Clearly, he had pulled the short straw tonight. It was cold out and there was an eerie silence. There were the typical sounds of animals running about in the street, no doubt strays, but no shouts of drunk men headed home or women leaving the house to find these men. Rolling his shoulders, Charles started his way toward the taverns and pubs of the city. They were placed along the wharfs so that the visiting captains and their crew would have no need to travel deep into the city just to wet their tongues or find a warm bed of any sort. Alongside him was another British soldier, a wiry lion that had not fully come into his mane yet, as he was only twenty years of age. The closer they got to the piers, the more normal sounds became. He grinned hearing the typical yelling, and nodded to himself. This is the way Boston typically was, no matter how cold the winter nights were. These colonists seemed to be used to it. This was a city much like the English ones they had descended from as far as the weather went.
Walking around the corner with musket in hand, he was loathe to see what exactly all the shouting was about. Even from up the street he could see odd shapes bobbing in the water, and now he could even hear that not all the shouts were english. Had these people somehow allowed Savages to descend upon their town and ravage their most profitable port? Fury brindled inside him as he rushed down toward the port, readying his rifle as he went. He was new to the British Army, but he knew their policies toward any Savage that found itself where it shouldn't be.
When he saw instead that there were colonists walking home with these creatures. Fury toward the savages molded into something knew. Putting his powder horn back into its sling, Charles straightened his posture then began to walk down toward the pier where he could still see a few civilians sitting and laughing. Approaching them, he saw that the odd shapes were actually crates. Considering the latest issues with the Tea Tax and the three ships that had refused to return to England... It was not difficult to put two and two together.
Marching himself onto the dock, he stopped to look back toward his patrol route. He was far off of it now, and his companion, Reginald, was quietly pleading with him to go back to where they had been. Where they should be. Charles paid him little mind, as he was two years the lion's senior, and continued on his way. The drunken songs were grating on his own ears as he strode up to the closest group of people that were clearly planning on remaining on the piers for a bit longer. Catching the last comment, made by some small canine he didn't care to recognize, he scowled and cleared his throat.
"Twice the brains? Dear sir, as long as you are making such witty quips, you might as well go with something more believable. Why not four times the brains? Hm?" Charles snapped, his arms folded over his chest. "What is the meaning of all this? Why are you all out at such an indecent hour? Being drunk in public at that. I do believe I'll have to take you lot in."
Reginald was still reluctant to follow Charles, and winced when he began to mock the men who were clearly having a good time after having destroyed so much of the King's property. With Charles so confident; though, he saw no reason not to join in the fun. "Oh, aye! All this destruction innit right either! Come on, chaps, it's time for you to come with us I'll be thinkin'." The lion's accent was thicker than Charles', and his hands more twitchy toward where the iron manacles were hanging at his hip.



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