Author Topic: Matisse; 'Gift of God'  (Read 423 times)

Calad

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Matisse; 'Gift of God'
« on: March 01, 2023, 09:28:15 PM »
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It was a hurried exchange.
Julia-Louise was a short and wide woman, apple-like cheeks, motherly. Her sable hair stuck to the sides of her round face, damp with the drizzling rain. It suited her profession, the looks. The cobblestones wet, she stood outside the building she made her living in, one of the orphanages of Chateaufaux.

It was a hurried exchange, but Julia-Louise was skittish to see it done. The mahogany wagon, bare of any insignia, rolled over the cobblestones like thunder, stopping before her with the whinnies of the horses. Julia-Louise pulled her shawl tighter around her figure, stewing in anticipation.

A lanky, thin woman emerged. Dressed in fineries, but ones that could only belong to a servant. Black hair pulled to a tight bun, her sagging neck the sign of her advancing age. In her arms, something bundled up. Tiny. A simple, white cloth.

Her voice as tight as her bun, the maid dressed in fineries approached Julia-Louise.

"You have arranged everything?"

Julia-Louise just nodded, swallowing hard.

"Her name is Amélia. My Lady wants her to keep the name."

If the bundle hadn't made a noise when the maid offered it forward, Julia-Louise would've thought it an odd bouquet of flowers in linen packaging.
The aroma of flowers, as if the bundle was soaked in perfume, hit her nostrils.
But it cooed. And babbled. So Julia-Louise took the bundle gently, and pressed it to her chest. Light of weight, tiny. She felt the purse the maid placed within the bundle, full of the solars she was promised, no wonder. She did not ponder upon the flowers.

"Yes, yes of course, ma'am." She hurriedly nodded.

The maid looked after the now given bundle, then lifted her hooked nose high.

"Nothing happened today. You did not see me, we did not talk. Amélia was just another orphan, left on this establishment's doorstep. If we ever hear otherwise..."

Julia-Louise immediately shook her head.
"Nothing ma'am, nothing happened today."

Firm nod, the maid turned on her heels, and disappeared into the carriage. Horses whinnied, hooves struck the cobblestones, and the carriage soon disappeared too.

So Julia-Louise hobbled back inside the building, before anyone woke up, before anyone saw.






Juin, 759
Chateaufaux




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Calad

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Cleaning
« Reply #1 on: March 15, 2023, 03:42:00 PM »
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The children of the orphanage were supposed to work today. Within the old, moldy kitchen the fire roared in the chamber of the oven, filling the room with the scent of burnt wood coal and appreciated warmth. A few women garbed in blue and white were flitting about, cleaning some corners. Pantries were half-full, the bread on the countertop was stale and dry.

The children, a group of six appointed to the kitchen, were sat around a table. Their waifish and thin forms were engulfed behind towering stacks of pots and plates, gunk and rust collected on their surfaces. The children were not less dirty, their rags tattered, soot-covered and ill-fitting. Eyes sunken in and cheeks sagged, doe-like irises the only sight of their remaining wonder of the youth.

Julia-Louise was still working at the orphanage, of course. She had put on a few pounds, her form had turned even more robust. With a hobble she made her way over to the children, in her arms carrying brushes and rags, a bucket of water in the other hand. The instruments of cleaning were put on the table along with the dishes, and the bucket on the ground with a splosh.

Her eyes went over each child, lingering some on one particular. Bird-nest of a ginger hair atop a pale face, eyes too big for her head, asymmetrical features and a thinned out body that looked as if it belonged to a toddler than an eight year old. All of them were ill looking, but this one, with her eyes of blue and green stood apart with her twisted, ugly visage even more. There was the slight scent of snowdrops and jasmine in the air. Julia-Louise's nose scrunched up at the sight of the ugly girl, in disbelief of how she just could be, before she turned to address them all.

Whatever whispers and chatters were going on between the children ceased.

"...some of you already helped at the kitchen before, for some of you it's your first time. It's simple. Grab a brush or a rag and get to scrubbing. I want to be able to see my own face on those surfaces."

Her tone was rather bored, annoyed even. Murmurs of 'yes madame', and the children went to pick up the brushes and rags, taking the pots. Julia-Louise pulled a stool and sat happy when none spoke up, the old stool creaking under her.

Though the peace did not last long. Just a few minutes after, from between the noise of clanking pots and pans rose another, the pained, sharp yelp of one of the children. Julia-Louise did not need to look to know which one of them the voice belonged to. It had to be her, it's always her...

One pot fell on the ground and in a clatter rolled away from the table, the children halting to look at their colleague who'd get them all in trouble.

The ginger one, from before. Her asymmetrical face had twisted to one of pain, truly an atrocious sight to the eyes, beads of tears rolling down her cheeks. Her bug-like eyes fixed on her palm she was tenderly cupping with her other hand.

"What are you whining for, Amélia?" Huffing and puffing, Julia-Louise stood up from her beloved stool, approaching the girl. "What is it this time?"

Uncaring of the fearful, pained eyes looking her way, she grabbed the child's wrist- named Amélia, to look at her palm. The skin had gone pinkish, raw, as if it had scrubbed for hours.

The girl whined a 'it hurts'. Julia-Louise wrinkled her nose once more like earlier, letting go of the hand and striking the child's cheek with the back of her hand in one swift motion unexpected of such a heavy woman. Amélia yelped, her gaze went down, her cheek went pink, and she did not speak another word.

"...I don't know how you managed that already, must be your frilly little hands- stop your whines, it's not bleeding or cut. Pick up the pot again, keep on working."

Amélia did as she was told so, going over and picking up the pot, as Julia-Louise returned to her spot. The girl did not object, but when she sat back, her whines continued in quiet and weeping. Fearing the pain Julia-Louise would bring if she raised her voice, than the burning pain upon her hands she did not have any explanation for. While some of her friends at her side gave sympathetic glances, the others looked at the unsightly child in pain with just, disgust.

When they were finished a couple of hours later, her hands were filled with blisters, skin peeling at places, and her throat was hoarse and dry from weeping in silence for so long.







Janvier, 767
Chateaufaux




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Calad

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Vicissitude
« Reply #2 on: March 28, 2023, 08:13:57 PM »
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Tomorrow, the duckling was to leave.

Amélia had changed over the years. She had become more befitting of the aroma of flowers that permeated about her. Years were kind to her appearance, smoothing out her flaws, easing her blemishes.

People's eyes had changed, too. No longer did they bare the mark of disgust and hatred, but jealousy, and admiration. Amélia was beautiful, no one could deny. The children that once pulled on her hair and cut her clothes, spat on her and insulted her, had now grown up to try and win her affection,

hypocrisy, is baseline to Dementlieuse society.

Even in a rundown orphanage.

From 'creature' her name changed to Mademoiselle Floraison, for the flowers that always came with her presence. The flowers were not new, but before they were the topic of mockery, now one of inspiration.

Even Julia-Louise had changed. The woman who beat, punished, hurt mercilessly, now doted on her 'flower', past her years of hideousness. Amélia had become her 'daughter', not her burden. A child, whose future she'd want to profit off of, if she married off to a rich man, if her blood family decided to find her...


Past years of ridicule, Mademoiselle Floraison was the flower of the orphanage.

And she was leaving tomorrow.

Amélia was not... naive.

Aware of the alterations in people's demeanour towards her, watching their sneers turn to sweet smiles over the years, she desperately wished out and away.
She recognized the potential in a pretty visage, the power of a smile, and a wink at the right time...

So she was going to get away. City of Lights was beckoning, grandiose, offering, inviting...

For every beating her child self received, each day where she ended with hands raw, every humiliation she was put through, she was going to make another memory. Fool their hearts and feast on their riches. She was going to get pampered with all sorts of finery.

Dominate this two-faced society.






Novembre, 777
Chateaufaux




« Last Edit: March 28, 2023, 08:19:35 PM by Calad »
Long live the Count, Strahd von Zarovich XI!