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The whole situation has become more and more frightening, to Porthos. The year seems to be more modern than Porthos could have ever dreamt up, and now he's got some kind of quarters. The lucky thing is that they're above the ones Aramis apparently now owns, despite neither of them having paid for any of this. It's enough to do his head in and that's even before he thinks of all the strange folk he's met today.
After briefly inspecting his own small quarters and divesting of his outer layers, Porthos locks the door and wanders downstairs to Aramis', picking the lock with a few easy twists of his fingers, letting him in while his mind starts to hurt from the hangover and the ache of too many changes.
"'Mis," Porthos calls out as he wanders in. "Don't suppose your place comes equipped with a whole lot of wine, because I need a glass or two. Maybe the whole bottle." He collapses down onto the sofa and pries his boots off, without even bothering to ask if he's welcome. It's not as if he ever asked at the garrison and now's going to be no different. "Every day, in Paris, every day, I knew what to do. Here? Aramis, I don't know what's happening," he confesses, as scared as he's been since he set out on the streets with nothing and no one behind him.
After briefly inspecting his own small quarters and divesting of his outer layers, Porthos locks the door and wanders downstairs to Aramis', picking the lock with a few easy twists of his fingers, letting him in while his mind starts to hurt from the hangover and the ache of too many changes.
"'Mis," Porthos calls out as he wanders in. "Don't suppose your place comes equipped with a whole lot of wine, because I need a glass or two. Maybe the whole bottle." He collapses down onto the sofa and pries his boots off, without even bothering to ask if he's welcome. It's not as if he ever asked at the garrison and now's going to be no different. "Every day, in Paris, every day, I knew what to do. Here? Aramis, I don't know what's happening," he confesses, as scared as he's been since he set out on the streets with nothing and no one behind him.

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"You're not out of your depth," he accuses, collapsing back onto the sofa beside Aramis, because he'd watched him charm his way into the good books of everyone they'd met. "We ran into at least a dozen people today and they're all half besotted with you. Already, they'd probably do anything for you. Don't see how that's out of your depth."
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Aramis looks around the room with a frown, one that deepens at it settles on their pitiful lights. "Tiny and ridiculous candles. Why have we not been provided with proper lanterns?"
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Out of curiosity driven, he presses it, only to be blinded by an unnatural shade of light that makes him wince enough to jam his fist against the panel again until they go away and only the miniature candles give him a sense of the room. Muttering profanities under his breath, Porthos decides he's had enough and goes for the bottle of wine, plucking it from Aramis forcibly and draining half of it back in one go.
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"What do you mean by this?" he bursts, "To blind me and then drink all my wine in one go?" Curling the heel of one palm to his eyes, Aramis laments, "And when I was only just about to extol the virtues of your honest exuberance, the charm of sincere action and this! This is where it leads!"
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Porthos' irritation with the whole thing has him digging out his flask with the little brandy he has left. "You think I understand any of this?" He gives another slew of profanities, these ones tempered with the dialect he'd picked up in the Court and aided on by Flea and Charon's creativity when it came to curses. "I don't," he says sharply. "Settle down or I'll settle you," he warns.
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"Cover your eyes," he instructs, and marches towards that little panel, hat seized from its peg as he goes. Holding the brim cautiously near his eyes, Aramis extends a finger...and pokes. The same light as before bursts into being, and Aramis gives a shout, smacking it out of existence again.
"The work of four hundred years, no doubt," he says, breathless.
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He wants to know how things have changed, but it's been a long day. He'll have time for exploring in the morning. "C'mere," he coaxes, patting the chaise beside him. "You'll give yourself a headache with all that shouting and flicking your finger at that thing."
Stretching his body out until his toes are tipped and his neck is elongated, he wiggles his hips to get comfortable. "Don't think I'm going anywhere tonight." Between the exhaustion and the drink, he can't imagine wandering up the hall, never mind up a flight of stairs.
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"Far be it from me to deny you your very great talent for falling asleep anywhere, at any time," he says. "But I think you will be more comfortable in the bed." Aramis peers down his own hall. "It's larger than any we ever had in the garrison."
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"It was an exciting day, even by our standards. The four us of were sent to guard the Queen while she bathed in the fertility waters. There was an assassination attempt, and we were forced to flee with her into the wilds."
Aramis did not look nearly as put out about this as he might have. "We had just come upon a moment quiet enough to think of supper when I found myself here."
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"Aramis," he murmurs, the thought bugging him enough to comment on it. "How come this place can know your name and still not know anything about me?" Part of him is fearful at the knowledge, but another part would welcome any kind of information.
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"Perhaps," he ventures, "It only knows what we ourselves know. How it can read our minds and hearts, I do not like to think, but...that is the best explanation I've yet found."
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The other matter they've yet to deal with is fairly pressing. "So if there's no King, who does our duty lie to?"
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"Our oaths have not changed, even if - " Aramis' mouth thins, body shifting as if it itself could bear the chafe of these truths. "Even if our duty has become impossible. We are Musketeers, cast from honour and into idleness."
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"That smacks of self-importance. No, if we are being punished, it is due to equal sin. I longed for adventure, and here it is."
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He should get some rest. Maybe the day will look different once he's slept. Rubbing a hand over his face, he pushes his fingers into his hair, but can't coax himself to get up, despite the monstrous yawn he cracks.