Flashback Don't Rock the Boat, Baby.

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An inland sea created by Ivak's cataclismic fury during the Valterrian, the Suvan Sea is a major trade route and the foremost hub for piracy in Mizahar. [lore]

Don't Rock the Boat, Baby.

Postby Tarlen Lastcrest on July 29th, 2015, 10:12 am

37th of Winter, 498
The Southern Suvan Sea
Midday

The waters of the Suvan wrapped around seven-year-old Tarlen as he plunged down into the azure waves, the laughter of his mother and his friends, Yalla and Elias still ringing in his ears. Saltwater swept into his mouth, a taste sweeter than any honey, as he kicked up to float on top of the waves. Looking back up to the ships of his pod - the Whitecrest pod - he noticed that Yalla and Elias had jumped into the water to join him while his mom leaned on the ship's railing laughing, the charms hanging from the ends of her midnight-black hair bouncing with every chuckle.

"That wasn't fair, mom," Tarlen forced his face into a false scowl, "Yalla and Elias were distracting me!"

"Your friend's a good helper," his mom grinned mischievously, "And you're easy to sneak up on. You've never caught me tossing you into the waves since you were a tiny little babe."

Tarlen Scowled, "I'm not a babe anymore."

"Of course. You're my little man."

"I-" Tarlen was interrupted by a pair of hands on his shoulders, shoving him under the waves again. Water rushed into his mouth and fear into his heart and he flung his elbow backwards hard, into his attacker. The hands released him and he kicked his way to the surface, gasping for air.

He turned to see Yalla behind him, rubbing her side and glaring at him with her sky-blue eyes, "Tarlen, you jerk!"

Scarlet red crept across his cheeks, "You pushed me under and grabbed me. What'd you expect me to do?"

Yalla grunted and swam off in a huff, but Tarlen's mom just sat there smiling that same smile.

"What's so funny?" Tarlen didn't like it when his mom did this - she always just sat there smiling when he got into a fight with Yalla, as though she knew something he didn't. Mom was crazy! Yalla was his best friend, and when they argued she just sat there smiling like it was all some big joke.

That was exactly what Mom did now with a chuckle, "Having a little lovers' spat, Tarlen?"

Tarlen hadn't thought he could blush harder, but he did. He turned away and swam out to sea, his mom calling out to him, "Be back for dinner!"

Last edited by Tarlen Lastcrest on August 4th, 2015, 8:12 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Tarlen Lastcrest
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Don't Rock the Boat, Baby.

Postby Tarlen Lastcrest on August 4th, 2015, 8:10 pm

37th of Winter, 498
The Southern Suvan Sea
Evening

Vibrant oranges of all shades reflected brightly across the sky and over the misty waters of the Suvan Sea as the sun dipped towards the horizon. Driftwood that must have once been a fallen tree, beaten by the sea until it was perfectly smooth and bleached to a pale white by the sun's rays, floated up and down on the waves under Tarlen. Dangling his arm in the cool ocean water as he lay on the log, Tarlen watched the ships of his pod bob up and down in the distance, silhouetted hazily through the mist against the brightly painted sunset sky.

But - no. Something was off. There were only eleven ships in his pod, including old Leski's old Casinor, but he was a weird one and never stuck close to the pod. There were... well, he couldn't tell how many at this distance, but they loomed through the light mist like some great beast riding the waves straight towards his sleepy little pod. More than twelve. More than eleven. Thirteen? Fifteen? Tarlen sat up and shivered - not from the water. Something was wrong. He could see it as they inched closer and he slid into the waves, inching closer to his pod with each stroke. It went on like that for some time, just swimming closer and closer to his pod as the sun sank down to hug the horizon. He raised his head for a breath and stopped, treading water with wide eyes as it hit him: Those weren't Svefra ships. They were too big. He was close enough now to watch in horror as the first harpoon slammed into one of the Pod's three Palivars, finding a place to stick among the splintered wreckage it made of the ship's hull and slowly dragging it closer.

Tarlen was close now, and he could hear the screams - men and women alike screaming in panic mixed with the laughter and jeers of the sailors on the big ships. He paddled closer to his own family's Palivar - the Redkelp, and clung to the elaborate relief carved into the hull well above the waterline near the back of the ship - dolphins and a handful of fish playing among a kelp forest, kept from wearing away by heavy maintenance and the old Whitecrest techniques.

An audible thunk was followed by the sound of wood straining and splintering, and then by his family's screams. Tarlen tried to climb, but found himself petrified as the Redkelp drifted closer and closer to the bigger ships while his pod's attackers stood above, laughing and taunting the Svefra.
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Don't Rock the Boat, Baby.

Postby Tarlen Lastcrest on August 6th, 2015, 8:31 am

37th of Winter, 498
The Southern Suvan Sea
Nightfall

Freezing waves crashed against Tarlen's body as he clung to the side of the Redkelp's carved hull with its faded paint. His father shouted something from the deck and the telltale clanking of a ballista's crank made itself audible over the waves. Another surge of briny water crashed over Tarlen and he pulled himself a little big higher on the ship's hull, peeking over the edge of the ship so that he could see the deck. It was too dark and foggy to see more than two figures - his mom and dad - cranking their ship's heavy ballista to full tension and aiming it up towards shadowy figures atop the much bigger ship's looming profile, lit from behind by glowing torches.

"Now?" Tarlen's father asked in his booming voice, loud even over the crash of waves.

"Not yet, Orlen," His mother shouted in reply, "Hold her steady... Steady... Just a little bit to the left..."

Crack! The harpoon launched its missile and a shadow disappeared from the looming hull - now close enough that Tarlen could see the rough black and red paint all over the vessel. It was a massive ship - bigger than any that Tarlen had ever seen, reminding him of the few times the Whitecrest pod had passed by the rocky cliffs near the port of Zeltiva. His mother would point out the different sea birds and sometimes they would even go ashore later, on quieter shores - where his dad taught him how to dig up and clean clams.

And now his parents were cranking the harpoon up for another shot when the ships collided together with a mighty crash. Tarlen grasped at the seal carving he had been hanging onto, rewarded only with burning pain as his fingernail and the tip of his index finger were ripped off, caught by the splintering wood. He crashed into the inky blackness of the nighttime Suvan and opened his mouth to scream as the salty water washed over the torn flesh on his finger. Saltwater rushed into his mouth as he was tossed by the waves.

Down, up, left - where was up? Tarlen couldn't tell. Everything was darkness, salt and pain. He spat out and paddled blindly forward, hard. His lungs burned from withheld breath. Tarlen kicked forward, fighting the ocean's waves the whole way.

Cold ocean air hit his face with a welcome spray of sea froth. Gasping for air, Tarlen wiped the water from his eyes with some difficulty, managing to stay just above the waves as he looked around. He'd been pushed from the ships, and could just make out the outline of one of his parents being dragged up to the glowing deck of the bigger ship. An icy fear grew inside of him, fueled by his realization that a shark was approaching him. Hunting his blood. He couldn't see it, but he could feel it - Laviku's mark let him know.

He had to get to the Redkelp and sneak onto the big black ship. Somehow he could help his family. Tarlen swam for the Redkelp madly, pulling himself closer and closer through the waves despite his mutilated finger.

There were still four figures standing on the ship - two of them holding one between them, with a fourth shouting something at the captive one - a man. He could see them more clearly as he drew closer, but it only confirmed what he had been dreading. Tarlen's father was being held by two of the other men. He noticed a glint from the torchlight in the fourth man's hand. Tarlen was close enough to see them, now. His father's captors were facing away from him, towards the fourth man, who was wearing a thick naval coat and a big feathered three-corner hat with a huge bushy brown beard that didn't quite cover the man's devilish grin. Nothing had scared him half as much in his life as the bearded man's smile.

"Lookit you, li'l Svefra," The bearded man jeered at Tarlen's father the common tongue, "Hell o' a fighter, you are, too, if these two're worth believin'. You took the other three I sent here?"

Tarlen's father spat.

"Hehehe," The bearded man's laugh was halfway to a wheeze as he lifted his cutlass and toyed with it, the mad twinkle in his eyes matching the glint of his blade in the torchlight, "Ye could'a been a fine slave, lad. Pity we'll hafta settle for yer woman. She's fierce enough. Heh. I like it rough-like."

Tarlen's father strained free from one of the men, elbowing him in the face as the bearded man raised his blade. He began to swing down at Tarlen's father, who caught the bearded man's wrist and began to wrestle the blade away.

As one man stepped back and drew his cutlass and the other clutched his broken nose, Tarlen screamed, "Father!"

Tarlen's father whipped around in shock, "Tarlen?! You're - Go! Swim, lad! I'll -"

The bearded man broke free and plunged his sword into Tarlen's distracted Father's chest, looking Tarlen straight in the eyes as he did, "Well lookit ye. My, my, what a sweet thing you are, lad. Come o'er here and let me take a closer lookit ye, and I swear I won't hurt ye."

Tarlen reeled backwards in horror, opening and closing his mouth - "You're a monster," he wanted to say, "Laviku won't let a creature like you live on his oceans," "I'll kill you." All he could think was fear, all that left his mouth were choked sobs.

"Ooh, he's tryin' to run, cap'n," one of the men cheerfully shouted, "Should I fetch 'im?"

"Aye," The bearded man started laughing but it lapsed into a coughing fit, leaning on his cutlass. "Aye," he repeated when he regained his composure, "And bring him to my quarters with the wench - She's prob'ly his mum. It'll be a fun night."

The bearded man turned and returned to the ladder linking the two ships together with the broken-nosed man while the other man dropped his cutlass onto the deck and dove into the briny depths. Tarlen turned and swam for his life, back the way he'd come. His father's last words rang in his ears - he couldn't die now. He had to live. If not for himself then for his father's last wish - though it occurred to Tarlen that not dying was certainly enough of a motivation to live.

Waves crashed around him as he swam desperately through the waves and he spotted the log he had spent the day riding off to his left - and, to his right, the fin of some enormous shark. While Tarlen was certainly terrified enough for motivation, the arrival of the shark terrified him beyond his wildest nightmares.

Tarlen gasped from exhaustion and found his mouth full of salt water. He spat it out and pulled himself through the ocean. His limbs felt leaden from the horrifying swim and he could hear the slaver splashing noisily behind him. After what felt like an eternity of burning muscles and buffeting waves, Tarlen's head smacked into the log. He hadn't even seen it in his blind panic. With a throbbing head and stars dancing before his eyes, Tarlen somehow managed to hoist himself onto the log and turn to see the slaver.

The slaver was a swimmer, but no Svefra. The man had fallen behind Tarlen, but seemed less tired - a full grown man, as he was. Terrified though Tarlen was of the shark, the slaver was more terrified, and it hurt his swimming. Splashing fervently in the waters, the slaver failed to make headway... but succeeded in attracting the shark's attention. The shark turned to the slaver and Tarlen watched as it rocketed forwards and gripped the man. The shark, tore the slaver's stomach open with a vicious shake of its head and the screaming man's entrails floated out over the water with ribbons of blood.

Tarlen didn't even wince as he watched the slaver die. If he could have his way, he realized, he would kill them all.
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Tarlen Lastcrest
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Don't Rock the Boat, Baby.

Postby Tarlen Lastcrest on August 9th, 2015, 5:46 am

38th of Winter, 498
The Southern Suvan Sea
Morning

Tarlen awoke to the sound of seagulls' shrill cries breaking the soothing symphony of waves rocking his ship up and down. He groggily opened his eyes and glanced at the water surrounding him - Tarlen sat up with a start. All of the memories of the last night came rushing back. His ship was gone. His family was gone. It wasn't just a dream; his entire pod had really been wiped out by the big-bearded slaver. They were gone - his father was gone and who knew what happened to his mother, and to his friend Yalla. He wanted to cry, but when he reached down into his heart he only felt drained.

The previous night's fog had lifted, leaving the ocean clear as far as the eye could see. His pod's ships - if any even remained floating - were far and away out of sight. Tarlen dangled his bare feet into the azure ocean waves, watching them crest with white foam before getting swallowed back into the sea.

Tarlen's stomach grumbled fiercely and he realized how good a roasted gull would taste right now. Or a raw gull. Any food would be a miracle, but Tarlen couldn't call on the little fish swimming around the water for fear of whose meat he might find in their bellies.

"Uhngh," he groaned as he laid down on the log, his sore muscles protesting with every movement as he lowered his head under the surf and gulped in several mouthfuls of water. At least he had that.

He could feel the sea teeming with life to the - South or North? Tarlen lifted his head and breathed in the cool sea air, slumping over on the log and looking out at the beauty of the Suvan Sea and its horizon, where the pale blue sky met the dark blue of the briny deeps. His shadow fell to his left... was that west or east? And What would he do, now? Drift forever on a sunbleached log? Could he even survive? Tarlen didn't know how to cook and he wasn't a very good fisherman. He could dig up clams and oysters... if he were anywhere near the coast. Now it seemed like he was just going to drift and starve. At least the view was pretty, and he would see his family soon. He felt a wrenching sensation in his gut and gasped sharply, and his eyes started to burn.

That was when Tarlen realized that he was not out of tears.
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Tarlen Lastcrest
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Don't Rock the Boat, Baby.

Postby Tarlen Lastcrest on August 11th, 2015, 7:39 am

38th of Winter, 498
The Southern Suvan Sea
Morning

Tarlen awoke to the sound of seagulls' shrill cries breaking the soothing symphony of waves rocking his ship up and down. He groggily opened his eyes and glanced at the water surrounding him - Tarlen sat up with a start. All of the memories of the last night came rushing back. His ship was gone. His family was gone. It wasn't just a dream; his entire pod had really been wiped out by the big-bearded slaver. They were gone - his father was gone and who knew what happened to his mother, and to his friend Yalla. He wanted to cry, but when he reached down into his heart he only felt drained.

The previous night's fog had lifted, leaving the ocean clear as far as the eye could see. His pod's ships - if any even remained floating - were far and away out of sight. Tarlen dangled his bare feet into the azure ocean waves, watching them crest with white foam before getting swallowed back into the sea.

Tarlen's stomach grumbled fiercely and he realized how good a roasted gull would taste right now. Or a raw gull. Any food. It was starting to hurt his stomach, pushing him further down into the heavy fog filling his head. Time stretched on and on as the sun crept across the sky.

He closed his eyes for just a second - resting was all he could do as he waited for the sea to swallow him and bring him to Laviku.

Tarlen's eyes snapped open as he was thrust into wakefulness by cold, hard metal wrapped around his chest. There was a big hook around his chest, lifting him into the air. He kicked at the air and grabbed the hook, trying weakly to lift himself out of its' cold, metallic grip.

"Stop wriggling, lad," a rough voice commanded from behind him. Tarlen felt a sense of familiarity, but couldn't identify the voice - one of the slavers? Someone who wanted to kill him, as likely as not.

Tarlen responded with a scream, "Let me go! Stop!" It didn't help. He was lifted helplessly up and swung over, the deck of a ship passing indistinctly before his eyes before the hook twisted, dropping him carefully onto the deck of the strange ship.

Tarlen twisted to the side, pushing himself back fearfully as he processed the ship: A Casinor, but not one he'd ever been on, with elaborate carvings along the guardrails. More importantly, an old man with leathery skin and grey-streaked brown hair squinted at him with navy blue eyes, leaning on a pole ending in a dull metal hook.

"Huh. You're Molla's boy, aye?" The old man tossed the hooked pole aside, taking a few steps closer to Tarlen and kneeling down when he was close, "Aye. I'd recognize that hair anywhere. You've grown a bit since I last saw you. Have I been away so long? And what're you doing floating out here, all by yourself? Got in a spat with your parents? Or..."

Tarlen sniffed, but didn't say anything. This was Old Leski? He'd heard all the stories of the Whitecrests' black sheep - all the legends of the pirate hunter and friend to land-folk - but where was he when his family was attacked? Tears welled up in Tarlen's eyes.

Leski's eyes widened and his mouth grew thin as Tarlen drew his legs up to his chest and hugged them close. He stood up and walked into the cabin of the ship, leaving Tarlen to himself. Tarlen pushed himself backwards until he had his back against the wall. Was Leski part of the attack? Why wasn't he there - was he just an absent wanderer, or was it something more? Were his questions his way of covering his tracks? Was Leski working with the slavers? Tarlen had just begun considering these questions when Leski walked back up the stairs bearing a small bowl full of a warm broth smelling strongly of seaweed and fish, which he offered to Tarlen with a tight smile. The kind that adults used when they were hiding sadness. Leski wasn't in league with the slavers - Tarlen was sure of that, now.

"Here, lad," Leski offered, "Eat. I'm sure you're hungry... And then you can tell me what happened."
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Tarlen Lastcrest
I like boats.
 
Posts: 11
Words: 10063
Joined roleplay: July 26th, 2015, 6:15 pm
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Race: Human, Svefra
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