phrynefisher: (012)
Miss Fisher ([personal profile] phrynefisher) wrote in [community profile] all_inclusive2015-03-30 02:46 pm

Give the girl a shot of whiskey/Set the pirate lady free

How it was that the wind, salt-sharp and quick as a whip as it swept around her did not tear the hat, broad-brimmed and worn, from her head, only philosophers and quantum physicists might be able to say.

Perhaps the rumors of her being a witch were true after all. Certainly she had never done anything to hush up the whispers of exactly that when she had heard them. (She had, in fact, laughed hard enough to nearly upset her glass when she'd first overheard someone informing their friend that the captain of the Thetis was some kind of sea witch). Rumors abounded around any woman who walked in the world of men, she had expected nothing less. Whether she was witch, fallen noblewoman, madwoman or whore, every man had his favorite story to tell of the woman who would dare to captain a pirate ship.

Phryne turned her head from the warmth of the sun to smile at her crew. "The wind is with us!" she called from her perch, standing as she was high up among the topmast sails. She took little note of the precariousness of her position, leaning far out from the safety of the solid wooden braces, kept safe only by the hand she kept wrapped around a rope nearby. "Prepare yourselves, we shall be on them by sunset!"

The Thetis was crewed by a mixture of sailors and strays, a strange combination of men and (shockingly) several women who came from all corners of the world. They were known for nothing more than for their captain's love of hunting slavers as they attempted to return to Europe newly heavy with profit, of the chaos they wreaked in taverns they frequented and the promise that all would share equally in the spoils they tore from merchants' hands before the goods could be traded for new stocks of slaves. What the crew made of their captain was up to each on their own, but were to Phryne more family than those she'd known by blood.

She all but danced down the rigging and masts until she stood on deck once more, eyes returning to the shape on the far horizon as she spoke to the figure nearest her, "Copper and cloth, you think?" Her lips curved, gaze turning to the one she spoke to, "Or might we hope for rum enough to refill our stock?"
praiseandglory: (rakish grin)

[personal profile] praiseandglory 2015-03-31 09:52 am (UTC)(link)
"That certainly wouldn't go amiss," Porthos remarked with a half smile, but she would know by now how little he truly cared what their hold contained, as long as they took whatever it was from the slavers. Unless, of course, they were on their way to the Americas with their holds full of people, and those were the times the crew they attacked most regretted their position on their ship.

It was the first time, since he'd first come to the hotel, that he had gone through this door and actually joined a pirate ship, but when he had found the lovely Phryne with a crew of her own, and favouring such targets, his mind had instantly been made. The violence was welcome, too, as he had recently returned from Paris, and still felt oddly unsettled after the truth about his father had been revealed.

Making slavers pay for their crimes was the perfect way to deal with his inner turmoil, clearly.

Now, this one they had been chasing for over a day now, and he was looking forward to catching up with her. "By sunset, you say?"
praiseandglory: (Default)

[personal profile] praiseandglory 2015-03-31 08:55 pm (UTC)(link)
"Always," Porthos stated honestly, holding her gaze for a few beats before he looked back to the dark speck of a ship on the horizon. Sunset wouldn't come soon enough, but there was nothing to do but wait and prepare. That was hardly his strong suit, but he would make do.

He looked back at - well, his captain right now, and the thought would not have been without its own, odd sort of appeal if he had been in a better mood, and he raised his eyebrows inquiringly. "Where do you want me?"

The words held none of the flirtation they might have in other circumstances; he just wanted to know where he might be needed. He wanted something to do.
Edited 2015-03-31 20:59 (UTC)
praiseandglory: (determined)

[personal profile] praiseandglory 2015-03-31 10:28 pm (UTC)(link)
It wasn't quite what Porthos had been asking, but he only had himself to blame for not making himself clear. And as it was, he held back from correcting her and making his meaning clear at last, because he was interested to know the answer she was giving him, too.

He had to wonder what things were like for men like him in her world, with its many advances. Clearly she found the idea of slavery as unacceptable and despicable as he did, or she would not be campaigning against slavers over the seas. But that might not say much about her world, her time; there were some in Porthos's own time that shared his views on the matter - not the least of which were his companions in arms - and yet they were hardly indicative of a general opinion.

How much did she understand, and how much did she guess, to give him that position in tonight's fray?

He nodded, signifying assent to her plan. "I'm amenable," he confirmed, although something in his eyes seemed to say that more than amenable, he was actually grateful for the opportunity. "We'll have that ship before they really know what's hit them."
praiseandglory: (Default)

[personal profile] praiseandglory 2015-04-01 04:54 pm (UTC)(link)
The glint in Porthos's eyes would let her know that he appreciated that return to something closer to levity as much as he had appreciated the gravity, if she noticed it. He dipped his head slightly, in agreement, then looked over at the sun. They had a while yet before sunset.

"How can I make myself useful until then?" he rephrased the question he had meant to ask all along.
praiseandglory: (angry bordering on murderous)

[personal profile] praiseandglory 2015-04-07 09:18 pm (UTC)(link)
Porthos, for his part, wasn't the sort to shoot first and then move on to his sword. He was the sort to jump into the fray, and keep his pistol for whatever need he might later have of it. One never knew when a shot might come in handy, after all. He was the first among the slaver ship, swinging a broadsword that might have seemed out of place in such a fight if it wasn't for the ease with which it cut through the enemy sailors. He used a swinging pulley to knock out a man aiming a pistol at him, then shifted out of its way as it returned, catching the next man trying to jump on him with a blow from his reinforced gauntlet, cracking his jaw.

This was when he felt most alive, and when he could forget all about his father and his lies. How he had doubted the man who had always seen worth in him, the very man who had always watched out for him. How close he had come to turning his back on everything he lived for. All of this faded away in the thick of the action, and his sword, his gauntlet and everything that he could get his hands on were all he needed to see him through this, cutting a path across the deck towards the captain's quarters, where he had seen well-dressed men barricade themselves.
praiseandglory: (angry bordering on murderous)

[personal profile] praiseandglory 2015-04-08 11:00 am (UTC)(link)
It wasn't long before Porthos reached the captain's quarters. The hasty barricade the men had put together did not hold for very long, under repeated assaults when he threw his whole weight against the door, shoulder first. The doors ended up bursting open, and three men tried to jump him. The first one only narrowly avoided the swipe of his sword, and lost his balance in his haste to dodge it; the second was greeted by the guard of his sword knocking him on the head, and to the floor; and the third stopped short as Porthos leveled the muzzle of his pistol on him.

All three of them wore finer clothes than the sailors fighting out front, either the slavers themselves, or the officers of this blasted ship.

"Which one of you's the captain?" he asked, lowering his sword to threaten all three of them with his pistol.

He heard a creak of wood one second too late, and he could tell that it was another pistol now pressed at the back of his head. "I am," came the voice from behind him.
praiseandglory: (not impressed. at all.)

[personal profile] praiseandglory 2015-04-09 01:02 pm (UTC)(link)
If there was a time Porthos woudn't be glad to hear Phryne's voice, he hadn't yet lived through it. What was certain was that he was very, very glad this time. Of course he wouldn't have simply let himself be taken, and there were still avenues of action for him to explore, but having someone at his back was a luxury he had grown used to, in his time with the Musketeers.

When the pressure of the pistol against his head vanished, he turned around and punched the man in the jaw with the guard of his sword, immediately leveling his own pistol back at the other three men. "That's for sneaking up on a man from behind," he added, moving sideways so that he could keep watching the three, and have the captain, who was just picking himself up from the floor, and Phryne, standing tall and proud with that impossibly small pistol of hers, in his peripheral vision. "What do you want us to do with them?"
praiseandglory: (default (musketeers are better than you))

[personal profile] praiseandglory 2015-04-09 09:32 pm (UTC)(link)
It had taken them a little while to unload the rum and the gold and jewels found on the slaver ship, but that time had allowed them to send the surviving crew members, including the officers and merchants, off to find their own fate in row boats. If you asked Porthos, the little water and few biscuits Phryne had afforded each boat was too nice for these kind of people.

At least she had taken their oars away.

They were sailing away now, Phryne and Porthos both standing on the forecastle, looking at the ship they were leaving behind. There was a loud boom, and it wasn't long before its sails caught fire.

"Here's to one fewer of those ships," Porthos toasted, and opened the bottle of rum in his hand, one of their prizes of the day, to drink to that.
praiseandglory: (default (musketeers are better than you))

[personal profile] praiseandglory 2015-04-10 01:48 pm (UTC)(link)
Porthos was, as a rule, the sharing type, all the more so when the person he was doing the sharing with happened to be a beautiful woman, never mind a beautiful woman whose ship he was standing on. He didn't begrudge her the rum commandeering for one moment, and just took another drink from the bottle when she handed it back, as if to seal that state of fact. He'd turned away from the burning wreck of a ship to face her, now.

"It's a good thing you're doing here," he stated, and meant it in ways he couldn't properly articulate. Sinking slaver ships, putting together a crew that might not have been accepted on any other ship, and one that didn't mind the sinking of the slave beads to the bottom of the ocean. All of those good things.
praiseandglory: (Small Bow of Liking)

[personal profile] praiseandglory 2015-04-15 03:24 pm (UTC)(link)
The way Porthos saw it, just because you got something out of doing something right didn't make you selfish. Especially when, he was fairly certain, you needed to do that right thing because it was right - or because not doing it would leave too much wrong in the world. This was almost better than complete selflessness.

"Well," he stated, and held the bottle out to her in offer, his lips curved in a slight smile despite the still muted, solemn look in his eyes, "a roaring fire would be quite hazardous on a ship."
praiseandglory: (Default)

[personal profile] praiseandglory 2015-04-17 04:12 pm (UTC)(link)
"Make the most of it while it lasts," Porthos advised her. Soon enough, it would all have sunk, the fire quenched in the ocean. The bottom of the sea was the only place this ship deserved to be, and part of him believed the same to be true of the men they had abandoned on rowboats. But cold-blooded murder was not in his nature.
praiseandglory: (Small Bow of Liking)

[personal profile] praiseandglory 2015-04-20 02:20 pm (UTC)(link)
Part of Athos wanted to stay here. He wasn't certain that he was ready to return to the Nexus, where there would be no such fighting as the Caribbean offered to exorcise his demons. But it would feel somewhat like hiding, and he wasn't the type to hide. Ever. Perhaps Phryne's offer was providential, and meant to show him the way back to himself, to his friends, to his life.

Besides, he was dirty, and he could use one of those wonderful showers to wash away the blood and grime. He could get used to those, and in fact probably already had.

So he met Phryne's gaze, his smile small but present, in the curve of his lips and the softening of his eyes, as he nodded. "Now, that won't do," he stated, and offered her his arm. If the door he had got here through was still there on the ship, then it was time to head back, yes. And he could imagine no better incentive than the look in Phryne's eyes.