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Xavière Sevin ([info]bataille_) wrote in [info]toujoursliberer,
@ 2008-08-13 03:02:00

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Entry tags:jacques_belmont, leon_belmont, plot, xaviere_sevin

An identity to be uncovered.

Subject: Finding someone new to investigate
Where: Near the French Embassy
Who: Xavière Sevin, a French immigrant.
Warnings: None.
Open to: Jacques Belmont, and whoever would be around the French Embassy at late hours.

What an exhausting day of work. Xavière had just spent the past fourteen hours running from the market to the kitchen of an aristocrat here in England, and her refusal to converse was a prime opportunity for the servants in the kitchen to take advantage of a woman who they assumed to be dumb and deaf, putting her to much more work than she ever intended to do. Though, really, it made no difference, it wasn't as if she had family to visit or a large manor to return to expensively waste her day. Yes, it was better that she work, because though she was being overworked and openly mocked in words she could not understand- though the sneers and leering was enough signal- she was earning some sort of reward. 

This reward wasn't any sort of expense, however, hardly worth an hour's work. Xavière frowned as she looked down at the loaf of bread in her bag, the few coins jingling in her pocket. She had no idea what they were called, or what their value held in comparison to the livre, but she recognized the pieces as being able to trade her maybe another loaf of bread. 

Well, it was nothing to dote over now, at least she would manage for the next week. She would go back to the field, lie in the shabby shelter that was still somehow standing, all three walls. Though she really did destest walking at night, disliking the idea of being mingled in with the street "entertainers"- she held too much pride for such a lifestyle- she had already forgotten her way back to the field. She was hardly familiar with the English territory. And for the better. Stupid British folk.

It was two hours since she had left the manor in the centre of town was she still wandering the streets of England, walking past the French Embassy without giving a second glance. Her curses in French could be easily heard from a couple of feet away, she was tired and dragging her sword and bag behind her after fourteen hours on her feet made nothing easy.



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[info]ex_the_ambas216
2008-08-13 01:51 am UTC (link)
Léon only worked late when he had to, when there was a political emergency or some dire straits that France needed to be saved from. In those cases, however, the whole house was usually a hive of activity, with secretaries, aides, translators running all over the place in order to divert themselves from catastrophe, every candle in the house lit until it was almost as bright as a summer morning inside the Embassy, and Léon, the Ambassador and master of this house, who be in his office, surrounded by officials and paperwork, and he would solve France's crisis.

There was none of that now. There was no one else up, as far as he knew. He had planned to go to the Theatre that evening, but having been rejected the last few nights he had attempted to visit, he found himself favouring the Bridge Theatre less. Perhaps he would go tomorrow, and see then if he was missed. Or send a gift, that, after all, was normally enough to win back Nell's favour.

Instead, he was pouring over the accounts, a candle pulled close to the large book, and Léon was gently murmuring to himself as he copied down the figures into a smaller pocket book he held in his other hand. There was no noise aside from the scratching of his quill and the mumbled French, and that, at least, was a blessing.

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