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faderift2017-04-02 10:59 pm
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Entry tags:
- ! open,
- { alan fane },
- { alistair },
- { anders },
- { araceli bonaventura },
- { bellamy blake },
- { christine delacroix },
- { clarke griffin },
- { freddie durfort-lacapalette },
- { inessa serra },
- { james norrington },
- { jamie mccrimmon },
- { jim kirk },
- { korrin ataash },
- { leonard church },
- { luwenna coupe },
- { malcolm reed },
- { merrill },
- { prompto argentum },
- { rachette dakal },
- { samouel gareth },
- { the medicine seller },
- { twelfth doctor },
- { tyrion lannister },
- { yngvi }
OPEN LOG: Establishing a Base in Kirkwall
WHO: Many People
WHAT: Cleaning up Kirkwall
WHEN: Cloudreach 1-21
WHERE: Kirkwall
NOTES: This log post is for characters who go early to Kirkwall to assist in preparing it for the rest of those assigned there. We strongly encourage IC discussion of things left to character discretion—someone should definitely do a crystal post to discuss what to do with the personal belongings left behind in the Gallows or what new form the statues should take!
WHAT: Cleaning up Kirkwall
WHEN: Cloudreach 1-21
WHERE: Kirkwall
NOTES: This log post is for characters who go early to Kirkwall to assist in preparing it for the rest of those assigned there. We strongly encourage IC discussion of things left to character discretion—someone should definitely do a crystal post to discuss what to do with the personal belongings left behind in the Gallows or what new form the statues should take!

The city's complicated past is not easy to forget, history having earmarked many corners of the stone city. A ship approaching the harbor spots the city's namesake: an imposing black wall. It is visible for miles, and carved into the cliff side are a pantheon of vile guardians representing the Old Gods. Over the years, the Chantry has effaced many of these profane sentinels, but it will take many more years to erase them all.
Also carved into the cliff is a channel that permits ships into the city's interior. Flanking the channel are two massive bronze statues—the Twins of Kirkwall. The statues have a practical use. Kirkwall sits next to the narrowest point of the Waking Sea, and a massive chain net can be erected between the statues and the lighthouse, closing off the only narrow navigable lane. This stranglehold on sea traffic is jealously guarded by the ever-changing rulers of the city as the net trolls taxes, tolls, and extortions in from the sea.
—From In Pursuit of Knowledge: The Travels of a Chantry Scholar, by Brother Genitivi
Establishing a presence in Kirkwall is a delicate matter. First, there's Provisional Viscount Bran Cavin—a man so used to batting back friendly offers of entirely harmless occupation of the battered city-state that his first three responses to the Inquisition's leadership appeared to be slightly personalized form letters. Proving that the Inquisition is here to work and not to conquer will be a process. The first step in that process is the second reason the move is delicate: the only building the Provisional Viscount is willing to part with is the Gallows, left quarantined and unoccupied since Knight-Commander Meredith Stannard's famous crystallization into red lyrium in the courtyard. The Gallows have since overgrown with red lyrium. If anyone is going to live and work there, there's a lot of work to do.
↠ Cloudreach 1-3: The Journey There
↠ Cloudreach 3-4: Arrival
↠ Cloudreach 4-14: Haunted
↠ Cloudreach 14-21: Spring Cleaning
no subject
She also responds differently to victory: he capitulates, and Freddie grins, big and bright and delighted. It can't quite be called triumphant, but only because one gets the sense she was never in any doubt about getting the end result.
"Excellent! Come along, then. I think you will be pleasantly surprised, Sir Spindleweed, if you will only let yourself."
She pushes through the front door, a bell dinging once, a softly carrying tone that brings a man trotting up to assist them. Everything about him screams blacksmith, except for the delicate lavender doublet he's somehow crammed onto his massive frame. Freddie does a doubletake, but recovers quickly to smile.
"Good afternoon, sir. I'm afraid my man here--his baggage was lost overboard in a storm and as you can see he's nothing left at all suitable for wear. Normally of course I would require Haut-Brion livery, but we are more on Inquisition business than barony at present, so perhaps something more subtle?"
no subject
This means that he's already looking unimpressed when he takes in the sight of a blacksmith in a lavender doublet, and continues to look unimpressed as the lady dismisses his current attire as unsuitable. Already said what he's going to say to that point, no point in saying it again. Haut-Brion. He makes a mental note of the family name that she drops so casually, and otherwise keeps his arms folded over his chest, impassive and unimpressed.
The blacksmith is already nodding, swept along by the promise of custom. Not quite what Bellamy is used to. He's going to be on her side, that much is clear; Bellamy shoots the lavender doublet another look. Great.
"No plate armor," he says, gruffly. Protesting will mar the image of 'dutiful servant', but that's fine. He's not on her payroll. "And no feathers."
no subject
When she's finished the smith bows politely and takes a step into the back of the shop, and a minute or two later he and assistants begin streaming back out, bearing bolts of cloth and scraps of metal and measuring tapes and pads and pencils. They herd Bellamy up onto a small circular platform before several mirrors, and proceed to begin measuring and checking coloring and maker knows what. One bolt of cloth is a bright, sickly green nearly the color of the anchor in a rifter's hand. Another is a soft pink, subtly embroidered with tulips. One swatch of chain mail is striped, black and silver. Even the helm they use for sizing has multiple holes in which one might secure a feather.
It is, in short, his nightmare. Which Freddie is no doubt enjoying, as she perches not-quite sitting on the edge of a windowsill, alternating between idly watching passers-by on the street and observing the flurry of activity and Bellamy's expressions as it surrounds him.
no subject
Until he can't, because he's surrounding by fabrics and samples and measuring tapes and a lot of technical conversation with regards to style and his own measurements, cavalierly bantered about. None of this is directed at him.
This is well beyond any kind of treatment he's ever had, and it's overwhelming at first. Then it is nightmarish. One look at that sick green and he scowls, only to be met with the embroidered pink, and then a yellow that looks like bile, and on and on and on, and even when he says no, no one pays him mind.
Except the lady, who catches his eye when he's trying to step away from an invasive tape measure.
"Can you make them stop?"
One of the assistants loops a strand of lace around his wrist. Bellamy shakes free, with a scowl.
"Look, I appreciate the gesture. All of this isn't necessary."
no subject
"As we discussed," Freddie says to the man, deliberately cryptic.
He nods. "It will all be ready in an hour, my lady."
"Excellent. Come, Sir Bellamy, we shall pass the time at our next errand."
As before, she doesn't wait to make sure he's following, just assumes and sweeps out the door the wigged servant holds for them both. He will want to follow this time though, as she leads the way just a few blocks over to a shop marked by a window full of displayed books.
no subject
Outside, it's as sunny and lovely a day as it was when they entered the shop. Freddie's boots click on the cobblestones and pavement. Bellamy's tread is heavier, a rush to catch up with her.
"Hey," he says, when she's in earshot, "what's going to be ready in an hour? I don't like surprises."
But he does like bookshops. As they draw up closer to the bookshop, as it becomes apparent that this is their intended destination, Bellamy loses some of his intensity. Warily, he eyes the window before he shoots his gaze back to Freddie. Like maybe this is a trap.
no subject
"Obviously the answer is the armor and livery we agreed that you needed for these errands and just spent half an hour ordering. Honestly, Sir Spindleweed, if you're this dull I think perhaps you'd best wait outside for this one. I shouldn't like to introduce you to Messere Larsen if you might taint his views of me, I've been quite enjoying his recommendations. The man has a positively encyclopedic knowledge of the pre-Blight dwarven kingdoms, and I've high hopes he might be able to find me commentaries on Gundren's Observations, and I should hate to jeopardize my chances."
no subject
Oh. "Well-- yeah," he says, his tone somewhere between gruffly irritated and defensive, "I know that. I meant whatever you were whispering about to that shopkeep. And I'm not waiting outside."
Not because of some insulting order, but especially not because-- well. Despite himself, Bellamy glances over at the window again, taking in the slight of the books. It's a risk, giving her the opportunity to start in on him again, but the sight of all of the books is enough to distract him.
"That's what you're into? Dwarf stuff?" He looks back at her, eyebrows raised. "Thought you Orlesians were all about good taste."
no subject
"And what, pray tell, is your objection to 'dwarf stuff'? Are you one of those men so intimidated by their beard growing abilities that you disdain anything to do with dwarves at all?" Her eyes narrow at him in suspicion. "I am into many things, but I am also one of the world's foremost scholars of dwarva architecture, so yes, it is."
no subject
Because, Orlais. Well-known fact that ladies of Orlais care mostly for stuff.
"They've got books on dwarva architecture in there?"
no subject
But if he doesn't have an objection, then okay. "Their crafts are fine, of course, but their architecture is the true marvel. Entire kingdoms hollowed out of the earth! And the rare above-ground installations, like the Storm Coast. There's a great deal to be learned from their engineering, but dwarves are more often given credit for their engineering than for their artistry. I think the beauty of their work goes too often unappreciated. For instance, if you--" She pauses, catches herself, smiles crooked.
That's all the acknowledgment her running-on gets, as she pivots quickly. "They have a small but well-curated selection of such books. Why, Sir Bellamy, what sort of books are to your taste?"
no subject
Okay. Just answer that last question, Bellamy tells himself. Make this easy.
"History." He steps around her to get the door. That's also what he's here for, right? If he's a little brusque in his movements, so what. "I like history. Got a well-curated selection of those too?"
no subject
She'd like him to be, that much is obvious. It makes answering his question more difficult, but also makes it far more interesting, and Freddie has always been one to value interest over ease. She remembers now that little hint of interest when they first met and she mentioned the University, recalls the sharpening of his gaze, the glint in it. She hadn't really noticed at the time, but there it is filed away in her brain. She looks at him more closely now, assessing.
"We can find history of all sorts within, but I can hardly say more specifically until you do."
oh hi
"I'm not a sir." Important correction. He folds his arms over his chest. As eager as he is to get to the books, he's also determined to dig in, stubbornness momentarily outweighing his curiosity. "And yeah. I can be more specific. I'm interested in historical battles. Warfare. That kind of thing. Big campaigns, wars... the way troops were trained by people that don't exist anymore. And people who do. Specific enough for you?"
If he's gruff about it, it'll go a long way to cover childish eagerness.