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The Seas of Blood (a piritical game) - Full
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<blockquote data-quote="Phoenix" data-source="post: 2420187" data-attributes="member: 16166"><p><em>"Some people are born into money, other people work hard for what they possess, then there are people like us who just can't help drinking it all away..."</em></p><p style="text-align: right"><em>- Captain Reginald "Frothing" Murphy, The Oceanbitch</p><p></em> </p><p></p><p>The tale is an old one, and one that is all too common on the docks of Tavenport. Two Captains in dock at the same time, their crew in for drinking and wenching, all bragging of their exploits on the sea, legal or not.</p><p></p><p>The Annals of History state that in the Year of the Crimson Snake, 569PO, that one of these meetings did occur in the drinking house of The Dyke and Wheelbarrow. It was here that two Captains faced off each other across a small table lined with tankards, coins and cards.</p><p></p><p>But these were no ordinary Captains, for in their day they were the greatest pirates on the known seas, both with large prices on their heads from lawful authorities. The travellers of the world knew their names well and stood either in fear or awe at their presence. But none could decide who was the true ruler of the seas, for both of the Captains respected each other's reputation enough to avoid open conflict, as they did not know who would be the winner.</p><p></p><p>In that fateful drinking den there was posed a wager, one that would send shockwaves through civilized lands for leagues around them for years to come. The bet was simple.</p><p></p><p>In three months time the two Captains would meet in Haven's Den (the legendary and secret meeting place of pirates), the ship that possessed the greatest treasures would be known forever as the more powerful, and her Captain the true ruler of the waves. The loser would abandon her ship and all of her treasures to the winner, who would sail off leaving the losing crew behind with only enough food and water to last them until the next pirate ship arrived to rescue them.</p><p></p><p>A race against time, for greed and honour.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Phoenix, post: 2420187, member: 16166"] [I]"Some people are born into money, other people work hard for what they possess, then there are people like us who just can't help drinking it all away..." [RIGHT]- Captain Reginald "Frothing" Murphy, The Oceanbitch[/RIGHT] [/I] The tale is an old one, and one that is all too common on the docks of Tavenport. Two Captains in dock at the same time, their crew in for drinking and wenching, all bragging of their exploits on the sea, legal or not. The Annals of History state that in the Year of the Crimson Snake, 569PO, that one of these meetings did occur in the drinking house of The Dyke and Wheelbarrow. It was here that two Captains faced off each other across a small table lined with tankards, coins and cards. But these were no ordinary Captains, for in their day they were the greatest pirates on the known seas, both with large prices on their heads from lawful authorities. The travellers of the world knew their names well and stood either in fear or awe at their presence. But none could decide who was the true ruler of the seas, for both of the Captains respected each other's reputation enough to avoid open conflict, as they did not know who would be the winner. In that fateful drinking den there was posed a wager, one that would send shockwaves through civilized lands for leagues around them for years to come. The bet was simple. In three months time the two Captains would meet in Haven's Den (the legendary and secret meeting place of pirates), the ship that possessed the greatest treasures would be known forever as the more powerful, and her Captain the true ruler of the waves. The loser would abandon her ship and all of her treasures to the winner, who would sail off leaving the losing crew behind with only enough food and water to last them until the next pirate ship arrived to rescue them. A race against time, for greed and honour. [/QUOTE]
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