Fade Rift Mods (
faderifting) wrote in
faderift2015-10-26 09:53 pm
Entry tags:
- ! open,
- { adelaide leblanc },
- { alayre sauveterre },
- { alistair },
- { araceli bonaventura },
- { ariadne },
- { beleth ashara },
- { benevenuta thevenet },
- { bruce banner },
- { cassandra pentaghast },
- { christine delacroix },
- { cremisius aclassi },
- { dorian pavus },
- { eirlys ancarrow },
- { ellana ashara },
- { gavin ashara },
- { iron bull },
- { jamie mccrimmon },
- { kitty },
- { korrin ataash },
- { lace harding },
- { maevaris tilani },
- { maria hill },
- { maxwell trevean },
- { merrick },
- { merrill },
- { pel },
- { rafael },
- { sabriel },
- { samouel gareth },
- { zevran arainai }
And as we wind on down the road
WHO: Open to all
WHAT: The Herald of Andraste is laid to rest, and the remains of the Inquisition try to put on a good face for their visitors. Some of them try, anyway.
WHEN: Harvestmere 26
WHERE: Skyhold
NOTES: n/a
WHAT: The Herald of Andraste is laid to rest, and the remains of the Inquisition try to put on a good face for their visitors. Some of them try, anyway.
WHEN: Harvestmere 26
WHERE: Skyhold
NOTES: n/a

The day after the mysterious strangers from the rift arrive, the Herald's body is delivered back to Skyhold. At first, there is doubt-- the timing is convenient, finally found the very day the funeral is to take place, and many still cling to hope that the Herald has somehow survived. Most, but not all, are appeased by news that the Inquisition's chief advisers have all confirmed the identity of the deceased. Preparations are accelerated: what was once to be a symbolic memorial now requires actual rites, and while some prepare the body others break down whatever can be spared for the pyre, constructed in the center of the main courtyard by another crew.
The funeral itself is a somber affair, as funerals generally are. The Great Hall has been cleared and swept but little else-- all attendees stand, and they are lucky it is a clear day, since the late afternoon sun streams in through the gaping holes in the roof. The service proceeds along strictly traditional Andrastian lines, stately and stiff. Mother Giselle provides the service and the sermon, focusing on duty, sacrifice, and the Maker's plan and concluded with a recitation of Transfigurations 10:1 by the whole assemblage. It is all very predictable, but sincerely delivered. Cassandra and Cullen lead the honor guard. It is a mismatched collection of visiting dignitaries, suspicious observers, pilgrims, colleagues, and companions that slowly process up to pay their silent respects as Evelyn Trevelyan lies in state. Some may notice that the body has been carefully arranged to disguise the fact that her left hand is gone. As night falls they light candles and then the pyre, and as the flames catch and lick up toward the star-washed sky, Mother Giselle sings a haunting version of the Chantry hymn The Dawn Will Come.
The wake that follows is less staid. It seems as if every table and chair in the castle has been dragged into The Herald's Rest and the courtyards and every hidden store of fine wine and food has been dug out from Josephine's secret stores to impress the more exalted visitors. This isn't just a funeral, after all, but a political occasion, an opportunity to demonstrate that the Inquisition lives on beyond the loss of its first symbolic leader, and that it can still be a force for peace and unity.
That impression is dented as the night wears on, and opinions and stories get shared more and more loudly. Someone hops up on a table to give their own little eulogy and others follow suit. Of course eventually it turns sour-- a templar gets up and starts blaming the mages for killing the Herald just like they killed the Divine, and mages at the next table shout back. He's hauled down before things can escalate, but grumbling and dirty looks are unlikely to be the last of it.
The event carries on into the wee hours, and noise echoes around the stone walls loudly enough to make it difficult for any to sleep early. One team of Inquisition scouts and soldiers comes out of the barn to complain more than once, and eventually move their bedrolls down into a basement hall, growling about how they have to be up at the crack of dawn to head out on a mission to scout some Maker-forsaken bog of all the places. (Mire, one of them corrects.)

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It wasn't possible.
"Blighted dragon. It is not an arch demon as far as they know. As Alistair met one face to face I would take his word for it." Ah yes, the old band back together again. Hurrah. Well- parts of it back together. "We send each other letters on occasion- but it is good to see him again. I think he's gotten taller."
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"Or maybe it just didn't like my singing voice," Gavin relented, with a grin, his eyes twinkling slightly.
"Right. Blighted dragon." He paused there, frowning. "... Can they do that?" he asked, with what appeared to be complete sincerity. "Humans, I mean? I thought once they grew up they stopped - well - growing up." The flicker in his expression was the only evidence that he was teasing.
"At least you can send letters. I've tried. I send notes home sometimes, but ah... they tend to be closer to completely unreadable scribbles than anything else."
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"Alistair never truly 'grew up' in the way most men at war might and for that? I am quite grateful. Otherwise the Wardens would be thoroughly depressing at all times. It does not do to have so grim an order when you need to save the world." A beat. "Can you not write?"
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"Well, sounds like someone I should like to meet, then," he decided, but then had the decency to look embarrassed at the last question.
"Ah - well. A little. Sort of. Easy things. But I get the uh.. I get the runes mixed up, you know. Apparently sometimes I draw them backwards, or upside down. At least writing I can get my point across. Reading is worse."
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Such things were beyond explaining. He did not wish to worry about it overmuch.
"I think he would like you quite a bit." They could be oddly charming together. "I do not suppose the Dalish have much cause for learning letters- most of your lore is spoken, yes?"
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"Hello, Mister Warden Alistair Ser, but Zevran said we could be friends so would you like a flask," Gavin said, making fun of himself a bit, but, seriously he'd probably do that. Whatever he is, subtle isn't it.
He shook his head. "It's all oral lore. Not that I'm much better at that. Most of the others can read and write, though. Our clan has always been pretty open to trading with humans, and when you do that, you need to be able to write agreements down. Humans don't usually respect oral agreements."
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"Mostly because they do not remember them all that well." He shrugs. "Normally Elves that live in an Alienage are not worth teaching, but the Crows needed us to be able to snoop about in case anything was written down and of value."
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"Or don't care to remember them all that well," Gavin said wryly. "The Crows..." Gavin frowned. Something pinged at him, but it took a moment to sort through his memory- "Ah! Yes. That's how you met the Warden, right? Right, I remember them now. Is that why they took you, then? So that you could snoop through people's letters?" Okay that might have been teasing a bit. "Are you sure it wasn't to seduce the pants off of people? Because if not, they've missed an opportunity there."
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Him rather than Rinna for the risk of pregnancy, rather than Taliesin for elves tended to be so much more exotic and lovely than humans.
no subject
"Ah." Sold. Right. He had the decency to look sheepish at that. Slavery was something he was aware of, but tended to forget actually existed, and something that hadn't exactly been harped upon in the stories told by his clan, apparently.
"Well, I can't argue with their assessment, though the whole 'lived long enough to be worth teaching' is highly disconcerting."
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"You're going to be assisting?" Gavin asked, putting aside the question of lethality for now - though it was certainly curious, it also wasn't a subject he really wanted to dwell on, this particular night. He could unpack it later.
"Are you going to be teaching 'honeypot' techniques? Because I think I would fail that and just about every other class," He teased with a grin.
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"Ah- that is a little advanced for most sorts, my friend. Trap building, disarming, proper tactics, group tactics, maneuverability, ambushes, poisons and venom, this is what I would teach. I do not think the Inquisition will have need of honey traps."
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"Poisons, I could use," He said, the humour dropping for a second. "I've never had a good hand with them, but being able to poison my arrows would definitely be a boon, that's easy enough to see. As for traps--" He flushed a little and then laughed, "Better not. I can manage a few simple ones, but I tend to - ah - get distracted, and forget where I put them...."
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He raised his right hand and held it over his heart. "I swear, I will not lick anything you give me unless you expressly ask me to, from now on," Gavin said, with a twinkle in his eye and a grin.
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"I will," Gavin promised, smiling warmly. "Though on that note - I had better find them all, and make sure they're alright. If the shems are gunning for elves tonight, it's going to get worse before it gets better." He leaned over and placed a warm kiss to Zevran's temple, and a squeeze around his shoulders, before he started to stand up.
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Gavin got in return a quick squeeze about the waist and a pinch of the rear. To be playful.
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"Ah - yes. Though I think you overestimate my abilities if you think I can keep him away from the tavern, but I'll do my best."
He stretched as he stepped onto the battlements, and then smiled. "Good night, Zevran. Sleep well, when you get some." And then he was gone.