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OOM: An Adventure in the Making
Courfeyrac had come to Bossuet and Joly's room many hours ago. Now, it occurs to him that perhaps he should attempt to remember why, because the purpose is bound to be important, or at least will distract from the cherubs glaring down at him with what he's sure is reproach.
'Who are you to judge?' he tells them, a bottle of something clutched to his chest. 'Why, you of all Heaven's being are sure to know what it is not your place; save it, dear children, and allow me to-'
...wait, he has forgotten. Is this absinthe? He squints at the label, and then holds it up in the air.
'Bossuet, what are we drinking?'

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The little group in the café has moved away from them, except for the young woman and one of the men: and those two look embarrassed and annoyed in the way of people who have had strangely-dressed confused drunks thrown at them. "Well--never mind, Mademoiselle. Courfeyrac, your instinct is correct. We shall take up arms! For Paris, for France, for the future!"
This is met by their quasi-captors with looks of irritated, patronizing, doubtful amusement, rather than cheers.
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Courfeyrac looks instantly delighted, and clasps Bossuet's arm in excitement. A chance to fight again for France! He will never say no.
The man, though, is looking suspicious and mutters something in the young woman's ear. Her eyes narrow, and she says, 'Courfeyrac and Lesgle? Are these code names?'
It takes a moment for Courfeyrac to understand what she means, or at least, a part of what she means. The context is still quite new to him. But then he beams, and says, 'no!'
Because surely if she has read that book, she will know they'll be on her side? And also she should like them quite a bit, seeing as they're famous.
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This isn't producing the desired effect, if the desired effect is welcoming laughter. But before anyone can quite tell what effect is produced, the sound of gunfire bursts suddenly much closer. The fighters in the café react instantly, some dropping down to cover and some stepping to peer sideways from the windows.
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'Do you have more weapons?' he says to Nina. 'Come now, we will fight with you; if you do not believe it, let us prove it with courage. A rifle, a musket, a bayonet even! You must have supplies, mademoiselle.'
He does not stop to ask Bossuet his opinion, because he does not have to; when it comes to fighting for freedom, they are all of one mind. And Nina, glancing from the window to the two of them, looks uncertain, but the man with her appears more pragmatic.
'Let 'em,' he grunts, and raises his gun to aim out of the window. 'We need all the help that offers. If they come at us instead, we'll shoot 'em.'
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"Grouchy lot," mutters Bossuet under his breath, as he has a look at the gun. It's...not really what he's used to. Presumably one can still point at something and fire, but--
"Christ, it's already loaded, do you think we're fucking around?" That's Nina's mother. Bossuet quails before her. Or anyway, he shuffles closer to Courfeyrac and nods in the direction of a window. They'll just try to be useful, shall they?
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There is a column of men marching up the road. Their uniforms are unfamiliar, as are the shape of their helmets, and the style of weapon in their hands. But the formation is not so new.
And behind them...Courfeyrac nudges Bossuet, and gestures with his head. A giant green thing, and it doesn't even have wheels. It seems to slide on runners. But that thing sticking out of the front is absolutely a gun, and it is immediately obvious that the pistols in their hands are not going to be a match for it.
'I think I have read about those,' he mutters. 'Oh well. No matter what magic exists, I am still sure a man cannot die twice.'
And with that, he points his gun out of the window, aims it and fires.
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The guns shoot astonishingly true, though there isn't much time to think about it once the soldiers start shooting back. Their guns are just as good.
If it weren't for the--tank!, Bossuet suddenly remembers--the fighters in the café would stand a fair chance at holding the location and scattering the enemy troops. And indeed, Lesgle is entirely game to hold the position as long as they can. There's something improbably comfortable about that familiarity. But as the tank turns towards them--turns its gun, that is--one of their new companions thumps him and Courfeyrac on the back and shouts in their ears, something about a cellar door and a fall-back point.
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But then the machine turns its giant gun in their direction, and dead man or not, Courfeyrac has to fight to swallow the ball of fear that crawls up his windpipe. He shoots until the pistol shoots empty, and then someone hits him on the back and starts to yell, and yes, a fall-back point would seem prudent at this juncture.
He and Bossuet seem to go through the door together, and as they do there is an almighty BOOM and the walls and floor shake as though the ground is going to crack open. He scrabbles to close the door after them...
...and wherever the are now, it is rather quieter than the place they have left behind.
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He scrubs his faec with one hand. "Now what?"
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But that'll have to wait a moment, while he hastily puts his gun away. There are people looking at him strangely, and he does not want to be accused of trying to kill someone.
'Paris,' he says, to Bossuet. 'This Labyrinth seems to like the place. Well, I have no objection to that; I have always been fond of it myself.'
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"An excellent city," he agrees. "Though apparently not the most pacific of holiday destinations. Now we seem to be..." He turns around, looking about him for clues about the Paris they've found.
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'...ah,' he says, his gaze travelling along the street filled with things he has only seen in pictures. Cars, they are called. They make the air smell funny, and it's rather warm, and there are a lot of people. All of them wear clothes in the style he has seen around Milliways, and it still feels faintly scandalous, on the women at least.
'It is the future,' he adds, though this is no doubt clear to Bossuet seeing as he's been here before. 'Do you recognise any of it?'
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Right on cue, someone pauses and snaps a phone picture of the 1830s gents, barely bothering to hide that he's doing it.
Lesgle thumps Courfeyrac's shoulder again for good measure, and then someone knocks into them with a brusque apology, because they are very definitely taking up space on a busy sidewalk.
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'Oh, for a shoulder of stone in your company, my friend. No matter! This is-'
He stops, as he's shoved again.
'...a thoroughfare of no little traffic, it seems. Shall we walk? The Labyrinth seems as though it will grab us as it wants, so we may as well see where we are. And I think I would not mind seeing the old place with its new clothes on, though I confess,' he looks around, his face blank, 'none of this seems a real Paris.'
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"This isn't where I came in before. Before, it was--well, in point of fact, it was about the site of the Musain. Now a different restaurant, something called Quality Burger. Hannibal Lecter seemed shocked by it, but--" Bossuet shrugs a shoulder. Do they really want to speculate about what would or would not shock Hannibal Lecter?
The street names are marked with little blue placards. Once they're out of the thickest foot-traffic, Laigle draws closer to the corner of a wall to get a better look. The name doesn't mean anything to him, though. He looks over to Courfeyrac and shrugs again.
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'I would not like to think how bad something must be to shock Lecter,' he says, darkly, and peers up at the street sign.
Rue Rambuteau. He returns Bossuet's blank look and pulls a face. 'Either it's entirely new, or just a new name for something old,' he remarks, and looks around again. There is nothing to give a particular clue, not even the ground itself. There are no cobbles any more, the gutters no longer run down the middle of the street, and everything is smooth and shiny.
'Keep going?'
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Here and there brightly-colored awnings jut out over cafés. "It's too bad we don't have any money," he remarks. "And that our drinks were confiscated by the Resistance. Not that I begrudge them! But still, something about an open café makes a man think of meals..."
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...
'...if you were not so dear to me, I should be vexed at you.'
Because food. He hasn't thought about food since they started drinking all those hours ago. But now, at a single mention, hunger punches him in the gut with frankly disgusting force. He clutches his stomach, and pulls a face.
'I begrudge the Resistance.'
He doesn't. He does glare at the cafés a little, and then walk on. But any vexation, real or imagined, melts away less than a minute later.
'Look.'
Rue des Prêcheurs.
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"...Well. Well!" The first time he came here he was at the doorstep of the Musain; now it's the Corinthe's turn. The two spots Hugo chose to bookend his life, or at least the portion of it of interest to a novelist. "Well. Paris has picked itself up and brushed itself off prettily, hasn't it. If we retrace our steps..."
Going back the way they came they reach the unfamiliar Rue Rambuteau--was it once the Chanvrerie??--and quite plainly a sign for the Rue Mondétour. "Welcome to Corinth, Courfeyrac."
Much more conspicuous than the street signs is a blue awning that reads BODY ONE lingerie.
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...well, he has no complaints about that, though he can only imagine Enjolras's face at seeing what the old place has come to.
He walks to a certain spot and stares off down the street, heedless of the people tutting at him as he refuses to yield. After a moment, he turns to look at Bossuet.
'It does look rather different from here.'
Is it maudlin, standing on the spot where you died? Probably. He throws it over almost at once, for that very reason, and comes back to look at the BODY ONE place.
'We should go inside,' he says, decisively. 'To see if it has changed much, yes? It's practically research.'
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In favor of lingerie. One of the windows shows a photograph of a naked woman: from the back, it's true, but it's a lovely view in its own right. "You were ever a diligent student, Courfeyrac." he says. "By all means, let us research."
He links an arm with Courfeyrac's as they enter, and prepares for astonishment.
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It really is. He can't even see her face, but he doesn't need to. In the interests of experimentation, he picks a tiny lace thing off a peg. It has two curved half-spheres, and it is easy to see what its purpose is, even without giant pictures to illustrate.
'Is this what they use instead of corsets, do you suppose? They ave nothing around their midsection?'
It's practically asking to catch cold, but he can't pretend he doesn't see the advantages.
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They're hardly the first young men to come in and gawp at the pictures of underwear models--and take things off the pegs--but they're certainly the first to do so looking like escapees from some period drama. The shop worker who approaches them--Can I help you?--looks more quizzical than disapproving.
"It's for his mistress," says Bossuet, loudly. "Wait, that's not what one says these days. --Girlfriend, it's for his girlfriend."
He's a helper.
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'I have been busy,' he says, shocked - shocked! - to the core at the insinuation that he might have been remiss in his learning in this area. 'Being dead is time consuming.'
The shop worker comes to his attention at this point, because a strange look comes over her face at these words. He replays them in his head. Ah. Yes.
'Well!' he says, brightly, and claps his hands together. 'My girlfriend, indeed. I am not sure white would suit, though. Do you have anything more...what shall we say? Scarlet?' He looks to Bossuet. 'A suitable colour for such a fine girl, would you agree, my friend?'
The assistant just raises her eyebrows. Clearly, they are nowhere near the strangest customers they've had in the place. She gestures around. 'This is what we have. Take your pick. If you have a specific desire in mind, I'm here to help.'
Courfeyrac looks again to Lesgle. 'Nothing is tailored!?' he says, in a stage whisper.
This is a shocking future indeed.
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The shop assistant raises her eyebrows again, more disdaining than shocked, and steps away. She's still watching, though.
But Lesgle is entirely accustomed to being eyed suspiciously by shopgirls. He'll keep on browsing, thanks. Oh, here's something scarlet! He holds up a little triangle of cloth for Courfeyrac's consideration. "Yes? No?"
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