Enjolras (
pro_patria_mortuus) wrote2015-08-15 08:18 pm
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Enjolras is not, on the whole, a man with a great deal of appreciation for the beautiful outdoors. He's a city boy, and a man whose interest is mostly occupied by people, and abstract concepts concerning people.
But Milliways is a very enclosed place, and a very boring place, and there's no city to go walking in here. And Enjolras is also a fairly athletic man, who would prefer a lot more exercise than one easily finds around this place.
All of which is to say: he's out for a walk. At the moment, he's just stopped by the stables.
But Milliways is a very enclosed place, and a very boring place, and there's no city to go walking in here. And Enjolras is also a fairly athletic man, who would prefer a lot more exercise than one easily finds around this place.
All of which is to say: he's out for a walk. At the moment, he's just stopped by the stables.
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...Enjolras is aware that, by dint of his upbringing and personality, he has an unfair shortcut into a medieval English nobleman taking him seriously. He can hardly undo that, but he's conscious of it as a problem.)
Anyway. Obediently, he follows! To the tack room, and then to saddling and bridling the mare Harry indicates.
He's more used to a groom handling this, but he was certainly taught how to do it. He's not as briskly efficient as he could be, but competent.
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He leads Duncan out to wait for Enjolras, where he may find them mid one-sided conversation, Harry bent low over Duncan's neck murmuring affectionate nonsense.
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He leads her out as well, and mounts with thoughtless ease. It's not the carelessness of a man who's spent days and years in the saddle -- he's neither cavalryman nor cowboy, just athletic, and the son of an officer and merchant with plenty of money to hire tutors.
Shall they?
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It's not particularly conducive to much more than small talk, and riding is one of the few times that Harry is even-- shocking, yes-- content to be silent.
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(After the gallop, they have to circle around to retrieve Enjolras's hat. Oh well.)
He's looking
photogenicallywindblown, but quietly content, when they amble back to the stable. So is Rachat.no subject
"What thinkest thou of her?" he asks, registering his own approval of Duncan's conduct with a carrot he fishes out of his pocket. Yes, Duncan, he was holding out on you all this time.
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Rachat, for her part, noses at Enjolras's pocket in hope, and juuuust gently enough to not have her nose pushed away for bad manners. "No, I've nothing for you," he tells her, but he does scratch her neck in apology.
"A good horse, and willing," he says to Harry. "And good at her paces -- much better than I'd've thought for a horse who's available for all to ride unquestioned. I liked her fine."
This kind of sounds like damning with faint praise, but there's real approval in his voice and in the way he pats her arching neck. And they both could see her conformation and responsive speed perfectly well.
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He hadn't thought of it.
"Well, either way, they seem good horses."
And not, oh, sentient or mechanical or about to sprout wings or talk, or whatever.
It's still a strange thought. Milliways.
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"When next thou hast a wish to ride, or need a companion in't, I would glad accompany thee."
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And not worry about it if he doesn't find him or if one of his other friends wants to go riding with him or some such, of course, but a casual hey let's hang out again sometime agreement is just fine with him. This was fun.
(Enjolras, despite some occasional allegations of his friends, is capable of having fun! Just only mildly, occasionally, and in the background of more pragmatic activity.)
He presses a hand to Rachat's chest -- not too hot; good -- and glances at Harry with Duncan. "Does he need walking out, or shall we put them away?"
Or turn them out to pasture, or... whatever the habits of this barn are. He hasn't observed closely enough to be sure.
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So there's a quietly, companionably busy while of taking off bridles and saddles and (for Enjolras) remembering which peg they came off, and brushing down horses, and checking hooves (again, something Enjolras is competent but not notably efficient at), and leading them out to the pasture Harry indicates as the correct one for them, and so on.
It's nostalgic -- far more powerfully so than Enjolras had expected. Of France and home all around, as the smell of a stable is, but especially for his boyhood in Auvergne, and lessons under his tutor's gimlet eye and his father's mild, keenly observant one. He feels a nagging sense of dislocation, of home just out of sight; not exactly unpleasant, and certainly not unfamiliar, but complicated.
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"Well then." He grins. "Have I made thee too long the truant?"
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"From the pressing engagements of my busy schedule? Certainly."
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"Why, Feuilly is ever running from place to place, ever has some business in hand-- I did think it the French way."
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That's because Feuilly, despite being just as intensely justice-focused as Enjolras, is a man who had a day job most of his life, and is consequently much better at figuring out how to have hobbies.
(Most people are better at figuring out how to have hobbies than Enjolras. But Feuilly is also better than some of the rest of them at figuring out how to have hobbies that don't require a bustling city full of peers and shared pop culture.)
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"Well! We idle men will find a way. Thou canst teach me-- what was it called? With the-- the walking-stick?"
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"Yes, whenever thou likest -- dost thou have one?"
Easily gotten from Bar, if not.
Also, you know, practice padding is an option, but they may not need it for the first lesson or two anyway, depending on how different it is from what Harry knows.
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"Will Mistress Bar provide one? Does she think it a weapon?"
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So clearly not!
Which is convenient, and points to the technicalities of the no deadly weapons rule as clearly as all the glass bottles of strong alcohol she gives out. A walking stick is the kind of thing any gentleman of the middle class might carry in Enjolras's day, and many of them would think little of it -- but, in the hands of a skilled bâtonniste, it's three feet of hard wood that can break a leg or a skull.
But then, anything can be a weapon, with enough skill or enough desperation behind it. There's no way to avoid handing them out. Enjolras knows this to his bones, and assumes Harry does too.
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"Why, shall I go beg one of her, then?"
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He smiles back, much smaller, but genuine.
"Sure. --Where should we go? There's a room upstairs I use often, but thou mayst practice elsewhere."
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"O, we do but practice nearby, Feuilly and I-- but 'tis no proper sort of place at all. But this room I would gladly see."
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Barwards let them go!
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