madamemoreau:
“Oh, that’s funny,” Vivienne said, adopting a pensive expression. “I always thought you might be quite good to have around, if you need a punch or two thrown at someone.” She throws her friend a wink. “No idea why, but there you are!”
“Mmm. Well you’re definitely doing better than me then, love!” Vivienne glanced around them before wandering to a desk and perching on it. “Oh, not at all! If anyone forgets having the pleasure of your company, perhaps it’s best to assume the poor dear is a bit dim.” She pauses slightly. “That’s terrible, isn’t it? … Oh well, he’s not here to hear me. What do I care?!”
She wondered whose arm might’ve been lucky enough to be attached to Lusine’s that night. It hadn’t escaped her – over the years, as she’d gotten close to some of Paris’s ladies of the night – that there was a sizeable chance that some of their most generous clients might be gentlemen who Vivienne had shared the odd glass of wine or bit of chat with herself. Once or twice, she’d even wondered about mentioning a name or two, to see how astute her theories might be. Mostly, she had held off, thinking it was tacky. But she’d be lying if she said she wasn’t curious.
Vivienne’s gaze followed Lusine’s to the bookshelf. Before long, she couldn’t resist the urge to make her way over. “Well,yes, exactly! I should’ve taken that as some sort of hint, really. Old Reginald–” At least, she thinks that’s his name – “He must be about 91, by the look of him. I vaguely remembered him as being quite charming a number of years ago, so I had thought I might be in for some fun. He is sweet, in a rather musty way. Not much for dancing though, sadly.”
Her eyes fall on the book again. “Anything to note in that? A nice murder, or something? An earnest proposal of marriage, maybe?” A smile suddenly crosses her face. “You’re really a sappy romance reader? Hmm. I ought to have sent you one or two, to keep you company on your travels.”
“A musty way!” Lusine exploded into a bout of giggles. “Poor dear— both you and him. I’m unsure if there’s such a thing already, but if not, there really ought to be some type of etiquette-like classes for these men to take that will help them know how to properly interact with women.”
Lusine shook her head at the flipping pages beneath her. “Then again, they do just fine without it, don’t they?” she said with an apparent bitterness on her tongue. “Even if there was such a thing, their pride wouldn’t dare--”
“I’m rambling!” she said in a quick breath, snapped the book shut, and placed it back on the shelf. “Nothing interesting in here, I’m afraid, just numbers and such. It would be wonderful to open one of these bricks only to find that it’s been hollowed out with a copy of Venus in Furs tucked inside.” Her fingers grazed the many spines on the shelf before the hand dropped to her side. “Too much to wish for, I suppose.”
“Sometimes,” she admitted to the question. “They can be quite entertaining, depending on the story. Some are funny, some sweet, others are... well... Do you not indulge from time to time?”













