Genevieve Moulin
The Gypsy
Genevieve eyed Fitz critically as he gathered their friends and acquaintances and prepared for a jump. Something was wrong. The slight crinkle of a wince lingered around his eyes even when he grinned at her, and though he went about the task at hand with his usual bravado and confidence the edges of his voice were strained. She felt an urgent need to hold him in her arms, to assure herself that he was okay.
"France," Daisy croaked in answer to Fitz's question of When and Where they should go, interrupting Genevieve's concerned thoughts. Her eyes flew wide. France. No. She could not go to France. But before she could protest, Fitz had his arm around her waist.
"All right, Red, you ready?"
No!, her mind screamed. But she only had time to open her mouth before they were off. She squeezed her eyes tight, trying to clear her mind. She didn't know When or Where in France Fitz was planning to guide them, and she wasn't sure what would happen with her own thoughts fixed on the time and place she feared they might land. But try as she might she could not still the thoughts of the city that set the course of her life--the thoughts of home.
The swirling of places between times stopped, and she opened her eyes slowly.
"Bienvenue à Paris!" Fitz cried.
And here it was, Haussmann's Paris. Her own Paris. Its wide, gleaming avenues. Its green beltways of flowering trees. And--she turned around to check--yes, it was here, too: Monsieur Eiffel's miraculous tower rising above it all. The Seine flowed lazily beside them, and pastel silk-bustled ladies strolled arm-in-arm with top-hat clad gentlemen down the sidewalk.
Genevieve crossed her arms over her stomach and stumbled back a few steps, feeling sick and disoriented. She should not be here. She could not be here. She cast about for something to indicate When they'd landed, and her eyes fell on a poster tacked to a lamppost. Bold letters arched over an illustration of Eiffel's glistening iron tower proclaimed: Exposition Universelle de Paris.
"1889," Genevieve said quietly. "I'm eight years old. Still in Algiers."
While that was some comfort, she was still shaken by existing here, in her own time, in her own home. And not only that. On their last day together, Tristan had taken her on a glorious tour of the Chicago World's Fair; now Fitz had brought her to the one Chicago had sought to best.
Genevieve was dimly aware of Lisbeth and Blott discussing something about the Architect in hushed tones.
"We need to find somewhere that we can rest for a minute and talk," she caught Lisbeth say. Shakily, Genevieve gestured toward an empty bench facing the water.
"I suppose here's as good a place as any for the moment, until we have a plan," she said, taking a seat to keep her knees from buckling under her. The scene was so quiet, so achingly familiar. Would their presence here bring destruction as it had elsewhere? And, if so, what would happen to her future with her past destroyed?
"France," Daisy croaked in answer to Fitz's question of When and Where they should go, interrupting Genevieve's concerned thoughts. Her eyes flew wide. France. No. She could not go to France. But before she could protest, Fitz had his arm around her waist.
"All right, Red, you ready?"
No!, her mind screamed. But she only had time to open her mouth before they were off. She squeezed her eyes tight, trying to clear her mind. She didn't know When or Where in France Fitz was planning to guide them, and she wasn't sure what would happen with her own thoughts fixed on the time and place she feared they might land. But try as she might she could not still the thoughts of the city that set the course of her life--the thoughts of home.
The swirling of places between times stopped, and she opened her eyes slowly.
"Bienvenue à Paris!" Fitz cried.
And here it was, Haussmann's Paris. Her own Paris. Its wide, gleaming avenues. Its green beltways of flowering trees. And--she turned around to check--yes, it was here, too: Monsieur Eiffel's miraculous tower rising above it all. The Seine flowed lazily beside them, and pastel silk-bustled ladies strolled arm-in-arm with top-hat clad gentlemen down the sidewalk.
Genevieve crossed her arms over her stomach and stumbled back a few steps, feeling sick and disoriented. She should not be here. She could not be here. She cast about for something to indicate When they'd landed, and her eyes fell on a poster tacked to a lamppost. Bold letters arched over an illustration of Eiffel's glistening iron tower proclaimed: Exposition Universelle de Paris.
"1889," Genevieve said quietly. "I'm eight years old. Still in Algiers."
While that was some comfort, she was still shaken by existing here, in her own time, in her own home. And not only that. On their last day together, Tristan had taken her on a glorious tour of the Chicago World's Fair; now Fitz had brought her to the one Chicago had sought to best.
Genevieve was dimly aware of Lisbeth and Blott discussing something about the Architect in hushed tones.
"We need to find somewhere that we can rest for a minute and talk," she caught Lisbeth say. Shakily, Genevieve gestured toward an empty bench facing the water.
"I suppose here's as good a place as any for the moment, until we have a plan," she said, taking a seat to keep her knees from buckling under her. The scene was so quiet, so achingly familiar. Would their presence here bring destruction as it had elsewhere? And, if so, what would happen to her future with her past destroyed?