[@GingerBoi123] [@Penny] The Captain himself was seated at the largest table in the inn (which made tables out to very thick peices of driftwood sanded down to make a smooth surface and then with four legs cross-nailed to it. The Captain's table was thusly a cross between a pentagram and a circle, and wobbled on one leg, which is why the Captain had elected to not use the table, and hold his bottle of....some kind of alien spirit. "What business would that be? Fighting?" He answered Jason, shaking his head. "There aren't many fighters here, and even if there were, they wouldn't give you money for winning. Plus I don't want you bloodied and sore the night before we set sail. You need to work out there." The Captain then turned his attention to James, who had arrived alongside the bulk of the crew, who all went to the bar in a rush, though the Captain called James over with a gesture of the hand. "Hey, I see how you walk and how you give commands. You're a King's Man, aren't you?" The Yorkshireman asked in a friendly way, but with a dangerous undertone to it, as if the real question he was asking was 'You're not in the Navy anymore, right? You don't have any qualms about sailing under me, right?' [@Pilatus][@vertigh0st] Mary-Anne had been curious about the other woman on board. She was a native. Mary-Anne's plan was to stow away in secret in the early hours of the morning, but if women weren't barred from sailing by superstition, she needn't have to hide herself. She suppose she should come open to her crew about misleading them eventually, luckily none of the crew had recognized her yet. They were looking for their salty yet boyish Captain, not a lady dressed as such. She started to walk besides Meryl as they headed to the tavern, and Mary-Anne was smiling. "Hello," she greeted. "Allow me to introduce myself. My name's Mary-Anne Galloway." Just then a crew member passed them, and their eyes met. May-Anne thought she saw a glimmer of recognition in his eyes, though he kept on walking, even so, Meryl would note that the lady's smile had gone and she looked a little pale.