OOC NOTEI'm assuming everyone has had plenty of time - 13 days irl - to make their sacrifices. So we’re moving on. The Sea portion of our adventure starts here. As the two sister ships held in the water at the mouth of the bay and the sailors and adventurers made their sacrifices, the sea was not littered with debris as one would think. Each ship held over a hundred and eighty lives, including livestock, so the sea by rights should be littered with floating offerings. Instead, as each man and woman made his sacrifice, the gifts hit the water, shimmered, and vanished instantly below the surface. Nothing that should have floated did. Instead, moments after each item was covered with salt water, it vanished – one would swear – in a flare of blue light.
And then the dolphins arrived. They leaped and bounded around the ship, laughing with their perpetual smiles. Sometimes these great mammals were seen in the plunge pool, but more often one or two could be seen escorting ships in and out of the harbor and playing in the sailing vessels wake. Often fisherman dumped their chum for the sea creatures, giving them the leftovers they had no way to preserve overnight. But this time, the dolphins expected no treats. Instead, they were there with gifts for the individuals.
Sailors of all ranks were gifted back, some large items, some small, all in proportion to what they’d sacrificed. Sirroco, having tossed over a necklace that had meaning to him all his life, hand a decidedly white dolphin leap up towards the ship at him and tossed him a small tube that appeared just to be the grip of a weapon. It was palest ivory and fit his palm perfectly. Seemingly made, the grip or handle had some intricate workings of shells around one end. If Sirroco investigated the shells or pressed on them, a spear of fierce proportions would suddenly manifest out one or both ends of the weapon, glowing slightly in the morning light.
Delani slipped her y’vas over the edge, gifting something that while simple, had been huge with meaning for her. It held a lifetime of memories, having been with her when she was injured and all that she loved was taken from her. It vanished into the depths and in its place a dolphin rose and handed her a leash. The leash had the sign of Nikali on its leather grip. It was sturdy, thick, as if for a big dog, and Kenval’s eyes – who was standing almost next to her – widened. “A Nikali Leash. Wow, I haven’t seen one of those in ages.” He said, shaking his head and making his long hair flow around him almost roguishly. “Keep that thing off me.” He added with a crooked smile and turned to accept a gift of his own. It was a whistle of glowing gold which he peered at curiously and turned over and over in his hands.
Mathias was handed a chest by the largest dolphin anyone had ever seen. It was large enough to perhaps hold a fully dressed out baked chicken, but the man did not open it and reveal its contents, at least not in front of the crew and adventurers.
Brodon pitched his figuring reluctantly over the edge of the boat and it vanished almost instantly. The dolphins were a long time coming in getting back to him. He stood at the rail while the others received their items and waited, chaos swirling around him. Then suddenly, black as night, a dolphin leaped and deposited a wooden baton carved with feathers into his hands. It was marked with the symbol of Eywaat upon its ends. The item did not glow, nor did it appear to be anything unusual nor give him any odd sense in holding it. It was wet from the sea and slightly slimy as if something had been growing upon its wooden surface, but a quick wipe would solve that.
When the lovely Eleret tossed over her wooden staff, a dolphin leaped immediately towards her, playfully slapping the water with its tail to splash her even though it too had a gift for her. Dolphins and Konti went hand and hand. The creatures whistles and chirps were almost a language, one that Eleret might have been able to follow in the depths of the sea. But eventually its playfulness ran out and it deposited in her hands what looked like a leather case of pure white. Inside the case, which had an oldly long and rounded form, was a magnifying glass. It was elegantly wrought with carved flowers in its silver handle, and the curve and depth of the glass itself was expertly crafted. It did not glow nor give off its own warmth, but it was unusually beautiful nonetheless.
When Abase gave the shirt off his back, several of the sailors raised their eyebrows, thinking the sacrifice not enough. But the sea took the shirt anyhow and gave back like in kind. A threadbare cloak was gifted to Abase, delivered between two dolphins that seemed to be having a tug o’war with it. Woven from what appeared to be seaweed, the thing had a deep rich sea odor and barely reached his knees if he were to try it on. Made more of gaps than solid seaweed fabric, the cloak was about as unassuming as anything handed back to the sailors thus far.
When Lacerta tossed out the glass orcania, the sea boiled a moment and then a dolphin of the plain grey variety leaped up and offered to her hands a metal compass. It was not a ships compass, though one would suspect that would be what Laviku would return. Instead it was a small hand held one that was inlaid with precious gems and seemed to spin of its own accord. It was only when Lacerta stopped and became very very still did it start pointing northward and then only sometimes.
When the small Pycon made his offering, Dolphins leapt and spent a few minutes playing with the py-pole before they released it and let it vanish into the depths with a brilliant blue glow. One dove, the other hot on its tail, and they rose tossing something between them. It was a tiny crossbow, just Kench’s size, with abalone inlays on its stock. It showed no signs of having any bolts with it though, as they handed the weapon over to Kench. If he took a minute, he’d find he could pull the lock and cock the crossbow with no effort at all, not even remotely damaging his clay with the taught string. If he tried the trigger, he’d find a magical water arrow automatically having loaded itself in the channel as if appearing from no where, and firing. The watery arrow would turn solid as it arched out and away from the crossbow. The weapon was small, but indeed very deadly.
When the vial of holy water was tossed overboard, it vanished quickly into the depths. Levissa was made, not unlike Brodon, to wait almost a small eternity until the dolphins rose up and offered her something. She was given, completely contrary to her gift, a weapon protectively buried in a small leather sheath. The dagger was ornate, completely black, and had Dira’s symbol etched into its pommel. And while it looked dangerous, it gave Levissa no foreboding if she were to draw it and look upon its ebony blade.
When Ialari tossed over the Izentored tooth fashioned into a dagger, the thing was almost immediately absorbed into the ocean. Laviku liked magic, a great deal, even those crafted by mortals and gifted to him in his own realm. He often swapped them item for item if such a sacrifice was made. A dolphin, pale and luminescent with blue rose and deposited a head band in Ialari’s hands. The headband was made of a strange metal and etched with symbols that looked familiar to Mathias, who had been watching from across the deck. He recognized the Nyavanni artifact, even if no one else there did. Made of some sort of bone, the headband wasn’t rigid though. It was in fact slightly flexible, as if the bone had been softened to the consistency of leather. There was an obvious front and back to the band as well, though it could be folded up and placed in a small pack without trouble.
As the smith Daekos tossed his rings, the dolphins reacted immediately. They grabbed the glittering items and played tug of war between them. Unlike the other items that had vanished immediately beneath the water, the silver of the rings seemed to do something else entirely. They expanded, warped, and reformed into larger editions of themselves. Breaking at the back, the dolphins seem to take great joy out of manipulating the soft silver, even though there wasn’t much material in the items to begin with. Doubling then tripling, then becoming numerous times their volume, the dolphins tossed the rings back to Daekos with a knowing eye. They had become bracers, both of them, pure metal, not silver, and backed with leather with fasteners in the back to be laced into place to guard his wrists. When he touched them, his body felt stronger, any aches he had seemed to vanish, and he inherently knew that wrapped around his wrists and tightly laced they would give him instant relief from the constant work he’d have to do at the forge once he crossed the sea.
When Lucus’ deck of cards flew over the edge of the ship’s rail, a dolphin, this time very young and very small rose up and deposited a trio of long almost flat ivory toothed dice in the young man’s palm. They were marked on one side with Avalis’ symbol, but on other side each had a word. “Yes”. “No”. And “Unknown.” Where marked on the dice. They looked like they belonged together in a very cohesive matching set. And as the dolphin’s deposited them in Lucas’ hands, none of them were word side up. Instead they all displayed the Seer’s Lily. Eleret, being Konti, might recognize them as powerful divination tools of Konti Origin called Decision Stones. There were only a few rumored to be out in the world.
Finally, when little Delilah tossed out the paper, it only floated a moment before it glowed and vanished. The dolphins didn’t forget her, not in the least, as one rose up and tossed a small otterskin bag at her. It was just her size, and something told her if she opened it up, that what was inside was very very important. The bag, once examined, would be revealed to have seeds within. The seeds were all different varieties, though some were duplicates, and though she didn’t have time to count them there on the deck of the ship, it looked as if the seeds had a dozen of each kind and about fifteen different varieties at that.
When Delilah received her offerings, the frenzy around the ships in the water dispersed. The dolphins disappeared, and Mathias spoke to the Captain a moment. The Captain gave orders to his first mate, who in turn barked out orders to ‘get underway’ and the sails were unfurled again, sailors clamored all over the deck, and slowly the wind caught the twin ships and began hurling them forward. The Dawn Sister took the lead, towing any craft behind her that was excess and couldn’t keep up. The Dusk Sister, by far the heavier of the vessels, lumbered in her wake, both setting a course once free of the harbor to the south and west.
It was going to be a good day for sailing.