minrathousian (
minrathousian) wrote in
faderift2017-12-01 03:10 pm
[OPEN] this guy is out now
WHO: Atticus Vedici, the Division Heads, Wren, Myr + OPEN
WHAT: Someone is free-ish from prison, finally.
WHEN: Early December.
WHERE: The Gallows
NOTES: In Benedict's thread, CW for Fade torture awfulness.
WHAT: Someone is free-ish from prison, finally.
WHEN: Early December.
WHERE: The Gallows
NOTES: In Benedict's thread, CW for Fade torture awfulness.
I. THE AGREEMENT (Closed to the Division Heads, Wren, and Myr)
Atticus has no choice but to submit to this condition of his freedom, even if in doing so he exchanges one set of shackles for another.
Tight-lipped and silent as he follows Ser Coupe into the private chamber to be utilized for this process, he schools his face into a neutral expression that only just succeeds in masking his outrage. Yet in this he knows he has no leverage, no trump card to play that would not in turn be played against him, too.
He stops in the centre of the room and waits. At this stage, there is little else he can do.
II. THE GALLOWS COURTYARD (OPEN)
It is exceptionally pleasant to step outdoors into a brisk autumn morning and not feel the looming presence of a Templar guard at his back, nor suffer the weight of the runed shackles around his wrists. Atticus examines the reddened flesh on his hands pensively, gives his fingers a tentative flex first this way, then that way; there appears to be no permanent damage, nor any adverse effects of his limited exposure to the lyrium within the runed cuffs.
In short, nothing truly worth remarking upon to distract him from his cursory, near feline exploration of the Gallows that are now laid out before him.
The courtyard isn’t his destination so much as a stop along the way; already he’s encountered a number of locked or warded doors that his better judgment refrained him from investigating further. The mess hall, at the early hour when he chose to rise, only had a scattered few individuals in it having their breakfast; curiously, none of them seemed interested in eating with him. So it has been during most of the interminable hours he’s passed this morning, though he can find little to complain over in having one of the communal baths exclusively to himself.
Likely he cuts an odd figure standing alone in the courtyard admiring this first unobscured view of the cloudy sky that he’s enjoyed in months, but that’s not reason enough for him to change his behaviour.
III. DREAMING (Closed to Benedict)
On some night--which one doesn’t especially matter, only that it is a still one, peaceable and quiet--Atticus lets his fadewalking lead him towards the outskirts of Benedict’s dreaming mind. It’s less that he intrudes, and more that he finds for himself some way to interweave himself into the world of the dream, and to search through it with vague interest for some sign of his former apprentice’s consciousness.
IV. IN THE LIBRARY (OPEN)
His freedom from the Gallows prison is accompanied by certain expectations, chief among them that Atticus will put his keen intellect and insight into the activity of the Venatori to good use and work.
So that is what he is doing now--or at the very least, he is perusing range after range of books upon aging shelves, withdrawing them at his leisure, bringing down volumes as they strike him as relevant, replacing those that don’t. He has acquired a small work station for himself in the corner, and returns to it occasionally to work.
V. PETRANA'S OFFICE (CLOSED)
If little else can be said for the quality of his character, let it at least be said that Atticus Vedici is punctual.
At the prescribed time he arrives outside Petrana's office door, but does not yet knock. An unexpected compulsion sees him taking a moment to straighten the sleeves and collar of the simple black robe he's acquired since being freed from the prisoner's tunic required of him in the jail cell. The fabric of the robe would never pass muster in Minrathous society; that alone makes him inexplicably satisfied by it.
He straightens and lifts his hand, hesitates only a moment, and then raps his knuckles against the door. "Madame de Cedoux," he says (never her given name, not so casually, not here).
VI. THRANDUIL'S OFFICE (CLOSED)
(OOC: This thread takes place shortly after the phylactery thread.)
Shortly after the phylactery ritual is completed, Atticus is summoned to a private meeting with the head of the Research Division. Well, that didn't take long.
He's given some time to himself to bathe first, wash his hair, shave the growth of stubble on his chin, and change out of his prisoner's tunic into something more fitting for one who is no longer meant to look like a prisoner. (He still is, he knows; as long as that phylactery exists. But that is a problem to be dealt with in the future.)
Now, dressed and clean, Atticus approaches Thranduil's office door and knocks.

no subject
"An interesting tale," she says, "Inaccurate by far, but interesting. Does the whole of this land subscribe to it?"
"No," Atticus concedes with the slightest tilt of his head, "not all. The Imperial Chantry doesn't ascribe to the same demonization of magic that this Orlesian one considers sacrosanct." His opinion in that regard is clear, judging by the dismissive note in his voice, the little gesture of his hand. He adds a moment later, "There are any number of other religions practiced within Thedas that provide differing explanations for the origin and purpose of the Veil, but I confess I know little of them."
For a moment, he looks as though he might say something else, but then does not. Still, there's a curiosity in his gaze as he watches Galadriel that is hard to ignore.
no subject
"At first I was uncertain how it managed to separate me from myself, a feat I still fail to understand to its fullest, but I have gleaned some knowledge in my time," she explains with the ease of someone who doesn't realize such information is necessarily valuable. She is no fool, of course, and has bartered information before, but the workings of mortal magics and the world are not things she believes to be terribly secret or particularly worthwhile.
Solving the riddle of the Veil is far more valuable to her than what advantages she might gain by meting out knowledge in indecipherable parcels.
"It can be thinned, if one has the ability to draw against it. I do not know if the staves of human mages function thus, I have failed in their use repeatedly, but I have found it is not too difficult to manage."
Here, perhaps, is where she should be cautious, for the people of Thedas have reacted poorly this statement, almost to the man. She hears no song in his veins, though, and already his reactions are more promising than most.
"Opening a rift, then, should be no harder than parting the clouds that shroud this world. However, apart from rendering aid in dire times, I can think of no reason to attempt it in earnest."
no subject
"Opening a rift, then, should be no harder than parting the clouds that shroud this world. However, apart from rendering aid in dire times, I can think of no reason to attempt it in earnest."
"Render aid?" he repeats quietly, adopting curiosity in place of silence. Affecting concern for their privacy, he glances briefly away from her, to look instead for any prying eyes or ears, but there are none. He's pensive when he looks to her again. "What circumstances do you envision?"
no subject
"If I must bring my full might to bare, I must have access to what lies beyond the veil, parted from my waking hröa," she says, perhaps more carefully than the rest of her accounts. "I have reclaimed it before and walked the world as I once was, undiminished by the lay of these lands.
"It would be a terrible risk, to be certain, but the circumstances in which I would attempt it would be dire already."
no subject
If he appears intrigued by the prospect--perhaps excited by it--his interest is surely academic. He traces a thumb absently against his bottom lip, thinking, then makes a slight gesture with one hand.
"Terrible and, of course, entirely hypothetical," he adds, though whether it's for her benefit or for the benefit of any ears that may overhear them, it's hard to tell. "As you said, the circumstances precipitating such a thing would surely need to be dire. It would not be something undertaken casually, to be sure."
He watches her a moment longer, considering. Perhaps she will take his meaning; perhaps not. He suspects they will find cause to speak of it again, at any rate.
He starts to his feet, however, admitting, "I would stay to discuss this with you further, but my schedule is rather strict at present."
no subject
"I would not keep you from your tasks," she says simply and gestures to the library as it moves away from them. "We may speak again, if your schedule permits it.
"Tenna' ento lye omenta, Atticus."