Welcomely Disturbed

Prologue.

Is it wrong to wish for something when you know it will never come? It disables your sense, does it not? Or does it add to it, having experienced more in your dreams. Anyone can argue these ideas either way, and both may be correct, or both may be wrong. This is, because, there is always a point in life, no matter what, where we shall wish for something to come, or wish that something didn't happen. Eponine, however, believed the latter, so she allowed herself to wish and to daydream, even if it caused badness. She did not wish nor daydream too much, though, because she knew that wishing can never really help. But she liked to wish that it would.

She started in this pathetically wonderful "hobby", if you will, when her family started living under the bridge., after the family had gone running after the night, trying to receive more money for The Lark, Cosette, after the man had come to take her away after giving her that spectacular doll for the window in the shop near their house, The Inn. The few things that they had taken from The Inn, were a few pieces of clothing for Azelma, Gavroche , her mother and father, and Eponine herself, the sign outside the Inn, which her father had painted himself, claming at the time 'It's worth a fortune, trust me.. They had, but there trust came to no avail. The highest offer they got was 5 francs, and Thénardier, being the proud and stubborn man he was, refused. Besides these things, all the really took, was food.

Now we have established that she did, indeed, like to wish and hope, we must further this to see what it was she wished for. There were many things, as she had allowed herself to go so far in her belief.

Two words.

Monsieur Marius.