mystictiger
Star
- Joined
- Aug 5, 2014
The rain was cool on his face as he barrelled down the dark alleyway, boots splashing on the rain-slick stone slabs. His dark eyes were bright with the manic grin that danger and adrenaline brought, maybe a little touch of fear if he was honest. The eagle, bundled in his cloak, made none of this any easier - and just a turn or twist behind he could hear the commotion of the Cardinal's Guard. They were clearly eager to recover their lost honour, but literally and metaphorically, and would enjoy beating Musketeer Second Class Jacques Desaix to a pulp. Assuming, of course, that they ever managed to catch him.
And suddenly the alleyway gave way to one of the yawning chasms between the dilapidated tenement blocks that made up this part of town. He didn't have time to wonder what had snatched the bridgeway out from his path, nor did he have the traction to stop. Arms flailing in a parody of flight he sailed across the 2 meter gap; there was no hope of reaching the other side of his tile-shrouded pathway, not in these conditions. He slammed through what had a moment ago been the flimsy shutters that the inhabitants had used to keep the sunlight out, and careened into what felt like a chest of drawers.
Yes, that was a handle. Ouch.
He picked himself up as he checked to make sure he was still mostly intact. Yes, his sword was still at his hip. Hard to be a musketeer without one. He could feel the sticky trickle of blood on the inside of his shirt, but a quick check revealed it to be nothing serious. Or rather, nothing that required to be dealt with now. And so he scooped his eagle back into his arms and did his best to find his way out of the maze of squalid shanties that filled the stone skeletons of more sumptuous times. It would take the Guards time to find another way across, and it seemed that none had been brave - or foolish - enough to attempt his method of transit. So that meant he could relax from an adrenaline-fuelled sprint to a more sedate jog. The Commanderie was still a few blocks distant, nestled up against the city walls. This one had none of the finery or ceremony of the one in the centre of Saccourveille, rather it was filled with hard-nosed, steel-eyed soldiers. Soldiers yes, but they were still musketeers, meaning that they may well have been hard-nosed, steel-eyed, but they were usually well-dressed soldiers, patriots and royalists all. Unlike the Cardinal's Guard - made up of sellswords from the near abroad with loyalty due only to the (considerable) amount of coin that they were given.
Jacques nodded to the gate-guard, a man not un-surprised by seeing his fellows arrive in all states of distress, disrepair, and drunkenness, as he returned to safe ground. Of course there would be complaints. But this was all part of the game. The queen would chide her musketeers in public, but would thrill at the thought of giving the regent a metaphorical black eye. That thought made Jacques laugh out loud. Which he immediately stifled because the splinter of drawer in his chest made him wince with pain. And then the thought of hurting himself by laughing made him laugh all the more. Which reduced him to sitting in the drizzle just inside the perimeter, clutching a misshapen cloaked-shrouded bundle.
And suddenly the alleyway gave way to one of the yawning chasms between the dilapidated tenement blocks that made up this part of town. He didn't have time to wonder what had snatched the bridgeway out from his path, nor did he have the traction to stop. Arms flailing in a parody of flight he sailed across the 2 meter gap; there was no hope of reaching the other side of his tile-shrouded pathway, not in these conditions. He slammed through what had a moment ago been the flimsy shutters that the inhabitants had used to keep the sunlight out, and careened into what felt like a chest of drawers.
Yes, that was a handle. Ouch.
He picked himself up as he checked to make sure he was still mostly intact. Yes, his sword was still at his hip. Hard to be a musketeer without one. He could feel the sticky trickle of blood on the inside of his shirt, but a quick check revealed it to be nothing serious. Or rather, nothing that required to be dealt with now. And so he scooped his eagle back into his arms and did his best to find his way out of the maze of squalid shanties that filled the stone skeletons of more sumptuous times. It would take the Guards time to find another way across, and it seemed that none had been brave - or foolish - enough to attempt his method of transit. So that meant he could relax from an adrenaline-fuelled sprint to a more sedate jog. The Commanderie was still a few blocks distant, nestled up against the city walls. This one had none of the finery or ceremony of the one in the centre of Saccourveille, rather it was filled with hard-nosed, steel-eyed soldiers. Soldiers yes, but they were still musketeers, meaning that they may well have been hard-nosed, steel-eyed, but they were usually well-dressed soldiers, patriots and royalists all. Unlike the Cardinal's Guard - made up of sellswords from the near abroad with loyalty due only to the (considerable) amount of coin that they were given.
Jacques nodded to the gate-guard, a man not un-surprised by seeing his fellows arrive in all states of distress, disrepair, and drunkenness, as he returned to safe ground. Of course there would be complaints. But this was all part of the game. The queen would chide her musketeers in public, but would thrill at the thought of giving the regent a metaphorical black eye. That thought made Jacques laugh out loud. Which he immediately stifled because the splinter of drawer in his chest made him wince with pain. And then the thought of hurting himself by laughing made him laugh all the more. Which reduced him to sitting in the drizzle just inside the perimeter, clutching a misshapen cloaked-shrouded bundle.