Subject: [FFML] [Slayers] Slayers Starboard, Chapter One : Getting the Band Back Together
From: twoflowr@maison-otaku.net (Twoflower)
Date: 5/20/2000, 1:34 PM
To: ffml@fanfic.com

               +-----------------+
               | |S|L|A|Y|E|R|S| |
               |S|T|A|R|B|O|A|R|D|
               +--+-----+--------+-------------------------+
                  | One |  Getting the Band Back Together  |
                  +-----+----------------------------------+

          A Slayers Fanfic Series by Stefan "Twoflower" Gagne

     (Certain characters copyright H. Kanzaka / R. Araizumi, obviously.
    If I ever even considered claiming that those were my own characters
    I'd probably be thrown into a small cell where I'd be forced to eat
                 my own testicular fortitude to live.)

  Check out the web center with fanart, *exclusive side stories* and more, at
             --> http://pixelscapes.com/slayers/starboard <--

-=-

     Life moves fast.  Don't blink, or you'll miss it.

     It's because life moves so fast that people would be better off sitting 
down and thinking about it from time to time.  A little orientation to keep 
yourself on course is just the thing to ensure smooth living; and it's an 
orientation that never ends.  After all, the questions are endless.  Why 
bother having a life?  What's life giving you?  What do you want out of it?  
Things like that.  

     For those who don't ask those questions... they tend to pop up and bite 
you in the tush when least expected.  Let's say you wake up one morning, 
expecting another round of the same old same old.  Get up, get ready, go to 
work.  Come home, relax, go to bed.  Repeat.  A nice, pat cycle.

     But, unknown to you, that cycle gets interrupted when, for no adequately 
explored reason, your pet dog has a heart attack or an asteroid flattens your 
house or you spontaneously combust.  Then your life gets WAY complicated, and 
you've got no choice but to ponder it for a few.

     The break can be like opening your hall closet and having six years of 
accumulated troubles dump on your head.  Problems unseen ring the doorbell 
bearing fruitcake.  Your old friends drop in from out of the blue with new 
problems.  Your past enemies sneak up to whap you one upside the head.  The 
longer you waited, the worse it'll be.

     When that happens, you're left with little choice but to cope as fast as 
you can and make sense out of it... a sort of forced self-comprehension, a 
spontaneous exercise in revelation.  Breaks in the cycle hit hard, and they 
hit fast.

     One day, they hit Lina Inverse.

                               +-------------+
                               |P|A|R|T|O|N|E|
                               +-------------+

     Morning.

     It's no surprise that most inns have windows facing the east.  When the 
stars wink out and the sun rises, that light floods right into the inn 
room... brilliant rays of the dawn streaming through the sometimes-slightly-
warped-with-age glass, playing off the furniture, illuminating a room once 
darkened.  It's a wonderful way to wake up, to face the challenge of a new 
day.

     It's true that the light woke Lina Inverse up that morning, but there 
was nothing poetic beyond that.  She slowly got herself from dreamy sleep to 
a more alert state, doing some quick stretches, yawning, the whole deal.  
Lina slipped out of bed, into her slippers (hence the name) and shuffled her 
way to the table (stock inn furniture).

     Clothing laid out from the previous night, so, change.  Tights, tunic, 
gloves, boots, belt, cape.  Everything in its place, the same outfit she 
always wore.  Brush on the table, so, brush.  She made sure her hair had none 
of the night's tangles, and was curled just the right way in just the right 
places.

     Toothpaste on the toothbrush, so, scrub.  Wash up, apply a wet towel, 
get the day's dust off your body; a full bath could be had later that night, 
if need be.  Out the door, knock on Gourry's door to make sure he was getting 
up, down the stairs, to visit the smallest room.  Breakfast.  Pay the tab.  
Toss the fireballs into the bandit cave and wait for them to run out 
screaming, zot a few as they get away, Gourry can handle the strays and head 
into the cave and take the loot.  Sort it into bags for later appraisal and 
stockpiling...

     "Lina?"

     Lina Inverse looked up, alert for the first real time that day, as she 
paused in stuffing fistfuls of gold into her sack.

     Gourry Gabriev, her long time partner in crime (not that stealing from 
the bad guys was much of a crime) was busy lifting his pack... or rather, 
TRYING to lift it.  It chimed and jingled with each attempt, but was simply 
too heavy; and for a musclebound swordsperson, that had to be pretty heavy 
indeed.

     "Jeez, Gourry, what'd you grab?  Lead bars?" Lina asked, with a little 
chuckle.  She dumped another handful from the bandit's treasure chest into 
her pack.

     "No, it's just that... nngh!" He hauled the pack up onto his back, 
trying to ignore the delightful array of popping sounds his spine made.  
"With the.. gh... last two camps we raided, and the five before that and the 
ten in the city-state to the north we got, we've got a lot of stuff, you 
know?  It's getting heavy.  Can't we drop it off somewhere?"

     "I don't trust banks," Lina responded.  "And beyond that, what can be 
done?  Bury it somewhere and draw a map, X marks the spot?  Get real.  Nobody 
REALLY does that.  I'll just use a levitation spell to make my bag lighter!"

     "...oh.  I hadn't thought of that."

     "Yes, well, I AM a sorceress, you know," Lina said quite proudly.  With 
one hand and a low mumble, she cast a spell to make her bag glow slightly and 
float an inch or two -- with the other hand she took another load from the 
treasure chest.  Efficient use of your time was everything, after all.  "I 
think they ripped off some family; there's a whole set of matching china and 
silverware in here..."

     "We should probably find who they swiped it from," Gourry warned.  
"These are stolen goods.  We could get in trouble."

     "Hey, ownership is ten tenths of the law, okay?" Lina said, waving a 
small handful of jewelry at him.  "Besides, I don't see any identifying marks 
here.  Just markless rings, bracelets, lockets, and--"

     It would be a good idea to discuss time right now.

     Time can be a very unusual thing.  Everybody innately knows it just 
flows from point A to point B, the most predictable thing in life.  It flows 
at a constant speed, with no slowdowns or speedups.  But HUMANS, humans can 
change their perception of time.  Time is, after all, nonexistent outside of 
the sphere of human perception.

     When Lina examined the locket she had dug out of a pile of ill gotten 
gain, time did two things for her.  One, it stopped.  It had been travelling 
at a phenomenal rate as of late, blurring on by in a haze, and this one 
moment had tossed that whole affair into an eternal moment of sharp relief.  
Two, once the moment had passed (eternal or not), it resumed a more normal 
pace for Lina, just as it was meant to for the last eighteen years.

     Gourry was totally unaware of this, of course, as he was too busy 
attempting to get a particularly annoying bit of wax out of his ears.

     He felt the bag go 'whumph' against his chest, as Lina pushed the 
floating sack over to him.  On top was the small locket she was previously 
examining.

     "...just turn it over to the authorities or something," Lina said 
quietly.  "We've got enough money right now.  You can handle mopping up 
operations here, right?  Just shovel the rest into that bag."

     "Huh?  What?" Gourry asked, trying in vain to get back up to speed.  
"Uh, yeah.  Sure.  Aren't you going to help?"

     But Lina was already walking away, not paying much attention.

     Gourry was not the sort of guy to just go 'Sure thing, Lina!' and start 
gleefully shoveling away treasure after something like that.  He wasn't a 
bright man, but he knew when something was amiss.

     He plucked the item off the top of the pile.  It was a pretty ordinary 
looking thing, a locket in the shape of a diamond; not a lover's gift.  He 
popped it open, and checked the inscription inside.

     All it said was 'Happy 18th Birthday!'.

                                    [*]

     Lina sat under a tree just outside the burning wreckage of the bandit 
enclave.  In the distance she could hear bandits fleeing in terror and so on, 
but didn't care much about it.  Instead, she looked up at the sky, at the 
sun.

     Well, not AT the sun.  She wasn't interested in going blind.  But she 
wondered if she could actually notice it moving across the sky, if she waited 
long enough...

     Part of her was surprised to see Gourry approach.  Part of her wasn't.

     "Get all the stuff packed?" she asked, looking over to him.  "It's 
approaching dinnertime and I want to get moving--"

     "Lina, is it your birthday?"

     That surprised all of her.  "How'd... oh.  The locket.  Well, if you 
must know... yes, actually.  I'm eighteen years old today."

     "That's great!" Gourry said, having a seat next to her.  "Hey, happy 
birthday!  I guess you're not the same scrawny little breastless kid I picked 
up at the roadside three years ago--"

     The Roaring Elbow to the face was obligatory.  "Gourry, I almost FORGOT 
it was my birthday!  If I hadn't seen that stupid locket I'd probably have 
gone days before remembering.  I mean... it IS the twentieth, right?  It is 
my birthday?"

     "Yaff," Gourry said, before re-aligning his jaw.

     "I've totally lost track of time," Lina grumbled.  "Gourry, how long 
have we been doing this?!"

     "Uh, doing what?  You're not going to hit me if I answer wrong, right?"

     "Raiding local bandit gangs!  I mean... okay, three years or so... and 
for me two years before that but what I REALLY mean is recently.  We hit, 
let's see, this town and the one to the north you mentioned, and the one 
before that before we totally cleaned it out of the criminal element, so--"

     "Four weeks and five days," Gourry stated.  "And about nine hours and 
twenty minutes if you want to get specific."

     And lo, Lina looked at him funny.

     "I have kind of an internal clock," Gourry said, a small note of pride 
sounding in that revelation.  "Never fails me."

     "...riiight.  Anyway, four weeks.  I had no idea... actually that's not 
as long as it felt, but... DAMMIT, Gourry!  Where am I going?!"

     "Aren't you're sitting in one place right now?"

     "In more ways than one, yes!" Lina exclaimed, getting to her feet.  She 
brushed some grass off her cape.  "You said it yourself, we've got so much 
loot we can't carry it.  I'm eighteen years old and there's got to be more 
going on with my future than this.  I've got goals, you know.  I want to be 
rich, and fed, and the most powerful and terrifying-- err, respected 
sorceress in the world!!"

     "I thought you already were?" Gourry asked.

     "I mean, how are you taking this?" Lina asked.  "Constant road travel, 
never really doing much beyond what we do, sort of aimless and everything..."

     Gourry shrugged.  "I don't mind, really.  I've got pretty much 
everything I need right now.  Never really thought much about it."

     "Okay, 'never really thinking' definitely doesn't surprise me," Lina 
said, shaking her head.  "But I hate sitting around whining and crying about 
things.  I can't abide by that kind of behavior.  So, I hereby propose we go 
into town, and purchase the largest damn birthday cake money can buy!"

     Tastebuds flickered lightly with anticipated bliss.  Gourry stopped 
himself from drooling.  "...how big?"

     "Taller than me!" Lina decided, getting a good pace into her feet, 
walking away from that tree.  "C'mon.  And THEN we can find something to do 
with our lives.  Something's bound to turn up eventually, anyway."

                                    [*]
 
     At first, when Lina made her Happy Birthday Girl Request, the innkeep 
simply laughed.

     After Gourry opened up one of their backpacks full of loot, he stopped 
laughing and immediately got baking with a blood oath that the cake would be 
complete before the last bite of dinner was gone.  Given Lina's usual 
appetite, that wouldn't be real hard, but given Lina's usual speed at 
consuming mass quantities, it in fact would be quite hard.

     The innkeep was up to the challenge, however, and delivered.  The cake 
was indeed taller than she was, and considerably thicker.  Most would have 
been content with that... but not Lina.  She wanted more.

     It was four layers of your most awesome and inconceivable fantasy made 
sugary sweet.  Gobs of pink/yellow/white icing (guaranteed to rot teeth from 
fifty paces) were heaped on the finest, fluffiest cake mortal eyes had ever 
witnessed.  The bottom layer... yellow cake, simple, pure, wholesome.  The 
middle was a racy little devil's food cake, dark brown and rich with flavour 
with a U.

     But the top layer... the top layer was illegal in nine countries.  It 
was cheesecake, but cheesecake that cheese would weep in joy to be a part of.  
Cheesecake with an upwards of fifty thousand calories, packing enough carbos 
to fuel a twenty man army.  It had to be magically compressed into a 
superdense wad of confection using arcane arts only taught by men in hooded 
robes and golden egg whisks to the top five Iron Chefs of the world.  Enough 
candles lined the thing to illuminate the room better far brighter than the 
sun was.

     He'd even sculpted a little Lina Inverse figure out of butter to pose on 
the top of the cake dramatically.

     "I guess it's adequate," Lina struggled to say while using every 
remaining drop of her willpower to avoid screaming 'BANZAI!' and pouncing.  
If she did that, the price might go up.  "Although you got my face wrong..."

     "Ma'am," the chef spoke with words true, "There is not a chef in a 
thousand mile radius who does not know your face.  And not all of them saw it 
on wanted posters.  I would stake my reputation that the likeness is so 
accurate, that if you yourself were creamy and yellow--"

     "You can stop right there," Lina ordered, before things got weirder.  
"Okay.  I'll pay what we agreed on, no more."

     She took a large scoop and delved into the bag of goodies, and then 
dumped the pile of gold and jewelry into the chef's apron.  He thanked her 
profusely, and then left.

     "You know, whenever I had a birthday, mom would just make me a cupcake 
and stick a little candle in it," Gourry commented, temporarily paralyzed as 
his brain issued more timeshare to his salivating tastebuds than his spinal 
column.  "This... this is probably a fire hazard, you know."

     "I like my food dangerous," Lina said, whipping out a well polished fork 
and knife.  "You know, I was really upset about this whole growing-old, 
wandering-aimlessly-in-life sort of thing before, but there's just something 
about a dessert that ranks as one of the thirty wonders of the world that 
cheers a girl up!  Gourry... savor this moment.  You may never see a more 
perfect--"

     "HANDS UP, EVERYBODY!  THIS IS A ROBBERY!"

     Lina twitched.

     Three burly men with neckerchiefs around their faces so as not to be 
easily identifiable had, of course, busted into the inn while she wasn't 
paying attention.  Crossbows were drawn.  One even had a cheap pistol he 
probably bought off a shipment from the New World.

     No, Lina thought.  Bandits are not going to ruin this moment for me.  If 
I die, I die a happy woman.  She advanced, grating her knife and fork 
together, ready...

     The lead bandit kicked the cake over, shoving it aside to address Lina.

     "HEY!  What did I just say!?" he demanded to know.  "I said, HANDS UP, 
you little witch!"

     "................................" Lina said, as she began to glow an 
unearthly red.  Gourry immediately dove under the table, seeking cover.

     The bandit waved the pistol right in Lina's face... and got a good look 
at the open bag of shiny gold objects.  "Holy crap!  Just LOOK at all the 
gold in that bag!  Hey, if you know what's best, kid, you'll make a generous 
donation to us... hey, I said hands UP, not hands OUT..."

     Lina's voice was deathly quiet, as she chanted.  "Darkness from 
twilight, crimson from blood that flows, buried in the flow of time..."

     "HALT!"

     The sharp, high pitched cry momentarily knocked some sense back into 
Lina, before she blew an entire city to kingdom come.

     "You with evil in your hearts can never be forgiven!" a spooky, yet 
oddly unintimidating voice echoed from the rafters of the inn.  "Ones who 
could spoil a bright shining day of an innocent girl must be punished in the 
name of justice!  THROW DOWN YOUR WEAPONS AND PREPARE TO BE JUDGED!"

     Amelia wil Tesla Sailoon plunged from the rafters a flying figure of 
nobility and heroism, sailing right past the bad guys and crashing face first 
into the remains of the cake, bonking her cute little head on the floor and 
getting knocked out instantly.

     THIS was familiar, Lina thought, the moment of absurdity temporarily 
distracting her from her righteous annihilation of the dessert mashers.  Her 
brain had long ago learned how to cope with this sort of thing; most people 
would sit around going 'Huh?' and 'What?' and 'I'm confused, what's going 
on?' when surprises fell out of the sky, but not Lina.  She knew exactly what 
to do.

     Step One: While the bad guys are distracted, lay the smack down.

     Twenty short and intensely painful seconds later, the screams that 
filled the air finally cut out when the lead bandit submitted to Lina's 
devastating crippler crossface submission hold, before she could pop his head 
off his shoulders.  That task complete, she could loot their pockets, and 
then proceed onward in her plan.

     Step Two: Ensure Gourry's safety and/or sanity.

     "You okay, Gourry?"

     "Huh?  What?" Gourry asked, peeking out from under the table.  "I'm 
confused.  What's going on?"

     Close enough.

     Step Three: Check Amelia's pulse.

     This was harder than initially suspected.  The cake was an inedible 
shambles, splattered all over the dirty wooden floor of the inn... but it was 
also white, pink and yellow, and Amelia herself was also white, pink and 
yellow.  It took a few slightly messy moments of searching before Lina even 
found the young girl.

     Still, the pulse was strong and sure, even if the eyes were rolling 
around in her head like marbles.

     "Okay, here's the plan," Lina said, brushing the rest of the ruins off 
the dessert tray, and gingerly dumping Amelia onto it.  "I'll wheel her back 
to our room, clean her up and revive her.  Gourry, we've still got to make a 
supply run before the sun sets, so you go do that while I do this."

     "...um... okay," Gourry said, having enough focus to parse that.  "But 
you're the one who usually does the shopping.  Why don't I take care of her, 
and you--"

     "Because she's going to need a change of clothes."

     "I'll be right back," Gourry said, turning an about face and marching 
for the door.

     Shaking her head, Lina wheeled the cart on, making sure to roll it 
directly over the three bent bodies of the bandits on her way.

                                    [*]

     Time passed.  It had a habit of doing that.

     Eventually, the stars in Amelia's head were replaced by the real ones.  
Her eyes were still a little fuzzy, which was normal after getting a near-
concussion, but she could make out the night sky... brilliant pinpricks of 
light scattered across a midnight blue cosmos.  Beautiful.

     'By the way, you're in excruciating pain' her head reminded her, and 
that was pretty much the end of that.  She squinted her eyes shut in agony 
not unlike eating a gallon of ice cream in under a minute, tearing her eyes 
away from the bedroom window... then sat up entirely too fast, which didn't 
help.

     "Oh, you're awake?" Lina said.  Or rather, said 'Oh', 'You're', and 
'Awake' separately so she could finish taking two quick bites of a small 
piece of cake.  Friends were friends, but food was food.

     "...I kinda blew it, didn't I?" Amelia asked.  "I should know better, I 
just can't resist a good high vantage point from which to strike fear into 
the hearts of my enemy... and when I noticed you were in the inn too, and 
they were accosting you, Lina-san--"

     "Hey, hey, I know how it is," Lina said, putting the empty plate 
aside... and fetching a fresh one.  "Don't worry about it.  Here, have some 
cake.  It's not as good as the one that got wrecked, but I managed to 
exchange the free-of-charge elimination of those robbers for it.  I also put 
some pain relief herbal powder in this slice for you."

     "Thanfff," Amelia thanked, already shoveling away forkful after forkful 
before Lina was done presenting it to her.  "Mmm.  Good!  Nee, Lina-san, I 
didn't know you were eighteen years old!  Wow, time really flies, huh?"

     "Tell me about it," Lina sighed, leaning back in her chair.  "And that 
makes you, what, seventeen?  It's been months since I saw you last.  What're 
you DOING out here?  I mean, bumping into you like this... it's gotta be some 
random fluke.  You weren't in your pretty little princess duds, so it can't 
be on a royal mission..."

     "Daddy doesn't know I'm out here.  I... aahh!" Amelia panicked, dropping 
her plate (Lina made the save).  "I almost forgot!!  Where's my stuff?"

     "It's at the foot of the bed," Lina replied, curious.  "Wh--"

     Amelia whizzed past her, headache or not, and winced at the cake-covered 
costume.  Picking her way gingerly through the mess, she pulled a small bag 
out of the pile... and sighed, in relief.  "I was worried this was open, and 
that'd just ruin everything!"

     A light prickle started at the hairs on the back of Lina's neck.  
Something was up.  Something that would probably lead her on some crazed 
adventure halfway across the world to face terrors unimaginable.  She'd gone 
so long just doing filler schtick that it was like a man dying of thirst in 
the desert smelling someone mixing up a nice pina colada...

     Of course, she only realized this on some subconscious level, one that 
prompted her to set the cake aside, and quickly join Amelia to discover what 
all the fuss was about.

     The fuss was over a piece of paper with five symbols on it.  Amelia 
checked it front and back for signs of icing damage, but it was dry as a 
bone, and about as white.  Freshly pressed paper, not ancient manuscript.

     "I'm on a quest, Lina!" Amelia said with Much Joy.  "I'm off on a quest 
all by myself!  Well, me and one other person who invited me on it in the 
first place..."

     "Quest?" Lina asked.  Curiosity was currently meowing and pawing lightly 
at the rocking chair.  "Who're you going on a quest with, if it's not Phil?"

     She took a better look at the paper.  Lina couldn't immediately 
understand the symbols, but there was some clear handwriting at the bottom of 
the map.  Something about meeting up at a specific island, and some stuff, 
and some stuff, blah blah, signed........

     And then Lina freaked out.

                                    [*]

  1 baker's doz. hyperaccela gsu
  34 QV9
  6 day sx ration pak
  12 UW pair sets
  2 cateen -- comp. Water
  1 bot. h.rinse
  10pak meat jerky (4gourry)

     Other than that last one, Gourry couldn't make heads or tails of Lina's 
shorthand-enriched shopping list.  He wandered the aisles of the franchised 
dry goods store aimlessly  (totally unaware that most of the items were 
readily available from the magic store next door) and just grabbed stuff that 
SEEMED to be what Lina had in mind.

     For instance, he was busy buying her a dozen pairs of underwear.

     It was the only word he could think of that contracted as UW.  But he 
didn't know too much about girls or what they wore, and relied entirely on 
the suggestions of the nice clerk he'd asked... namely, frilly, lacy, 
somewhat transparent things.  The clerk suggested Lina would really like 
those.  Of course, she also kept snickering under her breath, which was a bit 
odd, but Gourry just assumed she'd learned a funny joke earlier today and 
couldn't get it out of her head.  Happened to him all the time.

     He was busy studying a pair of panties in the dim store light, wondering 
why there was a hole in the middle of them, when he was neatly beheaded.

     Or rather, would have been beheaded if he hadn't ducked and let the 
sword swoosh through the air where his head was.  Some things just got to be 
instinctive when you lived a life of danger and combat and dinner.  He let 
the shopping basket fall (but carefully, to avoid spillage), and drew his... 
sword.

     For a brief moment, Gourry felt a pang.  This new sword he'd gotten 
since losing the Sword of Light was DECENT, but just that.  It was a sharp 
bit of metal.  Nothing else.  Something in him just cried out at how 
uninteresting his sword was, but he pushed that down; not something to dwell 
on in the middle of a fight with...

     The fight abruptly halted, frozen in mid-attack stance.

     The attacker gave pause, seeming to notice Gourry for the first time.  
Gourry did likewise.  Confusion settled in like light snow, or in Gourry's 
case, a falling sheet of ice.

     "...Zelgadis?" he asked.  "What're you doing here?  And why'd you try to 
cut my head off?"

     His opponent coughed lightly, unsettling the cloth mask he wore under 
his cloak's hood.  "It seems we have a misunderstanding.  I was hired to take 
revenge for a local group of thugs who were attacked earlier today in a 
restaurant..."

     "Oh, those guys," Gourry said, peeking behind Zelgadis to see the three 
heavily bandaged men, who were quietly trying to shrink away.  "Hi!  I'm 
surprised to see you up and about so soon!  Most people just sort of groan 
and roll around in pain for days after Lina gets them-- uh, Zelgadis?  You 
can put down your sword, ne?"

     "...they've promised me a cure," Zelgadis said.  "We have to fight."

     "But Lina already shook them down, they don't have anything."

     Zelgadis peered behind himself, at the bandits who were trying to 
retreat without looking like they were retreating.  "...is this true?"

     "Ah... yes?" the stupidest of the three said.  "But we do have a cure 
for, um, whatever you said was wrong with you, it's just, ah, not here--"

     One expert swipe of a sword, and the bandits were buried under recently 
liberated racks of women's shoes, and that was that.  Zelgadis let out a sigh 
of disappointment, as he sheathed his sword, and flushed that plan out of his 
mind.

     "You really thought those guys had a cure for you?" Gourry asked.  "Lina 
bashes me for being dumb all the time, but I wouldn't be THAT dumb."

     "I had nothing better to do," Zelgadis spoke.  "And I have had no leads 
whatsoever towards finding a cure since we last parted ways.  I suppose... I 
figured it couldn't hurt.  Even if it was unlikely..."

     "Sounds bad," Gourry summarized.  "It's good to see you, though.  Hey!  
Let me finish up my supply run here, then you can come back to the inn we're 
staying at.  I'm sure Lina would like to see you too--"

     "No," Zelgadis quickly said.  "No.  No way.  We've done this before, 
haven't we?  I meet up with you after a long absence, and I'm almost 
instantly wrapped up in some adventure where I end up being gunfodder or a 
human anchor or some other supporting role.  I don't mean to be unpleasant, 
Gourry, but I don't have time to kid around here."

     "But it's not even close to bedtime."

     "I mean in general," Zelgadis said quite patiently.  "You've known me 
for how long, Gourry?"

     "Uhh.... let's see.  Okay, umm.... errrr... it was-- no no, it was 
before that, ah, give me a mi--"

     "Three years or so," Zelgadis answered for him.  "And four years for me 
in this curse.  Four years of disappointments... and four years of being 
sidetracked.  If I'm going to get myself cured I have to devote everything I 
have to it, and that means NOT risking some grand jaunt with Lina Inverse.  
Therefore, I must decline.  I will take leave now, and perhaps we'll see each 
other again one day."

     "Jeez, Zel, you don't have to get so melodramatic," Gourry laughed, 
proving he knew big words like 'melodramatic'.  "I'm not saying you have to 
stay with us, just drop by for the night!  Amelia's back there, too.  She 
just showed up today.  It'll be fun!  The whole gang together for a little 
while."

     "I don't know..."

     "Didn't you just say you had nothing better to do?"

     "...I suppose I don't," Zelgadis agreed, although it was an agree with a 
strong tone of defeat.  His shoulders took on a degree of slump.  "You have a 
working man's wisdom, even if you're probably just quoting my words back at 
me.  I've got no leads.  No idea of where to go next.  I doubt that situation 
will change within one day, either, so I have nothing left except to waste my 
time away in this manner."

     "That's the spirit!!" Gourry cheered, giving Zel a few hearty slaps on 
the back in encouragement.

     "I have one question, however, before you lead me off to what may very 
well be a terrible decision on my part."

     "Yeah?"

     "Why do you have so much lingerie in your shopping basket?"

                                    [*]

     "AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHH! ... ... okay, I'm done now," 
Lina said, catching her breath.  "Amelia, please tell me I'm hallucinating 
and I did NOT just see that name on your little paper thingy there."

     "What, the name Gracia?"

     "AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA--"

     "Gosh, Lina, I didn't know you knew my sister!"

     "--sister?" Lina asked, a second degree of shock setting in.  "You're 
NAGA THE WHITE SERPENT'S SISTER?!"

     "Is that what she's calling herself now?" Amelia asked.

     "AAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHH!!"

     "I don't see what the big deal is," Amelia mused, rolling the paper.  "I 
know she had a bit of a scary laugh, but Gracia was the gentlest, kindest, 
finest white sorceress I ever knew.  Why, the acts of generosity she was 
capable of--"

     "Generosity?  White magic?" Lina aksed, swapping rapidly in and out of 
'Mind-Numbing Terror' and 'Light Conversation'.  "PHEW!  Cripes, Amelia, you 
had me scared for a second there.  The Naga *I* knew was a loudmouthed, nasty 
little braggart who relied entirely on black magic and shamanism.  We've got 
to be dealing with two different Gracias here.  I know Naga's real name is 
Gracia, but... well, she never did tell me her family name..."

     "Oh, I get it!" Amelia chirped.  "Naga was our mother's maiden name.  
What a clever alias for her to use in her adventures!  If I knew, I would've 
listened for news of her.  I haven't seen Gracia since I was ten!"

     "...let's take this from the top," Lina said, trying to get a handle on 
things.  For someone like HER to have a panic attack was unthinkably bad.  
She needed to get a grip... "You said your sister (who may or may not be my 
self declared strongest rival, Naga) invited you on a quest.  She told you to 
show up on Ordinary Island, where she'd meet you, and she sent you those five 
symbols as some sort of hint of where you were eventually going?"

     Amelia unrolled the paper again.  "Yeah, but I haven't been able to 
translate them.  It's not a cuneform language I'm familiar with--"

     There was a knocking without.

     "Lina!  Look who I found!" Gourry called from behind the door... before 
dragging Zelgadis in by the elbow for his grand dramatic entrance.  "It's our 
old buddy, Zelgadis!"

     "...yo," Zel greeted unenthusiastically, before a young princess clamped 
herself around his body, threatening to crack stone with sheer joy.

     "ZELGADIS-SAN!" Amelia shrieked.  "I haven't seen you in AGES!  Gosh, 
it's so great to see you again!  Are you well?  You're still a chimera?  
That's too bad.  Ne, do you want any cake?  We've still got some extra 
pieces..."

     "OI!  Hush up over there, I'm translating!" Lina shouted, before turning 
back to the paper.  She allowed the three to engage in wacky greetings, and 
tuned out the noise.

     Lina was onto something here.

     She was obviously no stranger to quests.  They had a habit of sneaking 
up and grabbing her at inopportune moments -- but for a change, this was an 
opportune one.  If there WAS something here, something she could fill her 
time with and put a little effort into, something that would make her 
immediate future have some MEANING, it would be worth it.

     Plus... there was the sender.  True, the shock of hearing about Naga 
after not thinking much of her in so many years was strong.  Naga was a 
loudmouthed braggart, as she'd said... but Naga was not stupid.  At least, 
not about certain things, such as magical lore and history.  If she was 'onto 
something', then Lina wanted to be onto it too, since it probably involved...

     "Gold!" Lina shouted.

     The three others looked over from some comedic position where Amelia was 
tugging on Zelgadis's cheek like an old auntie and Gourry was sheepishly 
laughing at the whole affair.  The magic word had been spoken.

     "It's the second symbol," Lina said, pointing it out on the paper.  "The 
triangular pile of circles, with the split eights above them, magical 
iconography for 'infinity'.  Basically, it means 'Infinite Wealth'."

     Gourry peered at the paper oddly.  "Is that some kind of comic strip?"

     Lina patently ignored him, and walked over to show the two in the room 
who would understand her big words.  "Amelia, I think this is part of an 
Elven poem.  The Elves wrote poetry in five by five grids of cuneiform.  This 
must be a fragment of the whole, just the first line..."

     "...excuse me, what's going on?" Zelgadis asked.  "I just got here."

     "We've got a quest!" Lina declared.

     "Oh no, not again," Zel groaned.

     "Check it out, check it out!  Okay, the first symbol, the twin triangles 
over a jagged line and below the sun?  That's 'Island'.  There's a hazy line 
modifier next to it, meaning 'Mists' or clouds.  The second is 'Infinite 
Wealth.'  The third here, the five pointed magical star, with the split 
eights, that's 'Infinite Power'."

     "...an island of infinite magical power?" Zelgadis asked, a tiny dinky 
immaterial sliver of hope creeping up there into his voice.

     "And the fourth, this one's unusual," Lina continued.  "It's an inverted 
archway with the non-inverted central scythe.  That one's obscure, but if I 
know my Elven cuneiform, it's Death's Door."

     "Meaning those who seek infinite wealth and power on the hidden island 
will face certain death," Zelgadis decided.  "Terrific."

     "No no no!  It's INVERTED.  That means the door swings the other way," 
Lina said.  "It means 'Reversal of Death'.  With no modifiers, I'd guess 
that's unconditional, too.  Amelia... your sister is onto something.  There 
must be more lines to this poem describing the location of the island... of 
course!  I know what this island is -- she's found the Island of Mists!!"

     "The Island of Mists?!" Amelia and Zelgadis and Gourry simultaneously 
shouted.

     "What's the Island of Mists?" Gourry added.

     Wobblewobble, went Lina.

     "How could you not POSSIBLY know about the most mysterious mystery in 
the world?!  ...no, of course YOU wouldn't know.  I momentarily forgot who I 
was speaking to," Lina said, her momentum of explanation shuddering to a 
halt.  "Look, Gourry, there are tons of hidden temples and lost cities and 
magical doo-dads hidden under the stone table in the crack of doom or 
whatever, right?"

     "Sure, if you say so..."

     "Okay.  Each of those has some mystically dramatic legend behind it, 
like, 'If ye follow the third star towards the crescent moon in the valley of 
the shadow of death there be this power/thing/whatever ye seek' yadda yadda.  
You follow?"

     "Uh-huh," Gourry nodded, his head making a light rattling sound.

     "Riiight.  But you see, each of those legends has something SPECIFIC in 
mind.  Like, a staff that reigns down black acid on your foes, or a magic 
lamp that produces a Wash that grants three Genes or something.  It's usually 
worked into the story."

     "So... this Misty Island thing is like that?"

     "NO!  I'm getting to that!  The Island of Mists HAS no story!  It's a 
legend so vague, yet so defined, that it HAS to be true.  Nobody knows what 
it does because supposedly it can do ANYTHING!" Lina said, pointing.  "Money!  
Power!  Control over death!  Nobody's ever seen the island and nobody knows 
exactly what's on it, but it's rumored to have just about anything your heart 
desires.  Heck, a lot of folks didn't think it existed, but that didn't stop 
people from questing all over the world trying to find it."

     "They should look for where they put it last," Gourry said, knowingly.  
"That's how I always find my boots when I lose them."

     "...I'm going to ignore that," Lina decided.  "My point is, Naga's got a 
lead!  Nobody's ever HAD a lead before!  At least, not one that wasn't sold 
on some shifty street corner for five gold that turned out to be something 
bogus like dance instructions or a recipe or something.  We've got here the 
first genuine proof that the island not only exists, but we might be able to 
find it!"

     "Right!!" Amelia interjected, feeling she should be part of this.  "My 
dear long lost sister has discovered the most amazing find our our era!  In 
the spirit of exploration and truth we shall journey to Ordinary Island and 
begin our quest for the ultimate power!  I did some research in the family 
library; the island is in the Architypicos Archipelago, on the fringes of the 
New World.  We can just charter a ship, and go there!"

     Adrenaline pumped through Lina's body like a vast pumping system of 
adrenaline.  "This is great!" she declared.  "FINALLY, something to do with 
my time!  With this much treasure, I can meet my life's goals and retire fat 
and rich-- err, rich and well fed!  Ne, Zelgadis, you want to be cured, 
right?"

     "Y--"

     "This island will have something that can do it, I bet!" Lina declared, 
pointing to the paper for extreme overemphasis.  "Amelia!  You want... what 
is it you want, actually?"

     "To spread love and justice throughout the world!!" she decided.

     "...right, well... I'm sure it can do that, too!" Lina declared, not 
wanting to lose her head of steam.  "Folks, we have got one for the history 
books here!  This is going to be TERRIFIC!  Are we together?  ARE WE 
TOGETHER?!"

     "What are we doing again?" Gourry asked.

     Dishes fell off the shelves downstairs from the massive tremor sent 
through the inn, when three bodies hit the floor facefirst.

     "...well, that killed the mood," Lina stated, as she weakly pulled 
herself up.  "Besides, there's no way we can get started tonight.  It's too 
late.  Amelia, Zel, get rooms at the inn here, and we'll set out in the 
morning.  Okay?"

     "Hai, Lina-san!" Amelia cheered.

     "I already have a room at the inn on the other side of town," Zelgadis 
said, raising the hood of his cloak.  "There's no need to be here until 
tomorrow.  I bid you farewell.  I pray this is not another wild goose chase."

     "Trust me, trust me," Lina said.  "I know my legendary legends.  This is 
the closest thing to the real deal I've seen for the Island of Mists.  And at 
the very least we can enjoy a luxury sea cruise!  I'm rich now, you know, we 
can afford it."

     Gourry scratched his head.  "But after that cake you got today, we spent 
a lot of that money, Lina--"

     "Relax, we have enough!" Lina said.  "Now, out, out.  I need to get 
plenty of rest if I'm going to go march towards my destiny tomorrow morning."

     She hustled everybody out the door, exchanging various good nights and 
happy smiles and that whole bother, then closed it.  Silence.  Peace at last.

     Lina stretched out.  It felt... great.  Just this morning, she was going 
nowhere fast.  Now she was going somewhere fast.  True, it might not pan out, 
but she had a hunch, and learned long ago to trust those hunches.  This was 
JUST what she needed to ignore the fact that she had nothing going on in her 
life...

     She noticed she still had the paper in her hand.  Totally forgotten in 
the frenzy.  With a little chuckle, she set it down on her bedside table, and 
started to change for a good night's sleep.

     Lina was hopping on one foot to get her slippers on when she happened to 
glance at the paper and notice the fifth symbol she hadn't translated.

     After a quick check of her memory and the semantics of Elven cuneiform, 
she loosely translated it as a single modern word.

     'But...'

                               +-------------+
                               |P|A|R|T|T|W|O|
                               +-------------+

     There are very few conditions under which time may be reversed, and all 
of them deal with the perception of time itself.  Memory structures are 
temporally indexed; you can revisit the past, in a sense, by 'thinking back' 
to another time.  Those with excellent mental focus can relive any time in 
their lives, moment to moment... however, humans are usually so focused on 
the present that their ability to remember things becomes spotty.

     Still, as said, there are conditions.  For example, if the conscious 
mind is unable to skip backwards with crystal clarity, that doesn't mean the 
unconscious mind is limited similarly.  Dreams are often perfect spyglasses 
into the past... it's the act of waking that makes them flawed and 
scattershot.

     So, that night as Lina slept in her luxuriously comfy expensive inn 
room, her mind went back to another time and place.  She had spent many 
nights in many inns, all around the world; but this particular night in the 
past had a significance.  She'd eaten an excellent sixteen course meal, 
allowed herself to have some wine, said a few things she never would have 
said except under duress, and then never saw her partner again.

     The mind reels backwards, travelling in time without truly going 
anywhere...

     ...the inn had cleared out.  Night had settled in, an unusually clear 
night with the stars twinkling away, and the dinner hour was long gone.  The 
only people who would be at an inn dining hall at this time of night were 
folks with nowhere else to go -- but this wasn't the sort of place where 
drunks hung out to slosh the night away, it was a pretty respectable place.  
Not that Lina wasn't enjoying getting completely drunk there.

     It was one of the things she never could do at home.  Being fourteen had 
some disadvantages, such as small stature, incomplete physical development, 
and adults not wanting to give you the cool stuff they were entitled to.  Of 
course, Lina always regretted it the morning after, but every month or so she 
enjoyed at least one night of getting crazy.

     But her partner... that was another story.  She got blasted at least a 
few times a week; she could also drink about five times as much as Lina could 
before starting to completely embarrass herself.  Not that Naga the White 
Serpent seemed to care about public humiliation, and not with the 'Battle 
Bikini' she wore, not with her loud and obnoxious voice.

     "To us!" Naga shouted, trying to clack her mug against Lina's and 
missing by a good six inches.  "Victors of the day!  Triumphant against the 
odds!  And stinking rich, too!"

     "You know," Lina burbled, giggling a little to herself.  "I didn't 
honestly think that temple was going to have any treasure.  The inscriptions 
were so cliche that I figured they were just public relations hype..."

     "Lina, Lina, you're so naive!" Naga proclaimed, waving her no-no finger.  
"You must learn to trust my inshti.. insss... my guts when it comes to 
treasure sniffing.  Naga the White Serpent can detect power and profit from 
milesh away!  OOOHOHOHOHOHOHOHOHOOO!"

     "Ohhh, I trust it, I trust it," Lina said.  "Never been wrong before.  
...'cept all those times it was.  But I trust it.  Yeah.  Yoooou... heyy.  
You know--"

     "Of course!" Naga replied.  "I know all!"

     "I'm sherious here!" Lina snapped back.  "I was jus' trying to say, you 
know... when you first showed up, sayin' you were my rival and burnin' down 
my inn room... and you kept coming back for more an' eventually we figured 
it'd be best to just partner up... I didn't wanna."

     "Are you eating this?" Naga asked, poking an unfinished portion of roast 
chicken.

     "Never hadda partner before," Lina continued.  "Gotta strike out an' 
make a name for MYSELF!  Not my sister... me, me!  I'm no little kid.  Who 
needs anybody else?"

     "Hear hear!" Naga said, only half hearing it.  "Right!  People make you 
weak!"

     "No, not right!  That's what I'm saying here.  ...it sucked when I first 
started out.  Boring.  ...lonely.  But you beena good partner, Naga.  A moron 
and a klutz and a jerk sometimes butta good partner in the long... when 
you... you know, like everything.  Yeah."

     The clock on the wall chimed in the silence that followed that.  Naga 
focused her eyes a bit, trying to get a bit of clarity, as she studied Lina's 
expression... curious, now.

     "...what are you saying?" Naga asked.  "Lina, Lina, you really can't 
hold your liquor.  I think you might want to call it a night."

     "Dammit, I'm tryin' to be nice here!" Lina barked back.  "I'm just 
sayin' I'm happy I'm travelling with you.  I hated going alone... I like it 
better like this.  You're a good friend.  You know... I mean... I care.  
About you.  And all that.  Wanna make somethin' of it!?"

     Naga sat back.  "Lina... we're rivals.  I've said that so many ti--"

     "Shyeah, okay, drop the pretense, got it?" Lina interrupted.  "We've 
been real partnersh for, like... long time, and you know it.  You like it 
too, don't give me that routine.  Wouldn't have it any other way.  Well?... 
don't just shit there and shtare, say what you're gonna say."

     Lina didn't realize it at the time, but hindsight is 20/20.  Naga's 
voice had changed when she gave her response.  It wasn't the haughty White 
Serpent speaking.

     "I do care about you," she had said.

     "There!  Ha!  Knew it!" Lina mocked, woozy and wobbling.  "See?  Good.  
Yeah.  So, everything'sh good.  Heeyy... let's... let's go knock over those 
thugs in the next town.  Hear they gots some stuff.  Yeah.  It'll be great.  
You and me, together... we'll really kick... some..."

     Time stopped for Lina, right there, as she passed out in her food.  She 
slept peacefully for the next ten hours.

     When she woke up, she was in her inn room, in her bed, tucked in nicely, 
and completely alone.  Naga was gone, and never came back.

     Of course, on waking, she completely forgot what had gone on the night 
before.  She shook off her hangover, went on to journey by herself for a few 
weeks, feeling like something was missing... then eventually met up with 
Gourry.  The rest was history.

     But on waking in the port city -- present day and present time -- to set 
off on her Island of Mists journey, she also forgot what she had just 
dreamed.  Dreams are often perfect spyglasses into the past... it's the act 
of waking that makes them flawed and scattershot.
 
                                    [*]

     People like organization.  When you have dozens of sailing vessels 
coming in and out of port every day, brisk trade and tourism flowing freely 
like water and hundreds of people at the docks each day, you need one central 
point to manage the whole mess.  In this case, the Shipping Office.

     In the middle of the docks lies a small building of invaluable resource.  
On every wall are chalkboards, updated every hour with ships currently in 
dock, items they're trading or services they're requiring, departure times, 
and so on.  A crack team of filing clerks runs messages to and from ships, to 
maintain those boards.  Any time you need to know what's going on, in, 
around, and down at the docks, you go to the Shipping Office.

     So, after getting ready to face the day and eating a breakfast that 
rivaled most holiday feasts and doing a little extra shopping to cover for 
Gourry's consumer ineptitude, Lina made a beeline for the Office.  With the 
others, of course.  Her steps were confident as she walked the road towards 
tomorrow with her head held high.

     "How come you're walking so funny, Lina-san?" Amelia asked, curious.

     Except for one small problem.

     She'd gone through her last clean pair of underwear, and didn't have 
time to do laundry... which meant she had to delve into the pile Gourry had 
purchased for her.  If she chewed him out for THAT fiasco in front of the 
others, though, it'd be pretty embarrassing... especially if someone found 
out that there were only eleven pairs of the frilly little things in her 
luggage.  Lina could justify this by saying she had no other options and she 
was eighteen now anyway even if her body had an uncanny habit for not growing 
in ways she wanted, but she'd never say that aloud.

     "Here we are!" Lina declared, switching topics as she stopped outside 
the Shipping Office.  She pushed the door open, letting the noise of the 
crowd inside wash over her.  "I scoped this place out when we first got to 
town!  Anywhere we need to go overseas, we can find a boat that's going there 
here.  It's kind of confusing, so everybody split up and take a wall.  Look 
for a ship going for... Ordinary Island, right, Amelia?"

     "Right, Ordinary Island in the Architypicos Archipelago," Amelia said, 
squeezing past a sailor walking out of the building.  She eyed a rack of 
brochures nearby... specifically, one with the island chain name she'd just 
quoted off.  "Hey, literature!"

     "I'll take the far wall," Lina said, pointing to the distant chalkboard.  
"Zel, you take the left.  Gourry, the right.  Remember, money is no object!  
I've still got plenty after my morning supply run, and I want to go there in 
style!"

     "Undoubtedly," Zelgadis said dryly.  "I'll just be happy to get there in 
one piece.  We've had bad luck with sea travel, after all."

     Amelia absently followed Zelgadis, paging through the glossy pamphlet.  
"Ne, Zelgadis-san, this is very interesting!  It says the islands were named 
after famous explorer Archibald Typicos, who named them when he first 
explored the region over a thousand years ago!"

     "That's nice," Zelgadis likewise absently replied, as he scanned the 
chalkboards.

     "They've been locked outside the god-sealing shield for centuries, but 
were opened up for trade and tourism to us last year when the shield fell," 
Amelia continued.  "There's hot springs, and ancient civilizations you can 
explore, and lots of trading posts with magical goods, and... wow, there's 
just a LOT of stuff out there!  It makes sense we'd find treasure in such an 
area.  Sis really did her homework on this..."

     "I'm not seeing Ordinary Island on any of these shipping logs," Zelgadis 
said, frowning a bit.

     "'Ordinary Island is your first step towards tourism in the 
Archipelago,'" Amelia recited.  "'The perfect place to stretch your legs and 
purchase souvenirs of your journey!  Although it recently has been superceded 
by the larger rest stop facility on Flat Island, its rich tradition extends 
back hundreds of years...'"

     "In other words, nobody goes there anymore," Zelgadis said.  "Your 
sister could have picked a better meeting place, Amelia.  I doubt we'll--"

     "GOT ONE!" Lina shouted, from across the room.  She hopped up and down, 
waving her arms, to be seen through the throng of sailors and traders.  "I 
got one I got one!  Come look!"

     Ye noble adventuring party gathered in front of the far wall, as Lina 
pointed out the hastily scribbled entry.

     "There's some luxury cruise liner on a one week tour to Ordinary Island, 
Pleasant Island, and Monster Island!" Lina declared.  "Check it out... 
they're offering three room suites, fine dining, entertainment, and a smooth 
ride the whole way through!"

     "It's amazing that they could cramp so many zeroes into the Travel Price 
box on the chart," Zelgadis commented.  "Lina, can you actually afford that 
for the four of us?"

     "It'll probably take the rest of our money... but it'll be worth it!" 
Lina said, rubbing her hands together in Evil Delight.  "No more camping on 
the roads and eating dried fish for us, gang!  We're doing this adventure in 
the lap of luxury for a change.  Gourry, go grab the bags from the inn, we've 
got to get on this... what's it called?"

     "The 'Titanic'," Zelgadis read.

     "Right.  We've got to get on there before all the good rooms sell out!  
Let's go!"

                                    [*]

     Hours later, long after the sun had set, a tiny life boat scraped up on 
shore of the city it had previously left.  It rocked gently against the 
sands, before halting.

     All four passengers in the boat sat in grim silence.

     "Okay... so... it sank," Lina said, wanting to break the awkward moment.  
"It could've happened to anyone."

     "I'm surprised it sailed for so long before anybody realized the ship 
had no rivets," Zelgadis spoke, in the classic 'I told you no good would come 
of this' tone.  "Or a rudder.  Or a main sail.  Or a captain.  You'd also 
think they'd notice the captain and all the investors bailing out ten minutes 
after launch with bags of ticket money."

     "If I ever meet those guys again, they're gonna taste Justice!" Amelia 
declared, standing up (and rocking the boat in the process.)  "We won't let 
this setback defeat us!  We must press onward in our journey, overcoming all 
obstacles set in our way with the passion of--"

     "Who're we trying to kid?" Lina interjected.  "I mean, seriously, guys.  
This was doomed from the get go.  All of us meeting up entirely by accident 
and immediately off on some great adventure?  Not to mention that we're after 
a mystery island with nothing but a piece of paper and now a complete lack of 
money to keep us going."

     "But Lina-san--"

     "Since I've already leeched every bandit gang in the area, we aren't 
gonna FIND any more money!" Lina continued, getting quite perturbed.  "The 
adventure is a bust.  I should've known better than to get my hopes up about 
this... ah, forget it.  I'm ranting by now.  C'mon, Gourry."

     "What?  You're leaving?" Amelia asked, shocked.

     "Hey, say hi to Naga when you see her," Lina said.  "IF you see her.  I 
don't see us getting out to that island at this rate.  I should've stuck to 
what I do best, raiding bandit camps... no matter how boring it gets.  Seems 
like it's destined to be my life's calling.  Gourry, you got my bag?"

     "I think we should try again," Gourry said.

     "...eh?"

     "Let's go back to that office thingy and find a boat," Gourry said.  "It 
can't be that hard.  Surely there's some trading ship that needs a crew, 
right?  We can work our way to the island."

     "'Work'?" Lina repeated, in proper disgust for a four letter word.

     "Lina... I KNOW you don't want to go back to raiding camps," Gourry 
said.  "Not after what you told me the other day.  Okay, so maybe we won't 
get huge rooms with soft beds and good food, and we might have to put up with 
hammocks and beef jerky and daily toil or something--"

     Lina whimpered.

     "--but it's better than what you were doing," Gourry emphasized.  "I saw 
how you reacted when you were talking about that Misty Island thing last 
night.  You were really excited!  Come on, let's not give up now.  What do 
you say?"

     She looked from Gourry to Amelia to Zelgadis and back again.  Gourry's 
cheerful little grin... Amelia nearly at tears, moved by the dramatic 
optimism of Gourry's words... and Zel, looking right back at her.  He didn't 
need to say a word; Lina understood.  This was the only lead he had at a 
cure.  He was going to endure whatever needed to be endured to investigate.

     "...you guys are serious about this, aren't you?" Lina asked.  "Okay.  
I'll admit... I don't want to go back to the same old same old.  Gourry has a 
point, in his dull and pointless little way.  But guys, come on, this is not 
going to be like a typical journey.  We could get stranded on an island with 
no way to leave, or lost at sea, or have to eat bad food!  Do you really want 
to risk that?  ...no, you do.  It's obvious.  Okay... I'm with you.  I'm 
dreading this extensively but I'm with you."

     "HOORAY!" Amelia cheered, hopping up and down.  "Let's go!  I just bet 
there's a ship out there we can use!"

     "Can't it wait until after a good night's rest?" Lina whined.

     "You just finished explaining at great length why we won't be finding 
any more money.  We can't afford another inn," Zelgadis said, climbing out of 
the life boat.  "Unless you'd like to camp out here on the beach...?"

     Lina pondered sand.  She pondered sand that can get into the worst 
places.  She pondered her pajamas, and the underwear she had on and dared not 
show anyone.

     "Boat.  Yay," Lina said joylessly.  "Let's go."

                                    [*]

     The starlit night has been a popular subject for poets.  Witness the 
majestic spread of the heavens, the way the tiny pinpricks of light twinkle 
in the midnight blue... the soft white glow of the moon across the plains, or 
reflected along the ocean waves.  Watch how the gentle flow of the waters 
plays with the moon's image, a dancing light that reflects and illuminates 
all...

     The reason for this is because poets are largely unemployed and have no 
job to wake up to in the morning.  One could argue that they have a more 
satisfying existence because of this, once you pushed aside the starvation 
aspects, but that still failed to aid in Lina's situation.

     Tradesmen such as the kind that would hang out at the docks are not 
typically up and about and busy at this hour, unless they're climbing the 
shady underside of the career ladder.  They certainly wouldn't be busy 
maintaining the chalkboards of the Shipping Office... and in fact would 
likely lock the doors and go home to have a good sherry and a long night's 
rest.

     "Locked," Lina complained, as she rattled the doors for the second time.  
"You know, that's the problem with the service industry; it never serves me 
the way I want it to.  Can we see the boards through the windows?"

     Zelgadis scraped a stony finger along the 'glass' of the window, or 
rather, the half inch thick layer of sea salt, grime and dirt.  Instead of 
making an indentation in the caked on crud, it managed to scrape his finger.  
"I don't think these can legally be considered windows anymore.  Either we 
come back tomorrow... or we have to break in and hope there's a board entry 
we need.  It could take awhile to search."

     With a tired sigh, Amelia's shoulders slumped.  "That's too bad... I was 
hoping we could get right under--"

     A sickening crunch of old wood snapping sounded as Lina kicked the door 
in.

     "Waah!  Lina, that's breaking and entering!!" Amelia yelped.  "It's 
illegal in all civilized countries!"

     "Do you want to go see your sister eight hours earlier than you normally 
would or not?" Lina asked, swinging the door open.

     "Well--"

     "Then a little B&E it is," Lina decided in advance.  "Besides, we're not 
taking anything.  Gourry, you and Zelgadis get in there.  Don't use too 
strong of a light spell, we don't want to alert the natives.  Amelia and I 
will play lookout for the cops."

     "Anoooo..." Gourry said, peering left and right suspiciously.  "Lina, 
the docks aren't a safe place at night.  I don't think we should leave two 
young ladies alone out here like this.  Someone might try to take advantage 
of you!"

     Lina stared at him.  "You can't be serious, Gourry."

     "I am!  I mean, you might set them on fire or punt them into the sea or 
break their arms and then it'd raise an ruckus," Gourry explained.

     "...oh.  Okay.  We'll be good," Lina promised.  "Now hurry up, okay?  
The future waits for no one.  And try to find a ship with a nightly banquet!"

     Zelgadis issued forth his 'Why Me?' exasperated sigh.  He'd perfected 
over the years of travel with Lina... just the right pitch on the exhale, the 
perfect slump to the body, and of course slowly closed eyes.  Of course, it 
never deterred Lina, but by this point it was habit.  He wandered into the 
office, waving Gourry in, and closed the door behind him.

     Leaning casually against the wall, Lina pretended like she was a young 
girl in a sorceress's costume who had a perfectly good reason for hanging 
around right outside a broken door and nobody had to give her a second look.  
And if they did, she'd just have to make them stop looking in a QUIET way.  
It was a good, stealthy strategy.

     "Nee, Lina, I'm really glad you're going with me on this quest," Amelia 
spoke aloud in her cheerfully musical voice, not quite understanding this 
whole quiet-and-unnoticeable thing.  "I don't like going out on trips like 
this alone, you know!"

     "Yeah, whatever," Lina said quietly, hoping she'd get the gist.

     "And I'm glad you're so interested in going to meet up with my sister 
again!  You two must have been really good friends.  Although you kind of 
seemed scared when I mentioned her last night..."

     Rolling her eyes annoyed-like, Lina flat out gave up on 
inconspicuousness.  "Yeah, well, Naga was a scary lady.  She had a creepy yet 
highly stereotypical black leather wardrobe, a tendency to make huge golemns 
that more often than not turned on us, and her laugh could paralyze an 
elephant."

     "Oh, so she DID take mother's wardrobe before she left!"

     Lina's brain did somersaults.

     "Still, that doesn't sound a lot like the Gracia I knew," Amelia said.  
"She was always such a kind and gentle soul.  We were training to be 
priestesses, you know.  White magic experts.  But... well, there was a family 
crisis... and she left.  But I'm very happy I'm going to see her again!  
Aren't you?"

     "Look, Amelia, to tell the truth I'm not just going for Naga," Lina 
explained.  "Lately, I've been... man, how do I put this.  In a rut?"

     "Father said rutting was very unladylike."

     "...uh.  Anyway, you know, I've basically just been smacking bandits 
around for months," she continued.  "I don't even know how long.  There's got 
to be something MORE to life than that, you know?  Anything.  A good, solid 
quest for some mysterious power and unimaginable wealth is just the thing to 
get me back on track!"

     "So... you want money and power?" Amelia asked.

     "Well, DUH.  Of course!"

     "Oh," she said, a little deflated.  "Okay.  I'm sure we'll find that 
too, Lina-san."

     "I'd hope so!  What other reasons are there to go risking our necks in 
some totally unknown part of the world against horrors unseen except for 
loot?" Lina asked.

     "But if you just wanted that, couldn't you keep beating up bandits?" 
Amelia asked, not fully understanding.  "It'd be less risky.  I mean, you 
KNOW you can do that easily."

     "...that's different," Lina said.  "Totally different.  Different things 
on so many levels I just can't begin to explain it.  You'll understand when 
you're as old as I am."

     "I'm only a year younger!"

     "Yes, but I'm a year older.  That's how it works, you see."

     "But... that means I'll never be as old as you are at any time."

     "I know.  Life's weird, huh?"

     Before matters could get any more esoteric, there as a knocking without, 
and Zelgadis had returned from his majestic journey into the building of 
darkness and doom.

     "Got one," he said simply.  "But you're not going to like it."

                                    [*]

     It wasn't a BAD ship.

     In fact, it was a reasonably impressive ship.  This was not some rich 
man's pleasure yacht, it was a light cargo vessel made for high speed long 
hauls.  There were only two sails instead of the heavy duty three but 
everything about the ship spoke of streamlining and optimizing; the cargo 
hold, hidden below the waterline, was deep enough to tote that barge and lift 
that bail while the bow was assembled perfectly to slice through the water.  
Definitely a good ship.

     The problem was the cost.  Or rather, the barter.

     "It won't be that hard," Zelgadis explained calmly.  "We just have to be 
the ship's crew while the captain ferries goods to Ordinary Island.  Said so 
in very plain words on the board.  I know a few things about sailing, so I 
can show you the ropes.  Somewhat literally."

     "We have to WORK?!" Lina repeated for the third time since finding out.

     "You knew we probably were going to have to," Zelgadis said, grabbing 
the rope ladder and hauling himself up.  "Don't act so shocked.  It'll only 
be for two or three days until we get to the island, anyway."

     "Zelgadis-san is right!" Amelia cheered.  If she had little fans, she 
would have waved them; symbolically she was waving them anyway.  "A few days 
at sea... crisp and cool ocean air, sunlight and a little hard work are just 
the thing to get us all ready for an adventure!"

     Lina waved her hands madly.  "I've been fighting bandits for months!  If 
that hasn't gotten me in shape, nothing will!"

     Leaning on the ship's railing, Zelgadis looked down on Lina in more than 
one way.  "We could always leave you here to resume your daily struggles 
against the forces of evil while we go get rich and powerful at the Island of 
Mists."

     "Fine, fine," Lina said while standing next to Zelgadis, having climbed 
the ladder in a flash before he was even done his sentence.  "Let's go.  
GOURRY!  Get the lead out!  Don't forget our luggage!"

     "I'll admit... this is a rather odd ship," Zelgadis said, turning around 
to get a better look in the dim light of the moon.

     "What's so weird about it?"

     "The rigging," Zel explained, pointing to the crisscrossing ropes that 
connected the sails to the ship.  He spoke with an odd curiosity, rather than 
his usual uncaring tone... "There's more of it than usual, and it's all 
interconnected.  You could probably control the sails more efficiently with 
fewer adjustments this way... one single adjustment to change both pitch and 
angle of the sails.  Plus, assuming that IS the steering wheel up there, it's 
very small and has a complex locking system.  I've never seen anything quite 
like it.  Whoever set up this ship must not have wanted to expend a lot of 
effort to get it going and pointed the right way."

     "A man after my own heart," Lina noted.  "Zel, how'd you learn so much 
about ships, anyway?"

     "...I was Rezo's navigator," Zelgadis said, voice getting stiffer.  "So, 
I had to oversee things whenever he wanted to travel by sea."

     "Oh.  Ah... so!  Where's the captain?" Lina asked, looking around.  "I 
guess there's no crew if we're the lucky bastards, but there's got to be a 
captain.  I want to barter this deal and go to bed."

     "He'd be in there," Zelgadis said, pointing to a small door to the rear 
of the ship.  "Traditional captain's quarters.  But he's probably asleep--"

     *WHAM* *WHAM* *WHAMWHAMWHAMWHAMMM.*

     "OI, open up!  We're your new crew!" Lina shouted.  "We don't have all 
night here, you know!"

     The door shook with each pounding, but was made a sturdy oak.  However, 
the tiny hidden door in the top of the door was not... it creaked open, the 
flap of wood swinging lightly in the breeze after being knocked open.  
Curious as to what it was, Lina peered through it, into the darkness of the 
small room...

     There was a rustling of what sounded like clothes, and a waft of air.  
Lina leaned away from the door a bit.

     "AWK!" a sound echoed from inside.  "Whaddye want?!  I'm trying to sleep 
here!  I've got a long haul in the morning.  If you're here to rob me, I've 
got hidden crossbow turrets pointed at ye right now!"

     "You do?" Lina asked, curiously... but decided curiosity killed the cat, 
and got right to the point.  "I just came to cheerfully inform you that your 
new crew has arrived!  We want passage to Ordinary Island and we're... gh.  
Willing to work to pay our way!"

     "Really?  Pull the other one, it's got bells on," the voice squeaked.  
Lina finally got a good picture of it... probably some scrawny little guy, 
very irate, but anybody would be after being woken up.  SHE would be.  "We 
ain't leavin' until tomorrow, so piss off!  Besides, some little girl ain't 
gonna be enough to handle this ship alone!"

     "Little girl?!" Lina scowled, brushing up an imaginary sleeve... and 
remembering this was too important to blow off.  "Ah... but I have two 
strapping young swarthy dogs with me, and a young maiden who's... uh.  An 
excellent chef!"

     "'Swarthy dogs?'" Zelgadis mumbled.

     "Oh?" the voice asked.  "Strong lads and a good cook?  How strong, 
exactly?"

     "Strong?  One's got muscles of STONE!  And he's a fully qualified 
sailor, although he doesn't wear the funny white hats."

     "...ah, whatever," the captain grumbled.  "Nobody else has been applyin' 
for days and I want to shove off as soon as possible.  I'll take it.  But 
only if ye start now!  What'll it be, lad, can you cast off and at least get 
us to sea?  Heading's twenty degrees west north west.  The combination lock 
to the wheel is 316."

     "I can handle it, sir," Zelgadis said.

     "Great.  Now LEAVE ME ALONE so I can get some goddamn sleep!  AWK!" the 
man shouted.  The tiny door snapped shut, presumably with him knocking it 
closed.

     Lina balked.  "What an irate guy."

     "Look who's talking.  Besides, he's the captain," Zelgadis said, 
grasping the ladder and scaling up to the stern deck.  "I don't feel like 
being thrown overboard in the middle of the ocean, so you might want to TRY 
to treat him with a little respect.  Unlike how you treat most people."

     "HEY!  I treat people with PLENTY of respect!"

     "Gourry!" Zelgadis called over, ignoring Lina.  "I'll need your help.  
We've got about two hours of work to do before we can get to bed.  Are you up 
for it?"

     "Sure thing!" Gourry called from across the ship.  "Ne, Lina, you and 
Amelia should get some rest!  We'll take care of things!"

     "First sensible thing I've heard all day," Lina agreed, stretching her 
arms over her head.  "Zelgadis, where are the bedrooms on these things?"

                                    [*]

     It wasn't a BAD...

     Okay, maybe it was.

     Lina prodded her 'bed'.  It swung lightly, but that could have been the 
simple rocking of the boat as the guys above cast off.  Yes, her luxury 
accommodations would in fact be a simple canvas hammock strung between two 
supports, in the underbelly of the ship -- thankfully not in the cargo hold, 
but it was just as damp and dark.

     And, because privacy was something you'd only get in a civilized vessel, 
the four hammocks intended to sleep herself and her companions were all in 
the same area.

     At first, Lina wanted to complain quite loudly.  She turned to face 
Amelia, and... saw that Amelia was unquestioningly getting ready for bed, and 
even humming a happy little tune as she did so.

     It was a painful realization.  Amelia wil Tesla Sailoon, a royally-
raised Princess with a P who had all the luxury she wanted in life wasn't at 
all concerned about the situation.  Lina, who was used to road travel and a 
variety of inns ranging from 'dank' to 'dismal' to 'demoralizing' was the one 
who had been whining and complaining all night that things weren't going her 
way.

     Not that she'd say aloud that she was whiny.  No no, Lina Inverse didn't 
whine; she 'told it like it is' in a proactive sort of way.  But she did 
mentally smack herself one and attempt to elicit a promise from herself to be 
more cooperative.  After all, it couldn't get any worse.

     But that would be after she hung up a sheet by the ceiling so the ladies 
would have a nice private area.  She wasn't in the mood to give the likes of 
Zel and Gourry a free show.

     Yanking a stiff sheet off the available pile of bedding, she got some 
clothespins together from her pack (which also had a length of rope, a tinder 
box, and a towel; four items no adventurer should go without) and set things 
up.

     "Hey, Amelia, do me a favor," she requested as she worked on the 
barricade.

     "Hai, Lina-san?" the younger sorceress asked, brushing her hair the 
mandatory one hundred strokes for added beauty and less morning tangles.

     "I've been having kind of a lousy night, and I'm dead tired," Lina said.  
She adjusted the sheet; there.  Hopefully it'd be opaque enough to work.  "So 
just let me sleep in tomorrow, okay?"

     "I think the captain might want us awake early to get to work..."

     "Gourry and Zel can handle things," Lina said, hauling herself into the 
top hammock, and trying to settle in.  "Oh, and by the way, you're doing the 
cooking."

     Amelia almost dropped her hairbrush.  "Wh-what?  Me?  But... but I don't 
cook!  I mean, not a lot... I CAN cook, just--"

     "Eh, you'll do fine," Lina said, ignoring the concern.  She snuggled up 
under a blanket, and almost immediately drifted off.  "No problem..."

     And so, she rocked to a gentle sleep, where she dreamed she was on a 
swingset back at her childhood home, going up and down and up and down and up 
and down and up and down and up and down and up and down until she was about 
to be violently ill, which is the point where she woke up totally seasick.

                             +-----------------+
                             |P|A|R|T|T|H|R|E|E|
                             +-----------------+

     It's said that any job well done is achieved by one part determination, 
one part enthusiasm, and three parts skilled work.  In Amelia's case, it was 
more like three parts determination, five parts enthusiasm and three eighths 
of a part of skilled work.  This tallied up to far more parts than should be 
the case, rendering the entire analogy moot, or quite possibly less 
frightening than the actual end result.

     Zelgadis tiredly poked at his pancakes, wondering if they were going to 
explode.  He knew a few things about nutrition, and how food is processed 
into energy upon digestion.  If that was true, these had enough stored 
potential energy to level a city.

     His companion should probably have been equally tired, as he was up for 
the better part of an hour getting the ship pointed in the right direction 
and secure; but two of the pancakes had already gone down his gullet, and 
Gourry was now visibly vibrating.  "WOWAmeliawhatdidyouputinthesetheytaste 
GREAT!!!"

     "Oh, it's nothing!" Amelia giggled, brushing some wrinkles out of her 
'Kiss the Cook' apron.  "I mean, I know the recipe called for all that flour 
but flour tastes yucky, so I decided to do them out of sugar!  They're so 
much yummier this way!  Ne, Zelgadis-san, do you want another muffin?  Or a 
cup of my specialty mix orange juice?"

    If stone skin could pale, his would.  "Ah... no thank you, Amelia.  I'm 
quite fine with my coffee."

    The gally door swung open... and in staggered Lina, looking as green as 
the Magical Taste Delight Sprinkles(tm NearlyFoodCo) Amelia had laced her 
meal with.

     "...coffee," Lina said.  "I need something in my stomach.  Everything 
that was there is now floating in a thick layer just outside the porthole 
near my hammock.  Gourry, if I ever agree to ship travel again, stab me."

     "OkayLinayougotitnoproblem!!!!!!!!!!!!!"

     "And more coffee for Gourry, I think," Zelgadis added.  "Lina, don't 
worry.  Some people get simply seasick until they get used to being on a 
ship.  It'll pass in a day or two.  And if it doesn't, please point the other 
direction before vomiting, it's very hard to get my cape clean."

     Lina sat/fell into a waiting chair, and accepted a cup of coffee from 
Amelia.  She sipped it, tried to keep it down, and focused on something else 
to get nice and distracted.  "So, Zel, how's the voyage going so far?  You 
two hit any problems?"

     "No problems whatsoever," Zelgadis spoke.  "Launch was quite simple; the 
captain had a spot reserved near the front of the docks so we'd be easily out 
and gone.  I have to admit, his technique is very interesting.  We've been 
making minor course adjustments this morning to compensate for the wind drift 
during the night, and he's proven quite knowledgeable about how the ship 
works."

     The blessed java worked its wonders, as Gourry went from 'blurry' to 
simply 'twitching occasionally'.  He took a deep breath, and nodded to 
confirm Zel's words.  "Yeah.  He's not what I was expecting, but boy is he 
smart about all this boat stuff.  Kind of unsociable, though..."

     "I'm just glad to hear we're in capable hands," Lina said, relieved.  
"So, when do I meet the guy?"

     A sharp whistle echoed, making Lina's headache 1.24 times worse.  She 
turned to look at the hollow steel tube that made up the intership 
communication system, source of the noise.

     'Feed time's over!' the captain announced.  'All hands on deck, this 
means you!'

     "About now, it seems," Zelgadis said, before draining his cup and 
setting it down.

     Amelia pouted, holding up a tray.  "But you haven't tried my Amelia-chan 
Specialty Morning Bagel Wonders!"

     "I'm not up for mourning anybody," Zelgadis commented.  "Which is what 
may happen if we don't listen to the captain's orders."

     "Or if we eat your bagels," Lina added.

                                    [*]

     The captain of the ship surveyed his new recruits with an eye that 
suggested he would be quite partial to kicking the wheels and making sure 
everybody had a full set of teeth.  His unwavering little black eyes studied 
each person in the lineup in turn, before addressing them.

     "Okay, listen up, monkeys," the captain started, in his shrill tone.  
"Welcome to the S.S. Lightfeather!  Ye are my new volunteer crew.  Ye are 
here of ye's own decision, and I'm expecting ye to work ye's little butts off 
in return for this free passage!"

     The assembled personages remained silent.  So, he continued.

     "If I didn't need yer muscles, I wouldn't have ye aboard.  I'm not 
interested in being yer best friend or yer preacher or substitute father 
figure!  I'm simply a trader by life's callin' and I've got a hold of 
supplies to get to Ordinary Island.  We will have a highly professional 
relationship!  I'm yer commander, and I expect to be treated with the respect 
the office demands!  When I say jump, ye jump!  When I say pull that rope 
there, ye pull!  When I say walk the plank, ye walk!  I expect nothing less 
than fast reactions and loyalty from my crews... YE in the purple!  What're 
ye starin' at, girl?!"

     "'Ye' is staring at YOU," Lina Inverse said, eyes still wide.

     The captain's eyes narrow.  "What about me?"

     "You're A PARROT!!"

     Zelgadis quietly groaned.  The captain, however, did nothing quietly; 
his cheerfully bright blue and yellow feathers rustled, ire rising like a 
balloon.

     The parrot 'pointed' to the tiny white paper hat on his head.  "What do 
ye call this?  Maybe it's not the size ye monkeys wear, but it's a captain's 
hat!  The hat is what ye should see, not the one wearin' it.  I am yer 
captain!  I'm the one who's gonna get ye to that bloody island, and if ye've 
got a problem with that ye can damn well swim there instead, missy!"

     "Guys, how can you possibly take this seriously?" Lina asked, looking to 
her companions for support here.  "We've got a birdbrain running the ship!  A 
talking one, but he's still--"

     "Quit talking back to the captain, Lina," Zelgadis quietly ordered.  
"He's not done speaking yet."

     "BUT--"

     If there was one art Zelgadis had mastered, it was that of nonverbal 
communication.  He wasn't a telepath, but he knew exactly how to shape his 
reactions to people to get the reactions he wanted to his reactions.  In this 
case, he was giving Lina his best 'Shut up, this is important and you're 
whining' look.

     Which, in turn, triggered off that promise Lina had made to herself last 
night, whether Zelgadis was aware of that or not.  Lina shut up.  The 
reaction to the reaction was all that mattered.

     "That's better," the captain said, after things had quieted down.  "And 
for yer information, Missy Inverse as your friends say ye be named, I be a 
parrot indeed.  A bloody talking parrot, har har, what a great gift for a 
ship's crew by some moronic monkey sorcerer!  But that's neither here nor 
there.  All ye need to know is I'm Phinneas Lightfeather, yer captain, I know 
this boat like the back of my wing and I'm getting ye where ye want to go for 
free.  Any objections to that?"

     "Free is good," Lina decided, gritting her teeth.

     "Right.  Now, the readin' of the rules," Captain Phinneas said... using 
his foot to hold out a slip of paper so he could read it.  "Rule number one, 
OBEY THE CAPTAIN!  But we've gone over that 'un.  Rule number two, obey the 
captain.  Rule number three, if ye want to mutiny and take over the boat 
don't forget the hidden crossbows I can use at a whistle.  I ain't no weak 
bird.  Rule number four, if ANY, and I's mean ANY of ye goes 'Polly wanna 
cracker' it's a keelhaulin'!  This concludes the readin' of the rules.  Are 
there any questions?"

     "How long until we reach Ordinary Island?" Lina asked, instead of asking 
'How long do we have to put up with this?'

     "Be about two day's sail from here," Phinneas said.  "Usually three, but 
thanks to yer friend Zelgadis's pretty damn impressive navigational skills 
and our night headstart, we'll be there in no time.  I'll say this, and 
that's that ye's got the best cookin' and sailin' skills I've picked up from 
volunteers in awhile."

     "He liked my bagels!!" Amelia cheered.  "I'm so happy!"

     "'course, I don't know what skills YE got," Phinneas said, hopping a bit 
on his perch and directly addressing Lina.  "Yer menfolk are good backs for 
the riggin' and Zelgadis is a right smart one, and the wee one can whip up an 
excellent pastry.  What do YE do, Missy Inverse?"

     "It's LINA," Lina corrected.  "And I do magic!  Amazing spells and craft 
the likes of which you've never--"

     "Magic?  Damn.  Got no use for that."

     "No use for--?  I could cast wind for the sails!!"

     "Wot, and break the masts?  They were made to handle NATURAL wind," 
Phinneas said.  "Well, it don't matter to me.  Ye three will do just fine, 
this ship doesn't need much to get it goin'.  As for 'Lina', well, do as ye 
wish, just don't sink the ship or get in my way."

     "Deal," Lina agreed firmly.  Anything to keep her away from that... 
thing.

                                    [*]

     Lunch came and went without being particularly eventful.  The four of 
them ate at one table; Phinneas perched nearby, nibbling on a bit of the 
sweetened ham Amelia made sandwiches from.  While the meal was cavity 
inducing, Lina was just too hungry to pass it up, and it's not like there was 
anything wrong with it other than having a high potential for causing a 
stroke.

     Work on the ship was fairly easy.  Every now and then the bird would 
bark an order from his micro-sized steering wheel perch, and Gourry and Zel 
would halt their card games or other chatter to go adjust things.  Amelia 
tended to stand at the very bow of the ship and pose; if she fell off she'd 
probably be sucked under the hull and spat back into the wake in a few 
mangled pieces, but thankfully this did not happen.

     Lina, however, took Phinneas's words to heart... she wasn't going to get 
in his way.  At all.  She took up post in the Crow's Nest (there had to be a 
pun there somewhere) and just watched the ocean go by.  Quietly.  Without too 
much change, since it was just big and blue and endless.  Exciting.  Yay.

     About an hour after lunch, when the wind was steady and no immediate 
demands were on his time, Zelgadis joined her.

     "Aren't you bored up here?" Zelgadis asked, scaling the ropes to join 
Lina in the small basket at the top of the main mast.

     "Eh?" Lina asked, distracted from the waters by his voice.  "Of course 
I'm bored.  But the sooner we get this done, the better.  Consider it a sort 
of time-killing meditation."

     "What's your problem, Lina?" Zelgadis asked.  "Not only are you shunning 
the captain, but you're shunning us in the process.  I don't get it."

     Lina stared at him quite amusedly.  "How can you ASK that?  I mean, 
isn't it obvious?  We are being led by a TALKING PARROT, Zelgadis!  That's 
the most ridiculous thing I've ever... well, I hate to use absolutes, but it 
is absolutely ridiculous!  I signed onto this journey thinking we'd be off on 
some grand adventure, something to shake things up -- not a farce.  Is it too 
much to ask that--"

     "So it's Phinneas?" Zelgadis asked, cutting the diatribe off.  "That's 
it?  I'll be the first to admit his social skills are considerably lacking."

     "Hah!  To put it lightly!"

     "But I take great offense to you disrespecting him as the captain."

     "...huh?  When did you turn into a bird lover, Zel?"

     "You don't get it, do you?" Zelgadis asked.  "Lina, put aside that he's 
a parrot for a moment.  Here you have someone who by being non-human draws 
ridicule, mocking and misunderstanding like flies to honey.  He's clearly 
just as intelligent as we are, even if he's abrasive, and he knows what he's 
doing with his job -- but because of what he is, you're treating him like an 
inferior.  Some sort of creature.  Stop me when any of this starts to sound 
familiar, Lina."

     "It's not sounding familiar."

     "Then maybe you need to live your life in stone skin for awhile," 
Zelgadis said.  "Then you'll know what it's like to face that kind of 
discrimination just because of your appearance.  You're judging him entirely 
because he's a parrot, forgetting that he's an experienced sailor who's 
hauled cargo thousands of miles in his lifetime, forgetting that he's got far 
more authority than all of us combined when it comes to ocean travel.  I've 
only logged a few hundred and that was as a glorified chauffeur; he's staved 
off pirates, traded with ports of call and amassed a small fortune.  Did you 
know any of that?"

     "Uh... no," Lina said, a bit surprised.  "He's rich?"

     "If you'd have taken the time to talk to him, yes, you'd know he's quite 
rich," Zelgadis said.  "Three bank accounts on various islands.  Feel free to 
dislike the man's attitude, but as long as you don't laugh him off just 
because he's a magically enhanced parrot, you'll get along fine with him.  
See those guys below?  Gourry's just too nice (and dare I say too thick) to 
care much.  And Amelia's too excited about our quest to care.  Myself... I 
respect the chain of command.  I've been a soldier of one form or another for 
a long time, you know."

     "So you are really, honestly, truthfully, TOTALLY okay with this par... 
this captain?" Lina asked.

     "Until he gives me a reason not to trust him, I'll take what I've seen 
of his skills at face value," Zelgadis said, folding his arms in a confident 
poise.

     "Yeah, well... you're lucky.  He LIKES you," Lina said.  "And Gourry has 
big muscles and Amelia apparently satisfies his sweet tooth.  Me, I'm just 
some conjurer he's got no use for.  I don't like that."

     "We're outside the fallen god-sealing shield, Lina.  It's the outer 
world.  You remember from our last trip out here with Filia; these people are 
not magical heavyweights.  They've found other solutions to the lack of 
magical lore available in these lands.  The few cannons Phinneas has do just 
fine."

     "Cannons?" Lina asked, perking up.  "What does he need those for?... 
hey, look, another ship."

     "What?"

     "Behind you," Lina said, pointing towards the frothy wake trailing 
behind the ship.  "It's kind of faint, but there's a ship back there."

     Zelgadis frowned.  He swung over the edge of the crow's nest, one 
handed, and grabbed the rigging.  "Encountering another vessel out this deep 
into the ocean is usually not a coincidence.  Lina, announce it to the 
captain; I've got to get down there, we're probably going to have to move 
fast."

     "Me?  But he--"

     "You wanted to be useful, didn't you?" Zelgadis asked, as he climbed 
down.

     Lina pondered her options.  Or lack, really.  Zel was right, this was 
the thing to do.  She leaned over the nest's railing, spotted the parrot at 
the wheel of the ship, and called the event in her best imitation of nautical 
terminology.

     "Hark, captain!" she shouted.  "Bogeys off the port thingy!  Evasive 
maneuvers!"

     The tiny white hat wearing bird peered up.  "What're ye babblin' 
about?!"

     "...there's a ship behind us," Lina translated.

     THAT got his attention.  He motioned for Zelgadis to take the wheel, and 
proving that wings do have a certain advantage in traversing a ship's 
facilities in the vertical direction, he flew right up to the nest and 
perched on the railing.

     Phinneas whapped a wing against the telescope.  "Take a look at it 
through that and tell me what flag it's flyin'."

     "Yes sir," Lina said, half meaning it.  She rubbed her glove against the 
lens to clean it of seasalt, and peered...

     The ship wasn't much bigger than this one.  It didn't bob on the ocean 
waves, clearly cutting right through them -- it was definitely headed for 
them, and at great speed.  She tilted up a bit, to check the flag.

     "Looks like... a pair of snakes twisted through the eyeholes of a 
skull," Lina said.  "Sheesh, how gaudy can you get?  As if the death imagery 
wasn't enough, you have to toss in reptiles--"

     "Wot's the color?"

     "What does it matter?"

     "Just tell me wot the color is, missy!"

     "It's white on black," Lina said.  "Why?"

     "PIRATES!" Phinneas squawked, flapping his wings madly.  He spiraled 
down to the command deck, shrieking all the way.  "Bloody hell!  PIRATES, 
PIRATES!  BATTLESTATIONS!  We've got to pick up speed NOW!  Hard to 
starboard, let's zag on 'em!  MOVE!"

     The ship lurched, as Gourry let out the sails to catch extra wind.  Lina 
nearly got tossed from the crow's nest as the ship angled off the side, 
Zelgadis whirling the steering wheel to give it a sharp turn -- but Lina 
voluntarily let herself be thrown from the nest, as she slapped on a 
Levitation spell and floated down to join the action.

     The pirate ship was gaining fast.  They'd picked a cloudy area with a 
lot of fog to emerge from; the distance Lina had assumed they had was an 
illusion.  There was no way to avoid interception at this point; the front of 
the pirate ship was still facing her.  They'd changed courses perfectly to 
adjust to the turn.

     Phinneas perched on the Command Perch, issuing orders.  "Gourry, stay by 
the ropes!  Zel, I'll need yer muscle on the wheel.  Amelia!  Can ye handle 
cannons?"

     "I was shot out of one once," Amelia said, getting nervous.

     "It'll have to do," Phinneas decided.  "Bloody hell.  I don't have the 
firepower to take on pirates right now.  If we can't outrun 'em..."

     "Excuse me!!"

     All eyes turned on Lina... Lina, who had assumed a more natural stance 
for her.  That of the 'devilishly amused girl with one hand on her hip and 
another holding a small glowing orange ball of magical whoopass'.

     "Pirates are basically sea-going BANDITS, right?" she asked.

     A voice boomed across the waves, as the pirate ship drew nearer.  
Someone had gotten their hands on a megaphone, and was quite pleased to be 
six times louder than god.

     "*ATTENTION, trading vessel!*" the voice announced... haughty and 
female.  "*This is the captain of the Highwater Serpent, freelance pirates at 
large!  Run the white flag of surrender and prepare to be boarded, or we will 
open fire!  Open your cargo holds for us to loot and offer no resistance, 
lest we run you through!*"

     "Yeah, they're bandits," Lina decided.  "And here I was worried I'd have 
nothing to do while at sea... FIREBALL!!"

     She flung the wad of compressed elemental power through the air... it 
screamed across the sea, kicking up a steaming wake of evaporated water in 
its path.  The pirate ship, being large and wooden and as maneuverable as a 
herd of cows, obviously was not going to be able to dodge it.

     An explosion rocked the waves, kicking up enough water to splash onto 
the main deck of the S.S. Lightfeather.  The front of the pirate vessel had 
been blown to driftwood; the fireball burned away cleanly in the humid air, 
but it had taken a good chunk of the ship above the waterline with it.

     "Victory!" Lina posed... and got a faceful of feathers.

     "ARE YE DAFT?!" Phinneas screamed.  "We could've negotiated with 'em if 
ye hadn't blasted them!  Now we're committed to brawling this out!  This ship 
was NOT built for--"

     The roar of cannon fire was unmistakable.  The first shot punched right 
through the ship and out the other side, taking the sheet Lina had tacked up 
between the hammocks with it.  It splashed a few dozen feet away.

     "*THAT was a warning shot!*" the woman boomed.  "*Hands up, or the 
second one takes out your main deck!*"

     "My clothespins!!" Lina yelled, watching them sink to the ocean floor.  
"Do you know how hard it is to get the little squeezy ones with the springs 
in them?!  OOOH, this sea hag is gonna GET it!  Get the ship CLOSER!"

     Phinneas boggled.  "What?!"

     "Hey, you can sail this ship and run it just fine during peaceful 
waters, but *I*'ve seen the inside and outside of more magical battles than 
you've got feathers!" Lina declared.  "I've wiped out Mazoku Lords!  Trust me 
when I say this -- if we get close enough then they don't dare to use 
cannons.  It'd blow up in THEIR faces too!  Folks, we're going to board the 
pirate vessel, defeat the enemy and take whatever loot they have!!"

     Zelgadis seemed mildly amused.  "You propose we pirate the pirate ship?"

     "Call it my modus operandi," Lina said with a grin.  "We--"

     The next cannon shot screamed just past her ear, and exploded a hundred 
feet out to sea.

     "Okay!  Fine!  Good!" Phinneas warbled, panic setting in.  "No other 
choice now.  Ye'd better be as amazing as you claim ye are, Missy Inverse!!"

                                    [*]

     There is a problem with evaluating amazement factor.  By logic, there 
are only three parties capable of witnessing Lina Inverse in action... one, 
Lina herself.  She already knows she's amazing and thus requires no 
convincing.  Two, you have an outside observing party, which was Phinneas's 
position... but this is problematic.  Sure, you can go 'ooh aah' at the 
pretty special effects, but there's a third party that can TRULY appreciate 
them first hand.  The victim.

     Thus, the only real way to get a good idea of what Lina Inverse is like 
in action is to be the one on the receiving end.  It's therefore important to 
go back approximately five minutes in time and also change viewpoints in 
order to truly comprehend the matters at hand.

     The fog was a positive boon.  The Highwater Serpent had not been very 
profitable lately, as the last two raids resulted in one escapee and one weak 
draw, but this one was quite promising.  They would have the advantage of 
surprise.

     The captain stood at the bow of the ship, watching through the hazy 
mists as they approached the latest soon-to-be-volunteer for the Keep The 
Crew Of The Highwater Serpent Rich fund.  The wind brushed through her long 
white hair, and that plus the leg-up pose made her look like something off an 
oil painting.  Granted, it would not be an oil painting with much COLOR.

     That's because she preferred basic black and whites.  There were all the 
layers and coats and the obligatory large hat with a feather in it, but aside 
from some gold trim there was no color to these garments whatsoever.  She 
just had a thing for basic black and white, and it worked with her hair, 
which made the whole thing TWICE as stylish; if it was humanly possible for 
her to be more graceful and stylish.

     After all, SOMEONE had to look good on this boat.  The men were, well, 
men.  Big and hairy and nasty looking and not going to appear on any pinup 
calendars.  The only other woman on board...

     The captain glanced down (since said woman was shorter) and asked.  
"Miss Kristen, what see you in today's prey?  I require information before we 
begin the primary assault."

     Her companion tugged a spyglass from the bottomless depths of her 
oversized sleeves, and peered through it at the distant vessel.  "The flag is 
a simple green slash on a white field, mid-sized canvas... I recognize the 
pattern.  That's the S.S. Lightfeather, ma'am."

     "The LIGHTFEATHER?" the captain asked, adding a little chuckle.  
"Terrific.  We've found the Bird Boat!  It'll be no threat whatsoever, and 
odds are the cargo will be rich indeed!"

     She turned sharply on the excessively stylish heel of her nicely stylin' 
shiny leather boots, and addressed the crew.  The ship started to emerge from 
the mists, and it would soon be time.

     "Men, we have hit quite a load!" she announced.  "We'll probably take 
this one without a single loss.  Then, it's on to Dark Island, and flagons of 
mead and ale or whatever you may want for everybody, on me!"

     "Three cheers for The Lady of the Mists!" a voice sounded in the back.  
And there was much hooping and hollering and meaty arms waving and that sort 
of thing, which The Lady ignored as she returned to studying the distant 
ship.

     "It will be QUITE good to dock and have a pleasant inn stay," The Lady 
said.  "I swear, if I don't get a bath soon, I'll stink worse than the crew."

     "You don't smell too bad, ma'am." 

     "You shouldn't try to issue compliments, Miss Kristen.  You're just not 
very good at it."

     "...yes, ma'am."

     "Megaphone, please."

     The megaphone was produced from Kris's other sleeve.  The Lady adjusted 
the valves on the contraption, so it would amplify her voice to its proper 
status in this world, and issued the proclamation.

     "ATTENTION, trading vessel!" The Lady addressed.  She tossed her hair 
back dramatically, because it didn't matter if they saw the gesture; it was 
the principle of the thing.  "This is the captain of the Highwater Serpent, 
freelance pirates at large!  Run the white flag of surrender and prepare to 
be boarded, or we will open fire!  Open your cargo holds for us to loot and 
offer no resistance, lest we run you through!"

     "Very merciful of you, ma'am," Kris added.

     "The last thing I require in life is to earn the sign of the blood," The 
Lady said with utter distaste.  "Now, we... what's tha--"

     The fireball impacted solidly into the front of the ship.  The 
figurehead (which The Lady had changed recently to a chiseled naked male 
physique to replace the rather chauvinistic statue which once adorned the 
Serpent) was vaporized; wood blasted back from the resulting explosion, which 
also knocked her flat on her stylish butt.

     Dust and smoke filled the air.  The Lady liked to think herself so 
amazingly cool that she had her own personal climate, but she panicked 
nevertheless for a few brief moments, grappling for a toehold, trying to get 
to her feet, to assess the situation...

     Which thankfully was not a disaster.  Most of the crew had fallen down, 
but nobody was hurt... Kris was simply sitting nearby knocked a bit silly, 
and hadn't been injured.

     But regardless... this would NOT stand.

     "FIRE CANNONS!" she ordered.

     The crew was well trained; they didn't need further goading, they didn't 
need more time to recover. A cannon was aimed and fired immediately; The Lady 
fetched the spyglass to observe the damage...

     The ball simply punched through their hull without exploding.  There 
wasn't even a chance of it springing a leak.  This raid was going from a 
cakewalk to a pie in the face.  She tossed the spyglass, and resumed her work 
on the megaphone.

     "THAT was a warning shot!" she shouted, trying to cover up the 
unfortunate dud cannonball... she cast a concerned glare at Kristen for that 
one.  "Hands up, or the second one takes out your main deck!"

     "...I'm sorry, ma'am," Kris apologized, dusting off her shirt.  "But we 
didn't have enough money to buy the high grade ammunition you requested..."

     The Lady's face fell.  If only it was something she could hand out a 
punishment for... but luck was fickle.  "Very well.  But next time, INFORM 
me, please!  We have to take control of this situation now, before they get 
any funny ideas.  Men, one more shot, and this time... aim for the main 
deck!"

     The Highwater Serpent rocked from the concussion... and this one skimmed 
right over the railing of the other boat and splashed down on the other side.  
At least it exploded properly when it hit the water.

     "You're all getting a dock in the treasure share!" The Lady announced.  
"Honestly, people, this should NOT be difficult!  But I suppose at least it 
can't get any--"

     "They're coming about, ma'am!" Kris shouted.

     "What?" The Lady asked, turning to look... and to see the ship 
approaching.  Head on.  At high speed.  With seemingly little intention of 
stopping.  "Quick!  Fire, before they're too close!"

     Two fresh cannons were rolled over and aimed; the first shot did strike 
the side of the boat and blast a chunk out, but it wasn't high enough to sink 
the thing.  The second shot...

     The second shot was knocked completely off track by some freakish blast 
of wind.  The Lady gaped at this appalling violation of the laws of physics 
just long enough to miss the S.S. Lightfeather ramming them head on.

     Both boats collided, but thanks to the fireball damage, the Highwater 
Serpent was the one to feel the worst of it.  Before anybody could react, 
people were swinging over onto the pirate vessel on ropes and a hand to hand 
battle was on.

     It was inconceivable -- utterly inconceivable!  But The Lady wasn't 
going to pout or stamp her foot, she was going to fight.  She slammed back 
the chamber on her personal sidearm, loading a led pellet into the pistol's 
firing shaft, and took aim at one of the interlopers--

     The bullet fired in a brief cloudy haze of gunpowder, and went 'ptang!' 
off the odd gray boy's skin.  He paused in his swordfight with one of the men 
to just look at her funny.  Despite the lack of dialogue, The Lady got the 
distinct impression the boy meant to say 'Excuse me, I'm busy here'.

     She drew her personal knife (since one of the few things a woman could 
rely on in this day and age was a nice hidden blade), and stalked into the 
fray, calling out.  The men could handle the battle; she had other things to 
attend to.  She had her first mate to find, after all.

     But something was wrong.  There was lightning on one side of the fray 
where there clearly was no storm; snow blew over from the other wise when it 
was clearly spring.  Then it hit her... magic.  The assailants were using 
magic!  How the bird had found THAT kind of hired guns was a mystery that 
could wait.  She shoved a blonde-haired swordsman aside into a small group of 
her crew, and found...

     A short girl with white and pink robes healing an open cut on Kris's 
head.  Both looked over her, pensiveness showing; they didn't know what she 
was about to do next.

     Neither did she.  Until she did.  Although she wasn't sure why she did 
what she did.  She dropped the knife grabbed the nearby discarded megaphone, 
and spoke.

     "*HALT!  Everybody, cease and DESIST!*" she ordered.  The fighting 
slowed, but wasn't stopping, so she went a little further.  "*We SURRENDER!  
That's more than enough of this madness!*"

     That stopped things.  Everybody looked confused, her crew and the thugs 
who had assaulted her alike... all except for one.

     A redhead marched silently from the crowd, to confront her one on one.  
Perhaps she wasn't the bird, but there was a mutual understanding between the 
two; we're the leaders here, it's our job to discuss this matter.

     "You're surrendering?" the redhead asked.

     "Of course," The Lady of the Mists replied.  "We clearly have 
underestimated your power, and luck is not on our side tonight.  We've 
swallowed losses before... in fact, if you are intent on killing us and 
taking our ship and all in it, you will find yourself sorely disappointed.  
No doubt one with the sign of the blood as you will simply be content to slay 
us all, however."

     "The what of the what?  We're here to loot you, jeez, not slaughter 
you," Lina said.  "If you're down with that, we'll just help ourselves to 
your ill-gotten gain and part ways.  I like it.  Gets me back aboard before 
dinnertime without a single scrape!"

     "You're... STEALING what we've rightfully pirated?" The Lady asked.  
"Are you some sort of thief-taker?"

     "No, I'm Lina Inverse.  You didn't recognize me?"

     Kris got back to her feet, wobbly-like.  "L-Lina Inverse?!" she 
exclaimed.  "The legendary bandit killer?  The enemy of all who live?  The 
Dragon Spooker!?  Ma'am, she's very, very bad news!"

     "Must not be excessively bad, I've never heard of her," The Lady said.  
"Very well.  Take what you wish.  This is a large ocean, and we will accept 
the black mark and recover from it in no time at all, Lina Inverse.  I'm 
surprised you would waste your time lying in wait in these distant waters for 
ones such as we to attack you.  It must not be very profitable."

     "Oh, we weren't after you," the (in her opinion) overly lanky blonde-
haired man said, with a smile.  "We're actually after this thing called Misty 
Island or something--"

     Lina elbowed him sharply in the ribs.  "If you could open your holds for 
me, please, miss Fashion Plate Pirate Captainess?  I'd like to get on with 
things."

     The Lady scoffed.  She wouldn't deign to bow to this woman's demand.  
She snapped her fingers, two of her men sliding up behind her.

     "Neidhart?  Bulldog?" she addressed, not needing to check to see who had 
come at her call.  "Do this nice little girl a favor and show her the cargo 
hold.  But know this, Lina Inverse.  Take no more than eighty percent.  That 
is the law of the sea.  Any more... and I don't care if you DO know magic, we 
will fight you to the death."

     "Deal," Lina agreed.

     Off they went.  The crew parted like a sea with some guy wearing sandals 
waving his arms apart, as the four attackers were led below decks.

     Kris adjusted her clothes a bit.  It didn't help improve her dignity 
rating, as she stood a bit sheepish next to her captain.

     "I'm rather disappointed by today's events, Kris," The Lady warned.  
"You're going to have to make things right, you realize."

     "Yes'm."

     "You may start... by using your resources to locate me a magic tutor."

     "Uh... ma'am?"

     "This is not over," The Lady stated, tightening one of her leather 
gloves.  "No one makes a fool of me and avoids the consequences.  I do not 
care if Lina and her companions are monsters... I will find a way to defeat 
them.  I will hound them to the ends of the earth... and seeing as how 
they're headed in the same direction we are, that will not be a problem..."

     She slipped the golden case from her coat pocket, to make sure her most 
precious cargo was not missing.  The one thing she would fight to the death 
for with Lina Inverse... an ancient yellowed slip of paper, clearly a strip 
torn from a larger sheet.  It had five cuneiform letters on it.

     "Mark my words, Lina Inverse," The Lady spoke despite Lina Inverse not 
actually being there.  "You have now met your strongest rival.  This is FAR 
from over."

                                    [*]

     The heavy sack of Goodies slammed to the planks of the Lightfeather's 
main deck.  Lina let out a girlish little laugh of glee, as she ran her 
fingers through the gold doubloons and trinkets within.

     "Well, that's the end of that!" she declared.  "We're rich enough to BUY 
a boat now!  If this is that crazy lady's idea of 'not much loot', I'd LOVE 
to meet her when she's loaded!"

     A parrot cleared its throat.

     Lina looked over.

     Phinneas held out one wing, fluffing two feathers together.  The 
universal sign language token for 'Gimmie'.

     "Seein' as how ye couldn't have done that feat without my ship," 
Phinneas explained, "I believe I've got a cut of the booty comin' to me.  
Cough it up, Missy Inverse."

     "HEY!  We're the ones that did the fighting while you perched around 
here like a wallflower!" Lina accused.  "You're not getting diddley!"

     "Hidden crooosssbooows..."

     "Fireball-roasted chicken."

     "Damage to my hull."

     "Five percent."

     "Twenty five!"

     "Ten."

     "Twelve and a half."

     "Done," both said.

     "Huh?" Gourry said, whose grasp of economics usually didn't go father 
than making change for a ten spot.

                                    [*]

     The rest of the trip to Ordinary Island was filled with sea serpents, 
sirens on isolated rocks, whirlpools, hurricanes and at least one full-scale 
armada battlefleet.  Or rather, nothing actually happened whatsoever.

     The Lightfeather was a considerably easier boat to live on, mind you.  
Somewhere in the mess of battle, Lina and Phinneas had settles scores enough 
to co-exist.  The wind was strong, and the hours clicked by like clicking 
hours, time speeding forward easily in the stillness of the ocean, in the 
dead of night.

     Games of cards were played, people talked, everybody had a reasonably 
good time and then before anybody knew it, it was time to dock.

     Ordinary Island proved to be... ordinary.  There was a garishly painted 
yellow building which sort of slouched in the middle of the island, and there 
was an extensive dock system (completely devoid of boats save for a small 
supply craft).  Lina was so totally underwhelmed by it that she ignored the 
island as Gourry and Zelgadis went through the motions of docking the boat.

     "I think we've gotten off on the right foot here," Lina said, leaning 
back against the railing while chatting with Amelia.  "Okay, so there were 
some problems at first... but hey, that's to be expected.  A little bag of 
gold here and there can smooth over any worry."

     Amelia studied her handwritten note over and over.  "I'm just glad to be 
here, at last!  I hope Naga's chartered a good boat to take us on the rest of 
the journey.  I like this ship, but without your clothespins, I have to go 
change in the galley..."

     "Never underestimate the power of the common clothespin," Lina spoke 
reverently.  She glanced behind her... and frowned a bit.  "I don't see any 
other boats here, Amelia.  Maybe she's booked us to leave in a day or two?"

     "Sister was always very organized," Amelia said.  "What?  Don't look at 
me like that, she was.  I already know she... changed a bit, when you met 
her."

     Lina cupped her hands, to call out.  "OI!  GOURRY!  How's it going?!"

     The four below looked up.  Four, because there was Gourry, Zelgadis, 
Phinneas, and the guy who apparently ran Ordinary Island singlehandedly.  
"Everything's good, Lina!" Gourry called back, giving the thumbs up.  "We're 
docked and ready, and Phinneas has negotiated us a room for the night!"

     Amelia rushed up to the railing, to see.  "Ano!  Mister!  Has the..." 
she paused, to consult her paper.  "Has the 'S.S. Fiasco' arrived yet?  
There's a passenger on there we're supposed to meet!"

     "The what?" the man asked.

     "S.S Fiasco!"

     "Oh.  It sank six months ago, a few miles from here," he replied.

     ...Amelia's grip on the paper tightened.

     "What?" she asked, hoping she misheard that.

     "Spectacular wreck, I saw it one night through my telescope," the man 
continued.  "Just... WHOOSH.  Whole ship went under.  Musta had a busted seam 
in the hull.  No survivors.  Why do you ask again?"

     Her knees wobbled.  Her legs got weak.  Lina quickly supported her, but 
it was not going to help; total system collapse.

     "...the... the letter must have gotten to me late..." Amelia said, dark 
realization settling.  "She must have sent it long ago..."

     The fainting spell put Amelia down.  Lina kept her at least a bit 
upright... but was having trouble, herself.  She coped.  She got a handle on 
it; she was Lina Inverse.  She didn't freak out.

     ...even if Naga was dead.


                      .-------------------------.
                      |T|O|B|E|C|O|N|T|I|N|U|E|D|
                      `-------------------------'






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