Lady Alexandrie d'Asgard (
coquettish_trees) wrote in
faderift2018-12-22 12:19 am
open | well i've lost it all
WHO: Lexie and the brave people who feel like maybe getting things thrown at them/being yelled at/cried on/some other flavor of ridiculousness.
WHAT: Breakup Drama ♫
WHEN: nowish (end of Haring)
WHERE: De La Fontaine apartments in Hightown
NOTES: if you're a melodramatic noblewoman with a sudden case of regency constitution clap your hands
[ if you want a certain flavor of ridiculousness, put it in your title or hmu on plurk (@shaestorms) or discord (shae#7274) ♥ ]
It has been three days since she returned to the apartments the Comte keeps for her and her sister in the middle of the night, and Alexandrie de la Fontaine has not emerged from her room. In fact, Alexandrie de la Fontaine has not emerged from her bed. The only mark of her continued residence is the persistent heartbroken sobbing from behind the door. It is largely quiet, muffled, a background sound to be filtered out like the ocean waves. It does on occasion become more energetic as some thought—new or revisited for the hundredth time—sets her off, or disappear entirely when the expenditure of it all sends her to sleep.
Meal after meal is brought, left, and found again untouched; the tea over-steeped, the coffee stale, and both quickly rendered cold, for she will not stand for a fire being lit in the hearth. (The first maid to find it silly and begin to kindle one in any case for her lady's own good received a thin bruise the shape of the side of an expertly aimed hairbrush and a tongue-lashing for her trouble. There have since been no other attempts.) Instead, she has wrapped herself in the covers of her bed, her attire unchanged since her return save to become rumpled, her hair slowly coming free over time as the pins vex her and are yanked out and thrown to disappear in the rug.
She is missing entirely. Silent on the network when she would usually be flip, absent from both duties and regularly kept company. Crystal messages go unanswered, and callers are turned away with the vague explanation that Lady Alexandrie has taken ill and is not receiving visitors; that they may leave a card, or a message, and she shall respond once recovered.
Some callers are, of course, slightly more insistent.
[ Here you still are! If you're not Evie and you're coming in the normal person way, Marceau is chasing after you right now in that sort of eminently austere way fourth generation lifelong butlers have. If you're a scalawag or something, she has a window. There's probably a trellis. We'll figure something out. Prose or brackets are fine! ]
WHAT: Breakup Drama ♫
WHEN: nowish (end of Haring)
WHERE: De La Fontaine apartments in Hightown
NOTES: if you're a melodramatic noblewoman with a sudden case of regency constitution clap your hands
[ if you want a certain flavor of ridiculousness, put it in your title or hmu on plurk (@shaestorms) or discord (shae#7274) ♥ ]
It has been three days since she returned to the apartments the Comte keeps for her and her sister in the middle of the night, and Alexandrie de la Fontaine has not emerged from her room. In fact, Alexandrie de la Fontaine has not emerged from her bed. The only mark of her continued residence is the persistent heartbroken sobbing from behind the door. It is largely quiet, muffled, a background sound to be filtered out like the ocean waves. It does on occasion become more energetic as some thought—new or revisited for the hundredth time—sets her off, or disappear entirely when the expenditure of it all sends her to sleep.
Meal after meal is brought, left, and found again untouched; the tea over-steeped, the coffee stale, and both quickly rendered cold, for she will not stand for a fire being lit in the hearth. (The first maid to find it silly and begin to kindle one in any case for her lady's own good received a thin bruise the shape of the side of an expertly aimed hairbrush and a tongue-lashing for her trouble. There have since been no other attempts.) Instead, she has wrapped herself in the covers of her bed, her attire unchanged since her return save to become rumpled, her hair slowly coming free over time as the pins vex her and are yanked out and thrown to disappear in the rug.
She is missing entirely. Silent on the network when she would usually be flip, absent from both duties and regularly kept company. Crystal messages go unanswered, and callers are turned away with the vague explanation that Lady Alexandrie has taken ill and is not receiving visitors; that they may leave a card, or a message, and she shall respond once recovered.
Some callers are, of course, slightly more insistent.
[ Here you still are! If you're not Evie and you're coming in the normal person way, Marceau is chasing after you right now in that sort of eminently austere way fourth generation lifelong butlers have. If you're a scalawag or something, she has a window. There's probably a trellis. We'll figure something out. Prose or brackets are fine! ]

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[ Kitty, more stung by the possible class-based reading of the remark (that she's an upstart) than by the personality-based one (that she's a bit of an arse herself), allows herself the luxury of a bit of fury. She comes over and, altogether without ceremony, grabs Lexie's blankets and yanks them off the bed and dumps them on the floor. ]
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She looks absolutely wretched. More wan than pale, save for the angry red of her nose and the swollen puff of her eyelids, the curls that had been beneath her face flattened and stuck to her cheek with tears that are even now threatening again over the hot elemental rage that fills her eyes and pinches even her fine features, always previously so carefully worn to their best effect, to something ugly. Weakened by her fasting, it is entirely that same rage that powers her quick roll towards Kitty that ends in a savage slap. ]
Get out.
[ It's a snarl, quickly followed by another command that breaks in the middle. ]
Get out!
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Not to leave, though.
Instead, she marches right over to the window. She unlatches it, and she hurls it open. Then the next window, flung wide. It's cold out there today, and windy - that stiff draft draws all the warm air right out of the room. ]
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Then, remembering why she is perversely pleased, they shake for another reason as she begins her quiet muffled sobbing yet again. ]
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A quicker, easier solution: Kitty throws the water directly on Lexie.
The compassionate thing would, of course, have been to ask why are you crying. But, ugh, Kitty is furious over that poor maid. ]
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So. Kitty is here to fight over her treatment of a disobedient maid remiss in her duties rather than care in the slightest for her? It's not surprising. No-one has ever stood by her side and stayed there, why should Kitty be any different. Geneviève left her with the wolves to become a Chevalier, Rolant betrayed her so utterly she had never recovered, Byerly so easily believed her ruse and let her drive him off, she had never made any acquaintances at court who would not have sold her with a smile, Emile is gone, and Loki, whom she fought so hard to let herself love, whom she thought, finally, a fixture, someone who would be as much hers as she was his, had turned her out as if it had all meant nothing. As if she meant nothing.
She is alone, she has always been alone, and she will never be important enough to anyone to have it be otherwise.
Fine. She draws on all her knowledge of everything she has ever seen hurt the young woman and proceeds to venomously, one by one, hit them all. ]
You base clod of a child. I graciously allowed your behavior despite your stubborn insolence, despite your rudeness, despite your not belonging in Thedas at all let alone in my sphere, and here, now, you repay me by choosing to align yourself at the first chance you get with a disobedient servant who you know nothing of in the name of what you believe yourself to share with her over the friendship and welcome I showed you. Well and so, perhaps I shall do the same. Perhaps I too shall choose my position over the affection I bore you.
[ Her expression slams shut to something cold and distant, lined with the distaste one might show after stepping in something unpleasant. ]
You stand in the presence of your better and debase floors you should never have been allowed to walk to begin with. Get out, or I shall call my staff to have you put out like the yapping dog you are.
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When Lexie finishes, Kitty just responds, her voice astonishingly haughty for a girl from the lowest rungs of society: ]
I'm not going to use that word. The word that Gwenaelle loves so very well. But right now, Alexandrie, you are being precisely that word, and I've half a mind to call her up so she can use that very word on you.
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What, a cunt? You shall find I lack both the warmth and give. As do you, apparently, and so eager to show it! Bravo! Were you not so basely born, you should fit right in at court.
[ Then, without turning her head, she calls: ]
Marceau?
[ Waiting, always, perhaps all the more attendant because he is the last in this house who remembers her sixteenth year, the door clicks open precisely enough to show him. ]
Call the guard.
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Not the first time I've been arrested. Won't be the last.
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[ It is idle and dismissive, and she turns away again to curl back into the now sodden bedding, not making even the slightest of attempts to rectify the situation, the surge of angry energy passing and abandoning her to hollowness. ]
Leave or be dragged, I care not which.
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[ She delivers that with a sneer, though there's a slight tremor in her shoulders for just a moment. Maybe not so untouched after all. But a shake of her head, and she dismisses the twist of pain - ]
So this is your priority, then? Petty punishment over my work? 'Cause I don't know if you remember, but we used to work on stopping Corypheus, and I still do. So you want me in a little jail cell rather than working on stopping massacres like the one we just came from?
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We all suffered through that battle, Lexie. Is your bloody response to it really to beat your bloody servants? Because that is not someone I want to be friends with.
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This is not about Ghislain, you fucking cow, and you would know so if you had cared to ask. If this is your friendship, I welcome its withdrawal.
cw a bit of fatshaming
I wouldn't call me a cow, Lexie. You're fatter than I am, so what would that make you?
[ Sneering more: ]
So what's it about, then.
return poor-shaming 8)
[ Which she is not taking advantage of. ]
You hardly care. Do hurry up and abandon me like everyone else I have ever allowed myself to care for. I tire of your voice.
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[ That's so ludicrous that Kitty actually lets out a harsh laugh. ]
I need you to turn around and look at me so you can see how hard I'm rolling my eyes right now.
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And I need you to leave, but yet, here we are, with you again selfishly demanding respect and care for yourself and your needs and wants that you categorically refuse to grant others.
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You hit your servant.
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Oh hurrah, no visit would be complete without the flexibly inflexible morality of Kitty Jones, high judge of good and ill, who believes a single ill-thought action she did not witness and has told herself an entire fable about to be justly punished by repeated, protracted, purposeful cruelty and derision.
You know nothing, you ask nothing, you make light of my pain, and for some cursed reason you are still here tormenting me.
[ There is low conversation at the door—apparently the guard has been successfully summoned.
Quietly: ]
I only meant them to remove you, but perhaps I will have you jailed if it will summarily relieve me from what you deem your good graces. I have had ‘friends’ such as you before. I need no others.
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[ Kitty props her shoulder against the wall. She's not going to go until they drag her out. And she's not going to go in a dignified manner, either; let Lexie watch her be humiliated. ]
And I don't think you have ever had a friend like me before. Part of your problem, I expect.
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I am being a complete arsehole? You are in my house, in my room, after having been informed I did not desire visitors, not to inquire after my state but to snidely match derision to my woe, browbeat me at length, and cause me to catch my death of cold.
[ She sits up, refusing to hug her shivering arms against her in the chill, despite the cold water and wind having leeched the warmth from her. ]
Although that I may yet have cause to thank you for.
[ Finally, movement at the door. Alexandrie looks at it grimly. It is not that she truly wishes for this, but she is every iota as stubborn as Kitty and, like Kitty, has already drawn her line and dug the trench behind it. ]
Well and so. If you have further complaints of me, you may address them to the guard.
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it is not the guard. or rather: the back of them, having been roundly dismissed by gwenaëlle, surveying the scene with marked skepticism. absolutely no part of this sounds helpful or productive, and all of it immensely exasperating besides. rather than a greeting, )
She may not.
( 'because you are being a fucking child right now' surely seems to go without saying. it certainly seems self-evident to her. she sits down on the edge of the bed, just out of easy reach of either alexandrie's hands or feet, and says, very evenly, )
Are you about done with this, Alexandrie? It's been several days. If what it takes to get you out of this bed is that man, you may as well stay in it.
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When it's Gwen instead of them - She feels a little weak and a little hot and a lot grateful. Her eyes close a moment, and she swallows, and she pushes it all down and away. No time for it now. No place for it.
A breath out. Then, squaring her shoulders, trying to look collected: ]
Hullo, Gwenaelle. What d'you mean, that man?
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It is childish, perhaps (not perhaps, it is), but now that it is a contest of wills, now that there is a concrete goal she has hope of attaining, Alexandrie is determined to abide exactly. Where. She. Is.
She speaks past Kitty, her eyes narrowing to unwelcoming slits. ]
I am trying to.
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