Poseidon’s Wrath : A 7th Sea Story
Rated Mature as violence, cursing, gore, sexual interactions and innuendos as well as much more grey area adventuring may occur. Enter thread at your own discretion.
“Jerome! You know that it is bedtime!” The little boy looked up with wide eyes at his mother, surprised to be caught reading his favorite book way past his curfew. The little room in San Teodoro’s artisan district had a surprisingly large window for a building of its time and allowed light from the outside street lamps to seep in. Paired with a flashlight, it was enough for the eight year old to say goodnight to his mother, wait for her to leave and then continue reading into the night. His first instinct now was to hide the book under his covers but after a few failed attempts, he sighed and looked down.
“Mama, perdoname,” The woman raised an eyebrow before throwing her hands in the air and stepping into her son’s bedroom, flipping the light on as she went. Sitting lightly on the edge of the boy’s bed, she reached for the book. Careful not to lose her son’s page, she looked at the cover before chuckling.
“El Huracan, hijo, again? Don’t you have all this story memorized from cover to cover?” The boy blushed but gave a shy shrug and grinned back.
“Not the whole thing yet, just the beginning. This part I haven’t memorized yet.”
“And which part is this?” Eleanora raised an eyebrow, opening the page and scanning the paragraphs on the page. Sensing that he wasn’t in any immediate trouble, Jerome scooted closer and pointed to the paragraph where he stopped.
“This is when the crew starts to approach San Teodoro in search of information about the Seventh Sea, mama. El Huracan is only a day away from docking in our docks!”
“It has been a while since I read the travels of El Huracan,” the woman looked down at her son’s blazing eyes and undeniable excitement, the hope of just one more chapter radiating from him. “You will need to remind me of what has happened so far though. And only one more chapter hijo then bed.”
“Si mama!” Jerome gave his mother a big hug, closing his eyes as he did before grabbing his pillow and moving it so that the pair could sit upright on the bed, leaning against the wall and have something soft helping to keep them comfortable. “El Huracan has been sailing from Avalon. First, they stopped in Vesten so that Conn could visit his family and Captain Drake Ryder could find a lead for the magical map. Zhao is my favorite though - he is so wise and knowledgeable. And he has this style - zip, bang, pow!” The boy ended up bouncing around the room, imitating the unique Cathay style of his favorite character, Eleanora shaking her head.
“There must be some girls in this story,” she smiled.
“Well, there are. Sol just joined them - she is pretty cool too. She shoots arrows from a bow and knows runes. She’s Conn’s niece and she is so brave.”
“Sounds like you have a sweetheart,” Eleanor teased as Jerome blushed a deep red.
“Mama!” he complained, coming over to the bed and sitting back down. “I don’t think this is a kissing book.”
“Well, Sol does sound really brave to leave her family and travel the world,” Eleanor agreed, flipping to the page and frowning. “Now, who is Tamara?”
“An Ussurian noble but she just got disowned. What does that mean anyway?” frowning, the boy scrunched up his nose then shrugged. “She seems to hate everyone but deep down she’s nice.”
“Alright, I think I have the informacion basico,” Eleanor smiled. “Now, let’s see what happens next…”
A lone figure stood in the huge common room of the ship, bent over a rough wooden table that was firmly nailed to the floor boards and remained typically void. Today, there was a huge map of the city sprawled across, held down by four distinct daggers pinning down the corners so that the man could easily see the lay of the land, his rough finger tracing various routes and stopping at faintly etched landmarks, a few comments and calculations drawn in a practically illegible handwriting on the sides, a few marks and words circled. The edge of the map was rough and ripped, a few small stains dotting it from the various times it was pulled out and mulled over with goblets of wine and other delicacies making planning sessions a bit more bearable.
The slow rocking of the sea gave those unused to the waves a slight disbalance and, oftentimes, a rather nautiating feel. The figure currently in the room didn’t notice the constant shift of the floor beneath him, frowning as his finger stopped yet again at a mark on the map, tapping it in though before growling in frustration and starting over. It was an ongoing dance of a mastermind, a puzzle that didn’t seem to carry any logical answer but one that needed solving none the less. Soft light came in through blurry glass windows, a luxury that the ship allowed itself while in relatively friendly waters though during attacks, thick wooden covers ensured that the room and everything inside it remained untouched. A chandelier, currently unlit, barely swung up above the table, an old globe in the corner tempting adventurers with places yet unseen or unexplored. Rough wooden bookshelves lined the cabin with various artifacts and a stash of Numenari rum.
In the opposite side of the room, an area resembling a quaint Castillian sitting room with fluffed couches and seats hosted an old piano. The keys were worn down from age and the salty sea air, the notes variously out of tune that sometimes, even the simplest of melodies came out in a musical cofundle. Past the instrument was a corridor leading to the living quarters while an elegant ladder allowed for access up to the deck. A young woman, no more than six and twenty, sat at the instrument, delicate fingers moving through some foreign song with ease. Her head was bowed slightly and her eyes closed - it was easy to see that this was not her first time conquering the temperamental instrument and somehow, over the course of their intricate and confusing time together, the pair came to a truce. The song was not played as perfectly as it could have been on a better quality instrument but the slight C minor added sadness and pulled at the heart.
Quietly, the woman started to sing in a foreign language, her voice matching the song and echoing the slight sadness within the notes. It wasn’t a song that she sung often, preferring the songs of Castille, Montagnie or Vestenmannavnjar and often spending hours translating notes of various instruments to befit the shabby old piano as well as translating the songs into Old Thean, ensuring their integrity was never lost. To hear Ussurian on board El Huracan was a rare occurrence indeed and a sign of something brewing. The man at the table paused, listening to the delicate voice of his companion before looking up with curiosity in his hazel-green eyes, lips involuntarily curling up into a smirk.
“That is a new one, Tammy,” he purred, walking over to lean against the piano, arms crossed on his chest. The woman shot him a glare but continued to play, deciding to ignore him for the time being. Drake Ryder….pardon, Captain Drake Ryder watched one of his oldest companions, not understanding a single word but allowing the ballad - of that much he was certain - to wash over him. Sometimes, Drake wondered who on Theah decided that Ussurian was a harsh, hostile language like Eisen. Although Tamara prefered to curse in her native tongue, she only transformed the foreign tongue into a rather pleasant sounding one. The grace and mannerisms, her noble demeanour and commanding authority - all of it forced the man to admire the country of snow, ice and magic that he had yet to visit. Shaking away his thoughts, he tilted his head as the Ussurian played the last few notes of her song. “What was it about?”
“Something you know nothing about,” Tamara’s eyes blazed with mixed emotions but her pursed lips gave away her true feelings. Over their years of travel, she had acquired an accent much closer to Vodacce than Ussurian when speaking in Old Thean. “It spoke of honor and humbleness, a parent’s love and rewards when one follows their heart.”
“You regret running?” Drake raised an eyebrow. There was a pause before the blonde slammed the keyboard cover shut, the sound of wood against wood echoing around the common room.
“I said you know nothing about it!” she snapped, looking away from him. Watching her for a moment, Drake shrugged his shoulders before pushing away from the instrument and walking back to the map. Women were strange, he mused, and hard to keep happy. Some days, he questioned his youthful sanity of mind to allow Tamara onto El Huracan in the first place. From the piano, he heard some muttering before a ruffle of skirts signed that she stood up and the click of her heels brought the woman closer, her elegant perfume both tempting and immediately putting him in his place. “Drake, I’m sorry. That song...I always thought I was like the hero and now, I wonder if I was always the villain.”
“Your father?” the captain raised an eyebrow. The woman shook her head in negative. It had been only a few months since Tamara Alekseiovna v’Pscovs had been stripped of her noble title and officially exiled from the Pscov boyar clan. At first, the ship’s surgeon locked herself up in her rooms for days and, from what the crew said, destroyed pretty much anything breakable in her reach. Then, interrupting Drake’s private conference with his First Mate, she demanded that all the items be replaced. Neither man had dared argue with her at that moment, knowing all too well of the Ussurian bear-like temper of the seemingly petite, fragile lady. Now, Tamara refused to speak about her past with anyone. Even now, Drake felt as though he was walking on eggshells and quickly opted to change topics.
“We’ll be approaching San Teodoro soon,” he ran a hand through his mop of hair. “Time to sell the wares and pick up a few supplies. I was planning to give everyone a couple of days to enjoy the sights.”
“The sights of San Teodoro?” Tamara rolled her eyes. “Please tell me you aren’t planning to go on that wild hunt for information that may not even be worth it.”
“This time, I swear, it’s true.”
“How do you know that?”
“I,” Drake stopped as the woman crossed her arms over her chest and shifted her weight to one side, looking at him expectantly. “Let’s just say I have a hunch.”
“Last time, your hunch got us thrown out of the harbor and I spent three weeks dealing with a wining, delusional Vesten in my medical bay! Not to mention that your Quartermaster barely recovered from that marathon - he is not a young boy any longer, you know!”
“Tammy, I know, I kno--”
“I don’t like it when you call me Tammy,” the Ussurian’s eyes blazed. Drake grimaced.
“You don’t like it only when you are angry,” he retorted.
“Especially when I am angry,” Tamara growled before shaking her head. “You won’t let this go no matter what I say. Why are you so pigheaded?”
“I believe it’s real and when we find it,” he paused, grinning. “When we find it, Tammy, you can return home a hero.”
“A hero, is that it? A runaway, disgrace of a daughter who is off galavanting with men and is probably a Jenny now? My father will obviously see it very differently when I return home having discovered some fabled drunken story.” Biting her lip, the girl pushed back her thick blonde braid and shrugged. “If I can’t knock any sense into you, I will go fetch someone who can.”
“Tamara!” Drake called after her but the woman slammed the door shut, walking off to find his usual partners in crime most likely. Perhaps it was the right thing to do - following the ancient saying that more heads were better than one. Knowing that he would probably be accompanied by Conn and Zhao, perhaps it was better to hear their input prior to trouble this time as opposed to the many times they thought on the fly. Leaning over the map of San Teodoro, the man frowned and tried to once again figure out what the cryptic directions were - two suns, five moons and a white lotus.
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