𝒂𝒅𝒂𝒍𝒊𝒂, 𝒏𝒐. (
thunderproof) wrote in
faderift2018-03-27 01:07 am
Entry tags:
feeling her boldest, she came around
WHO: Adalia (
thunderproof), Gwenaëlle (
elegiaque, Alacruun (
coiledscales), you?
WHAT: Adalia gets into a barfight. Consequences will never be the same.
WHEN: Evening, Drakonis 26
WHERE: Returning to the Gallows from Straddle
NOTES: N/A, will add if any come up.
WHAT: Adalia gets into a barfight. Consequences will never be the same.
WHEN: Evening, Drakonis 26
WHERE: Returning to the Gallows from Straddle
NOTES: N/A, will add if any come up.
i. open
"I didn't want to drink in your shitty bar anyway!"
The clarion call of all barflys who did, in fact, want to drink in your shitty bar, but have way too much pride to admit it when they've been tossed out. For Adalia, at least, it's partially true — she'd wanted to drink there, past tense, found it an infinitely more palatable place to get drunk than The Hanged Man, but after that human asshole said shit about that uppity elfblooded cunt in Hightown, got what she deserves — if someone like that is welcome there, and she's thrown out for taking exception, well. That's no place she wants to spend her time anyway.
Nevermind that she took exception with her fists. ...and also, mostly, her face. Adalia is not one for getting in brawls, alright, but goddamnit, when you have principles, you stand up for them, no matter how beat to shit you get for it in the end.
She picks herself up from where she was tossed into the streets of Lowtown, wiping blood from her nose and wincing at the tenderness of it — there's a cut above her eye, bruising around her socket, it's entirely possible her nose is broken... But there's blood on her knuckles, too, and the vicious satisfaction of justice meted out in her stomach. She was, indisputably, the loser of that particular fight, but she gave almost as good as she got, and that's all that really counts. Brushing the dust off her dress, Adalia takes a deep breath, straightens her back, and begins to make her way toward the docks and the ferry to the Gallows.
ii. closed to gwenaëlle
The ferry ride is uneventful, and Adalia disembarks at the Gallows slightly less worse for wear — she hasn't healed any of her injuries, but the cut on her forehead has stopped bleeding quite so dramatically and her jaw hurts a little less than it had when she'd started the journey back. Charis is about somewhere, having made himself a nest in one of the towers, but Adalia's reluctant to call him to her when she's so beat up, so she heads for her room first, meaning to clean up her face before she whistles for her dragon to join her for the night.
There's a statue in the Gallows courtyard, polished well-enough that one can see their reflection in it when the light is right. Adalia pauses in front of said statue, pushing her tongue against the cut on her lip to test it, brushing dried blood off her temple where she can. It's in this state that Gwenaëlle finds her, muttering to herself as she assesses the damage done to her face.
"Fucking racist asshole... How dare a half-elf have opinions or be unpleasant. Well this half-elf split your fucking lip, so have fun with that, you dick."
iii. closed to alacruun
When Adalia finally makes it back to her room, looking better but still like she got hit multiple times in the face, it's with Charis in tow and chattering angrily over her shoulder. For her part, Adalia doesn't look at all chastised, and in fact has the mulish expression of one unwilling to reconsider her stance.
"Hey, that's just what you do when people are racist in front of you, okay? You punch them."
A moment, and then —
"Or, maybe you don't. You assaulting people for being racist would get... more problematic."
Charis snorts, angry, and crawls over to his little ice nest in the corner of the room. Adalia sets about starting a fire, dumping a few more logs into the brazier and holding her hand over it to let a few sparks catch the wood. It's the only way the room can be in any way a livable temperature — the large block of ice in the corner chills the air considerably, and what is comfortable for Charis is frigid for Adalia. That done, she crosses the room to her desk, picking up her mirror to check on her face again.
The door to the room is ajar, but only just — she'd meant to close it, but it didn't latch all the way.

no subject
There's no hint of suspicion or accusation in her tone — not that there would be if she knew, more like a certain amount of eyebrow waggling delight — but just a touch of questioning. Who is the provost to Gwenaëlle, other than someone who gives her puppies and whose quarters she's comfortable stealing? A close friend, one must assume, though Adalia wouldn't have guessed at Gwenaëlle's being overfond of rifters, elves, or rifter elves in particular.
There is, though, a wince as Gwenaëlle's wet cloth touches the abrasions on her face. Adalia inhales with a hiss but grits her teeth, straihtening her book and holding her chin up high — she won't look the whimpering child being patched up after a nasty tumble on the stone floors.
As Gwenaëlle speaks Adalia's posture softens, and there's a lot going on on her face as it's cleaned — pity, anger, confusion, conflicted shame and vindication — but she says nothing, letting Gwenaëlle explain what she will without interruption. In the end, she's silent for a moment before inclining her head just slightly.
"Thank you for telling me."
Anything else — apologies, sympathies, explanations — would be inadequate. Even as she runs through the other possibilities, Adalia can find nothing sufficient. Better to say nothing.
no subject
Elven daughters, she means.
“A few years ago, the Empress ordered a slaughter in Halamshiral. Probably they were in one of the mass graves that was burned, afterwards; my lord used to pay for their upkeep. Assumptions were made when the money stopped being collected. Before Mistress Baudin was killed, there was an Inquisition visit to the city—she asked Provost Thranduil to look into the matter for her. Magalie was burned to death in the apartment that they shared, and Alix,”
her gaze is fixed on her fingers and not Adalia's eyes,
“was killed from behind by chevaliers, as she was trying to break down the door to get her out. To the best of my knowledge, they had no other family. I'm the last living thing, of my mother.”
The salve she begins applying smells bitter, but only feels cool, perhaps a touch numbing.
“Nothing elven of her will ever live again.” She does meet Adalia's eyes, then, to be sure her point has been taken— “That's what 'elfblooded' means, to elves. It's just a more inventive form of murder.”
no subject
Nothing. Less than nothing. All she has is her gut and her wishes and what she wants to believe of the world, and none of those things are helpful to Gwenaëlle. What does it matter what half-elves should be, when all there is is the elfblooded?
Silence doesn't suit Adalia. She's uncomfortable in it, and doesn't like to feel as though she's been caught out with no response. She shifts uncomfortably, trying to keep the most unhelpful of her reactions from spilling out where Gwenaëlle will have to deal with them, trying to figure out what to say, or what to say first —
in the end, she can't stop herself from being entirely unhelpful. It's clumsily done, she knows it, but she can't not.
"Maybe nothing elven." She thinks of Herian, and her trips to the vhenadahl, her attempts to help the elves in the alienage. "But not nothing."
Grand help it does the elves, but for this one moment — the abstract elves matter less than the young woman sitting in front of her.
no subject
The words don't move her to ache because they don't move her at all.
“That's a nice thing for you to say,” she observes, as if it's more interesting that anything nice can come out of that mouth than particularly what has.
It's meaningless bullshit, but it's sweet of her to think.
no subject
Making jokes is easier than being vulnerable. Or... dealing with other people being vulnerable, or whatever is happening here right now. Adalia's shoulders don't... droop, exactly, because she knew it wasn't anything Gwenaëlle would care to hear even as she was saying it, but she sighs and looks down, heedless of Gwenaëlle's work.
"I'm an orphan. I was raised in a library-cum-temple by monks, some of whom were elven and some of whom were human and none of whom cared a whit about the lives they'd led before, or passing anything of their cultures on to me. The only thing I know about myself is that I'm a half-elf, and I got my magic from some kind of connection to the plane of air."
It's perhaps not entirely relevant to the conversation at hand, but — context. Explanation, if not excuse.
"I don't even know if Adalia is my real name. But I'm not an elf. I'm not human, either. I'm a half-elf, no matter what I look like here. The specificity matters."
no subject
“That it matters,” she says, after a pause, because she didn't know all of the rest, and doesn't know if it's because Adalia doesn't talk about that sort of thing or just because she hasn't been paying attention; the way the Dalish all seem much more informed about matters of Thranduil's lands than she had been, studiously disinterested for so long. “But there's not one single human in Thedas who'll ever think of you being as human as you are elven.”
Adalia knows that, probably. It's not as kind a thing to say. After a moment, she says, “I detested that about our erstwhile host, you know,” with a vague gesture to Thranduil's office. “I was born here. I'm my mother's child. But I'll never be my mother's child, and this great oversized fucking stranger who doesn't belong, he gets to waltz in with his stupid hair and stupid shoulders and everyone wants to be his fucking cousin. If it makes you feel better,” patting her hand, “I personally will never think of you as a real elf, either,” very dry.
And bitter, but that's a knife palmed inwards, always.
no subject
It's not something to ask about now, of course. Their truce is still too new to run it aground on the shores of a conversation they don't need to have. But her curiosity is now piqued, and the details of Gwenaëlle's relationship with the elven Rifter provost are something she is very interested in.
"I'm not really a real anything, so I appreciate that."
Which is... rather more dour and bitter and depressing than she meant it to be. Adalia flushes, looks down at her hands and huffs out a breath.
"Is it better, do you think, to have no family at all, or to have family you can never truly claim?"
Which of them hurts less? Which of them is the more full person? Which of them actually matters?
no subject
She tidies the cloths she's been using away, into the water bowl to be dealt with, busywork while she talks,
"What difference would it fucking make, then? It's just pain. No one's pain is better. Getting to do my crying into a silk pillow, maybe, I'd take that over a hovel somewhere. But, of course, any crying you do in private rooms with guards isn't really crying at all, is it."
Everything is bullshit, essentially.