Penitency
Forgiving Your Sins
- Joined
- Mar 10, 2014

As Moscow’s icy streets concealed secrets at every turn, Lucas found himself thrust into a perilous game of cat and mouse, where trust was scarce and danger lurked behind every corner. With his identity compromised, the American now had to find somewhere to lay low. The problem? His safehouse was far, far away. And by now, it was probably in flames as the winds of political change spread like wildfire through the Soviet bloc.
It was all a blur: the break of a window, the hotwire of a car, the rev of an engine. Gunshots rang out, piercing the window at his back which sent fragments of glass spilling through the backseat. Lucas ducked out of instinct, slammed the accelerator, and glanced up at the rear view as the vehicle lurched forwards. He pushed the vehicle to its limits, weaving between traffic and pedestrians alike.
Another vehicle was fast on his trail, the wail of a single siren bouncing off the walls of the snowy cityscape around them. They were faster than Lucas’s “borrowed” vehicle, and their front fender planted itself into his rear wheel. Lucas corrected the angle of his own vehicle, teeth gritted, his massive arms tensed beneath a brown bomber jacket. One hand shoved the shifter into fifth as he gained speed again and found traction.
A growing crowd of vehicles sped behind him, the line eventually growing bigger by the second. Another glance in the review view made him acknowledge his fate was looking grim. Moss green colored eyes moved forward to look back through the main windshield, only to gasp at the sight of a roadblock around the corner.
A loud crash sent his vehicle off course, hitting the railing of the embankment. The motor was dead. Bullets began to riddle the interior as Lucas threw open his door and took cover behind the vehicle, men firing upon him from the opposite side. Glass nicked his face, blood stained some of his beard. His dark hair was messy, wild, feral. A 1911 was pulled from a holster at his lower back.
The last stand. Eight rounds. He slammed the steel magazine into the gun and pulled back on the slide. And with the firearm chambered, he turned around to fire a few rounds from over the hood. It was a deathtrap to use this tin can for cover, but he had no choice. A round hit his shoulder as he returned fire.
Lucas fell back unto his ass, blood staining the snow. “Fuck,” he grumbled, looking over his shoulder and beyond the railing he was seated against. A river not yet frozen. There was no way he’d dive into that, right? The empty mag was dropped into the white beneath him, tumbling between his legs. A fresh mag was inserted as his breath visibly drifted before his handsome face.
A bold KGB officer stepped forwards, a thick black trench coat upon his form. A Makarov had been clutched in the burgundy colored glove of his right hand; Lucas stared down the barrel of the PM fearlessly. The two traded shots, the PM missing and the 9x18 bullet sparked the rail besides the American. Lucas was fast to his feet, before another shot hit near the heart– inches from a fatal blow.
The 1911 fell into the snow as Lucas tripped up over the rail, and free fell into the flowing river below. The unnamed KGB agent stepped up, a black face-covering masked most of him from the nose down. Those steely blue eyes looked at the river from over the rail, and he could not find a body– it must have been washed away in the rushing current.
“Get down there and search,” the agent was quick to command, “now!” He’d motion with his PM pistol toward the river, before holstering his sidearm at his hip within the trench. Following, a brick of a radio was snatched from his beltline and brought to his lips as the officer began organizing a recovery event. They'd undoubtedly get more hounds on scene.
Later...
Luckily, Lucas had plunged far enough in the river that he didn’t surface immediately to the enemy above. The currents had been strong enough to move him further along the bank, until the American washed up on snowy shores. Unconscious, the brute lay soaked and at the mercy of nature– the biting cold would otherwise make him shiver painfully so.
A pair of jeans clung wet to tree-trunk thighs and powerful calves. A pair of brown boots, long soaked, covered his feet at risk of frost bite. Atop of that, his bomber jacket and long sleeve black shirt were more of a detriment than help now. His hard, muscular figure was on clear display, outlined in the fabric, from generous pectorals to the ridges of his abdominals and v-cut hips. A wild mane of black hair spilled behind him, water dripping from his beard. The cold only got more bitter, his lifeless form still bleeding from chest and shoulder.
Snow slowly dropped and collected across his nose, promising to bury him alive if no one came to eventually help. Crimson trickled, creating a trail beneath him toward the flowing waters.
If Lucas could use a miracle, now was the time.
Last edited: