She robbed them of wealth
WHO: Araceli Bonaventura and you!
WHAT: Catch-all for post-Mire; gambling in the tavern, Skyhold parkour 2: electric boogaloo, chilling in the gardens and wildcard available. Also dinner with Korrin Ataash
WHEN: Between returning from the Fallow Mire and folks departing to the darkspawn desert and red templar winter adventureland
WHERE: Skyhold; the Herald’s Rest, battlements, gardens or wherever if you wildcard it
NOTES: Feel free to have seen a wild Araceli roaming past (and possibly up and over) your windows or to have had a run-in with her fox. I’ll match your style/tense.
WHAT: Catch-all for post-Mire; gambling in the tavern, Skyhold parkour 2: electric boogaloo, chilling in the gardens and wildcard available. Also dinner with Korrin Ataash
WHEN: Between returning from the Fallow Mire and folks departing to the darkspawn desert and red templar winter adventureland
WHERE: Skyhold; the Herald’s Rest, battlements, gardens or wherever if you wildcard it
NOTES: Feel free to have seen a wild Araceli roaming past (and possibly up and over) your windows or to have had a run-in with her fox. I’ll match your style/tense.
tavern; teaching cards and dice
If she’s going to have to learn new games of cards, the least she can do is make sure people can play a few hands of the games she grew up with or introduce them to liar’s dice. Liar’s dice is always so much more than just making coin or whatever you’re wagering after all; liar’s dice teaches you how to figure out a tell and how to cover your own with enough practice and how to tell the most bold-faced lies without a single person noticing if you’re good.
She’s more than happy to buy a drink for anyone who wants to play a hand or two. If you’re new she’ll go easy on you if you offer to explain how Wicked Grace works.
parkour;
The best thing about being back in Skyhold is actually having something to climb that won’t have her landing stagnant water that’s full of corpses ready to attack her. There’s always a little note tacked on a corner of the board in her elegant hand offering lessons and her name but it’s easier in small groups or one on one. Often you’ll need to track her down as she does her regular circuits of Skyhold, climbing up and down the walls either side of the fortress
gardens;
The gardens of Skyhold are larger than most gardens in Castileos, lacking the sea air but they’re more sheltered than most other places in Skyhold so she can some of the weak watery sun. After the Mire she needs it so she’s relocated from the library that was beginning to feel overcrowded with actual researchers, something she is absolutely not. Instead she’s working on something of a report, scowling at it most of the time and there are doodles in the margins, annoyed scribbles and half a paw print along the edge of one of the pages but it’s fine, it’s a draft, it’s perfectly fine.
Besides, it’s not even a report exactly, more of a guide, advice about how to actually get around and fight safely in conditions like the Mire.
Feel free to interrupt before she starts getting distracted with her little reference sketches.
wildcard;
Where else have you bumped into her? Or have you met a rather striking fox with streaks of red beneath his black fur and wondered who the hell keeps shouting ‘Lux’ as you stare down at said fox.
dinner with Korrin Ataash;
It took a lot of convincing to get the kitchen staff to allow her to cook. It helps that she had the coin to pay for it thanks to several profitable games of dice because it’s easy to spot a liar and far too many of the soldiers have honest faces here, the kind of men and women that’d be eaten alive in Castileos. She promised Korrin a meal she’d cooked herself and they absolutely deserve it after that hell.
She can’t make her favourite exactly. They don’t have quite as many fish but that’s obviously the problem with being stuck up a bloody mountain although there’s at least plenty of snow and ice to help keep it fresh. One of the helpers stays to explain the herbs she doesn’t recognise but all in all there’s plenty of fish stew served in bread bowls with rich tomato sauce with a healthy glug of good red wine through it.
When Korrin arrives according to the note Araceli left with her, there’s even a candle or two lit. Look, you gotta have ambience for this after she spent a whole day engaged in high stakes kitchen negotiations.

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"Ah--no." Bruce shook his head as he replied. "I was simply watching. The way you climbed was very impressive." He smiled after saying that, and his words were nothing but honest. It was a rather impressive sight to see, even as dangerous as it was. Although if she did know what she was doing, then Bruce supposed he didn't need to say anything.
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Not bothering to finish, she shimmied back down, regretting the lack of water and that the horsemaster and others would complain if she stacked hay in all the spots she wanted to. A couple of feet from the ground she dropped, neatly falling into a roll before she dusted herself down and wiped her hands on he trousers before approaching.
"Araceli Bonaventura, at your service and always glad to put on a show and to receive compliments from a gentleman. Skyhold does make it easier though, old brickwork has a lot more places for fingers and toes." Old brickwork also had a tendency to crumble or disappear to create larger but potentially very unstable and dangerous holds but best not to scare strangers with that one.
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At least she seemed fine.
"Ah--Bruce." He fumbled for a moment, shifting the grip he had on his bag before he extended his hand out for a handshake. "It's a pleasure. Your show was indeed impressive."
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"I'd hope it was impressive; I've been doing it so long it would be shameful if it was anything else." Alas, no rooftops to physically leap between because that makes her look pretty spectacular, especially at night. "I've seen you are, I think, with the wounded folk by the tents? I try not to come too close lest the excitement be too much for them - I hope it's not?"
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"I think some of them actually appreciate the excitement," he says with a slightly amused smile. "Some of them tell me about it while I treat them, although its the first I've been it happen myself." And now that he had, he could see why they kept telling him about it. "Its really interesting. How long have you actually been doing this?"
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"Eight years is still a long time." It was rather impressive, and Bruce could appreciate the effort put into learning and mastering a skill. "And it certainly shows in what you do."
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Pulling back one sleeve, she extended her left wrist just enough to show a bump and a thin scar, the reminder of a rather nasty break several years ago where the bone ended up poking out.
“So, are you like the mage healers? Or are you a doctor sort of doctor? We only have the latter back in Castileos, no magic like here.” Which was a shame because watching Korrin electrocute corpses was pretty damn cool.
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"For everyone's sake, I hope that is a lesson they quickly learn well," he returned with some bemusement. "And I'm a 'doctor sort of doctor', as you might say, although I do appreciate what the healers can do. Their magic is useful in many things that potions and poultices can't quite manage." As much as Bruce liked his potions and poultices, it was hard to deny the effectiveness of magic and how much they helped.
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Well no one but Gavin but he clearly needed his own set of rules.
"Potions," she tried and failed to hold the smile back but some things were still too new and strange. "We have lots of poultices but potions are things like love potions to woo the man or woman of your dreams, not potions that do whatever it is that they do. Do they actually really heal you, quick as a flash? I never drank the one I was given."
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"There's some that can do that, but they're usually enchanted with magic after being brewed." Potions were made with herbs after all, and those were certainly not magical. "But if you're drinking a magical potion its usually easier to just get a healer to patch up your wounds instead."
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“Honestly if I’d been hurt badly by one of those corpses I would rather trust someone with stitches and leeches when I know that it works in the past.” Not that they were just as bad as that but the classics, she liked those. “How are your patients? You must get so many when people are always tramping in and out, up and down the mountains, you must have to work around the clock, even falling over mages.” Maybe there weren’t so many to people used to them but going from zero to most of the people she knew? Quite a leap.
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Still, if she preferred the traditional ways, Bruce couldn't begrudge her on that. "Feel free to look for me if you ever need some patching up. I'll do my best, as much as I'm able."
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An awful lot here is strange, including her own left hand, something that she never thought possible.
"Then it's only right I extend to you a personal invitation to a lesson one day. It clears the mind more than you might think." Especially up here when 'bracing' was a charitable way to describe the wind when you were halfway up the side of the main chunk of the building.
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"I'm sure you'll get the hang of it," he returned, the amusement still clear in his voice. "And thank you for the offer, but I think I'd rather prefer to have both of my feet firmly on the ground." Not that he has anything against her, but Bruce is pretty sure he isn't going to be able to do what she was doing up there - not to mention just thinking about it made him a bit... queasy.
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"I think the library and I shall have many more dates long into the night." Not that she minded but too many of the books were clearly written by the most boring men alive. The sort of men with beards that were at least three-quarters dust. "No? Your feet do touch something at least, something more solid than the avalanche risk going to and from this place. Falling from up there," she turned, pointing all the way up to roughly the balcony because she hadn't investigated the roof and stealing that much straw had been an ordeal, "is as close to flying as any of us are likely to get."
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"Sadly I don't think I have the aptitude for something that exciting." The smile on his face is wry, and Bruce inclined his head a little before continuing. "But should you ever attempt it yourself, I wouldn't mind seeing it."
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Honestly, Bruce is pretty sure that he's alright with never learning something like what she was doing, but he doesn't want to outright reject her since that would only be impolite. "I'll give it a thought, I suppose." Never mind that said thought was probably only going to happen a good while layer - but hopefully that was enough, for now.
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Besides, it had paid well at home to know a bit about a person before they actually said two words to you. Here, when she was already at a disadvantage it would only help.
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Still, seeing the mark on her hand, Bruce supposed any sort of answer would work for her. It was a little unfair, yes, but Bruce also had his reasons at the same time.
"I hail from Ferelden," he answers her after a moment. "Though I had been travelling around Thedas for the last several years, so there's really not much of it left in me."
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"Doctors often travel with the ships and on the sailing routes with us to study in each land, indeed, if our ships have a doctor, you know it's a good ship." Unfortunately, many ships couldn't afford to keep a doctor unless he was a passenger and it was normally the cook placed in charge of dealing with any and all maladies. "Do you miss it? Being here in Skyhold? If I could get to and from places without so much walking I'd be exploring more."
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"It has been a change of pace, but I can't say I mind it." Bruce turned his gaze over to the rows of tents and such from the refugees that had come all the way here. "I just go where people need help and do what I can to give it."
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Then again, maybe that was how things were at war, she wouldn't know, it had been so long since anything more than petty squabbles had ever troubled a single soul back home.
"Forgive me, I don't wish to sound discouraging when your work is harder than most, being away from home for so long for the first time, it makes me see things differently."
Or she lost her rose-tinted glasses falling through that rift.
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His expression turned apologetic then. "Things here have just been hard in the last few years, and the Breach made it even harder. All of us are simply trying out best, in our own way. Wherever we come from, we are all the same in that regard." It was just a matter of what, mostly.
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