[PSL] in this sense the open jaws of wild beasts will appear no less pleasing than their prototypes


The bread that is over-baked so that it cracks and bursts asunder hath not the form desired by the baker; yet none the less it hath a beauty of its own, and is most tempting to the palate. Figs bursting in their ripeness, olives near even unto decay, have yet in their broken ripeness a distinctive beauty.

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Maybe some fragment of it shows in his face as he glances after Thomas. "We should be so lucky," he says, slashing through the uneasiness prickling at the back of all their necks that only way that's available to him. "If we come across a horse, we can take it. You know how to ride, don't you Bes?"
"A little," she says, breathing hard with her arm slung around Thomas's shoulders - fingers twisting into the shoulder of his shirt. "I think I could stay on."
It's a story. They all must know it is. But maybe it smooths some of the sawing anxiety that the growl of thunder on their heels has sharpened. He studies the land ahead of them, dark trees against an uneasy sky too thick with clouds to parse their exact bearings. The earth runs uneven, shadows split by the broken sunlight, and he slows the length of his stride and finds his hand at the strap of the rifle slung once more on his shoulder. He falls alongside Thomas and Bes, their company strung in an irregular line before them and Charlotte at the rear casting intermittent glances over her shoulder.
He drops his voice. "When we pass into that thicket there, continue on. I'll wait and see if anyone means to follow after. Don't slow - if nothing comes across this path, I can run to catch up."
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Another look before they soldier on, this time what's there on his face is as good as leaning over to send him away with a kiss. (I love you, I hate leaving you, good luck.)
Charlotte lingers behind to wait and see if James has any particular instruction for her, her rifle adorned with a bit of sleeve over the flint in apprehension of the weather, and then she does as she's bid.
The wind is picking up now, tugging at hats and skirts, sending leaves and and branches swaying and making it even harder to hear anything over the ambient sound of the wild around them. Bes murmurs an apology about her state, and Thomas squeezes her side. Nonsense. The ground is uneven beneath the crowded bushes and brambles and they have to pick carefully, but everyone keeps moving. Thomas tries to pay attention, catch sight or sound of someone alien around them, but the shifting foliage and thunder mask everything. A wild, panicked thought strikes him, that if they walk too far and James waits too long, he might not see them again in the thick trees, to say nothing of being caught by himself.
Reason feels too exhausting, for a moment, and so Thomas lets himself have that awful thought, the dizzying fearful energy of it at least fueling further momentum. He picks its claws out of himself soon enough-- leaving one or two, perhaps, because it would be willfully foolish to assume no danger is possible. When living in a constant state of terror, a person can become complacent and used to it - that won't do. He has to learn a new kind of intuition.
Up ahead, Richard and Frances have stopped, and Bettina is moving back to Sophie's side.
"What is it?" Thomas asks, regretting the fact that he has to raise his voice to be heard.
Frances looks back at him and shrugs. Hearing things?
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("He made me promise him," she had said. "That no matter what happened next, that you and I would take care of each other.")
So as they pass through the ticket of trees, James touches his side then falls silently behind. Using the sounds of them passing through the wood - rustling leaves and snapped twigs -, he folds himself into the shadow between two trees and takes a knee there. It's not exactly subterfuge that will tolerate close examination - he must trust that if someone is tailing them, that they're far enough behind to miss one absent body until it's too late. He finds himself mentally willing Thomas and the rest to move faster anyway. The sooner they put distance between them, he reasons, the less likely a tracker is to see their backs and spot the ruse. It might be the only thing keeping the knowledge that they're disappearing into the swaying trees tolerable; otherwise it might slash into him. Cut his belly out. Steal away the certain parts of him.
Because he is certain. The world hangs strangely, so intimately near as to be like bared skin. Surely that must mean something. Surely it can't just be the storm after them.
Thomas and the others disappear into the forest. James waits, the rifle primed and ready there against his shoulder if not yet levelled. Every living thing is as a sea shifting in the wind: leaves winking from green to silver and back again, yellowing grass bending as water rises and falls. The sky is so black.
He waits and doesn't measure the time.
And waits.
And after an eternity, something stirs through the trees.
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Someone following.
Snap.
More than someone. On James's other side, entirely removed from the spot he'd been watching, is a second horse, and upon it, a young man. Without closer education that they all must certainly lack it's impossible to guess if he's Yamacraw or Yamasee, but certainly Creek-- dressed for the ugly weather, he is on the cusp of leaving childhood, and he's looking at Flint with a frown that could mean
anything.
He says something, utterly indistinguishable in its lack of resemblance to any European or African language, but there is some universal thread of exasperation in it.
A chirp-like noise - clearly human-made - tries to catch the boy's attention. He points forward, after where the rest of the party has walked on. Urging. Maybe he thinks this man is lost. He clearly doesn't care about the threat of a gun. Pointing. More words, slower, like maybe if he speaks to the wandering white man as if to a child he'll magically understand.
On the wind are snatches of voices. Just moments, fractured off of something-- up ahead. Thomas's voice?
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Then the sound of something else catches in the twisting wind - voices, maybe only in part familiar - and James rises immediately from his knee. For a split second, the rifle is set against his shoulder and his hands are laid on the stock in such a way that it would be easy to--
What? Shoot the boy? Demand his horse? Both seem so divorced from reality that he isn't sure how either even occurred to him. James takes one step back, wary as a keyed up hunting dog, then turns and moves at a clip after the sounds of his companions.
It's not quite running, but it's close. He can't help himself.
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(Or they wouldn't have been noticed in the first place?)
The shapes of his companions are not so easily found up ahead, snatches of their voices in the air misleading, offering no distinct clues about the direction they're in. In midday the light should be beaming down but it's dark, darker, and before James makes it across the thicket he'd marked out, the sky finally gives up the water it's been holding so precariously. No ominous crack of thunder or flash of lightning, just rain, sudden and torrential.
Sophie comes into view first, a dirty, pale-faced smudge in the abruptly watery forest, Richard ahead of her and the others in close knot, tension in every figure.
--More than eight.
With a gasp Sophie turns, clutches at James when he's close enough, and nearly all heads turn. Thomas, furthest away, looks for a second like he might faint from relief, and then enormously pained when he forces his attention back to the man in front of him.
Whatever he says to Thomas is lost in the deafening sound of the rain coming down, but despite the scattered men behind him all holding weapons, no one makes a move that looks hostile. It's Frances who turns around and murmurs to the rest of them, "He's inviting us to go with them, he says the 'real hunters' paid for us to share their fire. I think."
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He slings the rifle back over his shoulder, rain sluicing violently from the wide brim of his hat. "That's kind of them." For what reason? Not that it matters. They don't have the luxury of refusing a helping hand, even a suspicious one. He touches Sophie's shoulder, coaxing her fingers to come away from his sleeve, as all his attention is drawn like a lead weight on a line toward the rain-mangled conversation happening mere paces away.
Thomas is perfectly capable of this - whatever this is. James knows that, but presses forward through the knot of bedraggled escaped slaves anyway: swimming up through the pouring rain to act as shadow at his elbow.
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Instinct is screaming to reach out for James's hand, but he doesn't dare. He's still supporting Bes, Bettina at her other side, somehow menacing in the way her light hair is stuck to her face, rifle in her hands.
"Come back, come back, if this is everyone there's no reason to stand here and talk in the fucking rain," the man nearest Thomas is saying. Short but broad-shouldered and wearing a wide hat, he has the look of someone who might wrestle a bear for sport. All of them do. There is nothing particularly friendly about them, but nothing overtly hostile, either. Just people-- probably somewhat confused about the circumstances, but apparently curious enough to play along.
Thomas, ignorant of the fact that James is holding the missing piece to the puzzle, remains wary. Someone paid for you is a fundamentally disturbing thing to say to a slave, and he doesn't understand what's going on. A moment of silence as he tries to process-- god, what. What could he possibly be processing. If these men wanted to kill them it'd be easier to try and do it here, instead of regrouping and giving them a chance to breathe, first. Frances murmurs explanations.
"Lead the way."
He wishes he sounded less like someone drowning.
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Not anyone after them from the the Oglethorpe plantation or any of the other surrounding farms. Probably. He can't think of a legitimate reason why the boys or anyone in their company would approach these white men looking to provide respite for a handful of escaped slaves, but he also can't think of a reason to doubt the intention of this. It's so utterly detached from any version of reality he recognizes that there's no deciphering it. Not from here anyway. Better to puzzle it out dry around a fire than miserable in the pouring rain.
"What did they say?" Through the heavy rain and the slanting dialect, he'd caught barely a word - two, maybe. Not that it matters. They're moving already. Richard cuts forward with Sophie all but clutching his sleeve as substitution for James', Frances trailing after them with her hand at her belt and there pistol there.
For a moment as they shift to follow where the trappers lead, Bettina lingers there in rain with her rifle in an iron grip. When she moves, it's only once she can fall into the shadow of Thomas and Bes - to set herself behind the theoretical wall formed by them and James and Charlotte.
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"Just that we're welcome to rest at their camp," Thomas says, quiet as he can through the rain and sound of them all moving. "When I asked why he'd bother, with or without 'payment', he said it's better for the nerves of their quarry if we're sat down quietly instead of scaring the deer."
Implied shrug. Might as well.
"I don't like them," says Sophie, her voice thin. Richard tells her it'll be all right, and Thomas-- Thomas doesn't know. He doesn't like or dislike these men, doesn't know anything about them other than that they're French and apparently have a measure of good humor to be playing along with whatever theater is going on.
It's a long, cold, wet march to where the trappers are camped, in a makeshift clearing with a lean-to in the center shielding a sputtering cooking fire. There are two men awaiting, one portly man who calls out an inquiry to the ringleader and another swaddled in blankets beneath a stretched hide shelter, ill or injured. Conversation happens in French that Thomas is chagrined to miss, but Frances whispers at him that they're just discussing where to put them.
"If I give you something can you make one of those?" the leader asks Thomas, walking closer. He's pointing at the little shelters tied between trees, slanted thick sheets and hides. Thomas tells him yes and in a few minutes they're provided with heavy fabric that needs dirt shook off of and a measure of rope. Not luxury accommodations, but it might as well be. It's shelter. They can put it together and Bes can rest without water being poured over her, and if these men turn out to be dangerous, at least they can see them coming. Thomas turns to James with the fabric in his arms, a little boggled still, and finds and edge, puzzled for a moment over the worn-out holes.
Old sailcloth.
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Instead he sends Sophie and Frances to fetch every big rock and broken bough they can find and have the energy to haul back here. Meanwhile, between the rest of them they find themselves a likely pair of trees and he feeds the rope through the worn eyes at the edge of the cloth with a steady, familiar hand. The canvas is rigged roughly shoulder height, the rest angled backward by the loose end of the rope secured to a sapling. The edge if lain with stones and brush and any assortment the two youngest girls scrounge from the wood - dirty kicked over it to bury the edge. To keep it from coming up in the darkness or the wind switching back. Before they're fully finished with the work, Charlotte has helped Bes into the shelter of the canvas. She's checking her wound, the two of them in low conversation among the bags discarded there. They are, all of them, soaked through by the work but Christ the shadow of under the sail is practically seductive. They'll have to lie close to fit all of them and their things, but that's hardly a bad thing with the weather so sour and all of them run through with rain.
It - the lean to, the shuddering fire, the tang of smoke, the growl of the storm and the snap of the canvas for the wind - reminds him so strongly of camping along some stormy beach as the Walrus rolls against her anchor in the bay that his stomach could clench for it. Instead, one of the Frenchmen has come over carrying an armload of badly folded blankets and that warrants more attention as they're unloaded into Richard's arms.
"He says we can borrow them. Just for a little while," says Frances. Dark eyes are watching them from across the camp.
"Tell him thank you." He could manage it himself, but maybe it's better if they don't know about his limited vocabulary.
She does.
James ushers the girl under the sheet with a hand at her shoulder. "Good. Now lets get out of this fucking weather."
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Bettina has been industrious with arranging their packs so that minimal water gets to important pieces (whatever those may be), and pulling out layers of skirts that haven't been cut up for bandages to tie to the other side of the canvas, offering no protection from the rain but a little privacy, unwilling to cede any inch to strange men that she doesn't have to. Of unstrange men, the three of them make up a respectable outer wall with a shared blanket over shoulders and against the trees, Bes in the optimal spot and everyone else squashed in as best as they can be.
When the rain isn't coming down with such force they can speak to one of their hosts better, or they can find something to eat, but for now all there is to do is sit still and rest. Thomas thinks of very tired foxes in a muddy den successfully outrunning a hunt. He thinks of how light James looked handling that canvas. Something about how deft he is in all things puts Thomas at ease, washes away the anxiety clouding him and allows him to sit there next to him without losing himself in thoughts that go nowhere. It wasn't like this last time-- shuttled and hidden, slipped from place to place in secret. In his failed escape attempt he wasn't ever put against the open world with nothing in between, not at any point.
The rain has cleared out some of the blood on his clothes. Or made it impossible to notice, at any rate.
Sailcloth and their pirate captain. Thomas wants to lean his head against James's shoulder and fall asleep, perhaps for the next week. Instead he just takes his hand, because no one can see them do so from the outside (a consideration he will be upset to think on too closely, but not now), and smiles at him. Tired and soaked and muddy. Alive. Here.
"I owe you an apology."
It takes Thomas a moment to register that Richard has said anything - spaced out in his exhaustion and delirious contentment with this should-be-miserable blessing, and finding it almost hard to hear him over the sound of the rain, still violent no matter that they've been sitting for a while, now. He starts to ask 'What?' and the young man, sat in the triangular opening at the end of the shelter, shakes his head, seeming solemn.
"I thought you had the right of it, back at the plantation, but some principle or the other, construct of something I was clinging to like it made me better, didn't let me say so or approach you."
Oh, he feels himself think. Doesn't say anything-- what is there to say? Critique on religion, on the status quo of everything-- it doesn't really matter. He tightens his fingers where they're threaded between James, and at his other side, Bettina stirs, watching Richard. The other girls seem like they're asleep or too far away even in this small space to hear over the downpour, but that can't truly be the case.
"When it happened, it didn't feel real. Like I hadn't come to terms with the possibility. But standing there watching it I thought, I've done nothing to benefit nobody in the two years I've been in this hell, and the only thing I know about myself is that I would dedicate my soul to the devil to get back to my wife. So what an ass I've been."
Catholics and their confessions. What does that make them?
"Thank you for having me."
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The plantation. A ship. A family who cared more about the ruin of their reputation than that of their daughter. The plantation. A ship. Some broken rebellion. The plantation. A ship. An island on which a war was buried. The plantation. A ship. A prison hospital. And on and on and on, a grim litany with a strange conclusion: a forest and a half dozen scraggly men who don't know the words to any of those stories. And so what power is left in them?
Only what they allow, he thinks with his hand in Thomas's while Richard's apology takes shape between the drumming of the rainfall. Where is Madi, he wonders, a last deflection before his mind turns finally toward John Silver.
An island, he knows. A ship, he knows. What comes before that? Does it matter? Silver asks and there on the maroon island it had been a question James couldn't fathom much less answer. Of course it should have meant something, he'd thought. How can a man deny the broken things which created him unless he is complicit in being broken to match? But here with Thomas next to him surrounded by an unknowing world beside Richard, who would trade everything for his wife whom he loves and whose face he wants to see another time, he finds himself capable of understanding. It's some siren song he hears the words to now: Just stay down, Silver begs in his dreams and on that ship from Skeleton Island when he'd been mad with the loss of every thing they (he and Silver and he and Madi and he and Vane and he and Gates and he and Eleanor and he and Miranda and he and Thomas) had built. What a terrible thing to believe, he thinks, and the grief overcomes him sudden and unexpectedly.
The emotion must show on his face though the sound of rain on canvas swallows everything else save the rigidity of his grip on Thomas's fingers. After what feels like a decade but must be only a moment - Thomas would have said something if the pause had spun out too far -, he clears his throat and fixes Richard with a singular look.
"You belong out here," he says, fierce and absolute and fundamental. "For as long as you or anyone else cares to, I will do everything in my power to see that remains true."
Maybe that's just a story. Maybe it's one meant for someone else. Maybe this is how James Flint who once was James McGraw appeared in Nassau and convinced men to vote him captain of a ship in so little time. Or maybe he means it. Or maybe all of that is true all at once.
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He is a solid presence beside him, his hand around his tight, their lifeline together. You belong out here. It is a beautiful distinction.
"We all will."
--Charlotte, from her place curled between Bettina and Frances, head on her hand against the older woman's shoulder. She's watching them with clear eyes, though her skin seems flushed even in this gloom. Bettina's hand on Thomas's forearm shifts, fingers curling. She doesn't sound placating - she sounds steady, and like she's speaking to James as much as Richard. A pinprick reminder that he shoulders nothing alone, not even them.
There is no argument in her wake, and there is some sort of covenant about it in the quiet that follows. Thomas moves his thumb across the back of James's hand, still wet with rain. No one needs to be convinced. They're already here, and they know he means it.
Richard is looking at him almost shyly, nerves apparent still even after James's confirmation, and Thomas just smiles, small and lopsided with how bruised he's feeling, but it's honest.
It's been a long time since he's changed someone's mind about anything.
"Thank you." For telling them, for being here. Every life that's made it out of the corpse of that place (even the proper criminals? maybe) is a light let back into the world again, and Richard is as important to him now as anyone else. This kind of shared experience carves a person and leaves them changed forever, can't ever be explained. No matter how well or how poorly they shift back into the sun, there are fingerprints inside each, mapping out this moment.
"Do you know any good Bible verses for the situation?" is Charlotte again, softly shooing away encroaching cobwebs of strange thought.
Thomas almost laughs. "God, no."
Richard does laugh.
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He takes one crooked breath and gathers his frayed edges, slowly blinking back the ragged emotion as Sophie asks after Bes's leg and Frances tends quietly to arranging a place for her pistol where it won't get damp with all the care warranted a swaddled child. Next to Thomas, he can exhale out again with such shocking comfort. A broken thing is still ruined, but at least it has no place in this make-do tent. It belongs to someone else, to somewhere else, and he can find no reason except heartsickness to want to repair it.
Christ, what a day it's been.
"Will you take the watch first?" he asks Richard who answers, Of course. Anything. "Try to keep count of them. If one of them disappears for long, we should be aware of it."
But the Frenchmen stay around their fires and under the shelter of their lean to's, bundled against the rain in blankets or furs too damaged to sell or trade, for the duration of the storm.
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He's so sick of scripture.
The day crawls on, wet and miserable and everyone content for it anyway, and he thinks he must have nodded off for a while - he's not sure when the rain became less deafening, but it has. There are probably pink imprints on James's wrist where Thomas has been clutching at it for so long, but all he does is smooth his fingers over the skin there instead of letting go.
Across the camp, someone is whistling a cheerful tune. Thomas doesn't recognize it. He wants to ask, suddenly-- awfully-- if Miranda kept playing, if she learned anything new, what her favorite close contemporary piece was. Would James know? Children have grown up and musicians have kept producing work and books have kept on being written. And he's been--
He doesn't know how he keeps from asking. It's an insensible impulse, and so bitter, burned at every edge. The same kind of brokenness that's the foundation of this whole moment, and wildly, painfully beautiful for it at the same time. They don't have to be cleaned or healed or ready for it, they don't have to be anything; it can be bitter. He looks over at James, the damp spiky halo of his regrowing hair, the lines beneath the dirt on his face, his jaw hidden behind a red beard Thomas hadn't had an opportunity to get used to in London.
Smiling like an idiot.
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It's nothing like being removed from the world, he thinks. Across the camp a man is whistling some sweet, high tune and beside him--
Thomas's smile is staggering. It strikes him like a blow in reverse: his ribs unsnap and breath finds him again. The pain draws out of his skin and James, off guard and exhausted, finds himself mirroring that incandescent look on Thomas's face. He's so brilliant there, a bright star burning in the gray of the day under the shadow of the sail cloth, that there's no option but the mirror him.
If they were alone, he might -- ask what has him smiling so (he must have at least part of the answer, but if it was just the two of them James thinks he'd like to hear Thomas say it); he might use his wrist to draw his hands close; he might do anything. But here in this company, James just regards him with his own sprawling smile and turns his hand. He touches Thomas's fingers and his palm and his wrist and there is nothing in the touch to complicate anything.
"Someone's headed this way," says Charlotte. Richard is dead asleep under the edge of a blanket, a human barricade at the lean to's mouth.
A moment later, one of the Frenchman ducks down with his hands on his knees to peer inside. He's more beard than face and his accent is mangled, fine misting raindrops clinging to the blanket his has wrapped around his shoulders like a cape.
Frances pops up like a dog hearing a whistle. "There's food."
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Richard stirs as Thomas straightens up, somehow managing not to laugh at the way Frances looks so comically interested in the unsolicited offer. It's not funny-- they're probably all some degree of almost-starving, considering how much physical work they've been doing and running on quick mouthfuls of dry things shoved in bags. (A cautionary memory, eating a meal a Quaker woman had cooked up, rustic and beautiful, and then bringing it back violently. Thomas has trouble where the others might not, thanks to the asylum.)
It is very hospitable of the trappers, and Thomas says so. The man looks like he has something else on his mind, dithering, and Thomas tells him that if it's any trouble they certainly aren't obligated to share their food. Dissent among ranks won't bode well for them.
"Not that, not that, we don't mind," he says, peering past Thomas into the little shelter for a moment, eyes narrowed. Then-- "Your lady who's hurt, she's doing well?"
"She is."
"Who's minding her? You?"
Thomas isn't sure where this is going, and apparently neither is Frances, crouched near behind him and looking over at James briefly with a puzzled expression. After a moment Thomas tells him that's so, more or less, though it sounds like there are unspoken caveats.
"Our man here, he isn't doing as well. Would you look at him?"
"Oh," Frances says, sounding a little sympathetic, and Thomas pauses again before, carefully: "I'm not a doctor," but the Frenchman shrugs it off, eager for even a non-professional opinion, apparently. He beckons, and Thomas says quietly to everyone else, "Can you all ask the universe for that man to have a sprained ankle." Really, he doesn't think he'll be able to do much for anything worse. Charlotte does the math and grunts as she moves to get up, intent on going with him. Which is more than fine.
Before he gets up, Thomas looks at James. Well.
"Accept the things to which fate binds you," is quiet, not private because it can't be-- but still personal, the first half of a quote he knows James can finish.
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Charlotte steps put over Richard and straightens, shielding her face from the fine misting of rain. Bettina watches from the back of the leanto, propped up on her elbow and knife sharp. She hasn't slept, James thinks. Not for long anyway.
"Stay there with Bes," he tells her. Frances is already moving to rouse Richard. Sophie stretches briefly into all the vacated space then rolls back over, burrowing against Bettina's side. "I'll bring you something."
The Frenchman leads Thomas and Charlotte across the camp, pointing Frances and her companions toward the low fire and the bedraggled circle of similarly rough hewn men around it. Trailing after the girl - made some degree of bold by a shared language she must surely have thought lost to her -, James marks the shape of the three of them making for the sick tent with enough intensity to feel like he can still see them even as his attention turns to folding himself into the company at the fire.
"He fell down from a ledge a few days ago," the Frenchman is explaining - slowly. "Hit his head and now the fever refuses to be broken."
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"When he comes around see if he'll drink some water," is the best advice he can give, not knowing what a doctor might suggest. (Cutting a hole in the back of the head open and putting dried peas or wooden pebbles in, apparently. Good thing Thomas has no idea.) The man he's speaking to, who calls himself Mercier, is amiable enough, pleased to have run into them for the sake of their ill companion and happy to talk about the area. Thomas watches Charlotte as she makes her way over to James and Frances, trying to stay aware of who watches them the most in return. Their ringleader is easygoing but indifferent, perhaps used to strange events out in the wilds of the New World, but Thomas doesn't particularly trust indifference.
His slightly pessimistic reflection is interrupted when Mercier says something surprising in response to one of his questions, and, huh. They talk a little more and Thomas joins the others at the fire, standing near enough to James to speak to him lowly.
"The northward plantation we were concerned with failed eight months ago and was abandoned," he says, "I'm told it's now 'haunted' and dangerous to travel through, which I take to mean someone unpleasant is camped there." It explains why there weren't more men scouring the woods in this direction, and it's good they didn't end up veering too close to-- bandits, or whatever.
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Frances is translating some small conversations one of the Frenchman is trying to have with Richard. "No, tell him no," the younger man is saying softly, tone purposefully moderated. "Not English. Scottish."
James passes the tin cup to Thomas, the contents a watery broth spotted with shards of some boiled root. It's bland as dish water, but hot and it's amazing how much that matters. "Haunted," he huffs, a complicated version of skepticism there in his exhale. Then a pause, as he acruslly considers the ramificstions. "How widespread must the rumor be if it's reached this place?"
A hypothetical question. Wide enough, might very well be the answer. Wide enough that hooking in toward Savannah now might not be as ruinous as previously estimated. If superstition was driving people away from the place, cutting close to its periphery might not be the worst place to make their run at things.
They can't stay out here forever, shared fires or no.
"Did the man seem frightened?" He tips his head faintly toward the bearded Frenchman in question, so slight a motion as to be easily overlooked.
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"Not particularly," he says, of the question. Pausing to take a mouthful of broth, grateful for both heat and the blandness of it. He doesn't need to think very hard about what the Frenchman he'd been speaking to was projecting, so used to observing people closely out of necessity. "Certain, though, about the inconvenience of getting close to it."
Distantly, he wonders if telling a pirate about a potentially haunted thing was wise; perhaps there is some allure to the idea tangled up in instincts alongside blood money and the earring James has now and.. monkeys won in card games. Or is that too frivolous a thought to be having in between grounded concern about their continued safety and the brilliant, knife-sharp elation of getting to be concerned at all.
The man engaging Richard and Frances in conversation is pleased for conversation beyond his companions, even more pleased that a pretty girl is doing the translating, and while nothing about his body language says threatening, Thomas knows how fast that can change. For now everyone is content with the novelty, at least, though - no, they can't stay out here forever.
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--but the inconvenience isn't lost on him. At present, operating under what can only be a temporary promise of safety, warmth and some measure of hospitality, he can't say the idea of purposefully endangering themselves so obviously is really all that appealing. Would it be possible to enact such a plan? Certainly. But is it work the risk, given the make up of their party and Bes's leg? Unlikely.
(Or is he just letting that comfort get the better of him? Wouldn't it be easy to do nothing and then find themselves in some dark spot because of it?)
Anyway. Enough of putting the cart so far ahead of the horse.
"What's the state of their man?" Strangers dying tend to upend things for those left in the wake. If there's a tipping point to be watching for, that seems like a sensible one.
They're standing near enough that he can ask the question low in a strange language and not feel intrusive to the Frenchmen nearby. Or are they standing close enough to be strange? Seven people covered in blood with a number of women with their hair hacked short and wearing trousers stumbling out of the forest strange, or a different kind altogether? He finds himself attempting to judge the distance and utterly incapable of determining it.
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Haunted, full of terrors. There are more immediate potential terrors. He drinks more of the broth and hands the cup back to James with the rest left in, automatic. "Grim at best, I think," he says, low enough that even their companions who speak English would have to strain to hear. "I don't know what to do about someone who's hit their head hard enough to be in that state."
A doctor just as well might not either, his tone implies. Miles beyond Thomas's proverbial pay grade, as it were, possessed of some alright emergency medic knowledge and tales of odd remedies Annie's described to him over the years, discussing the ignorance of European medicine. Nothing applicable to this situation, and thus nothing to smooth over potentially disgruntled hosts if their usefulness not coming up better or equal to their novelty goes over poorly.
And yet even if this takes a turn, it still feels like a miracle. Whatever happens, at least they'll be rested for it.
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He finishes the dregs of the thin soup and uses his thumb to wipe out whatever clings to the side of the tin cup, licking it clean without a second thought.
"--And what about your companions? Shouldn't I bring them something?" the Frenchman in conversation with Richard and Frances is asking, filling his own cup again from the pot over the fire. "No spoon, I'm afraid."
"No, no please," Frances insists. Her tone is even, but something in the line of the girl's shoulder must bristle because without comprehension James's attention has shifted to her as she reaches to take the cup from the man's callous blackened hands. "Let me take it. Her condition is delicate."
The hunter surrenders his cup without so much as a moment of protest and he says something that must be kind as all of Frances' bristled hackles seem to smooth themselves. The involuntary rigid quality of James beside Thomas, so instinctive that a moment ago it might have gone unnoticed, eases.
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I used 'it seems' twice in basically the same line of dialogue and I want to be dead
i thought it was deliberate for ominous impact of some kind
nope just incompetence
i forgive u
thank
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