2 Fall, 511 AV With perplexed determination, Sable eyed the harpoon mounted to the bow of her ship, the Sea Sparkle. It was a vestige of their previous ship, where all four of them had lived a happy, close existence. Banishing memories; of Tungsten egging Sir on to fire just one more shot so that he could capture the scene perfectly on his parchment, of Syb dancing after bringing in her first three hundred pound fish with it; Sable turned away and padded to the cabinent in which Sir had carefully stored the harpoon spear things upon the purchase of the Sparkle. The sleek shaft, clean and carefully wound with its cord, surprised Sable with the heft. For a few minutes she amused herself by finding the balance point and pretending to throw it. Then it actually escaped her fingers on one thrust and clattered end over end across the dck. As though there were someone around to witness the clumsy and silly loss of control, she scurried forth and retrieved it in a hurry. Knowing the basic idea from witnessing the contraptions use, Sable set the shaft aside and pulled out the cord with careful attention to keeping it untangled. The surprising length, after a moments consideration, required her to double it up from port to starboard, close but never lying over a previous length. Beaming at the neat rows, the lanky Svefra skittered over them without mussing a single strand and set about examining the launcher. A long depression would clearly house the bolt, but she wasn't sure if she should wind the string back before or after installation. Taking the bolt in hand, she butted it up against the string and tried to get it to balance on the short run way. It toppled off two or three times before the theory became conclusive. Wind it back first. Grabbing the handle, the salt crusted system resisted the first few rotations before smoothing out and letting the neophyte pull the string into position. Then on went the bolt. Tension hummed throughout the contraption and Sable eyed it warily. If it exloded she didn't want to be anywhere nearby. With the jaunt of satisfaction of having solved a problem coloring her step, she disappeared back into the cabin and returned with a length of thin, abused fishing wire. With the same delicacy someone would handle a live, but slumbering, alligator, Sable wound the wire around the trigger so that the only tension on it would be when she tugged and carefully backed away. Standing a good fifteen feet back, she jerked the string. Out it flew, fast and far! Finally, the tip broke tumbling water and it cut through like a razor. With the direct object gone...blue eyes turned to the line quickly unraveling and disappearing off her deck. 'Petch!" Fishing wire trigger rigger forgotten to drop to the deck, Sable leapt upon the end of the harpoon line and panicked for a moment. Holding it would be disastrous. What to tie it to!? The harpoon! Duh! It had a ring! Sliding to her knees in front of it, her rush-clumsied fingers fought to feed the line through the ring and tie it off with a good solid knot. Every pass through, around, and over itself unwound with no strength, yeilding no knot capable of holding the stress of a flying harpoon. Frazzled, she whipped around and eyed the waters, like she could see the bolt stop through the depths of blue, and had not the mind to let go of the rop.e |