((collaboration with AmongHeroes and Igraine))
Thomas crossed the ballroom floor with a confident lift to his chin, and a detached look in his copper eyes. Around him the party goers swirled in elaborate loops of dance, and the swish of bustled fabric blended harmoniously with the songs of the string quartet seated in the corner of the room.
His gaze followed Antonia, disguised beautifully as some exotic lady or other, as she moved gracefully along with the ever rigid Commander Murray. It took conscious thought for Thomas to not smile openly at the depth of the rogue's adherence to her character, as she not once cast her eyes away from the dashing British gentleman before her.
Thomas positioned himself so that the lilting path of the Commander and Antonia would cross where he stood. As the two spun about, Thomas deftly leaned forward and tapped the Commander firmly upon the shoulder. With a slight bow as the startled Murray turned his head, Thomas removed his tricorn hat.
"Commander," he said, "I beg your pardon, but I simply must avail myself a dance with this most striking of ladies." Thomas paused to look up into the glowering eyes of his old friend. "By your leave, of course?" he added with a smile.
Once he collected his wits about him and wiped the startled look from his visage, the British officer still fought to bite back the first words that might have tripped off his tongue, words very like, ‘Who the hell let you in here, Lightfoot?’
His dark eyes glanced toward Antoinette, the dusky rose at his side. Though it cost him near every ounce of hard won discipline, a thin, tight smile stretched across his lips, the dim match to Thomas' bright smile. "Of course Thomas, though Miss Greene is her own woman, with quite the mind of her own. Introductions first perhaps, and then she will have her say. Miss Antoinette Greene, this is Thomas Lightfoot. Captain Lightfoot... " he added, emphasis on the title made at some obvious cost from within. "Thomas, Miss Greene." The small smile twisted up to something almost true as the Commander turned to the gentlewoman at his side.
It was all the rogue could do, to keep the pleasant-but-interested appearance of Antoinette pasted to her face at the sight of Thomas. Here. Of all places, right here, right now. How in all the world had he ever found her - oh wait. Of course. Jax. But even so, what in the world was he up to?
Not, of course, that he was "troubling" to her eyes in the least. She could not remember a time when he had ever cut so dashing a figure - to say he 'cleaned up well' was a gross understatement. And, unless she were horribly mistaken? Oh yes, every eligible lady in the gathering was casting the gamut of furtive to bold glances his way.
"Capitaine Lightfoot," she said with that musical, perfectly Parisian accent, nodding her head in elegant acknowledgement. "Are you a friend of my Robert?" she asked, all sweet innocence and wide, generous smiles. "It seems you know one another, non?" With the last word, her face tilted up toward the Commander, whose visage turned from glower to glowing in an instant.
Thomas bowed deeply to the regal 'Antoinette.' "Madame, I am honored to make your acquaintance." He returned to stand, handing his hat off to Commander Murray without taking his eyes from Antonia. Out of the corner of his vision he could see the man all but step back in surprise at the boldness of Thomas' move. Even so, the Commander could be seen fighting valiantly against his own desire to deck Thomas across the face, and begrudgingly take the man's hat.
Thomas continued. "We are indeed friends, Ms. Greene, you see Robert and I have a long and storied history together." At this Thomas glanced to the Commander with an expectant look. "Robert, do tell, how was it that we met?" Thomas could barely contain his mirth at the sight of the Commander's discomfort. The story behind the men's acquaintance was no tale for a true lady, and the Commander was chewing upon his tongue as his mind raced. Thomas only smiled.
Commander Murray may have laughed. Then again, he may have growled. The interpretation would have to be made entirely by the any hapless observer of this strange little tête-à-tête. In the end though, by some unspeakably proud discipline, he managed a smile. Or perhaps a snarl. Once again, this would simply have to be a matter of interpretation.
"Another time perhaps, Thomas," he managed through the fence of tightly clenched teeth. These words, of course, meant that at absolutely no point in time - ever - would the tale of an island witch doctor, a drunken wrong turn to send a man pitching off a pier into the ocean, and a brothel madame ever be shared in front of this gentlewoman.
Not ever.
"Far too long and dull a tale for such a festive night. Antoinette, would you care to dance with Captain Lightfoot?"
The young woman sighed softly, as if terribly aggrieved to be deprived of the full tale, but Antoinette still managed a gentle smile as she turned toward the handsome stranger with the laughing copper eyes, her hand outstretched. "Oui Robert, any friend of yours, will certainly become a friend of mine."
With another bow, Thomas stepped forward to grasp Antonia’s proffered hand. The other hand he placed at the small of her back, gently resting it against the firm fabric of her corset. Though every ounce of his being desired to close his hips and chest towards her, Thomas was mindful of his place, and of Antonia’s disguise. Teasing the Commander aside, he did not want to bring Antoinette’s persona or honor into question. At this party she was the Commander’s lady, and Thomas would play his part in that pretense.
Besides, Thomas thought with a wry lift to his brow, coming to a duel with the Commander over a pretend woman would be so utterly tragic.
As the quartet transitioned fluidly into another slow waltz, Thomas led with the first step to bring them into the dance, and Antonia followed with consummate grace. They traversed the finely tailored lawn with all the robust formality the setting demanded, swirling and stepping in grand arcs of fabric and shimmering silk. Though he had not danced for some time, beneath the steel-gray of Antonia’s lovely gaze, Thomas’ mind led his limbs along like a man built for the task.
When they had moved a good distance from where the Commander stood, Thomas at last hazarded a secretive smile. His coppery eyes twinkled down at the woman in his arms, the light of the candles and torches reflecting like nearby stars.
“I can’t put into words just how beautiful you are.” He said, his voice low and breathy, barely audible above the strings.
He let the words drift away into the air like heavy smoke, turning them through another set of twirls and steps.
With a note of sadness, he added. “I wish I could say that I was here only for the splendor of your company, but there are shadowy games at play, and I wanted to warn you.”
The rogue smiled sweetly for the pirate captain, her grey eyes filled with a genuine joy meant only for him, for her lovely man. And yet this could only be a mere lightning flash across her visage, the barest glimpse of the true pleasure she found in his precious words, come and gone in an instant to be replaced by the most polite and formal of attentions from the gentlewoman.
No, not even the sincere note of warning in his voice could pierce the eternal tranquility of the mask known as Antoinette. But that did not mean rogue's heart did not flip in her chest at his more dire words. No, of course there would be far better reason for him to seek her out here, than merely to add to the jest of Jax' arrival at this sparkling soirée, but this was a thing wholly unexpected. Unprecedented, even.
Her voice was a warm silken whisper, her speech couched entirely in the buccaneer French he knew so well. "Ah Thomas, as much as I wished to believe otherwise? No, I did not hold out much hope you were here simply for the dancing. Although it must be said, my lovely man - now that I know the true measure of your grace? Dancing with you shall be had in the future, entirely for our own pleasure."
"But for the moment, no pleasure - only games it seems. What has brought you here? I will admit, knowing my Captain Silverfish may have a better grasp on the shadowy underworld than I? This is certainly a touch... Disconcerting."
“To you and I both,” Thomas said, his mouth barely moving. “It was Dujo that heard of it, and came at once to me. He overheard the gunsmith prattling on about the Crimson Feather having departed from port early this morning, and in great haste. Judging from what Dujo heard, they’re sailing for our treasure galleon.”
Thomas paused as they moved through yet another loop. He looked to Antonia with all the gravity his thin disguise permitted. “What’s more is that the Feather was visited by an unknown official from the Governor’s house before she moved to set sail.”
“I see.”
There was nothing about her lovely face to belie the sudden storm unleashed behind those grey eyes. Every last part of her wished to deny this warning Thomas gave was even in the realm of possibility, to stomp her foot, to growl her frustration and cut the nearest available cur who deserved to be laid open.
How could this be!? The captain of the Plume, in all likelihood, would not even be found within the next day, much less the garbled story of his barely remembered moments with a dusky bawdy woman completely unraveled any time soon. And at any rate, even when his incoherent ramblings could finally be deciphered? It would be far too late for the baffled man and his crew to catch up with the Dusk Skate.
The rogue took a deep breath, letting it out slowly as the pleasant expression on her face blurred not a jot. "The gunsmith you say, and... The Crimson Feather? Of all ships, of all crews, who would leak such a thing to those worthless curs? And they have already put out to sea with a goodly portion of their crew disabled or dead, and surely they cannot be provisioned?"
"Oh, do not mistake me - such idiocy is little surprise considering what I would expect from them, still... " She hummed deep in her throat, perplexed. "Do you have any reason to suspect, at the least, that the preparations on the Skate have come to light, that we set sail for the same venture tomorrow?"
Thomas nodded fractionally. “The Feather cannot be manned well, nor provisioned smartly at all. What she does have though is a ruthless bastard in command, and a crew behind him that’s equally so. I don’t fear that we can catch her, Jax has confirmed as much, but why there would be an agent informing for that ship is beyond comprehension.”
The waltz was transitioning to its final movements, and hearing this Thomas quickened his words.
“As for the state of our own covertness, I cannot confidently say. Dujo has done well in his provisioning, and he has done so as quietly as he can. It’s easy to imagine however that with everything we’ve been taking on that someone has noticed that we are preparing to sail. If anything is secret, I imagine it is the nature of our quarry, and that in itself should be protection enough.”
"That will have to be enough." Antonia fought mightily against the urge to frown, managing somehow to grow her polite smile as the pair made yet another nimble circuit before the music could find its end.
"Thank you Thomas, truly. I had imagined I was careful, thoughtful - it would seem, not near enough.” The scowl was entirely in her voice, finding no true home on her exotic features.
“I am afraid I must be firmly fastened to our good Commander's side this evening, but I will see what I might yet manage to shake from the trees tonight. And… I am yet to see your infuriating helmsman about, but I imagine he certainly is here. Somewhere.” The long-suffering lift of one eyebrow was near indiscernible but there nonetheless, the perfect accompaniment to the upward twist of the corner of her lips and the soft sigh.
With the final trills of the quartet ringing to accompany Antonia’s words, Thomas took a reluctant step back, and bowed deeply. His eyes never left the woman before him, this lady Antoinette. With a touch that was slightly overzealous given his presumed relationship to this woman, Thomas brought the back of her hand to his lips, and kissed it gently.
“I have every faith in you,” he said with a voice just loud enough for her ears. “Do not beleaguer yourself with notions of onus, for even a shadow as deft as you cannot be lurking behind every corner. We’ll find this infiltrator, one way or another.”
As he stood erect from his bow, Thomas caught the quickly approaching figure of Commander Murray, obviously perturbed by the kiss upon his lady’s hand.
Thomas hid a scowl, but only marginally. “Your man in red approaches.”
"So it would seem. You really cannot help yourself, can you Thomas?" It was Antoinette who smiled politely at Capitaine Lightfoot, nodding graciously in appreciation for the dance, her sweetly kissed hand falling back to her side. She did not linger for any unseemly amount of time with the man in silver and black, but turned toward the hastily approaching Commander Murray.
Not that he was running, of course - oh no, most assuredly, nothing of the sort. Simply long, purposeful strides until he was returned to his lady's side, a most proprietary cast to his expression though not a single thing that could be a point of objection in his demeanor.
The gentlewoman slid her arm easily into the officer's, the polite smile she wore for the strange man she had only just danced with turned warm and easy once more. "Antoinette," Commander Murray said gently, his icy demeanor melting by equatorial degrees in the gentlewoman's presence, "Would you mind if Captain Lightfoot and I shared a word alone, gentleman to gentleman?" He patted her soft hand gently, nodding toward the tables. "I will not be a moment - and perhaps you could find some other sweet something or other I have not yet tried? I swear, for putting you out so, I will have it without the least fight. I place myself in your hands, dear lady."
The rogue fought the sudden urge to let her eyes dart between the two men. But it was Antoinette who merely let the backs of her fingertips run along her Robert's cheek with an indulgent smile. "Oh you boys have a nice chat. Just do not leave me too long to my own devices, or you will be surprised, what can be candied and sugared!"
The grey-eyed woman turned toward Capitaine Lightfoot, nodding politely once more before she let loose of the Commander's arm, making her graceful way toward one of the nearest tables.
The Commander's dark eyes turned toward the pirate captain, an almost genial tilt to his lips that barely suggested a smile. "Thomas?"
Thomas hid his piqued curiosity at the Commander’s request for a private conversation with exceptional grace. In lieu of such, he merely plucked a crystal glass of red wine from a roving servant’s tray, and raised it in polite salute to the retreating Antoinette.
Turning his body fully to the Commander, he took a half step forward, and took a sip of the fine wine.
“Robert?”
Commander Murray took only a moment to look over his shoulder, reassured the gentlewoman truly was walking toward one of the grand refreshment tables before he followed after Lightfoot. If he took umbrage the pirate captain turned his back on him entirely, there was precious little in his stony countenance to suggest so.
Rather, the Commander simply followed to a darker corner of the grand lawn, one neither trafficked nor occupied, before he took Thomas by the elbow, pulling him up short. The officer still carried that black tricorner hat, his free hand wiping the cloth gently, as if he were pulling some unseen lint from its crown and brim as he met the pirate captain's eyes.
"To the point then. I imagine we will not be left alone long. That is not her way," Robert Murray said just under his breath, one dark eyebrow raised as he offered the hat in an outstretched hand.
"You have her with you always, Thomas. Could you not leave me even a few, brief hours?"