Jopson can think of nothing but the fireworks that burst behind his eyes, that turn his thoughts and sensibilities into nothing but warm and sated mush. His body pulses with heat and sparks, sensitive and needy still, the occasional slow roll of his hips upward to work out the rest of his desire.
Troubling, though, when Crozier stops. He hums, leaning up to kiss him, nip his lips.
"Don't stop," he murmurs against his mouth, less a plea and more a command in his own, stubborn way. A slurry of kisses follows, to his mouth, his jaw, his neck, tugging the man down, encouraging his full weight to fall upon him. "I want it, sir. To see you - to feel you. I'm yours for the taking."
To let him use his body to finish, let him rut against him however he'd like and see himself through. "Or do you wish for my hand? My mouth? My thighs?" A tease of words, delirious with his own orgasm as he presses feather-light kisses to his lips.
Thomas melts beneath him, melts into him, and it makes reality tip sideways. Crozier returns a wet, desperate kiss, and there's something — can't even put a name to it — in the way his steward orders him Don't stop.
No, there is a name: relentless. It's one Jopson doesn't like, and so he doesn't murmur it to him. But it curls in Francis' chest warm and affectionate. Even when he follows it with all that, like he's laying himself out on a banquet table, asking to be devoured, it's still sweet. Like burning sugar, like citrus fruit, something almost stinging in a way that feels too good to let go of.
He can't help but laugh, though it's little more than a rough exhale—
"What more could I wish for?" Surely he can feel him, how tightly wound. Crozier grinds into him, hard, but still carefully attentive for anywhere he needs to shift. "Just that you feel good, too. Just you."
To follow him into that melting, that's what he wishes for. He kisses him again, and moves, and it doesn't take long. A hand nearly (maybe genuinely) bruising at his side, the other tight in his hair, a gasp at his jaw. Crozier's mind whites out like the ice surrounding them, sees bright blooms like sundogs.
Everything feels dreamlike around them, gauzy and soft and warm, like there's a gentle summer breeze waiting for them just outside instead of the bitter winter. His eyes close as Crozier's body works against his, raising his hips and encouraging the man to tumble into the dizzying afterglow with him. Just you. Here with the warm veil over his eyes and the haze of reality distant and beyond the door of the berth, he can wrap those words up and hold them carefully against his heart.
Fleeting as it is, to be wanted by this man feels better than any lewd act could ever strive for. It will never be just him, anyway. There's Jamie, and the woman he's been told Crozier might fancy, and all of the weight of the world to negate it, but here - just you and you make him happy are enough.
He groans into the man's skin, turning his face against the stubble at his captain's cheek, sparked back to life by the bruising pressure at his side, the tug of his hair. Francis is a beautiful, strong, inspiring man. A gentle soul, a curious explorer, a lover of all things wild and beautiful and wonderous.
Sighing, he pets over the man's hair, his back, up and down, gently soothing him through his climax which he can already feel has made the skin of his hip and belly go sticky and warm. It's enough to stir him, to make the heat try and work itself back up for how incredibly delicious the thought is. To be painted with this man's spend, to walk the ship knowing it's there while the others are none the wiser.
A soft kiss to his cheek, his ear, then the corner of his mouth.
"You make me feel so good, sir," he whispers, encouraging and sweet. "And I only want to dp the same for you for as long as you'll let me."
What a sight, if he could paint Jopson's body as thoroughly as the younger man has done; alas, a meager offering in comparison. But still they're a mess, and for the time being, it's a comfortable one. Overwarm, sticky, slippery with oil, a sharper smell than even sea-salt. They could be doing nothing else right now. For all its vulgarity it is honest, and undeniable. A fixed thing.
Just you.
As long as you'll let me.
They are in trouble, here, probably. But Crozier is too involved with the drifting state of euphoria after spending to mind it. In the morning he will tell himself that's the lot of it; everyone's minds (but men most of all, he's noticed) over-commit themselves in the aftermath. It is a liminal space in which it's safe to. Private, secret things, that for brief moments get to be real, and then forgotten.
(Though he won't forget.)
"Promise you'll tell me if I'm smothering you," he says, with a trace of humor to his voice. "But stay with me a moment, Thomas."
He wants to hold him. As best he can, in this narrow bunk.
"I promise," he huffs softly, nuzzling in against the man's neck and breathing in the scent of him, warm and the tang of sweat and sea-salt. The weight of him, the warmth, the everything of him like this - Jopson wants to soak it up, commit it to memory. If this were a larger bed (a feather bed, even) they could wrap around one another and enjoy a comfortable evening.
The tent was lovely in its own right and this is, too. Aether will follow them wherever they go.
He reaches his arms up around the man's neck, one hand splaying down between his shoulder blades, holding him closer, feeling the tacky heat of his skin. They'll need to do something of the mess eventually but it's comfortable now, pleasant and warm. If there was room to move he'd pull a fur over them both and insist they deal with all the cramps come morning.
Instead he kisses him, sweet and slow, nothing of the hungry things moments ago but everything like the soft and gentle beginning to all of this.
"I will always be at your side, Captain, remember?" A smile against his lips, because it's true in so many ways. As his steward, as a man, as... this. Whatever they are like this. "I do try to keep to my word."
A bump of noses, another lazy kiss, his body beginning to relax into the afterglow of it all.
Crozier winds arms around him the best he can, one behind his head, the other just tucked against his side. The slightest shift of his weight to one side, though there's nowhere to go without pressing sweaty skin against the wooden bulkhead. Not as bad as rolling off, he supposes.
"I'll remember," he murmurs.
Always.
They can't, life isn't like that, but wouldn't it be a lovely state of things.
Slow, lazy kisses as they wind down. (If Jopson stirs enough to be noticeable, then, perhaps—?) Francis should get the up, so that they can get as clean as they can before parting ways. The idea of it is too far away to engage with, though. It would be agony if he could think clearly of it, but he's put it aside on some shelf, reckless, to be looked at later. All he wants is to stay right here.
Of course it can't last indefinitely, even if only as a concession to the way the chilly air eventually creeps into his berth now that they aren't moving frantically and heaving impassioned breaths. Bare-arsed and spent, in need of rest. Crozer pets his stewards side, his shoulder, looks at him up close and out of focus.
Perhaps he's more spoiled than other men here who sneak into dark corners or hide deep in the belly of the ship behind barrels and crates. Being in his Captain's cabin late on occasion doesn't draw the same suspicion as it might if he were a ship's boy squirreling away somewhere less safe with a lieutenant or some such. Lucky in their own right. Even if all of this is just a dream on the sea, a life that cannot be lived openly.
But slow and lazy and warm are the only things he feels, he thinks. Easy to stay pressured into the cushion of Crozier's bunk, to sink into the easy comfort of it all after their lovemaking.
"Mmm. Good."
A little delayed, but he's enjoying the moment. Jopson's eyes grow heavy so he rests them shut, close enough now that he can nose in for soft little kisses when he feels the need to. (Always - nearly always). Fingers trace up and down his spine, to his side, then back, the motions growing a little slower every minute that passes.
"Just a little while longer, sir?"
A question, soft and dreamy, the tug of exhaustion pulling at him. Perhaps from the adrenaline spike, the rush of everything in the evening that brought them here.
An impossible luxury. Crozier began this life in a hammock in the lowest position; it was jarring to get a lieutenant's cabin, and in one of those closets he made his life for over a decade, far longer than most. (He knows that Jamie had recommended his promotion, doesn't know how many times, or how passionately.) This little space here on Terror could be a palace.
Especially with such company. Lazy, soft, sleepy. The kind of cuddling ascribed to young lovers, not sailors having illicit affairs. And yet it all feels sugar-spun, gossamer.
"A while," he agrees, and he kisses his cheekbone, near his closed eye, and long eyelashes. "I'll tell you when it's time to move on."
Ah, well, eventually. He tries to make himself feel even a little bit of shame about it, but finds none. He's already decided he'll let Jopson sleep here, though he knows he can't risk the swap from last time. But, again: this is a luxury. There is space enough to make due, one way or another. So he just holds him, cradles him, and waits until he's certain he's drifted off. Tempting to follow, but he'll need to clean them up at least. Natural as anything for a man to fall asleep after, but he's got his standards, and pleasant exhaustion is no excuse to be inconsiderate.
Still. He dozes for a few minutes, enjoying the closeness. How warm Thomas is in sleep, how his breath feels against his skin. When he was a ship's boy, sailors told salacious stories about French ships and their oversized officer beds made for devilry. But of course, half the ships in the Royal Navy were captured from the French, and they're just as slender. No devilry to be found. Almost a shame.
Used to the rocking of the ship and the noise of the men at night, Jopson sleeps through most of Crozier's moving about. Only toward the end, when the hammock is put up and the man moving around for the last few moments, he rolls over to one side, tangling the blanket round his feet, but pleasantly warm and resting easily. He's far less put together like this, hair loose and flopping across his brow, a flush to his cheeks, all the tension in his shoulders gone, cocooned in the scent of fresh laundry and musk and Francis.
He sleeps soundly otherwise, occasionally mumbling in his sleep or sighing, finding a new comfortable position. When the edge of morning arrives he wakes naturally, his internal clock simply not allowing him to be late for his duties.
Jopson knows the moment he opens his eyes that he's not in his own berth, and almost absolutely in his Captain's. What surprises him, however, is the hammock, the man in it, and how close it is to the tiny bunk in the berth. Not quite sharing a bed, certainly not a cot, but there's something magical in it.
He'll blame it on the sleepy state of mind, but it moves something in his chest, to wake up to the crop of fair hair and a brow he's kissed now more times than not. Getting up and preparing for the day should be the next step, but with the captain here, he's blocked into the small space that has become quite warm with their shared body heat.
From his place in the bunk he reaches to touch the man's arm, his hand, and gently laces their fingers.
"M'sorry, Captain, but you'll have to wake if you want me to prepare your breakfast, sir."
Thomas knows he sounds ridiculous - voice thick with sleep, accent a little heavier, the guise of the dutiful, business-like servant not yet in place.
Contingencies, he might claim. Gave it a rehearsal go to himself, as he puttered around swaddling Jopson in blankets and climbing into his own pajamas. If someone managed to get past the locked great cabin door, and his locked berth door, and then surprise him, he can claim he's in the hammock for back pain related reasons. The bed's almost obscured. Could work, perhaps.
But the best reason to be slung so close is sharing space. Good enough, his specialty. Crozier sleeps well in the hammock, dropping off in minutes, content beside the younger man, and selfishly looking forward to the way his sheets will smell like him the next time he actually ends up beneath them. Spare blankets sort him out just fine for the night, and he's still bundled in them when Jopson gently wakes him in the morning.
Muzzy eyes blink open at that first touch, and soft address. As usual, Crozier wakes easily — can startle awake even from a dead drunk state (foreshadowing) — and he finds his place in the world quickly despite the sleep in his eyes. Mm, it seems his course of action was the right one. Jopson looks well-rested, and content. Beautifully ruffled in the morning. It makes something in him ache with a desire to see him wake in the morning light of some countryside bedroom, beneath a window with a sheer curtain.
"Will I?" a little muffled. He raises his head to fully escape the blanket. Mph. He squeezes Jopson's hand. "Oh, I've got you held hostage, don't I."
Always a boy with a vivid imagination, it's easy to picture them both somewhere warmer, somewhere private, shared only between them and the lazy rays of the sun. (What does Crozier's skin feel like, warmed under summer heat? Could he taste the golden rays on his lips? His brow? Tinged with the salt of his sweat, so different now from the cold and the ice?)
"Mm. It seems you do," he mumbles, a lazy smile pulling slowly over his face. He turns his cheek against his extended arm, resting his head there, watching Crozier peek out from his blanket.
Yes, one day they will be like this in the sunlight together, even if it's a small and cramped room somewhere far, far away. Just once, he'd like that. (The hopes and dreams will be shattered because foreshadowing).
"And what is my ransom, good pirate? There is a gallant sea Captain who may pay a fine penny to have me returned."
Squeezing his fingers around Crozier's, wishing they were close enough he could tangle their legs, that he could kiss him, entice him to stretch out with him a few minutes longer like they have the time for it. (They don't. They never will.) He has to sound half drunk for how sleepy and content he is.
Not much hope for side sleeping in a hammock, but Francis turns as much as he's able, keen to see Thomas so open and relaxed, and to play this little game for another minute. They both have very strict internal timepieces, and soon enough the day will begin.
"I suspect he'd pay just about anything."
Hm, perhaps a foot wrong. Should have made a joke about Who's the gallant one? Captain Ross, of course? —he's the one with all the pennies, anyway. But Crozier would. For any man under his command. And for Jopson, well.
Hopeless, as it turns out. A pirate could ask for his fingers and he'd calmly remove them on the spot.
"We can.. sail for Atlantis."
Jesus and Mary he is awful at it, though, and a brief face he pulls, near laughing, betrays his self-awareness over that fact. Giving it a go at any rate. What fantastical things are pirates said to do? Help.
I suspect he'd pay just about anything has an honesty to it that stings, blooms warmth after it - he'll remember it. Crozier's voice is lovely in the morning, a little deeper, graveled, complimentary to the tilt of his Irish accent. It suits him.
But he snorts as well, laughing softly as he watches the man's composure break. They're both bad at it, but Crozier is charming this way and makes it easier to forget that they should be doing other things, that they are not alone in this hazy, warm little bubble for much longer.
"Mm, we will have to do far more than sailing, pirate," he murmurs, tugging the man's hand across the way so he may kiss his fingers, eyes staying focused on his face. Would that he could wake up like this every day. Slowly he sits up, swings his legs over the side of the bunk, but stays tangled in the blankets to escape the cool air a little while longer.
Another kiss to Crozier's knuckles and he rests their joined hands on the captain's chest.
"But if there is anyone on the sea who might find Atlantis, I think you would, sir."
Crozier lifts Jopson's hand, presses a kiss to his palm. Holds their hands there for a moment while he huffs about the notion of finding Atlantis, even though he's the one who brought it up.
"God forbid. Imagine the bloody fuss naming every inlet about the place."
It is time to get to work. Not lost on him, the fact that he's slept better than he has in ages — sex and company and the hammock conspiring to make him feel like he's gotten double the hours. Just one more thing that this affair is offering him, winding deeper into places he shouldn't let it touch. All of these things are transactional, in the end. He knows better than to hope for more.
"Let's see if I can still get out of one of these without making a fool of myself—"
He can. And they can get dressed and return to ship life without anyone noticing, for how unremarkable a steward being in his captain's presence is. (Phillips might miss him after supper, but like anyone else, the assumption is that Jopson was simply busy at off-schedule times; beholden neither to that of a regular sailor or regular steward. An island, not unlike the captain himself.)
It would be so easy to continue this affair just as they are - tucking in together each night and waking side by side come morning. A steward is meant to be at the Captain's side whenever he beckons, and everyone on this ship knows well how devoted he is to this man above all others, taking his job to heart.
"We would quickly run out of all the names available to us in England."
A smile, and once Crozier is up, so does Jopson follow, tugging up his soiled underthings, and moving to lower the hammock. They are to get dressed and go about normal life, it's true. The berth has gone chilled without his care but he doesn't care - and instead of turning immediately to his clothes left folded or to draw out some of Crozier's, he gains the tiniest bit of confidence.
Enough to crowd the man, getting up into his space and smoothing hands down his chest until they rest at his sides, and he kisses him, not something hungry but claiming all the same, lingering, deep. No doubt they both taste of morning and a night's rest, but he doesn't care. All of it tastes like Crozier, and starting the day with that on his tongue sends life back into his sleepy limbs.
"Good morning," he murmurs against his mouth, bold and smiling, before he flutters away to get his clothes. He'll dress his Captain first, of course. Can't have him catching cold.
Crozier holds still as he's cornered, and no doubt Jopson will see the engaged curiosity in his eyes as he proceeds. He likes it, likes the way Jopson feels confident, and likes being on the receiving end. Likes the kiss, too. Stale from sleep but there's something binding in it. A night spent together in such an intimate way, without a third party, without necessity. Still here in the morning without making excuses.
"Good morning," he returns, and he clasps Jopson on his shoulders for a moment, affectionate and bracing. Nothing more, because otherwise he risks wanting to draw him into an embrace. Good, as Jopson moves on, judging the need to get back to reality and the ever-turning world appropriately.
Which means getting dressed his brisk business, though he makes light of it in attitude and speed, helping along more like he did at their Camp Aether (or before he was fully comfortable with having a personal steward), saving them both time. Who knows what challenges await during the day; at least there's no one beating down the door, no alarm bells being rung. But something does occur to him as he's preparing to summon the lieutenant watching the overnight shift. Makes a note of it in his mind to discuss with Jopson, and soon.
Not today. Let this feeling go on, for as long as it has the wings to.
A little wash up of his face and smoothing of his hair once he's given the Captain his morning ablutions and he's on with his task. It's easy to tidy up and make it seem like he's only just arrived. Easier still to fall back into the lines of his job as though he doesn't taste the captain on the back of his tongue.
"I'll send the lieutenant in and return with breakfast for you, sir," he gives a nod, pouring out some hot tea for Crozier in the meantime. "I'll do the laundry later this afternoon. I'll be sure not to disturb your meetings."
The laundry he buried himself into last night, wrapped up in a warmth that's left his skin smelling of Crozier. A heady thing, if he thinks about it too long - and so he puts it out of mind, sets the tea on the table alongside some of the documents and maps he knows the man will want to pore over again, and sighs something quick and satisfied.
"I'll bring something for the lieutenant as well, but after should you require me, it will be best to use the bell. It is the day for inventory and I'll be below much of the morning."
A little nod, he meets the man's eyes with a gentle sort of warmth, and slips away, dishes from the night before in hand, as though nothing has changed.
before he sets off, sneaking in an order. It has the tone of one, or near enough; on degree off, into something both playful, and not a request.
"Fetch one of my shirts until the roughest patches on your back have cleared up."
The same steward who threatened to use his own money to find him clothes, wearing the most canvas-feeling shirts. Good grief. Crozier will be being him shirts when they end up back in civilization, at this rate.
"I don't want to see any more splitting. And I'll be checking."
He sets the dishes down slowly, the tone of the man's voice drawing him back with a start. Playful, an order, something toeing the line and he can't quite place. Intriguing.
"Oh. I see. Of course, sir."
Crozier's shirts, soft and expensive, smelling of him and worn thin in places for the utility of it. There is a practicality to his captain that he will always respect and admire - so very unlike other officers in Her Majesty's fleet. Francis Crozier seems grounded with the world, even at sea, and it's a pleasant change from his past positions.
Things forgotten on the table, he fetches one of the man's shirts, taking his time and smiling at the feeling of the fabric beneath his fingers.
"Yours are much finer than mine, it's true," he nods and brings one, presenting it. "Is this one suitable? I'd rather not take from your better shirts, sir."
And there will be no time at all to do much changing than what he can do here and now, with the door locked. So he shrugs off his coat, his vest. "I'll see to it that it's washed and returned to you."
Bit of a detour, he should have mentioned it before they got dressed. But he was distracted— distraction tempts him again now, as Jopson changes, but Crozier maintains professionalism. (In his shirt, after what was going on the last time he was in one of his shirts, and shirtless again for a moment—) Even steps over to hold his other layers while he swaps the shirt out. He nods about the choice of shirt. It'll do.
"You know best," he says, because it's true. About shirts and laundry, and when Crozier should have things returned. When he's sorted, he smooths his shoulders down in his coat, then moves away. "Now, on to ship's business."
So it is.
Busy days. Surveys to conduct, and a narrow channel between massive icebergs to navigate. It seems for a while as if they're nearing true night again, with cathedrals of ice looming above them. Crozier spends long hours on deck guiding and troubleshooting, and everyone gets to congratulate themselves on a fine bit of sailing when they finally do make it past the challenge and into, not open water, but freer expanses of the icy coast. The Barrier — Jamie has no other name for it as of yet, and Francis suspects he won't give it one, too mysterious of a thing, too many questions still — continues to loom.
When they're able, Crozier permits Jopson to use the great cabin to work, and they manage to snatch moments to continue to read, now and then. It's at the tail end of one of these meetings that he decides to bring something up, at last.
"I've neglected something important," he opens with. "And it's done us both a disservice. Only because I've been so pleasantly occupied, but one follows the other, if I'm to be at all responsible about it."
Life on a ship has no short supply of hurdles, both dangerous and mundane. Navigating the sea will always be so far above and beyond him, and watching all the men work on deck as they try to navigate treacherous, icy waters is a thing of beauty. Never in his life would he have placed a bet on working here on the deck of a ship, but as they all breathe a little easier and sail into more open waters, he wouldn't wish to be anywhere else.
At his captain's side, supporting the officers how they need, and seeing that the stewards all tend to their good care.
The passing moments in the great cabin where he uses the better light to do some of his mending have become a pleasant and steady reprieve. Easier to do his work here without the noise of the mess nearby, with better light and more room. He doesn't overtake the space, though occasionally he spreads fabric out to check for holes or make markings before he takes to sewing. A table is a blessing in matters like this.
Jopson is deep in his work when the captain speaks and it almost startles him out of his focus, head tipping up so their eyes meet. Typically these interruptions are for witty comments or questions, little remarks here and there as they work alongside one another, so the timbre of this such statement gives him pause, his hands going still in his lap.
"Oh, of course, sir."
He sets his work aside, turns his attention back to the man.
"I've done my best to keep atop of my duties and your tasks as well, is there something I've missed?"
"Your work ethic and attentiveness are impeccable," Crozier assures him. Almost to the point where I might order you more time with which to do nothing, he doesn't add. It would be sheer coddling, and an insult.
He leans in his chair, at ease, but taking this shift of topic seriously. No interruptions are expected anytime soon, but there's still enough of the day left that, should Jopson decide he feels uncomfortable with the conversation, he has fodder to occupy himself with, and indeed, excuse himself over. Crozier hasn't plotted this carefully, exactly, but he does try not to cage people in— a fine line to walk, on a ship. They're all caged in. But they are alone here, with no lurking figures just behind the door.
So. He looks at him, plain.
"If there is ever a time where someone questions you about our association, and they cannot be satisfied or shut up within reason, you are to tell them I've obligated you. It is important to me that you understand that's how it must be."
It might feel like praise if there wasn't something hanging heavy at the end of it in wait. A seriousness falls over the usual easy warmth they share in these quiet moments, and Jopson makes sure to catch the man's eye, measuring him from across the small cabin. Francis Crozier always means what he says, a true and loyal captain, but this -
His stomach sinks. Lead, perhaps, cold and heavy and acrid. Should they be discovered, he is asked to ruin the man across from him? To watch him fall from grace when what they've done is a crime shared equally between them? A crime he would so very easily take upon himself.
"Sir," harsh, quiet. "I cannot. It would be far simpler for the tale to be told the other way - I do not have a reputation like yours, a livelihood such as yours. The London streets will know no better of me."
Likely not totally true, as rumors travel everywhere, but he'd have some time, at least.
"I... why, sir? I don't understand. I have nothing to lose - nothing such as you do."
Crozier wishes he could take on a cold mien in response to Jopson's immediate, impassioned denial. But it touches him. Obvious that it does, by his sad, lopsided smile. Bittersweet.
"You have your life, Thomas." A pause, and he leans forward, extending his hands to the younger man. Asking silently for contact, to reassure him. Of course this distresses him, of course he sees himself as inconsequential. It is noble, that Jopson would want to fall on the sword over it— but it is concerning, too.
"I'm an officer, and there'd be an inquiry. It wouldn't be a fair one, but I'd have an inch to fight with. You would not be afforded that luxury, and that's not a thought I can endure. I can't abide it at all."
Thomas reaches for the man's hands, curling fingers around his, feeling the warmth of their palms together. He knows these hands well now, knows them in a way that's brought them here to the table with this conversation. A dangerous thing, even holding hands, when it feels so absurd that it should be so lethal.
He looks away from the older man and down to their hands, the way they fit together. No one can find this out about them and he will do everything in his power that it remains so. Whatever this is, whatever tenderness they've forged out here on the ice, is so very sacred. As much as the man is to him, too.
"I..."
There are no good places for his eyes to roam but their hands, noting the differences between them. Crozier's marked by hard work, labor on ships and sea, despite the fine cut of his shirtsleeves. Jopson's marked much the same, but the calluses more delicate, made from scrubbing clothes in lye and working with fabric or from the occasional butt of a gun.
"I understand, sir."
Though he doesn't like it. Knows that should the unspeakable ever happen, he may not be able to hold to his word. Anything that would put Francis Crozier's life in danger... anything at all, he would take for him, no matter the consequences.
"I will make certain that absolutely no one has even a hair to doubt with. I will not allow it."
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Troubling, though, when Crozier stops. He hums, leaning up to kiss him, nip his lips.
"Don't stop," he murmurs against his mouth, less a plea and more a command in his own, stubborn way. A slurry of kisses follows, to his mouth, his jaw, his neck, tugging the man down, encouraging his full weight to fall upon him. "I want it, sir. To see you - to feel you. I'm yours for the taking."
To let him use his body to finish, let him rut against him however he'd like and see himself through. "Or do you wish for my hand? My mouth? My thighs?" A tease of words, delirious with his own orgasm as he presses feather-light kisses to his lips.
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No, there is a name: relentless. It's one Jopson doesn't like, and so he doesn't murmur it to him. But it curls in Francis' chest warm and affectionate. Even when he follows it with all that, like he's laying himself out on a banquet table, asking to be devoured, it's still sweet. Like burning sugar, like citrus fruit, something almost stinging in a way that feels too good to let go of.
He can't help but laugh, though it's little more than a rough exhale—
"What more could I wish for?" Surely he can feel him, how tightly wound. Crozier grinds into him, hard, but still carefully attentive for anywhere he needs to shift. "Just that you feel good, too. Just you."
To follow him into that melting, that's what he wishes for. He kisses him again, and moves, and it doesn't take long. A hand nearly (maybe genuinely) bruising at his side, the other tight in his hair, a gasp at his jaw. Crozier's mind whites out like the ice surrounding them, sees bright blooms like sundogs.
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Fleeting as it is, to be wanted by this man feels better than any lewd act could ever strive for. It will never be just him, anyway. There's Jamie, and the woman he's been told Crozier might fancy, and all of the weight of the world to negate it, but here - just you and you make him happy are enough.
He groans into the man's skin, turning his face against the stubble at his captain's cheek, sparked back to life by the bruising pressure at his side, the tug of his hair. Francis is a beautiful, strong, inspiring man. A gentle soul, a curious explorer, a lover of all things wild and beautiful and wonderous.
Sighing, he pets over the man's hair, his back, up and down, gently soothing him through his climax which he can already feel has made the skin of his hip and belly go sticky and warm. It's enough to stir him, to make the heat try and work itself back up for how incredibly delicious the thought is. To be painted with this man's spend, to walk the ship knowing it's there while the others are none the wiser.
A soft kiss to his cheek, his ear, then the corner of his mouth.
"You make me feel so good, sir," he whispers, encouraging and sweet. "And I only want to dp the same for you for as long as you'll let me."
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Just you.
As long as you'll let me.
They are in trouble, here, probably. But Crozier is too involved with the drifting state of euphoria after spending to mind it. In the morning he will tell himself that's the lot of it; everyone's minds (but men most of all, he's noticed) over-commit themselves in the aftermath. It is a liminal space in which it's safe to. Private, secret things, that for brief moments get to be real, and then forgotten.
(Though he won't forget.)
"Promise you'll tell me if I'm smothering you," he says, with a trace of humor to his voice. "But stay with me a moment, Thomas."
He wants to hold him. As best he can, in this narrow bunk.
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The tent was lovely in its own right and this is, too. Aether will follow them wherever they go.
He reaches his arms up around the man's neck, one hand splaying down between his shoulder blades, holding him closer, feeling the tacky heat of his skin. They'll need to do something of the mess eventually but it's comfortable now, pleasant and warm. If there was room to move he'd pull a fur over them both and insist they deal with all the cramps come morning.
Instead he kisses him, sweet and slow, nothing of the hungry things moments ago but everything like the soft and gentle beginning to all of this.
"I will always be at your side, Captain, remember?" A smile against his lips, because it's true in so many ways. As his steward, as a man, as... this. Whatever they are like this. "I do try to keep to my word."
A bump of noses, another lazy kiss, his body beginning to relax into the afterglow of it all.
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"I'll remember," he murmurs.
Always.
They can't, life isn't like that, but wouldn't it be a lovely state of things.
Slow, lazy kisses as they wind down. (If Jopson stirs enough to be noticeable, then, perhaps—?) Francis should get the up, so that they can get as clean as they can before parting ways. The idea of it is too far away to engage with, though. It would be agony if he could think clearly of it, but he's put it aside on some shelf, reckless, to be looked at later. All he wants is to stay right here.
Of course it can't last indefinitely, even if only as a concession to the way the chilly air eventually creeps into his berth now that they aren't moving frantically and heaving impassioned breaths. Bare-arsed and spent, in need of rest. Crozer pets his stewards side, his shoulder, looks at him up close and out of focus.
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But slow and lazy and warm are the only things he feels, he thinks. Easy to stay pressured into the cushion of Crozier's bunk, to sink into the easy comfort of it all after their lovemaking.
"Mmm. Good."
A little delayed, but he's enjoying the moment. Jopson's eyes grow heavy so he rests them shut, close enough now that he can nose in for soft little kisses when he feels the need to. (Always - nearly always). Fingers trace up and down his spine, to his side, then back, the motions growing a little slower every minute that passes.
"Just a little while longer, sir?"
A question, soft and dreamy, the tug of exhaustion pulling at him. Perhaps from the adrenaline spike, the rush of everything in the evening that brought them here.
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Especially with such company. Lazy, soft, sleepy. The kind of cuddling ascribed to young lovers, not sailors having illicit affairs. And yet it all feels sugar-spun, gossamer.
"A while," he agrees, and he kisses his cheekbone, near his closed eye, and long eyelashes. "I'll tell you when it's time to move on."
Ah, well, eventually. He tries to make himself feel even a little bit of shame about it, but finds none. He's already decided he'll let Jopson sleep here, though he knows he can't risk the swap from last time. But, again: this is a luxury. There is space enough to make due, one way or another. So he just holds him, cradles him, and waits until he's certain he's drifted off. Tempting to follow, but he'll need to clean them up at least. Natural as anything for a man to fall asleep after, but he's got his standards, and pleasant exhaustion is no excuse to be inconsiderate.
Still. He dozes for a few minutes, enjoying the closeness. How warm Thomas is in sleep, how his breath feels against his skin. When he was a ship's boy, sailors told salacious stories about French ships and their oversized officer beds made for devilry. But of course, half the ships in the Royal Navy were captured from the French, and they're just as slender. No devilry to be found. Almost a shame.
Eventually, he gets to it. So very careful.
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He sleeps soundly otherwise, occasionally mumbling in his sleep or sighing, finding a new comfortable position. When the edge of morning arrives he wakes naturally, his internal clock simply not allowing him to be late for his duties.
Jopson knows the moment he opens his eyes that he's not in his own berth, and almost absolutely in his Captain's. What surprises him, however, is the hammock, the man in it, and how close it is to the tiny bunk in the berth. Not quite sharing a bed, certainly not a cot, but there's something magical in it.
He'll blame it on the sleepy state of mind, but it moves something in his chest, to wake up to the crop of fair hair and a brow he's kissed now more times than not. Getting up and preparing for the day should be the next step, but with the captain here, he's blocked into the small space that has become quite warm with their shared body heat.
From his place in the bunk he reaches to touch the man's arm, his hand, and gently laces their fingers.
"M'sorry, Captain, but you'll have to wake if you want me to prepare your breakfast, sir."
Thomas knows he sounds ridiculous - voice thick with sleep, accent a little heavier, the guise of the dutiful, business-like servant not yet in place.
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But the best reason to be slung so close is sharing space. Good enough, his specialty. Crozier sleeps well in the hammock, dropping off in minutes, content beside the younger man, and selfishly looking forward to the way his sheets will smell like him the next time he actually ends up beneath them. Spare blankets sort him out just fine for the night, and he's still bundled in them when Jopson gently wakes him in the morning.
Muzzy eyes blink open at that first touch, and soft address. As usual, Crozier wakes easily — can startle awake even from a dead drunk state (foreshadowing) — and he finds his place in the world quickly despite the sleep in his eyes. Mm, it seems his course of action was the right one. Jopson looks well-rested, and content. Beautifully ruffled in the morning. It makes something in him ache with a desire to see him wake in the morning light of some countryside bedroom, beneath a window with a sheer curtain.
"Will I?" a little muffled. He raises his head to fully escape the blanket. Mph. He squeezes Jopson's hand. "Oh, I've got you held hostage, don't I."
Having fun, even half-asleep.
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"Mm. It seems you do," he mumbles, a lazy smile pulling slowly over his face. He turns his cheek against his extended arm, resting his head there, watching Crozier peek out from his blanket.
Yes, one day they will be like this in the sunlight together, even if it's a small and cramped room somewhere far, far away. Just once, he'd like that. (The hopes and dreams will be shattered because foreshadowing).
"And what is my ransom, good pirate? There is a gallant sea Captain who may pay a fine penny to have me returned."
Squeezing his fingers around Crozier's, wishing they were close enough he could tangle their legs, that he could kiss him, entice him to stretch out with him a few minutes longer like they have the time for it. (They don't. They never will.) He has to sound half drunk for how sleepy and content he is.
"But I could be convinced."
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"I suspect he'd pay just about anything."
Hm, perhaps a foot wrong. Should have made a joke about Who's the gallant one? Captain Ross, of course? —he's the one with all the pennies, anyway. But Crozier would. For any man under his command. And for Jopson, well.
Hopeless, as it turns out. A pirate could ask for his fingers and he'd calmly remove them on the spot.
"We can.. sail for Atlantis."
Jesus and Mary he is awful at it, though, and a brief face he pulls, near laughing, betrays his self-awareness over that fact. Giving it a go at any rate. What fantastical things are pirates said to do? Help.
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But he snorts as well, laughing softly as he watches the man's composure break. They're both bad at it, but Crozier is charming this way and makes it easier to forget that they should be doing other things, that they are not alone in this hazy, warm little bubble for much longer.
"Mm, we will have to do far more than sailing, pirate," he murmurs, tugging the man's hand across the way so he may kiss his fingers, eyes staying focused on his face. Would that he could wake up like this every day. Slowly he sits up, swings his legs over the side of the bunk, but stays tangled in the blankets to escape the cool air a little while longer.
Another kiss to Crozier's knuckles and he rests their joined hands on the captain's chest.
"But if there is anyone on the sea who might find Atlantis, I think you would, sir."
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Alright, none of that.
Crozier lifts Jopson's hand, presses a kiss to his palm. Holds their hands there for a moment while he huffs about the notion of finding Atlantis, even though he's the one who brought it up.
"God forbid. Imagine the bloody fuss naming every inlet about the place."
It is time to get to work. Not lost on him, the fact that he's slept better than he has in ages — sex and company and the hammock conspiring to make him feel like he's gotten double the hours. Just one more thing that this affair is offering him, winding deeper into places he shouldn't let it touch. All of these things are transactional, in the end. He knows better than to hope for more.
"Let's see if I can still get out of one of these without making a fool of myself—"
He can. And they can get dressed and return to ship life without anyone noticing, for how unremarkable a steward being in his captain's presence is. (Phillips might miss him after supper, but like anyone else, the assumption is that Jopson was simply busy at off-schedule times; beholden neither to that of a regular sailor or regular steward. An island, not unlike the captain himself.)
You could feel less, Crozier tells himself.
He doesn't.
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"We would quickly run out of all the names available to us in England."
A smile, and once Crozier is up, so does Jopson follow, tugging up his soiled underthings, and moving to lower the hammock. They are to get dressed and go about normal life, it's true. The berth has gone chilled without his care but he doesn't care - and instead of turning immediately to his clothes left folded or to draw out some of Crozier's, he gains the tiniest bit of confidence.
Enough to crowd the man, getting up into his space and smoothing hands down his chest until they rest at his sides, and he kisses him, not something hungry but claiming all the same, lingering, deep. No doubt they both taste of morning and a night's rest, but he doesn't care. All of it tastes like Crozier, and starting the day with that on his tongue sends life back into his sleepy limbs.
"Good morning," he murmurs against his mouth, bold and smiling, before he flutters away to get his clothes. He'll dress his Captain first, of course. Can't have him catching cold.
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"Good morning," he returns, and he clasps Jopson on his shoulders for a moment, affectionate and bracing. Nothing more, because otherwise he risks wanting to draw him into an embrace. Good, as Jopson moves on, judging the need to get back to reality and the ever-turning world appropriately.
Which means getting dressed his brisk business, though he makes light of it in attitude and speed, helping along more like he did at their Camp Aether (or before he was fully comfortable with having a personal steward), saving them both time. Who knows what challenges await during the day; at least there's no one beating down the door, no alarm bells being rung. But something does occur to him as he's preparing to summon the lieutenant watching the overnight shift. Makes a note of it in his mind to discuss with Jopson, and soon.
Not today. Let this feeling go on, for as long as it has the wings to.
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"I'll send the lieutenant in and return with breakfast for you, sir," he gives a nod, pouring out some hot tea for Crozier in the meantime. "I'll do the laundry later this afternoon. I'll be sure not to disturb your meetings."
The laundry he buried himself into last night, wrapped up in a warmth that's left his skin smelling of Crozier. A heady thing, if he thinks about it too long - and so he puts it out of mind, sets the tea on the table alongside some of the documents and maps he knows the man will want to pore over again, and sighs something quick and satisfied.
"I'll bring something for the lieutenant as well, but after should you require me, it will be best to use the bell. It is the day for inventory and I'll be below much of the morning."
A little nod, he meets the man's eyes with a gentle sort of warmth, and slips away, dishes from the night before in hand, as though nothing has changed.
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before he sets off, sneaking in an order. It has the tone of one, or near enough; on degree off, into something both playful, and not a request.
"Fetch one of my shirts until the roughest patches on your back have cleared up."
The same steward who threatened to use his own money to find him clothes, wearing the most canvas-feeling shirts. Good grief. Crozier will be being him shirts when they end up back in civilization, at this rate.
"I don't want to see any more splitting. And I'll be checking."
Best to take care of himself.
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"Oh. I see. Of course, sir."
Crozier's shirts, soft and expensive, smelling of him and worn thin in places for the utility of it. There is a practicality to his captain that he will always respect and admire - so very unlike other officers in Her Majesty's fleet. Francis Crozier seems grounded with the world, even at sea, and it's a pleasant change from his past positions.
Things forgotten on the table, he fetches one of the man's shirts, taking his time and smiling at the feeling of the fabric beneath his fingers.
"Yours are much finer than mine, it's true," he nods and brings one, presenting it. "Is this one suitable? I'd rather not take from your better shirts, sir."
And there will be no time at all to do much changing than what he can do here and now, with the door locked. So he shrugs off his coat, his vest. "I'll see to it that it's washed and returned to you."
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"You know best," he says, because it's true. About shirts and laundry, and when Crozier should have things returned. When he's sorted, he smooths his shoulders down in his coat, then moves away. "Now, on to ship's business."
So it is.
Busy days. Surveys to conduct, and a narrow channel between massive icebergs to navigate. It seems for a while as if they're nearing true night again, with cathedrals of ice looming above them. Crozier spends long hours on deck guiding and troubleshooting, and everyone gets to congratulate themselves on a fine bit of sailing when they finally do make it past the challenge and into, not open water, but freer expanses of the icy coast. The Barrier — Jamie has no other name for it as of yet, and Francis suspects he won't give it one, too mysterious of a thing, too many questions still — continues to loom.
When they're able, Crozier permits Jopson to use the great cabin to work, and they manage to snatch moments to continue to read, now and then. It's at the tail end of one of these meetings that he decides to bring something up, at last.
"I've neglected something important," he opens with. "And it's done us both a disservice. Only because I've been so pleasantly occupied, but one follows the other, if I'm to be at all responsible about it."
And he does hope to be.
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At his captain's side, supporting the officers how they need, and seeing that the stewards all tend to their good care.
The passing moments in the great cabin where he uses the better light to do some of his mending have become a pleasant and steady reprieve. Easier to do his work here without the noise of the mess nearby, with better light and more room. He doesn't overtake the space, though occasionally he spreads fabric out to check for holes or make markings before he takes to sewing. A table is a blessing in matters like this.
Jopson is deep in his work when the captain speaks and it almost startles him out of his focus, head tipping up so their eyes meet. Typically these interruptions are for witty comments or questions, little remarks here and there as they work alongside one another, so the timbre of this such statement gives him pause, his hands going still in his lap.
"Oh, of course, sir."
He sets his work aside, turns his attention back to the man.
"I've done my best to keep atop of my duties and your tasks as well, is there something I've missed?"
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He leans in his chair, at ease, but taking this shift of topic seriously. No interruptions are expected anytime soon, but there's still enough of the day left that, should Jopson decide he feels uncomfortable with the conversation, he has fodder to occupy himself with, and indeed, excuse himself over. Crozier hasn't plotted this carefully, exactly, but he does try not to cage people in— a fine line to walk, on a ship. They're all caged in. But they are alone here, with no lurking figures just behind the door.
So. He looks at him, plain.
"If there is ever a time where someone questions you about our association, and they cannot be satisfied or shut up within reason, you are to tell them I've obligated you. It is important to me that you understand that's how it must be."
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It might feel like praise if there wasn't something hanging heavy at the end of it in wait. A seriousness falls over the usual easy warmth they share in these quiet moments, and Jopson makes sure to catch the man's eye, measuring him from across the small cabin. Francis Crozier always means what he says, a true and loyal captain, but this -
His stomach sinks. Lead, perhaps, cold and heavy and acrid. Should they be discovered, he is asked to ruin the man across from him? To watch him fall from grace when what they've done is a crime shared equally between them? A crime he would so very easily take upon himself.
"Sir," harsh, quiet. "I cannot. It would be far simpler for the tale to be told the other way - I do not have a reputation like yours, a livelihood such as yours. The London streets will know no better of me."
Likely not totally true, as rumors travel everywhere, but he'd have some time, at least.
"I... why, sir? I don't understand. I have nothing to lose - nothing such as you do."
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"You have your life, Thomas." A pause, and he leans forward, extending his hands to the younger man. Asking silently for contact, to reassure him. Of course this distresses him, of course he sees himself as inconsequential. It is noble, that Jopson would want to fall on the sword over it— but it is concerning, too.
"I'm an officer, and there'd be an inquiry. It wouldn't be a fair one, but I'd have an inch to fight with. You would not be afforded that luxury, and that's not a thought I can endure. I can't abide it at all."
Surely Jopson can understand that.
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He looks away from the older man and down to their hands, the way they fit together. No one can find this out about them and he will do everything in his power that it remains so. Whatever this is, whatever tenderness they've forged out here on the ice, is so very sacred. As much as the man is to him, too.
"I..."
There are no good places for his eyes to roam but their hands, noting the differences between them. Crozier's marked by hard work, labor on ships and sea, despite the fine cut of his shirtsleeves. Jopson's marked much the same, but the calluses more delicate, made from scrubbing clothes in lye and working with fabric or from the occasional butt of a gun.
"I understand, sir."
Though he doesn't like it. Knows that should the unspeakable ever happen, he may not be able to hold to his word. Anything that would put Francis Crozier's life in danger... anything at all, he would take for him, no matter the consequences.
"I will make certain that absolutely no one has even a hair to doubt with. I will not allow it."
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