Amos & Cormac
Amos had long since given up on his salve to save his own stomach. Now, the goal was simply to keep the other crew members healthy. After news of Amos helping a sailor with a head injury had gotten around well enough, two or three stragglers would wanter into their sleeping quarters, asking for a common fix to a more common problem. It was truly no issue, especially since Amos had prepared for such injuries, but he couldn’t help but admit helping these sailors, while good for this journey, was taking away from helping the members of his party once their time on this ship had passed on.
As he churned out another drink, this one to clear the body of any natural toxins within, Amos decided to give one final effort to a solution to his nausea. He could only hope he would be so successful.
The day dragged into evening. It seemed everyone was busy doing something on the ship, which was better than everyone doing a whole lot of nothing. There was still a fellow perched in the crow's nest, and some of the sailors were gambling again. Cormac opted to stay out of those games for the time being. He wasn't going to wait a moment longer; the mast was bothering him more now that he'd had a good serving of whiskey. He had to find his messenger.
Cormac noticed the blind woman's servant first, but he decided against sending him to fetch the lady. Chances were, he reckoned, that the posh madame would take offense to being interrupted from whatever she was doing, and chances were he'd say something that'd turn into a sort of grudge. Besides, that Rory boy seemed to be having a grand old time watching the sailors. Cormac left him be.
But then the mercenary spotted just the man he needed: Amos Breckenridge, the good and respectable alchemist. He was precisely the man Cormac could trust to make a persuasive case. At least, he hoped he'd be the right man.
So, Cormac made his way over, his wooden leg distinctly thumping against the ship's planks as he went. When he was several feet away from the seated physician, Cormac cleared his throat.
Hours had passed, and still no solution to his ailment. By the time evening had come, the churning within him had subsided slightly, but if the previous nights were any indication for the next, there wouldn't be much rest for him.
It was then that Cormac had entered, his thumping leg giving away his entrance long before his sight. Cormac and Amos were two men who would most likely relate the most. Cormac was only slightly older than Amos, but both men had many years over the other members. Amos had hoped to get a word out of Cormac before, but his time was spent with the oarsmen on on the deck, where Amos had spent his time with his herbs and on his cot.
He nodded as Cormac entered the room. "Evening," he said, briskly.
"Aye, so it is," answered the bigger fellow gruffly, wiping his hairy hand across his face. It was hard not to notice the missing middle finger on that hand, and harder still to miss the bottle he was holding. Yet he seemed rather sober and composed. Curious.
"Look, I'm not one to mince words," the maimed warrior continued. "And it's for that reason I be needing a hand. The damned captain's risking all our lives, and I need you to light a fire under his sorry ass." He pointed down at Amos as he spoke in a relaxed manner, then jerked his thumb behind him. "I'll show you. C’mon."
Amos couldn't help but take a quick glanced at the man's injuries. The missing middle finger and leg were the obvious wounds, but the scars along his face were less direct, but just as telling. The two men were experts in their fields, but their fields...they were vastly different, safe to say.
The alchemist set down his tools as Cormac motioned for him to follow. He appreciated the quick conversation, and could respect a men that'd cut straight to the point with him. Besides, the walk may do him good. He hadn't tried a good pace for a few days, and seeing a potential danger to the party was enough motivation for him to do so. As he stepped out into the open air, and saw the sea stretching out beyond them, he was already glad he had gotten out.
Amos' companion seemed a little less glad, however.
"Here," he said with a wave of his hand, motioning up at the mast. "Watch her. There's a wind about, and the sea's rocking the ship. You'll see the trouble in a moment."
What was obvious to Cormac was less obvious to Amos. The mast stood straight and tall like a tower above the sea. The sails were full and unfurled. If there was a problem, there was naught evidence of it to be seen. It...
Was the mast swaying?
"There, I see you see it," Cormac noted with a snap of his fingers. "How she moves! That's shoddy work, and it's going to topple on all our heads if we go through a storm.”
Amos strained to stare above them, spreading his legs slightly to account for the swaying of the ship. Between that swaying, the clouds above them, and the setting sun, it was hard to tell exactly what the veteran had been talking about. However, Amos knew he was no master of the sea. Cormac surely had the knowledge here that Amos did not, and while his gruff exterior seemed ill-suited for convincing the captain of the issue, the man had knowledge of that shortcoming and had sought out Amos to pass this message forward. Regardless of Amos not fully understanding the issue, he decided it was best to trust his fellow man.
"Aye," he said, looking back down to Cormac and slowly growing accustomed to his sea legs. "I'll seek out the captain. Let him know. Although I've not got the technical knowledge here. If I convince him of the problem he'll surely head to you to figure out just how we get this mast fixed.”
"That's good," Cormac grunted, nodding at his compatriot. "You're a good man, Amos. Just make sure he understands we're doing him a favor, not the other way around, and he ought to remember that when the time comes. I won't be surprised if the cheap bastard offers us naught in return.
"And..." Cormac looked the alchemist over with a low rumble in his throat. "You seem a good man, even if you do look like you'd throw your back out lifting a bucket of water. You let me know if there's aught I can do for ya, aye?”
Amos couldn’t help but laugh at the man’s statement. It was honest, and it was true. Giving him a nod, Amos turned to be off.
“I’ll be sure to,” he said, making his way across the deck.
The Captain was supposed to be somewhere around the other side of the ship or so he thought. He walked with a renewed confidence in how own legs as he crossed the main section of the boat, giving nod to the sailors that passed him by. A few thanked him for his remedies, and Amos would respond with a curt “Aye” as he passed.
He knew somewhere around this part of the ship were Eve’s quarters. He hadn’t seen much of his party members, and he saw both her and her aide far less. There was a large question in his mind about the use of a blind woman upon their journey, but it was best not to mention such things before one even knew a person. He wondered where she and her Rory had been, and how they had been.
Finally, Amos came upon where he had been told to go; where the captain said he would reside. He thought he saw the man amidst a few other of his seamen, and approached quickly.
“Evening, Captain,” he said briskly. “May I have a word?”