alankazam: ([ blue - sass ])
Alan Fane ([personal profile] alankazam) wrote in [community profile] faderift2017-03-04 12:35 am

[CLOSED] | I'll say you haven't met me,


WHO: Alan + Beleth, Alistair, and Kolgrim Jr.
WHAT: Touching reunions.
WHEN: Drakonis.
WHERE: Outlying Camp Shady.
NOTES: The touching may be with fists.

 

He still isn’t certain how he’s been talked into this.

Alan would’ve been fine never meeting the man. Would never have even had to know that he was here. Through the years and a child's eyes, the faces have long since unravelled.

The facts
came later, sharper: Wardens. Cousland. A Blight,

He would have been fine. He is. But Beleth was so — invested — had such faith in the idea, and if he's fine (and he is, because there's no reason not to be, no alternative,) then this is only proof.

His posture changes to approach the camp; s
tride lengthens, shoulders press out angular. When he arrives, his expression wears its usual distance. If you don't know him, it's difficult to notice the new tension in his jaw.

"Hello," A glance up, unblinking. "It's been a long time."

 

 


byblow: (129)

[personal profile] byblow 2017-03-07 06:01 pm (UTC)(link)
For good or ill, Alistair is not that much smaller than the broad side of a barn, and therefore not much harder to hit. He takes the punch with a backwards step and recoil that's more about instinct than pain. Instinct and respect. He's learned from experience that small people with skinny arms only get angrier if he stands his ground while they beat on him—which is funny sometimes, sometimes that's what he's going for, but not now, no.

And that's well enough, because nails follow shortly after. That's when Alistair makes his first noise of surprise, bringing up an arm to block his face. That hurts. And it carries with it an instinctive stomach-flipping fear, one that's hardly unique to him among Thedosians, but amplified of late: not his blood, not his blood.

"Andraste's—" he says. Which garment or body part of Andraste's he was about to invoke in front of a clawing boy who believes he helped murder her, no one gets to know. Not because he realizes it's a bad idea. It's just that another one occurs to him—turns into a wolf, Beleth said before, a wolf and who knows what else—and he shuts up to breathe and slam the force of his will into Alan, into whatever it is in a mage that reaches through the Veil. Just for a minute, until the clawing stops, before it gets more literal.

As if to compensate for that excessive presence of mind, he also takes another step backwards, directly onto an uprooted chunk of ice, and stumbles and falls flat onto his back.

Is Beleth crying yet?
arlathvhen: (28)

[personal profile] arlathvhen 2017-03-07 09:24 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah we have reached 100/100 in crying factor here.

When Alan throws himself at Alistair, Beleth's too stunned to move, to yell, to do anything but stare in silent shock. But panic is a familiar companion, and it's quick to move in. What had she done wrong? He'd freaked out when she went to touch him. Was that the point she'd fucked it up? Were either going to forgive her again?

It's Alistair falling to the ground that finally induces Beleth into movement, instead of just standing there sniffling. Alan is--a friend, one she likes, but Alistair occupies a place that few other people do. And when she realizes that he could really get hurt, she only hesitates for long enough to set Kolgrim Jr down, before jumping between Alan and the fallen Warden.

A 5'3 elf comprised mostly of limbs and eyes full of tears is probably not the ideal meatshield. But Beleth stands her ground, even as she sniffles, staring stubbornly at Alan. She should probably say something moving, something that'll make him stand down. She wouldn't want this or you're becoming the people you're so angry at, something thoughtful and moving. She doesn't have those words right now.

"I won't let you hurt him." It's all she can manage, tone obstinate, and expression sullen, through the tears. She may have fucked this entire thing up, but she won't let Alistair become of victim of her failure.