semi-closed; i cannot see the path
WHO: Samson, Cullen, Mia, Anders, Thranduil, and more perhaps
WHAT: Even more dungeon visits
WHEN: One backdated, the rest current
WHERE: Skyhold Dungeon
NOTES: Preemptive warning for strong language and substance addiction.
WHAT: Even more dungeon visits
WHEN: One backdated, the rest current
WHERE: Skyhold Dungeon
NOTES: Preemptive warning for strong language and substance addiction.
the commander's visit;
How long since they first hauled his sorry carcass down those steps and dumped him in a cell? Hours? Days? No sun or moon to tell by, not down here. In the lingering aftermath of his own foolishness, consciousness has been elusive. Through the murk of his memory he glimpses a brisk voice and gentle hands, faces reduced to indistinct shapes, there and gone again. He slept after that—for how long, who knows—and it's from that same sleep he's just been jerked by a well-aimed boot.
Samson is hoisted up from the bedroll before his wits even have time to congeal into awareness, strangers' hands gripping him rough under the arms. They jostle him till he'll sit on his own. Now awake enough to be aggrieved by it, he shrugs them off abruptly, and thereafter two armed and armoured men leave the cell to join others outside it. Shadows and torchlight beyond, bodies moving or leaning to look, the man at the cell door glaring down at him expectantly. The chains are heavy on his wrists as he drags them toward his lap.
Someone important's coming down. He can tell that much.
a captive audience;
First hours, then days, and now weeks later, Samson is still here. Same clothing, same sweat-stained bedroll, same small space to call his own. Apart from sluggish but persistent beard growth that waxes and wanes from week to week, not much else has changed since the first day—not at a glance—only now there's a pail sitting outside his cell, the long handle of a dipper keeping its wooden lid just slightly ajar; from this he can drink when he likes.
It's just as likely you'll find him sleeping as standing. Occasionally, he'll be seated on the bedroll without any shoes or stockings or gloves, biting or tearing at his nails when they grow long enough to need a trim. His hair might still be wet from the occasional wash achieved by bucket and rag. Sweating or shaking, listening or waiting, he's still here.

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The guard is kind enough to warn her. He's dangerous, my lady. Don't tarry there any longer than you have to. I don't want the Commander coming down on my head, you understand. A valid concern, and one that comes with a promise that she'll be swift as she can, and Cullen is not to be cross with him for not forbidding her entry. Not when he wouldn't do so himself.
Though given who she's come to speak to, perhaps she's misjudged that call. It hardly matters now.
Samson wouldn't have much to distinguish who she is, beyond the curly blonde hair and brown eyes she shares with her brother. Her dress is plain, typical of a Ferelden, though there's a very fine-looking pendant at her throat that seems at odds with her otherwise practical attire. There's a basket still under her arm, with the sweet scent of honeycake drifting from beneath the woven cover. And on her face? Something between sternness and curiosity.
Perhaps he'll be asleep, and all this will be for nothing.
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Especially when it smells of fresh baked goods.
Roused by the guard's voice, he's waiting at the bars when this woman appears. As she draws near, his gaze follows her without focusing on her entirely, as though it's too slippery to keep hold. And as she draws near, she will see what even this meagre passage of time has wrought: as the weeks have come and gone, especially in these last few days, his condition has worsened. He's dreadfully pale; he sweats nigh constantly; his hands always tremble when they aren't resting somewhere. Fever chills and nightmares, often jolting out of sleep, long stares into the dark while he strains to hear a whispering that seems to call to him from somewhere beyond the walls.
"I like where this is going," he says, as though continuing a friendly conversation they have yet to start.
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Because upon a closer look, it's clear that Samson's in bad shape. She can guess as to the reasons, and there's nothing they can do for him to cure that. It's not even a matter of whether he deserves it or not, at this point. No one deserves what that evil stuff inflicts on the people infected by it.
Not so different from the Taint, really.
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"They do their best," he agrees, hangs on the silence a moment, then smiles for a reason that is rather less apparent than the small dry split in his lip. His eyelids seem to become heavier, too, with a pleasant drowsiness. "Plenty of folks seem to want a hand in it, too. Might have to start taking appointments at this rate."
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She's taking note of all of this, without question. There are a great many questions he can answer, some without saying a word. But he does hold a particular interest to her, for very, very personal reasons.
Still. She'll excuse herself before playing into any of his games.
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hope you'll pardon the wait
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The former Templar seems to be awake, at least, which means Anders' preparation isn't wasted.
"Hello." For a moment he's at a loss for more words, just looking at the man. He was so close to being here too. There were plenty that still thought he should be, that were surprised he was walking around. Some days, he was surprised as well.
"How are you feeling? Physically, I mean," Anders finally comes up with.
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The mage says hello, and he stares. The mage asks him how he's feeling, and he grins weakly—and between this glimpse of crooked teeth and the slow blink that follows it, for just this moment he seems drowsily content, like he's been awoken by pleasant news.
The rasping of his voice scrapes that illusion away in an instant:
"I'm dying. How're you?"
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He's on more solid ground now, though. Dramatic overstatement is easy to deal with, familiar. Anders leans against the bars, looking in, reminding himself of what side he stands on. He can walk out of here. It's not anything against Samson, simply a reminder that he needs to keep the nerves at bay.
"With some of us having tried to charge down that path a little faster and harder than others." There's a beat as he takes a breath, watching the Templar. "I'd wondered about you, once or twice, you know. After Thrask died. But I don't know how much of that you remember."
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There.
"Yours isn't a face I expected to see again. Thought for sure you'd've been put to death by now." Spoken conversationally, as if they're discussing the weather and not the foregone consequences of mass murder. He sniffs. "They got any idea who you are?"
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"They know." Samson's not speaking with anger. It's... He's not sure what he'd come in here expecting. Anything, really. Maybe even nothing. Rumor has it that the man's been dealing with red lyrium for who knows how long, after all.
"With some very helpful and fancy words about how Hawke passed judgment when she was given the authority in Kirkwall to do so and spared me, the Grey Wardens managed to get me spared here. I am one, even if it's meant they're rather more unpopular now."
They hadn't been bound for winning popularity contests in the first place, though he's willing to admit he's not helped there. He exhales, voice and expression contemplative despite how his hands have tightened on his crossed arms from keeping the far past solidly in the past.
"I didn't expect to see you again either. Or hear that you'd taken up arms for Corypheus. How does that even happen?"
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Try, try again, this time unglamoured and first making polite small talk with the elven scout currently running the shift. It's warm enough down in the dungeons. He supposes it must be the hot springs on the other side of the wall that make it so. Thranduil's dressed just as he was the last time he visited Samson-- tunic, pants, boots, long white gold hair bound up in a braid to leave the small points of his ears visible.
He makes his way over to the cage once more, stops exactly where he had before, and does not bother sitting this time. Just like before, he smiles, and then: "Good afternoon."
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Whether he means to tempt him into a bargain or simply to talk to him, Samson sounds far less wary than he did during their first encounter. He seems not at all inclined to expend the effort wariness would require, actually, having not even stood up to receive his guest. Let the elf tower over him while he sits on the floor, he doesn't care. The wall is cool against his back; that's all he wants.
"If you're here to ask me why I did it, you can piss off now and save us both the time." With a tilt of his head, he adds, "Nothing personal."
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Either works. Rivers carve their way through stone with slow, persistent work, Thranduil gets what he wants-- though hopefully in a shorter timeframe. He looks over Samson's cell- or, more precisely: Samson, his ridiculous get-up, and Samson's bucket, and then glances at the guard for a moment.
"I do not care." He shrugs, an elegant little movement of his shoulders. "It is done. Are they feeding you?"
Look, as dungeons go, Skyhold's is abysmal. He's free to judge the shems on this too. At least his is nicer and features a selection of delicate carvings. And rudimentary plumbing, which Samson could benefit from.
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"You don't think the Inquisition feeds their prisoners? Some optimist you are." Samson's grin is wan and drowsy and full of crooked teeth. "Some people've tried to feed me extra, as a matter of fact. Can't imagine why."
He is well aware, of course, that he is both a war criminal and a man who consistently looks like he's dying. Funny how those two things play at odds in a bleeding heart.
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But-- the second admission makes him blink in surprising, and he twists his head to look behind him, indicating the guard on duty with them now.
"Your jailers? Or other visitors, like myself?"
Not that Thranduil has any treats for him. Since Sam left, he's been eating from the canteen with the rest of them, and very much missing his hobbit. And not that Samson deserves treats.
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*pretentious oh my god jxjc
this hiatus has been like a tar pit, please excuse
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they definitely did not stare at each other for an entire month between tags
they could have
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He pauses outside the bars, looking at the withered man in the cell and trying to reconcile it with the face that he might have once almost called friend. There but for Andraste's Grace...
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There's a new scar above this left eyebrow, only recently healed and still pink—the work of a potion, no doubt—but otherwise, were it not for the blood still dried on his skin, the few dark stains on his clothing, one might not guess he'd been injured at all. The Inquisition's healers have done their job with the usual efficiency. And yet, the prisoner slouched there on his knees, hands bound, his dark hair hanging lank around his face, is obviously suffering nonetheless.
Apart from his breathing—shallow, quickened, through nostrils flared by restrained emotion—he bears Cullen's scrutiny in silence.
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"Go," he says to the guards, not looking over. Just one quiet word of dismissal. Perhaps it's surprise, or perhaps it's Cullen's hint of trepidation, that makes them both pause, glance to each other, begin to raise a weak protest. His second insistence of "leave, now" is much more effective, though he feels no swell of confidence to match. He can fake it, though. He can fake it with the best of them. Can't lie for shit, but he can present a facade of confidence when it's needed.
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Bitterness fills his throat, his mouth, presses to escape. He should hold his tongue, probably, just keep on smouldering in subjugation with his eyes averted, and let the commander address him first.
"Look at you," he says. The rasp in his voice is deeper than it was those years ago; the wry lilt is much the same. "All grown up."
(He's never been fond of should or shouldn't as guidelines.)
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"Look at you," Cullen repeats back to the captive. He doesn't have the energy for wry. He can't quiet his thoughts. It's an impossible task. "What happened?" During the fight, since his arrival, since the last time they were actually face to face. How did life bring them both here?
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your terrible son misses you so I'm tagging into this
Maybe he just doesn't have any friends, or does and is too awkward to see that.
Whichever is the case, he has brought half a sweet roll from the kitchens. He ate the other half. He wasn't going to just take two.
Though he doesn't speak immediately, Cade peers in to investigate Samson's current state.
yay
He's on the bedroll when Cade arrives, curled up loosely, with his broad back pointed at the bars. His ankles are tucked in together, one boot stacked on the other. Arms drawn in close and both hands cupped against his chin. Body still and quiet—not dead, but his breath's not right for sleep, either. Too shallow, too quick. Perhaps he's counting on visitor ignorance to convince them otherwise.
Or he's waiting for one such visitor to linger long enough that he might startle them with a single word, abruptly croaked:
"What."
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"You what?"
Then he twists to look back, head and then shoulders, and so turns that perplexed sneer toward his visitor, whereupon it fades to a more benign grimace in recognition. His body relaxes, too, once he's turned to lie on his back—from the waist up, at least. His wrists are limp, his long hands draped wherever they happen to lie on his chest or belly. The stretch in his waist and hips is painful in a satisfying way.
"What is it, then."
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