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R ([info]vagueambition) wrote in [info]wariscoming,
@ 2014-09-13 14:30:00

Previous Entry  Add to memories!  Tell a Friend!  Next Entry
Entry tags:grantaire, lagertha

Who: Grantaire and Open or works as a narrative
When: Early evening, after he and Enjy discussed feeeeels
Where: Outside. Out of the inn. Because dnw
What: Idek he does this to me with the feels right now and demands it be written. Carry on


Grieve properly, he'd said. Remember her because she deserved it. Grantaire wondered sometimes for all of Enjolras' intelligence if he really thought about the things he said. Didn't he understand that grieving and remembering her was exactly what he'd been avoiding for years, now? He didn't give a damn what Enjolras thought was fair to her. She was dead. She had left him to face this alone and all he cared about was what was fair to him.

The problem with that, of course, was that he knew just how much of a lie it was. He cared. He still loved her and missed her, and every day he was sober he felt that. How angry he was that she'd gotten sick. How unfair life had been to take his parents and the woman he'd loved from him. How much he couldn't breathe with the thought of her being gone. And he couldn't help but feel bitter when Enjolras talked about fairness, when he had Eponine. She was the first person Enjolras had loved like that, and he didn't understand because he hadn't lost her. God willing he never would. But not wanting Enjolras to experience that didn't stop the comparison when he was feeling this way.

He surprised himself when he didn't walk with purpose to the first place outside of the inn that he could get a drink. Not that he had much chance of that in the inn anyway, with Enjolras locking cupboards and watching him like a hawk whenever he was in the same room. He liked it, he wouldn't pretend he didn't like the caring his friend was showing him. He'd be fooling no one if he tried to pretend he didn't like any kind of attention from Enjolras. But after their last conversation, it had felt suffocating. So he'd taken his chance as soon as he'd left the room for a moment, and slipped outside.

Purpose or not, he'd ended up in the middle of Lawrence without his phone, surrounded by far too much temptation and no way to distract himself. He'd tried drawing once since he'd gotten back. And he'd sworn there and then to never attempt that again sober. The pictures he found in the book were bad enough without trying to draw with a shaking hand. It had only started when he'd picked up the pencil, too. He wasn't particularly interested in trying to figure out what that meant.

Finding himself back near the park where he'd first ended up here, he nearly laughed. Arriving and tripping over his own feet was probably the perfect argument that could be used against drinking. Even without all the other arguments Enjolras had used. That he was a better person when he didn't (he remained unconvinced), that it was better for his health (it had been hard to argue against that one, admittedly).

When he'd done nothing but walked in a circle and found himself almost back at the inn he stopped, sinking down to sit none too gracefully on the curb. He crossed his arms over his chest, fingers curled in the sleeves of the shirt he was wearing. He wasn't going back inside, and he wasn't going to drink. He could do this. He could sit here in the quiet with his completely sober thoughts, with nothing to distract him. He could absolutely be alone and function like any normal person could. Even if normal people didn't freak out and walk out and not tell their friends where they were going and end up sitting in the gutter. No, he was fine. He absolutely wasn't trying to pretend it wasn't all he wanted to find the nearest bar and get himself completely blind drunk and forget everything that had made him start drinking in the first place.

He was fine.



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[info]couldntkillme
2014-09-15 11:04 am UTC (link)
Lagertha's grin grew. She wasn't going to tell Grantaire what the phrase meant until he'd tried it out, although it certainly wasn't as incriminating as some of the things she could have got him to say.

"Very good," Lagertha said honestly, once Grantaire had made his attempt. People here seemed to struggle with the pronunciation of words in her language but, although Grantaire's accent made the words sound strange, by copying her, he had done a good job with the phrase.

"Now what do you think it means?" Lagertha had been surprised by the similarities between her own language and some words of modern English. She supposed it made sense, considering the history books she had read which said that her people had settled in England, made possible by the Great Heathen Army led by Ragnar's sons. It was hardly surprising that the languages had merged to create the English people knew today. She was sure, if people put their minds to it, they wouldn't have too much trouble understanding her if she spoke only in Old Norse. Still, people here were lazy - they didn't like having to think too hard - so it had been easier for her to learn English than to expect too much of people.

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[info]vagueambition
2014-09-15 11:17 am UTC (link)
"I have the feeling you are being very generous in saying that," he returned easily. He had for the most part gotten the words right, but they had sounded beyond strange to his ears. Then again, so had English, when he'd first arrived. And now it was what he was mostly speaking. Not necessarily by preference, but by necessity.

He honestly hadn't been expecting the question. Though given what he now knew of the woman sitting beside him, it was probably naive to imagine she would have made it that easy. "I may have studied literature, but that does not make me a linguist." Nor had literature been the preference, over art. Still, he couldn't help but consider the words and see if there were any he could figure out. "I would assume litil is small. Genta...sounds like it should be gentle, but these are not particularly intelligent guesses."

There was also the simple fact of concentration not being his friend, of late. It was yet another mark against attempting this for Enjolras. What point was there in not drinking if he could not even hold intelligent conversation?

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[info]couldntkillme
2014-09-15 11:31 am UTC (link)
Lagertha smirked. "Perhaps a little generous, but you should know me well enough by now to know I do not lie." Lying only clouded people's judgement and gave them false impressions. Where enemies were concerned, she could see the use in lies and subterfuge, but, with friends, she found it was far more beneficial to communicate openly and honestly. Honesty was all she asked from her friends.

"You are right about lítil. Genta is perhaps not so close to English. It means girl. You said, 'You fight like a little girl.' I thought it might prove useful to you at some point." Lagertha smiled, almost cheekily, picking up her coffee again and taking a sip. "It is one of my favourite insults to use on the battlefield. Men seem to take great offence at being likened to little girls, although some of the little girls I have known have been stronger in mind than even the greatest warrior."

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[info]vagueambition
2014-09-15 11:42 am UTC (link)
"I had an inkling, yes." His expression closely mirrored hers. Because honestly, who could miss it? And as with their earlier talk of being pathetic and whiny, he appreciated it more than if she had sat there and told him lies about how strong he was being, or some nonsense. He wasn't strong. He wouldn't be in this position if he was, and he hated that enough to want to simply ignore the thought.

"I'm not surprised that they do," he replied without trying to hide his humour. "Particularly from a woman. No offence intended," he added perhaps needlessly, because it was clear from the way he'd said it alone he was being more ironic than anything else. Grantaire didn't hold any particular stereotypical notions regarding what the fairer sex could do. Spending enough time with someone as focused on equality as Enjolras ensured that. Not to mention the women he knew. Had known. It was impossible to think of people he thought of in such high regard as anything lesser.

Realising his thoughts had taken a melancholy turn again, he forced a humoured smile. "I'm sure I'll find a use for it, at some stage."

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