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faderift2016-04-17 01:31 am
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Entry tags:
- ! open,
- teren von skraedder,
- { adelaide leblanc },
- { anders },
- { araceli bonaventura },
- { ariadne },
- { benevenuta thevenet },
- { bruce banner },
- { cassandra pentaghast },
- { cole },
- { dorian pavus },
- { eirlys ancarrow },
- { ellana ashara },
- { fenris },
- { galadriel },
- { gavin ashara },
- { hermione granger },
- { iron bull },
- { james norrington },
- { jamie mccrimmon },
- { jim kirk },
- { kain highwind },
- { korrin ataash },
- { leliana },
- { leonard church },
- { malcolm reed },
- { maria hill },
- { martel },
- { maxwell trevean },
- { merrill },
- { mia rutherford },
- { nerva lecuyer },
- { obi-wan kenobi },
- { rachette dakal },
- { samouel gareth },
- { sera },
- { siuona dahlasanor },
- { solas },
- { velanna },
- { zevran arainai }
OPEN: Cloudreach Event
WHO: Anyone at Skyhold
WHAT: Cloudreach showers bring weird shit.
WHEN: Cloudreach 15 onward
WHERE: Skyhold
NOTES: For information about the illness, its effects, and its cure, please make sure to also read the OOC Post.
WHAT: Cloudreach showers bring weird shit.
WHEN: Cloudreach 15 onward
WHERE: Skyhold
NOTES: For information about the illness, its effects, and its cure, please make sure to also read the OOC Post.
This high in the mountains, snowstorms are to be expected. But this one is large and lingering, hanging over the valley and the fortress for days. In Skyhold, with its eternal spring, the snow becomes rain before it hits the ground, leaving inhabitants and visitors to wade through puddles and mud in the courtyards. In the valley, snow and ice accumulate under cloud cover—and worse, when the clouds finally thin, a whole winter's accumulation of snow begins to melt in the sunlight.
Within a day, the ground is sodden and mucky enough to give the survivors of the Fallow Mire (or Ferelden in general) unpleasant flashbacks, and those who live in tents are issued additional hastily-constructed wooden pallets to raise their floors above the mud. It is worse outside the fortress: streams and rivers have overflowed their banks, rapids run twice as fast as normal, and flash flooding has made even road travel treacherous.
On Cloudreach 17 a mudslide buries the pass into Skyhold from the west, and on the 19th a sheet of snow loosened from a mountainside collapses into the shadowed passage from the east. An Inquisition supply caravan is caught in the latter, scattering wagons and goods across the hillside and leaving a dozen people and horses in need of rescue and medical care.
Healers may find themselves stretched thin, as in addition to the usual rash of blisters and sniffles that come from days of rain and flooding, an illness begins to sweep through Skyhold's ranks from around the 16th onward. It's marked first by climbing fever, then by flashes at the edges of vision—green light and jagged formations that aren't there, beings of light and shadow gathering around people or clustering in corners—and distant voices, coherent for brief moments if you're quiet and still and not trying too hard to listen.
Within a day, the ground is sodden and mucky enough to give the survivors of the Fallow Mire (or Ferelden in general) unpleasant flashbacks, and those who live in tents are issued additional hastily-constructed wooden pallets to raise their floors above the mud. It is worse outside the fortress: streams and rivers have overflowed their banks, rapids run twice as fast as normal, and flash flooding has made even road travel treacherous.
On Cloudreach 17 a mudslide buries the pass into Skyhold from the west, and on the 19th a sheet of snow loosened from a mountainside collapses into the shadowed passage from the east. An Inquisition supply caravan is caught in the latter, scattering wagons and goods across the hillside and leaving a dozen people and horses in need of rescue and medical care.
Healers may find themselves stretched thin, as in addition to the usual rash of blisters and sniffles that come from days of rain and flooding, an illness begins to sweep through Skyhold's ranks from around the 16th onward. It's marked first by climbing fever, then by flashes at the edges of vision—green light and jagged formations that aren't there, beings of light and shadow gathering around people or clustering in corners—and distant voices, coherent for brief moments if you're quiet and still and not trying too hard to listen.
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Malcolm shakes his head, sitting back up straighter. "Work must be done, and if everyone who had taken ill went for a lie-down until it passed, people would be dying on the passages here and nothing would get done, and this place would fall apart. And we must...keep appearances." Another shake. "You must keep up appearances, and Lady Montilyet, and Sister Nightingale, and Commander Cullen. Even if we see your illness, you strive to carry on. Now, were you in such a state that you were delirious with fever and could barely stand, then I would insist upon rest." He peers at her. "Unless you're worse off than you appear."
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"Yes," she says, with a relieved smile. "That is what I meant. Normally you are very handsome."
She's so relieved that he hadn't taken her original pronouncement the wrong way that she doesn't think about what she's saying next - doesn't bother to analyze her words before she says them - and so she moves right on from the unsolicited, slightly backhanded compliment without a second thought or a hint of embarrassment, nodding eagerly in agreement with him. "I only wish everyone understood that as well. We are - we are the examples, are we not?" She frowns. "I am far from delirious."
Hopefully, however, he will not ask her to stand.
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Still, that he is to be called handsome by her catches him off-guard. He's never considered the likes of Cassandra in any way other than a strictly professional--if friendly--relationship. So. Obviously it's just her trying to cover for inadvertently saying he looks ill. Obviously. She would never--
Hm. Maybe he should just ignore it as she did. That might be the safer and less embarrassing for the both of them. Still, doesn't keep him from staring for a moment longer and clearing his throat. "Far from it, of course. Just occasionally seeing spirits hanging around everyone. I just hope you're getting adequate rest when you're not under scrutiny. Maker forbid you collapse from pushing yourself too hard when it isn't called for."
He motions to the plate. "Which you have a habit of doing." Pot, meet kettle... "Hence making sure you do eat adequately. You would scarcely believe how busy the kitchen is, though. We'll be burning through quite a few of our herbs and meats and potatoes just throwing together so much tea and stew. And then the cooks complain that some ingredients are going missing or ending up in the oddest of places... But, those are things to consider once this illness has passed and our roads are cleared. For now we can only take care of our own and be glad to be able to do that much."
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"I know," she says grimly, and gestures to the papers spread over the table. "That is - it is part of what I am trying to account for. It will not do to run out of food before more supply caravans are able to reach us, and we have so many here now." The refugees, the rifters, those eager to join the Inquisition - it is a wonder Skyhold can hold them all.
She shoots a glance at him, needing to make at least a token effort at defending her own health and ability to work. "I am not the only one seeing spirits."
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"You are not the only one determined to work despite seeing spirits." So there. "The spirits can be...distracting, but not enough to keep me from lending a hand." Not even the heavy presence of Despair can hold him back, though it tries in dark moments. To have Hope so nearby helps. And that's just his own spirits to be distracted by, much less all the others, the glimpses and pauses and whispers of conversation.
"The illness will have to make me drop entirely before I back down. Hopefully it will not come to that point." It's been close, but he hasn't gone down yet.
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"You are being stupid." She frowns, and waves a hand as if to fend off any impending protests. "Not about the spirits. About the illness."
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"I am doing what must be done, and no more," she says. Perhaps not entirely accurate, but close enough that she believes it, anyway. "I am working because no one else can do this - because I must provide an example. And when the pain and exhaustion become too much, I will stop." She narrows her eyes at him. "Fighting until you collapse will only put you in greater danger, and create more work for the healers, in the end."
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And, well, not accident-prone or poor of health, but...still tends to take ill quicker than others, and puts himself in harm's way more often. So. It's a not-insignificant number of people. "I am able to look after myself."
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"Take care that you do, then." She won't force him to go to the healers; she would be a terrible hypocrite if she tried. But there's a large gap between capitulating at the first sign of weakness, and stubbornly ignoring even the extremes of one's limits. "I will not hear of you pushing yourself until you drop."
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