Snow, Snowball Fight, Winter Wonderland, The Triumvirate
I'm late this this event, so I just mashed together some prompts and came up with this. This takes place in my AU setting I'm writing about. Here's the link to AO3. (Word count: 1500 words). @brickmas
City Gate, Southeastern Paris - Early November, 1831
As autumn died, and the beautiful golden hues adorning the trees of Boulevard de lâHĂŽpital vanished, replaced by a dirty and soot-covered blanket of snow, three sisters walked south to the city gate. The three girls were from the Jondrette brood, who were destitute and lived over at Gorbeau Tenement, somewhere along Rue du Banquier.Â
âC-c-crap, itâs freakinâ cold!â Azelma, the youngest, shivered, shoving her hands under her armpits for warmth. She wrapped tightly in a woolen blanket but the wind still bristled against her skin.Â
âGet a grip, âZelma, we only just left,â Ăponine said, her voice muffled by her popped collar which covered the lower half of her face, âStill got a long way to go, so donât bother complaininâ.â
Ăponine was dressed in a threadbare, drab-colored woolen cloak that hung low around her shins and was buttoned up all the way to her collar. She also wore a heavy pair of menâs workboots which clopped loudly with every step she took. She walked facing ahead and stood upright.Â
Azelma blew her tongue at Ăponine before turning to the middle sister, âHey, how come youâre not freezing your rats off, Câsette?âÂ
Iâm used to it,â Cosette deadpanned.Â
Cosette wore only her usual clothes - a white chemise in ruinous condition, and a frayed red skirt. She wore a simple black cap atop her head, letting her dark, tangled hair fall down to her back. She was wrapped up in an old shawl for warmth and wore a basic pair of flats and stockings. She stood with a hunched back and shoulders and kept her gaze low as she walked.Â
âYeah, but just that crappy old shawl isnât going to keep you very warm for too long, yâknow?â Azelma said.
âLet it go,â Ăponine butted in, âLarkâs only ever been an urchin, âcourse sheâs used to it.â
Cosette scoffed, âUsed to what? Listening to you yap on and on?âÂ
Ăponine snorted, âThere she is.â
âCâmon, Câsette, donât start,â Azelma groaned.
âWhat do you mean, âdonât startâ?â Cosette asked, âJust wondering how Princess over here got so pumped full of hot air.âÂ
Ăponineâs boots clopped harder with every step she took, before shooting Cosette a nasty look, âJust shut the hell up at the gate, Lark.â
When they finally arrived at the southeastern âGate of Italyâ as it was called, Ăponine went up to the guards and handled the talking.
âMessieurs, our aunt lives out in the country and she is terribly ill. Our parents must work and sent us to go look after her. Would you kindly let me and my sisters through?â Ăponine pleaded, while Azelma sniffled, and Cosette made herself look as pathetic as possible.
When the guards let them pass, Ăponine loudly proclaimed âGod bless you both, messieurs!â Before quickly scampering out into the countryside with the other two.Â
âHah, suckers,â Ăponine chuckled to herself.
âDone feelinâ proud of yourself?â Cosette asked, âWhoâs the mark this time anyway? âPa was being all hush-hush about the letter.â
âLeast I got somethinâ to be proud of,â Ăponine grumbled and pulled the packet in her hand out from under the cloak and took out the letter, âThe envelope is addressed to some AbbĂ© Carlos⊠Herrera? Some kind of foreignerâs name, but the letterâs addressed to some guy named Vautrin.â
She checked the address on the envelope, âHe ainât too far, just over there in Ivry,â Ăponine pointed over to the small but fairly affluent suburb in the distance, âLooks rich, kinda like Auteuil. Too bad the forest is on the other side of the Seine.â
The mention of a forest made Cosetteâs heart skip a beat. Indeed, across the Seine, loomed the great Vincennes Forest, standing like a dormant mass of brown among the snow. She looked away, preferring to keep her head down.Â
Azelma had a smile beaming on her face as she took in the surrounding countryside of Ăle-de-France, as it was caked in a thick layer of fresh snow.Â
In fact, snow was everywhere, as far as the eyes could see. The myriad fields that dotted the landscape were covered in snow. The still, unmoving windmills to their right were covered in snow, even the trees, somewhat, were covered in snow. The overcast, midday sky, was even white like the snow. Along the road, there were relatively few carriages and coaches rolling along, to or from Paris.Â
âLook at all that snow!â Azelma beamed, running ahead of the two older sisters, doing a spin and then diving head-first into a deep pile of snow.
âSo, whatâs the plan, âPonine?â Cosette asked, âYou ainât planning on stealinâ the money for yourself again, are you?â
Ăponine regarded Cosette from the corner of her eye, âWhatâs it to you?â
âNah. Figured youâd waste it on chasing that dumb blockhead next door.â
âYou ainât know nothinâ about him, so shut up!â Ăponine snapped.
â... Fine. Think you already know what Iâm gonna say anyway.â
âYeah, and you better not say it, Lark,â Ăponine grumbled, walking ahead, âHeard enough of you calling me ugly. Look at yourself in a mirror for once.â
Azelma was mock-buried inside a snowy gravy next to the road, giggling the whole time.
âWhat in the world are you doing, idiot?â Ăponine chided, ââPaâs gonna sell you if you turn into a block of ice.â
âAwesome,â Azelma stood up, brushing off the snow from her dress and blankets, âI for one, think Iâd fetch quite the price.â
Cosetteâs face twitched into a smirk for half a second, before she forced it back into her usual poker face.
âHey, look!â Azelma held up a snowball, âSnowâs still fresh!â
âThatâs filthy,â Ăponine rolled her eyes, continuing down the road. Each heavy clop of her boots could still be heard with every step.
âWell, someone woke up on the wrong side of bed,â Cosette said.
Azelma shot Cosette a conspiratorial look, âCâsette.â
âI didnât say nothinâ though.â
âYouâre about to do somethinâ anyway.â
Azelma snickered, âHey! âPonine!âÂ
Ăponine stopped, and turned, âWhat?â she asked, âHurry the hell up!â
âWh-â The snowball landed right on Ăponineâs face, âYeow! Brat!âÂ
âBullseye!â Azelma laughed, as Ăponine cleared the snow off her face.
Cosette couldnât help but to laugh along, âPffft, hahaha!âÂ
âUgh! You pigs!â The elder sister gathered a snowball and tossed it right at Cosette, landing on her shoulder, eliciting a sharp, âOw!â from her.
âOh ho ho ho!â Ăponine laughed haughtily, covering her mouth with a hand, âWhatâs the matter, Lark? Surprised by my aim?â
âYou asked for it, witch!â Cosette threw a snowball of her own.Â
âGrrr!â Ăponine threw two in succession, and Cosette returned by pelting the elder with two of her own.Â
âSnowball fiiiiiiight!â Azelma declared, before launching away at both Cosette and Ăponine, right as the elder sisterâs spat seemed to be focused on each other.
It was half an hour of snow and laughter later that the three Jondrette girls lay down along an incline, facing the city inside their own little beds of snow.Â
âYour aimâs worse than a guy pissing away in the wind, Lark,â Ăponine said.
âAt least I can actually see and use my head,â Cosette said, ââFraid if you tried knockinâ on that head of yours itâd sound just like an empty barrel.â
âCan you two put a lid on it?â Azelma asked, âYouâre ruining my beauty sleep.â
âWho told you to sleep on the job?â Ăponine rebutted, sitting up, her whole back covered in snow, âOh sh-â
Ăponine patted down her cloak frantically, âWhereâs that damned letter?!â
After a moment of panicked searching, she calmed down when looking at the large pile of snow they left from their earlier scuffle, âNevermind. Weâll just tell âPa Mâsieur Vautrin wants another letter.âÂ
âWhatâs it matter anyway? Weâll just have to come out here again to deliver it later,â Cosette said, âSâall life is, at this point.â
âDunno where you became such a cynic,â Ăponine rolled her eyes, receiving a deadpan stare from Cosette, âWhat? Livinâ like this sucks.â
âWhatever. All this sufferingâs pointless, anyway. Not like any of us asked to be born.â
A pensive silence fell among the girls letting the prickly winter wind massage their ears. They watched the traffic along the road to Paris, until they were shooed off from the property by the farmer.Â
âWhyâre we goinâ to Ivry?â Azelma asked, âWe already lost the letter.â
âWho cares, we came this far already, might as well see the sights.â Ăponine said.
Cosetteâs heart felt lighter the rest of the day. No doubt pelting Ăponine with snow helped her mood, but why waste it?
âIf you two cross the river to see the woods, Iâm goinâ home.â Cosette said.
âWow, lame,â Ăponine said.
âYou know what we need? A snow truce!â Azelma posited.
âNo!â Both Cosette and Ăponine said at the same time.Â
âFine⊠I was just trying to helpâŠâ The youngest grumbled.
The road to Ivry seemed a bit brighter.