A. Enjolras (
solo_patria) wrote in
tushanshu_logs2013-12-24 03:48 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
Entry tags:
(no subject)
Characters: Enjolras, Les Amis, Other Friends (I'll edit those last two things as we head in here!)
Date: Christmas Eve- Early Morning
Location: The Cafe the boys tend to congregated at, Wood Sector
Situation: Réveillon is celebrated as part of the French Christmas traditions. And it's Christmas Eve here, so... :D
Warnings/Rating: Will Update!
Somehow, even in as strange a place as the turtle can be, and even in a time of such great sorrow as the loss of the Empress (a term he'll stubbornly use with his last breath), and the departure of Jehan, Christmas has managed to make its way around again, and this past year...when Enjolras thinks of it is nothing short of astounding. For him, it meant the rebellion, death, being born again, and all of the adventures here, finding his place with Etienne, growing closer to others than he allowed himself in life, and while he's not given to outward expressions of his sentiments, still finding that difficult in many cases, it bears some celebration nonetheless.
On Christmas, in France, after the midnight Mass, the one time a year Enjolras could drag himself to church, comes Réveillon, a time for staying awake, gathering close and, admittedly, overeating and drinking. Who could say otherwise of a meal that traditionally hosts thirteen desserts? Here, on the Turtle, some things were not able to be found but even so, the spirit of the thing is good enough, and, he managed to find a local equivalent to citron that, well, it's a miracle it hasn't all vanished by this point, because it's really good. In any case, it's set up in the cafe, along with a meal that may not be totally traditional but works out well, regardless.
So, here they are, old friends, and perhaps some new, on Christmas Eve, a little earlier than usual with no Mass to run off to, and warm and comfortable and here. That bears some celebration with friends, doesn't it?
Date: Christmas Eve- Early Morning
Location: The Cafe the boys tend to congregated at, Wood Sector
Situation: Réveillon is celebrated as part of the French Christmas traditions. And it's Christmas Eve here, so... :D
Warnings/Rating: Will Update!
Somehow, even in as strange a place as the turtle can be, and even in a time of such great sorrow as the loss of the Empress (a term he'll stubbornly use with his last breath), and the departure of Jehan, Christmas has managed to make its way around again, and this past year...when Enjolras thinks of it is nothing short of astounding. For him, it meant the rebellion, death, being born again, and all of the adventures here, finding his place with Etienne, growing closer to others than he allowed himself in life, and while he's not given to outward expressions of his sentiments, still finding that difficult in many cases, it bears some celebration nonetheless.
On Christmas, in France, after the midnight Mass, the one time a year Enjolras could drag himself to church, comes Réveillon, a time for staying awake, gathering close and, admittedly, overeating and drinking. Who could say otherwise of a meal that traditionally hosts thirteen desserts? Here, on the Turtle, some things were not able to be found but even so, the spirit of the thing is good enough, and, he managed to find a local equivalent to citron that, well, it's a miracle it hasn't all vanished by this point, because it's really good. In any case, it's set up in the cafe, along with a meal that may not be totally traditional but works out well, regardless.
So, here they are, old friends, and perhaps some new, on Christmas Eve, a little earlier than usual with no Mass to run off to, and warm and comfortable and here. That bears some celebration with friends, doesn't it?
no subject
I am as well! It has been a long time since I have had a pleasant Christmas. I am happy to spend it amongst my friends.
no subject
Then I am glad that you can have it with us, yes. It has been...quite the year for us, hasn't it?
[A tiny hint of sorrow, just a shade, passes over Enjolras's face there, as he considers all of it, but then, well, there's a smile since, for all that has been lost, a good deal has been gained as well. Her friendship not the least of those.]
If it had to end the way it did for us, then I am glad we have been granted here.
no subject
Still, it is a lovely thing to be here. If such a thing should have come from the barricade, it should have been this.] As am I. I trust that you have been well.
no subject
[Funny that Enjolras must still correct himself, much as he was working to become closer to the others here. His smile is a little sad as he nods at Eponine.]
I suppose this is a time for remamembering them as well, along with the other things we do here tonight. I've been...well. The Empress and then Jehan have had me in a bit of shock, but...I am holding, I suppose. A good deal of things have helped.
And you?
no subject
[Many of them had granted Eponine permission to use their first names, or at least, knowledge of them. But Jehan seemed the sort to remain monsieur.]
We shall drink for them both.
I have been well. [She pauses] Will Courfeyrac be here this evening? I do enjoy his company. And Joly as well!
no subject
Mmm perhaps we should. And what obscenities will I manage to spew forth for everyone this time, I wonder.
[It's a joke, of course, but, Eponine saw him drunk that night. She'll know the truth in it.]
They ought to be. So far as I know, everyone will be here, and a few other friends. They ARE both quite amazing, aren't they?
no subject
Good! I do wish to see them both. Good, kind, handsome gentlemen they are.
no subject
Perhaps so. [Anything, after all, is possible. But if he ends up ranting in Provencal, well, that's on you, Eponine.]
They are indeed. I am glad that you get along so well.
no subject
I am as well! Oh if I had come to your barricade as myself instead of a man! Think of what would have happened then! But no, I am content to be your friend here and to have known you then. Your sister at arms surrounded by brothers! Come, we should have a toast!
no subject
Had you come as yourself...we would have wished to keep you from the fighting, yes. We may have had a use for you in rolling bandages or some such thing, but...that would have been far different indeed. They used to joke I had no idea what a woman was, and I spent so little time with them.
This island's brought us many things, including that kinship. I think a toast would suit us well. What shall we start with then, sœurette?
no subject
Eponine raises her glass but pauses almost immediately after.] Sœurette? I am your sister, then? Is it because I am younger, or I am smaller? Perhaps I am both, I shall not lie to you, I am surely eighteen by now. But now you know what a woman is, and will pronounce one your sister! Should I be offended or pleased to have you as a brother?
no subject
To know you now, I do not disagree.
[They did indeed, and well, she should be remembered as a part of them because of that. So *Sœurette indeed, in every way that mattered.] *
*We became such, on that day, those who were not already so. We had a sort of baptism there, and you are much younger than I am indeed. I've only ever been brother to the others of my friends, so you might ask them about that last part. *
*[Then he's pausing, a wry smile crossing his face as a thought occurs to him.] *
*However, Courfeyrac may well...exaggerate if you ask him. *
no subject
[She smirks at him.] So I shall not ask our Reynaud then? Or should I dare?
no subject
As for how time works here, I am much at a loss. It seemed to be still June when I arrived, but it feels as though the seasons here are off for that,or perhaps we do not age once we are here, but I am twenty six. Quite a bit older then, really.
And I SUPPOSE you could, if you take what he says with a grain of salt in mind.
no subject
Then I shall ask him!
no subject
[And he's eyedarting a little, remembering that experience and poor Marius having to handle it. Of course, it's funny now that he's made up for the damages. Not that he would do them again but...He's studying Eponine now, carefully.]
You seem closer to your age here than when you first arrived, I think. It suits you better, certainly.
[And Enjolras can only hope that Courfeyrac will not quite exaggerate the stories of him as a brother now. He makes a mental note though, to keep an eye on his friend and to be within kicking distance should that be required.]
no subject
Do you mean to say I was young then? Or old then? You must clarify, Apollon, if you mean to complement me.
no subject
[No one else seems to be here just yet, but even so, Enjolras is glancing around the room sharply, almost making a show of that for Eponine. ]
Our secret. And ah...
[How DOES this work, really? Complimenting women without making them think you mean anything? When you are barely sure how they think or do much of anything? He understands their biological function, and would not now deny that a woman may be capable in near anything she wishes, as much as a man, but he will never understand their thoughts regardless.]
Well, much better than when you arrived. Pretty, in fact.
no subject
Me! A pretty girl! It is true, it is true! Oh how my father would say otherwise! It was better that I were not pretty near him, he would ruin it. But here he is not here, and here I am pretty! Oh, do tell the others, do!
no subject
[He does spend a bit more time with women these days, so he's sort of worked out what they find pretty about themselves, along with what his friends have noted they like. It's given him something of a picture of beauty, though, when one of your lady friends is Iskierka, well, results may vary.
Healthy Eponine though, is pretty, like many of the mistresses he's watched his friends spend time with through the years, and there's a bit of him that is thrilled to see that reaction, almost as if she were a real little sister, or well, one he's known for far longer at least.]
And of course I can tell the others. They will likely laugh that I have noticed, but allow them. Our sister of the barricades is radiant here.
no subject
I was often told I was pretty as a child. But then I grew and became ugly. The outside reflects the inside. Perhaps now here, that is why I am pretty!
no subject
[There seems to be a perception, among his friends, that beyond merely not knowing what women are, in a practical sense, or that they exist, that Enjolras's taste is a bit...off. It probably is his fault somewhere along the way, but they may laugh, he thinks, at something involving that perception being true. Not in a bad way though.]
And they would hardly deny it. It's good to see you happy and beautiful. I dare to think that even Marius may notice.
no subject
You must tell him and make him see it! If you are the one to realize it, even he cannot disagree! And he shall tell me!
no subject
And I shall do my best on that.
no subject
She laughs excitedly, taking his hand.] You are a kind man, Apollon! A kind man and a friend- my older brother indeed!
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)