René d'Herblay, alias Aramis (
afineseamstress) wrote2014-11-22 06:48 pm
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The box is there when he wakes, settled at the edge of the bed and almost hidden by Aramis' kicked up sheets. He stares down at it for a long moment, listening to Porthos move about in the kitchen, and when he is awake enough, Aramis drags the box to him to open.
Looking down at its surprising contents, Aramis smiles.
"Washing up!" he calls, exiting the bed with box in hand straight to the bathroom, where he wastes no time, fingers busy with more than the work of slipping the silk up and over his legs. If he is surprised, Aramis is equal parts impressed, stunned, and more warm than he's ever been in his life.
When at last he is set to rights, Aramis gives the corset a last tug and opens the bathroom door, walking the short distance to linger in the bedroom doorway. He gazes at Porthos' back as he rummages in the pantry and smiles, leaning his hip against the frame. "I believe I'll need some help with the string."
Looking down at its surprising contents, Aramis smiles.
"Washing up!" he calls, exiting the bed with box in hand straight to the bathroom, where he wastes no time, fingers busy with more than the work of slipping the silk up and over his legs. If he is surprised, Aramis is equal parts impressed, stunned, and more warm than he's ever been in his life.
When at last he is set to rights, Aramis gives the corset a last tug and opens the bathroom door, walking the short distance to linger in the bedroom doorway. He gazes at Porthos' back as he rummages in the pantry and smiles, leaning his hip against the frame. "I believe I'll need some help with the string."
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He brushes Porthos' knuckles with his thumb. "Would it help if the wedding were a simpler affair?"
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"Athos helped to pay," Porthos murmurs, a bit numb, "for things, but I don't want him to." He's so stubborn when it comes to money because he's meaning to earn it as best as he can. He follows, sinking down, and shaking his head vehemently. "I don't want it to be small because you don't want it to be small. I want what you want," he insists.
"You want a big affair," he says simply. "Me, too." Stretching, he digs out a few of the discs that Allison had left, showing them to Aramis. "Look what she's found me. They're cartoons, but they're fairytales and love stories. I love them," he confesses.
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He cranes his neck then, taking up the brightly adorned boxes. "Sleeping Beauty," he says. "These are moving paintings?"
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"They're all moving paintings," he agrees fondly, his fingers sliding into fond patterns, tracing the strings' marks along Aramis' torso, down to where the panties had hugged. "This one is my favourite," he raves. "It's beautiful." And he likes the way that everyone loves the Princess so much that she's to be protected and that protection means a happy life, out in the country.
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Setting the disc down for the moment, Aramis clears his throat, asking carefully, "Should we involve Athos in the finances?" Though the argument has ended, Aramis cannot help but feel that Athos still thinks them foolish. Suppose he tries talking them out of their home, talking Porthos out of children? Should the latter occur, Aramis might actually have to duel him. "The man has burdens enough without our finances."
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"It was us being ridiculous and overbearing that got him to be our friend," he says, wiggling his hips and shoulders and smiling happily when the story begins.
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Though, Aramis is right. If Athos means to be unhappy, then Porthos should avoid drawing himself into it. He rests his cheek on Aramis' shoulder, now, staring at the princess as she's brought to the woods with her three fairy godmothers, all equipped with care and magic.
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He rests his own cheek against Porthos' curls. "I will not be thwarted."
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The music is haunting and lilting, a melody that Porthos could hum in his sleep (or to a child in a crib, he thinks distantly). "You're as stubborn as Athos," he murmurs. "But you shouldn't worry. I want nothing more than to watch you raise children."
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He sighs and rubs his face against Porthos' hair. "This is a good tale for a child," he notes at length. "Little girls in particular would be enchanted. Perhaps you will show this to ours."
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"And what is her name?" he challenges. "I know you've thought of it."
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He turns his head. "Perhaps we might name her after yours."
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"Ana is a sweet name. Maybe Anabelle or something to make it a bit different from the Queen?"
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He stares down at their hands, swallowing to try and lose the lump in his throat. "You didn't know," he says vehemently, trying to remind himself that he's here and he's happy and he's not lingering in the past. He offers the briefest of smiles along with a shrug. "It's not your fault. I was a kid, my memory wasn't always very good."
"I always liked to think it was something pretty. Brigitte or Caroline or Eleonore." He had a lot of time to think of what it might have been, but not what it had actually been. "I'm still not sure if she even named me what I am," he admits. "Or if that's just what they call me, like we did Flea."
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"I picked du Vallon," he says, but he's leading somewhere else with this, tracing the pad of his thumb over Aramis' brow and the line of his jaw. "And I'm picking d'Herblay, too, if you'll gift it to me."
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Aramis swallows, finding his voice has gone a touch unsteady. "Perhaps Ana Lucia if it is a girl. Our Lucie."
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Rather than fear, he feels excitement in the smallest of sparks, but it's enough to make his heart beat a little faster. "And I'll show her the valiant prince battling a dragon," he murmurs fondly, for what's passing on the screen.
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"Neither of us set good examples in that respect."
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He grins at Porthos. "And with our tutelage, she may even insinuate herself into Athos' affections."
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