d'Artagnan (The Musketeers) (
apprenticemusketeer) wrote in
itinere2015-04-29 05:01 pm
Open | Thou art so fair ....
While here there is no King to protect here, it seems d'Artagnan has no problem finding trouble. First, there was whatever sickness drove him to such extremes in his love of Lucrezia - to where even he could not imagine feeling anything so strongly. He had thought he had loved Constance, but that had paled in comparison to what he had felt in those weeks with Lucrezia.
Now that whatever spell had been lifted, he's left without her to occupy his thoughts quite so fully as she had. He misses her, though. He just misses her.
But d'Artagnan is a man of action. This is why he has a pen (what a strange contraption this is), and a sheaf of paper. He is under the sun at a table, surrounded by a blizzard of crumpled paper. He is attempting to write a poem. An ode or tribute to Lucrezia.
It isn't going well. Raised as a farmboy, he is lucky to know how to read and write, so anyone less determined would leave the poem-writing to someone else. Not d'Artagnan! While he might have been somewhat stretched in his wits in those weeks with Lucrezia, he will tell anyone who dares to question him. He will even draw his sword to challenge someone if his honor - or his feelings - are challenged.
Now that whatever spell had been lifted, he's left without her to occupy his thoughts quite so fully as she had. He misses her, though. He just misses her.
But d'Artagnan is a man of action. This is why he has a pen (what a strange contraption this is), and a sheaf of paper. He is under the sun at a table, surrounded by a blizzard of crumpled paper. He is attempting to write a poem. An ode or tribute to Lucrezia.
It isn't going well. Raised as a farmboy, he is lucky to know how to read and write, so anyone less determined would leave the poem-writing to someone else. Not d'Artagnan! While he might have been somewhat stretched in his wits in those weeks with Lucrezia, he will tell anyone who dares to question him. He will even draw his sword to challenge someone if his honor - or his feelings - are challenged.

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She steps out in one of her favorite gowns, a white lace parasol in one hand and small coin purse tied lightly to one of her slim wrists. Her hair is a series of intricate braids that wrapped around her head and then fell in waves down her back.
Something tells her that Itinere will grant her wishes. Her search is put on hold though, when she spots the object of her affection across the street. Carefully, she crosses and pads slowly behind him until her hands reach around to cover his eyes. She says nothing, but her soft hands and the coin purse softly bumping against his chin and neck might give her away. She's trying to stifle a laugh over her game.
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Oh. Wait. He knows that perfume. And he knows those hands. He sets down his pen and smiles, shifting those hands to kiss her palms.
Yes, he has missed her. Turning, he smiles up at her, pulling her into his lap. "Did I summon you from my dreams?" he asks. "How did you know I was thinking of you?"
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"You guessed correct, my love." Her hands slip to his shoulders as he pulls her into his lap. She leans in to kiss at his cheek and then his lips. Look at him writing, just another way that he was not like Paolo. "Perhaps it was our thoughts of each other that brought us together for you were not far from mine as well."
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'I was trying to write you a poem. But I ... I am quite terrible at poetry," he admits wryly, just so happy to be with her again.
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Her arms tightened around his shoulders even as she looked back to the paper on the table. "Will I get to hear any of your words?"
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"Then perhaps I could find some words for you." She tells him. "Something to soothe your heart and speak toward my love."
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To her comment, he cocks his head. "Do you want to? I should like to hear your words. If you wish to share them." Something, it seems, has settled back into place with her being here. As if he is more complete now.
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She seems to get stuck there, head tilting to consider her words that she's written.
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When whatever strangeness had lifted, he had waited for the cloud to clear, and yet, even when it did, he found that he loves her.
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It's so simplistic. But it's exactly right, as far as Lucrezia is concerned. She lifts the page so that he can see it. "And now, d'Artagnan. Read."
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"Your lips on my lips.
A warm breath.
Whisper.
Tell me your deepest desires...."
He slows as he reads that, looking around to make sure that no one is eavesdropping.
"Love me.
Love me.
Love me..."
"I do," he tells her, looking up at her. "I do."
The poem isn't over, though.
"Do I dream?
Can it be real?
Your spell is so lovely a cover.
Love me.
Again and again
and again.
I have been blessed with your love."
Once again, d'Artagnan looks at her. "Perhaps ... I mean, maybe it's me who's lucky. That's what I think."
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"I would hope that such is fate more than luck. Fate has blessed us." Setting the paper down, she turns in toward d'Artagnen and her fingertips smooth over his lips. "I have been blessed with your love, d'Artagnan."
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Here? Here, they can be together and she can love him as much as he loves here, even without the fever that seemed to drive him for so long.
"Will you kiss me?" he asks, smiling at her sweet face.
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"I will." She says softly, because here they could love one another. She was not naive enough to think it could last. But she could have this now. She was greedy for it. And greed was a cardinal sin. Perhaps she was truly a Borgia after all.
Lucrezia leans in to kiss him.
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"I believe that you could, my love." She turns to face the table again and writes her name at the bottom of the page. "And perhaps someday you will."
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"Now that I have seen you," he tells her, smiling, tone light, but no less sincere, "I cannot be apart from you. Will you allow me in your company this evening, fair Lucrezia?"
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Then she leans back and moves to stand, brushing her skirts away from his lap. "I would rather not be apart from you either." That, accompanied by the gleam in her eye, says she wants him in her quarters this evening.
She holds a hand out to him even as she lifts her parasol. "Will you walk with me? I've a feeling the city has a surprise for me today."
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He likes that gleam in her eye, by the way. When things were so heated, they did find a great compatibility in bed. It was quite wondrous.
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The glance she sends in his direction is full of mischief. "Perhaps I cunningly focused my desires on something rather specific."
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d'Artagnan, himself, is not very religious, not anything like Aramis, actually. He doesn't think of things like heaven and Hell and God very much.
"I would imagine," he tells her, "that if there is suddenly a church, that we shall easy see it."
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She gently squeezes d'Artagnan's arm in her hand. "We should remember to be thankful for what we have. For even as it is given, it can easily be taken away. I would not see us parted, d'Artagnan. Not when we have only just found each other."
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It's just a heart beat when he speaks again. "They could not part us, could they?, if we were to marry."