Closed;

Apr 19, 2010 15:12



[ Characters ] Mireille Duroc/unreadability and Silver/annealoncemore
[ Location ] A clearing in Schwartzwald, somewhere between Jamarrow and Childreams.
[ Date/Time ] 19th of April, early afternoon.
[ Warning ] Awkward honesty?
[ Content ] Mireille gets rid of The Mouse and Silver... hasn't learnt not to run around with knives.
_____

The mouse is the least of her problems... )

[silver wolf] mireille duroc, [silver wolf] silver

Leave a comment

annealoncemore April 20 2010, 11:47:32 UTC
By the time Mireille fully enters the clearing, the mouse has left - more accurately, has fleed the scene, managing to babble about historical figures even as it ran for its life. Silver directs his full attention to Mireille, eyes veiled and impossible to read (not that he's the most expressive guy to begin with.)

He hadn't anticipated the effect that seeing her, like this, would have on him. There is something eerily familiar about the way she walks (gracefully intent) and talks (her voice steady and clear) - all things he logically knows he remembers about her, but cannot associate with the man he is today.

A piece of his past, staring him in the face like this... Silver starts towards Mireille, almost involuntarily, the shock of seeing her like this affecting him more than it should, for a moment. Abruptly he stops himself and stands his ground, across the small clearing from her, unscrupulously but unencroachingly examining her features.

Does he have any real memories to compare her to, or is her face in his memory simply her face as it is now, substituted into his memories, a dream that pretends to be the truth? Certainly he has more facts than before, but if anything he has more questions than ever.

"Nn," he grunts by way of acknowledgment - oh yes, what a coincidence, and one he's not sure he entirely likes. "What are you doing here?"

The question is abrupt, but something about his tone... it's not warm by any means, but one must also remember that, being incredibly averse to small talk, Silver would have to actually care at least a little to even ask a question like that. Just don't try and point it out to him - I doubt it'd go down very well.

Reply

unreadability April 20 2010, 12:58:54 UTC
At his question, she lets her eyes wander across the clearing in search of… but the mouse is long gone. Looking down, correcting a fold in her skirt slowly, she takes her time to regain her composure. Deep breaths, difficult as it is in a corset, and the slight trembling of her hands not as obvious when they’re moving over the shadowy material of her dress. In her mind, she can hear her own voice, twenty years old and high-pitched from grief, I’m sorry, I shouldn’t have… not like I did…

Blinking once, the thought disappearing in a rush of others, Mireille raises her gaze, meeting Silver’s. That was then, this is now. She cannot take back the words she threw at him that night and if she were given the opportunity to go through it all once more, would she really not utter them, in the exact same way?

And would it change anything? Too many questions… Not that Mireille minds unanswered questions, they have their time and place, but Silver looks so unlike Michel Lavreau and she feels so unlike Mireille Barrault that it feels as if this particular inquiry has very little to do with them.

“I was beginning to fear for it,” she replies, matter-of-factly, “the mouse. Jean Louis…” A halt. Focusing on something, a peculiarly shaped sign pointing down a trail at the other end of the clearing, behind his tall form, Mireille moves forward. The distance between them lessens, step by step, until she is standing only metres away. “… didn’t appreciate its presence.”

He’s taller than Jean Louis. Now Jean Louis isn’t a very tall man and many men are taller than him, but something about Silver makes it seem very, very conspicuous. She looks up at him, knowing that her features are too blank for any real expression.

Reply

annealoncemore April 20 2010, 13:32:26 UTC
Jean Louis... it's not like Silver to get contemplative about other people's relationships, but even he must briefly wonder what sort of woman Mireille has to be to put up with Jean Louis's very particular way of talking and acting. Silver is frankly surprised she hasn't stabbed him in the face yet - God knows Silver would have.

And yet, for once, he and Jean Louis are in agreement.

"It was annoying," he comments flatly, matter-of-fact-ly. "It would be better if it spoke about something useful."

He stands his ground as Mireille approaches, turning briefly to follow the direction of her gaze before returning his full attention to her once more. Even if he hadn't recognised her at that party, there is something about her that stands out. Not her beauty, though she is beautiful, and not the way she carries herself, though it is distinguished; no, it's something about the way she looks at him now, expression so perfectly polite and perfectly blank that there is no way for it to be real.

Being able to become so detached, like that... keep it up and one day she might even give Silver a run for his money.

Back to the situation at hand, Silver now allows his gaze to follow the direction in which the mouse had gone. "You're going to great lengths, just for a mouse."

Again - it's not that he means to be blunt, and yet, so much detached cynicism about the world simply doesn't mesh well with his very straightforward way of speaking. His statement is not accusatory, but if anything, and particularly after their flowers conversation, he begins to feel the tiniest hint of curiosity at her ability to care about these little things.

It's possibly more bewildering even than sex.

Reply

unreadability April 21 2010, 16:49:35 UTC
She averts her eyes when he speaks. Not because she doesn’t want to look at him, or can’t bear it, but because she wants to create for herself a moment to think. With how their discussion went last time, with how he allowed her opinion its existence, but didn’t understand it… Mireille doesn’t want to fight a losing battle, simply for the matter of fighting it. Too many of those take up space in her life already, lost wars, lost causes. Silver is still more of a stranger than a friend and she will not assign him that role if she can at all avoid it.

He has struggled enough already. Is struggling enough, judging by the knives in his hands, the blades catching the sunlight and reflecting it onto the trunks in glimpses of gold.

Turning her attention back to him and meeting his gaze, she shrugs lightly. Perhaps it is because he is a man and she is a woman; a shred of maternal warmth making her more likely to care for such details. Yet, she finds it an illogical conclusion - between the two of them, he is the one who has been a parent and she has never seen herself naturally fitting the role of a mother.

“It cannot help its ways,” she tells him, evenly. It must seem an easy answer, but to Mireille it isn’t. Not with every of its implications.

People have reasons and agendas; plans they will lie, cheat and murder to see into existence. Flowers and mice only have the characteristics of their kind; like children. Innocence isn’t forever, she knows. Better than most. Just because she has had to give up on hers…

The line of her mouth tightens. Even if she dirties it with her own half-truths, why then not value innocence when it is presented to her? In the same way she leaves her mark on it, it might leave its mark on her.

Or so she hopes. At least.

Reply

annealoncemore April 22 2010, 15:49:48 UTC
Silver is suddenly acutely aware that he is still holding two items of some faceless inhabitant's cutlery. Un-self-consciously, as if it is a perfectly natural and absolutely rational thing to be doing, he picks out and walks purposefully towards a clean and even boulder whose surface floats above the carpet of twigs and leaves. Carefully - they're hard-earned knives, you know! - he sets down both knives, before turning back to his conversation.

In this moment, she reminds him of Ray. It's not that Ray would go out his way to save a talking mouse, or even be able to express a sentiment like the one she just had without laughing. No - it's that, like Ray, she has seen the world for what it is at the core (he can see it in her eyes, in the way she forms her words, even when he isn't trying to see it - oh, even when he's trying not to see it). It's that she has seen the blackness that bubbles and rots beneath this calm veneer, but has chosen to continue holding her beliefs. It's not even that her beliefs are anything like Ray's, and it's not like her beliefs are logical, anyway, and yet... each time they speak, she becomes more and more difficult to ignore.

Silver cannot envy the mouse its innocence when he cannot imagine seeing the world through any set of eyes but his own, grey-lensed glasses though he may permanently wear. He cannot even praise it for being true to itself - that is something reserved for those who have been forced to face the true depth and darkness of which they're capable. If there's to be any principle behind this creature - as Mireille seems so intent on finding - perhaps, Silver concludes, it's that some people can find something worth protecting in almost anything.

Honestly, Silver doesn't get it at all.

"Anyone can say that for themselves. It's no excuse."

A sentence like that has nothing to do with the mouse, when you get to the bottom of it. Silver, of all people, has the most cause to say something so flatly realistic. After all, perhaps those who murdered his family and wounded him could not have helped their ways; however, he certainly hopes he is not expected to forfeit his vengeance on them on those grounds alone, or in fact at all. If all creatures are products of their natures, then the only grounds on which to judge are the consequences of what they do.

And let's face it, it was a pretty annoying mouse.

Reply

unreadability April 22 2010, 21:29:59 UTC
Following his movements with her gaze, she can’t help but wonder what a man like him needs such a collection of knives for. Eyes narrowing for a second, she folds her hands in front of herself, fingers interlacing easily, although she can feel the skin on her fingertips beginning to grow callous from the sudden add of manual labour. When has she ever had to prepare dinner herself? Or do the dishes?

As he speaks, she heads for a smaller boulder next to the one he has chosen for table, leaning against it gingerly - as not to get her dress dirty. As long as she doesn’t have much else to wear, it won’t do, washing it time and again. His words sting, flatly, because in another world, at another time, she would have been very likely to agree with him.

Everybody carries the full weight of their own choices. Free will is a privilege that comes with its own obligations; consequences one must stand by. Mireille has chosen the very position in which she has stranded. Even through the thick veil of pretence she so likes to wrap around herself, this is an undeniable truth. Spoken in Father’s voice.

Her lips tremble.

Not looking at Silver directly, she instead focuses on the way his hair reflects the light… strangely. Almost lifelessly. “You are right. It’s not an excuse.” Sometimes there simply is no excuse or if there is, it holds no purpose, but even in those situations… surely… “I suppose I was simply trying to explain.”

By now, she has come to understand that the two are not synonymous.

Reply

annealoncemore April 23 2010, 06:45:56 UTC
What sort of question is that? What kind of man doesn't need a collection of knives? If JL doesn't have a collection yet, Mireille should really tell him to man up and get started. For his part, Silver keeps an eye on the knives, but offers no explanation - she can ask if she wants to, but he has nothing to justify.

He finds a tree with a sturdy trunk and leans back against it, one leg propped up a little, looking at his ease but as always alert, maybe even tense. They're about two metres apart, a distance of closeness Silver is used to, in conversations - judged never by what is proper, but by what distance words should cross to ring most true.

Making excuses for a mouse like this, exerting herself to care for something so useless... the sheer illogicality of it is overwhelming. How can she gain any value from it, this... this unyielding need to care? Silver cannot fathom thinking with his heart even this much - after all, hadn't he said once he would never let the light of sadness touch him again? Didn't that extend, more than anything, to the light of all these unnecessary feelings?

And yet. Having anything, even this... unlike Mireille, Silver does not avert his gaze, focusing directly on her features as he contemplates her words. Even in doing something so frivolous as caring for a talking mouse, she seems to have some sense of purpose.

After all, she doesn't need to make her explanations to him. They owe each other nothing.

"More things like this will happen in the future. You should decide now how you feel about it."

His tones is casually flat, his words direct as always, spoken as if it is the only truth he can accept. If she is going to make a habit of something like this, she should at least know her own reasons.

As Silver will tell you (often and loudly), having a reason for something is a very good start.

Reply

unreadability April 24 2010, 19:10:15 UTC
How she feels about it? Blinking once, she meets Silver’s direct gaze, features blank. Against her back, the boulder is hard and lukewarm from a long exposure to the sun. She knows it’s important to her - caring, because it’s all she has left. Of Father’s spirit. His embrace, the way he would overstep boundaries others allowed to dictate their lives. The very reason she agreed to Jean Louis’ plan… that Father’s caring spirit should not disappear with the man who had possessed it.

Mireille is no naïve schoolgirl. She knows the workings of politics well; knows the shadows of its backside. Even so, she wants to focus on… on… Jean Louis taking her hands in his, telling her they will surely win. Michel Lavreau reaching out for a scalpel, his fingers brushing those of his wife as she hands it to him. Her younger self holding on to her father’s pale, lifeless hand for dear life.

Her hands have been quite powerless since that moment, haven’t they? Mireille raises one hand slowly to look at it; her soft, pale skin slowly hardening from the manual labour she has to do here. Her wedding ring glints in the light. Through the bars of her wide-spread fingers, Silver looks very free.

“I do feel helpless sometimes,” she admits, though none of the actual feeling is evident in her voice. It’s only halfway a conclusion and she doesn’t know why she would ask this person something like this, because she doesn’t know him. They are not close, and is this not something to tell the people dearest to your heart? However, she thinks he will accept it for what it is and it makes the words flow more easily. “I have learned to care, but…” Her hand drops to her side once more. “It isn’t always enough.”

So many times, she has let Jean Louis know her views and opnions and seen it have no real impact. He leaves it be and she stumbles along. Without explanation. Even without any excuses. Yet, for all it's worth, however little, it’s all she has and thus it matters.

Reply

annealoncemore April 25 2010, 07:54:58 UTC
Learn to care? Focus on good moments? Those concept do not quite commute. Don't let those precious moments fool you, Mireille; no matter how much good may exist in the moments we share, at the end of the day, nobody's actually special or valuable at all. Isn't that a cheerful thought?

Silver knows better than anyone: caring will only disappoint you, if you are foolish enough to even attempt it in the first place. The only thing anyone can do is kill before they're killed, and keep living - and even then, he can't be sure why.

And yet. As long as she is able to latch on to something - as long as she can pick one path out of the din - then there is sure to be people who feel the same way. Even if he can't understand it. Should he envy her the resolution to choose this path, or just be confused that she can muster up the strength and will to see so much good in a world like this?

"Calling yourself helpless is an easy excuse," he replies instead - not going near that "caring" comment, knowing by now that he's just doomed to have these irresolvable differences with everyone he meets. His tone is direct but very casual, not so much an accusation as the statement of a fact. His gaze does not leave her features.

"You have more power than the people you're deceiving with your charade, anyway."

Given the harsh nature of the words, he actually doesn't sound angry or forceful at all - after all, it doesn't really have much to do with him, it's just... true. And Silver is always happy to state the truth, no matter how awkward a truth it may be.

Reply

unreadability April 25 2010, 14:10:29 UTC
His tone isn’t rude, there’s no challenge in his words to detect, but even so Mireille balls her hands into fists at her sides and looks away from his face, sharply. She is well aware which position she has placed herself in, by agreeing to Jean Louis’ plan. Her pride demands of her to hold on to her belief in it, in him, but her integrity is tossing and turning in her stomach, a constant reminder that something is not quite right. Never has been. Something too important to be overlooked is missing, but she can’t find it and whenever she grasps for something of a somewhat similar shape, it slips through her fingers.

If that is not being helpless, she doesn’t know what is. Of course, it is not a state of mind she has willingly chosen, but she sees no way out of it… Mireille can’t expect Silver to understand, though. If she were to draw the parallel to how he could do nothing when his family died but look on from a safe distance, she would remind herself too much of Jean Louis, and that, that, she couldn’t bear.

Besides, he lost his memory. All she has lost… No, she has no excuses anymore. Not even her dreams.

Instead she stares off into space. All she sees is memories that have little effect. “Knowledge is only power when it is common,” she tells him, her voice strained, “Jean Louis may think he is in control like this, but -” There is a moment of silence when she realises she is about to speak very poorly of her husband to a man who could be a compromise to his, their, plan. She presses her lips together, eyes narrowing. It holds no importance here and once they return to Luxembourg… Perhaps he will see reason now, so far away from his strings and puppets. “- in the end the power resides with the people. When their approval wears thin, no impostor will ensure Jean Louis his position.”

Mireille contemplates her own words for a moment. In this, if nothing else, Father’s will is carried out, at least. When they have something to say, the people will speak. Surely. Because they must. It is all she has to rely on.

Reply

annealoncemore April 25 2010, 15:20:07 UTC
Silver looks at her sharply, then - surely if she thought, as Jean Louis claims to think, that their actions are for the good of the nation, she would at least sound more sad at the notion of losing their position. Still... he supposes it doesn't really concern him, one way or another. As long as they're not doing anything overtly wrong, if they want to play games, then that's for them to do. He has no time to pay attention to something like that.

For Silver, what she's talking about isn't the real world at all - it's politics. Perhaps the power rests with the people, but as far as Silver is concerned the power rests with those who have something to do and the means to do it. As for politics, as for the coming-together of thousands of events, the reputations and situations that take years to build... it is a field of consideration well beyond Silver.

After all, Silver is not a patient man.

"Will you wait for times like those instead of making something happen for yourself?"

That's Silver for you - always focusing on actions, determined that once a person knows their reason for doing something, there is no excuse not to do it. You talk the talk, Mireille - all this about caring, about not wanting to be helpless - but when it comes to the things you can do with your own two hands...

Can you walk the walk?

Reply

unreadability April 25 2010, 18:53:44 UTC
She would like to think that it isn’t his fault that an angry blush finds its way into her cheeks. Unlike Jean Louis, Mireille doesn’t tend to blame others for her own unconstructive reactions. Her reactions are her own and she will have to deal with them when they occur, be they faulty or fully legitimate. Had it been anyone else saying something like this to her, perhaps she could have told herself her indignation was understandable, but this man… this man who has lost everything and asks for so little… He, if anyone, has the right to be demanding towards her, even when he demands something she isn’t sure she can give.

Even so, her motions are angry when she straightens up and steps away from the boulder. One step closer to him, the knives laid carefully out on the rock next to her shining silvery. First Jean Louis, now Silver… always asking her to do. Of course, because both of them are male - Mireille is no feminist but to believe a woman has the same range of options of action as the man next to her is unrealistic. Not to mention how, most obviously, she and Silver are not from the same circles of society. Every restriction that weighs double on her, he doesn’t get to carry on his shoulders at all.

Tone insistent, she raises her chin. “I do what I can.” And it’s the truth. Unfortunately that truth also entails that what she can isn’t as much as she would want it to be. A long moment passes when she simply focuses her gaze on him, his alert stance, the way his body looks toned - not a man who spends most of his time at dinner parties eating himself fat over diplomatic particularities. What do they have in common, besides the shared moment of losing everything? She, because he couldn’t wake her father from the dead. He, because she had asked him to anyway. Mireille looks away, attention caught by the shining blades on her left.

“Not everybody can be carrying knives with them to cut through the obstacles they face,” she continues. Gently.

She admires him for his resolve, but she possesses neither his skill nor his objective. Not that she perceives herself weak or aimless; Mireille does what she can with what she has.

If she didn’t, she wouldn’t be able to live with herself.

Reply

annealoncemore April 26 2010, 03:20:56 UTC
She's right, of course - and if Silver were anything like the type of person capable of seeing in greys, he would understand. Unfortunately, his world is black and white and a line drawn down the middle; it's hard enough for him to decide where he himself rests. If he is to see the greys, well, someone with a much stronger connection with the intricacies of the world would have to paint them in for him.

So it's good he has Mireille around to voice these confusing truths, right?

Silver watches Mireille move, noting her agitation without comment or apparent reaction. She's a woman, yes, but she's also the state minister's wife and the "president"'s daughter; surely she has a great deal more power than most. Because Jean Louis definitely listens to her opinion all the time, right? At least, she should - as anyone does, really - have the initiative to try for change, if she has anything resembling a reason to do it.

Following the direction of her attention, Silver also wanders over to the rock on which his knives are lying - bringing them closer together, her expression clear and firm under the sunlight that seeps through the canopy of leaves, his own features as intense yet unreadable as ever.

Was it easier for him, to move through the world without the constraints placed upon others, to live and die by his own two hands? He picks up a knife, thoughtfully, searching for his own reflection in the silver-grey length of the blade, momentarily blinded by the sunlight that catches and reflects off the shining surface. Certainly, he has his own freedoms - something he hardly likes to think about, coming so close as it does to finding a silver lining to the giant grey cloud that is his life. And certainly, he's capable of cutting through obstacles when they arise.

Even so, it's not as simple as that. "That doesn't help when I don't know who my enemies are."

There's irritation in his voice, the kind that's bubbled and brewd for a while. It's not exactly aimed at her - it's just that the problem with only caring for so few things as Silver does is that, when you come to a dead end, it's hard to find anything else to do. And being here - no corrupt politicians to kill, no family's death to avenge - oh yes, he's very much having trouble finding something to be his purpose.

Not that that isn't, you know, the story of his life anyway.

Reply

unreadability April 26 2010, 15:40:52 UTC
Close up, Mireille recognises his eyes. Not the look in them, but everything else. The colour, the shape, the particular way he squints a bit when concentrating on something - all as she remembers Michel Lavreau that day, bending over Father’s bleeding torso, trying to undo the damage. Is it strange, feeling bonded to a person over something as feeble as an unpleasant, long-gone memory? Especially when, between the two of them, she is probably the one who remembers it most clearly.

Are they friends? Are they enemies? Acquaintances? Are they at all familiar? She has grown up in a world where relations of any kind are of the utmost importance and having them labelled correctly even more so. One has to strike the best match, be it in friendship or marriage, to climb the social ladder, to conquer more ground. Names. Faces. To remember them and remember them well is the only life preserver available.

Silver isn’t Michel Lavreau. It might be Lavreau’s eyes and Lavreau’s face, but it isn’t Lavreau’s name or his life. Mireille has nothing to draw upon.

"Is it really that important?" she asks, walking up next to him - not shoulder by shoulder, it wouldn’t be proper, but a few feet apart, both of them looking down at the knives. Judging by the experienced grip he has on the knife in his hand, his enemies are of his own making, implying, of course, that so are your friends. Reaching up her hand to the pendant of her necklace, she hesitates. All she has to go with is that she, for some unexplainable reason, wants to be familiar to him. That is what she wants him to make of her. What she has already made of him.

Out of nostalgia, perhaps, if she is cynical. Guilt, if she were still raw and bleeding.

If she is truthful, though, Mireille knows it’s neither of those. She doesn’t know what draws her to him. She observes, he asks for her reasons; but she has no reasons beyond what she sees.

In the blade of the knife he is holding, she sees his reflection.

Reply

annealoncemore April 27 2010, 11:54:09 UTC
Silver doesn't believe in girly shit like having bonds between people, but surely... if he can be useful to her and she can be useful to him, then they're worth something. It may not be much - it may not even be value so much as convenience - but it's enough to distinguish each other from the crowd. For him, that's all the reason he needs to stalk and kidnap keep tabs on her.

And as for the fact that she breaks through his silver-grey fog, in a way even Ray never did, that when she speaks he is forced to listen no matter how irrational or ridiculous her words logically are... well, let's just not think about that. We don't want to break Silver's brain yet.

For a moment their eyes meet in the reflective surface of the blade - an odd way to look each other in the eyes, he thinks. As always she is almost impossible to read, but perhaps that in and of itself is a tell-tale sign of some sort of feeling. His own expressions are certainly no less impassive than hers.

He is the first to tear his gaze away, turning the knife in the same movement so that it is merely a glint of steel under sunlight, nothing that can reflect anything about him. Oh, yes, he will use those knives when he needs to. He will use everything at his disposal.

"It's all I have!" His words are ambiguous and he doesn't clarify his meaning; for a moment even he wonders what he means. Surely a more ideal person (a him from the past, even) would tell him he is so much more than his revenge, but he is in no state to believe something that comes down to a blank and useless reassurance. How can he be complete in any sense, how can he achieve closure and attempt to move on, when he has not had his revenge? Now that he knows who he is, is it not doing himself a disservice to simply abandon the path he has almost found?

The truth is that he has no answer to these questions - just more questions. It's how he has learned to live.

Reply

unreadability April 28 2010, 10:56:57 UTC
She watches the knife move, turning into an almost beautiful arch of silver cutting through nothing, and then - at his outburst - she turns her attention to Silver. Directly. With nothing standing in the way; reflections or shadows or distance.

He may not be aware of it; surely he isn’t, if he were, he would not argue with her over her choice of words - but what he is saying is similar to what she is feeling. Even if no one else asks her why she stays, with Jean Louis, with his all too ambitious plan and all the lies it entails, Mireille does question herself. In the dark of night. And the answer she finds is this: It’s all she has. It’s not much. It’s not in any sense or definition good, but she has no choice but to make of it what she can. She has nothing else.

Once it was enough. A long time ago. When Jean Louis was still the man Father had trusted, and she was still her father’s daughter, ideals and beliefs intact. All that is gone now. Long gone. Silver fights his way back, or his way onwards, with his knives and his choice of revenge. She fights, too - but her battle doesn’t require any physical weapons, only words. Too many words.

“It's like that sometimes,” she says. Simply. "I know." It leaves her previous question redundant, but that’s the difference between them, isn’t it? Blood spilled always matters. Words…

Mireille has been married to a talented politician for too long not to know how feeble an existence words live.

Reply


Leave a comment

Up