stache19

No Longer a Noob
Apr 21, 2001
8,417
794
Welcome everyone to The Legend of Zelda RP XIV: Tides of Discord

We will kick-off the RP with a three part introduction covering The Royal Tournament, which will be the first major event of the RP. Each section will have its own summary for your convenience.

Please message a GM on discord if you have any questions. If you have no idea what this is about and are curious, head on over to the Interest Thread to learn more and sign-up.

Summaries of all three parts can be found at the end of each respective section. Details on the Tournament can also be found at the end of the post.



Part I: Unknowns
Many Months Ago, An Old Man

A ragged man collapsed onto the floor of some ancient ruins, some long worn castle of a forgotten kingdom. He dragged himself up a few sets of steps, darkness closing in around him as he ascended. He had crossed the boundaries of the universe to find this world, seeking a treasure believed to grant eternal life.

“Oh, a visitor!” A cheery, welcoming sounding voice caught the man’s attention, but he saw nobody around but himself.

“Where am I?” The man hacked up the words in a sentence that was more coughing than communication.

“Oh, this is where those in great need are educated. A school, you might say.” Still nobody accompanied the voice, and its joyous tone seemed undercut by something sinister, something hateful. The man coughed some more, spitting out a few more words.

“I know everything I need to know.” A statement deserving of its own category of lie.

“You know nothing, but have potential. Open your mind!” The words seared through the old man’s thoughts, leaving him feeling as if his whole body was burning. He could feel a crushing grip upon his whole body, as knowledge flooded through him.

“See the thousands of worlds that have burned at my feet, see the failure of heroes and irrelevance of villains. See the futility. See that there is only consumption.” The old man’s eyes were burning, but he could now see the form of that who spoke to him. A woman who appeared ten feet tall but was surely no more than six. She wore a crown with the mark of a shattered triforce. Between each blink it felt as if he could see a thousand eyes and mouths upon the woman, teeth gnashing.

Her thoughts dominated his. Service and reverence replaced all other thought. Her name. Her name was Vera.

“Tell me, why you have come here.” Vera asked, briefly returning his agency to him. He stuttered out the words, as his body continued to fail him on the path to his certain death.

“I came for the t-treasure, of eternal l-life…” The man whimpered, dropping to his knees, then collapsing completely. He felt a hand raise his chin up. Vera was staring directly in his eyes. Her thoughts overpowered his own again. He rose to his feet again, his strength returning.

“In service to me you will find meaning. In service you will find life.” Her words were gentle, calming. The man realized now, this touch was the treasure. Not an artifact or a spell, but Vera’s caress. He longed to serve her will, for as long as she would allow.

“Your past is gone. Your future is irrelevant. I am your present. Speak your new name as I have granted it.” Vera gently kissed the man’s cheek as she finished speaking, and he felt all the unnecessary baggage of his mind slip away. He was free, free to serve. His new name blared in his mind triumphantly, and he stood tall.

“I am Kuhn. My past is gone. My future is irrelevant. You are my present. May the world welcome your embrace.” Kuhn felt young and powerful. The old man that he was, was gone.

Kuhn was ready to bring Vera’s wishes into reality.


Sirius Fulmaren, Several Months Ago, Forsaken Fortress Cells

“Tell me again, why we are tolerating you here?” A heavyset man covered in decidedly rusted armor sat in front of a set of old prison cells. He wheezed between each breath, and from looking at him you’d be forgiven for thinking he hadn’t risen from his seat since his armor was new. The stench certainly matched such an assessment, but that could just as easily have been the cells. Cells which at present were empty, and had been for some time. Most prisoners here were temporary.

Forsaken Fortress. It had always been this kind of place, though once upon a time it was at least cleaner, if no less foreboding. A century ago had seen it filled with monsters loyal to Ganondorf on his failed quest for the triforce. Now one hundred years later it was filled with exiled New Hyruleans, banished from New Hyrule. The “True Royals”; they liked to called themselves.

“You listening?” The fat man grunted. It was hard to tell if he was becoming irritated or not since he could barely speak through his three chins.

“Regrettably, yes.” Across from the fat armored man stood another, garbed head to toe in black robes, with the hints of a wild old beard poking through the darkness. The old man lowered his hood to reveal a mess of gray hair that would not and could not be tamed. His face was wrinkled, but his eyes were young and wild. “And I believe you were instructed to give me the keys to this place, not ask questions that have already been answered by your superiors.”

“I don’t trust wizards or alchemists, or whatever you are.” The fat man grunted.

The robed man looked him up and down.

“Well isn’t that convenient, I don’t trust fat pigs.” He replied. This seemed to light a fire under the fat, armored guard. He made what sounded to be the angriest noise he could, moving to rise, but became forced back down by a fit of coughing. The coughing grew worse, and quickly transitioned to hacking up a small bit of blood. He wiped his mouth and stayed seated. His head tilted back and the coughing grew worse, but this time he could not bring himself to move.

The robed man, seeing his opportunity, forced the fat man’s mouth open and poured a thick green liquid down it from a previously concealed vial. There was no attempt to resist, none could be made.

“You see.” The robed man produced a notebook from his pockets and scribbled in it. The book bore the symbol of a crescent moon, pristine and faded all at once. “You are going to be participant number one. That’s part of the deal. And as the lucky guinea pig, you get to try this potion.” He slapped the fat man, forcing him to stay upright and alert. “This part gets a little unpleasant.” He brought his hood up, took the prison keys from the man and swiftly left the room. As he shut the metal doors to the prison behind him and ascended the narrow stairwell, he heard faint screaming from the cells, and he smiled.

“What a good morning.” He said to himself as he finished writing in the notebook, and slammed it shut. He passed another guard on the way out, this one much more loyal.

“Everything go as planned, Mr. Fulmaren?” The guard asked, rather pleasantly.

“Perfectly.” Sirius replied. “Oh, and in two hours please check on him. You’ll find him quite cooperative I think. I will bring more to join him soon.” Sirius continued. “It’s time for phase two of our testing.”

“Apologies sir, but phase two?”

“The Great Sea is about to need a lot more heroes, and we’re going to help provide them.”


Part I Summary
We are introduced to the main villain of the RP, Vera. We are also introduced to her first major lieutenant, Kuhn. They are preparing an assault on the Great Sea from an unknown location.

Additionally, several months before the RP starts, Sirius Fulmaren is performing experiments to enhance individuals into super powered soldiers.




Part II: Schemes
Ajax, Forsaken Fortress, Day 0

Black waves crashed against rock cliffs and burst into clouds of foam and salt that sailed up and over the apex of a lone black tower. Along the parapets surrounding it several lanterns danced from pikes carried by a few watchful, if tired guards. The night was clear but its stars were faded, morning’s light just beginning to shine over the distant horizon. At the east end of the wall, two men dressed in long, fine robes scratched their chins and looked out over the coming dawn.

“You will insure our losses, then?” said the taller of the two, a slender man who wore his long black curls tied back into a single tapered braid. He wore thin spectacles that obscured his amber eyes once the red sun glanced over their circular lenses.

“My people are not known for their generosity,” his partner answered back, in a thick longshoreman’s accent. “But in this case, we will certainly try.” Much rounder and older than the tall guy, the plump old Zora leaned in and slapped him on the back, but with such force that the many gold rings and necklaces adorning his fins jingled lightly under his words.

“And you will see to it that no one gets killed?” Straightening up his shoulders, our first figure slowly raised his hands and pressed them to his temples, a brief but anxious wince on his face. He dragged his palms down the sides of his black braids to interlace his fingers behind his neck, and look off in the ocean distance, suddenly wide-eyed as if deep in thought. His eyeglasses glinted as the dark gave way to morning, and the waves below clashed and hissed with the changing of the tide. He still couldn’t make up his mind.

“Of course, you wouldn’t want any blood on that good ol’ family name just yet, would you?” The Zora chuckled. “You Old Royals and your guilt, your divine justice! Always got a ***** in your armor, you lot, over some spot of land or some dead man’s ghost. It’ll be the death of you in the end, y’know?”

The Zora rocked back on his heels and grinned, looking out over the sunrise and drumming his slimy fingers along the handle of the blunt hatchet at his waist. A small pewter ring around his index finger tapped on the iron axehead, and a black skull with gemstone eyes and teeth glittered in the sun from his blue spotted knuckle. At his back, he carried a short, thick javelin with razor sharp bone spines lining the edge of its blade.

“You’ll have my word, on my mother’s eggs and all of my treasure, my men will not spill a drop of blood without your say so, including those in their command. We’ll run their puny ships out of the western seas real quiet like, so long as you make sure to keep the Council out of our hulls. Now, if some of our new recruits should sidle off on some job and get themselves killed,” he eyed the tall nobleman slyly, smirking with a sideways glance, “that can’t be helped. But for me and my crew, it’ll be bloodless—or my name ain’t Ajax.”

The squat Zora suddenly turned to face the other, and shoved his fat, webbed hand out to strike the bargain. The spines of his brows and whiskers perked up a half inch awaiting the reply.

“Good enough for you, ya’ highness?”

The Zora hustler, Ajax, stood there, strong, stiff arm outstretched, awaiting an answer. His gems and chains glistened in the peeking sun. The echo of a gull’s distant cry reached them atop the wall as the tall Hylian man nearly let the moment slip.

At last, he dropped his arms to his side, and looked in the old Zora’s eyes. “I suppose it will have to do. It’s probably best if you aren’t seen around the Fort for a while, wouldn’t you agree?”

“What, and miss the Royal Tournament? Not this old thief.”

They shook, the Zora smiling broadly, and the tall man managed a weak smirk. Against the high brick walls splashed with the early sun, their combined shadows fused at the hands and slowly began to creep over the bulwark of Forsaken Fortress.



King Daphnali of the Isles, Tower of the Gods, Night 0

“You’re certain that you wish to move forward with this plan, sire?” Nost asked.

The Chamberlain to the King and chief advisor in matters of state stood beneath one of the outer archways of old salt-pocked and lichen-crusted stone high atop the Tower. The robes of his office fluttered in the gentle breeze.

“It is long past time my friend.” King Daphnali was seated in a high-backed chair beneath an awning he’d had built to provide cover beneath the open sky within the broad, circular chamber of the bell tower—obstructed only by the grand ancient bell—that he might occupy the Tower’s highest point as only a Rito truly could. He liked to be able to look upon the stars as he contemplated the demands of his office and the governance of the seas. “Unless you can see another means to reduce these damnable tensions?”

This was not a conversation they were having for the first time, but it would be the last. On the morrow they crossed a rubicon, one at the edge of which they’d stood paralyzed for far too long.

“You know I cannot, sire,” Nost replied with some reluctance, shifting on his taloned feet and adjusting how he held the rolled scrolls in the crook of his left wing.

“No,” Daphnali mused. “All of our efforts before have failed, or been rebuffed. The Old Royals are prideful. They see as their right that which is no longer theirs, so anything short is too little. But the Great Sea is changed and they will not reclaim their past. What I have offered, and what was accepted, is the closest compromise that we will strike.”

“They left,” Nost challenged, as he so often did. He was a Rito of exceptional loyalty to the King of the Isles, after all. “They abandoned the Great Sea. What right do they have to demand anything of us?”

“The right of their name only, but that has been enough. You’ve seen the influence they’ve gathered since their return. The name of the ancient royal line still means something. I was named in honor of the Last King of Hyrule, and that link to the past grants me legitimacy in some ways, but even a name is not the same a blood.”

The King rose, smoothing his own ceremonial vestments, robes of deep blue with elaborate bronze embroidery on the cuffs, neck, and hem. He stood taller than Nost, his own beak more aquiline, a crest of stiff feathers running down the back of his head from crown to the nape of his neck, and another line of similarly stiff gray feathers forming a beard of sorts along the jawline.

He stepped out from beneath the awning and into the open beneath the expanse of stars, and he knew without looking that Nost had come forward to smooth the impression of his backside from the cushion of his chair. The man was nothing if not fastidious. The sound of clinking and scraping soon followed as the chamberlain inevitably set about reconfiguring the items on the king’s desk.

Tonight the air was cool but not cold, and a light breeze swirled beneath the encircling arches, carrying with it the smells of salt and surf, the smells of the sea. The Great Sea which now was, high above the remnants of the ancient world lost deep beneath the waves. That world had been theirs, these old ones come again who still claimed the mantle of royalty.

“I fear that someday it could come to war between us if this is not seen through,” Daphnali admitted. “And can you say for certain that allegiances will remain with us then? Will the denizens of these seas follow a king’s name, rather than his blood?”

As ever before, Nost said nothing. What could he say? That he knew their people would follow the King of the Isles in place of those who’d ruled long before? Ruled for thousands of years uninterrupted? Such assurances were impossible and the risks too great.

“If it ever turned to war, the bulk of our fleet is occupied on the sea’s southern edge,” Daphnali went on, as much to himself as his advisor and friend. “Has there been any further report from Admiral Dashar regarding the strange activity down there?”

“None, sire,” Nost said. “But I suspect we should receive another report any time within the coming days.”

“Good, notify me as soon as the next courier arrives. I will deliver the Admiral’s update to the Council myself.”

“Of course, sire.”

For a moment the gentle breeze grew to a stiff gust, and high above their heads the great bell creaked back and forth. Not enough to ring its mighty chime—it was too massive and too heavy for that—but enough to cause it to sway visibly until the wind died down again.

“Was there anything else tonight, my friend?”

“Only an update from Forsaken Fortress, sire,” Nost said in return. “The Royal Tournament, now that it is to be hosted by the Old Royals, is scheduled to begin in the coming days without issue, following the seating of their representative. Ambassador Kura anticipates significant turnout for the event this year despite the change of venue. The three vessels that Prince Nero has put up as prizes are said to be quite impressive, and with our own reward… It is believed that this will generate significant commerce for the Old Royals and further bolster their coffers, as well as garner for them an enormous amount of goodwill.”

Daphnali nodded thoughtfully, though Nost sounded dubious about the arrangement with every spoken word. “Such is their right. It is well that they see the seating of their Councilor as an event to be celebrated. Let them hold the tournament this year—they will be a part of the Great Sea now in truth, and their enrichment will enrich us all. Besides it will give me a respite from the rupee-counters downstairs who harp every year about the overhead costs. If they wish to bear the expense then I’m of a mind to let them.”

“Of course, sire.”

“If that is all, my friend, I would be alone for a while. Tomorrow will be an eventful day and I must refresh and be ready to convene the full Council of Isles in the morning.”

Nost bowed deeply and took several steps back through the archway and drop over the edge and out of view, having left the scrolls of reports he’d borne up to the Tower’s top on the small desk in a neat stack. Moments later he rose back up into the King’s field of vision on outstretched wings. With a few powerful flaps he propelled himself into the twilight and vanished from view, leaving the King of the Isles to his private communion with the sky and meditations on the future.


Part II Summary
A rather shady Zora named Ajax has made a deal with the Prince Nero of the True Royals (aka Old Royals) regarding the upcoming Royal Tournament.

Meanwhile, King Daphnali discusses the Old Royals faction with his chief adviser Nost, as they prepare to induct the Old Royals into the Council of the Isles.





Part III: Traditions
Kura, Forsaken Fortress, Day 1

Sunset painted the western face of the old black fortress in reddish hues as an avian woman with feathered skin and claws looked out over the pink and yellow waters. She stood atop a massive stonework bridge built from one end to the other of a natural rock harbor in Forsaken Fortress Isle, a crescent bay at the entrance to which men had constructed a colossal iron portcullis. The portcullis was raised now, its saltworn iron teeth bleached white and jagged just under the bridge’s expanse. She felt the weight of the moment hanging over her--not unlike the ironworks below, she thought, as she looked over the bridge’s near edge. The Hylian men who built it in ages past were the very ones she had audience with now.

A door on the southern tower of the stone bridge creaked open, and a tall man in fine robes with small, circular glasses emerged to stroll towards the Rito woman. He wore an elegant rapier in bronze and leather sheath slung from silk ropes tied about his waist. His light leather black boots clicked briskly against the bulwarks of Forsaken Fortress.

“Ah, I see you’re enjoying the view,” he called across the bridge to her, picking up his pace to reach her at the midpoint, the soft fabric of his shoes tapping along the stone. “Divine, isn’t?”

“I must admit, being this far out over the water like this? It’s almost like flying,” she said, looking down over the sheer drop into the dark, churning waters below. Her blue robes wafted in the evening breeze. “Almost.”

“They say my ancestors worked with Rito sculptors and architects to construct this bridge, generations ago. Perhaps that has something to do with it.” The man went on. “Sadly, much of that history is lost to us now.”

“Lost, is it? Our people’s scrolls from those days lay safe in our archives. I reviewed them myself before coming here.” The Rito woman pressed her hand to the bottom lip of her beak and thought for a moment, her eyes soft as if lost in a vague mourning. “Whither your Hylian records of this place, Nero? Perhaps we can help you find them.”

“Who knows? At the bottom of the sea somewhere, I imagine. What’s the old phrase?” He laughed and smiled, turning to look his guest in her deep red eyes. He took her hand in his. “Lost to antiquity?” He spoke the phrase in a heavily accented Rito tongue, and bowed low to kiss her feathered fingers.

The Rito woman laughed briefly but soon caught herself, and turned to avoid the Hylian man’s gaze, withdrawing her hand. She chided him in her native tongue. “You’re improving, young prince. Though your accent could use work."

“Allow me to show you my progress,” he said in Hylian, a proud grin on his face, before returning to Rito in a faster pace, with no trace of a Hylian accent.

“The two sides of the tournament will proceed in parallel. In the sand pits, the fighters, archers, and swordsmen will compete in single combat; seating will be arranged for all comers, free of charge, in the surrounding arena. But for paying customers only, we’ll have a small box here on the bridge for the mage’s rounds, where sorcerers, wizards and the like will have free rein to battle over the open water. Once the elimination rounds are complete, the two finalists, one mage and one fighter, will compete until one leaves the other in the drink.”

The Rito woman laughed gently at the end of his short speech, surprised at his command of the language in so short a time. “You are quite the fast learner, Prince Hyrule.”

“Time is precious,” he said. Then, for a moment, his smile faded and he returned to Hylian speech.

“So we have an agreement then, Kura?”

She turned to face him again. “We have an agreement. The King will award honorary knighthood to the top three winners—the champion, and the two finalists from the mage and fighter circles. You will contribute three ships to be awarded as prizes, and those three ships will sail under the wing of the King’s fleet.”

“Between your titles and my ships, I’d say we’ve got a tournament on our hands,” he said, reaching to shake her hand boldly, and giving her a short kiss on the cheek by way of greeting before returning inside. Looking back from the door, he called back to her in the Rito tongue. “I believe we’ll be seeing very much of one another soon, Madame Advisor.”

Alone on the bridge again, Kura watched the last lines of twilight sink below the waves, searching her feelings about the brash young Prince Nero. She must admit she was charmed, even seduced, by his guile, but upon reflection she unearthed a buried sense of dread, as she realized how uncertain his fate was about to become.

“I hope you know what you’re doing, kid,” Kura said to no one. She opened her wings to the sea air and alighted on the edge of the low wall. A pale blue light graced the tips of her feathers and gradually shifted in the breeze. A long ceremonial dagger glistened in her aura, fastened to a finely stitched red leather belt tightened around her waist.

She lowered her goggles and set off into the darkness unaccompanied, swooping low along the wall, her robes flapping in the wind, before catching a strong breeze and soaring off into the East under a waning moon.


Windfall Island, Day 1

A bright day gently glimmered through the dust specks of a greasy window, with the echo of laughing children and a single dancing butterfly on the breeze outside, before a Goron shuttered the blinds and plunged the Café Bar back into dingy darkness with a lazy burp.

In the dim light, the Goron hiccupped into his mug at the bar, and eyed a large bill of parchment plastered on the wall. “Aye, Gillian, what’s this edict here?” he belched, noticing the heraldry of the royal seal at the top. “You know I can’t read y’all’s Hylian script.”

The barkeep raised his glasses to his nose and read the contents out slowly to the Goron. “Why, it says as follows:



LAST CALL: TOURNAMENT OF THE AGES!!!

His Royal Highness invites all brave warriors of sword and flame to compete in his name at the 14th annual Royal Tournament!

Festivities will begin on the day of the Equinox at Forsaken Fortress!

This year’s grand prize will be a ship and crew for the top three champions, with nothing less than full honorable knighthood upon fealty to the King’s Royal Navy!

Ferries and trains will be leaving from every settled isle for two days before! Competitors need only sign up when they reach the shore!

Come one, come all, for this once in a lifetime chance to prove you’re the greatest in all the Great Sea!!!



“Tournament of the Ages, eh?” Grong hiccuped into his pint. He had stopped listening after the first bit. “What’s ‘last call’ supposed to mean, anyway?” he mused through slurred speech.

“Say, they’ve been plastering these damn posters for months in the inns and taverns all over the sea, trying to catch the sellsword crowd, you know. Guess this is the last round for dunces like you that haven’t read it yet,” the barkeep teased.

“So whaddya say, Grong? Interested? They don’t call you the Hammer for nothing! The ferries just started running out to the Tracks today,” he egged him on. Grong tended to get a little loose with his coin when you harkened back to the good ol’ days.

“Ha! Fat chance. My battling days are over,” Grong laughed, belching before taking another swig of his ale. He raised one flabby arm without invitation and showed a long, pale scar running just over his heart, from his left armpit to his right ribs, to anyone unfortunate enough to look. “Nah, the Hammer for Hire’s for hire no more. Especially not out there in that Forsaken Fortress, no sirrah.”

“A buddy of mine got eaten by Octoroks out there! You couldn’t pay me enough to go back.” Another patron, a heavily tattooed Hylian dockworker, piped up. He slid a small stack of green rupees across the bartop under his muscled, leathery hand. On it, a pewter signet ring with a small black skull on its face glinted in the halflight.

“Pretty odd of them to hold it way out there at the old Fortress, wouldn’t ya say, Loot? It’s been years since it was anywhere other than Dragonroost,” the barkeep, Gillian, recalled. He scooped up the man’s rupees with one hand while sliding him a fresh ale with the other, the hand he served with featuring the same black skull ring.

“Betcha somebody got rich off’a that deal! Smells a wee’ bit fishy to me, if y’know what I mean,” the drunken dockworker joked, elbowing the Goron in the ribs. Grong found that hilarious, and threw his head back with a mighty roaring laugh, even if he was unsure what Zora term his drinking buddy had used. Gillian returned to cleaning his cups.




King Daphnali of the Isles, Council of the Isles Chamber, Day 1

Dawn came swiftly upon the sleepless King. The sun’s first rays pouring through the open archways were greeted by Daphnali already on his feet, gazing out northwestward as though if he looked long enough, strained his raptor’s eyes hard enough, he could look upon Forsaken Fortress himself and the preparations being made there even now. Far below the seas were calm, and the network of wooden piers that had been built up around the base of the Tower were quiet but for the creaking of the larger ships docked alongside. Personal vessels and other smaller ships would be at anchor at the interior docks.

It was time. Even now the Councilors would be gathering in the main chamber directly below the King’s aerie awaiting his coming.

Once that vast hall had been a proving ground, as had the entirety of the Tower of the Gods, before the Rito of Dragonroost had went about the process of appropriating it for their own designs. Ancient traps had been repurposes, defensive turrets taken control of. The lifts ran without issue now for those who were grounded, and the pitfalls were spanned by bridges and staircases of varicolored light. All could be activated or deactivated at a command, making the Tower of the Gods the most secure structure on the Great Sea.

With an intake of sea-salty air, the King left himself sway forward and drop over the edge and out into the open sky, feeling the familiar lurch in his stomach for an instant before he let his wings catch the air and lift him with a few powerful strokes. Too rarely did he get to revel in the freedom of the wide blue expanse, so weighed down was he by matters of state, but it felt freeing to ride the updrafts of warm air for a moment. Eventually though, he had no choice but to bank and plunge down toward the top landing of the grand exterior stair, alighting on the edge of the balustrade and hopping down, smoothing his robes as he stepped to the door and let it slide open to admit him.

There was no crier to announce his arrival, no bells or chimes or elaborate pronouncements. King of the Isles he was, but all that truly meant was that he was the chief administrator. Unlike monarchies past, he did not rule absolutely, nor had he been meant to. The Council dictated policy and he ruled on it, implemented it, and oversaw it. Too much trouble had come from absolute power being placed into one individual, and so his Rito predecessors who’d designed their new government had seen fit to try things a different way. And so as he strode into the sprawling chamber he did so to the greetings of a cluster of familiar figures, all garbed in different ceremonial vesture, positioned around a broad circular table, while his “throne” such as it was, was positioned only slightly above on a raised dais at the far end positioned behind a polished wooden desk. He was a part of the Council, but separate and above it as well.

The King crouched and threw himself into the air with a few flaps of his wings, soared over the assemblage, and landed atop the dais next to his desk. He settled onto the high seat and peered over the edge of the desk.

“You may take your seats, Councilors,” he intoned, inviting them to the table as was custom. With the scraping of chair legs on the stone floor they took their places.

“Thank you for convening this meeting of the Council of Isles on shorter than usual notice, honored representatives,” Daphnali said, noting a few unhappy expressions among the lot arrayed before him. “I call you here outside of our normal session because I have made a decision, one that I have been deliberating on for some time now, and I mean to proceed with it immediately. It is far too long in coming, I think, so further delay would do us no good.

“As our many debates on the subject make plain, we are all aware of the return of the descendents of the Last King of Lost Hyrule and the ancient royal line. For years the Old Royals have dwelled alongside us on these seas, and because we have kept one another at arms length for so long we have allowed tensions and mistrust to foment between ourselves and them.

“No longer, I say, can we allow the current state of affairs to persist! We cannot look past one another and each pretend that the other does not exist! That way lays conflict, maybe even war. And so instead today I extend a hand of friendship and cooperation on behalf of the Great Sea. Today I invite their chosen representative to take her rightful seat within this body, that we might bind ourselves together for mutual benefit!

“Come forth!”

A hidden door at the side of the Council Chamber slid open, and in stepped a figure resplendent in robes of crimson and gold. Her long, tawny hair fell down her back in thick ringlets and spilled over her right shoulder. She took long, purposeful strides toward the table, straight-backed, her chin thrust forth. She was beautiful and prideful, and the gaze she leveled upon all, even the King above, was peremptory as she came to a halt beside the one remaining empty seat directly across the table from Daphnali. They locked eyes for a moment in silence, and she offered him one slightly arched brow before she finally stepped back into a deep curtsy.

“Katra Hyrule of Forsaken Fortress, of the blood of Lost Hyrule, I hereby extend to you a royal invitation to join the Council of Isles here in the Tower of the Gods as the representative of Forsaken Fortress. Let us set aside the troubles of years past and bring the Great Sea into a brighter future together.”

“I thank you Daphnali of the Rito,” she said as she came fully back to her feet. Around her a few heads turned as her soon-to-be colleagues noted the lack of the appropriate appellation, though her tone indicated no overt disrespect. “On behalf of my brother, Prince Nero Hyrule, I accept your invitation and will gladly represent the interests of my family on this Council.”

Daphnali held her gaze for a moment as she pulled the chair back from the table and settled into it, placing her hands on the table’s edge. A ripple of murmurs were running through the rest of the assemblage, but he ignored the noise and kept his focus on her. There was no submission in her posture, there was no gratitude but neither was there open hostility. It would take time yet to bridge the divides between them, but this was a step at least.

“Katra Hyrule now completes our number, and per the Charter of Isles and the laws set therein, only a consensus vote of the Council of Isles may unseat her, just as it is with us all.”

A smatter of applause filled the chamber, some enthusiastic and some merely polite, while a few Councilors remained silent and still. The King exhaled a breath; the ceremony was over at least, such as it was, but there was much yet to be done.

As the clamor died down, he went on. “Now, honored Councilors, let us move on to matters of state. In two days time the 14th Royal Tournament will begin at Forsaken Fortress…”

As he moved on to the business of the day he could not but continue to hold the newcomer’s gaze across the table. Those imperious eyes, the thin line of her mouth and the set of her jaw, could not but make him wonder if he’d done right after all, and what change the coming days might bring.

Later, after the business of the day had concluded and a round of handshakes, back-slaps, and daggerlike glances was done, the King approached the newly minted Councilor.

“That was very… ceremonious,” she said as she spied his approach. She had not yet walked away from her seat, though the rest of the Council was filing out and down the spiral stair outside the chamber.

“Stuffy, you mean?”

She very nearly cracked a smile at that, though her eyes still shined with defiant pride.

“One could describe it that way. I didn’t, but one could.”

That brought a small laugh from the King. “You’ll make a great politician, Lady Katra. You’ll fit in well around here.”

She didn’t say anything in answer to that, only held his gaze firmly and gave a half nod as if to say ‘of course I will, Daphnali of the Rito, I am the blood of kings.’

“My brother sends his thanks again for allowing us to host your tournament,” she said after a moment’s silence. “He has been quite eagerly seeing to the preparations this past week, and believes it should be a grand event, made greater still by cooperation between our family and the throne.”

“I have no doubt it shall be a great spectacle,” he replied, stroking the beard of bristling feathers beneath his beak. “Send Prince Nero my regards.”

“I have urgent business with my brother anyway,” she noted flatly, “so I will be sure to add your message to the rest.

“Now if you will excuse me, I must go. I’ll see you in session… sire.” The word seemed to stick in her throat as she said it. Then she wheeled on one heel and made for the exit, Daphnali’s sharp raptorial eyes on her as she departed. Then he made his exit as well back out into the open air and rode an updraft of warm air up to the bell tower. Nost was back as he flared his wings to slow his descent and grabbed at the edge of a stone archway with his talons.

“It’s done. Send a message to Outset Island,” he said as he hopped down from his perch. “I want no delay.”

“Of course, sire,” Nost replied, unfazed by the suddenness of the command. “Shall this be official post, or… unofficial business?”

Daphnali clucked his tongue. “Unofficial. This is not to go by standard courier; you know what to do. I want one of ours to put it into our asset’s hands directly… there are to be no other links on this chain of custody. Tell the agent what has transpired and direct them to travel north to Forsaken Fortress for the tournament. Have them ascertain the response among the Old Royals and their guests to Lady Katra’s seating, and any other relevant information they can gather.

“I need to know what’s happening up there.”


Part III Summary
Katra Hyrule, representative of the Old Royals and brother of Prince Nero Hyrule, accepts King Daphnali’s invitation to join the Council of the Isles.


OOC: Royal Tournament Information
The final announcements for the 14th Annual Royal Tournament have gone out. Most major areas upon The Great Sea would already know of it considering how long it’s been running. The difference this year is that the tournament will be held on Forsaken Fortress, where traditionally it had been held on Dragonroost.

Player characters can work personal invitations into their backstory if they so choose. These invitations can be either as an audience member, or as a participant, but please speak to a GM to help put that story together.

Otherwise, it can generally be assumed that planning for the tournament has been going on for months and the majority of the population is well aware of it and its new location. Anyone that is uninformed will be able to catch a ferry from Dragonroost to Forsaken Fortress.
 
Last edited:

Link64Gogetta

No Longer a Noob
Nov 19, 2000
10,717
177
Shin/Two Weeks Ago

“There’s nothing we can do,” the two healers said as the came out into the hall to address the dying man’s son. “He doesn’t respond to medicine or magic. He just keeps fading away like he’s dying of old age. But…”

“He sure as hell doesn’t look that old,” Shin said, finishing their thought.

The two healers looked at each other uncomfortably as if there was something they couldn’t say. Ultimately they simply nodded in response. “He wants to talk to you one last time. I’m not sure exactly what he wants to say, but… just listen to him carefully. Ok, Shin?”

“Right…” he said and he walked into his father’s room.

A whispery voice called out from the ailing man as his son entered his chamber, “come close, I can’t speak loudly anymore.”

“Is this where you tell a bunch of secrets you’ve kept from me my whole life.” Shin asked with an irritated sarcasm.

The father let out a weak laugh that caused him to slightly wince from pain. “Hehh… If I was going to do that, I would have a long time ago. Besides, I don’t have enough to cover any of that. No, I simply realized I can’t stop you from going out to sea anymore so I want you to make me three promises and in exchange I’ll give you something that will help you out there in the world.”

Shin nodded but when a moment passed with his father remaining silent he realized the man couldn’t see properly anymore and finally spoke up, “ok, what are they.”

The father tried to lift his arm to point at something but was force to give up letting out an exhausted sigh. “First, in closet with you mother old things, it has a fake floor. My old equipment is hidden under there, but the important thing is the small wooded jewelry box. Take the small piece of metal in there. It will grant you power when you find something you want to protect. That is my gift to you.”

“And the promises?” Shin asked.

“First, lay me to rest next to the tree we planted over your mother’s grave. Leave no other marker. Second, there is a second item in that jewelry box, a potato like instrument I’ve wrapped in cloth. Leave it in the box and bury it with me. Tell no one what it is. Finally…”



The next evening

“Is it just me, or are there more stars out tonight?” Shin asked his girlfriend Katsumi when he heard her approaching from behind.

The girl sat down beside him and rested her head on his shoulder, “It’s a new moon tonight, plus there’s less light out here on the beach.”

“No, you’re suppose to say something like, ‘It’s the heaven’s welcoming your old man.’” Shin said in protest.

“I figured he’d by annoyed if I did.” Katsumi answered causing both to break out into a teary laugh.

Afterward to two sat slightly on the beach looking up and the stars and listening to the gently movement of the waves. “Hey Kat,” Shin finally said, “the old man made me promise him something right before he died. He told me if I’m going to leave this island that I’d have to leave as soon as his buried. So, tomorrow when the next ship comes.”

“Wait what no! That’s too soon,” she said as she jumped up in surprise, “I need more time than that to prepare. Plus I’m not done with my studies yet.”

“That’s the point,” he said regrettably. “He told me I can’t bring you with me until you master you summoning magic, or until I get this weird piece of metal he gave me to turn into some kind of protection weapon or something.”

Katsumi remained silent for a moment letting her anger stew until she decided to blame who she thought was the obvious culprit. “My mom put him up to this, didn’t she?”

“If it was your mom I would have been told to run away and never speak to you again,” Shin said trying not to laugh. “No, I’m pretty sure my old man came up with this himself. Though I think your grandfather gave him the idea for the conditions.”

“Oh, damn Jiji, this is his pay back for skipping lessons with him join your sword practice.” She paused before finally letting out a shout, “Fine! One month!”

Shin responded with a simple, “Eh?”

“Give me one month, and I’ll figure out how to summon one of the greater elemental beasts. Then Jiji will have to graduate me and I’ll come find you. So don’t you dare run too far ahead. Got it?” Katsumi declared.

Shin smiled, “Got it. Don’t worry; I doubt you’ll miss much fun.”



Day 1/Great Sea

“FIRE!”

boomBoomBOOM!

The deafening eruption of the cannons was dwarfed only by the Gunnery Chiefs roaring commands, “LOAD SHOT!”

“Hey pick up the pace new guy,” the Gunners Mate yelled as Shin struggled to keep pace with the loaders on the other two guns. As the large iron ball fell into the barrel he took his position at the guns base just in time for the next order.

“ONE LEFT! TWO DOWN! LOAD BOMB!”

“Two down? Are the closing that–” Shin thoughts were cut off as the third order came and he needed to quickly cover his ears.

“FIRE!”

boomBoomBOOM!

“LOAD SHOT!”

Shin moved as quickly as he could to load the next shot and get in position for the next adjustment. However instead of the speedy orders there was an eerie silence until Gunnery Chief popped his head above deck. A moment later the Chief was barking with ever greater urgency. “GET THOSE BOMBS TO THE BALLAST TANKS THEN GET YOU’RE ASSES ON DECK WITH A FIRE BUCKET! AND BE READY FOR A BOARDING WHILE YOU’RE AT IT!”

A swirl of smoke and panic had consumed the upper deck by the time Shin made it top side. The pirates had catapulted over a flaming barrel of pitch and oil in successful attempt set their sails ablaze. The hard efforts of the crew were able to snuff the flames, but pirates true goal had already succeed. They had been slowed to a halt, and now the pirate ship was bearing down on them and about to ram.

“BRACE!” Someone shouted a moment before the two wooded hulls smashed into each other.

Shin among those who were to slow to react and were knock down. He was quick back to his feet though and readied his blades for the inevitable boarding. This would finally be the kind of fight he was use to.

Summary:

Two weeks ago Shin’s dying father bequeaths him with some kind of magic item in exchange for secretly burying a small wind instrument with him and leaving the grave unmarked. He also tells Shin that if he’s going to leave the island he has to leave his girlfriend behind for the time being.

In the present day the ship Shin’s sailing aboard is attacked by pirates.
 

stache19

No Longer a Noob
Apr 21, 2001
8,417
794
The Middle of the Sea, Day 1

Ethan Chiaria


It was the ice cold water that shocked Ethan awake. Third time in two months he’d woken up in the middle of nowhere, though the last two times had at least had the decency to be on land. His eyelids fought the whole way, but victorious, Ethan took in his surroundings. It was ocean alright. Except for the giant ship he appeared to be stuck to.

“Oh okay.” Ethan mumbled, finally realizing why he couldn’t move. He was strapped to the side of the boat as waves were repeatedly crashing over his entire body. He reached out telepathically on a secure wavelength, as secure as he could make them. It wasn’t exactly science, or science at all.

(“Liah did you make it yet? How can Twins recinarnate this far apart? I’m speaking to a manager about this.”) With nobody around to hear his joke, Ethan still managed to chuckle at himself. It was the only reaction to his present situation that maintained sanity. (“Okay well whenever you get here, maybe you can tell me why we reincarnate as adults. I thought this was supposed to be a rebirth, new life kind of thing. Not just poof now fight pirates don’t worry about relearning basic motor skills or anything. Not that I need to.”)

Even self entertainment couldn’t keep Ethan distracted for long. He focused his senses in on the crew of the ship, picking up their thoughts immediately. Urgency and excitement was the theme of the day. The ship was preparing to intercept and fire on another. Not a situation one wants to be tied to the boat for.

It was an especially eerie circumstance given the absolute lack of shouting. The entire crew was telepathic, that much was immediately evident to Ethan. Either that or they were experts at shout whispering. Ethan still had a hundred questions about how someone was even able to overpower him so easily. The hole in his memory worried him.

Ethan focused his mind on the bindings that bolted him to the ship exterior. One by one they snapped apart, leaving him attached by just one arm. Loosening the remaining binding he swung himself upright, vaulting up the side of the ship. Being stuck near the back of the ship on the port side, most of his view was obstructed, but Ethan managed to spot a glimpse at the spirit tracks in the distance.

He also heard the distinct whistle of a train coming in from the open sea rail system, a railway that extended from The Great Sea several hundred miles north towards New Hyrule, where it eventually stopped at an open ocean seaport transfer station.

“No time to lose.” Ethan pulled himself up onto the deck of the ship just as it came up upon two other ships. Pirates firing on an unknown vessel. But not completely unknown, as Ethan sensed a familiar presence on the ship being attacked.

“Shin?” Ethan muttered under his breath, sensing the presence at the perimeter of his reach. He’d known the kid for years, but hadn’t seen him in months. It was unfortunately that moment when Ethan was finally noticed by the crew. It was a rather impressively diverse cast of Zora, Rito, and Hylians, all with masks covering their faces and overly heavy looking armor for their present location. Except one.

“You.” The voice was guttural, submerged in tone. “The Empress will turn you.” Each word struggled out, suffocating Ethans ears.

“You mean Vera?” Ethan asked. “She didn’t mention you, I figured I would be getting her best.”

The Zora stepped forward, and Ethan realized his perception of her had been distorted. She towered over him, ten feet tall, and instead of armor had several layers of natural scales. He’d never seen any Zora like her, but it was most definitely a Zora, jagged spikes on the fins and all. Ethan tried to scan her mind, and was met with a piercing shriek that deterred him instantly

“She has consumed countless others just like you.” Ethan held up a hand to interrupt the Zora.

“Seriously, name first or I’m not hanging around for this rant. I assure you, I am Vera’s equal, not yours.” Ethan was not a particular imposing looking individual, but even the Zora felt the weight in his warning.

“Quelura.” She snarled, truly surprising Ethan. Most of the time these commander types didn’t play along. It was refreshingly different. What was less refreshing was the alarming speed at which Quelura moved after stating her name. Before Ethan could comprehend it, she had grappled and forced him to the ground. Looking satisfied she had dealt with the situation, Quelura turned to bark orders at her crew.

“Hold him!” The louder she spoke, the harder it was to think. Listening to her talk felt like drowning. Struggling to overcome the feeling, Ethan was easily restrained by the rest of the crew. He watched in partial awe and mostly confusion as Quelura reared back and extended out two massive wings. Rito wings. She launched herself with so much force Ethan half expected the ship to collapse in on itself. The ship held, but Quelura’s target didn’t. Descending upon the pirate ship, a glowing purple aura surrounded her as she slammed into its deck.

Ethan composed himself as he watched the fallout of the strike. Everything he had expected to happen to the ship he was on, was now the fate of the pirates. Those in the immediate vicinity of the strike were crushed, and the rest were panicking and looking for ways off the doomed vessel. Half of it was already under the sea, and the other half would only be in a worse situation if on fire.

Fittingly, that was the final touch on the act. As Quelura launched back to her own ship, the purple aura turned bright red, setting the pirate ship aflame. She ignored the few pirates that had made it to escape boats. Ethan knew when someone was sending a message. And that meant Quelura had to know what his next move would be.

“I’ve seen enough.” Ethan stood up, from his point of view, rather casually. Quelura’s crew seemed to find the event more extreme, as each one was launched off the ship into the water. “Quelura, I’m honored that Vera chose you to keep track of me. Next time, let’s not beat around the bush. Also I’m definitely going to need to know why you left me alive and tied me to the ship. But we both know that conversation won’t happen today.” Ethan snapped his fingers, teleporting off Quelura’s ship and onto Shin’s.

“Hi Shin.” Ethan waved to his friend. “Funny running into you here. Don’t worry they are just leaving.” Ethan pointed to Quelura’s ship, which had picked up its dunked crew and started heading off north at too high a speed to pursue. “Sorry to drop in like this. I may need your help tracking someone down.”

Summary: Ethan Chiaria, reincarnated from Ithan Chiaria, wakes up strapped to a ship owned by Quelura, a ten foot tall Zora working for Vera.

After watching Quelura destroy a pirate ship, Ethan escapes from her to Shin’s nearby ship. He abruptly says hello to Shin and asks for his help searching for someone.
 
Jan 8, 2013
44
22
England
Bingbang Bongbang, The Great Sea, Day 1

The ocean. Vast. Wide. Empty. A gentle lapping of waves and the whistling of a light breeze.

BANG BANG BANG BANG BANG BANG

The silence of the sea is sharply interrupted by a small raft, shoddy in it’s craft with a large pair of stolen underpants functioning as it’s sail.

BANG BANG BANG BANG BANG BANG

A sole occupant sits impatiently upon her vessel. Her throat dry and silenced from singing, no, screaming, to the beats she slams down on her bright red drum as her feet dangle in the salty water below.

BANG BANG BANG BANG BANG BANG

If not for the chaotic drumbeat, the loudest sound would be the low rumbling of the Bokoblin’s stomach, empty and craving some flesh, or hell, even a vegetable would be good right now..

BANG BANG BANG BANG BANG BANG

Most creatures would be frustrated to die alone in the great blue void but Bingbang Bongbang aimlessly floats with a wide smile on her face, confident that her story wouldn’t end here as she glares out to the open horizon, knowing it won’t remain empty forever.

Summary: A Bokoblin on the brink of death optimistically drums as she sails aimlessly on a raft that probably won’t last much longer before sinking.
 
Last edited:
Jan 2, 2003
7,603
473
Your Dreams
Mistral

BANG BANG BANG BANG BANG

"That poor guy is gonna die, huh, Bise?"

BANG BANG BANG BANG BANG

Mistral lay stomach-down, mystically supported on what for all appearances was a small cloud. Her head was propped on her hands, staring down at the only thing of interest on the ocean today.

BANG BANG BANG BANG BANG

Wait, was Bise... mimicking the drum? Stupid cloud... "That's not very nice, you know..."

BANG BANG BANG BANG BANG

The drumming was as loud as it had ever been, but... slower. Definitely gonna die.

BANG ... BANG ... BANG ... BANG ... BANG

"Okay, okay, Bise. Yeah. I get it. You can stop pestering me." Mistral rolled to the side, shoving a hand into one of her travel sacks. She pulled out a few chunks of dried fish and bounced them on her palm. "Not much, I guess... but I can always fish up some more."

An errant wisp of Bise drifting off in the light breeze. Sarcastic collection of vapor...

BANG ... ... BANG ... ... BANG ... ... BANG ... ... ... BANG

Mistral smirked at Bise. Sarcastic or not, it would be fun... She dropped the dried fish, and it sunk right through the cloud which solidly supported her weight. Down, down down....

BANG-THUNK-THUNK!

The dried fish landed on the bokoblin's drum. Mistral suppressed a giggle and hid behind Bise, watching through the cloud wisps.

Summary: Mistral has been trailing Bingbang, and takes pity, dropping some dried fish rations for her.
 

Cream04849

Don't Tase Me, Bro!
Jul 14, 2001
5,859
200
Portland, ME
Murkscale - Outset Isle - Morning One

If he wasn't careful, Majin knew he was liable to get a fist thrown his way. Wouldn't be the first time, especially with all the wary side-eyed glances he was getting from the others clustered around him.

Out in the front room of Tycho's Tap the clamor of the more savory patrons drew a comfortable veil around the gambling den arranged in the back. Gambling itself was not illegal on the seas, per se, but high stakes games such as these were monitored closely by the Council of Isles, the winnings tracked and taxes assessed with meticulous calculation. If chests of rupees amounting to small fortunes were being won or lost, or if property such as the limited island plots, ships, or the like were changing hands, this new government intended to have its due. But what was gambled safely out of view could not be taxed or taken, and so establishments like these had cropped up all across the Great Sea.

Majin himself, along with an ale-sodden Zora with a paunch and a sagging layer of scales and a gaggle of bleary-eyed Hylians were crouched around a ring of bricks erected on the graying floorboards of the back room beneath the shifting light of an oil lamp hung from a nail on the crossbeam directly above their game. Outside of the ring each player had a pile of rupees of various denominations in front of them, all of differing--and with the exception of Majin rapidly dwindling--sizes. More than once he heard curses murmured under their breath as they cast the dice into the circle, picking up angry snippets.

"... flooding cheat..."

"... my own dice!?"

"... she's going to flooding kill me..."

He ignored them for the most part. These weren't newcomers to the backroom dice or card games, and most of them had one and lost in nearly equal measure as most did. But the longer they let him cast the dice against whatever they put up, and the more ale they soaked up, the angrier they grew. Tonight was no exception.

After a particularly strong throw, the Zora--a dockhand named Lukau with a penchant for frittering away his wages every night waiting for his retched luck to finally turn, shoved the three dice into Majin's waiting hand, following that with an unsteady, glassy-eyed glower as though daring him to beat him again as he'd been doing for much of the night. Majin offered a patronizing grin and took them, raising them and looking them over in his palm, making a show of ensuring that the Zora hadn't palmed the game dice and replaced them with fixed ones of his own as so many cheats tried to do.

He had. Suppressing the urge to shake his head in amusement, Majin instead nodded as though satisfied that the dice he'd received were legitimate and closed his fingers around them. A flash of unrestrained satisfaction flitted across Lukau's face, and the corner of his mouth twitched, fighting back a smile.

"So what's the bet?" Majin asked, rolling the weighted dice around in his casting hand. The other three had backed out this time, so it was just he and Lukau betting on this round. The drunken Zora leered at him, fighting the twitch of his gaze toward the Tokay's clenched fist. Instead he looked down at the pile of rupees left before him. It was less than half of what he'd already piled up before him when Majin had joined the game late, but it was still much more than the others had managed to hang on to so far. Not exactly a fortune, but not nothing either. Then he looked at the pile in front of Majin, at least half-again as large. Majin could almost read the Zora's math in his eyes.

"Got my shift starting in an hour," Lukau mumbled, his tongue loose and imprecise in forming the words. He made a vague gesture at his pile. "I'm putting all in, Murkscale. Whadda 'bout you?"

That would earn back more than Lukau had come with, leaving him the night's winner. Majin rolled the dice around in his hand again. With weighted dice Lukau was obviously confident that he'd win the toss, so why not go for broke?

Majin nodded, then he threw.

The dice hit the floorboards inside the ring of bricks and tumbled madly all the way across the circle, striking the bricks on the far side and then spinning back in toward the center. Majin leaned back in his crouch while Lukau leaned in, eyes alight with anticipation.

Before the dice could land on the faces Lukau was counting on, invisible to the unfocused eyes of the lookers-on, the shadows beneath cast by the lamplight above plumed upward in tiny, imperceptible tendrils, striking each die on the bottom, on the side, pushing them from where they should have settled, causing them to lurch to another face, and another until the tumbled over one last time and remained still.

Three threes, arranged in an approximate triangle. The Gods' roll.

Lukau lurched unsteadily to his feet with a strangled, angry cry. He swayed before he found his balance and then spun fully toward Majin.

"Cheat!"

Majin also got to his feet, the top of his head coming comically short of the much taller Zora's chin. He looked up into Lukau's enraged face and this time he did smile.

"How do you figure?" he asked. "You handed me the dice and saw me roll. How'd I cheat?"

The Zora snarled but it was clear that his mind, so fogged with alcohol as it was, couldn't think of a retort that wouldn't implicate himself for his own cheating. Majin watched his fist clench at his side, but after a moment's anticipation all he did was turn and stomp toward the door to the front room, finally vanishing through it leaving his lost rupees behind. Majin turned to the three Hylians who'd remained mostly silent during the game, and had moved back away from the ring of bricks as Lukau had risen. If there was to be a fight in the back of Tycho's Tap, they didn't mean to be a part of it.

"Till tomorrow night, fellas," he said, crouching back down and sweeping Lukau's rupees and his own back into the canvas pouch he carried with one arm. Rising back to his feet, he gave the bulging purse a toss, feeling its heft. He didn't cheat much, but he couldn't say he felt bad about punishing Lukau for his attempt either.

Back in the front room, most of the patrons had already begun to filter out. Through the boarded up windows--a necessity on the seas when storms raged through--he could see that daylight was peaking in. He hadn't realized that hours had passed. It had been not far past midnight when he'd made his way in. Tycho, owner and barkeep, was nowhere to be seen, so Majin assumed that he'd gone down into the cellar to bring up another ale barrel. Instead of waiting to settle up, Majin just tossed a handful of his new-won wealth onto the bar and made his way to the door. He'd already pulled it half open when he paused and swung it shut again, looking at the poster that had been nailed to the inside.

LAST CALL: TOURNAMENT OF THE AGES!!!

His Royal Highness invites all brave warriors of sword and flame to compete in his name at the 14th annual Royal Tournament!

Festivities will begin on the day of the Equinox at Forsaken Fortress!

This year’s grand prize will be a ship and crew for the top three champions, with nothing less than full honorable knighthood upon fealty to the King’s Royal Navy!

Ferries and trains will be leaving from every settled isle for two days before! Competitors need only sign up when they reach the shore!

Come one, come all, for this once in a lifetime chance to prove you’re the greatest in all the Great Sea!!!

"Interesting..." he thought. Events like these bred opportunity, particularly for individuals like himself. "Just a few days off... might be worth hopping a train."

As the sound of stumping footfalls could be heard growing louder behind him, signaling Tycho's return from the cellar, Majin reached up and ripped the notice down from the door. As he exited into the morning light on the street outside, he carefully folded the notice and tucked it under the belt hanging crosswise over the tight, studded leather of his jacket. Another new day, a host of new opportunities.

Particularly for individuals like himself, rare as those might be these days.

Summary: Majin is winning at an illegal game of dice taking place in back of Tycho's Tap on Outset Isle. When a drunken Zora dockhand named Lukau tries to cheat, Majin uses his shadow gifts to tilt the game back in his favor. On his way out, he spies the tournament notice and considers the opportunities that might arise from such an event.
 

tristandark

Almost Not a Noob
Sep 3, 2005
898
159
Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Tristan Bryseis/Outset Isle Smithy/Night Zero

A blast of hot air came from the forge as Tristan removed his billet. It glowed a bright teal as he grinned at it, knowing he had smelted the ore just right and formed the ingots masterfully. This was no ordinary metal he found. That last expedition gave him a chance to gather something he'd not thought he'd find on the ocean: darksteel.

Sure, he was making a lot of noise for this time of night, but he paid well to rent the facilities. He'd forged special hammers months ago in anticipation of this, borrowing an old family adage of if one needed a tool that he should make it himself. And he was going to do that again tonight. Sleep could come later. This would give him an edge in his latest venture. Multiple edges.

He'd put drawings all over the workstation and etched chalk outlines on the benches and anvils so that he'd keep parameters met. It would all depend on how the metal drew out...

Taking his tongs, Tristan set the first billet down on the anvil and took his first swing. He grinned as sparks flew, and praised Farore for the courage to seek out what he needed at great risk. His young arms continued to move steel at a rapid pace. When Tristan was crafting, he was at his most excited, yet most peaceful. It was just him, his metal, his tools, and the forge.

He had to remind himself to keep drinking water. It was a sticky evening, and the rain that fell before sunset only made things more humid. Cats in the forge also gave him solid reminders to take breaks and pet them. That was also the perfect time for a snack.

"Ok, it's a knife tonight. Tomorrow, we go for the big stuff. I have enough material to get what I want done. But my bow needs some love."

Tristan always worked fast, yet methodical. Some of the contraptions the owner of this forge had set up really helped too. He'd have to borrow these ideas for his workshop, and no, he would not be smithing on his ship.

This metal moved beautifully. It was a pain to smelt out of the ore, but he got the blend right, and it took flux well. It was almost time to quench. He'd sharpen after. It only took a small amount of thermocycling to get it where it needed to be. After shooing the cats away from the oil, he took the knife and plunged it deep into the drum. Green fire shot out of it, and he barely avoided getting scorched, but it turned out alright.

Examining the newly heat-treated blade, Tristan found no warps. The file skated right across its dark green surface. It should never have gone this easy the first time.

The grinder didn't quite like this metal, but it did eventually sharpen. This was turning out to be quite the fighter's knife! The blade itself was about 14 inches long; longer than he'd usually make, but he wanted to make sure it would hold up. This was an investment!

He didn't dare drill holes in the tang of the metal just yet. That'd be for another test knife. He opted to go for a tang that would remain hidden in the polished ash driftwood handle. Getting it fashioned and fastened along with a brass guard proved to take more time than anything.

Tristan resolved to craft a proper sheath for this new creation in the afternoon after he'd had a good meal and recovered his strength. He was dead tired, but sleep couldn't come yet. He had to test the knife rigorously.

It held an edge even after he drove it into the anvil from multiple angles. It cut with very little effort. And it even made a handy razor for his sideburns and their meticulous maintenance. Fruit stood no chance. This thing was sharp, it was light to handle, and it felt great in the hand!

http://dervishknives.com/wp-content/uploads/photo-gallery/nt/nt-bowie10.jpg

All good for a night's work.


Morning 1/Outset Isle

Tristan cleaned himself up and headed over to Tycho's Tap for breakfast. Yes, it was usually just a watering hole, but they had some surprisingly good food on certain days. It was worth the chance, because he was famished.

As he headed in, he noticed the tournament announcement again, as he had a few days prior during his time on shore. This would be Tristan's time to prove that the Sheikah martial arts were superior to others. Adjusting the glove on his left hand, he grinned and read over it again before turning to go into the door.

Summary: Tristan forges a new blade with intensity and method. He's quite proud of his work, but he didn't sleep. Now fairly tired, he opts to get some breakfast at the local watering hole.
 
Last edited:
Jan 8, 2013
44
22
England
Bingbang Bongbang, The Great Sea, Day 1

BANG-THUNK-THUNK!

And with that, the silent peace of the ocean finally returned for a moment, Bingbang’s wide bloodshot eyes staring onto her drum before ecstatically screeching with joy.

“YEESSSS! YEEEEESSSSS! I DID IT! MAGIC! IT’S REAL AND I DID IT!”

The hungry Bokoblin paused for a short moment to wolf down the fish she had summoned, shovelling it down her gullet in one quick bite.

“But what do I call it…” She pondered quietly to herself “The song of fish… no, that sucks… the song of hunger… what if it works for… MORE THAN JUST FOOD?!?! THE SONG OF SUMMONING!!!”

BANG BANG BANG BANG BANG

Focusing hard on the ocean before her and imagining a boat on the wide horizon as she drummed, eyes squinted as if to try and force something into existence. Belief in her newfound powers outweighing any logic or reason.

Summary: Bingbang Bongbang now thinks she’s magic and is attempting to summon a ship with a song.
 
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Link64Gogetta

No Longer a Noob
Nov 19, 2000
10,717
177
Shin/Day 1/Great Sea


Steel clashed against steel as the sailors all struggled to subdue the pirate that had come aboard. Shin had his mind set on jumping over to the other ship and attacking them on their own turf, but the chaos of crowded deck was making that difficult. Suddenly, in an instant, it was all over.

Someone, something, had appear out of nowhere, destroyed the pirate ship then zipped back to where it came from. For a moment everyone stopped and starred in awe at the sinking wreckage, but slowing, they all started to remember there was still a battle at hand.

Shin quickly turned back towards his current opponent but found the man had already dropped is weapons and thrown up his hands. “Hey look man; I just signed on to whatever ship offered the best pay. If it’s all the same, I’m happy to surrender and keep my head.”

“Yeah screw this,” another pirate yelled out, “I’m only here because these guys shanghaied me.”

Most of the pirates quickly threw down their weapons and surrendered. One of them made a blow-hearted attempt at rallying everyone to keep fighting going and take the ship, but a quick thinking officer slashed the man’s arm open then kicked him over board. Everyone looked on in horror as a school of Gyrog, attracted by the blood, encircled the pirate and tore him to pieces.

The captain took this moment to shout down from the poop deck, “Any man who surrenders and signs on to complete our voyage wage free will be pardoned. Anyone else, well feel free to jump in and try to swim to you mates in the life boats. Your call.

“Hi Shin.” Ethan waved as he appeared out of nowhere. “Funny running into you here. Don’t worry they are just leaving.” Ethan said, pointing to the ship the thing had come from. “Sorry to drop in like this. I may need your help tracking someone down.”

Shin looked at his magically appearing friend. He looked back towards the insanity around him and then looked back towards Ethan, “Yeah, sure, sounds fun.”

Summary:

Shin agrees to go with Ethan.
 

stache19

No Longer a Noob
Apr 21, 2001
8,417
794
Ethan, Shin’s Ship, Morning 1

Ethan felt like Shin was oddly agreeable, but then again there was no reason for him to be anything else.

“Listen Shin, I’m not sure you realize what I’m actually asking. I- Agh!” Ethan gripped his head as a piercing migraine dropped him to his knees. A deep ringing noise in the back of his head complemented the headache, and some sort of gurgling whisper hid just underneath the pain. He focused as hard as he could.

Short-term effects...Prepare....Head...Resolves on its own…

Though Ethan could only make out fragments, he quickly realized he was hearing a telepathic seed, a reminder someone else had planted in Ethan’s mind for him to remember as needed. The headaches were part of the reincarnation process.

“Ethan!” He heard Shin yelling his name. Realizing his eyes had been shut tightly, Ethan opened them and saw that the ship was in a completely different part of the Great Sea. A relaxed mixture of panic and confusion swept over the crew as everyone looked around for something to blame.

For the moment, Ethan thought it best not to tell the crew that the random teleport was a symptom of a man recovering from recent reincarnation. Not a contagious affliction, but he very much doubted that would be the primary concern of the crew. It would be okay to tell Shin, but only when they were somewhere more private.

“Ethan?” Shin’s voice was normal again. He was a smart kid, smart enough to suspect something. Ethan gave him a look that suggested silence was best, and then proceeded to join in the confusion of the rest of the group.

“I don’t know.” Ethan gripped his head as the piercing noise returned. But this time he wasn’t having reincarnation sickness, as others on the ship seemed to hear the banging noise too. A random crew member shouted out the cause first.

“There!” And there indeed was the source of the noise. A bokoblin very enthusiastically banging on a drum.

Ethan sighed and turned to Shin. “You sure you still want to join me on this adventure?”

Summary: Ethan has reincarnation sickness, which means he can get headaches and teleport everyone around him randomly. This caused the ship that Ethan and Shin are on to get teleported to Mistral and Bingbang’s location.
 
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Jan 8, 2013
44
22
England
Bingbang Bongbang, The Great Sea, Day 1

BANG BANG BANG BANG BANG

Poof

After some time of intent staring and vivid focus, the unexpected happened. She did it. Bingbang Bongbang had mastered the song of summoning and not only summoned a ship but a full crew to go with it. This day truly was going well for her.

“HOLY SHIT IT WORKS! I AM A GOD AMONG PATHETIC MORTALS!”

A gravelly yet feminine shrieking came from the small raft, now appearing clearly pathetic next to a real ship, the Bokoblin aboard delving into incoherent yet clearly arrogant noises while erratically slamming her drumsticks down in celebration.

“YOU THERE, MINIONS OF MINE, TOSS ME A ROPE FOR I AM YOUR SUMMONER, I HAVE CALLED YOU HERE AND YO-” Her voice cutting off as swords and bows were drawn “...or just, hey, we can be friends, lets be friends here my dudes, it’s all good, no need for any killin’ y’know? You scratch my back, i’ll scratch yours, that kind of thing…please?” Came a slightly more humbled rambling from a creature with quite literally nowhere to run after taking a little too long to realise that despite her newfound magic she may be out of her depth.

Summary: With a new confidence in her magical skills, Bingbang Bongbang arrogantly requests to board Shin’s ship.
 
Jan 2, 2003
7,603
473
Your Dreams
Mistral, The Great Sea, Day 1

“YEESSSS! YEEEEESSSSS! I DID IT! MAGIC! IT’S REAL AND I DID IT!”

Mistral giggled at the silly little Boko as it quickly devoured the first of dried fish... and got right back to banging on that noisy drum.

BANG BANG BANG BANG BANG

Mistral bobbed her head side-to-side with every beat of the drum.

Bise drifted in disapproval.

BANG BANG BANG BANG BANG

Mwerp.

A full galleon suddenly manifested in the Great Ocean right before the small raft.

“HOLY SHIT IT WORKS! I AM A GOD AMONG PATHETIC MORTALS!”

Mistral blinked a few times. Yeah, sure, the Boko saw it, too, but maybe there was a mass-hallucination caused by aural trauma...

Nope, still there. "Huh..."

Mistral refocused as the crew of the ship gained their senses and trained arrows on the Boko. "Uh-oh..." Bise wafted. "Yeah."

She guided the cloud down toward the ship, hoping to spare undue death. "Hey! Whoa, hey there! Hi! Hey... Yeah. Let's not act too rashly, huh? Like, you know, a single little beat-building Boko-buddy isn't bad to a big barge of boisterous boaters like yourselves! Plus, like, poor thing's starving to death and OH HEY WAIT IS THAT ETHAN HOW ARE YOU I HAVEN'T SEEN YOU IN AGES?!?"

Summary: Mistral intervenes to try to prevent Bingbang from dying and addresses the OH HEY IS THAT ETHAN?!?
 
Jan 8, 2013
44
22
England
Evalyn Vass, Windfall Island, Day 1

As the sun glimmered across the bright blue ocean, two figures lay in the long grass of the hillside gazing down at the docks. The young woman, with long black hair and a mischievous smile, watching through a rusting spyglass while her nervous blonde compatriot lazes on his back with a worried expression.

“We could always just, pay for a ferry… you know that right? It’s not even that much” Said the scruffy blonde.

The woman took her eyes from the docks for a moment and flicked a grin his way “Sure, we could, but where’s the fun in that? Where’s the adventure?”

“Evalyn, please, don’t act like this isn’t about the money. We both know it’s about the money”

“You think that one’s going to the fortress? They’re loading bombs so it’s safe to assume right?” Inquired the girl, expertly attempting to avoid the topic as her companion sits up to glare down at her.

“It’s probably only a rupee or two, I’ll pay for us both if it means we don’t have to stow away for once. We could sail comfortably, sit on the top deck, feel the wind in our hair… maybe if we ask nicely enough they won’t even make us pay, offer to help out, y’know?”

An awkward silence arose for a moment as Evalyn stubbornly continued to eye up ships and ignore the pleas of her long suffering best friend.

“This one is definitely going to the tournament, look at that guy… look at his biceps… i’d put money on him if you catch my drift”

“Do we even need to go? I mean, is it even worth it? We’ve made good money here so far, we could just stick around, maybe save up for a boat of our own. That’d be nice”

“Seriously Rufus, this guy looks like he could single handedly row that ship the the fortress. Maybe we can convince him to join our crew…”

“Are you even listening to anything i’m saying?” Grumbled the frustrated Rufus, lying back down in defeat.

“Sure I am, save up, settle down, boring. This town is dead and I want to be where the action is, go where the rich are going, steal whatever I can get my hands on. Tell you what, it’s been a while since we gambled, let's make a wager… i’ll stow away, go to the tournament, make a killing, and you stay here. When I get back, whoever made the least money gets… I don’t know.. If I win, you have to be my first mate for life and actually live a real life with me, no complaining. If you win…” Evalyn paused to think, a fiendish smile crossing her face and her tone shifting to one of mockery. “If you win, we settle down, together, i’ll be your wife like you’ve always wanted.”

As his frown intensified, Rufus couldn’t help but blush, his freckled face flushing with red as he flustered through his response. “I… no… we… it’d be nice I suppose… but not like that… I….”

Evalyn promptly spat in her hand in a deliberately unladylike fashion and held it out to shake “It’s a deal then?” she said before Rufus slowly reached out to meet her and shake.

“But you can’t take his ship” He said stubbornly, pointing at the handsome sailor with incredibly well toned arms, much to Eva’s dismay.

“Ugh, fine, i’ll find another one… actually… I just had a thought, maybe if I ask nicely enough I won’t even have to stow away, offer to help on board, that kind of thing… it’s worth a shot…”

And with that, she was up, pushing her spyglass down into a compact holster at her belt and cheerfully walking through the long grass, leaving Rufus behind with confidence that she was about to show him exactly what she was capable of.

Summary: Evalyn Vass sits with her long suffering friend Rufus Weatherby as he tries to convince her to live a less careless life. They make a bet and she heads down to the docks alone in search of a free voyage to the tournament.
 

Link64Gogetta

No Longer a Noob
Nov 19, 2000
10,717
177
Shin/Day 1/Great Sea

After the botched teleportation Ethan sighed and turned to Shin. “You sure you still want to join me on this adventure?”

Shin smiled, “Come on man, you know I’ve been dreaming of going on an adventure like this since I was little, so of course I’m game. Plus, I had to leave Katsumi behind, so going with you means I’m still with a friend.”

“YOU THERE, MINIONS OF MINE, TOSS ME A ROPE FOR I AM YOUR SUMMONER, I HAVE CALLED YOU HERE AND YO-” the bokoblin yelled out, but cut her decree short once she notice the plethora of bows pointing at her.

“We should probably do something about that before things get out of hand,” Shin sighed

As if by the hand of a trickster god, the second Shin uttered those words a woman riding a cloud appeared out of nowhere before the already tense crew. "Hey! Whoa, hey there! Hi! Hey... Yeah. Let's not act too rashly, huh? Like, you know, a single little beat-building Boko-buddy isn't bad to a big barge of boisterous boaters like yourselves! Plus, like, poor thing's starving to death and OH HEY WAIT IS THAT ETHAN HOW ARE YOU I HAVEN'T SEEN YOU IN AGES?

Shin looked up at the mysterious cloud woman, then at the crew whose eyes were now fixed Ethan and himself, then finally back to Ethan. “So, ex-girlfriend or..?”

Summary:

Shin reaffirms his desire to travel with Ethan while commenting on the lunacy around him.
 

stache19

No Longer a Noob
Apr 21, 2001
8,417
794
Sefton Axtell, New Hyrule Forest Regions

A Day in the Life


“Jones, narrate my entrance!”

“Right away!

Citizens wipe away your despair! Sefton Axtell has arrived to spare you from this fate! Look upon him and be in awe! For on this day you shall know his glory, know his awesome power!”

A man of such bland nature that he could not be described nevertheless gathered the attention of a grieving townsfolk, having been stricken with plague. The name he shouted, Sefton Axtell, was one of mystery to them. And yet, the words were magnetic and overpowering when spoke aloud such as they were. The belief that this man would save them was already as high as it could be.

“Thank you Jones.” Sefton himself stepped forward, stretching his arms wide in a pose fit for greeting a more enthusiastic crowd. He wore the outfit of a mage cosplaying as a non magical-magician. A common man using sleight of hand to pretend he was in possession of any kind of true magical talent. Sefton, for all objective purposes, looked unfit to be in public.

But he was radiant, his presence shifted the world to his favor. His true appearance did not matter, for it was not what the people saw. Though in this particular villages case, it seemed very few were actually paying Sefton much attention.

Sefton, sensing some urgency to the situation, took note of the sick and dying around him. It was not the first time he’d seen such a plague. Without further interaction with the crowd, he knelt down, peering up at the sky.

“Spirit of Light. Watcher of my destiny. Protector of my fate. Hear my plea! Sintar, please cure this village and these people!” Sefton was exaggerated in every word and movement. Emphasis had no limit in compounding its own effects. Absurdity was the secret ingredient to his power. He was a man so impressed with his own skill he appeared enthusiastically bewildered without a trace of arrogance. His skills were undeniable, or would be to anyone that watched them long enough.

After Sefton’s strange words and stranger movements, things were silent for a moment. And then it started. First with a single villager. Standing up from what had most certainly been the brink of death. Another followed, and then another. There were no lights, no rays from heaven, no glimpses of a god or goddess. It was merely Sefton maddenly flailing his arms. And then he was done. He swiftly turned on a heal, and left the village without another word. His assistant Jones, gave a smile and a nod to the crowd, and then proceeded after Sefton.



Sefton Axtell, New Hyrule Forest Regions

Another Day in the Life


Another day, another crisis to solve with the flick of his wrist. Life for Sefton was good. He even stopped keeping track of the date. What did it matter when he had no worries? He was bound in service and reverence to his Patron, the Light Spirit Sintar.

So lost was he in self adoration, it took no less than ten attempts by Jones to get Sefton's attention.

“So sorry Mr. Axtell, but I thought you should see.” Jones outstretched arm led in the direction of a very sick looking man. He had the appearance of someone cast out to die, whether that was the truth or not. Sefton was happy to assist.

“Jones…” Sefton’s tone changed to a somber one. “Please introduce me.”

“Yes of course.” Jones stepped over to the man, who looked up, saying nothing but the cries for help in his eyes. “Sefton Axtell is here to deliver your fate. Your journey will be the fuel of a billion futures, as this act ensures others flourish.” Jones lacked the booming enthusiasm of the village. He never made much of a show of these particular acts.

There were no wild motions. Sefton simply placed a hand upon the man’s forehead, smiling and closing his eyes. The man’s eyes mirrored Sefton's, slowly dropping shut.

The previously dying, and now dead body of the man slumped over even, rapidly decaying until only a skeleton remained. Upon it Sefton placed a small jewel, which fused itself with the skull of the skeleton, all of which was immediately consumed into the earth.

Summary: Sefton Axtell is introduced.
 
Last edited:

Oni_Link87

No Longer a Noob
Apr 27, 2001
8,175
166
Memphis, TN
Morla Clarigo / Great Sea, At Large / Day 1, Pre-Dawn

”What’s the word from topside?”

“Plenty of Rito traffic to and fro from Forsaken Fortress lately. Boss wants to head that way before the big party starts.”

“Is that why we’ve been pulling double shifts? My sinuses are killing me after two days in this boiler room.”

“She says it’ll mean double our money on the other side, so I ain’t complainin’, not yet anyway.”

“This weather vane we’re picking up better be worth it. You ask me, I’d say we’re lost, and this business about a new recruit is just a con 'til they think of something else.”

“I guess we’ll see, won’t we? Tonight’s supposed to be the night.”

Two Gorons dressed in black burlap overalls stabbed into a heap of coal piled up against the far wall across from the ship’s furnace. They shoveled their lumps of coal into the furnace rhythmically, one after the other as if dancing with the flames. Their gruff staccato grunts blended with the crunching, steaming coals into a percussion like boots marching on rock. As they worked, a low hum suddenly filled the small iron chamber. It steadily grew louder, and the Gorons paused in their toil as they realized the ship was surfacing.



A churning ripple slowly dipped concave into the ocean’s waves, gathering speed and radius as the bronze mast of a metallic, covered ship suddenly rose from beneath its murky waters. In plates of dark amber and polished steel and bronze, a wide, low vessel emerged bearing rounded windows along its sides where long wooden oars were now being extended. Alternating between every other oar was a wider opening for the long, iron barrels of an array of mounted guns. As it arose from the waters, its covered iron plates grinded apart to either side of the ship, revealing a traditional longship's forecastle underneath the mechanical shield.

At its bow, a polished mahogany figurehead looked skyward, carved in the likeness of a fierce snapping turtle. It was still night yet, and the polished eyes of the turtlehead and the brushed copper and steel of the ship’s hull glistened in the crystalline light of moon and stars bouncing off the waves under the clear, cold sky. The finely forged ship cut through the water like a knife, almost silent amid the waves in the dark of night, but it could not move on its own power for long.

A tightly sealed iron lid popped open along the foredeck, and a slender figure climbed out of it wearing a long, dark red maritime coat and black wide-brimmed, tricorner hat over auburn locks and pale green eyes. A slightly curved rapier hung sheathed at her hip, and a blunderbuss was slung snug in its holster along the other side. She held a lantern aloft and looked up towards her second mate, a stained and greasy bottle of rum in her other hand.

“Captain, we’ve spied land, the first sign of it in three days since we lost our coordinates,” a brown-feathered Rito with the face and talons of a hawk called down to her from a raised platform on the aft deck. Morla made her way to his side and gripped her fingers around the embossed bronze handles of the wheel at the ship’s helm.

“See? What I tell ya, Rhys—three days, just like the old man’s instructions said,” she quipped, handing off the bottle of rum to him. “And you all doubted me.”

“Begging your pardon, m’lady—it’s not often that the captain is right, and the stars are wrong.” The Rito took a swig of the bottle himself and stepped back from the helm with a sarcastically low bow, tucking the rum under his spotted wing.

“Something you may not know about me, bird,” Morla said, squaring her feet below her hips and taking the wheel. “I’m always right.”

She spun the wheel of the helm vigorously to starboard, and the Turtle Ship made its way east towards the green and mountainous island gradually fading into view amidst a distant fog, eerily moonlit as if the silver light were attracted to its shores. With the ship in navigation mode, her crew unfurled its black sails along the length of the high mast, emblazoned with her symbol of a Clock Face within a Crescent Moon, and a strong easterly wind picked up behind them as if to carry them towards the island’s central cove.


OOC: Morla and her crew surface from an undersea journey in their convertible submarine, the Turtle Ship, and arrive outside a mysterious mist-covered island that appears on no map. They head in towards the cove under darkness of night before the sun rises.
 
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Xiaber

Almost Not a Noob
Jun 6, 2010
3,816
669
Roy & Clara / Pawprint Isle


The hot, noon sun shined down on the grassy field that surrounded a large, egg-shaped stone. Next to the stone were two Hylians holding sickles. The male was surveying the grass before him as the female looked around in confusion. “Hey Roy,” the female finally spoke out.

Roy turned to look at the woman with a smirk. “Yes Clara?”

“What are we doing here?”

“Well I’m happy you asked!” Roy raised his hands up into the air while turning around to see the entire island. “We are here doing what no one has done before; we are stealing from the world!”

“Oh wow!” Clara shouted in excitement, but then instantly went back to a confused look and asked, “But how do we do that?”

“It’s simple!” Roy continued. “Beneath all of this grass lays an untapped trove of rupees! They say that little miniature men go around every night and hide rupees in the grass for people to hunt down.”

“Oh, like how there is all of those rupees under the ocean for people to find? We were starting to make quite a fortune grabbing those.” Clara pointed out.

“That’s right!” Roy agreed. Then, with his head lowered, sadly added, “If only that supposed ‘boat owner’ didn’t find us and chase us off.”

“Oh yeah, that was scary.”

“But all is good,” Roy assured Clara, “for our new fortune awaits right here in front of us!” And with that, Roy took his first swing with the sickle and cut some grass.


1 Month Later

A make-shift tent made of a tarp and two large sticks was covering the side of the egg-shaped rock. Next to the tent, the two Hylians could be seen swinging away at the grass.

“Hey Roy,” Clara said

Roy stopped his swinging of the sickle and looked at Clara with a smirk. “Yes Clara?”

“Are we really sure there are rupees hidden under this grass?”

“Why of course! Why else would the grass miraculously grow back to full height every night if not to conceal a treasure only those with true faith and patience may wield?”

“Oh, that makes sense!” Clara replied happily. “But wait, I think I remember hearing that only children could find things hidden by little people.” She held her finger to her chin in thought.

“If that were to even be true, I’m pretty sure our child-like hearts are good enough for us to still see everything! Don’t you worry, Clara, any day now and we will find this mysterious miracle the world is trying to hide from us!” And with that, the two quickly picked up their pace, swinging through the field.


Day 1

“Hey Roy,” Clara said.

Roy stopped his swinging of the sickle and looked at Clara with a smirk. “What is it, Clara?”

“We got a letter!” Clara waved the parchment in the air. “One of those flying Rito stopped by and gave it to me.”

“Well what does it say?” Roy asked.

LAST CALL: TOURNAMENT OF THE AGES!!!


His Royal Highness invites all brave warriors of sword and flame to compete in his name at the 14th annual Royal Tournament!
Festivities will begin on the day of the Equinox at Forsaken Fortress!

This year’s grand prize will be a ship and crew for the top three champions, with nothing less than full honorable knighthood upon fealty to the King’s Royal Navy!

Ferries and trains will be leaving from every settled isle for two days before! Competitors need only sign up when they reach the shore!

Come one, come all, for this once in a lifetime chance to prove you’re the greatest in all the Great Sea!!!


Clara finished reading the letter and looked at Roy, perplexed. “They’re inviting us to a tournament. Is that one of those things where people fight to the death? How barbaric!”

Roy looked on, just as confused, until a thought put a smirk back on his face. “Oh no, you see! It must be one of those tournaments of the mind, like a puzzle!”

“Oh, you think so? But why does it mention brave warriors of sword and flame?” Clara pointed out.

“Hmm,” Roy thought, “Ah, you see, they are obviously trying to set up an intimidation factor into this tournament! They don’t just want any old person to walk in and ruin the whole tournament.

“Oh, like what we did with that one girl back at the private oasis!” Clara added.

“Exactly, just like how we didn’t want that girl barging in on our thievery, they don’t want the whole kingdom barging in on this amazing tournament! But since we have been personally invited, I cannot see why we shouldn’t attend!” Roy dropped his sickle and walked towards the tent. “We shall head off to Windfall at once!”

“But Roy, how are we supposed to get anywhere without rupees?”

Clara’s question froze Roy’s movement. “That’s right... Ah, I’ve got it! We shall commit some piracy to procure an investment!” Roy held his chin in his hand as he thought. “Now then, how do you commit piracy again? Oh yeah! Step one: steal rupees! Step two: get on a ship! Yes, this should work nicely! There’s bound to be someone at Windfall with pockets full of rupees they do not need!

Summary: Roy and Clara are given one of the tournament flyers while working on their latest get-rich-quick plans. Thinking they have been personally invited to a non-combative tournament, they head to Windfall to find rupees to find a way to the tournament.
 
Last edited:

stache19

No Longer a Noob
Apr 21, 2001
8,417
794
Ethan, Shin’s Ship, Day 1

Wait a minute, resurrection sickness? I was resurrected years ago…

Ethan struggled with his own memories. Having resurrection sickness with the actual resurrection being years before simply did not happen. That thought triggered a eureka moment for Ethan, who reflexively smacked his own forehead upon the realization.

It wasn’t resurrection sickness, but something very similar. It was the effects of a powerful telepath nearby. Somebody with latent powers who either didn’t know about them or was unconscious. Either way, they were not in control of their abilities and had randomly hit Ethan.

“Are you okay?” Shin asked. Ethan realized he’d been standing in silence, only to smack himself in the face, followed by more silence. The crew still had their weapons trained on the bokoblin, Shin looked concerned, and now Mistral had shown up and was doing everything she could to make the situation louder. Everything seemed suspended in time, waiting for Ethan’s response.

Flexing his telepathic powers a little, Ethan transmitted a general attitude of calm, relaxing the crew of the ship. It only took a light touch, and Ethan eased back as one by one, the crew recognized the lack of danger posed by the previously drumming and yelling creature.

“That raft looks about ready to become one with the ocean.” Ethan motioned towards the piece of wood he referenced as a ‘raft’. It was some kind of miracle that this bokoblin hadn’t drowned. Perhaps not a miracle. Whatever the opposite of a miracle was. Ethan honestly wasn’t sure if he had accidentally willed the crew to act, or they felt pity on their own, but within minutes they were helping the creature onto the ship, or at least making way for it.

“Mistral.” Ethan felt awkward around her after the incident two years prior. “Still hanging out with your cloud I see. I uh, hope it’s doing well…” Luckily for Ethan he was saved by another impromptu headache. He shot Shin a warning glance, and as the pain consumed his mind, he could see Shin mouthing words of warning to the crew again.

Time lost meaning as his head pounded, and it felt like hours later as Ethan pushed his eyes open. The ship was gone, as was the crew. The exceptions being Shin, Mistral, and the drumming shouting Bokoblin.

“...I don’t know where the crew went.” Ethan preemptively offered the answer to Shin, assuming the question would be asked. “But we appear to be…” Ethan looked around the dimly lit cavern. “In a cave.” It wasn’t clear where the light sources were even coming from, nor did Ethan see any entrances or exits. He took stock of his new allies trapped with him in this unknown place. The competent, but very inexperienced Shin. The confusing oddity that was Mistral. And a loud bokoblin.

“We can’t figure out where we are or where the ship went without first finding a way out of here. Let’s-” Ethan took one step forward, and felt a switch depress beneath his right foot. The sound of stone grinding against stone could be heard, and two hundred feet to his right, part of the wall had raised up. “Go through this apparent hidden door I just found.”

Summary: Ethan, Shin, Mistral, and Bingbang are transported to a secret cave dungeon in an unknown location. Ethan solves the first puzzle by accident when he steps on a hidden switch. He leads the group through a revealed doorway into the next room.
 

redawson2

Ink Addicted
Jul 8, 2003
12,406
242
Silas Vindr/ ???/ Late Night 0

With his hunger sated, the moon god had taken to the night sky once more to resume his cyclical pursuit of his sister sun across the heavens. Or so the Father of the People and their ancestors would have you believe. Silas was not so certain anymore. He questioned this, the story of the darkness loving Fox and the Hare, he who was the shining believer of daylight, and many more things that the shamans and the spoken word histories of the People would have him believe.

Whatever the cause or reason, the young hunter found himself thankful for the added light on this night, but not so thankful that he failed to conceal himself. It had become second nature now, but he still reveled in the sensation brought on by asserting his dominance over the flow of the Breath Soul. The push and pull against the spirits of the wind and the world envigorated him and it was with a satisfied grin that he pulled the island mists close, cloaking himself in their concealing embrace.

His silver streaked coal black hair, flattened by the dampness, clung to his face and neck. The wolf pelt cloak, open to reveal the bronzed and scarred skin of his chest hung heavily over his seal skin pants and boots. A dagger carved from a single piece of glossy black stone hung in a sealskin sheath at his waist secured by a length of woven rope and the jawbone of the Gyorg he had killed on his first spirit hunt was slung across his back. With the mist cradling him, he was a wraith in the night as he climbed higher up the side of the stony spire.

The mighty Helmaroc was feigning sleep when he reached her perch, she knew it was him and she wanted to know why he had returned after he had already bested her and claimed one of her tail feathers as his prize.

“Be at ease mother Helmaroc. I have no quarrel with you. I bring a gift for the young. An offering of peace.”

Silas removed two large fish from inside his cloak and tossed them into the nest. The two young Helmaroc snatched the fish from the air and immediately began gorging themselves on the fresh fish. Silas smiled as they went about their business and turned to face the rising sun. The stories would have you believe that Malina had avoided Anningan for another night and in so doing, brought forth her light once more as the first light of day pierced the darkness. But still, he doubted.

A disturbance in the waters caught his eye and as he turned his attention to it, his breath caught in his throat. An enormous sea turtle had begun to surface off of the coast of the island. Trembling, Silas wondered if all of his doubts had been wrong. Had Sassuma Arnaa, the Mother of the Deep, come to pass judgement on the People. On him? On he who had questioned the very existence of the gods?

Steadying himself, Silas squared his shoulders. He would meet Sassuma Arnaa on his terms. Reaching out he brushed against the mother Helmaroc, beckoning to her with Breath and spirit. “I who have bested you and named myself master of your Breath Soul have need of your wings. Fly me to the beach so that I may face the daughter of Anigut the Creator. Then you must flee as I entreat with her on all our behalf.”

The great bird dipped its head and splayed her wings wide in a show of submission allowing Silas to scramble onto her back.

The wind whipped his still damp hair and his sodden cloak billowed behind them as the mother Helmaroc took to the skies, circling her nest once before dropping into screaming dive. Silas saw through her eyes and beheld the transformation of the mighty sea turtle as it morphed into something else. Some sort of sea faring vessel. Whatever this was, whoever it was encroaching their waters. It was no goddess. Silas freed the jawbone from his back and laid it across his lap as the Helmaroc circled the beach.

Summary:

Silas brings fish to the children of the Helmaroc whose tail feather he took and then sees a strange creature surface off of the coast. He asserts his power over the bird and has it fly him to the beach to investigate.
 

Link64Gogetta

No Longer a Noob
Nov 19, 2000
10,717
177
Shin/Under Ground Cave/Day 1

The pass Ethan had discovered was narrow, but they all managed to squeeze though somehow. It was at the end of the passage that the party came to its first true obstacle, a massive crevasse far too wide to jump across. “Is this supposed to be one of those leap of faith type things?” Shin asked the group.

“Huh, what do you mean?” Mistral responded having already crossed the fissure on her cloud. “And why are you guys just standing there, hurry up.”

Shin was rendered speechless in pure marvel over Mistral’s complete lack or personal or situation awareness.

Ethan spoke up to get everyone back on track, “Doubtful, there’s too much mist in the air for that. You’d be able to see any hidden ledges or magical updrafts.” The telepath effortlessly levitated himself across the crevasse, joining Mistral on the other side.

“Right,” Shin said as he readied his grappling hook. Once he managed to secure it to an outcropping overhead he grabbed Bingbang and swung across. “...just a plain old hole in the ground then.” He was actually a bit disappointed over the mundanity of the situation, but that quickly faded when they got the next opening.

Awaiting them was a large, horned, cyclops which threw a large boulder at them as soon as they came into view. Luckily the beast missed, but the impact shatter the rock and Ethan was forced to shield the group from the debris. “He’s unusually aggressive for a Hinox.” Ethan noted.

“Hey, we all have our bad days, right? I’ll take care of this though.” Shin said as he drew the flaming sword he’d inherited from his father. He decided to stick with just the single larger sword this time around since he’d figured he’d need extra power against something as big as the Hinox.

Shin made what looked like a blind charge strait for the beast but at the last second slid under its legs narrowly avoiding its fist. Thanks the ground being wet and made of smooth stone, Shin’s momentum managed to carry him all the way the far wall. The swordsman pushed himself off the ground at the last moment the kicked off the wall to launch himself back toward the Hinox. Shin swung as hard as he could, but to his shock seemed to only slash at the air.

Through equal measures of luck and skill Shin managed to land on his feet despite the slick surface he was fighting on. Turning back to face the giant, he noticed a large amount of steam coming from both the creatures front and its back, likely where he would have struck. It seemed he had somehow he’d passed strait though it, but the heat of his blade was causing it to evaporate.

The Hinox swung at him again but the blow was weak enough that Shin was able to block with his sword. Nevertheless, because of the lack of friction on the ground he was still forced back several feet, but once he settled his footing he noticed the creature’s fist was steaming as well.

Shin had spent enough time sparring with a certain summoner in training to know exactly what he was up against. “Well that’s just great, an elemental. It’s probably made of the mist.” He briefly looked back at his friends. He knew he simply needed to evaporate the thing with a single strike, and he could do it using the Burst attack his father had taught him. There was just one problem; the others would be hit too.

“Look, I need you guys back out across that crevasse. I need to boil thing guy and you’ll just get caught up in it.” Shin said as he readied himself for his next attack.

Summary:

Shin battles an irritated Hinox, but discovers it’s actually made out of mist. He can beat it quickly using a Burst with his father’s flaming sword but he needs everyone else to back out of the blast zone first.
 

stache19

No Longer a Noob
Apr 21, 2001
8,417
794
Sirius Fulmaren, Crescent Moon Isle, Day 1

After living in the same grand, overindulgent, ridiculous setting for so long, Sirius had longed for something simpler. He had built and rebuilt the same magical laboratory for hundreds of years, always in grand fashion. His labs of the past had looked more like castles, and felt like dungeons.

Being unable to truly let much of anything go, Sirius had instead opted to put his original laboratory on the backburner, locking it up and transporting it to the bottom of the ocean. A fresh start, but always with that small chance of opening a door back into tradition.

Now he had a much more modest setup, a two story cottage with a thatched roof crammed with traditional alchemist equipment, and a few other oddities. In addition, it had a secret basement or two, but none of the sprawling insanity of his labs of old. Instead Sirius got to feel the cool ocean breeze as he worked, and sun on his face. It let him pretend he was a proper mortal, instead of whatever horrifying abomination that actually composed his being.

Upon the east wall, a massive grid was laid out. Working with his daughter Severa, and other key allies, Sirius had put together a list of names and faces. Each grid square held a single face or name. They had tried to order the list by the ease at which the individuals could be found, but it was mostly guesswork and was effectively a random list. He was preparing to add a few more names to the list, based on attendance numbers for the tournament.

Knock Knock Knock

Sirius waved his hand through the air in response to the knocks, and his front door swung open. A man and a woman, both wearing ceremonial burial robes, stood in the doorway. Each one had a rather deep and recent looking scar down the left side of their temple, and their skin looked like what most would consider ‘dead and rotten’.

“I’m glad you two could make it. Have you been awake long?” Sirius turned to his guests, who looked disoriented and exhausted. “Please, sit.”

Sirius had expected these two, but not so soon. He had sent out a trusted ally to carry out the ressurection ritual. Unfortunately the bodies had long vanished, so Sirius had to get a little creative with that part. He figured it had been long enough that at least one of them had a tongue by now, and could explain what happened.

“Who woke you up? Was it the goron?”

In response the womans mouth opened in a scream, and black sludge began pouring out of it.

“Teval, I need help now!” Sirius shouted. He heard a furious screech as a Rito soared through the doorway into the pair of undead. Hastily Sirius searched for several key ingredients in his lab, a simple concoction known to put the undead into a sort of stasis. He swirled the ingredients up while his guard Teval held the zombies down. They had now switched to screaming in between spitting up sludge. Not the most tense situation Sirius had been in, but easily a top contender for grossest.

Potion ready he filled a syringe and injected it into both Zombies. Within a few seconds they each went rigid and stopped making any noise.

“Have the others help you bring them into the basement. Keep them locked up. Someone wanted them to come here, and might be following up on this little gift in the near future.” Sirius commanded Teval, referring to the other three bodyguards, Jango, Irwin, and Huck. They weren’t real bodyguards, but a Rito band that had over the years made heavy use of technology provided by Sirius. Sirius didn’t get directly paid for the arrangement, but was essentially able to gather huge volumes of information from the crowds of each concert they played. So he got paid.

He kept them around as bodyguards because the technology they used also heavily augmented their combat capabilities, general strength, and stamina.

Sirius frowned as the four of them carried the bodies out, mumbling under his breath.

“Sorry Tillorn, Aurelia. I might have been too late for you two.”

Summary: Sirius is toiling away in his new nostalgic alchemy beach cottage when two zombies show up out of the blue. Finding them quite hostile, Sirius has his musician bodyguards lock them up in the basement.
 
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Cream04849

Don't Tase Me, Bro!
Jul 14, 2001
5,859
200
Portland, ME
Majin Murkscale - Outset Isle - Morning One

The door to the Tap swung open and Majin and another attempted to pass through all at once, Majin outbound as the other was passing through to enter. They bumped hard into one another and Majin, being as ever the smaller of the two, bounced off of his obstruction and staggered a step before he regained his equilibrium.

"Watch where you're goi-" Majin cut off as he craned his head up to look into a face bearing an affable expression, framed by long ivory hair and punctuated by gleaming crimson eyes. "Oh, Bryseis, wasn't expecting to see you for a few days yet."

He moved aside a step and let his acquaintance--not a friend per se, as Majin had too few of those--through the door and into the front room of Tycho's. The youth cast a scanning gaze around the room, probing the corners and the dark, shadowed spots carefully, an altogether familiar trait to Majin and one that he knew Tristan had picked up from his Sheikah heritage. In that, as with several things, they were very much alike.

Majin knew a little something about Tristan, about the name he carried. Bryseis. That was one of those family names that had come to bear special significance in Hyrule, and on this Great Sea that had flooded in and drowned it. Sheikah they were, and more than that.

Wordlessly they strode up to the bar counter opposite the front door and slid onto stools. Tycho was still out back, they could each hear the scuffing of feet on the floorboards in the back, the creak of steps as the proprietor bore his burden up from the cellar, grunting softly all the way. A moment later he appeared through the door with a heavy wooden cask balanced on his right shoulder, stepping carefully.

"So what did you manage to dredge up this time?" Majin asked as he played with the folded sheaf of parchment with the tourney announcement that had been posted on the inside of the front door.

"Take a look," Tristan said, reaching down and plucking out a dagger that had been tucked into his belt, rather than sheathed, and twirled it casually through his gloved fingers. The dark green blade seemed to catch the light of the lamps in odd ways. "Darksteel."

Majin inspected the blade carefully. He knew some little bit about the properties of darksteel, as well as how rare the mineral was and how difficult to work. But for all of its quirks, it made weapons and tools of nigh-unparalleled quality, and this blade seemed little different.

"Timely," Majin mused as Tycho had set about using the enormous maul to drive the spigot into the ale barrel. While the man went about his business without so much as a glance at his two patrons, Majin pulled the parchment from under his bandolier and unfolded it on the counter top, pushing it to the space between them. "I assume you've seen this? They were posting them before you last pulled out of the harbor. Might present some unusual opportunties, if you have a mind to see what kind of contracts spring up."

Tristan examined it for a moment, but was cut off before he could answer as Tycho finally finished with the replacement keg and turned to ask after their orders. Majin wasn't hungry, and it just so happened that as Tristan conversed with the owner, Majin caught sight of a Rito sticking his head through the door which had been pushed just slightly ajar.

"Excuse me," Majin murmured, sliding down from his stool as Tristan was ordering what sounded like enough food for three meals, rather than one breakfast.

Taking the moment's distraction, he crossed the room to the door and pushed the Rito outside into the street, following and letting the door click shut at his back. With his right hand he made a waving motion up the back of his neck as though he were pulling up a hood. A well of inky shadow that had compressed and conformed on the inside of the collar to his studded leather coat seeped up in the wake of his hand's passage and in an instant it was as though he wore a hood of black cloth, deep as a clouded midnight, concealing all but the nostrils of his reptilian snout.

"What are you doing here?" he asked sharply, steering the Rito down the steps, around the railing, and around again into the narrow alleyway separating Tycho's from the apothecary next door. He was roughly Majin's height, and his plain garb did not announce him for a courier, though Majin knew exactly what he was. Circumspect, rarely a good sign. "I told your boss I wasn't interested in any more of his errands after what he tried to ask of me last time."

"You'll have to take that up with him, agent," the courier replied with a shrug. Hands went to the back slung across his chest and extracted a letter, folded carefully and enclosed with a wax seal that Majin knew only too well. "Once I put this in your hand, it's no business of mine what you do."

Majin grunted and snatched the letter. Once firmly in his grasp, the Rito courier took to the air with a few strong flaps of his wings and disappeared over the apothecary eaves. Majin broke the seal with a crooked finger and unfurled the parchment. His eyes scanned over the missive, written in a tight, cramped hand, and then quickly crumpled it as soon as he finished. Holding it tight in his right first, he let moisture seep out from his palm and into the letter, slowly soaking it until it deteriorated between his fingers. Once the letter was little more than wet tatters, any ink smudged beyond recognition, he shook the water droplets and bits of wet parchment off into the dirt and then headed back around the mouth of the alley and into the front room of Tycho's, where Tristan still sat at the bar, now with huge plate mounded with steaming food set before him.

With a hand gesture as though he was lowering the hood of a cloak, the shadow cowl wavered and dissipated in wisps of black vapor as Majin clambered back up onto the stool at Tristan's right hand. All the while the words of the missive wriggled uncomfortably in the back of his thoughts, along with all too many private and important messages that had been left for him since his waking. None of them would lead to anything other than trouble, and he'd caused more than enough of that however many centuries lay between then and now.

Still, he mused to himself, a job was a job and Majin was who he had always been.

He set a hand down on the tournament invitation, upon which rested Tristan's utensils, and drummed his fingers to draw Tristan's eyes up from his laden fork.

"So," he said with particular casualness, "back to what I was saying about contracts... I might have a line on a job that'll take me up to Forsaken Fortress anyway. Going to coincide with the big event it seems. Should be plenty of work for two, if you're interested."

Summary: Majin bumps into Tristan and they go back inside to chat. Tristan shows off his new blade and they talk about the tourney invite. Majin intimates that he might have some work for another individual who shares his skill set, then gets pulled outside as a nondescript Rito messenger arrives. He receives a "secret" letter, which he reads and then promptly destroys with water magic, then heads back inside and goes about the business of recruiting.
 
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Cream04849

Don't Tase Me, Bro!
Jul 14, 2001
5,859
200
Portland, ME
Admiral Locke Dashar - The Midnight Wolf (Two Eye Reef) - Morning One

The aftcastle swayed beneath the Admiral's boots as he stood at the wheel of his flagship--one gloved hand resting on the lacquered wooden railing--and looked down over the quarterdeck. The Midnight Wolf and the other ships of his squadron rested at anchor safely within the sheltering walls of Two Eye Reef, poised at the southernmost edge of the Great Sea, looking out beyond the line of ethereal locomotive tracks and toward the seemingly endless horizon.

Elsewhere along this southern border the bulk of the South Fleet was fanning out, broken up into discrete squadrons of five or six warships apiece, sailing from end to end. to and fro along the commercial shipping lanes as they so often did. But on this day they were not patrolling for smugglers and pirates; such trivial nuisances did not bring the Admiral himself along with the full force of the Talon Guard down from the Tower of the Gods or their primary anchorage at Six Eye Reef. No, it was not pirates or smugglers, or other petty criminals who had so agitated the Fleet of the Isles.

It was dark tidings that had brought Locke south to take command of the South Fleet at the behest of King Daphnali. There had been reports of late, disturbing ones, of merchant cogs vanishing in the expanse of ocean south of the Spirit Tracks. For years the reaches beyond the border created by the tracks had been more dangerous than the seas within, but even with piracy at its height in recent years never had there been so many disappearances, so many lost shipments and lost rupees. Those losses had begun to affect the royal coffers, and privateers upon whom their commerce relied had begun to complain that they could no longer count on the protection of the Council. Taken to its logical extreme, if matters weren't rectified in the southern reaches and soon, it could have devastating effects on the solvency of the Isles. With a burgeoning population and limited landmass upon which to farm, trade with the mainland nations was critical to the security and prosperity of the Great Sea, and so with their losses continuing to mount, King Daphnali had personally dispatched Locke south with the Talon Guard to lead the investigation.

That was why Locke was here, now, waiting at the stern of his ship with his free hand casually fingering the glittering basket-hilt of his cutlass, when the Rito messenger alighted on the aftcastle railing beside him and then hopped down, immediately snapping off a rigid salute. The loose-fitting naval coat with the wing badge named her a scout for the Fleet of the Isles--Locke knew that all too well, having been the one who had taken such pains to integrate the different peoples of the Great Sea into a single force. Every ship of the fleet counted a Rito flyer among its crew, making coordination between the different squadrons, regional fleets, and the Tower of the Gods faster and more secure than relying on standard post.

"Scout Trestyl reporting in from the 3rd Squadron as ordered, Admiral," she said in the usual perfunctory manner. Locke inclined his head toward her instead of returning the formal salute.

"At ease, sailor." The Rito immediately settled into a more relaxed stance with her wings crossed behind her lower back. "You have the report from Captain Hurin?"

With a nod, she unfolded her wings and then reached inside the flap of the carrier satchel slung across her shoulder, drawing out a furled sheaf of parchment and handing it over to him.

"The report comes from a merchant who said she and her crew had to abandon their ship in their only lifeboat. Two trading ships heavy with produce bound for Outset Isle and a plan to reload their holds there for the return trip. A few days out from Outset they claim to have encountered a maelstrom of incredible power, 'like nothing we've ever heard of or seen' to use her exact words. Formed as if out of nowhere, she said, and pulled the first ship down before she could give an order. She managed to get at least some of her crew to the lifeboat before her ship was pulled apart after it. They were lucky to make it away from the vortex at all, if half of what she had to say was true."

"If it was true?" Locke asked of Scout Trestyl, cocking an eyebrow as he eyed the report in his hands. "You don't believe her?"

"Whirlpools forming out of nowhere under a clear blue sky, sir? I can't say I've ever heard of such a thing. And one with the force to rip two large trading cogs apart to boot?"

He nodded absently. He could see the scout's point and understand her skepticism. He was of a mind to treat this in a similar fashion, but for the simple fact that this was the first survivor that they'd managed to find of all of the ships that had been disappearing of late. It was the only eye-witness account that they had to go on at present, and so he had to treat it as though it were feasible.

"Was there anything else, sailor?" The Rito blinked and looked around, as though purposely avoiding his eyes. He cleared his throat loudly to bring her gaze back around to meet his own. "Well?"

"Just the last thing the merchant captain said before she lost consciousness again is all," Scout Trestyl replied hesitantly. "They were all severely dehydrated by the time one of our patrols came across them floating out on the doldrums. She just said it was a feeling she got from the maelstrom. Not wind or wet or cold, but a feeling of... wrongness, as though the vortex was entirely unnatural, out of place. She said she felt the wrongness of it down to her bones."

He nodded again, this time closing his fist tight around the written report as he did. The words on the page relayed the same message that Scout Trestyl had spoken aloud to him, but there was a difference hearing them from the tongue of another. He felt a pit of ice forming in his stomach as he contemplated the import of this account.

He took a sharp breath and exhaled. "Return to Captain Hurin and let him know that your report has been delivered. Relay my orders that the 3rd Squadron is to sail for the coordinates that we've received from this merchant as soon as you arrive. From there you're to carry that message further east to the 2nd Squadron as well, out by Five Star Isles. I'll be sending Scout Aera of my own crew west with the same orders to the 1st Squadron over on the other side of Headstone Island. I mean to bring the entirety of the South Fleet out beyond the Spirit Tracks to that location to investigate. We'll start at the exact point where this merchant woman claims the vortex formed and then we'll spiral out from there until we find... whatever it is we're looking for."

The Rito Scout straightened and then snapped off another quick salute. He returned it this time, and without another word she took to the sky again, shooting up into the morning air until she was little more than a speck of dark against the bright blue expanse. He watched her until her powerful wings carried her beyond the reach of his vision. Then he lowered his eyes back to the deck and cast his gaze back down to the rest of his crew below. He drew a deep breath again, exhaled sharply, and stepped to the railing to begin giving them their orders.

Summary: Admiral Locke Dashar of the Fleet of the Isles is anchored inside Two Eye Reef on the southern edge of the Great Sea responding to recent reports of merchant ships and other commercial vessels disappearing beyond the southern border. He receives a report from a Rito Scout from the 3rd Squadron--stationed further east near Angular Isles, of a massive and unnatural maelstrom forming out of nowhere and pulling down two merchant ships and allowing only the captain and a few crew members to escape on a lifeboat. As it is their first and only eye-witness lead, he gives orders for the entire South Fleet to pass outside the border formed by the Spirit Tracks, converge on the coordinates where the maelstrom appeared, so that they can begin to investigate.
 
Jan 2, 2003
7,603
473
Your Dreams
Mistral/Caved Und Grounder/Day 1

“Look, I need you guys back out across that crevasse. I need to boil thing guy and you’ll just get caught up in it.” The bravado-y one shifted into a different stance.

Definitely charging up for some sort of overblown something-or-other. This'll be fun to wat-

"Wait!" Mistral shouted in a moment of realization. "Over-blown!"

She squinted at the Mistox. Mist... ral. Heh.

From... well, from nowhere (but also kinda from Mistral? she didn't alway get how it worked, but, hey, it worked!), a light breeze kicked up and the temperature ever so subtly changed. The Hinox of mist... evaporated in the soft wind.

Mistral floated down beside Mr Sword. "Hey. I'm gonna need you back out across the... uh... crevis.. crabass... pit-thingie. Kay?"

Summary:
Mistral uses weather manipulation to make it not-so-misty in here. Woo.
 

Oni_Link87

No Longer a Noob
Apr 27, 2001
8,175
166
Memphis, TN

Morla Clairgo / Great Sea / Day 1

The shimmering bronze length of the Turtle Ship cut across the waters at lightning pace, a supernatural force propelling it from its arcane mechanical engines. The breaking sun glanced across its gleaming metals and through the great white arcs of foam spraying from its two rear propellers. At its helm, Morla gazed along the coast of the distant isle and tried to discern what lay behind its mists.

“Is that a…bird?”

She squinted in the dawn halflight and mist surrounding this forbidden island, her red locks twisting in the wind as the ship accelerated. Short wings of steam lanced out from the Turtle hull’s four large, mounted cannon-limbs. As her vessel gained speed, Morla’s first mate, Rhys, got a closer look.

“Not just any bird, a Helmaroc. Sovereign of the mountaintop you see to the south, no doubt. One wonders what ore may be buried under her nesting grounds.” The grey spotted Rito nudged Morla’s spyglass to the right as she carefully surveyed the topography. “But there’s…something else,” his voice fell to whisper.

“Something else, you say?” Morla lowered the spyglass and returned her attention to the mast and the choppy waters ahead, leaving the scouting to her avian lieutenant. Rhys had worked for the Rito King of these waters as a fledgling, and his services as chief intelligence officer hadn’t come cheap. But this wasn’t the only forbidden locale on their itinerary, and Morla’s voyage was to take her deep into the whirling pool of the Great Sea’s island nations. She would come to rely on him only the more as their journey continued. “Spit it out, wingman.”

“Yes, captain. She bears a rider.”

At that, Morla popped her spyglass back open and peered along the coast, spotting the great bird soaring over the beaches. Its chromatic plumage glistened in the morning light, and its piercing yellow eyes unexpectedly met hers even at this impossible distance, as if it knew where to find her at a level deeper than sight. It seemed to take up half the sky, but as it turned slowly towards her, she saw a small humanoid figure on its back. His grey cloak seemed to merge with the fog encompassing the beachhead, its turning clouds draped from the black and red wings of his mount.

“So? He seems a wretched thing. Do they not often accept riders?”

“No, captain. Most unusual. And their chieftain is nowhere in sight. This may be the seer himself.”

“Hm. Maybe not so wretched after all. What do you say, Rhys, shall we test the wares?” She lowered her glass again and pulled back a tall bronze lever attached the floor at her feet. “Word to the crew, we’re taking the beach: Arrowhead formation.”

Rhys leaned toward the bell of a large copper horn attached the deck and shouted Morla’s orders down a copper pipe leading belowdecks. After a beat, the Turtle Ship picked up steam.

When the island came within ramming speed, a low groaning emerged from the hull of the Turtle Ship, and a flaming light lapped at the cracked mouth of its beak and beady eyes. As the first rays of sun pierced over the horizon, Morla’s ship crashed into the shore and sliced into its shallow dunes in a fanning cloud of sand. As the ship ground to a halt with an echo of churning metal, the Turtle’s limbs extended into spiny, bronze cannons. With the two starboard cannons trained on a spot twenty yards out from the ship, Morla herself descended a retractable ladder welded into the hull of the ship with a graceful slide. As her boots hit the sand, the Helmaroc touched down just out of the two cannon’s accuracy.

She didn’t draw her sword or cock her firearm, but she kept the shining brass of her scabbard and holster visible with the length of her red coat pulled back around her waist. The silhouettes of the ship’s crew lined the deck of her ship, each of them ready to follow their captain into combat. The bird’s mysterious rider remained high atop his regal avian mount, clutching the down feathers at the back of its neck as she drew near.

“You must be Silas,” she called out in a high, clear voice, crossing her eyes as she planted her feet in the sand a few paces away from the strutting roc. “I see your old one couldn’t make it, but I don’t blame him for sleeping in. Remind me again why we had to do this so early?”

She stretched, standing in place, and yawned dramatically. “Just call me the early bird,” she joked, gesturing toward the Helmaroc. “And that makes you the worm?”

She took two steps closer to the bird, eyes up toward the man in the cloak riding its back, and rested one hand on the butt of her blunderbuss. “I hope you’ve said your valedictions. Forgive me, but I’m loathe to visit your culty little village if we can avoid it. Now come along, we haven’t much time before the equinox.”


Summary:

Morla breaches the beach of the mysterious island with her ship’s stationary amphibious form. With two cannons trained on her, she descends the ship and crosses the beach to confront Silas on his Helmaroc mount. She seems to already know him, and asks him to come with her at once.
 

tristandark

Almost Not a Noob
Sep 3, 2005
898
159
Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Tristan/Outset Isle [Tycho's Tap Room]/Morning 1

The fatigue had really thrown Tristan off. Normally he'd be a lot more aware so as to avoid bumping into people on his way somewhere; his routes were carefully planned most of the time for efficiency and for minimal contact with others unless he purposed to find someone. Bumping into Majin, however, was a good thing. Tristan had some enemies, and he was glad Majin wasn't one of them.

When the Tokay greeted him, Tristan nodded in response and gave a lopsided grin as his acquaintance stepped aside to let him go through. He motioned behind his back in a subtle fashion to advise to follow.

Tycho stood at the bar taking down some inventory notes, and didn't really say much when he saw a Sheikah and a Tokay settle up to the bar. He welcomed all types in this establishment, provided they kept things mostly civil and had rupees to spend.

Tristan was eager to show his handiwork to Majin after a long night of smithing. Majin seemed slightly impressed at the find as well.

"I managed to find a few veins and will most likely be going back for more after the tournament. How someone didn't claim it yet surprised me, but eh, I will take it as long as it's there."

Majin showed him one of the fliers for the tournament. Tristan grinned again upon seeing it, eager to test himself.

"Oh, absolutely did. I'll be entering. That's why I made the knife. Might make more if I have some time, but you're right. Can't go wrong on the lookout for some extra action."

The Tokay abruptly excused himself while the barkeep was bringing food back from the kitchen. Tristan was almost always a big eater. It was a combination of his youth, his tiredness, and the caloric high-protein requirement of his physical fitness regimens. The young man pushed himself all day, every day. And sometimes he pushed himself for a huge plate of bacon and tall glasses of orange juice in the morning as a victory dance.

Tycho knew who to order his meat from. The bacon was sublime as Tristan tucked into it, but he kept his awareness on point and saw Majin come back to the stool. It was probably a good thing he wasn't using utensils. His face was covered with grease as he reached for a banger that he dipped into some gravy-soaked mashed spuds.

"I like how you think. Count me interested. When do we ship out?"

Summary: Tristan is firmly committed to a high protein and moderately high carbohydrate laden diet that would clog arteries with little effort. When Majin brings up the potential for a job in the same area where he's going to be in a few days, the opportunity sounded too good to pass up. He expresses interest in the job for two and pigs out on some bacon, sausage, and mashed potatoes.
 

Link64Gogetta

No Longer a Noob
Nov 19, 2000
10,717
177
Shin/Under Ground Cave/Day 1

The Hinox suddenly dissipated into nothing and a second later Mistral floated down besides Shin, "Hey. I'm gonna need you back out across the... uh... crevis.. crabass... pit-thingie. Kay?"

Shin stared at her with a dumb-founded expression as he tried to decipher just what the woman had said. Eventually he figured out she was the one who’d destroyed the Hinox and now she was trying to mock him. “I’ll admit that was impressive, but your trash talking still needs work.”

“Good to know we have a mage with us though. All and all the place should be pretty easy to deal with,” he said as he sheathed his sword and started his way down the next tunnel. Before long the group stumbled upon another opening, this time the room was filled with pol’s voice.

“Ok, we’re up against a bunch of bunny hoods. Ethan, your cave is trying to cute us to death,” Shin joked as he readied his sword and long dagger. One of the pols’ jumped at him and he easily swatted it away but oddly it seemed to have no effect.

The creature leapt at him again, this time it jumped high enough that Shin was able to see the large gapping maw on it underside that could easily swallow his head whole. Instinctively he jump back to dodge but accidently ended up smashing it elbow into a stalagmite that was hidden in darkness.

The sudden pain caused him to yell out, “DAMN IT!” and in the moment the pol’s voice that was attacking him simply popped like a balloon. “Ok, well, that’s thing.”

Summary:

The group enters the next room which is filled with Pol’s Voice. One attacks but he’s unable to damage it as he’s unaware of what they are. By pure dumb luck he ends up yelling close enough to one that it kills it.
 
Jan 8, 2013
44
22
England
Bingbang Bongbang, Underground Cave, Day 1

Dumbfounded and confused but refusing to question it, Bingbang Bongbang stumbled along with her new compatriots, adjusting to being away from the bright shimmering blue of the ocean and back into the darkness from which she had emerged years before. Where the Bokoblins vision had always been blurry, years of exposure to sunlight had made things so much worse and in this dim lighting she could mostly just see outlines and shapes and was mostly relying on her hearing alone.

Bingbang Bongbang followed along just behind the group with a light drumroll to guide her, listening out for the echoes of the beats while occasionally mumbling incomprehensibly until she ended up in the front of the group after hearing a swarm of odd shapes rush around her and assault and overrun her companions.

“WATCHA DOIN’ STOPPIN’ YA DUMBDUMBS” She screeched out in frustration, turning to face the blurry skirmish as several of the closer Pol’s burst around her. “JEEZ, YOU LOT ARE PATHETIC, FIGHTIN’ A BUNCH OF WEIRD LITTLE… WHAT EVEN ARE THOSE THINGS? WHATEVER, YOU’RE DEALING WITH A POWERFUL WIZARD RIGHT HERE SO LET'S GET THIS OVER WITH”

Briefly after finishing running her mouth, which had finished off a good few Pol’s on it’s own as it boomed and echoed around the cave, Bingbang began to drum. Loudly. Her face scrunched up as she focused on destruction, pulling all of the spiteful and nasty thoughts from deep in her heart to channel the magic of hatred and death into her song. As her drumming quickly reached a cacophonous crescendo she screamed out a single ear splitting word.

“DIE!!”

And with that, it was done. The more resilient Pol’s voice that were able to withstand her drumming burst like bubbles with the impact of her spell, splattering the room with light droplets of gore. Pausing for a second to contemplate the power she now possessed, internally debating whether to use it responsibly or to simply obliterate the rest of her current company as a test of power.

YOU’RE WELCOME” She boasted, choosing the first option but not completely ruling out the second just yet.

And with that, the tiny Bokoblin simply turned around and kept on walking into the next dark tunnel, mostly to hide the huge smug grin that had taken over her entire face while she attempted to appear humble for effect, because that’s how powerful wizards were supposed to act, right?

Summary: Bingbang Bongbang kills a bunch of Pol’s Voice using a “powerful magic spell” she just discovered. She decides not to use it on Ethan, Shin and Mistral, despite really wanting to, and smugly moves the party onwards.
 
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stache19

No Longer a Noob
Apr 21, 2001
8,417
794
Polaris Eridanus & Davus Fulmen

Distant Lands, Several Months Ago


It had been a long week stuck in a small harbor town, somewhere insignificant far across the world. A never ending set of dead ends for a town tightly held within death's embrace. It had started small, a few more animal carcasses along the roads. Sometimes passing hunters would up the death toll. Or a temporary sickness would pass through, or the weather would turn. Life could be cruel, and sudden occasional death was hardly a surprise.

And then the poorest among them vanished first. In the night, without a word. Such was the existing discord in the town, that the elite barely noticed the missing transients. It was only when the first respectable families starting having casualties, that helped was called.

Neither one could recall how it had really started, the investigations. Sometime after the war of the Interlopers, Davus and Polaris had found their souls permanently intertwined. Though each was free to be independent of the other at will, fate always pushed them back together. It was surely a phenomenon having to do with the now dead witch, Rhunerys, but neither one cared to find out.

They had grown to accept the universe’s command that they should be allies in life and death. And so when death came upon a village in need of help only Davus and Polaris could provide, refusal was not an option.

Now the town was, for the most part, rather wealthy. Something perhaps more influential than it should have been, it had kept Davus and Polaris around even as it seemed like the very people who hired them wanted the pair to leave.

“I told you already, we are going as fast as you’ll let us.” Davus had mastered the art of being terrible at masking his anger. Polaris, moderately mild mannered by comparison, quickly took over.

“What my partner here is saying is, when can we be given access to the catacombs? Everything we’ve found points us there.” Polaris had his best diplomatic voice on, but the old woman behind the counter was a wall.

“Two weeks you’ve been here, and you’ve done NOTHING!” She wailed.

“Two weeks?” Davus jumped back in, making sure to remind himself that he wasn’t a killer of innocents anymore. And despite having a punchable face, and a voice like a banshee, the old woman was still technically innocent. “It’s been five days, and for the first two we were forced to answer your questions and stay confined to one building. This is starting to feel more like a kidnapping than an investigation. What happens when we try to leave? Because I promise you, nothing can stop us from leaving when we choose.”

“Excuse us.” Polaris guided Davus outside, where a thunderstorm had started to pick up. “Is this you?” Polaris asked.

“As much as I’d love to blow this place up, no. This is just the luck they have.” Davus remarked. Polaris frequently chose to be the voice of reason, but was never one to always follow the same path.

“We have to go to the catacombs.” Polaris tone was clear enough. Davus nodded in agreement, and no further discussion was needed. Something was clearly wrong with the entire situation. Neither one had found a single individual that actually wanted them in the town, and the original invitation had come from a postman that they had never seen before, or since. Seeking permission had gone from a necessity to a waste of time.

Together they walked the short distance across town to the main catacombs entrance. It had up until that moment been guarded by two large armored men. They were nowhere to be seen, the only evidence that they ever existed being the set of faded footprints on the ground.

“Look.” Polaris paused and pointed to the small field opposite the catacombs entrance. It was a tiny gravesite made long before the town had been built. But there had been no tombstones on it when Davus and Polaris had first arrived. Every single stone had a picture of the deceased upon it. A moving picture, as if the stone were wearing the face of the body in the ground beneath it.

“Why are there tombstones for these people?” Davus asked. “All of them vanished or died this week. Nobody has left or arrived into town the past couple days. Who put these here?”

Summary: Part 1 of the introduction to Davus and Polaris, as they investigate an isolated town far away from the Great Sea. This multipart intro will conclude with their arrival to the main map with everyone else.
 

Xiaber

Almost Not a Noob
Jun 6, 2010
3,816
669
Roy & Clara / Windfall Island / Day 1


Craaacckkk! The man slumped down to the floor, unconscious, as an oar, now split across the paddle, lands on top of him. Another man in a similar pinstripe suit as the first fell backwards and fearfully scooched away from the two people in fishermen outfits standing over them. “I’ll take that!” The male fisherman picked up a large bag out of their cart. The female cheered him on, jumping in the air repeatedly, almost as if she was doing jumping jacks. Then, before the man could even think of going after them, they disappeared into one of the many alleyways.


“Ah, isn’t stealing from local gangs so exciting!” Roy exclaimed as he took off his false beard and hat. “They always seem troublesome, but never expect any trouble in return. Plus,” he lifted the bag up to their view, “they always seem to have big sacks of rupees!”


“I just hope that man is okay,” Clara said as she also took off her false beard and hat. “I heard that hits on the head can severely damage people’s memories.”


“Don’t worry, my dear Clara. If he loses his memory, I bet that other fine fellow that was with him will be able to help him jog it back.” They continued to stroll down the alley.


“Oh, you’re right! What a noble pursuit he must have to now stay with his companion and nurse his memory back to normal. What if he forgot how to breathe!? Pushing his chest in and out until his lungs could remember what to do, oh, isn’t it such a wonderful relationship they must have?”


“A relationship anyone would dream of. Of course,” Roy smirked at Clara, “it still falls short of the wonderful relationship the two of us have together.”


“Oh Roy!” Clara did a little twirl before embracing Roy. “I guess we should find a boat that will take us to that tournament now? I hope it has great service; I could really go for some food.”


“With all of these riches, they’re bound to give us anything we want!”


Summary: Roy and Clara procure some rupees from the local crime on Windfall Island and set about finding a boat that will take them to the tournament.
 

stache19

No Longer a Noob
Apr 21, 2001
8,417
794
Ethan, Underground Cave Dungeon, Day1

Nothing in Ethan’s life had prepared him for the absolute absurdity that was the bokoblin. So perfectly had every single action worked out that Ethan had to assume either the creature or the drum was an ancient magic artifact. His instincts and experience told him it was probably both and neither at the same time, because the universes sense of humor was based on frustrations and impossibles.

“I’m going to have to reconsider my opinions on Bokoblins.” Ethan said. “You aren’t all horribly annoying creatures, or at least you aren’t without merit even if you are horribly annoying.” He normally would have felt bad insulting someone to their face, but then realized that actually no, he wouldn’t feel bad about that in any situation.

“Look out!” Shin shouted, as another Pol’s voice appeared out of nowhere. Shin’s loud warning proved sufficient in destroying the creature, sending its guts artistically across every inch of Ethans body, though focusing mostly on his face. Bingbong seemed even more gleeful than before, clearly taking the credit for each and every kill. Mistral merely watched silently.

Ethan couldn’t say it was the first time guts had been strewn across his body, but none of his prior experiences lessened the vomit inducing impact of his present situation. Briefly emotionally defeated, he somewhat lazily wiped his face clean and cleared his throat, trying to mentally reset.

“You know what? No. I’m not doing this. We’re skipping to the good part.” Ethan didn’t feel like explaining what he meant, snapping his fingers, teleporting the entire group deeper into the dungeon. It was a risk given that he could easily be teleporting them into solid rock, or into more weird bunny head monsters. But nothing worse than that because nothing worse than weird bunny head monsters existed in all of reality.

Thankfully, brutal cave wall death was not in the cards, and they all seamlessly appeared in a new much nicer looking location. It was at a point where the rocky cavern walls shifted from uneven stone to deliberately crafted Temple walls.

“Follow me.” Ethan tried turning his tone to something more serious, which was probably a waste of time given that seventy percent of his body was still covered in murdered Pol’s Voice slime. He briefly pondered a scenario where armies of Pol’s Voices went up against renowned opera singers, resoundingly defeated on the first note. The imagery was very effective at upending his attempts at being serious or focused.

“At last, here we are!” Ethan pushed open a set of deceivingly light iron doors, leading the group into a vast brightly lit chamber. The walls and ceiling were covered by a continuous mural showing major events of history, so densely packed it was difficult to focus upon it.

“You!” A scorched voice pulled the group's attention to the back of the chamber. “You are too late, Empress Vera has already claimed this shrine’s treasure.” Ethan knew the voice. This was an ancient warrior known only as Volga. A dragon of fire who this world had never known. This Volga was an outsider, a lost soul from some other world beyond the borders of the universe. He was one of many rogue agents Vera employed and deployed, enticing them with treasure and occasionally threats. All just to advance her agenda from the shadows just as aggressively as her frontline soldiers.

“Well team - I’m gonna call you all ‘team’ now. Anyway, well team…” Ethan coughed, interrupting his attempt to be smooth and cool. “...Fuck it.” He threw a hand forward, breaking out into a run towards Volga. It was not a move that any of his allies had expected, but Volga certainly had. He threw his body back, winding up into a massive roar as his human form shifted into that of a dragon. His one little trick, besides just being really powerful of course.

“You guys ever fought a dragon man before? Yes? No? Well here’s your chance if you haven’t or-” Ethan was knocked down to the ground as Volga whipped his tail, attempting to impale him. Volga’s tale, already rather pointy and dangerous, now looked to have some kind of metal attachment. Jagged and menacing, his tail seemed to effectively have become a harpoon launcher. A fact Ethan only realized as a spike buried itself in the ground next to his head.

“Well, don’t just stand there, get him!” Ethan yelled, rolling out of the way of another strike, inviting the group to join the battle.

Summary: I think this has been a fun side diversion, but this dungeon is becoming a mini-dungeon instead. Meet the final boss, Volga from Hyrule Warriors.

This version is almost identical, except his dragon form can shoot spikes out of his tail. Or maybe he could already do that, I can’t remember. You can go here for some info on him if you never played HW.

http://zelda.wikia.com/wiki/Volga



Windfall Island, Day 1, Random Man

"I'm hungry."

Summary: This post brought to you by the more boring side of world building.
 
Last edited:

Link64Gogetta

No Longer a Noob
Nov 19, 2000
10,717
177
Shin/Underground Cave/Day 1


A harsh gust of wind tore through the chamber and forced Volga away from Ethan. “We don’t have time to play Mr. Dragon. We have a thingy to do.” Mistral said having clearly misread the Draconic Warrior’s intent.

The now irate Volga reverted to his humanoid form, charged at Mistral and struck her square in the chest with his blazing pike. The woman slammed hard against the chamber wall, but a second later managed to stumble back to her feet. In what looked liked a struck of dumb luck, Volga’s pike had struck a small leather pouch Mistral was wearing around her neck. Unfortunately the attack had severed the strap, sending the pouch flying to the far side of the room, making sure she wouldn’t be so lucky again.

Mistral extended her staff just long enough to reach Volga and struck him lightly on the head, “Bad Dragon! That’s not how we play.”

“THIS ISN’T A GAME!” Volga roared. He moved to strike Mistral down once and for all but found his pike had snagged on something. Looking down he saw his weapon had been snared by a grappling hook.

Shin pulled on the grapple’s rope as hard as he could while goading on the Dragon Knight, “so I totally get why you’d be annoyed right now, but I can’t let you kill her. Why don’t you fight me instead?”

Volga smirked with a menacing glee, “you better not disappoint me boy.” He yanked hard on his weapon to pull it free, but instead of losing his grip Shin used to force of the tug to launch himself at his opponent. Shin took a swing at Volga’s face with his long dagger but the Dragon managed to dodge with minimal effort.

Shin landed and quickly attack again by launching all of his throwing knives at his foe, but Volga effortlessly deflected them by twirling his pike with blinding speed. Volga then jump into the air and slammed his weapon down. Shin had managed to dodge but the blow sent a small spout of flames erupting toward his face. He shielded himself on instinct leaving an opening for Volga swing his weapon around strike Shin square in the gut.

The blow sent him flying up and back into a part of the mural depicting a dragoon woman fighting an argorok over several ships. He’d managed spin around in mid air allowing him to impact feet first so he could kick off and fly back at Volga at high speed. He drew his short sword mid flight and used both of his weapons to slash the dragon in the chest.

While the attack left an X-shaped gash in the Dragon Knight’s chest, his thick armor like hide meant it was merely superficial. Shin on the other hand, was momentarily staggered from his hard landing.

“A disappointment after all,” Volga mocked, as he raised his pike to strike Shin down but paused when his back was hit with a sudden painful stinging. Ethan had taken advantage of Volga’s tunnel vision and attacked the dragon with Shin’s discarded throwing knives. Which, thanks to his psionic abilities, were able to penetrate much deeper into dragon’s flesh then they would have if thrown by a human arm. Volga turned and breathed a jet of fire in reprisal, but the flames merely lick impotently against the Ethan’s telekinetic barrier.

Shin, not one to waist a perfectly good distraction, got back on his feet and swung for the dragon head. His sword struck true, slicing off the tip of Volga’s left horn.

Volga stopped his assault dead as he felt the place where his point once was. After a short paused he finally roared out, “ENOUGH!”

The fiery warrior transformed back into a dragon and flew to the top of the chamber. He began to charge a large ball of fire in his mouth, but Shin knew what was coming and though he knew how to deal with it. He took a wide stance and held his sword to his back. The blade started to glow with a blue aura, then orange, as Shin flooded it the simple magic he knew how to harness.

Ethan suddenly realized what Shin was planning on doing but before he could warn him against it, Volga had already fired his blast. Shin unleashed his sword spin but instead of being deflected, the massive ball of fire exploded. It was only Mistral’s unexpected knowledge about fighting dragons that saved Shin from turning into Barbeque. She realized Shin had confused the way you fight a dragon with the way you fight a wizard and knocked him clear with sudden gust of hurricane force winds and rain. Unfortunately, her half thought out rescue slammed Shin head first into a nearby wall.

Everything became a sudden blur to Shin. His vision had glazed over due to impact and the only thing he could hear was dull thumping that he hoped was the Bokoblin’s drum. He stumbled around as he struggled to regain composure but was far to dizzy to get back on his feet.

Through either fate or serendipity his hand landed on the leather pouch that Mistral had previously been wearing around her neck and in that moment he started to feel ever so slightly refreshed. Something was radiating from inside the bag and to Shin it like he was holding on to the warm soothing rays of the sun itself.

He heard the voice of a man that seemed to have a motherly comfort to it, “I think you could use some help.”

“What?” Shin mumbled as his eyes came back into focus. Suddenly the leather pouch ripped apart as the small metal shard it contained formed into the Legendary Sword of Light. “What the hell is this doing here!?”

It was information overload, he’d heard of the Sword of Light from the old stories but couldn’t fathom how it ended up in this cave. His mind raced through every possibility he could conceive at the moment. Was it here the whole time, or did Bingbong somehow summon it. No, wait, that pouch it was in belong to Mistral. Why the hell did Mistral of all people have it? No, that didn’t make any sense; he preferred to believe it was summoned by the half-pint’s drumming.

Thinking about it was becoming far to frustrating considering his head was still pounding from his impact with the wall. Instead he decided to focus on his newly found opportunity, namely that he now had a magic weapon that wasn’t fire element. This meant he could use the trump card his father taught him and bring this fight to an end.

Shin fired a sword beam at Volga’s head to draw his attention away from the others. “I’m not done yet.”

Volga shrugged off the intentionally weak attack, “You’ve confused you’re stubbornness with skill, but very well. I’ll grant you the death you so desperately desire.” The dragon lunged at Shin with his pike but that was exactly what the young swordsman was hoping for.

“TRUE BLADE!” Shin yelled as he swung down leaving a crescent energy blade in his sword path. The tip of Volga’s Dragonbone Pike slammed into the deadly magic arc causing it to split apart then shatter. The Dragon Knight’s eyes widened, he’d seen this attack before used by a half crazed man in a cloak that briefly accompanied the time mage. He knew what kind of destructive power it possessed and more importantly he knew he couldn’t dodge it.

“STRIKE!” Shin yelled as he swung up along the blade of light magic, but then nothing happened. The torrent of violent energy Shin was expecting hadn’t been unleashed and instead the crescent energy blade had shattered. “What?”

Volga wasted no time in putting distance between himself and his opponents. He looked down at his broken weapon and then at the four opponents he still had to combat. He may have been saved by the young one’s error but he knew odds were still against him. “I stand by what I said earlier, swordsman. You were a disappointment. However, I suspect in time that won’t be the case. I’ll wait for that day.”

A swirl of flames surrounded Volga and when it died down he’d vanished leaving only Shin’s knives behind.

“Damn it, why did that fai-” Shin words were cut off as he suddenly vomited up his breakfast. “Ok, I think I have a concussion.”


Summary: Mistral tries treating Volga like a misbehavingpuppy and gets speared in the chest as a result. She’s saved thanks to the contents of a pouch she was wearing around her neck and Shin’s timely intervention. Shin battled Volga with Ethan backing him up but a misguided attempt at electric tennis leaves him with a concussion. While stumbling around, he finds Mistral’s which for some reason contains the Sword of Light. He attempt the end the fight with a True Blade Strike but the attack fail to initiate and he only managed to destroy Volga’s pike. Volga retreats after insulting Shin but telling him he looks forward to fighting him once he’s improved.
 

stache19

No Longer a Noob
Apr 21, 2001
8,417
794
Ethan, Underground Cave, Day 1

Ethan somewhat roughly grabbed onto Shin’s head to examine it.

“Yep definitely a concussion.” he lazily let go, causing Shin to drop against the ground. “Well at least you gained the respect of an insane fire dragon man. That’s something. Anyway, look-” Ethan gestured to a small glowing treasure chest that had magically appeared in before the group. “Isn’t that convenient?” He reached out to open the chest, and it vanished in a puff of smoke, replaced by a glowing pool of shimmering silvery liquid. Ethan pulled his hand back in confusion.

“Uh...yeah, convenient.” Shin commented. Ethan couldn't tell if it was sarcasm or his concussion getting worse.

“I...I don’t...Bingbang can you cast a spell on this pool? Any spell.” Ethan had no other ideas, and figured it was worth a shot.

Summary: There’s no reward for defeating Volga besides a strange pool of silvery liquid. Ethan doesn’t know what to do and asks Bingbang to cast a spell on it.
 
Jan 2, 2003
7,603
473
Your Dreams
Mistral/Underground/One

Mistral shook her head to clear some of the fuzz from all the smoke and heat. What an ill-behaved draconis! She wrinkled her nose and snorted some of the sulfur-stench out her nostrils. Why, she hadn't seen such a rude, untrained scale-baby since that hornsnaggled argarok... Now she was a handful! All rawr and grr and burny-burny. Of course her mother had told her not to bother and just get rid of the thing before it could rampage through some cottages, or something like that? Mom was weird...

Mistral, though, couldn't just give up! NO GUFF. And now, of course Kitty was such a good dragon! Hadn't seen her in a while, though. Maybe a visit back home was in order... Bise jealously rubbed against her side, snagging her attention back to the cavern.

"Oh, don't worry, you're still the best ride for flying!" she said, hugging her dear best friend.

Wait, the fighting was over?

"Hey!" she shouted, "Where'd the dragon-baby go?"

She swung up onto Bise once more, sitting crossed-leg on the cloud, and floated over to Ethan and Shin.

"Wow, Shin. You kinda got a bump, there... Does it hurt?" She leaned over to look down at the lump in question, and saw a pool of squirmedy shinedy silverdy.

"Ooooh what's that?"

She bent forward, stretching an arm through Bise and poking the stuff.

Summary: Mistral does a thing.
 

legendarylugi

No Longer a Noob
Jun 29, 2006
6,805
125
Rakki Silverfish - Tycho's Tap - Morning 1

"Pair of kings!"

Rakki laid his cards on the table and grinned. Not a great hand, but apparently good enough for this lot. He was beginning to like the future. As the Zora collected his winnings, another player at the table, clearly intoxicated, took the opportunity to opine about politics.

"There's only one king, and that is his grace King Daphnali of the Isles!" he blearily slurred out before taking another swig of ale.

Another chimed in, laughing. "Tell that to the Old Royals! From the sound of it, they should be plotting a coup any day now!"

Rakki put his hands up in a gesture of "I surrender" and joined in their drunken raparte.

"Hey, don't look at me, I'm obviously not up on current events."


That received a round of uproarious laughter from the table. He'd played with these guys regularly since coming to Outset several weeks ago, and by now they were well aware of his claim to be from the distant past. They called him "future boy" despite the fact that made little to no sense, assuming his story to be the drunken puffery of a habitual gambler. Of course, Rakki rarely drank, and never enough to impair his senses. He took the game seriously and liked to keep a clear head when making bets.

"You are planning on entering the Royal Tournament, though, yes?"

"Of course. This may not be the monarchy I was raised with, and I don't exactly need a ship, but a knight-hood is just too good to pass up."

Rakki looked around the table, an idea popping into his head. Why not? He'd spent months trying to get the damn thing working again, talked to every shaman and sorcerer on the Great Sea, and so far no luck. If he was ever going to get home again, this thing was probably not his ticket. But he might as well have some fun with it, and make some money while he was at it. He fished through his satchel and pulled out the broken shard of time-shift stone.

"What do you say we make the next round interesting?" He threw the shard on the table, and immediately the table grew silent, all eyes on the shard of clearly mystical material, its glowing runes shifting and changing in color.

The bets started pouring in, and the cards were dealt.

Suddenly his attention was pulled away by the action at a nearby table. A Tokay was there, clearly far more level-headed and in control of his faculties than his inebriated competition. Rakki watched as the man closed the dice in his palm in a strangely deliberate and focused manner, with obvious intent, as if casting a spell. That kind of superstitious behavior wasn't uncommon among this sort of gambler, but the calm, focused, rational affect was.

...and then he threw.

It was subtle, but unmistakable if you really paid attention (which of course, the drunken travellers around the table did not). The shadows, they were wrong somehow. They seemed to move and warp, caressing the dice.

The God's roll...of course it was.

"Future boy! Your bet!" Rakki was suddenly snapped back to the present.

"...I fold. Keep it. It's a gift. A fat load of good it will do you, though."

Ignoring the perplexed faces around the table, Rakki got up from the table and cashed out his earnings (which were still substantially larger than the sum he'd walked in with), suddenly very curious about the stranger using magic to cheat at dice. Not that Rakki hadn't had the same thought, but his control of the wind was far too imprecise to be useful as a gambling aid...plus there was the whole morality aspect of it.

Rakki followed at a distance, careful not to reveal his intent to his quarry, stopping at a distance as the Tokay met a Sheikah at the door.

"Oh, Bryseis, wasn't expecting to see you for a few days yet."


Rakki stopped dead in his tracks. "Bryseis?" he whispered to himself. It can't be.

In an instant he forgot about the Tokay, who walked out of the building to attend to some other business. The Zora stood there cautiously for a moment, not wanting to draw attention, as the Tokay returned to the bar and continued his conversation with this person who now had Rakki's complete attention. Rakki eavesdropped at a distance as the two discussed a job, and the tournament at Forsaken Fortress, before finally summoning the courage to join them.

Walking up to the bar and sitting at a stool next to the Sheikah, called Tristan apparently, Rakki attempted to be as casual as possible.

"Sorry, I couldn't help but overhear, you two are headed to the Royal Tournament? I'm just headed that way myself, actually. I could use a ride." Rakki instantly winced at the silliness of this statement. He was a Zora, he could easily swim there without any help. Roll with it, he thought. "If the sea weren't so infested with Gyorgs, I'd swim there, of course, but you know how it is. I could use a ride."

Summary:
Rakki wins at a game of cards, notices Majin's antics, and becomes instantly intrigued by the existence of a Sheikah named Bryseis.
 
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stache19

No Longer a Noob
Apr 21, 2001
8,417
794
Davus & Polaris

Distant Lands, Several Months Ago


The largest addition to Davus’ personality and social capability was deeply tied into an unflinching and unending analysis of his present self versus his past self. An unhealthy obsession in the eyes of many, but one which also served as a crucial anchor to how he defined himself in the present. By always staring at who he used to be, Davus extracted a certain kind of steadfastness in his modern self, one that could stand up against the memories of his old life and wisely look down upon them as a necessary mistake.

He spent quite a bit less effort analyzing Polaris, having grown trusting of him, but not exactly close. Two quasi immortal undead ancients. Neither one particularly interested in recognizing their teamwork as friendship, even if it held all the trappings of grumpy old pals doing the jobs no one else could. Davus could have dug deep and perhaps found a sense of comfort in that kind of friendship, but it seemed like that would get in the way of the investigation.

“Look.” Polaris waved a hand toward one of the tombstones, and Davus watched as it passed completely through it. These were fakes, apparitions or projections of some kind. That half answered the question of who built them. Nobody. But they were still being created using some kind of magic or technology, so it wasn’t really nobody.

“This better not be Sirius.” Davus remarked. Polaris’ eyes voiced agreement, but he stayed silent. In that moment the rain paused, and the clouds scattered. It was rather unnatural feeling, so Davus gave Polaris a look to indicate that he still was not the culprit for the storms behavior. Polaris didn’t receive the information, as he was busy scrutinizing the ‘tombstones’.

“Davus these things are watching us. These are the missing people. They’ve been trapped in these forms by someone.” Polaris sounded particularly disgusted by the torturous imprisonment. That was of no surprise, and Davus felt the same. This was nothing short of true hell.

Each of them carefully walked around the group of fake tombstones, doing their best to observe the faces on each one, while minimizing eye contact. It felt unnatural to look into their eyes.

“This one.” Polaris stopped and nudged one of the stones. It was tangible, unlike the others. The image upon it did not move. Davus still didn’t remember seeing it before though. “Help me with this.” He leaned down and helped Polaris move the tombstone back. Davus was relived to see the hidden stairwell before them. The entire investigation seemed ready to fall apart, and this was the first positive sign in ages. Thunderclouds formed above, catching Polaris’ attention immediately.

“Now I know that one is you.” Davus didn’t need to answer, they both knew it to be true. Together they descended into the tomb, finding it to be a rather steep and dark passage. Davus waved a hand, sending a group of sparking orbs along the cavern ceilings, floors and walls, illuminating the path.

“I don’t think this is connected to the catacombs. I investigated it pretty thoroughly the first day.” Polaris remarked, catching Davus off guard.

“When exactly did you manage to pull that off?” Davus asked.

“I found the time.” Polaris replied.

“Speaking of time...What do you think this is doing here.” Before the pair, titled on its side and cracked, sat a massive six foot tall hourglass. A small bit of sand remained within, but the majority appeared to have spilled out and been lost. On the glass was a faded etching of a timestone, and below that some ancient hylian text.

“Timelock Chamber.” Davus translated aloud. “This was holding something captive.” He got up close and put some of the sand on his fingertip, and felt it go numb immediately. “I know this. Sirius used something similar to immobilize people, but this isn’t his style. But someone or something was definitely being held here.”

“Yeah...I think you’re right.” Polaris motioned for Davus to look down the caverns ahead. The walls and floor were smeared with blood and the remnants of chains. There were also torn bits of uniform similar to the one worn by the catacomb guards.

“Found the guards.” Davus said.

“I think this counts as an invitation.” Polaris said, walking ahead. Davus leaned down, checking if the blood was from the guards or something else. Best he could tell was either a combination of the two, or they were some very sick guards. He looked up and saw that Polaris had stopped following the trail, and was clutching something in his hands.

“What’s that?” Davus asked. Polaris held his hound out, revealing a blood soaked green hat. One of a very particular kind. “Why would that be here?” Polaris shrugged and the two continued around the corner.

“Wait.” A female voice called out from behind, triggering them both to turn around and assume battle stances. Realizing it was a familiar face, the immediately relaxed. It was Severa, an old ally to both of them and a bit of an oddity herself. For one thing, she claimed to have no last name (something Davus knew to be a lie) though he admittedly did the same thing. It was a convenient way to let go of the parts of the past you hate, and keep the tiny bits worth keeping.

“You guys made this easy for me, but I get the sense you have no idea what we’re about to face.” For once, Polaris stepped up to respond first instead of Davus.

“And how long do we have listen to you gloat before you let us in on your secrets?”

“Free this time.” She smirked. “Let me see that hat.” Dropping the false tension, Polaris handed Severa the hat. It wasn’t the first time the three had accidentally worked together. Severa had a pair of silver gauntlets on, which began to softly glow in a purple hue as she took the hat from Polaris. The blood immediately drained from it. Neither Davus or Polaris cared to find out what powers Severa had access to to accomplish such a feat. Surely not blood magic given her background. Surely.

“Look at that.” She pointed to a small signature that was woven into the hat.

Davus smirked when he read it. It was just a name, but one he hadn’t seen in a very long time. He hadn’t even been sure if it was a real memory, or some fragment of a memory lost to the rivers of time.

“You know him?” Severa asked.

“Yes, I do.” All three paused after Davus answered, as rough heavy breathing filled the room. A quick glance around confirmed it wasn’t any of the three, so they cautiously began eyeing each shadowy corner of the room for their obvious fourth guest.

“I remember you, Davus.” A hollow, hateful, wooden voice rolled through the tunnels. It felt ancient and heavy, instilling exhaustion in any that heard it. The owner of the voice crept out of the shadows, revealing a monstrous creature that seemed to have started the transformation into a skull kid before abruptly halting. Davus stayed focused on the investigations primary goal.

“Are you responsible for the vanishings from town?” Davus asked. The creature cocked its head to the side and made an effort to laugh, but came across as little more than a hacking coughing noise.

“We’ll take that as a yes.” Polaris chimed in. The creature answered with more failed laughter, lumbering closer and raising itself up, revealing its height to be near seven feet tall.

“It really is nice to see you again, Koro."

Summary: Part II of Davus and Polaris intro. They have gone into some catacombs, met their old ally Severa, and are now facing off with some strange ancient creature.
 
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Jan 8, 2013
44
22
England
Bingbang Bongbang, Underground Cave, Day 1

Upon hearing the Dragon Knight fall, Bingbang Bongbang stepped away from the rock she had chosen to crouch behind for improved acoustics and no other reason. Clearly her quiet song of support and healing had greatly aided her allies in their battle and she felt a swelling of pride in their victory.

“I… I don’t… Bingbang can you cast a spell on this pool? Any spell.” Ethan asked as she stepped towards the group of confused faces surrounding a strange metallic liquid. She spent a moment in silent contemplation as the cogs whirred in her dense skull, ruling out her powerful killing spell, trying to come up with something worth summoning, but eventually settling on what seemed like the obvious solution.

She stepped forward confidently and cracked her knuckles, “DON’T WORRY MORTALS, I’VE GOT THIS”

And with that, she lay beside the pool and swiftly began to lap at it with her tongue, drinking as much as she could, knowing that every liquid based problem she had come up against in her past had always been solved by drinking it.

Summary: Bingbang Bongbang confidently makes what could be the best or worst decision of her life, depending on the effects of drinking magic silver liquids.
 

stache19

No Longer a Noob
Apr 21, 2001
8,417
794
Ethan - Cave of Surprises and Wonder - Day 1

“Whoa whoa, maybe don’t do that!” Ethan yelled, but it was too late. Bingbang had already drank most of the liquid. She’d be a top-shelf participant in a drinking competition, without a doubt.

“What it taste like?” Mistral couldn’t help herself.

“Don’t answer that.” Ethan snapped. “Actually what does it taste like-” Ethan’s indecisive curiosity was swiftly stifled by yet another challenger.

“Foolish mortals! It is I, the master fire mage Dracon Livarius, who shall-aggggh!” Before Ethan had much chance to analyze the budget-level Volga, Bingbang had demonstrated why her solution was in fact the superior one. Stretching and expanding outwards, she grew many times her original size, head just shy of the cavernous ceiling. How convenient that the liquid happened to be in a tall open chamber.

Joyously, Bingbang picked up the screaming man self identifying as Dracon, biting down on his midsection and cutting him nearly in two. Spitting out the foul mess immediately, a horrendous pile of mangled flesh and bone lay before them.

Ethan wasn’t sure if it was what she had meant to do, or some compulsion brought on by the liquid. Either way, it only served to increase the levels of her ego, even as the size increase wore off and she returned to her original height and weight.

“I’m done now, you can turn off the ride!” Ethan shouted at no one. “Let’s get the crap out of here. Bingbang, can you-” Before he could ask, Bingbang slammed her drum but once. It felt like his eardrums were going to explode from the sound. It was so loud he couldn’t rationally react, shutting his eyes instead of covering his ears because how scrambled his brain felt. That liquid had been something very powerful, and Ethan was shocked it hadn’t killed Bingbang right away.

Her strike wasn’t without purpose, as the reverberations weakened a fake wall, revealing the way forward. A drumming bokoblin on a magical hot streak of death and destruction, that was the force keeping the group alive. What a world.

“Believe it or not, I’ve actually been here before.” Ethan said as they passed through the newly created doorway. “To this staircase.” He said. Before the group was a single option, a staircase wrapping itself around the walls of the room, twisting upwards seemingly endlessly. “It’s exhausting, and-” Bingbang slammed her drum two more times, which was followed by awkward silence, then more awkward silence, and then a series of strange mechanical clicking sounds. The staircase above them was yanked inside the wall, leaving them all standing in what was now essentially a mineshaft.

And then the clicking got faster, and then Ethan felt and heard an explosive force beneath the floor. With literal fanfare going - the room had filled with sounds of trumpets like one would find on ancient battlefields - the floor revealed itself to be an elevator and rocketed upwards.

“Maybe this wasn’t the one I came to.” Ethan said. “So anyway, let’s all hope this doesn’t end with us crushed against the ceiling.”

Summary: Bingbang is super powered from the liqiud and eats the second boss, Dracon Livarius. The group moves on to the next room which turns out to be a rocket powered elevator heading up to somewhere.
 
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stache19

No Longer a Noob
Apr 21, 2001
8,417
794
An Anomalous Individual, Stowaway in Vera’s Fleet , Day 1

Nobody knew he was there, stowed away in the heart of Empress Vera’s southern fleet. His existence unknown, his world of origin consumed by The Empress. She’d stolen everything but his identity. He would forever be Stryver Chiaria, sworn to the Sheikah and guardian to the elemental stones.

Thanks to the dark magic she employed, he no longer had a need for sleep or food. Did not tire, did not age. He was little more than a memory, but one that could kill you if you weren’t watching it. For months now he had stayed hidden, watching his primary target.

It was one of Vera’s commanders, a monstrous hybrid creature. Covered by deep red subrosian robes, its goron-like arms and legs protruded out, while its face remained hidden in the robe. It spoke slowly and infrequently, and never with complexity. And yet his presence was so overwhelming, it was enough. Stryver had heard some crew members call him ‘Zosk’ but could never tell if it was a name or a title. Nevertheless, it was all he had to go on.

Zosk killed a single crew member in the fleet every day. Ate them, actually.

At first Stryver thought it was to instill fear, but in time he realized it was for food. He wasn’t a creature meant to be tamed into such a role. Vera had likely destroyed his world too, and kept him as an example on a tight leash and with limited food supply. Despite sharing a wonderful backstory together, Stryver still best preferred the idea of Zosk dying as quickly as possible.

But he likely wouldn’t be making the killing strike before the first assault took place on the Great Sea’s southern border. It was an impressive number of ships for a first strike, thirty-five in total, each one identical on the exterior. They bore designs matching that of the fleets they were assaulting, a tactic Vera employed frequently to sow chaos. The crews of her ships were fully dedicated to dying in her name, and even a death via friendly fire was a joyous celebration of her character. So while Vera’s forces happily lost themselves in the confusion of identical fleets, the enemy would suffer far greater losses.

It was cruel and efficient at accomplishing her endless task- break the worlds back and then drink its blood.

It wouldn’t be long now before Stryver would get a chance to sow his own chaos. He knew the battle plan perfectly, and which ships to take out first. And taking them out would be more fun than challenge, the crews were surprisingly poor at detecting infiltration. Perhaps it had something to do with primarily being mindless shells stolen from dead worlds, and perhaps because Stryver had in his possession an object that was not supposed to exist given that the universe that powered it was eaten by Vera.

He looked at it in his palm, the prism stone, an amalgamation of every elemental stone from his world. Even touching it once should have vaporized him, but logic had stopped applying to his life many years prior.

Summary: Hidden in Vera’s southern attack fleet, Stryver Chiaria plots a way to destroy the fleet from within.
 

Link64Gogetta

No Longer a Noob
Nov 19, 2000
10,717
177
Shin/Under Ground Cave/Afternoon 1


Among the several symptoms of a concussion includes multiple forms of visual impairment. Shin counted his blessing that he was current under the effect of such and impairment as he had a fairly good idea of what just happened with Bing Bong and was more than happy to not have that image burned into his mind. It was the other symptoms he could do without. For example, nausea, which when combined with blurred vision, a dark cave and an unexpected elevator ride led to him vomiting again.

“Please let this thing go to some place sunny,” Shin thought aloud. The sun wouldn’t heal him directly but he knew it would at least rejuvenate him a bit.

Suddenly the elevator came to a stop, and unfortunately they were still in a dark cavern.

“Hmm... the lift-y thing is broke. Guess we have to float up now.” Misty said to the limited comprehension of the already confused Shin.

Ethan quickly filled in the gaps for his injured friend, “The elevators stuck in the middle of the shaft. Mistral thinks we can all fly up, for some reason.”

Mistral wasn’t sure why, but she had a feeling Ethan was being dismissive over her suggestion. So she explained things slowly and loudly so the boys would understand, “I have Bise, psychic boy can float himself and Bingy with mind powers, and sword boy can use the glowy sword wings.”

“I can use the WHAT!?” Shin yelled.

Ethan again acted as the translator, “The Sword of Light can be used to create wings. She doesn’t realize it has to be taught. Though I’m surprised you don’t know about it. You’re father didn’t tell you?”

Shin confusion grew by the second, “Why would my dad know anything about a legendary sword? Better yet why does Mistral know anything about this sword? Hell, why did she have it to being with!?”

“Hold on, you mean you don’t know who she-” Ethan was cut off when four figures fell unto the elevator form previously unseen openings in the wall.

Shin jumped to his feet and readied himself the best his could. He was bit nervous trying to defend himself when it could only see blurry figures but as long as he could follow their movement he’d manage. “Ok I heard bone and metal. I’m guessing Stalfos Knights?”

Mistral was beside herself in laughter.

“No,” Ethan answered, “Darknuts, dead darknuts.”

Misty’s mocking continued “Shin-boy’s scared of some dead monsters.”

“Damn it, I can’t see!” Shin barked back.

Ethan interjected, “So... I think we were supposed to fight these things to make the elevator move again, but they sat here for so long they died. It’s really shoddy dungeon crafting.”

“So we’re stuck,” Shin sighed as he plopped down on the ground. “I wonder if I can teach myself how to use the wing things after all.”

A mere second later a strange chime rang out and the elevator started moving again. Shin could sense Misty grinning at him, “not, a single, word.”

“Shin-boy’s so uptight. Reminds me of someone, but I forgot who.” Mistral mused to herself as she laid back on her cloud.

Ethan quietly chucked to himself, “I guess they’re both clueless,” he thought, “I should wait until later to tell them. Shin’s probably at his limit right now.”

Several minutes later the party arrival on the surface, where to Shin’s relief it was a nice sunny day. He took a moment to soak in the sunlight, though it was short live as he suddenly heard a number of small children screaming. Fortunately, enough of his eyesight had come back that he was able to see what had happened. They’d popped up on the outskirts of Windfall Island, and a bunch of kids that were play at the shore caught sight of Bing.

“Damn it,” Shin grabbed the bokoblin and the group ran behind the bomb shop at the edge of the island. “Ok, I don’t think the townsfolk will appreciate a bokoblin walking casually though there streets. So, either either A: we tie her up and claim we captured her or-” before Shin could continue Mistral and wacked him in head with her pole.

“OW! God DAMN IT! What is it with you and causing my brain trauma!?” Shin screamed

“No tying up young maidens! It’s creepy.” Mistral replied.

“OR B!” Shin continued, “we get her a disguise. Something like those things long sleeved kimonos and veiled hats noble girls wear. Which I guess I what we’re going to have to do even it if mean playing into her delusions of grand-“ Shin was cut off again by other swing from Misty’s staff, but this time he managed to catch it before it struck.

“No destroying a young maiden’s dreams either.” Misty lectured

Shin angrily thrusted his wallet into Mistral’s hands, “just go buy the cloths.”

“Ethan, if anything kills me on this quest of yours it’ll be that woman.” Shin said after Mistral left.

Ethan nodded, “Yeah, Misty can be... difficult. On that note, you do realize you just gave her your wallet?”

Shin took a second to let what was said sink in, “...damn it...”


Summary:

After some shenanigans with a failed dungeon event the group makes it to the surface. Unfortunately the surface is on Windfall Island which is a problem when you have a bokoblin in your party. Shin sends Mistral off with his money to go buy a disguise for Bing, but Ethan points out he’ll likely regret that.
 

stache19

No Longer a Noob
Apr 21, 2001
8,417
794
Davus - Catacombs of a Distant Land - Many Months Ago

All eyes were on Davus. The tension suggested a fight, but Davus made no movements to such ends. Instead, he relaxed his stance and took a step forward casually.

“Who do you think I am?” He asked the question earnestly, something that this monstrosity calling itself Koro didn’t seem to expect or immediately understand. His hacking cough rose from the silence, leading into a pained question in response.

“The Feared.”

“Hey. You want to explain what’s going on here?” Severa asked, lacing the tension with urgency it most certainly didn’t need. “I was told to find something named Koro-” She gestured towards him. “And you two clearly have a history I didn’t know about.” Davus put a hand up to silence her, rightfully feeling her immediate reactionary death-stare. Severa had known Davus in his more murderous days, and had never stopped watching for signs of his old self. Davus lowered his hand, and remained silent for a moment. Severa sighed in exasperation. “Just talk.”

“I don’t go by The Feared anymore.” Davus said. “It’s just Davus now.”

Koro repeated his now trademark hacking laugh.

“You think you can just change your name and be done with it?” Koro replied. Davus was grateful a fight hadn’t already broken out, but felt like time was running out on the real mystery. He sensed that Polaris was thinking the same thing, looking back towards him.

“This isn’t adding up, Davus.” Polaris commented. He was right. Koro was a monstrous being now, but he didn’t show signs of a fight. He didn’t even appear to be especially aggressive, despite the situation feeling to be on the cusp of something that could only end poorly.

“Are you actually responsible for the townsfolk vanishing?” Polaris pressed the question again. This time Koro seemed to be taking the situation more seriously.

“No. I just got here.” He answered sternly. Severa, Davus, and Polaris all exchanged looks of concern and confusion.

“You didn’t kill the guards...did you?” Davus asked, betraying his concerns. Koro remained calm.

“No. I was in a forest searching for a way out of this form, and something attacked me. Then I was here. You are the first people I’ve seen.” Koro motioned to the hat. “Can I have that?” Davus handed the green kokiri cap over, treating the group to an instantaneous and unexpected transformation. In a flash of light, Koro went from his monstrous form to that of your typical Kokiri. “Magic may have taken my body from me, but this hat is enchanted now to grant me my original form.” Koro’s eyes felt empty to Davus as he spoke. What the Kokiri described sounded an awful lot like mask magic. But this was the face of Koro for sure, begging the question of just what twisted work was really going on.

“I feel like we’ve met.” Polaris remarked to Koro. “But I just can’t place when.”

“That happens when you live through as many apocalypses as we have.” Koro, dead as his eyes were, seemed remarkably cheerier in his new old form. Not just cheery, but helpful. “Something else did this.” He remarked about the blood stains on the ground. They all glanced at the stasis device that had been broken out of.

“Why is it placed there?” Davus asked aloud. Polaris was two steps ahead, back examining the device again.

“We’ve been looking at this backwards. This wasn’t broken out of. It was broken into. It’s not a timelock chamber, or any kind of prison. It’s a door.” Polaris rather bravely stuck an arm into the ‘door’, its true nature as a portal was immediately obvious as the arm vanished.

“Here’s your guards.” Koro called from the other end the chamber. “They dragged themselves here, but no sign of anything else.”

The sounds of slow clapping filled the chamber, a sultry smooth yet still still irritating voice laughing alongside it. All four gathered around the newly discovered portal door, looking around for the source of the voice.

“You’re in over your heads on this one.” Accompanying the softly spoken gloat was a much more powerful torrent of water, catching all four off guard and slamming them into the ground. Severa was the first to her feet, rushing towards the sound of the voice. “Oh no, no clever lines from this one.” Another torrent of water lashed out, this time in the shape of a whip. It wrapped itself around Severa and pinned her to the wall. “I’m sure this is very frustrating, but our little battle is not meant for this moment. None of them could see the owner of the voice, but could feel her presence as the water rushed past them into the portal.

The air calmed, and the water evaporated as its magical owner was no longer present. The four composed themselves, and Koro was the first to speak up.

“Who the hell was that?”

“Her name is Masa.” Severa sounded irritated just saying the name. “And this is just got a whole lot more complicated.”

Summary: Part III where Koro turns out to be a good guy, and yet another new face is introduced.
 
Jan 2, 2003
7,603
473
Your Dreams
Mistral! // Windfall // Afternoon 1

Mistral zipped off on Bise with a huge grin. "Cloooooooooothes for a Boooooooko buuuuuuuuuuuuudy!"

She drew some attention, what with the flying cloud and all, but nothing she wasn't used to. It was definitely preferable to walking. Her nose crinkled as she saw them all. On their feet. She leaned down, whispering to Bise, "You're right. It doesn't move right."

And then it happened. Suddenly and overpoweringly. She had no idea from whence it came and yet it was open her and she found herself stunned. Powerless.

"Ooooooooooooooooh my godesses. That. Smells. AMAZING!"

A street vendor was frying a meats on a large open grill. Bise floated her, involuntarily, toward the all-encompassing aroma. "I suppose... well, no one's eaten all day, really... Shin-shan the Grumpy-man probably won't mind tooooo much, as long as I bring something for him."

Bise bobbed reproachfully.

"Shush, you don't even eat."

The vendor cautiously raised his voice. "Uh... Uhm..? Ma'am...? Eurh... Did..." He seemed to realize he was stammering and cleared his throat. "Aherm! Welcome to my grill. Not much, saving for a shop, but the best eats you'll find on Windfall! I'd say you could ask anyone, but I see you happen to have a nose, so you must already know!"

"Yes!" Mistral squealed. "It smells like heaven mixed with bliss and a dash of yummy!"

He chuckled. "Well said! This is ready to serve, I'll make you one!"

Mistral thrust forward a hand with upraised fingers. "FOUR!"

The vendor boggles slightly, then shook his head. "Four it is, then, miss."

Moments later she was drifting down the street with juices dripping from her chin, and grease smeared over her hands. "Happy tummy." she sighed, her mind drifting with the peaceful contentedness that comes after a good meal. Bise wafted along beneath her, insistent about something or other.
________________________________________________________________________

Half an Hour Later


"And that one looks like a tektite!"

"A... what?"

"You know. Tektite. Sorta like a less-leggy spider?"

"Uh-huh... you're making that up."

"Nu-uh!"

"Well.... that's clearly a bokoblin."

Mistral bolted upright, eyelids spreading wide. "Oh no! Bokoblin! Bingbang! Clothes!"

With a nudge she sent Bise blasting back down the hill into town.

"Weird girl." commented the boy laying in the grass, as he looked down after her. "But I kinda like'er."
________________________________________________________________________

Bise flew with such speed back to the Bingbang Gang's hiding spot that it left a trail behind Mistral. She brought it to a halt and began bowing in apology. Her words fell out in a frantic rushed mess. "I'msorryI'msorryittooksolongsorryI'msorryhereIgotclothes-" she tossed a voluminous yellow and orange dress at Bingbang, which landed on her head, "-andIgotusallgood sincewehaven'teatenallday-" she tossed the fried street-meats to her three companions, "-butIalreadyateminesofeelfreetogoaheadnoneedtowaitformeandasaspecialI'msorrytoyouShinhereIboughtyouthispleasedon'thavemeweshouldbefriends."

The final item she did not toss, but gingerly offered a glass bottle full of red liquid to Shin, her eyes wise and welling with tears, hoping he'd accept the peace offering and fearing his dismissal and ire.

Summary: Mistral is a character that exists. She goes off, gets distracted, comes back with food and clothes for Bingbang and a red potion for Shin.
 
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stache19

No Longer a Noob
Apr 21, 2001
8,417
794
Ethan, Windfall Island, Late Afternoon 1

Ethan’s attitude grew more grim once the party was safely on Windfall island. Without the distraction of villains and wannabe villains, he was forced to pay attention to more important details. Bing had somehow survived drinking from an ancient well of power, a place where magical ley lines converged. Mutations, death, disfigurement. All things he would have expected from drinking something of such power. Not for Bing. It made Ethan’s head hurt.

Mistral came wandering back after a relatively brief time away, rambling, and offering things she’d purchased with Shin’s money. Ethan’s attention however was on the sky, as he watched a single curious spot above the windmill. A singular dot had appeared in the air, and then began stretching out into lines. It was like watching a crack in a window forming, spidering out rapidly, catching the attention of more and more people.

The entire party and half the island now had their eyes on the sky. Strangely not a soul was panicking or reacting how one might anticipate when the very heavens begin to break. With a most unpleasant crunching sound, the crack finally tore open, leaving a fissure in the sky. A cloud of insects swarmed out and down to the surface of the island, coalescing into a humanoid-esque shape. Just enough definition to identify which part began talking.

“Empress Vera wishes a message.” The words came out like one might expect from a creature composed of insects, all hisses and buzzes forced into barely intelligible words. Ethan and crew braced for a fight as the creature drifted closer. “You are marked now.” insect-man pointed to Bing. “The Empress shall claim the power you have stolen for yourself. Make peace with your existence or pledge your future to her, for she is coming.” Exploding out into thousands of insects, the creature vanished back into the fissure, which sealed itself up immediately, but not completely. A single thin line still traced across the sky where the wound had been opened.

“You just had to drink the all powerful magic soup.” Ethan snapped at Bing, taking comfort in sarcasm as the gravity of the situation truly settled in.

Summary: On Windfall island, a giant fissure opens in the sky and a humanoid form made of insects emerges. It announces that Bing is now Public Enemy #1 of our main villain, Vera. It then leaves. The fissure is sealed, but you can still see where it used to be. It’s probably fifty feet long with its center point being above the Windmill.
 

Link64Gogetta

No Longer a Noob
Nov 19, 2000
10,717
177
Shin/Under Ground Cave/Afternoon 1


Shin wasn’t entirely sure what Mistral had just said but he sure as hell knew what a red potion was. He quickly drank it all down and the let out a sigh of relief, “thanks, I really needed that.”

Mistral than sheepishly handed Shin back his now empty wallet. For a brief moment Shin looked disappointed but quickly realized that she had actually come through for them at this one. He shrugged and smile, “Well, it can’t be helped. We are going to need more money though.”

It was then that the sky opened up and a swarm of insects put a death mark on their bokoblin companion.

“You just had to drink the all powerful magic soup.” Ethan snapped at Bing, taking comfort in sarcasm as the gravity of the situation truly settled in.

“In her defense, you never did get around to telling us about sentient swarm of hell bugs that we’re up against,” Shin pointed out. “Besides does it really matter? That’s the... person? Yeah, that’s the person you were going after anyway right? Now we just have another reason to fight... it? Them?”

“Psh, you think too fighty,” Mistral interjected, “we just need bug repellent.”

Shin was about to say something to correct her, but then he quickly realized he wasn’t sure she was wrong.

Summary:

Dialogue of Shin reacting to the last two posts.
 
Jan 2, 2003
7,603
473
Your Dreams
Mistral/Windfall/Early Evening 1

Shin look like he was going to respond, but then shut his mouth and took on a confused yet thoughtful expression.

Mistral turned her head up to look at the weird crack-thing in the sky. "Or a frog."

Without so much as a warning, Bise zipped up high into the air. Mistral circled around the top of the Windmill and then took a closer look at the offense to reality the Bug-man had left behind.

Summary: Mistral adds another comment, and then flies up into the air to examine the weird "tear" or "crack" that had been left by Vera's buggy minion.
 

stache19

No Longer a Noob
Apr 21, 2001
8,417
794
Davus, Catacombs of a Distant Land, Months Ago

Before Masa’s attack, Koro had redundantly pointed out the guards position, something Davus couldn’t stop thinking about. Something had been different about it. He studied the location of the bodies carefully, realizing after a few moments that it looked as if they’d been moved. Davus decided to speak up.

“Polaris. The guards weren’t completely dead, or possibly something started animating their bodies if they were dead.” Davus could tell Polaris was thinking the same thing. He looked over to Koro and clarified. “When you spotted the guards, it was after we had already found them. But they were in a different position when you saw them.”

“Maybe the water moved them?” Severa suggested.

“No, the water didn’t extend that far into the room. The mage controlled it very precisely.” Polaris replied. “This isn’t adding up.”

“Shocking.” Davus quipped. “And what can you tell us about Masa?” Davus asked, turning back to Severa.

“I don’t really know where she’s from, certainly not this world or era. She might be from another reality entirely, another dimension. It’s a complete mystery. Whatever gods made her, well, they hold no voice in this land. I’ve fought her once, and I lost badly. I survived because she made the mistake of thinking I was dead. I’ll tell you the rest some other time. The point is, she’s dangerous and could take us all on collectively.

“No, I don’t think she can.” Polaris replied. Davus nodded. “We are stronger.” They said in unison. It was moderately creepy.

“Oh good, we’ll just defeat her with the power of arrogance.” Severa snapped.

“I’m not spending any more time arguing.” Davus said flatly.

He found himself with too many pieces too quickly. This could not be a coincidence, the town needing help, the vanishings, the sudden and abrupt negative attitude shift of the townspeople towards Davus and Polaris. And now Davus just happened to stumble across Koro, who also claimed to be here by chance. And now this Masa individual was involved somehow.

“We can’t waste more time here.” Davus gestured to the portal that they previously believed to be a stasis chamber. “Let’s go.” He led the group through, bracing himself for the unknown.

There was little to see. Some shriveled empty husks of long dead trees. Cracked, dried ground littered with dust and the occasional unidentifiable bone. No evidence of a single living thing, except for themselves and presumably Masa.

“Oh…” Davus wasn’t sure if he muttered it or someone else did, but all eyes were fixed in the same direction all the same. The sun was burned down to a tiny glow, and the moon scattered across the heavens in pieces. Shooting up hundreds of feet into the air was a black spire that looked as if it was draining the sun of its life.

“Tell me again why you were hunting this Masa.” Polaris asked Severa.

“Why because I owed her a favor.” Severa’s tone dramatically changed, and Davus didn’t need more than a half-second to suss it out. But his denial was stronger and he refused to acknowledge what he already knew. He watched with bottled confusion and rage as Severa walked away. Davus had known Severa her entire life, during a time when he skewed noticeably further closer to objective evil. He had attempted to turn her to darkness, corrupt her soul. It had failed, and he was in the end murdered by Polaris of all people. In that hour of death, Davus was reborn in more ways than one, entering into a life of eternal questions. And now one new question: Why was Severa seemingly about to betray the group? How could someone fighting for the light their whole life turn away without explanation?

Davus realized the same question had surely been asked about himself. How could one turn from the darkness after embodying it? He never did find an answer.

“What is this?” Polaris remained calm, but warning entered his words.

“Oh my dear general.” Masa said, casually referencing another era of his life. “Did you really think it was wise to ally yourself with the daughter of Empress Vera? You've been played for the fools you are.” While Masa conversed with Polaris, Davus stared deeply into Severa’s eyes. He searched, very close to desperately, for evidence it was all some plan. Evidence that it was a long con on Vera.

He didn’t find any. The woman who had helped steer him to a new life now chosen his old one.

“You won’t recruit us.” Davus said flatly to Masa, still refusing to directly acknowledge that Severa had just casually switched sides. “We’ll never work for Vera.”

Masa put a hand to her chest in feigned offense.

“You will die for her cause, one way or another.”

Summary: The group goes through a portal into a dead world, where they encounter Masa again. Severa randomly seems to betray the group, joining Masa’s side as the situation heads toward a battle.
 
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Jan 8, 2013
44
22
England
Bingbang Bongbang, Windfall Island, Day 1

“HISSSSSSSSS”

The sudden shift from darkness to light came as a shock to Bingbang, who spent a while gradually adjusting to her new surroundings while Mistral fetched her a new outfit, shrieking and screeching from within a bush that Ethan had thrown her in to maintain their cover. Eventually she stepped out from her cover and nattered meaninglessly to the others about how great and powerful she had become and how she knew it had always been her destiny, until…

WHAP

Darkness. Bingbang Bongbang was suddently covered by a mess of fabric, she fought valiantly with no success to struggle her way out of the dress but only found herself more and more tangled in its pockets and sleeves until a strange voice causes her to stop still. After the threat was over she carefully found her way through the neckhole and nervously peeked out at her surroundings, gulping heavily with dread.

“You just had to drink the all powerful magic soup.” Ethan snapped her way while she pushed her arms out and strapped her drum to the back of her new elegant dress, which was far too long and dragged across the dirt behind her as she stepped towards her bickering cohorts.

“Or a frog” Mistral commented

“OR, HOW ABOUT A FEW OF THE BEST PALS A BOKOBLIN COULD EVER HAVE, EH? BY THE SOUND OF IT, THERE’S ONLY ONE OF THEM CREEPY VOICE FELLA’S, BUT THERE’S 5 OF US SO REALLY, THEY SHOULD BE SCARED OF US, RIGHT?”

And with that, Bingbang put her clawed hand out in the centre of the group, hoping that the others would join her in a moment of comradery.

Summary: Bingbang Bongbang gets stuck in a dress and declares that she isn’t afraid of her new enemy because of the power of friendship.
 
Jan 8, 2013
44
22
England
Evalyn Vass, Windfall Island, Day 1

“FIFTY RUPEES?” Evalyn shouted with disgust “You’re joking right? That’s extortion.”

“Look. A deal’s a deal ‘luv, if you ain’t takin’ the free travel with everyone else it’ll run ya back fifty to bunk with the crew” Replied the disgruntled sailor she had chosen to harass.

“But I don’t think you’re listening, sir, if I become crew, then surely I can stay with the crew.”

“We ain’t hiring. And what exactly would ya be doin’ in our crew anyway?” The man sneered, looking the slender girl up and down.

“I’ll have you know i’m an excellent navigator” She snapped back with confidence

“Already got one.” He stubbornly replied. “Sleep with the other filthy street rats or pay up, that’s yer offer.”

Eva’s eyes narrowed at this insult, but her determination followed through, a wicked grin creeping across her face, knowing that this ship was the last one to turn her down and really wanting to avoid having to stow away.

“I’d like to speak to your captain.” She sneered, absolutely prepared to stoop to a new low just to shut down this clown.

“Oh yeah? And you fink he’s gonna just let you in? Well too bad, he’s not ‘ere.”

“Well where would I be able to find him? I’m sure he’d be a more reasonable man than yourself.” She stubbornly persisted.

“Go to the Salty Stalfos. Find a man named Morgan Longhorn. Wears a lot of red, you’ll know ‘im when you see him.” The sailor replied with a chuckle “And lass, good luck, you’ll need it.”

Evalyn shot a wide smile back as she began to walk away “Cheers. And I definitely won’t.”

Summary: After failing to convince every ship at the dock to host her in private quarters for free, she decides to take desperate measures to secure a place on the last one, heading off to find and seduce the captain.
 

stache19

No Longer a Noob
Apr 21, 2001
8,417
794
Ethan | Windfall | Late Afternoon 1

Ethan was ready for a break from the power of friendship, mumbling an incoherent warning about being quiet and cautious as he wandered away from the group. He had a few social connections on the island, including a favor it was time to cash in on. Slipping out of sight, Ethan snapped his fingers and teleported into one of the smaller and more discrete residences on the island.

Appearing inside a small home, Ethan immediately heard the shattering of dishes and what sounded like water splashing onto the floor, followed by the sound of a body hitting the floor. “Goddesses be damned, you’ll never stop doing that will you?”

Ethan looked down at the old man asking the question, offering a hand to him. He took it and rose, the shock and surprise quickly turning to concern.

“I’d yell at you for doing that, but I suspect you’re here for something more serious than broken dishes. What can I do for you, Ethan?”

“Hi Regulus. Yes you can do something for me. You could reveal you exist to Sirius. He might have some questions about that given his certainty about history as he knows it. You could also maybe tell me again how exactly you got here…”

“Oh aren't you tired of this story? The old man asked.

“I don’t think I ever will be.” Ethan answered.

“Well okay then.” He motioned for Ethan to sit down at a small square table and followed suit. “I lived during a time of great turmoil on The Great Sea. I was in a dungeon talking to someone named Kokage, and then the world was destroyed by rocks. I woke up on this island, and made a new life for myself.” The old man smiled. There was indeed a more in-depth version of the story but Ethan had asked to her it hundreds of times and he liked to tighten it up more each time.

“Who saved you?” Ethan asked. “Nobody in that entire world would have known what was coming. Who saved you, how did they save you?” Ethan was desperate to know, given that this man represented something extremely rare. Someone who survived Vera long enough to tell a story about it.

“You aren’t asking the right questions you know.”

“So what are the right questions?”

“Let’s start by talking about finding the Triforce and completely destroying it.”

“Oh not this again…” Ethan sighed and put his hand down on the table, talking in a muffled tone into its surface. “You can shatter a Triforce, but you can’t completely destroy it.”

“Is that so.” A soft voice came from the other side of a door Ethan had not been through before. The door was gently pushed ajar, and an individual wearing a ridiculous purple costume stepped out. “Tell that to Lorule.”

Summary: Ethan chats with someone claiming they come from a destroyed world as he searches for information about how to stop Vera. Then Ravio shows up.
 
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