( throughout the business of being handed up into the carriage, petrana is thinking again of how very long a drive it is from hightown to the docks, and that she ought to say something, and then that perhaps she has misread the situation entirely and if she is to say something the journey will be longer still in the interminable silence following,
and he is removing her glove, so perhaps she didn't. it is a soft thing, chamois, thick enough to dull her anchor-shard without being sufficient or practical to do much more than make her fashionable. it slides easily from her fingers and her hand, and there are inkstains on her index finger and her thumb. )
My pardon, ( she murmurs, dry, ) of course.
( when her glove is loosed entirely, she turns her hand palm to palm with his. )
I don't mistake you for one I might sway by the turn of my head, ( she observes, ) but it has occurred to me, Commander, that we did both very much enjoy pretending.
[He's never had any reason to study the uneven gash of an anchor shard's glow up close, and doesn't feel particularly compelled to do so now. Instead his hand is light in hers, briefly attentive to the dark mark set into her thumb, before shifting to the matter of her second glove. There is something about the process which might be described as businesslike were it any other thing, in any other place. When he is finished, Flint folds one soft slip of fabric over the other and sets the pair idly across his knee.]
Though you should know you're giving me more credit than is really deserved.
( whether she meant to be charming or to keep squarely in view the trouble either of them might cause the other, both are true enough so far as they go. she lays a hand upon his knee, over her gloves: )
You must tell me if you find yourself feeling more sympathetic to my causes,
( and then, because fortune favors the brave, she raises one hand to his neck and kisses him, like a warning shot. )
[She’s a small woman, and though the carriage’s cab is narrow it’s impressive how promptly she makes work of it. It might be surprisingly so, were he not already certain that they’d reached this understand a half hour ago as he’d lingered with one foot proverbially out the door while she made her courteous goodbyes to two dozen members of Hightown society. If he had thought there were a question - if he’d required warning -, it had been in the gallery or while dancing or perhaps in the division office (not during their first or second meeting, but perhaps the eighth or ninth).
So he bends rather easily to her hand at his neck, and lets her kiss him (let seems like a strange word, but)
as if he’s been expecting her to. And when he kisses her in return, something premeditated in the way his hand goes to her side, it’s like he’s been waiting for the invitation. Sympathetic is one word for it.]
( he is whiskery, which she had known but which she has never had cause to investigate so closely as to know the touch of, and she is still holding onto him not to fall back across the carriage when she laughs against his mouth, rueful, turning her cheek against the scratch, )
I don't know what I was expecting.
( she doesn't wait for him to find an answer to that moderately obscure remark before kissing him again, and it is. decisive. she has decided and so she proceeds, and this is hardly the first or the seventh time that she's thought of being so near to him as this. she tastes of wine, but only faintly; lilac-water that has hung familiarly in the air of his office in her wake thick in the air and her hair. )
[Now there, he is caught out - she must feel the way his mouth goes briefly crooked against her cheek, how he is a half a beat away from exhaling a surprised laugh when she kisses him again. Yes, he supposes he is.
It lightens something in the close quarters of the carriage - makes real the part of this that is good humor and some sly joke between them rather than simply further sharpening the parts of this which are pointed and thoughtful, deliberate as a measured weight is. It makes kissing her easier than it shouldn’t be. It makes taking her by her small waist and fetching her rather neatly (for all the awkwardness of the carriage and her voluminous skirts) across the cab and into his lap in a flurry of blue and gold seem perfectly reasonable, or at least in keeping with the fiction. So: that.
How awfully industrious and terribly sturdy, that glowering captain apparently can be.]
( from the outside of the carriage, there is a brief flash of cream golden lace and blue velvet slapping aside the small curtain of the window, fabric splashing across glass and dragging down, and the darker velvet obscuring them from prying eyes falling back into place. she lands in his lap, which doesn't feel inevitable because inevitability might suggest—
some force of nature. something other than that she wanted to, and so she is, and it is warmer than she might have expected. for a moment, it isn't the edge of every conversation but the sidelong glances exchanged in company and every time that she had pressed her mouth upon a smile and looked out of a window rather than laugh. it is the laugh, instead, and how absurd it is that he is now lost within a sea of her skirts, and she would rather like to feel the scrape of his beard in places hidden within them, too.
she is no longer certain where her gloves are. her hands are at his face, her thumbs at his jaw, and she is kissing a crooked smile. )
Yet to be seen, Madame. [Is his over dry answer, as if she is not presently on his knee and he isn't warm under her thumbs.] But you'll be the first to know should my position change.
[In the meantime, they might as well take some mutual advantage of the situation, and there are some parts he finds more willingness in himself to play than others. So by the next time she kisses him, one of his hands has found its way to the set lightly on her neck - fingers strangely cognizant and mindful of the edge of her hair with all its pin neatness (someone knows how to mind his manners around a lady's coiffure as well as he is familiar with dancing) - so he might encourage her to deepen it.]
( that coiffure had come at cost, considering that petrana does not typically engage a lady's maid and wears her hair in equally tight but simpler styles in that absence; better it not be taken to pieces until she is not going to at some point be expected to get out of this carriage. it is instinct learned elsewhere that her hand follows his back there, and when a pause breathes in between them at the realisation it is quite unnecessary she fills it instead with her teeth, pressed to his lip, ahead of a ready acceptance of that invitation into his mouth.
her fingers she folds over his, slides between, drops away. not far: to his jacket, just beneath. wherever she had gone, she's here and now and how wonderful to find him the same.
[How long is the winding trip to the ferry slip? The streets are very narrow, and it's early yet so the closer ones may be clogged with enough foot traffic the farther they wind down through the city. Long enough to assure the trip across the water is distinctly uncomfortable, he thinks, some part of him (the part she doesn't have her teeth to being motivated by the ones which do) mentally calculating whether it wouldn't be better to simply stick his head out the window and ask to be driven round Hightown for an hour first.
Beneath the jacket is a wine dark waistcoat. It is possibly the only one he owns, though the dark stitching is needlessly elaborate under her fingers and its blacked buttons stamped with some pattern indecipherable in this light. In answer, to her hands or the taste of that lilac and tannin tang, his thumb sets very light at base of her throat as if contemplating the potential of his hand roving lower in kind.]
Where are we going?
[Is a very honest question when set next to all the other things they've said to each other this evening. But it's at least as practical as it is about the shifting of his thigh under her and his touch at her waist securing her near.]
( this carriage is altogether too small for the two of them and the entirety of her dress, and there is certainly a part of petra that wishes this conclusion had been reached on any other day, wearing any other far more sensible thing with fewer architectural undergarments and elaborate hairstyle and witnesses who had seen the latter and would have questions about her emerging with something different and simpler. she sets that aside to consider, and finally, )
To your quarters.
( —decisively. it'd be even better if by some miracle there could be any other possible explanation for her emerging from the walrus tomorrow morning, but she is not an unfamiliar face in the central tower and his quarters do not have a dog the size of a pony who has missed her these past hours and will be ready to interrupt. there are favours she might call with the maids; perhaps she and commander flint simply had a very early meeting. )
[It doesn’t solve the trip through Hightown and a fucking boat to follow, but that’s an issue of impatience at best and there is a difference between playing this game and being it. All things being equal, he’d rather take her there than whatever questionable room might be found between this point and that one that might appeal to some pirate without scruples.
He kisses her as agreement, and then his hands have moved to her heavy skirts.] We should find your gloves, [is the one hundred percent legitimate explanation, hummed low at the corner of her mouth, behind beginning to shift the fabric.
That, ( an arch murmur delivered almost directly into his whiskers, following the line of his jaw with interest (and teeth), ) is my garter, Commander.
( but it sounds rather like he's getting points for effort. )
[Which sounds suitably chagrined under her teeth. Is it? His mistake. The texture is so similar to the blind eye. His hand, all work rough, roves most obediently elsewhere.]
( that bedamned boat ride is going to be interminable.
she follows the line of his jaw to his ear, and to the stud in it, and tests this, too, with her tongue; his clothing less convenient for her to slide beneath within the carriage, and her hands inclined to search out fastenings regardless. reconnaissance. familiarizing herself with the sort of men's clothes she has become unaccustomed to navigating, or taking apart, and the firmness of him underneath them.
it is a careful balance. if she parts her knees incautiously, she may tumble from his lap at the next corner. on the other hand, has she truly lived if she doesn't. )
[He had thought he might set simply find his way through the ocean of her skirts and under the edge of her chemise to set his hand high on the top of her thigh for the duration of the time left to them. It would be easier to keep her cinched in close with such a convenient hand hold, and the blatant suggestion inherent in wandering hands is meant to have been suitably interesting.
But she has a habit of doing small things which compel him unexpectedly into commitment. Maybe it is her tongue and how warm her breath is, or the pleasant prickle of small hairs at the back of his neck in reply to the opening line of her thigh, or simply the appeal of how no part of this has been difficult and there is no reason to insist on being contrary now.
So he moves to take advantage of the slight space, and there he does set an anchor to keep her secure in his lap: taking a full hold of the very inside of her thigh, the side of his hand and the line of his thumb pressed firmly against the shocking heat of her. The temperamental jerk of the carriage encourages decisiveness. It also bumps his hand against her at small, irregular intervals.]
( the first time his knuckles press against her is a small thing, notable only that she might not have meant to bite him. the prospect of a comfortable roll down to the docks in his lap is a pleasant one, and she doesn't dislike the particular way she's held steady,
by the eighth time, her thighs are tense either side of his hand. she casts about for a diversion, something less obvious than repeatedly clearing her throat, settles on, )
[Somewhere between one and eight, he's gone back to a hand at her waist as well. There is something rational in that touch; were it not for the hand between her clenched thighs doing the work, it might otherwise be the point of anchor by which she is kept in his lap. As it is, a sailor of all people should know the benefit of a fail safe.]
I've heard a new dog does best when kept to heel, [Which might be perfectly conversational, even so near skin, and is clearly meant as the precursor to some further throwaway remark. But what occurs to him is—] And the Enchanter's? How long is his line?
( by the time they had climbed into the carriage, this had been a nigh on foretold conclusion; the time for conversations in the gallery. in the division office, not their second meeting but their ninth, and then had been a conversation that his question drags her mind back to.
parrying, light on her feet even off them with her dancing slippers braced between his boots, )
[His laugh is abrupt and short. Later (in an hour, or two), he might find his mind wandering down the length of that suggestion. But in this one, it's just something clever being said in the close quarters of the carriage. Funny, he doesn't say, but the sentiment is there in the prickle of his beard and the lopsided line of his mouth at her cheek.]
No, [warm against her, hands all sure and sturdy.] I'm preoccupied.
[Her gloves aren't fetched until after they've quit the carriage - yanked out from under the seat and secreted away into some pocket on his person with no fanfare whatsoever.]
( her gaze follows her gloves, amused, but she makes neither protest nor comment as she steps carefully down into the ferry, her hand light in flint's as is proper and as if she has put right out of her mind where his was not minutes before the carriage door had opened.
she hasn't. she is acutely conscious of the line of his thigh beside her and the ferryman behind them, even as she makes pleasant, passing conversation on the party they had been unexpectedly (she is almost certain) both attending. how like her, to think of work still, her hands folded in her lap, her eyes on the tower rising ahead of them.
and then fists in her skirts, holding them out of her way up the stairs, carrying herself with the confidence of one who has come and gone from here at all hours for months and years, even. she knows the way. occasionally, she allows herself to know that it might have been coupe behind her coming up these stairs, once. but not tonight: she is preoccupied. )
--Maker preserve us from any young lord who thinks he knows anything about the world, [he is saying, a dry middle point of the long conversation which has carried them across the water and winding up through the Gallows. ] But the good news is that Cumberland's waterway remains open, so there may yet be some work to be done through there regardless with respect to Val Chevin.
[It is almost as if they might pass through this door (which he holds open for her), and continue this conversation. Not that he has forgotten the tension of her thighs around his knuckles, but that the conversation is a good one and in carrying it along this whole time they've wandered close enough to genuinely compelling territory just here as they've reached the office that maybe there is a question as to whether they will instead have drinks and continue it.
Then the door closes, the bolt is thrown, and he is very efficient about catching hold of her again.]
( there will be time to talk about the waterways of cumberland and the lords who would be distraught to know it's perfectly plain their knowledge would not fill her thimble; she rises onto her toes out of the carriage and out of his lap and out of numerous easy ways to right the difference between their heights, some warm thing that might have been a laugh pressed into his mouth instead. her skirts bouncing around his feet when she lets them go to catch herself against him, a tangle of fabric (temporarily) impeding want.
reconnaissance, was it. she finds the buttons of his (one) waistcoat, nimble fingers that have set to diplomatic reports and darning alike neatly and methodically jerking them undone, and give her half a chance, him, too.
perhaps they'll still have drinks. she had had a little wine, to show willing and to give the appearance of a social call that wasn't at all, but she had kept her wits about her in hightown's high society and there is some appeal in the thought of drinking his wine and dissecting his opinions from just above him, in his bed. )
Maker preserve me from men I require a box to reach, ( grumbled insincerely from her tippy toes, and probably a novel complaint for flint personally. )
Does it still count as a struggle if you're well acquainted with the effort? [This said against her warm cheek, satisfied by the angle of it all. Surely her calves are practiced.
As familiar as his hands are with finding the lacings and buttons of a fine woman's clothes, evidently. The benefit of reach helps, but there is a prerequisite of knowing where to go looking for them even for the cleverest fingers.]
( numerous layers are involved in creating the effect and appearance of madame de cedoux, out on the town; she is shedding them, now, on the floor of his locked office, impatiently pulling her arm loose a bodice so she can push his coat and his waistcoat from his shoulders— )
I am rarely in favour of the Enchanter's robes, but I am presently feeling very warm towards them,
( as flint presents somewhat more of a challenge. to undress, at least. )
no subject
and he is removing her glove, so perhaps she didn't. it is a soft thing, chamois, thick enough to dull her anchor-shard without being sufficient or practical to do much more than make her fashionable. it slides easily from her fingers and her hand, and there are inkstains on her index finger and her thumb. )
My pardon, ( she murmurs, dry, ) of course.
( when her glove is loosed entirely, she turns her hand palm to palm with his. )
I don't mistake you for one I might sway by the turn of my head, ( she observes, ) but it has occurred to me, Commander, that we did both very much enjoy pretending.
no subject
[He's never had any reason to study the uneven gash of an anchor shard's glow up close, and doesn't feel particularly compelled to do so now. Instead his hand is light in hers, briefly attentive to the dark mark set into her thumb, before shifting to the matter of her second glove. There is something about the process which might be described as businesslike were it any other thing, in any other place. When he is finished, Flint folds one soft slip of fabric over the other and sets the pair idly across his knee.]
Though you should know you're giving me more credit than is really deserved.
no subject
And it is most charming of me to do.
( whether she meant to be charming or to keep squarely in view the trouble either of them might cause the other, both are true enough so far as they go. she lays a hand upon his knee, over her gloves: )
You must tell me if you find yourself feeling more sympathetic to my causes,
( and then, because fortune favors the brave, she raises one hand to his neck and kisses him, like a warning shot. )
no subject
So he bends rather easily to her hand at his neck, and lets her kiss him (let seems like a strange word, but)
as if he’s been expecting her to. And when he kisses her in return, something premeditated in the way his hand goes to her side, it’s like he’s been waiting for the invitation. Sympathetic is one word for it.]
no subject
I don't know what I was expecting.
( she doesn't wait for him to find an answer to that moderately obscure remark before kissing him again, and it is. decisive. she has decided and so she proceeds, and this is hardly the first or the seventh time that she's thought of being so near to him as this. she tastes of wine, but only faintly; lilac-water that has hung familiarly in the air of his office in her wake thick in the air and her hair. )
no subject
It lightens something in the close quarters of the carriage - makes real the part of this that is good humor and some sly joke between them rather than simply further sharpening the parts of this which are pointed and thoughtful, deliberate as a measured weight is. It makes kissing her easier than it shouldn’t be. It makes taking her by her small waist and fetching her rather neatly (for all the awkwardness of the carriage and her voluminous skirts) across the cab and into his lap in a flurry of blue and gold seem perfectly reasonable, or at least in keeping with the fiction. So: that.
How awfully industrious and terribly sturdy, that glowering captain apparently can be.]
no subject
some force of nature. something other than that she wanted to, and so she is, and it is warmer than she might have expected. for a moment, it isn't the edge of every conversation but the sidelong glances exchanged in company and every time that she had pressed her mouth upon a smile and looked out of a window rather than laugh. it is the laugh, instead, and how absurd it is that he is now lost within a sea of her skirts, and she would rather like to feel the scrape of his beard in places hidden within them, too.
she is no longer certain where her gloves are. her hands are at his face, her thumbs at his jaw, and she is kissing a crooked smile. )
Am I swaying you?
no subject
[In the meantime, they might as well take some mutual advantage of the situation, and there are some parts he finds more willingness in himself to play than others. So by the next time she kisses him, one of his hands has found its way to the set lightly on her neck - fingers strangely cognizant and mindful of the edge of her hair with all its pin neatness (someone knows how to mind his manners around a lady's coiffure as well as he is familiar with dancing) - so he might encourage her to deepen it.]
no subject
her fingers she folds over his, slides between, drops away. not far: to his jacket, just beneath. wherever she had gone, she's here and now and how wonderful to find him the same.
the beard, she decides, is growing on her. )
no subject
Beneath the jacket is a wine dark waistcoat. It is possibly the only one he owns, though the dark stitching is needlessly elaborate under her fingers and its blacked buttons stamped with some pattern indecipherable in this light. In answer, to her hands or the taste of that lilac and tannin tang, his thumb sets very light at base of her throat as if contemplating the potential of his hand roving lower in kind.]
Where are we going?
[Is a very honest question when set next to all the other things they've said to each other this evening. But it's at least as practical as it is about the shifting of his thigh under her and his touch at her waist securing her near.]
no subject
To your quarters.
( —decisively. it'd be even better if by some miracle there could be any other possible explanation for her emerging from the walrus tomorrow morning, but she is not an unfamiliar face in the central tower and his quarters do not have a dog the size of a pony who has missed her these past hours and will be ready to interrupt. there are favours she might call with the maids; perhaps she and commander flint simply had a very early meeting. )
no subject
He kisses her as agreement, and then his hands have moved to her heavy skirts.] We should find your gloves, [is the one hundred percent legitimate explanation, hummed low at the corner of her mouth, behind beginning to shift the fabric.
Well, they should.
no subject
( but it sounds rather like he's getting points for effort. )
no subject
[Which sounds suitably chagrined under her teeth. Is it? His mistake. The texture is so similar to the blind eye. His hand, all work rough, roves most obediently elsewhere.]
no subject
she follows the line of his jaw to his ear, and to the stud in it, and tests this, too, with her tongue; his clothing less convenient for her to slide beneath within the carriage, and her hands inclined to search out fastenings regardless. reconnaissance. familiarizing herself with the sort of men's clothes she has become unaccustomed to navigating, or taking apart, and the firmness of him underneath them.
it is a careful balance. if she parts her knees incautiously, she may tumble from his lap at the next corner. on the other hand, has she truly lived if she doesn't. )
no subject
But she has a habit of doing small things which compel him unexpectedly into commitment. Maybe it is her tongue and how warm her breath is, or the pleasant prickle of small hairs at the back of his neck in reply to the opening line of her thigh, or simply the appeal of how no part of this has been difficult and there is no reason to insist on being contrary now.
So he moves to take advantage of the slight space, and there he does set an anchor to keep her secure in his lap: taking a full hold of the very inside of her thigh, the side of his hand and the line of his thumb pressed firmly against the shocking heat of her. The temperamental jerk of the carriage encourages decisiveness. It also bumps his hand against her at small, irregular intervals.]
no subject
by the eighth time, her thighs are tense either side of his hand. she casts about for a diversion, something less obvious than repeatedly clearing her throat, settles on, )
A short leash, I think,
( which is not much of one at all. )
no subject
I've heard a new dog does best when kept to heel, [Which might be perfectly conversational, even so near skin, and is clearly meant as the precursor to some further throwaway remark. But what occurs to him is—] And the Enchanter's? How long is his line?
no subject
parrying, light on her feet even off them with her dancing slippers braced between his boots, )
Do you wish to see for yourself?
( because he might. )
no subject
No, [warm against her, hands all sure and sturdy.] I'm preoccupied.
[Her gloves aren't fetched until after they've quit the carriage - yanked out from under the seat and secreted away into some pocket on his person with no fanfare whatsoever.]
no subject
she hasn't. she is acutely conscious of the line of his thigh beside her and the ferryman behind them, even as she makes pleasant, passing conversation on the party they had been unexpectedly (she is almost certain) both attending. how like her, to think of work still, her hands folded in her lap, her eyes on the tower rising ahead of them.
and then fists in her skirts, holding them out of her way up the stairs, carrying herself with the confidence of one who has come and gone from here at all hours for months and years, even. she knows the way. occasionally, she allows herself to know that it might have been coupe behind her coming up these stairs, once. but not tonight: she is preoccupied. )
no subject
[It is almost as if they might pass through this door (which he holds open for her), and continue this conversation. Not that he has forgotten the tension of her thighs around his knuckles, but that the conversation is a good one and in carrying it along this whole time they've wandered close enough to genuinely compelling territory just here as they've reached the office that maybe there is a question as to whether they will instead have drinks and continue it.
Then the door closes, the bolt is thrown, and he is very efficient about catching hold of her again.]
no subject
reconnaissance, was it. she finds the buttons of his (one) waistcoat, nimble fingers that have set to diplomatic reports and darning alike neatly and methodically jerking them undone, and give her half a chance, him, too.
perhaps they'll still have drinks. she had had a little wine, to show willing and to give the appearance of a social call that wasn't at all, but she had kept her wits about her in hightown's high society and there is some appeal in the thought of drinking his wine and dissecting his opinions from just above him, in his bed. )
Maker preserve me from men I require a box to reach, ( grumbled insincerely from her tippy toes, and probably a novel complaint for flint personally. )
no subject
As familiar as his hands are with finding the lacings and buttons of a fine woman's clothes, evidently. The benefit of reach helps, but there is a prerequisite of knowing where to go looking for them even for the cleverest fingers.]
no subject
I am rarely in favour of the Enchanter's robes, but I am presently feeling very warm towards them,
( as flint presents somewhat more of a challenge. to undress, at least. )
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)