Friday, May 30, 2014
8. Skratch and the Instant Proposal
As the Wabbit and Lapinette watched the preparations for the Sago Ceremony, Skratch the Cat took his opportunity. "Captain Jenny," he whispered, sinking to his knees. Jenny looked down with interest and Skratch began. "I adore you Captain," he said. "May I have your hook in marriage?" Jenny rocked back and forth in a pirate fashion. Then she leant forward and pursed her lips and muttered. "Where's my dowry?" "That really comes from your side," replied Skratch, who had been a Cat Burglar and knew what was what. "But I have some jewelry put by." "Oh," said Jenny, and she smiled. "Who's going to marry us?" Skratch gestured towards the Wabbit's android double. "Wabsworth has a divinity sub-routine," he purred. Jenny chuckled. "Who's going to give me away then?" "The Wabbit of course, he's senior." Jenny let forth a kind of a giggle. "I see no ring!" Skratch felt beads of perspiration under his mask. "I'm certain the Wabbit has one in his fur." "Aha!" said Jenny. "I don't want a second-hand ring the Wabbit found in a market." Skratch was quick. "I'm sure there's a special ring somewhere on this island." Now Jenny grinned. "Perhaps we'll find one." Skratch brightened and Jenny drew close. "I really don't know, Skratch. But I tell you what I'll do." Skratch felt his legs go rubbery. "I'll think about it," said Jenny curtly, then paused. "What on earth that thudding?" "My beating heart," sighed Skratch.
Wednesday, May 28, 2014
7. The Wabbit and the First Encounter
The team traversed the island and from a vantage point, surveyed the scene. But as they looked down at an avenue of pillars, they saw figures emerge from between the blue pyramids. One larger than the rest looked up and called out. "Do you seek treasure?" Jenny looked at Lapinette. "You're the anthropologist, it's your call." Lapinette thought carefully. "We seek no treasure, we seek what is rightfully ours." Creatures scurried around and held impromptu discussions. "What is it that is rightfully yours?" cried the leader. The Wabbit shook his head. "We're not rightfully sure, but we have a map which leads to another map." The leader laughed. "Throw away your map, we know where everything is." "In that case," said Lapinette, "we'll pop down and interview you about your customs." There was a brief interval while more discussions took place. The leader hailed them again. "Have you brought any sago?" Lapinette smiled, because for once the Wabbit had something useful in his fur. But Jenny broke in quickly. "Sago is a scarce commodity, but we might be able to assist you." The Wabbit gripped his hidden packet tightly. "Have you heard of antique sago?" he called. A cheer rose above the island and some creatures began to dance. "We will now prepare the altar," called the leader. "I don't like the sound of this," said Skratch the Cat.
Monday, May 26, 2014
6. The Wabbit lands on Wablantis
"It's just up here," said Lapinette, but the Wabbit knew from his map that this might be a long way from their goal. So he hopped forward with a stern look to give the impression he knew what he was doing. "I though it would be warmer," said Captain Jenny, clutching an arm to her chest. "This is my summer tunic." Lapinette smiled because she had seen the whole island from her helichopper. She thought the island's broad plains and rounded hills might get very hot indeed - so she had dragged a light battledress from her locker. The Wabbit spoke in a too-loud voice and glanced all around. "I find it rather strange that no-one's about." "We should be on our guard," Commander," said Jenny. "These quiet places with no sign of life hide awful secrets and conceal strange practices." Lapinette was intrigued. "What sort of thing?" "Devil worship," replied Jenny. "And ritual sacrifice," added the Wabbit. But Lapinette had studied anthropology in the field with the Bare’e-speaking Toradja. "In Central Sulawesi," she nodded, "it ensures fertility." Jenny snorted. "Aren't they the ones that drink their own ...?" No," said Lapinette quickly, "that's the Sambians of New Guinea." "Well, did we bring any gifts for inhabitants?" asked Jenny. The Wabbit dug deep in his fur and found a packet of sago long past its sell-by date. "We'll be fine," he murmured.
[Background photograph: Mick Warne]
[Background photograph: Mick Warne]
Friday, May 23, 2014
5. The Lost Island of Wablantis
Lapinette didn't need much. She saw a tiny patch of blue and her helichopper leapt into the sky like a grasshopper. She looked down to see the Lepus and the Unut break through the jungle inlet into an electric blue sea. Lapinette's rotors chopped through strange air as she wheeled across an other-worldly landscape. She pawed her radio into life. "Lapinette, Lynx 2 calling." Nothing. She switched to the short wave. "Lynx 2. Do you copy?" Now the radio whined. "Captain Jenny receiving. What can you see?" "Strange shores, Captain," muttered Lapinette. There was a break in transmission. "Have you eaten recently?" broke in Jenny. There was no reply and Jenny's voice became strict. "There are salad sandwiches in the glove compartment. Eat." Lapinette gripped a sandwich in her mouth and skittered the Lynx along the island. "Report," snapped Jenny. "Six blue pyramids of varying sizes," said Lapinette. "Sounds like Ancient Aliens," said Jenny, "so is there any life?" "No visible life," said Lapinette. "Then it's a rather normal kind of place," quipped Jenny, scanning the horizon. She made out a dot and she knew it was Lapinette. "Can you see a suitable spot?" Lapinette swooped towards the coast. "One klick east of the Unut," said Lapinette. "I see a road and a landing strip." "Land on the Unut," said Jenny. Lapinette had a thought. "What happened to the Wabbit?" Another signal intruded. "I hear everything."
Wednesday, May 21, 2014
4. Lapinette and the Jungle Inlet
Monday, May 19, 2014
3. The Wabbit & the Whale's Undertow
Neither the Wabbit nor Rabbit Jenny could
do the slightest thing about what happened next. Thoth the Whale expanded to
giant proportions and the undertow from his wake trapped both Lepus and Unut in a vice-like grip. The Wabbit looked at his instruments and shrugged and
gave up as the Unut was hauled across the ocean. On the Lepus, Jenny tried fighting with
controls but to no effect. But somehow, Thoth glided on the ocean surface like a
hydrofoil. The Unut's video link sparked out, so the Wabbit
looked away and tested the ship-to-ship radio to see if it was working. There was
a whoosh from the speaker as if the sea had got into the circuits, but Jenny’s
voice cut through like crystal. "We have to run with the whale, Commander." "I hope he really knows where he’s going," sighed the Wabbit. Jenny’s eyes narrowed. "The Goddess Unut sent him?" "She
tends to interfere," said the Wabbit. There was an awful noise as the hull of
the Lepus rumbled then groaned. "Will she hold?" asked the Wabbit. "She’ll
hold," said Jenny, "she’s been through worse." "Brecan’s Cauldron?" asked the
Wabbit with a shudder. The radio whooshed but it couldn’t cover the clarity of Jenny’s
voice. "I love to sail forbidden seas, and land on barbarous coasts." Now
silence fell, except for the roaring of water past hull. "What can Wablantis look
like?" murmured the Wabbit. "Ignorance is the mother of fear," responded Jenny. "Who’s the father?" smirked the Wabbit.
Friday, May 16, 2014
2. The Wabbit and Ocean Turbulence
It was the Wabbit’s watch and he was
looking forward to a quiet one. Dusk settled across the ocean and he relaxed
and glanced at monitors and yawned. But he kept an eye on the progress of the
Lepus and to break the monotony, occasionally spoke to Captain Rabbit Jenny on ship’s
video. He was looking over to the Lepus and smiling to himself when he noticed
the previously calm waters were a little disturbed. So he called Rabbit Jenny -
but just as her face swam into view, something leapt from the sea with an
incredible splash and made a series of low booming sounds and clicks. Foam spurted as the creature’s tail threshed. "I see it, Commander," said Jenny. "You could hardly miss it," said the Wabbit. "Hang on. It’s
communicating with my bridge crew," said Jenny. "Do they speak whale?" asked the
Wabbit. Jenny raised a paw. "We can decode the sounds. I’ll patch you through a
translation." The Wabbit listened intently. "I am the Sea God!" boomed the
whale, "and I am thrice great." "That sounds very familiar," thought the Wabbit
and he spoke to the monitor. "Jenny, his name is Thoth. Confirm he is thrice
great, or we’ll be here all day." Threshing tortured the water and casually sprayed both ships. "I am to assist you find the Lost Island of
Wablantis." The Wabbit addressed Thoth directly. "Thoth, do you know where we’re
going?" A jet of water shot in the air and a piercing wail shook the vessels. "I
am thrice sure!" The Wabbit looked at Jenny in the monitor and shook his head and winked - and Jenny winked back.
Wednesday, May 14, 2014
1. The Wabbit and the Improvised Map
On the tiny dock of a little-known port, the Wabbit and Rabbit Jenny met prior to departure. "Our task is formidable," said the Wabbit. "So are we," said Rabbit Jenny the Pirate Chief. The Wabbit grinned and glanced at the scroll under his paw. "This should be of help." "It looks like map," said Jenny. "I made it myself using hearsay and tittle-tattle," said the Wabbit. Jenny's eyebrows fluttered and her lips were questions. "No-one really knows where Wablantis is," continued the Wabbit. "The Ghost Island?" frowned Jenny. "Few have seen it and lived to tell." The Wabbit looked surprised. "What else do you know?" "Those who land and seek treasure there can never leave." The Wabbit's fur stood on end. "We're not looking for treasure precisely." Jenny gripped the Wabbit's paw and he felt it tingle. "What are we looking for?" she murmured. "Another map," said the Wabbit. Jenny knew what was coming and made a wry smile. "That map will indicate the position of another object." "How did you know?" asked the Wabbit. "I'm a pirate," said Jenny. "But even so I don't know what the object is." "Neither do I," shrugged the Wabbit. Jenny swayed backwards and forwards as a pirate chief should. "We'll know when we find it." She turned to look at her ship. "It may not be down on any map, Commander." The Wabbit nodded. "True things never are."
Monday, May 12, 2014
The Wabbit at the Adventure Caffè
" ... that someone special was the Wabbit." Lapinette spoke softly and the Wabbit nodded gravely. "Our meeting had to be kept secret from our enemies, the Agents of Rabit." Rabbit Jenny took roses from her pockets and passed them around. "Type of adventure, Skratch?" she asked. "This was epic theatre," said Skratch immediately. "Speaking of yourself in the third person confronted our dominant specularity and made us think critically." Lapinette looked directly at Jenny. "What about the hanging washing? That was just a symbol wasn't it?" Jenny smiled and shook her head. "No, I don't take prisoners." "So expensive," commented the Wabbit. Lapinette frowned but she was too far away to kick his ankle. "How many of them were there?" asked Wabsworth. Jenny shrugged. "I really don't recall." A silence fell. "Their bones will bleach in the sun," quipped Skratch. Everyone laughed and Jenny turned to him. "I like you, I like you a lot." Skratch blushed. No-one knew, although his voice trembled slightly. "There's one part of the narrative that needs to be addressed." Jenny raised a considerable eyebrow and Skratch waved at her uniform. "The coins you had sewn into your tunic. What happened to them?" Jenny laughed. "I spent them," she said, "and now I need to find more." The Wabbit's 28 teeth gleamed. "That can be arranged." But Jenny's eyes were on Skratch. "Did I foreground the signifier, Skratch?" she asked. "You are the signifier," he gasped.
Saturday, May 10, 2014
Pt 11: Jenny and the Last Washing
"That can't be the end of the story," said Skratch the Cat, "it's much too exciting." "Yes," said the Wabbit, "we want a coda." Pirate Jenny stared with amusement at her glass and gulped the contents down. "Indeed," she said, "there must be an end, so here's the tail." Lapinette smiled and applauded. Pirate Jenny waved an arm and spoke. "On the deck of the Lepus, Rabbit Jenny opened the
third and last of her packages and took out a sack of coins. Then she shrugged
off her blue tunic and told the Quartermaster to have the coins made into
buttons to be stitched into her uniform. She hardly looked back as her ship slid away
from the ratty coast, but she caught sight of the rows of washing she’d left as
a warning - and watched as a breeze blew in and filled the garments." Pirate Jenny stopped and lifted her glass in a toast and so did everyone else. "The clothes should
have billowed, but under Jenny's gaze they started to jerk and kick in a grim
gallows jig. Her nose twitched as if she'd smelled something sour and
she turned away from the coast. An ancient and grizzled mariner grasped her fur and asked
where they were going. Jenny took his hand gently. A bolt of electricity shot
up the mariner’s arm and prickled across his shoulders, but when it reached his
heart it felt warm. She told him they would follow the Southern Cross and the mariner asked for the name of the port. Rabbit Jenny shook her head, smiled and pointed out to sea. “We have a secret rendezvous with someone special.”
Friday, May 09, 2014
Pt 10: Jenny - and Now or Later
Pirate Jenny’s audience was on tenterhooks
as Jenny’s eyes hardened and she took another deep draught of rum. She
looked around her audience but Wabsworth couldn’t restrain himself. "What happened
next?" he breathed. "I will tell you," smiled Pirate Jenny – and she did. "Rabbit
Jenny stood and looked at the harbour she had watched for so long. Behind her, voices grew louder and louder
until she could hear every word. They were bringing the prisoners in, bringing them to her. And they wanted to know what to do with them. She heard one ask if
they should kill them now or later and all the sailors took up the cry. “Now or
later, now or later?” Their voices echoed through the shabby alleyways and the shattered
buildings of that ratty town. Rabbit Jenny stared and stared until she realised they
were asking the question of her. So she took
the second package from her bag, unwrapped it and using the hook on her injured paw, extracted a blood-stained towel. Then she lifted it high above her head and waited - waited as only Jenny
could. Everything became quiet - even the splashing of waves on the dock. The
sailors watched Jenny’s paw and it was unnaturally still for what seemed like
an age. Then way up in the air a seagull screeched. With a sudden movement
Jenny brought the towel down and breathed ... “Right now.”
Thursday, May 08, 2014
Pt 9: Jenny makes a Departure
Jenny the Pirate Chief paused for enough
time to pour another glass and just for a second she watched her rum swirl.
Lapinette reached out to touch Jenny’s paw and her eyes urged Jenny to
continue. Jenny's eyes gleamed in response as she put down her glass and went on.
"The massive cannon of the ghostly ship overshadowed the harbour and it
could easily be seen from Rabbit Jenny’s attic window. But Jenny was no longer
there. As she headed down the hotel stairs, she took out the first of the objects
from her bag – an object that she quickly unwrapped." Pirate Jenny
stopped talking suddenly and she too pulled out something from one of her many
pockets and waved it at her audience before continuing. "A guest stepped
forward to bar Jenny’s path but it was his last conscious act. A pistol fired
and the muzzle flash lit his cruel face in the dim hotel lobby. “Who are
you?” muttered the guest in a last dying gasp before his knees buckled and
he sank silently onto the shabby carpet. Jenny kicked his body
aside. She shoved the automatic deep into her fur and glancing in a cracked
hotel mirror, she straightened her hat. Then she hopped through the door and
onto the hapless streets of the ratty little town where four hundred sailors
swarmed in every shadowy lane. They were rounding people up and taking them
away, but they stiffened to attention and saluted as Rabbit Jenny moved
seamlessly through their ranks, heading directly for the harbour ..."
Wednesday, May 07, 2014
Pt.8: Jenny and the Seige
Pirate Jenny wore an intense expression, so wrapped in her story that her glass of grog remained untouched. Her eyes
narrowed and it seemed to everyone listening that they were really there with her in that awful shabby hotel. Jenny suddenly lifted her glass, drained the
contents and spoke. "Even though the shape seemed far out to sea, Rabbit Jenny
recognised a ghostly ship and could make out frantic
activity on the deck. She grasped her hat firmly, straightened her red rose
and braced herself. Suddenly the harbour lit up as the ship wheeled to port and
cannon fire burst from her bow. The town shook and plaster fell from all the
walls of the hotel." Pirate
Jenny stopped and waved her hook, pretending to pick plaster from her ears. Now her voice grew menacing. The hateful guests cowered in their rooms and
prayed for deliverance but Jenny casually turned from the window. Bending
slightly, she levered a loose floorboard with her hook and took out three
wrapped objects, which she placed in a small bag." Pirate Jenny paused because
it looked like Wabsworth was going to ask about the objects, but he merely
nodded, so she nodded back and carried on. "Rabbit Jenny returned to the window. Seeing that
the ship had closed on the town she turned to light a lamp behind her - so
that her silhouette could watch. The massive cannon on the bow of the ghostly
ship swung right and left, up and down, blasting the coast until every building
was flat. Except that is ... for one
ratty little hotel.
Tuesday, May 06, 2014
Pt 7: Jenny when The Ship Came In
The Wabbit and Lapinette watched Jenny the
Pirate as she stood akimbo and swayed her body back just like a pirate
should. Everyone was desperate to hear the next bit of story, but they stayed
very quiet until Captain Jenny began again. Rabbit Jenny watched the harbour from an attic window in the ratty old hotel, but she did watch. Never a night
passed when she didn’t. Her eyes grew tired and her limbs
grew weary but she wouldn’t give up. Night after night she watched while the
hotel guests slumbered. Long after the dubious deeds were done and the dock
became deserted, she continued her vigil and she missed nothing." Pirate Jenny
stopped, took another swig of rum then frowned at her empty glass. The Wabbit hopped forward
and quickly refilled it while Pirate Jenny continued. "Her task seemed unending. But one night when the moon crept behind the
shadows, a shape appeared on the distant horizon and came quietly closer. Rabbit Jenny
looked far out to sea and when she saw it, her heart slammed three times
under her fur." Jenny slammed her glass three times on the table and when everyone jumped, she smiled. "She went swiftly to a small cupboard, took out a special hat
and put it on her head. Then she slid open a drawer and from a recess at the
back extracted a flower made from red cloth. Carefully pinning the flower
to her hat, she turned to watch as the shape cut through the limpid waters like
a knife. It made no sound whatsoever and Rabbit Jenny kept watching. But she
got ready to move."
Monday, May 05, 2014
Pt 6: Rabbit Jenny & the Medical Tray
Jenny, the Pirate Chief, took another
sip of rum. She closed her eyes for a second and when they opened they seemed
to flash. They looked like diamonds catching the light and they clearly said, "No interruptions." Her brow furrowed and
her lips pursed as she went on. "In her meagre quarters in the ratty hotel,
Rabbit Jenny cleaned her wound and applied bandages. Although spikes of pain
shot through her paw, she did not feel hurt exactly. Hurt was something Rabbit Jenny
would not allow and she refused to show anything resembling distress. Yet deep
inside, some anguish spasmed that was quite unlike the injury to her paw - because
it couldn’t be bandaged. Jenny lifted the hook that she’d found in a drawer and
gripped it firmly in her injured paw so that she could pick things up. She
tried it a few times until she became practiced, then she washed the
bloodstained towels and hung them out to dry. And just like before, Jenny
ironed each one and folded it neatly. But bloodstains are hard to remove and
even though Jenny laundered the towels well, each one bore signs of Jenny’s
pain. She gave each towel a name that was impossible to forget and returned to
pursue her nocturnal vigil. Rabbit Jenny wasn’t going to give up, but she became wilier.
Every night after that she was careful to look behind her. But she also looked
up at the moon and silently chanted the list of names."
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