open; and so we burned
WHO: Samson and assorted guests
WHAT: The red general has been put where he belongs; the rest is up to you.
WHEN: Harvestmere 28-30... ish
WHERE: Skyhold Dungeon
NOTES: Warnings for very strong language and substance addiction. Fight and capture, still in progress, is here.
WHAT: The red general has been put where he belongs; the rest is up to you.
WHEN: Harvestmere 28-30... ish
WHERE: Skyhold Dungeon
NOTES: Warnings for very strong language and substance addiction. Fight and capture, still in progress, is here.
day one;
On a certain night, deep into the coldest hours before dawn, a wagon under heavy guard enters Skyhold and passes through the yard by torchlight. It stops at a certain door, and armed soldiers drag its cargo roughly through and down two flights of stone stairs. One of the men left behind spits after it. By midday next, the word has begun to spread, and quickly: there's another body in the cells. Whether through gossip or a proper announcement by the returning war party, it won't be long before a name surfaces, and even the humblest of the Inquisition's agents will know they've cut off the Elder One's despicable right hand. Samson, the general of the red templars, the blighted traitor. They got him.
Separated now from his armour, without the heavy Kirkwall steel and thick horns of red lyrium fused to it, without the nauseating glow to lend him a towering presence and the power to break a soldier in half, he is simply a long-legged man folded on a bedroll with his back turned to the bars. He's been quiet and still, lying just where they left him. Most of what he's done amounts to slow bleeding—and even that's since stopped.
Don't get too excited, now. He's only unconscious, not dead.
During these first hours, only those who've come down to the dungeon on official business will be admitted.
days two and three and beyond;
A few days' time will see him livelier, though not by much. He's since been stripped of his filthy clothes, allowed a cursory wash with a rag and bucket, and given something different to wear. It seems a kind of uniform, fitted with straps and buckles and other odd bits of metal tackle—to restrain him, he reckons, should an authority figure deem it necessary for whatever arbitrary reason. Maybe they'll drag him up for a proper trial, though he doubts it. The hood even buckles closed—for what? To conceal his identity? As if anyone can keep gossip contained in a barracks. So he won't know where they're taking him, more likely. Or so he won't see the swings coming to dodge them.
He sighs, often. Rubs his eyes, his face, massages his forehead. Doesn't eat much of what they bring, can't get comfortable enough to feel rested. He's taken to moving around the limited space of his cell to keep the strange ache in his joints at bay, and trying—failing—to sleep through the headaches. There's nothing for it. This is his life, or whatever little is left of it, as far as he knows: suffering in this stone box until he dies in a haze of pain and madness.
The dungeon doesn't have visiting hours, exactly. Anyone without a legitimate reason to be down here might get in a bit of trouble—one of the prisoners might even tattle out of spite. There's always a guard on duty, besides. But when has common sense ever stopped anyone doing anything in Thedas?

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"Good to know your knight-commander's got half a brain," he grumbles. Giving a sword to a solder, what a revelation. "How'd you lose it in the first place?"
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"I, um," he mumbles, looking at his feet, "attacked someone. Who... didn't deserve it."
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Not that he wasn't already.
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"I could have killed her," he adds dismally, folding his arms tightly against himself, "I couldn't... stop." He squeezes his eyes closed for a moment and gives his head a quick shake. "I lose... myself. I can't be trusted." Not that he isn't working on it, but he's still probably more afraid of a lapse in control than anyone else is.
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"That happens when you take the red. Not that you do. But the more a man takes, the more it heats him up till he can't keep it in. You lose track of who you are, where you are, who you're with. One of my men, boy named Wystan, the madness took him when he was sitting by the fire with some of his fellows—took a sword to two of em before I could get him down." Arms still folded, still leaning on the bars, calmly watching Cade through them. "He was there with me when your Inquisition came for us, out in the Dales. One of my best men. I'd trust him with my life."
A weak grin suddenly surfaces, pulling more at one side of Samson's mouth than the other. "Bet this wasn't what you pictured when you came down here."
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"Why did you do it," he asks, turning to look at the prisoner, his gaze still wary but more assertive with his indignation. "...why did you feed it to them?" He pauses, struggles with his thoughts for a moment, then darkly adds, "it's painful. And unnatural."
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"So it is. I know it, believe me, I do, but it had to be done. If it weren't me leading them, it would've been someone who wouldn't've bothered to give it any meaning. They'd have died alone and empty. There's nothing worse than that."
Except, perhaps, living through it.
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"Why weren't you affected?" he asks pointedly.
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One of his arms, the one on top, unfolds partway to rub the stubble under his chin with the backs of his fingers, and shortly migrates down the front of his neck. Quiet rasping sounds of stubble and skin. "Like I said, if not me, he'd've found someone else."
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His righteous anger has been reaching a boil, but as he notices the feel of the cool metal in his hand, he remembers sitting on the other side of the bars. It's getting cold down here, and it's lonely, and it's degrading.
Perhaps Samson deserves it. Perhaps Cade did too. He seems torn as he continues to gaze down at the man, his expression pensive.
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"That's not true," he insists, but he can't quite put all his resolve behind it. He's seen that this is true. He was nearly executed for his mistakes, and in the guise of a second chance was simply forgotten, left to fall through the cracks and fend for himself. He is unfixable.
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"Listen, Harimann—I need a favour from you."
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Cade is still of completely two minds when it comes to this interaction, but Samson has instilled in him an insecurity even deeper than that which he already feels on a daily basis: what if his leaders... have been wrong?
"What is it," he asks, a bit snippy with anxiety.
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As if nettled by Cade's tone, Samson's rasping voice becomes a bit sharper. "Bring a big pail of water down and set it right here," he gestures with a loose hand, "just outside the bars. And a dipper with a long handle, so I can reach it. Or get someone else to bring it, I don't care. This thirst is unbearable." The water won't be enough to slake it, not by a long shot, but it'll help in other ways.
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Cade casts a furtive glance back into the cell as he moves away from it, leaving the dungeon long enough to do as he's asked. When he returns, he silently sets everything out, just as Samson specified.
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Eventually, the sound of footsteps draws him back to the bars.
"There's a good lad." Once Cade's finished fussing with it, Samson stoops by the pail, scoops out a measure of water, and carefully maneuvers it between the bars. "This would've been a good chance to get your wish," he says, and drains the scoop in one big swallow, looking Cade square in the eye while he does it.
Something tells him it didn't even occur to the boy to poison it.
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"I'm-- not like that," he lamely replies, figuring that's as good a rationale as any. He's honorable, like a Templar is supposed to be. The 'but you probably are' goes unspoken, but is fairly clear in his wary glance down at Samson.
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He slips the spoon back into the pail and, instead of standing back up, has a seat right there on the floor by the bars. He's not in a hurry to get his legs unfolded; perhaps this makes him look older than he is. Not that he needs the help. He's lived hard the last few years, and it shows.
Once he's comfortable—more or less—again Samson reaches for the pail, this time to dip into it with his bare hand. "That's all," he says, and uses what little water is cupped in his palm to give the skin of his hands a reprieve from the dry air. His are large hands, with long fingers, the calluses of a swordsman and scars on both palms. "You can go now, with my thanks."
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It's only when he gets about halfway up the stairs that he realizes Samson has no authority over him, but he took an order anyway. He looks back down over his shoulder, scowls, and stands in anxious limbo for a while. It... would probably be worse to go back down.
He proceeds upward, embarrassed.