Lady Alexandrie d'Asgard (
coquettish_trees) wrote in
faderift2020-08-02 10:37 am
Entry tags:
open | you know you love me
WHO: Lexie, Gwen, Wysteria, Bastien, you
WHAT: Hot weather, hot goss
WHEN: Various, mostly now~
WHERE: Kirkwall generally
NOTES: I've put the starters in brackets but do you and I'll match!
WHAT: Hot weather, hot goss
WHEN: Various, mostly now~
WHERE: Kirkwall generally
NOTES: I've put the starters in brackets but do you and I'll match!
gwenaëlle; crystal (back when this happened).
[ one afternoon, of a sudden: ]
Gigi! You shall never guess how I spent my early afternoon.
[ she sounds delighted. ]
wysteria; on the veranda at the asgard estate.
[ It being hard to properly enjoy chilled wine through a veil, Alexandrie's is currently thrown back over her hat. She needs neither covering, the veranda is perfectly shaded at this time of day, but she wears them in any case in the hope that the extra protection will induce her skin to return to its customary—and much desired—unblemished fairness.
She lifts her glass, observes the frozen strawberry gently bobbing in the straw-coloured liquid contained within it, and frowns as mightily as she can without encouraging wrinkles. ]
It is such a lovely day to sit out at a café, and I hate it.
bastien; showing up unexpectedly at his room.
[ knock knock knock knock knock~ it's exuberant, and lacks the hard edged sound of bare knuckles. Wonder who it is. ]
everyone else~
[ drop me a top level with something your character knows (of any level of import) that Alexandrie might have conceivably heard tell of or some piece of gossip about them you'd like to have reached her, and prepare yourself for the advent of a terrible busybody ]

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When I suggested this scheme to him - for naturally I was the one to think of it - he expressed some conspiracy that I was arranging the whole thing to orchestrate a particular pairing on my own behalf. I quite like to believe it will infuriate him that nothing could be further from the truth.
[She likes to think it, though suspects the reality will be something closer to 'Honhon mademoiselle, how prudent of you not to even try. For I cannot imagine how you would survive the bitter disappointment of having your company bought for a pittance. I could never abide such sensitivity in myself, but et patati et patata—']
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For such a surpassingly clever engineer, Monsieur de Foncé is remarkably ignorant on some subjects and well deserves to be infuriated upon them.
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Do you know, [her laugh is quite sudden and clear, bright like a ringing bell.] I once mentioned Mr. Rutyer to him and he didn't know who I was talking about? Mind, this was after the man's appointment to Ambassador.
kill bill sirens
She grips the brief start of surprise on her own behalf and prepares to turn it to one on Val’s. ]
Truly?
Perhaps he is terribly unconcerned with anyone not holding the purse-strings for research projects! You ought to mention our Scoutmaster and Commander in passing to him as well, and then report back to me whether or not he is at all aware of them.
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As true as that may be - I could not be surprised by almost any facet of the Orlesian gentleman's inattention -, it is truly incredible to me that someone might have no idea who Mr. Rutyer is. Overlooking that he had been made Ambassador? Certainly. Why, it is frankly unbelievable given the man's character and I could fault no one for forgetting it. But you must admit, dear Alexandrie, he is a rather unavoidable presence.
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Perhaps Wysteria will take it for some flavour of irritation. ]
He is indeed.
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[She takes a deep breath, considers drinking from her dwindling glass, and then instead adds—]
We danced at Lady Barra's party for a turn at his invitation. It was very strange.
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Oh?
[ Alexandrie and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Curiosity. ]
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[And for a long, torturous beat, it's as if that really is all Wysteria has to say on the subject. She looks past the edge of the veranda and studies, for a moment, whatever view lies beyond it. And then she wrinkles her nose.]
He is a credibly good dancer, but I have no idea why he would offer when he is so fully aware that we find one another disagreeable. I'm not an imbecile; I know he has no more fondness for me than I do him. So his insistence on pretending otherwise serves only to put us both in some position where we are doomed to be miserable.
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It is, perhaps, a terrible truth of diplomacy that it sometimes has as much to do with learning how best to antagonize those around you as it does mollifying them.
[ She fishes a berry out of the glass, careful not to squeeze it so as to get juice on her glove, and does anyway. A noise of irritation, and she holds the berry briefly in her teeth to abandon the gloves to the side table before taking it up again to gesture with it. ]
Both are routes to learning what one wishes to know about a person, and both will allow you to nudge them about as you like. You really must not let him make you miserable.
[ Haha. ]
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[She makes a short, sharp noise into her glass (which is rather less empty than Alexandrie's).]
If the Ambassador requires practice manipulating people, he may look elsewhere.
no subject
Just so.
[ She eats the strawberry decisively. ]