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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"I was given a chance to change the world and I took it." Just the same as you, he could add, but doesn't do that either. "We deserved better than they gave us."
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It occurs to him that he might be making a show of his circumstances to bring up guilt, because Cullen is not stupid, and neither is Samson. Of course, it also occurs to him that no one in Skyhold has any reason to treat Samson well, and he doesn't actually know if the man has been getting his meals. The guards eat, though, and drink, and Cullen turns away from the cell to go to a small table in an alcove and pour a cup of weak wine.
It's easier, somehow, when he doesn't have to look at him. He takes his time, staring into the dark liquid. "Why didn't you leave?" Such a long time ago. Cullen hadn't been able to help much, but he'd been able to offer the means to get very far away, to try and find a new life.
So much easier with his back to him.
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He can't outrun the past, either, but facing bygones will have to wait till he's done lashing out.
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Cullen's pretty sure he knows the answer to the first part, actually. Lyrium. Enough for the means to get out of the city, or enough for a couple weeks' worth of smuggled lyrium. It shouldn't surprise him. It definitely shouldn't hurt him. Nothing should hurt him, at this point in his life.
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"Kirkwall is my home." Is. Presently. So declares the crest on his armour, wherever it now lies. "I couldn't leave it in Meredith's hands. That mad bitch didn't deserve the satisfaction of running me out." Railing against her still provides him a small thrill of pride, years later. "I still knew people. I could still..." Help, he's about to say, but the word dissolves on his tongue. He couldn't leave Maddox behind. He couldn't leave all those young and frightened mages under her power. And the lyrium—he couldn't stop.
His glare loses his resolve, drifts back down to meet the floor.
Samson never did thank him for that chance he never took; but it's too late now.
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"They want to know what I think we should do with you. How to handle your situation." He rests his hands against the bars, palms flat, without curling his fingers around them. Maybe it's unfair, but he's not actually certain Samson won't bite, and he's not fully clear on how the parasitic lyrium functions. Christine might know. She'd be further along in her research if they could have agreed on a way to handle her request for a live test subject. Not the first time he regrets that stalemate in the War Room.
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He picks up the cup of wine again, takes a sip to show that it's safe, before replacing it. He's not going to force the man to take it. Samson is not a child, he does not need minding. He needs... something neither of them will get - a fresh start. Or perhaps a blade between the ribs would have been kinder, in the long run.
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"So you do have some sense left in you after all," he murmurs, looking down into the darkness of the wine, the beading on the rim where Cullen sipped. "Pity you're fighting for the wrong side." He then drinks from the opposite side of the cup, and again, more deeply, with his eyes closed.
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It's useless to wonder. Doesn't mean it's easy to stop. "Have you been fed?"
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In the end it was his own recklessness that took Samson out of the fight for good, but his opponents fought hard nevertheless. Credit where it's due.
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He moves back to the table, retrieves the bottle of wine and one of the plates full of bread and fruit and cheese. If Samson puts the cup back on the bars, he'll fill it. If he doesn't, he'll still leave the food on the small metal shelf intended to make it easy to give prisoners necessities.
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Perhaps the weight of the lyrium chain around Cullen's neck has stolen his passion—perhaps that's why there's no sign of the wrath Samson expected to face.
"You didn't come down here to feed me." His voice grinding at the words like gravel beneath a boot. "Go on, Rutherford. Get to the point."
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Most days, he's certain his armour is the only thing keeping him upright. "Popular opinion is that you can't be trusted. That you should be put down. I'd hoped... that I'd see something of the man I knew."
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The cup, now full, remains where it is, held heavy on the bar between them with both his hands curled around it.
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"Give you what. What d'you want me to say? That you caught me, now I repent all my sins? That I'm ready to come crawling back into Andraste's bloody light? Fuck's sake—" With both hands he tears the cup from its perch and throws it at the cell wall. The resulting arc of wine spills across his arm, his shoulder, spatters at his feet. He doesn't care.
But just as quickly as it flares, Samson's temper drains off, leaving only shame to uncoil its familiar shape as he turns his back on the front of the cell and the man standing there. His posture crumpling, his head hanging low. Broad shoulders sagging and dark hair in disarray. While his pulse settles, he takes measured gulps of air, and the last of these breaths slips out as a weak laugh.
"I thought I'd be dead before it came to this."
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He places his own hands on the bars, rests his forehead against them next. He's tired. He's so tired. "I have to believe there's something left of you in there."
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"You do, do you? Why? What does it matter? Whatever's left, it'll be gone, eventually. You know as well as I do how we all end up. In time, there'll be nothing left of your templars, either. You're using them the same way the Chantry used us, the same way the Inquisition uses you, still, and you can't even see it."