Introduction Open A Fox Starts Again

Amnesty Greysoul

Rating: Able Seabeast
Surgeon's Mate
Character Biography
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Amnesty stood, hesitating, at the bottom of the gangplank. She had promised herself for weeks that she wouldn't do this. The circumstances of her chance acquaintance with Arthur Barrett were a fluke. She had promised herself years before that she was done joining crews, armies, and bands of freedom fighters. There was too much pain, too many opportunities for her to end up failing beasts who relied on her. Or to betray them outright.

Yet here she was, preparing herself to set paw on a ship with the intention of joining the crew on the suggestion of a beast she had met only once. That night they had turned her neighbor's apartment into a makeshift infirmary had given her a taste of the camaraderie she had managed to avoid for years. She had thought the need for companionship had withered away entirely. Apparently, it had just gone dormant-- and like flowers in the desert after a long awaited storm-- it was now a brighter and more insistent need than ever. And rather than fade as the weeks had passed, it had grown until she could no longer ignore it.

So, with nothing more than a small rucksack strapped across her shoulders, she started upwards with the intention of heading straight for the Captain's cabin.
 
High up on the top sail yard arm, Finn sat perched. There he worked over every piece of rigging, checking to make sure it hadn't frayed during the voyage to Urk. It wasn't difficult work -- in fact, it was rather tedious. But to a young thirteen year old todd, it was life giving. The alternative was being out on the streets, which were only getting meaner every day. And so, with all cheer and diligence, Finn inspected the ropes.

The running rigging was much easier to inspect, Finn found. He could grab it in his paws and examine it in most cases -- though good heavens, he'd never imagined a simple canvas sheet could be so heavy. At any one point, he could comfortably use it as a blanket. but all together it weighed as much as several beasts.

Finished with his inspections, the foxkit crawled down onto the ratlines -- only to put his foot straight through the webbing. Ironically, he'd found a frayed bit by accident, and it snapped under his weight. The foxkit let out a strangled gasp as he lost his balance, and swung upside down. One glance downwards was all he needed. It would be his end if he hit the deck!

Fortunately, rigging was everywhere. He cried out as he fell, gathering up rigging like a fly caught in a spiders web -- only to come to a stop several feet from the deck, upside down, and so hopelessly bundled up in tar coated rigging that it looked like he'd never escape. He slid a half foot down further with a painful "Oof!", only to dangle and twist slowly until he came face to face with Amnesty.

"O-oh! Hi there! G'mornin'!" he said cheerfully, as if he'd not just been a hair's breadth away from becoming a pancake on the deck. Gyles had instructed him to be on the lookout for possible new recruits -- and stressed the importance of making a good first impression. Being upside down several feet in the air caught in a thicket of webbing, Finn decided, was an excellent first impression. "Are y'new to the Hide, or looking to sign up?" he said, with only some discomfort. The blood was rushing to his head, and that was never pleasant.
 
Amnesty watched with horror as the kit dropped down through the rigging. That was the thing about falls. You'd be fine until you hit. One instant, a beast was a perfectly healthy (if terrified) creature. The next, nothing at all. And there wasn't a thing she could do to stop it.

But apparently, Lord Vulpuz wasn't quite ready to bring that particular young fox through the Dark Forest Gates. He would have had to figure out how to get him out of that gordian knot of rigging, first. Amnesty categorically Stopped Thinking about how the original gordian knot had eventually been "solved".

"G'mornin'," she answered back, forgetting for the time being that she wasn't generally in the habit of dropping the ends off her words. "I'm looking to sign up, on the advice of the surgeon, actually."

The surgeon who had, in his drunken mumblings, said something about the beasts on this ship having no sense of self preservation. Amnesty's ears, already splayed backwards in residual discomposure, dropped even further. Three minutes on the ship and already a beast had nearly died in front of her. This was a terrible idea.

She swallowed once, cleared her throat, and pretended her tail hadn't bushed out to twice its normal size. "Arthur Barrett is the surgeon here?" And then: "Hellgates, what am I thinking. Can I get you down from there?"
 
Finn huffed as the ropes snugged more tightly around his torso, making it even harder to breathe. Though the poor vixen seemed to be quite startled at first, it seemed his calm demeanor had charmed her out of her surprise. The ropes twisted ever so slightly, and Finn began to rotate away from her, revealing his tail dangling upside down from the ropes.

"Oh yeah! Mr. Barrett? He's the surgeon... on the Hide here!" he said, his voice coming out in strained gasps. Like a fly caught in a spider's web, Finn wiggled as he tried to twist back the other direction. "Could always use... another medic! Lotsa injuries! All the time! Mr. Barret says... ...they almost want to... get hurt!"

Of course, he'd considered asking her for help... but that would mean admitting he was in a predicament of his own making. He could cut himself free, really! He just needed to get a hold of his knife. The foxkit spiderfood bundle wiggled around as he tried to get a hold of the knife on his waistband. Unfortunately, he fumbled the blade, and it spun downwards to stick point first into the deckboards with a satisfying thud. The foxkit looked upwards downwards at his knife with dismay. Now he was really stuck.

> "Hellgates, what am I thinking. Can I get you down from there?"

"Awh yeah, would be nice!"
 
'Nice'. Being saved from near-certain death or disability would be 'nice'.

Well. Most kits his apparent age hadn't really begun to grasp the concept of their own mortality. Then again, most kits his age weren't already working aboard a naval vessel. One would have hoped that might have given them a sense of their own fragility.

But this was hardly the time for philosophy.

The white fox shouldered her rucksack to the ground and retrieved the kit's knife from where it had lodged itself.

"If I cut a couple of these ropes and get them to loosen up, will you promise me you won't land on your head?"

She was, at this point, simply choosing to pretend that these were perfectly normal circumstances. The alternative would not have been helpful. She could question all her life choices again once the young fox was back safely on the deck in the proper orientation.
 
The Hide had a new captain, new orders, and a new adventure waiting on the horizon. Naturally, some turn-of-the-season cleaning was in order, and that had kept deckswabs like Darragh Harper firmly planted snout-to-deck with scrubbing, mopping, polishing, and dusting. Since the stoat resembled a scruffy chimney-sweep himself with his small frame and sticky-out fur, Darragh had been assigned to clearing out, in the words of the officer of the watch, ‘as much of the hold as you can without risking your own life.’

Darragh had been given a broom, a big burlap sack for hauling whatever rubbish he found in the hold, and a cutlass. When he had asked why he needed a weapon to clean out the hold, the master-at-arms merely smiled, and reassured the young sailor with a pat on his back.

“You won’t need it!” He said. “..Probably. I mean. Best case scenario, you won’t need it. Just a precaution, m’boy!”

The hold was dark, even with the lantern gently swinging overhead with the roll of the ship in the harbour. The shadows moved with the unstable light, and it was eerily quiet, to the point that every thud or creak from the timbers above him set Darragh’s fur prickling. As he toiled his way through barrels, boxes and bulging sacks of the bric-a-brac of bygone battles, Darragh felt as though he was standing in the refuse pit of bad memories. There were bloodstained, rusty weapons captured from this or that foe, there was food that had somehow gone unaccounted for and turned to colonies of mould, and there was every sort of odd-and-end that had been claimed as ‘booty’ in the midst of a raid, only to be found utterly worthless.

Yet all their junk treasures still counted as property of the Imperium, and existed in a legal limbo where it had to be retained in case it could be used to negotiate an exchange with the Enemy, whoever they may be at any given time.

Since the Winter War of 1733 was long over (Though Darragh could not tell who had won, or what had been at stake), it seemed pointless to hold onto the Golden Hide’s store of captured Alkamarian wooden ducks. Into the Rubbish Sack they went, along with a set of voluminous bloomers that had been half-eaten by moths. The terms of the peace treaty, or whatever had brought the war to an end, clearly had released the ducks fully into Imperial Navy custody.

Darragh was prepared to answer to a court martial for his destruction of Seized Enemy Materiel Vital to the War Effort in this case. The ducks were ugly.

Something skittered, deep in the hold. Darragh straightened up, ears perked, whiskers quivering.

Hello?” Darragh said, mainly to reassure himself with the sound of his own voice. A few seconds crept by, and he heard nothing but the groans of the Hide's hull. He waited a few seconds more, then went back to examining a crate. He was just starting to get elbow deep into cleaning out more motheaten uniforms, when he heard a swish, and a thump.

Cutlass in one paw, sack of ducks in the other, Darragh gulped nervously. There was something down here, and it wasn't a crewbeast. Slowly, tentatively, he tip-toed around the pile of crates, his own breath roaring in his head.

There was a severed stoat’s tail lying on the deck.

A terrible, distraught wail sounded from the hold, growing louder and louder to the beasts on deck, as Darragh tore up the stairs from below, fur frizzed and poofed from the top of his head to his own bottle-brushed black-tipped tail. The stoat burst out onto the deck, still clutching the weapon and the sack. In his mad rush, he hadn’t realised that the coils of rope on the deck had been moved around during the rigging inspection, and he neatly tripped over a thick pile of tarred hemp.

To Darragh’s credit, he did not lose the cutlass. A Navy beast ought never relinquish nor lose hold of his weapon once drawn in the face of the Enemy. It was the sack of antique wooden ducks he lost as he sprawled onto the freshly-cleaned deck. The sack tumbled in the air, distributing its contents with a tumultuous clattering and a sad quack.

Right in front of Amnesty.

Darragh looked up to see a white fox, a total stranger to him, holding a knife close to a thoroughly bonded Finny, who hung suspended and helpless from the rigging. A rational Darragh would have taken a moment not to make assumptions about this fox and her intentions. Rational Darragh had gone out to tea though, contemplating all possible implications of what he'd seen in the hold. Instead, it was Panicked Darragh at the helm.

Villain!” Darragh bellowed, leaping to his footpaws. He flourished the cutlass expertly (well… decently enough) and adopted a fencer’s pose, in the middle of a wooden duck minefield of his own making, which diminished any appearance he had of being remotely a threat. “Big mistake thinkin' you could tangle with the crew of the Golden Hide!

Darragh winced. Tangle?! He hadn’t meant to pun, but his powers of free association could be as much a hindrance to being taken seriously as a boon to his creativity.

…Sorry, Finny,” Darragh added as an apologetic afterthought to his bravado. Come to think of it though, how had the foxkit gotten tied up like that?

Whoever she was, this fox was good.
 
[ Moments earlier! ]

Finn whined as he looked at the ropes. "Awh hang it... this is a fine mess! I can't tell which one's which... don't cut one of the sheet lines, or I'll have t'go chasing the sail down!" he grumbled. The foxkit wiggled about vigorously for a moment, and caught a rope with his teeth. Tugging at it, he pulled it out and away from his body. "I shink ish bish 'un!" he said, wiggling a little more to hold out one of the ropes. "Ahwl kry t'nah wand ohm mah head... buh ish kahnba harb!"

As Amnesty delicately slipped her knife inbetween Finn's throat and the bothersome ropes, there was a great commotion coming from the lower decks. Finn was fairly certain that was Darragh coming from the lower decks, but given his current rotation, couldn't quite see behind him. All he heard was a terrible fumbling noise, someone falling, and... ...ducks. So very many ducks, skittering about on the ceiling.

And then, he heard the drawing of a cutlass.

Nope! Nope! Too many sharp things were out! Finn froze. His teeth clenched down tightly on the rope, and his fur poofed out in fright. Oh he was so scared Darr was gonna accidentally cut him! "Mo mo mo mo! Barrah! Ifh mah wah ih wooks wike! Feezsha fwen!" he cried, wiggling around to try and get a better view of the stoat. Unfortunately, the rope dug further into his muzzle, gagging him slightly. But for what it was worth, Finn attempted a smile. "Fhee? Fwehn!"
 
"No one's tangling!" That was the deeply unfortunate phrase that spilled from Amnesty's mouth in something that might accurately (if unkindly) be described as a yelp. Later, she would ascribe her distinct lack of dignity to the fact that she couldn't remember ever having been in a situation quite like this before. Oh, certainly there had been wild escapades and dangerous encounters. Those, she could handle. Those she had handled. What she apparently was not prepared to handle was just how fast she had tumbled snout over tail into what could only be described as Shenanigans.

She still held Finn's knife in her paw, the blade resting against the specific rope the kit had pointed out. Her other paw she held out towards the menacing young stoat in what was meant to be an appeasing gesture. All while the upside-down kit came closer and closer to strangulation.

"Like he says, I'm a friend." Or at least a friendly acquaintance... "He had a mishap in the rigging. I'm trying to help."

And was running out of time to do so. Her instincts hissed that the newly arrived mustelid probably wouldn't disembowel her (or the fox kit) if she made a move. Probably. But that rope was coming dangerously close to doing some real damage to the young vulpine's jaw, among other things. And the newcomer seemed to be a friend of his.

"'Gates. Foxkit, Finny? Tuck your chin. And you, Barrah, was it?" That's what it had sounded like the young fox had said. "Get ready to catch him on the way down. I'm cutting the rope."

And she started to do just that.
 
Finny’s lips were drawn back into a snarl through the rope gagging him, his fur fluffed out in terror just as bad as Darragh’s. The foxkit was squirming in his bonds, fighting for his very life. He was yelping something, and Darragh’s brilliant powers of poetic free-association immediately translated the sounds into coherent meaning.

No no no no! Darragh! It’s my white lookalike! Seizure when?! Flee! Run!

But she doesn’t look anything like you!” Darragh bawled. “And I’m not havin’ a seizure, I was just scared, okay?! I’m not abandonin’ you!

There was only so much thinking Darragh could avoid in this situation. The white-furred fox’s response was hardly villainous enough for the panicked poet’s imagination to twist, and now that he thought about it, there were easier ways to foxnap Finny. A notion that Darragh would never so much breathe in his cherished adopted-brother’s presence so long as he lived, unless of course it would be very funny to do so.

Darragh’s sense of reason was returning to him. The stranger’s explanation made a bit more sense than his own assumptions, and there was a slight (if only very slight!) chance he had misinterpreted one or two critical words from Finny. Still, with his heart pumping and with a stranger so close to a clearly upset foxkit, it was hard for Darragh to hold back his brotherly protective instincts.

…hang on,” Darragh said with a growl in his voice, his ears pinning back as though physically pained by the fact he’d just made another accidental pun. “I’m comin’ over.

Kicking his way through the ducks, Darragh sheathed his cutlass and hurried to the other side of the trapped foxkit. The tension in the ropes slackened as he braced one paw on Finny’s upside-down shoulder, the other on his back. He was ready for Finny to fall into his arms… or at least, not crack his head, or break his neck falling to the deck.

Darragh glared at the stranger, his sea-grey eyes cold and unforgiving. “If you hurt m’brother here, it’ll be personal between us, aye?

As colourful as the poet wanted to get with his threats, caution and practicality stayed his tongue. After all, he knew he was an intimidating specimen of a stoat - what he lacked in height, visible muscle mass or facial scars, he more than made up for with his powerful aura of untamed rugged dynamism. Oh yes, he was a bolt of white-fluffed lightning ready to strike! So he better not scare her too badly. He didn’t want her paws to shake while she was cutting Finny loose!
 
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