merryeccentricities (
merryeccentricities) wrote2015-01-20 11:35 pm
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Hello, There's Been An Error
Joly gets a few bursts of static, some mention of the Directory and Consulate, and "Fifth", and Courfeyrac, before the call goes definitely silent.
So...Bossuet and Courfeyrac are going to the Republic, of some point, and..Fifth? Or they're going to THE Fifth? Or, given how drunk they obviously are, they're going to GET a fifth, or had one, and then...
then "the Labyrinth", which might be taking them anywhere, never mind where they think they're going.
No, Joly isn't about to sit around waiting for them to get back. He sets the watch-hand for 2. "Combeferre? We had talked about exploring the Labyrinth? I think we might have to plan to do that right now."
So...Bossuet and Courfeyrac are going to the Republic, of some point, and..Fifth? Or they're going to THE Fifth? Or, given how drunk they obviously are, they're going to GET a fifth, or had one, and then...
then "the Labyrinth", which might be taking them anywhere, never mind where they think they're going.
No, Joly isn't about to sit around waiting for them to get back. He sets the watch-hand for 2. "Combeferre? We had talked about exploring the Labyrinth? I think we might have to plan to do that right now."
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Alas, it has vanished.
He takes a step onto the path when the rustling noise turns into a whooshing noise, and suddenly he's been hit hard in the stomach. It's so sudden that he's not even consciously aware of the impact, just the sensation of being winded, and the realization that he's doubled over, and then the pain. It's not much pain, but it's there.
"What was that?" he manages to get out, when he gets his breath back.
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"Are you all right? Did you see--oh!"
Another shape makes a quick dash at them, swerving when Meta leaps at it with claws. And while Joly's watching that, something THUMPS into the back of his legs, nearly knocking him over.
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Well, that makes it sound more athletic than the reality. What he actually does is fall over with purpose, onto the thing that has attacked the back of Joly's legs.
Combeferre tackles the thing--the soft, silky, squishy, ferociously struggling thing--to the ground.
He pins it down by its four corners so that it can only twitch vigorously instead of hurling about. Once it's no longer a blur of motion, he can examine it properly, and see what it is.
"...a pillow?"
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The last is in reply to a sudden barrage of pillows, leaping from the woods directly at his head and shoulders. He guards his face with his arms, and tries to step away, and trips over Combeferre; and then he is being knocked over and smothered.
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Tucking the pillow firmly (and with some difficulty) under his arm, he seizes Joly's dropped walking stick and thrusts it into the cloud of pillows battering at Joly.
He brandishes it this way and that. The pillows react in confusion--not confusion, Combeferre thinks sternly to himself, they're pillows. Some keep at Joly, but others simply fly away from the stick. A few hardy souls--pillows--launch a counterattack upon Combeferre.
"Joly," Combeferre shouts, "shall we run?"
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Run to... he spots a sort of general trail leading to an narrow arch of trees and tilts his chin. "That way?"
If he sounds a bit stunned and out of breath, it's only because he is.
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The pillows follow. Combeferre turns every so often and whacks them back with his stick.
"A softer version of computers, perhaps?" He pants the question at Joly as they run along the trail, through the arch of trees.
They run several steps before Combeferre realizes they're somewhere else entirely.
He looks around. It's a city. It's...almost Paris?
But there are large balloon-like things in the air? Powered by gas, evidently. They look somewhat like hot air balloons, but more more advanced; somewhat like airplanes, but less sleek.
Combeferre looks at Joly. "Euh...?"
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"Oh really now--!" Nothing else has followed them from world to world. Of course that doesn't make it a rule, but still.
"But why ...pillows... how.." he manages to say as he staggers upright again, kicking at the Pillows a bit, breathless from running and also, honestly, from laughing.
They seem...a little less aggressive?
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Another pillow is skimming the top of Joly's head, ruffling his hair.
"I think they're trying to make friends," says Combeferre, feeling utterly ridiculous as he says it.
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...There is a great deal of sky. And brass.
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One of them is snuggling Meta.
Combeferre looks around and sees people driving in strange brassy vehicles that look neither like anything he saw in his lifetime nor anything he's read of in Milliways. Some people are walking. Their dress is strange. Their eyewear and walking sticks and other implements are stranger.
He sees a road sign and freezes.
Rue de la Chanvrerie, it says.
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The buildings appear to be largely riveted. The street-lamps are in place, but look very different than the ones he knew. The street is smooth, paved with some odd flat green surface; a single beam runs along the air above it. Joly can guess, from some of his reading, that it's a sort of rail. But above that--
He reaches a hand out to Combeferre, trying to get him to look up. "Airships!"
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He points to the Rue de la Chanvrerie street sign.
"We're in Paris."
In a specific place in Paris, he does not add.
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There's a low, two-story building, newly painted and with the same sort of intricate brass and copper tubing around the walls as every other building on street, but unmistakeably older in its design-- and very familiar indeed in its outline. Smells of coffee and food come out ever time customers go in and out of the new glass doors, and the smells aren't bad.
Joly stumbles forward a little, still gaping. "We have to go in, we have to see-- oh, we have to, don't we?"
The pillows, in agreement or otherwise, choose that moment to knock him over. "And we can leave these outside" he grumbles, climbing out from their fluffy attack yet again.
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He turns to the pillows. "Stay here," he says firmly. "Wait for us."
The pillows fly towards each other, into a small indignant constellation. They float upwards together and then settle down onto the ground, fluffing out like huffy cats.
Combeferre takes that as agreement.
They enter the café.
It is dark and gleaming inside, with all kinds of food on a kind of counter, under glass containers. Fresh, uncooked food, too--it looks like spinach and lettuce and tomatoes and some things Combeferre can't identify. Salads. Combeferre has read of them, and seen them on occasion in Milliways, but it's a different thing to see them in Paris.
Above the counter is a sign with a list of coffee-based beverages, none of which seem to actually be coffee itself.
He turns to Joly. "...do you have any francs on you?"
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The woman behind the counter looks very familiar, though with the odd fashions and lighting Joly can't quite place her. "Excuse me? Can we order some coffee, please?" Something about this new Corinthe inspires more careful manners than their old ramshackle café.
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The woman leans forward and squints at Joly.
"I beg your pardon--Monsieur Joly, is it?" She flushes. "I believe I knew your--well, perhaps he's your uncle--a Monsieur Jean-Gilbert Joly? He came here often, in his youth."
Combeferre blinks in the odd light as he recognizes Matelote.
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She looks past Joly at Combeferre, and her eyes widen. "And you--oh, I think it's so nice that the next generation know each other. I know whose family you must be, it's written all over your face. The distinguished M. Combeferre himself, a scientist and a statesman, and he used to come here! You can see for yourself." She points to her right, where there is a row of pictures on the wall: the Corinthe's most famous patrons. The pictures are photographs, not portraits. Not the slick colored photographs he saw in the Milliways books, but sepia-toned and faded.
Combeferre leans forward and sees his own face. He looks much the same, maybe a bit thinner and more haggard, but grinning. Next to him is Enjolras, smiling faintly.
"Yes," says Matelote, grinning. "He came here often. Not anymore, he's a very busy man now! As you must know. Is he your--father, or...?"
"Er," says Combeferre. "He's my uncle."
He's staring distractedly at the wall. A busy man, a scientist, a statesman--a live man, with a live Enjolras and a live Joly, in a world with airships.
This is not the history of their world. In their world, Paris did not have airships in Matelote's lifetime, or within any time that could possibly have been his own lifetime. This is a wholly different world, a different universe, and that makes it hurt less.
Still.
His silence starts to grow heavy. He searches for a way to lighten the mood, thinking up a question his curious "nephew" might ask. "We've heard such stories about what our uncles got up to in their youth," Combeferre says, smiling. "I suppose you know Bossuet, too, then?"
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"Legle." Joly says it in recognition, not in answer. He's staring at a photograph at a far end of the wall, older than some of the others, slightly spotted. Bossuet is there, not staring at the camera for a portrait but looking up at Joly and Musichetta, both of them sharply dressed and falling over each other into Bossuet's lap, all three of them laughing and looking impossibly happy.
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"Oh," is all he can say. He puts a hand on Joly's shoulder.
"Oh, yes, of course! L'aigle!" Matelote laughs. "He was a cheeky one, he was. Of course I remember him. He and M. Joly and M. Grantaire, they'd come in together all the time, and drink their weight in wine. It was Joly who paid, though. His friends never had much money on them, especially not that aigle."
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It occurs to him after he asks that perhaps it wasn't a wedding after all, it doesn't have to have been a wedding party-- but he knows it was, as much as he knew this building was the Corinthe. The soul of the thing, in both cases, is obvious.
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"They look very happy," Combeferre says gently. And in a way, isn't this good news? To know that there is a world where this happened? He searches for a way to convey this to Joly, without having Matelote think he's a madman. "It's good to see proof of such happiness--to know that it's real, at least for some people."
Against his will, Combeferre's eyes stray back to the picture of himself and Enjolras, a few years older. A scientist and a statesman, Matelote had said. Combeferre didn't want fame, but to know he'd made a contribution to science--that he would have made a contribution to science--no. Not would, did, in this world. In this world it's a thing that happened, and that is, in its own bizarre way, a happy thought.
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And then he starts giggling. It soon turns into full laughter, as it often does with him, and then he iscrying , too, and still laughing, and then that turns into hiccups, and he's having to hold himself up with one hand on the café counter and one arm over Combeferre's shoulders, trying to talk past giggles and his own treacherous hiccups.
"You-!- you make us sound so far gone-!"
...Well, they are dead, of course. But somehow thinking of that only makes Joly want to start in laughing again. He manages to fight it down to a smile. He lifts his hand off that count to wave at the Corinthe in general. "We made it-!- made it here, didn't we? " And their old Corinthe being this lovely little café is almost as much a testament to resurrection as their own presence. Though Joly has no idea how to say that in front of Matelote.
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We are, he doesn't say. After all, is Milliways even a real place? An actual world? Or just--a holding cell, of sorts?
"Yes, we did," he says, with determined brightness. He turns back to Matelote, still bracing Joly up with one arm.
"I suppose this place must have changed a great deal! Our uncles described it...very differently." For one thing, Combeferre would eat the food here with no worries for his health.
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