News from The Lemurian Seas

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Chocolates and Deck Training

In Adventure on Lemurian Seas, General Ship News on February 18, 2009 at 10:20 am

chocolatebox

When the horns of the SS Vulcania sounded and it was time to leave the Island of the Temple People passengers, upon returning to their cabins found hat le Enchanteur has left a surprise for them. She has left a special box of chocolates, to savour as the ship heads towards the next destination.  The chocolates have led to inspired writing.

Out of the Chocolate Box by Gail Kavanagh

I dipped into Le Enchanteur’s box of chocolates and I pulled out – my thumb. I remembered promising Lori that I would tell the story of my shot thumb. So here, out of the chocolate box of childhood memories is a tale you may think is highly unlikely, but is in fact quite true – any circus performer and traveller could tell you even weirder stuff…

How I Got Shot in the Thumb is one of those stories that gets trotted out every now and then. The kids used to love hearing it, and whenever they made too much fuss about something trivia, I would give them the Thumbs Up. Litanies of injury would come to abrupt halt with the words, “Of course, there was the time Mum got shot…”

As many Foodies know, I grew up as a traveller, and my parents were circus performers. My father was a sharpshooter and my mother his human target – and as circus kids do, when I was old enough I joined the act.

There were a few accidents but never with the guns until one Friday in Scotland in 1960, during the second house. I was standing at the target board, holding one of the small plaster disks by its matchstick handle between my finger and thumb. It was one of the simplest parts of the act – Dad shattered the disc with a bullet and the most I had to worry about was being stung by a bit of flying plaster. Except that, this time, it felt more as if my thumb had been hit with a large, dull hammer. I stared at it in surprise. There was blood pouring out.

One of the bullets had only half the charge, and dropped as it was fired, enough distance to go clean through my thumb and into the target board. I was hurried back to the bus where Dad examined my thumb. There was a small neat hole near the nail, where the bullet had entered. The back of my thumb was a bloody, ragged mess.
One of the locals gave us the address of the local doctor and I set off with Dad, both of us with coats thrown on over our costumes.

We found the doctor’s house, after a fair walk, and knocked on the door. The Doctor’s wife opened it and stared at us as if we were a couple of escaped lunatics.

“We’re from the circus,” Dad explained. “My daughter has had an accident.”

Seeing my hand, and the blood soaked cloth it was wrapped in, the woman ushered us inside and called for the doctor. He turned out to be lovely old man with a white moustache and a manner to charm the most stubborn of patients into submission. My hand was beginning to throb by now, and I wasn’t too keen on having the cloth removed. It had stuck to the wound, and we had to soak it off. Once my thumb was in the open he examined it with interest. Then he looked at me.
“I think the young lady should have a cup of tea,” he said. “About six sugars should do the trick.”

As he cleaned up my wound he listened to Dad’s tales of our life on the road. From his manner, you would think he treated Indian squaws for gunshot wounds every day. His wife, now past her first shock, was just as charming. She brought the tea, with a couple of biscuits, and joined in the conversation while the doctor expertly bandaged my thumb.

“I think there’s not much point in stitches,” he said, “since the bullet has blown out the tissue at the back. The best thing you can do is keep it clean, soak it in saline solution every night, and let the tissue rebuild itself. Come back tomorrow and I’ll have another look at it and change the dressing.”

We stayed for another cup of tea, long enough for the doctor to make sure I was recovered from shock – which explained the very sugary tea I had been given – and arrived back at the circus in time for the evening show. I had to hold the disc in the other hand, but I was thankful – Mum’s part of the act meant she had to hold the disc on her head, so if a bullet had to drop two inches, it was best that it dropped into my thumb.

I visited the doctor twice again before we left Beith and he was well pleased with the progress I was making. As he had said, the back of my thumb was in too much of a mess for stitches, but with repeated soakings and clean dressing, it began to heal over, though it left a permanent scar that has considerably faded now.

Deck Training for Pythian Games

The word music itself is derived from the Muses, the legendary goddesses of Delphi. Greek mythology is rich in stories related to music. One of the most well known myths concerns Orpheus, the son of the Thracian King, Oeagrus and Calliope, one of the nine Muses. Mythology tells us that Apollo presented him with a lyre and the Muses taught him to use it so that he not only enchanted wild beast, but made trees and rocks move from their places to follow the sound of his music. At Zone in Thrace a number of ancient mountain oaks are still standing in the pattern of one of his dances, just as he left them.

After a visit to Egypt, Orpheus joined the Argonauts, with whom he sailed to Colchis, his music helping them to overcome many difficulties. There are many accounts of how he died. One says that Zeus killed him with a thunderbolt for divulging divine secrets. Whatever, the Muses tearfully gathered his remains and buried them at the foot of Mount Olympus where the nightingales now sing sweeter than any where else in the world.

The Muses delighted in feasts and the pleasure of song. At one such contest the daughters of Pierus defied the Muses in a contest of song and, having been defeated, were turned into magpies, greenfinches, ducks and other birds. Likewise, the Sirens, who were daughters of one of the Muses competed with them and lost. The Muses proceeded to pluck out their feathers and made crowns out of them for themselves.

The Muses discovered letters and the combination of these we call poetry. These letters were used to celebrate victory. Polymnia is so named because by her great praises she brings distinction to writer’s whose works have won for them immortal fame. Perhaps it was Polymnia who crowned the Poet Laureate at the Pythian Games which took place at Delphi every four years. The festival not only involved athletic contests but included musical competitions and drama. Unlike our society which had turned sports figures into icons, in ancient Greece there was no divorce between intellect and muscle. Each was viewed to be a necessary quality of the perfect man. Pindar, a Boeotian poet made it his professional business to celebrate the athletic contests in music and song. When a city was victorious it rejoiced in poem and song. Thus these games furnished poets, musicians and authors the best opportunities to present their productions to the public, and the fame of the victors was diffused far and wide.

Homer was clearly present at a number of games and his reports provide us with the most accurate account of what happened during this time. There was a contest in which the fight between the god and the monster was represented; the prize a garland of laurel, which was Apollo’s tree. The story goes that Apollo had fallen passionately in love with Daphne, the mountain nymph, a priestess of Mother Earth, the daughter of the river Peneius in Thessaly. He pursued her all over the countryside but just as he was about to overtake her Daphne cried out to Mother Earth who, in the nick of time spirited her away to Crete, where she became known as Pasiphae. Mother Earth left a laurel-tree in her place, and from its leaves Apollo made a wreath to console himself. It is this wreath that is placed on the heads of the victorious.

After defeating the Python Apollo took over from Themis the neighbouring oracle of Delphi, which was in historical times the most famous oracle in the Greek world. It was after this that Apollo instituted the Pythian games, which took place at Delphi and involved a reenactment of the slaying of the Python.

The Pythian games fire my imagination because they permit me to participate. As someone who has neither the coordination or the body to engage in physical exercises I have never been able to conceive of a time when I might be able to enter myself in any sporting events. I am prepared to move mountains to do whatever is required for me to enter the writing events.

The Greeks insisted that poetry was a form of craft, of practiced skill. To prepare for the Pythian games we need to practice our skill and become deft wordsmiths.

Let the training begin on the deck of the SS Vulcania: Check out the mad deck activities and then use the Pythian Games forum to participate and contribute your entry.

If you are not a registered USER of the Pythian Games simply send in a request to the group to join and we will sign you in.

games

On Being A New Passenger

Late last night, in a flurry of anticipation, I was teleported on board the S.S. Vulcania.  With my homeland in turmoil I was reluctant to leave but friends urged to take the ticket they had arranged for me.

‘A cruise,’ they had cried. ‘You must go Almurta. It is just what you need. Take some time away to reflect, to dream, to heal. Go now before your health deteriorates further. We will contact you immediately if you are needed here. Remember you can beteleported home in an instant. Go now. Gaze upon new horizons and heal.’

And so I did as I was bid though the suffering of the people around me rang in my ears and my heart was heavy was their pain. Against the back drop of the current terrors that lay waste my homeland my own health troubles have paled into insignificance yet they weigh me down. My soul feels weary. Perhaps this cruise will restore me and I will return to my ravaged home invigorated and more able to give of myself to others.

Now as dawn breaks over White Owl Island a gentle light flows into the cabin where I find myself. The exultant songs of birds greeting the new day sounds in the distance. I fling open my porthole to hear it more fully and a rush of salt laden air fresh with undertones of wild heather and lavender rushes into my cabin. I breathe deeply.

In the corridors beyond my door I can hear voices abuzz with news of White Owl Island. I hear tell of old potting sheds where the seeds of new ideas can be germinated. ‘Come, let us seek them,’ the voices call to one another. ‘Let us too plant new ideas in the fertile soil.’ For a moment I think of joining them but fall back on my couch heavy with the realisation that it has been months since I had a new idea. Or perhaps indeed, it has been years. Either way, I have no seeds to plant.

From somewhere comes a whisper that perhaps there is a Temple of Solace on the island. The name captures my imagination and I strain to hear more of this mythic place. It remains though, only a whisper, a suggestion of a possibility. Still something inside me has stirred and I decide to go in search of it. Wrapping my midnight blue cloak of protection around me, I zip up the opening and pull the hood tight around my face. The amulets and talismans I always carry are safely hid beneath its folds. Drawing upon an invisibility spell I make my way off the ship. As usual the spell is only partially effective and I feel people moving towards as if to speak. ‘Later, later,’ I will them, ‘for now I need to be alone.’ My body language is far more effective than my pathetic attempts at spell making and the people move away with a shrug of their shoulders.

Once on land the penetrating gaze of the Lemurian Warriors rips through my faulty defence shield. I mention the name of the hostess, The Enchantress, and they allow me to pass. Clear of them. I follow instinct and climb a steep, over grown path away from the docks. Around me a luxuriant tangle of herbs and flowering plants perfumes the air. Along the edge of the path large chunks of rose quartz glisten in the early morning light. The breathy sound of a flute wafts through the air. The player is hidden from me. My muscles, weakened by sickness, ache as I ascend the hillside but the sweet magic of the trail beckons me onward. ‘Almurta, Almurta,’ the breeze seems to murmur. ‘Come hither now.’

I round a bend and enter into a wide clearing where stone benches have been strewn with soft mounds of cushions. Gratefully I ease my tired body down. The seat I have chosen looks out to the sea. The horizon line merges into a foreverness of blueness as sea meets sky. I become aware that the air around me has a pristine quality, a lightness I have never experienced before. It is as if it has been washed through the light of crystals to come now to me absolutely cleansed of any negativity, utterly uncontaminated by any taint of sadness, of fear or of anger. Pure. Clean. Filled with Spirit.

Time passes without me being aware of its passage. My thoughts have stilled. There is nothing I desire. I simply AM within the light. My soul uncurls, stretches and opens to the possibility of healing. The faintest whisper of a new idea comes to me. The idea of regeneration. The idea of rebirth. I know where I sit is a way station on the path the Temple of Solace. I realise there are still paths for me to travel before I enter that magical citadel yet this place I have been drawn to has given me the sense that the Temple does exist. That I will somehow find it. First though, on the morrow, I will seek out the potting sheds and plant the seeds of my newfound ideas.

When I return to my cabin the urge to make art that has been dormant within for so long reawakens. I pull out the few art materials I have bought on board with me and spend the afternoon making tiny paintings of birds and plants I saw along the pathway. My earlier desire to avoid my fellow passengers dissolves as I become intrigued with the possibility of sharing my art work with them. Already I have noticed the ship is filled with the paintings, drawings and photographs of our hostess and of fellow passengers. How, I wonder, do they post it so that others can see it?

From Almurta’s Cabin


Enchanteur’s Gift

In Adventure on Lemurian Seas, General Ship News, Ghost Stories on January 19, 2009 at 2:26 am

walnutboat

Enchanteur has been in the habit of providing bags, filled with talismans to guide and protect travellers who are brave enough to set out on one of her adventures.

Like the tooth fairy she has quietly visited cabins on the SS Vulcania and has left a simple walnut shell in each

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In the case of an emergency it can become a life raft

But look deep within the shell and you will find

Carefully stored, minature items, that may be of use.

a tiny net

a compass

a hairpin

rope

a miniature anchor

a snorkel

a flare

one surprise item

Look very carefully and you will see that each shell is inscribed with a map of the heart.

Guard your walnut shell at all times. Keep it on your person and under no circumstances exchange this, no matter how generous the offer seems to be.

Take a moment to acknowledge receipt of E’s gift here in the comment box, sharing any thoughts or perceptions. In addition you might take a moment, within the privacy of your cabin, to create a visual or written entry in a diary, journal or letter.

From Were Pen’s Station

All is working according to plan – my fellow passengers are so worried about me nabbing their Tim Tams they have no idea what I am really after is ideas for my stories…

Now just why would Enchanter give everyone a walnut? Except for the obvious joke you have to be nutty to cruise with this bunch…it reminds me of one of my favorite quotes:

Life does not accommodate you, it shatters you. It is meant to, and it couldn’t do it better. Every seed destroys its container or else there would be no fruition.
Florida Scott-Maxwell

nutcrackerLook out, gals, things are about to crack wide open!

Cetea’s Revenge by Lori Gloyd

Still fuming from my unexpected encounter with Albion, I decided to take a few strong walking laps around the promenade deck to work off my head of steam.     As I came around the starboard side, I noticed a group of a dozen or more passengers and crew standing at the railing.  They were staring at something in the distance.    One of the officers had field glasses.

As I approached I could pick up snippets of excited conversation.

“Unbelievable!”  —  “Where do you think it came from?” — “It looks so old!”

I slowed my stride and worked my way over to the group.

On the horizon, several miles away, I could make out what appeared to be a tall-masted ship, something from centuries ago.  It sails were hoisted but I could make out no activity aboard.

“Excuse me.”    Another officer worked his way to through the crowd.  It was the First Officer known to us only as “H.J.”.    He approached the officer with the field glasses and motioned for them.    He took one look and said tersely to the officer.  “Inform the Captain.”

“Uh, sir…. Captain Diabolito is away hunting shape-shifting werewolves on the lower decks.  She won’t be back for a couple of days, sir….”

“Well,”  he snapped, “inform the Admiral then! This is not good.”   The other officer rushed off.   H.J. continued to stare through the glasses.  His jaw was clenched.   ”Not good at all.”

“Commander,” I whispered.  “May I take a look?”    He handed me the glasses and I put them to my eyes.

I gasped.   “It’s Cetea’s Revenge!”

The First Officer turned to the gaping crowd lining the rail and loudly announced, “Nothing unusual here folks…just a local merchant vessel on its way back to port.” The passengers, who were already getting bored, moved off in various directions, some heading towards the pool, others to the casino. I stayed at the railing and handed the field glasses back to the H.J.

“You apparently know about Cetea’s Revenge?” he asked.

“Just a little… enough to know that you lied to these people.”

The First Officer looked at me for a moment, and then said. “Come to the Briefing Room on Deck E at 1400 hours. Bring a warm coat and your Walnut.” He hurried off, leaving me a bit startled by his strange command. Deck E? The Admiral’s Deck? Only special guests of Enchanteur get invited there. Now what? I wondered. A chill moved down my back and I shivered.

Having a little time before 1400 hours, I scurried down to the ship’s library to review the little bit I did know about Cetea’s Revenge. I located a cracked and faded copy of Bosley’s Compendium of Cursed Ships and Other Sea Mysteries and flipped through the pages until I found this entry.

“Cetea’s Revenge, a phantom ship whose appearance portends madness and mutiny to the crew of whatever vessel sights it. According to legend, the sea-nymph Cetea (also known as Cetus) fell in love with Albigensio Schlagg, a sea-captain involved in the rum trade and other activities of questionable legality. Schlagg returned Cetea’s affection by stealing her treasure hoard which included the Great Pearl of the Nereids. Upon discovering Schlagg’s treachery, Cetea confronted him. When she learned that Schlagg had already sold her treasure and the Great Pearl to the crew of a passing ship, she went into a rage. She commandeered his ship and drove Schlagg and his crew to madness, murder and suicide. It is said Cetea’s Revenge now roams the Lemurian Seas searching for the ship’s crew that bought the Great Pearl. Her rage will not be assuaged until she finds it.”

I closed the book. No, indeed, this was not good. I glanced at my watch. It was nearly 1400 hours. I raced to my cabin, grabbed my coat and walnut and headed towards the Briefing Room.

I lightly knocked on the door and pushed it open. A group had already assembled there. Seated around the conference table were handful of passengers and the ship’s senior officers….including Albion.

“Good,” said H.J., “we’re all here. Let’s get started.”

I landed hard on the deck of the Revenge. I tried to get up but nearly pitched onto my face.

“Not quite as smooth as the Vulcania, is it?” said the actor as he struggled to find his balance.

“You said it.” I regained my footing and put my transport amulet into my pocket. I spun around to look at my surroundings. The Revenge was not a large ship, but given that we had no idea what we were looking for, suddenly the ship seemed enormous.

Miss Marplewood immediately took charge. “May I suggest that we split up to conduct our investigation? It will be a more efficient use of our time.”

I nodded at her suggestion. “I agree. It will be dark soon. I don’t think it’s a good idea to be here after nightfall.” I looked around. There was not a soul to be seen and the only sound was the creaking of ropes and the flapping of sails.

“Fine,” said Miss Marplewood. “Mr.— what is your name?” she asked the actor.

“William.”

“Well, then William, why don’t you visit the wheel house, and I’ll look through the officers’ quarters. Excuse me,“ she motioned to the young man who had said he was a graphic designer, “where would you like to investigate?”

“Beats me. I don’t even know why I am here.”

“Then why don’t you can check out the galley area and the crew quarters.”

“Fine, whatever — What am I looking for?”

“Anything that would suggest where we might find the Great Pearl. Just use your instincts.” Miss Marplewood pointed to a doorway toward the bow. “The galley is that way.”

The young man rolled his eyes and trudged away. Then Miss Marplewood looked at me. “I guess that leaves the lower decks for you.”

“Great! I’ll just go right down into the dark hold of the big scary ghost ship…..” I muttered.

“I’m sure it is perfectly safe, dear.” Miss Marplewood patted my arm and then waddled off in search of the captain’s quarters. “We’ll reconvene in about an hour,” she shouted to me and the others.

I found a hatch in the deck and yanked it open. A gush of rancid air burst through the hatch. I started down the wooden steps. A lantern with a tiny bit of oil hung at the top of the stairs. I unhitched it, lit it, and slowly worked my way down into the hold. My imagination conjured all sorts of nasty things lurking in the shadows.

Instead, I found wooden barrels lining the bulkheads and from the smell I could tell they contained rum. Crates of various sizes were piled in the center of the hold. Some were clearly marked “Pitchford and Gibbons Spice and Tea Company”. I pried open a few unmarked boxes and found a variety of unusual items: a dozen athletic trainers, a hundred packets of Tim-Tams, a complete set of DVDs for the second season of Dr. Who, and box of Victoria Secret Pushup bras, double-D cups. I was about ready to give up my search when I saw an ornately carved trunk. It was unlocked so I lifted the lid.

It was lined with red velvet and in the bottom was a flat chunk of stone with something akin to hieroglyphs chiseled on it. The stone had jagged edges as it if were broken away from a larger piece. I lifted out the stone and examined the glyphs

To read the remainder of this cliff hanger visit Aft Views.

The SS Vulcania Sets Sail

In General Ship News on January 11, 2009 at 6:30 am

It was the Twelfth Night and a large crowd of spectators, photographers and journalists, looking to catch a glimpse of passengers as they boarded, gathered on the esplanade and pier to farewell the SS Vulcania as she headed off on her maiden, TransLemurian voyage. A flotilla of small boats surrounded her as she sailed out of the cove, beyond the Murmuring Woods.

On board excited passengers, who were embarking on the journey of a lifetime, stood on the decks bidding farewell to loved ones. The Vulcania will sail all through 2009, stopping at ports and picking up more passengers as she sails into more unknown parts of Lemuria. The sense of adventure  built as the boat prepared to embark and, by the Twelfth Night, it had  reached fever pitch. Few will forget where they were on the night when the SS Vulcania sailed.

At midnight all the passengers gathered on E deck, le Enchanteur’s private deck, for a fire work spectacular.

Everyone watched , mesmerized and enchanted, as guests began to present to Enchanteur, each taking a moment in the spotlight to share something old, something new, something borrowed, something they pulled out of the hat, as a part of the celebrations to mark the launching of the SS Vulcania’s.

To add to the excitement hundreds of dolphins danced and stampeded, providing a show for E and all the passengers on board the ship.

sourced by Lori Gloyd

Passengers on Board the Vulcania

Assorted Shape Shifters on Board

fairy-leah

My first voyage at sea…I experience a sense of excitement mingled with fear and some small voice of hope…

Previously I have always flown where I wanted. My golden wings have been able to carry me over the rainbow, above the clouds, to lands and places no living mortal has ever encountered….unil now. I have fallen in the worst possible way: I have fallen in love! But even worse: My love is a mere mortal man! When I told my mother, Talissa (Queen of the Faerie Folk), about this situation, she told me to go on a voyage of the heart, to see if I would be able to live amongst the mortals. So I donned my beautiful spiderweb cape, to hide my wings and radiance, to become Earth bound… at least for this voyage.

To console me I brought a bag full of treasures:

“My ball, my fan, my pot for tea.

A sparkly blue egg I found beside the Wisdom Tree.

My unicorn whistle, a pearly shell.

A poem to leave on a windowsill.

A bug, a box, a book, a wand.

A ship that will sail on a mirror pond.” (Fairy Dreams)

I also have some pictures of my previous image, worlds I have seen, my family and friends. At this momentous occasion I am looking at how I looked before this day, and I can’t help but wonder: Will this mortal man be worth it?

An image of me when I still had my wings…

An image of me when I still had my wings…

Meet Fairy Rainbow

Mistress Ching Performs for le Enchanteur

Mistress Ching Shih

Mistress Ching Shih

Tian Shih shushed herself.  How could she be nervous in front of these people who did not even know her?  But her performances thus far had been for families and friends.  She was dressed in her finest clothes, her floor length hair completely subdued under glittering hair ornaments.  Ting Ting shuffled along behind her.  As she entered the theatre, she saw L’Enchanteur in her glory and was momentarily stunned and humbled.  Arrayed about her were the officers of the ship, and Tian Shih made low bows to each, hands pressed together at her forehead.

She met the eyes of the captain who was swinging a roll of duct type around her wrist.  The captain seemed amused.  Why amused?  Tian swiftly checked her clothes for tears or problems but there were none.  Perhaps this amusement was meant as an attempt at friendship.  Other cultures were difficult waters to navigate. L’Enchanteur indicated that she should approach, and Tian Shih reached into her hidden pocket and retrieved the gift and extended her hand, palm up with the walnut in it.  ”I am honored to receive this gift,’ she said in her clear accent-less voice.  L’Enchanteur reached down and clasped her hand around Tian Shih’s hand, enclosing the walnut inside.  ”May it bring you the dreams you desire, ” she said, or so Tian thought she said, although later she wasn’t sure if the words were spoken or had just been in her head.  Her Fox self chuckled wickedly and decided that later that night would be a good time for hunting.

Tian Shih turned and walked to the stage.  As she faced the men and women around her, she couldn’t help but notice the presence of several interesting passengers.  A bright green skirt shone briefly in the lights as a smiling woman passed the stage.  The fairy was in the room somewhere, Tian could feel her and a young woman, neatly dressed in the latest style sat at a table with another young man and woman who paid no attention but to each other.  This young woman stared at Tian but her face had a sadness about it.

Tian Shih briefly closed her eyes to block out the minds and eyes of the audience and then she launched into her operatic performance.  She had worked hard over the years to be prepared for a performance such as this, practicing the traditional acrobatics, musical instruments, singing and gestures.

Tian Shih had chosen a section from ‘Women Warriors of the Yang Family’, an opera depicting the triumph of the Yang matriarchs over the  the Si Xia army.  It was an unusual opera because women were featured in most major roles, but that  was why it appealed to Tian Shih.

The audience was eerily silent as she performed her movements deftly and her high-pitched voice leapt from one note to the next as dextrous as the wind.  A drum and a guzheng played softly as an accompaniment, causing some of the listeners to crane their necks to find the musicians, but they would look in vain.  Tian Shih had arranged her musicians herself and they would disappear as quickly as they had appeared when she finished her piece.

As she neared the end and the music trailed off, she sank to the floor in the silence.   For a moment, no one spoke or moved.  Then L’Enchanteur rose and began to clap and applause followed.  Tian Shih rose, bowed low to the audience, then turned and bowed lowed to L’Enchanteur.  The people aboard this ship may not have realized what they had witnessed, but L’Enchanteur had and she was pleased.

Tian Shih left the theatre trailing her robes with her head high, Ting Ting behind her muttering as usual.  Tian would be glad to be in her cabin again to savor the experience of performance.

(Note: if you wish to listen to Chinese opera, please go to Women Warriors of the Yang Family.  Skip the first 3 minutes unless you speak Mandarin.)

Visit Travels With Mystery to meet Mistress Ching

Stretching Wings

I have finally arrived at the port of call

It has been a long journey and I have been amongst people for way to long .

I long to stretch my wings and relax in the safety  of my room

but that will have to wait as there is a long line waiting to board and as my luck would have it,

It ’s  snowing .

Even though i am dressed for it . Wearing a long dark Green trench coat with a large dragon adoring the back of it  a purple scarf and black jeans   .   I hate this cold weather .  I long for tropical beaches and warm sun.

there are many people waiting to board , I can sense no real danger, but I also sense that most of these people have many secrets.  that they do not wish to reveal and are very good at hiding. I have no interest in discovering their secrets, only in protecting my own.

the voices and sounds of their thoughts are overwhelming I must work to prevent them from invading my mind and becoming my own.

a porter approaches me asking  for my name  “Isabell Dagon  but I hate the name Isabell so please call me  Issy”

I stopped using Isabell a long time ago.  That name reminds me of a  prim and proper women of society that stands for everything I am against.

The porter notes my name gives me a knowing look , as if he knows who I am  and moves on to the next person.

I reach my hand up to my necklace, an amulet bag made from cloth with a copper flower and a face at its center.

It is one of my most precious possessions, and one that holds many secrets within its tiny pouch.

I can not wait to see my cabin.  I know it will be perfect , They knew I was coming long before I did and Im sure my cabin has been ready for awhile   awaiting my arrival.

Meet Issy in the Dragon’s Lair

Maid Without Honor

Hmmmph. All these society type ladies on board, dining and dancing and carrying on.  Someone around here has to clean up after them, and that someone is me, Cordelia Frumpwort, maid without honor.

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Usually they don’t even notice me – I’m just so much furniture to them – I stay quiet and don’t make a splash, so I can listen in on their conversations.  It’s not eavesdropping, it’s research – because I really want to be a writer.  When I was little, I didn’t say, “When I grow up, I want to be a maid…”