[OPEN] I will need to face what I've done
WHO: Loghain, various starters + OPEN
WHAT: Loghain has been granted a temporary reprieve from his exile in order to attend King Maric's funeral in Denerim. Once he returns, various other situations require his attention.
WHEN: Early April-ish.
WHERE: Throughout Kirkwall, and outside Denerim in Ferelden.
NOTES: Prompts 1 and 2 take place in Ferelden and predate all the Kirkwall prompts.
WHAT: Loghain has been granted a temporary reprieve from his exile in order to attend King Maric's funeral in Denerim. Once he returns, various other situations require his attention.
WHEN: Early April-ish.
WHERE: Throughout Kirkwall, and outside Denerim in Ferelden.
NOTES: Prompts 1 and 2 take place in Ferelden and predate all the Kirkwall prompts.
I. A rural inn outside Denerim; the night before the funeral (closed to Teren and Anders)
Loghain was advised by the Crown (also known as his daughter) that his presence in the city of Denerim was likely to cause a stir, stoking the fires of arguments left dormant for nearly a decade after the blight and the civil war. It was not an explicit instruction for him to make his entrance into the capitol as discreet and quiet as possible, but that is how Loghain has chosen to interpret it. This is explanation enough for why he's opted for his small travel party to stay at a nondescript roadside in a few miles away from the city gates; he'll ride in on his own tomorrow, dressed as simply as possible, and make a nondescript entrance into the palace through a prearranged meeting with one of Anora's confidantes.
It all feels unnecessarily cloak-and-dagger for his tastes, but the indisputable fact of the matter is there are a number of people in this country that would see his head on a spike if left to their own devices. This is the safest, least politically incendiary route for him to take, while still getting to say his final farewells to his king.
The inn has a small common area near a lit hearthfire; aside from them, and the innkeeper who is keeping to herself, they don't seem to have much other company. To keep himself occupied, Loghain has taken to polishing his boots.
II. The inn; after the funeral, in the evening (closed to Teren)
The funeral is over, and so is Loghain's business in Ferelden. Whatever feeling he had expected on the heels of completing this journey, this isn't it.
After passing some time at the palace with Anora, Loghain arrives back at the inn late enough at night that he fully expects both Teren and Anders to be asleep so that they can be well rested for their journey back to Kirkwall in the morning. Rather than rousing the stablehand to see to Sooty's needs, Loghain leads his tired mare into the stables himself and takes the time to feed and water her while removing her tack. He brushes her down while she grazes, speaking softly to her under his breath. Outside the stall, Primrose dozes with her chin on her paws.
III. The Gallows library; at night (closed to Vandelin)
Once he has returned to Kirkwall, Loghain does not need very long to revert to his usual habit of staying up late into the night pouring over maps and tomes related to the blight and darkspawn, though admittedly some of his work is almost of a penitent nature; reviewing the old routes he took during the years he devoted to searching for Maric, wondering whether the present might look very different for Ferelden had he simply made this choice, rather than that one. It's a completely unproductive use of his time, yet it is difficult for his thoughts not to tend in that direction.
More often than not, these nightly visits to the library are solitary. This night in particular, however, when he steps into the library, he discovers there is already a lamp lit on one of the tables.
"Someone else is here burning the midnight oil, I see," he greets the enchanter with a smile that could easily be mistaken for a grimace.
IV. Wildcard scenarios (OPEN)
(OOC: Loghain can be found working in the Warden offices, on the training grounds delivering basic combat and self defence training to those who require it, in the stables seeing to his horse Sooty, or wandering around Sundermount with his wolf-dog Primrose! Feel free to set up a scenario of your own choosing if you prefer.)

IV: walking doggos
Along the way, though, he stops when he catches whiff of another animal and human pairing. Off in the distance, he spots Loghain and Primrose. Curious, he trots off after them, ignoring Carver's second whistle and beckoning call. Rather, he approaches the other pair, woofing gently in greeting.
II
Expecting her to be asleep at this time of night is misguided; as a rule, Teren doesn't get a good night's sleep. She's embroidering by candlelight at her window when she sees someone enter the stables, and having come to know that specific gait-- and horse-- she makes her way down, giving Primrose an idle scratch behind the ears as she goes by.
Rather than disturb Loghain, she stands in the doorway, arms folded, thoughtful. She doesn't mean to sneak up on him, but sometimes it just happens.
good doggos
"Easy," he tells her soothingly, then looks up towards the mabari and, more distantly, Carver. He recognizes the young man's gait, and lifts a hand towards him in acknowledgment, and greeting. (Truthfully, he does not expect much back, but he makes the gesture anyway.)
IV
She waits until Loghain is done with the people he's been training before she approaches, her sword swung over her back and her hair tied up and out of her face. She would bow, but she's not entirely sure of the proper protocol in this world compared to her own.
"Sir. You train people here?"
no subject
It takes Loghain a moment or two to notice the presence behind him, focused as he is on caring for Sooty. When he does, he turns just quickly enough that the mare snorts her displeasure into her feed bag, but not enough to truly spook her. Then, "Teren," he exclaims with some quiet surprise, relief coupled with confusion plain on his face (and another unnameable feeling that always creeps in when he sees her).
He dusts off his hands and slips them into his pockets, taking a small step towards the stall door. "I rather expected you'd both be asleep," he admits.
no subject
The training grounds have mostly cleared out by the time Six makes her approach, and Loghain is in the process of putting away some of the equipment when he hears the voice behind him. He glances over his shoulder, and then has to consider Six a little more closely.
"Sir. You train people here?"
The resemblance is uncanny, he decides, but perhaps it is just a coincidence--
"In the event they require it, yes," he replies, his tone naturally gruffer than he intends for it to be. He turns to face the young woman properly; it's easy enough to discern at a glance that training is not something she requires from him--at least, not the basics. "Can I help you with something?"
no subject
She's cagey, unsure, not as trusting as she might be, but at least she approached first. There's more important things than her own dislike of this place and distrust in strangers.
"I would like to help." She's not offended by his tone, considering that hers is likely something similar when she's caught off guard. She tilts her head up, just a little, crossing her arms over her chest. "I know how to use a blade and there are many who do not. It seems best to make sure that anyone unprepared is given some means of protecting themselves."
no subject
"I suppose you've had things to think about," she adds, chancing a small, uncertain smirk.
no subject
"I suppose you've had things to think about."
"A few things, yes," he agrees, meeting her eyes. There's no drink to reach for (or spill everywhere) this time, and no intoxicated junior Warden to come staggering into their table to interrupt them, and so the brief silence that follows feels heavy, weighted with meaning. Loghain allows himself a small smile that crinkles the corners of his eyes a bit, before he looks back to Sooty and absently smooths a hand across her broad neck. "What about you?" he asks--to Teren, of course, not the horse.
no subject
"If I told you," she says in a quiet voice, "that what you saw in the Fade was real-- as, I expect, what I saw was-- how much would you want to know?" It's as much an invitation as anyone has ever received, to be given the truth by Teren about some aspect of her life. She's not even entirely controlling the subject. It's a huge deal, and by how stolidly she looks anywhere but at Loghain, this much should be clear.
no subject
Her body language communicates her vulnerability just as clearly as her words do, if not moreso, and Loghain pauses as she speaks, listening in silence. The question deserves serious consideration and not a haphazard and ill-thought out promise to never never wonder to himself about what he had seen, to never ask Teren any questions for fear of tripping a wire and ensnaring her in something she can't escape. And to turn the situation on his head, how much of what she'd seen in the Fade had been true for him, too?
He smooths his hand one more time over Sooty's neck, then slips his hands into his pockets and takes a few quiet steps towards where Teren leans against the door. "I would know whatever you might wish to tell me," he replies quietly at last, looking to her eyes even if she cannot look into his, "whenever you might choose to share it." A pause, before he offers, "And I would give you the same, for what you saw."
no subject
Whatever similarities to Adalia Loghain notices in this young woman's appearance, he sets them aside for now. Instead he considers the offer she's brought to him--a magnanimous one which seems to run counter to her instincts. It's not a critical observation; on the contrary, he finds it admirable.
"On that, you and I are in agreement," he tells her with the beginnings of a smile appearing at the corners of his mouth. He surveys the training grounds around them, then gestures towards where the practice swords have been placed. "I would like to see a demonstration of your skills, if you don't mind."
no subject
"I'm glad to hear it." Looking around, she takes in the people filtering in and out before she nods herself, moving over and putting her actual sword to one side. While her greatsword is the weapon she's most comfortable with, all martial weapons are familiar to her now; picking up a simple longsword is easy enough, and she turns back to Loghain with a nod of her head before she walks over.
"Rules?"
no subject
...comfortable, in his way.
She's silent for a time, jaw clenched and arms folded as she stares hard at the floor. How much does he need to know? Perhaps, as a start, just the things that would send a person running, either to the hills or to the guard.
"Fifteen years," she finally grunts, tucking a strand of hair behind one ear, "or thereabouts. I was in that room because I killed someone."
no subject
It is not an answer that Loghain finds especially shocking or difficult to accept. There is much about Teren that he does not know, though that lack of knowledge doesn't hinder his understanding. Her demons, the blood on her hands, hound her as much as they do him. He doesn't need to know the details to grasp the deeper intangible truth of what those experiences did to her.
He frowns in thought, not in judgment. "Did they deserve it?" he asks quietly.
no subject
Teren shrugs one shoulder, shifting her eyes grimly back to meet Loghain's. "We were both doing what was expected of us. And both gave up our lives as a result." There's a great weariness behind her words, and her arms are still folded, still closed off.
"I still remember his face. Quite clearly."
III
He blinks up at the approaching stranger, eyes gleaming opaque in the dim flickering light of the lamp he's nearly burnt out. The company is unexpected, but he would be too weary for visible surprise even if he were inclined to display it.
"Oh, you know how it is," he says dully. "Never enough hours in the day."
no subject
"Rules?"
A pragmatic inquiry. Loghain reaches for one of the sheathed practice swords as well, hefting it into his right hand before he turns to face her again. He carries the weapon with the ease and familiarity of a veteran. "Let us aim to disarm each other, for now," he suggests to her. Maintaining one objective will better enable him to take her measure--and vice versa.
He adopts a ready stance, and taps the foil of the practice blade against hers. "When you are ready."
no subject
Another pause, before he offers, "If you would prefer privacy, there is plenty room in the library for me to work somewhere else. I wouldn't wish to intrude." It is at once a careful acknowledgement of what he observes in Vandelin's expression and posture, and outright stating that he's willing to mind his own business.
no subject
Loghain makes a pensive sound of agreement in response, but little else for a time. He empathizes, but she knows that already; anyone who knows the name Loghain Mac Tir knows that he has the blood of hundreds on his hands, but perhaps only a handful--present company included--know enough of him to know how those deaths preoccupy him. And this isn't about his understanding, anyway. It's about her, and her willingness to expose a vulnerability to him, trusting that it won't be exploited.
"Teren," he starts again just as quietly, "that changes nothing for me." After a moment of hesitation, he reaches out to rest a hand against her arm, his touch light, easy to withdraw from should she choose that.
no subject
She lets Loghain touch her arm without pulling away, however, and she looks down at his hand, pensive. "You'll find I'm not what you're bargaining for," she says, her voice quiet and not entirely combative, "but I suppose the choice is yours."
Betraying an order, and Alistair, and leading a whole country nearly to its doom? Rather more to complain about than killing one person, sabotaging one noble house. But some things are done out of a desire for honor, and some are done out of intrinsic treachery, and Teren suspects she knows where both she and Loghain stand on that spectrum.
1
"Does it feel like coming home, if even for a short time?"
no subject
It reminds her, sharply, of the taste of iron in her mouth, the laughter ringing in her ears, the sing of a blade and the twist of her body. It echoes with the sound of dice being rolled and the prayers, a glowing touch around her hands, and she has to force herself to focus, to bring herself back to the present with a sharp intensity.
"Until we are disarmed, then." Six is prepared for a good bout, no matter who's going to be the victor, and she watches as Loghain settles his weight and prepares himself, ready to move. She's going to have to try to use speed, she thinks, rather than attempting to overpower him - for all that she knows she is strong and powerful she's also well aware that he may well outmatch her.
Moving forward, Six grips the blade in her hand and darts to the side, aiming a swift cut up that'll sting just along his elbow, up towards the underside of his arm, unless he moves.
no subject
Dog woofs in mild offense at that comment, but does as told, trotting back to Carver.
no subject
"No, please, by all means." He gestures magnanimously to the chair across from him. "I could always use the company. And new company, at that. I don't cross paths with many Wardens besides Anders." He knows that much by sight, if almost nothing else.
no subject
"He seems a friendly fellow," Loghain calls out to Carver, then glances down to his own companion. A grimace creases his expression some. "I acquired her in Amaranthine some months back. She'd been used as a pit fighter; I think she still carries some of that old wariness of other dogs in her still."
no subject
"I bargain for nothing--that's not what this is." It would be easy under other circumstances for Loghain to allow himself to woolgather over his past mistakes, but the pair of them are on the cusp of something together and he suspects a misstep, or inattentiveness, could throw it into jeopardy. When she doesn't push his hand away, he lets his hand settle there warmly, a calloused thumb stroking her arm through the fabric of her shirt.
"And," he adds quietly, "it's not only my choice, is it?"
no subject
"Does it feel like coming home, if even for a short time?"
He exhales some and leans back, giving his shoulders a bit of a roll, then turns his gaze to the fireplace, considering. "It puts me in mind of this truism I used to hear my father say from time to time when I was a lad. 'We can never go home again.'" A short spell of silence, before he snorts some and raises his eyebrows. "I've never been one for wallowing in my melancholy, Anders, but in this respect I think he was right."
no subject
"He's Marian's dog. Like master, like dog." Outgoing and foolish, but somehow hardy. He glances at Primrose, a frown settling in. Never saw a dog fight in his life, not one like that. "That's a hard habit to break from when it kept you alive."
no subject
"Yes," he agrees with Carver's assessment of Primrose's circumstances, glancing down at her to gauge her temperament again. She is calm, though wary, and continues to regard Dog as though anticipating a vicious turn in him. "But she's done well, unlearning most of it," he adds, and drops a hand to affably scratch the wolf-dog behind her ears. "A bit of patience goes a long way with them. I had a mabari as a boy, myself."
He pauses, looking back to Carver again, as though considering saying something else. He does not.
no subject
"...we're all food for worms," she says under her breath, unsure why the thought came aloud, but it seems appropriate. How many years does she have left, how many does Loghain? Looking up into his eyes, she watches him, torn, a part of her hoping he'll take the initiative, make the decision for her. That's never been a thing she's wanted before.
no subject
"...we're all food for worms."
He quirks a small smile. "But not today," he replies just as quietly. Then he lifts his hand from her arm to cup her cheek, and leans in to kiss her gently on the mouth.
no subject
As the mabari happily makes a bed out of Carver's feet and wags his little stump of a tail, Carver looks up, waiting for Loghain to finish. He caught the look and expected more. But when nothing comes, he tries to come up with something to stay (it's not like he's going anywhere anytime soon). "You had one? During the rebellion?"
no subject
Except this one, apparently: she's a little surprised by the action, but not averse to it, and meets Loghain's kiss. There's no tearing at clothing or shoving tongues in mouths, at least not on her part; really, it's telling as is that Teren's demeanor is calm, even pleasant.
no subject
"I care for you. Whatever sort of life an old traitor of a Warden can have with the Calling," this said with a touch of grim humour, clearly referring to himself, "I'd share that with you, Teren."
no subject
She looks into his eyes as his thumb moves over her cheekbone, and finds that she likes the feeling. It's familiar, in a long lost way, and Teren is a bit ashamed that she wants to chase it.
"Very well then," she replies, prim and dignified, but with the slightest twitch of a smile at the corner of her mouth.
no subject
"You had one? During the rebellion?"
"As a boy, yes." For he was a boy during that time, as well as a man, and recalling those years puts a bitter twist at the corner of Loghain's mouth. "Her name was Adalla--as good a companion as a boy could ever wish for." He drops his hand down to give Primrose's ears a pensive scratch. "A chevalier as good killed her."
no subject
He's making it very hard to hate him. And he makes it harder still when he tells Carver about Adalla.
Dog whines in sorrow at the story. Even Carver feels a lump form in his throat. "Fucking Orlesians." Carver's not one to curse overly much - at least not so crassly so - but it feels fitting here. "Was it out of retaliation for your part in the rebellion?"