Latest Feghoots

Archived Feghoots
1 - 50
51 - 100
101 - 150
151 - 200
201 - 250
251 - 300
301 - 350
351 - 400
401 - 450
451 - 500
501 - 550
551 - 600
601 - 650
651 - 700
701 - 750
751 - 800
801 - 850
851 - 900
901 - 950
951 - 1000
1001 - 1050
1051 - 1100
1101 - 1150
1151 - 1200
1201 - 1250
1251 - 1300
1301 - 1350
1351 - 1400
1401 - 1450
1451 - 1500
1501 - 1550
1551 - 1600
1601 - 1650
1651 - 1700
1701 - 1750
1751 - 1800
1801 - 1851
1851 - 1900
1901 - 1950
1951 - 2000
2001 - 2050

Shaggy Origins

What's New

Site FAQ

A Tall Ship Tale, Chapter 24: A Boy Named Siu

The continuation by the very creative Paul de Anguera, but you knew that.


Captain Quid purchased the Buddhist colony's entire store of olives. As the First Mate entered the great stern cabin, he thought he recognized a crafty, acquisitive look on his superior officer's face. "We can't use all those olives," he observed. "What are you going to do with them? Have you figured out some way to make money with them?"

The Captain grinned triumphantly and thumped the chart with a hairy forefinger. The First Mate peered at it:

PISA

As the men lowered bales of olives into the hold, Almo Sather kept glancing at the shore. He jumped guiltily when the Boatswain interrupted him. "Meet Siu Purgh Lu," he said, introducing the elderly, alert-looking little Zen Master. "He'll be joining us for the trip to Pisa. He's from the Buddhist colony."

"Oh!," said Almo in disappointment. "I thought it was a nud -- erm, a nuTRITIOUS cargo we're loading! The olives, I mean," he explained. Blushing, he caught his foot in a ringbolt and toppled into the main hatch with a squishing sound.

As the H.M.S. Legume rounded the "boot" of Italy, Siu Lu studied its docking equipment with interest. Because the frigate was capable of flying over land, Ian Vilcorus the blacksmith had supplemented the usual anchors with devices for making the ship fast to trees, cliffs and buildings. These included grapples for rough terrain and bits which could be drilled into vertical surfaces to create a secure moorage. Each of them ended in a round protrusion not unlike that of a trailer hitch; this matched a coupling which Ian had installed at the end of the anchor cable. The Zen Master wished to make himself useful, so he volunteered to clean and organize the equipment.

Now the ship was ascending the Arno River to Pisa. There was quite a lot of cargo to transfer, so Captain Quid ordered the steersman to pull the flying lever and sail into the center of the city. Shortly he selected a tall, cylindrical tower to dock against. As the final approach began, the blacksmith turned to his new assistant and said,

"Standard orb bit, Mr. Siu Lu."


Served by Austin Web Publishing, Inc.

Sponsored by search engine marketing firm Apogee Search, providers of world class paid search advertising management and search engine optimization services. Apogee Search is a division of internet marketing firm Leads Customers Growth.

Designed and maintained by Brian Combs (info@briancombs.net).

(c) 1996-2006 Alan B.
& Brian P. Combs,
All Rights Reserved