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(IC) Fitz's Folly
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<blockquote data-quote="FitzTheRuke" data-source="post: 7798745" data-attributes="member: 59816"><p>The Chultans prayed at the statue of their fallen god. Satysfied, they returned to the islands and the group began to travel east, led by the tabaxi hunters. They carried the rafts over a few landmasses and poled across a few bodies of water before hiding the rafts upright against a rock and covering them with hanging vines. With the supplies reloaded into packs, they made their way through the jungle on winding and barely passable trails. Occasionally the tabaxi would shoot up a tree and run along branches to get past an obstacle. The Sticks would have to follow with great difficulty, while the tabaxi waited impatiently. </p><p></p><p>Three hours later they found themselves at the outer edge of a small village dominated by one enormous hut surrounded by a few smaller ones. The large hut was ancient and its roof was so covered with ferns and other growth, that it would be difficult to spot from the sky.</p><p></p><p>While the tabaxi had been friendly enough, Qawasha and Dellrak could tell that they had been led on a circuitous and indirect route to arrive at the village and they would be hard pressed to ever find it again. This was fine, of couse, from a cautious jungle folk, but both agreed in a hushed whisper that they were also unsure if they could find their way out.</p><p></p><p>Still, the tabaxi villagers appeared friendly enough, as Myrral introduced the Sticks to his chief, a powerful-looking catfolk with an impressive lion's mane. The chief called for food, which consisted mostly of birds, uncooked and feathered, but the tabaxi realised that their guests liked other things and so they brought fruits gathered from the jungle (some of which Qawasha had to say were not to be eaten as they were poisonous or unpalatable.)</p><p></p><p>The chief also called for entertainment, and tabaxi musicians and dancers showed their talent in styles and with instruments utterly unfamiliar to all - even Qawasha, who had known other tabaxi villages. The hour grew late and the Sticks were invited to stay in the Chief's large hut, as most of the village appeared to be happy to do after a celebration. They piled in heaps around an enormous central firepit.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="FitzTheRuke, post: 7798745, member: 59816"] The Chultans prayed at the statue of their fallen god. Satysfied, they returned to the islands and the group began to travel east, led by the tabaxi hunters. They carried the rafts over a few landmasses and poled across a few bodies of water before hiding the rafts upright against a rock and covering them with hanging vines. With the supplies reloaded into packs, they made their way through the jungle on winding and barely passable trails. Occasionally the tabaxi would shoot up a tree and run along branches to get past an obstacle. The Sticks would have to follow with great difficulty, while the tabaxi waited impatiently. Three hours later they found themselves at the outer edge of a small village dominated by one enormous hut surrounded by a few smaller ones. The large hut was ancient and its roof was so covered with ferns and other growth, that it would be difficult to spot from the sky. While the tabaxi had been friendly enough, Qawasha and Dellrak could tell that they had been led on a circuitous and indirect route to arrive at the village and they would be hard pressed to ever find it again. This was fine, of couse, from a cautious jungle folk, but both agreed in a hushed whisper that they were also unsure if they could find their way out. Still, the tabaxi villagers appeared friendly enough, as Myrral introduced the Sticks to his chief, a powerful-looking catfolk with an impressive lion's mane. The chief called for food, which consisted mostly of birds, uncooked and feathered, but the tabaxi realised that their guests liked other things and so they brought fruits gathered from the jungle (some of which Qawasha had to say were not to be eaten as they were poisonous or unpalatable.) The chief also called for entertainment, and tabaxi musicians and dancers showed their talent in styles and with instruments utterly unfamiliar to all - even Qawasha, who had known other tabaxi villages. The hour grew late and the Sticks were invited to stay in the Chief's large hut, as most of the village appeared to be happy to do after a celebration. They piled in heaps around an enormous central firepit. [/QUOTE]
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