Entry tags:
CLOSED | one minute you say we're a team
WHO: Darras & Yseult
WHAT: A random courier mission
WHEN: Before news from Tevinter
WHERE: A road into the Vinmarks
NOTES: Pirate language probable. Maybe giant spiders. Who knows.
WHAT: A random courier mission
WHEN: Before news from Tevinter
WHERE: A road into the Vinmarks
NOTES: Pirate language probable. Maybe giant spiders. Who knows.
[ It's not exactly a glamorous mission, which is fine. The problem--Yseult thinks to herself but does not say when she is handed the assignment--is that it's also not a good use of her skills. Yes, the agent needs to be met in the pass midway from Wildervale, the message needs to be collected and delivered the rest of the way to Kirkwall. But surely they could send someone else, like an actual messenger, or anyone with two legs and a brain, and not a highly-trained spy? At first she'd thought perhaps there must be some other dimension to this, some suspicion about the courier, or some potential threat. But no. This is the Inquisition, and as it turns out their rumored egalitarian leanings are both very much true and also seem extend even to their internal assignment structures. It's all very different than she's used to.
So her horse is not the only one champing at the bit to get going and get this over with as she waits just outside Kirkwall's northern gate. Even this early, the road toward Wildervale is busy, merchants and farmers coming and going, wagon traffic stirring up dust to make the already-sweltering day even less pleasant. Her horse is a big grey mare who immediately ate every green thing in reach and has now taken to snorting impatiently, head tossed as much as the reins tied to a tree branch will allow her. Yseult leans against the trunk out of biting range, arms crossed, squinting at the gate. "Someone from Forces will meet you," she was told at the last second, over her protests (not in so many words) that sending two skilled agents was even worse than wasting one. But it seems there have been reports of animal attacks, and they are taking no chances.
She doesn't expect to see Darras, and even shades her eyes with a hand to be sure (as if she could mistake him). She doesn't expect him to come towards her, either. What are the chances, after all, that out of everyone in Forces, his name was pulled? And that he actually turned up to do the work? Slim, but here they are. She pushes off the trunk and lifts her hand in a little (awkward, ill-advised) wave. ]
Good morning.

no subject
Imagine is right, [ She replies, amusement flaring warm with the uneven curl of her smile and the teasingly skeptical angle of her brows. ] Even if I could teach you that you'd never have the patience for it.
[ She flicks a stray bit of grass from her mount's mane at him, and shakes her head. ] I'm serious, that's actually how you do it! You'll be less sore later. [ A sigh, long-suffering. ] There really is no way around the innuendo, is there?
no subject
[Fair is fair; honest is honest. And despite himself, Darras likes the way Yseult's smile curves at her mouth. He likes it so well that, in many ways, he could blame it for landing him in service to the Inquisition. Yseult is neater and sparer than anyone he knows, careful with her expressions. So the cracks, when they show, are to be savored.
That's why Darras falls right into smiling back at her, a little more of a smirk than what she's shown him.]
No, is the answer there. Sorry.
[He sounds nothing of the sort. He has, as they've exchanged this little banter, managed to relax a little, as instructed, and as it turns out, she was exactly right. It's more comfortable, albeit tenuous. If Horse so much as shies from a tumbling leaf, Darras will be back to awkward uncertainty.]
I don't trust horses. I don't see why everyone else is so keen to.
no subject
They're useful, [ she shrugs of horses, ] Better than walking for long distance [ but then already she smiles again, pleased with a thought that catches her: ] And once you get comfortable, you can go for a gallop. That's the best part of riding by far, flying over the ground. You'd love it.
[ Somewhere in the not-so-distant back of her head is the awareness that this is dangerous, that this is how falling back together begins. The ease, the humor, his smile. It's enough to make little things like wanton murder slip your mind. But you catch more flies with honey, etc. ]
no subject
It would come to little or even no surprise that he's terrible at resisting. That's why his smirk turns a little toward a grin, as he turns his attention back toward the hard-packed road ahead of them.]
I don't think I would. Because, like I've said, I don't trust a thing about them. D'you really think i'll be getting comfortable enough that I'll letting 'em run with me?
no subject
Yes. Maybe not right away, but yes. You're not going to turn down something fun just because it sounds a little dangerous, are you?
[ That arched brow is all challenge, even if she has to squint a little bit against the sun when she turns toward him. The heat of it is already oppressive, and she dips her head toward the long road ahead of them. ]
Come on, we can at least walk faster than this.
no subject
Rather than admit it, Darras inclines his head, onward.]
You first.
[In a moment, this could all be undone. Kirkwall is already behind them, every step like shedding a layer. It will all come back, and soon. A wrong word, a memory, something to curdle this. When she squints at him, like that, with the sun in her face--what does any of it matter?]
no subject
Up ahead the road widens and splits, with more than half of the traffic peeling off to head up the coast instead. Small farms line the road heading up into the foothills, and there's plenty of room to weave between haywagons. Yseult looks back over her shoulder for Darras. ]
Are you coming?
no subject
The road is physically moving away from the coast, turning from the familiar toward farmland, open fields, farmhouses. There is little wind here, and the sun is baking the hard-packed earth of the road. Darras is used to open sunlight. This is worse, with the stilted air.
Well behind Yseult, he watches her guide her horse in that direction, smooth and graceful. She could ride circles around him. He could turn around, now, leave her to it.]
As I was ordered!
[--He calls back, and it's half a joke. Along the coast, the water glimmers, far enough away that the waves move silently, their white heads flashing and falling back to blue again. Darras makes himself look away from it.]
no subject
The road they're on is mostly flat, but up ahead are the Vinmark mountains--not their tallest peaks, Sundermount jutting up above the rest off to their right--but a steep rise all the same, or so it looks from here. Yseult rides on for a little ways before turning back, urging her horse around and speeding back to Darras at a canter, stopping short to circle around him obnoxiously. She only half means to be, the disgusting heat of the day and an urge to race on until there's wind in her hair making her impatient, putting an uncharacteristic itch in her bones. She tries to shake it off, settles in beside him again. ]
I can actually feel my skin burning.
no subject
Different orders. Different circumstances.
[Both true. He doesn't let himself get mired down, but keeps his same steady pace, warily watching Horse for signs of rebellion. It's bound to come.
When Yseult circles back, he's picked up the pace a little, but caution is still keeping him on the slow side. Darras has at least managed to relax, physically, on the surface--reins held loose, shoulders slumped easy. Complacent, like, a man out for a stroll. On horseback.]
Spread mud on yourself. [He says it very evenly and seriously, enough that it might be actual advice.] Protects you fair lot from crisping up.
no subject
She suffers in silence for a while, eventually turning up the collar of her shirt and rolling down sleeves, thin white linen some slight barrier against the sun, at least. She lets him set the pace, too, but slowly increases the pace of their walk, as subtly as she can. And it is subtle, at first, but after a while, she suddenly speaks up. ]
Right, come on. Give him a gentle kick and a little rein, a trot isn't going to kill you. Stay loose or you'll get bounced around.
[ It's either this or she kicks his horse for him. Or he rides with her and his horse can run along side. Or they die of heatstroke before they make it halfway there. ]
no subject
And suddenly you're an expert on what's going to be killing me, now? Picked up some bit of magic, when you joined the Inquisition?
[He casts her a sidelong look as she pulls ahead of him a bit more. He's undone his shirt, mostly, his coat long ago stripped off and laid clumsily behind him in a bundle. His shirtsleeves are pushed up, baring tattoos that will be familiar to her--the anchor on his hand, the ship, the stabbed swallow--and stray marks of ill-healed scars, faint and pale. He hasn't changed much; it hasn't been that long, since they last stood in that little room in Llomerryn together.]
I don't fancy getting bounced around at all. I've only got so many teeth, y'know. Even the healers of the Inquisition won't be reaffixing those in my head, if they're knocked out from falling off a bloody horse. And all 'cos you're in some sort of hurry.
no subject
[ Yseult's patience may be legendary but it is really, really hot. And he is being a baby. Her face says it a bit, if only in the way that she is a little too clearly trying very hard not to say it. ]
The faster we go the less total time you'll have to spend on a horse. If you can't manage it you can come ride behind me instead and we'll send a message for someone to come pick up yours.
no subject
[First things first, and then, second--]
I'm not riding behind you. You're as liable to knock me off as your horse is. I've been watching you this whole way, and you're bloody reckless. I can see it in you. If you're that overheated, we'll stop at a stream or something and you can have a swim and drink all the fresh water you like. I won't say no to that.
[It's a small deference, the way he touches his heels to Horse. A small touch, too. Horse snorts, gives his mane a shake, and picks up the pace--a small bit, of course.]
What's the fun of being out from under the Inquisition's eye if we're going to be rushing back straightaway.
no subject
[ She can bear the sun if she has to. She has after all spent the rest of the summer at sea, and the seasons before it, too, building up a sturdy enough tan to survive this ride, even if she'd prefer not to. But she's not going to push Darras harder just yet. He's sped up a little and it is his first hour on a horse, so perhaps he deserves to be cut a bit of slack for a bit longer.
Yseult exhales a deep breath with her eyes closed, and shakes her head. ] If you insist.
[ Her horse has saddle bags, not bulging in the least but apparently not empty, as she bends to unbuckle the flap and dig out a book. Reins in one hand, half an eye on the road, and otherwise she's going to get some reading in. ]
no subject
[--Darras repeats, very matter-of-fact and steady. His eyes are fixed on the road ahead of them now. He's not looking around at Yseult in the least, not rising with great injury to a remark that was clearly intended to wound him, and certainly not acknowledging her attempt. Not looking around when she twists about in her saddle, either, though he catches a hint of the movement out of his perhiphery.
By the time he lets his curiosity get the better of him, she's well settled in that book. Darras snorts, again.]
Oh, come off it. Now you're just showing off.
no subject
I might as well, she knows how to follow a road. And at this speed I could hardly run into something if I tried. Besides, I want to find out what happens next. [ She probably means in the book. ]
no subject
[Arch, it's not exactly a question. Darras goes on looking at her, as she goes on reading. She'll be able to feel the weight of his gaze on her. A warm focus, for all the sharpness he's put on for the moment.
This is more of their same mistake. Banter, easy as anything. If it's a mistake, a trap, a mire, it's one Darras will fall into, easy, in the moment.
He takes firmer hold of the reins--but subtly, out of her sight. She's focused on the book. Doesn't matter: she'll be watching him, too. Her horse can follow a road. Well, that's not something Darras would have thought of horses--domesticated, but still beasts, aren't they, and unpredictable, as he'd tried to convince Yseult--]
What happens next, is, [and he leaves it hanging as he tries to mimic what it was she'd done to urge her horse faster, when they'd first set out. Squeeze, she'd said. And there's something in the heels, he knows that much. Horse bolts forward, with a start, surprised; Darras holds gamely on, hands tight on the reins as Horse really starts in at a clip.]
no subject
When he takes off ahead, she smiles, snapping her book shut. She's not in a rush to follow, watching his back as she tucks the volume back into her bag, and then urges her mount forward, picking up speed more gradually. Still, she gains on him, and after a minute or two has come up alongside, keeping pace. She grins. ]
See? You're fine!
[ And then gives her horse another little kick and pulls ahead, assuming he'll give chase. ]
no subject
[Fine for now, fine until the bloody beast jostles him off for good and all, rids itself of a burden--which is all a rider must be to a horse, Darras can't imagine otherwise. He's hanging tightly to Horse, hands knotted around the reins and legs clutched tight, hunched a little as if to present a small target, or decrease his weight or something equally unlikely. A courteous burden, if he's got to be a burden at all.
He does not give chase, when she pulls ahead, but keeps his same pace. Surely it's good enough.]
Do a handstand!
[--A challenge, yelled at her back, as she moves ahead of him.]
no subject
If I can do a handstand [ she asks, slowly, a not-entirely-certain proposal, ] while the horse is moving, will you pick up the pace to my liking until we hit the forest? Then I will have actually risked my neck as much as you feel like you're risking yours, so we can call it even.
no subject
[Hrk, is how the K sound in that word ends, 'walhrk', as Horse jostles Darras particularly. He doesn't throw himself flat over the beast's neck and wrap his arms around it, or anything so foolish. The instinct is there.]
--but, I'm a betting man. I'll take it. If only because I want to see the trick. Never made it to the circus, when I was a kid.
no subject
[ She considers, looking closely at the saddle in a way she had not bothered to before, and standing up in the stirrups to tug on it, side to side, testing how much it moves. ] One of the last times I did this [ she tells him as she prepares, leaning down to tighten a buckle, and then pulling her feet up out of the stirrups to kneel in the saddle, still holding on with both hands, just getting the feel of it ] I was about ten? I fell, and I accidentally tugged the horse's mane hard trying to catch myself. The horse was understandably angry about that, and bit me. Hopefully this will go better.
no subject
[Confided, sarcastically, conspiratorially, to the back of Horse's head. The effect is somewhat spoiled by the jostling still very much present in his voice, as Horse trots briskly along.
Her story gets a bit of a grin out of him, though it does nothing to assuage his apprehension. In many ways, the rare story of Yseult's youth is to be savored. She doesn't talk of it much. She would have, probably, had Darras asked it of her--asked it of her more than he did, those times when wine sweetened both of their mouths, when they were together, in the dark--sat on the beach, with a little fire burning between them, and the tide rolling in, black at night, brilliant azure by day. Then it seemed like something to be asked, something they could speak of.]
You're doing nothing to make me feel better about this, y'know. Truly gifted and trained at this, and you'll still be maybe falling from your horse. And being bitten, which proves my point about ill-will and all that.
no subject
[ But that's not going to happen, and anyway, she kind of wants to see whether she can, now. She's never been a show-off, or even much a thrill-seeker, but that doesn't mean there's no enjoyment to be found in exercising her skills, especially when the alternative is as unpleasant as a plodding hours-long ride in miserable weather. And if it makes Darras smile, that one where his eyes go a little wide like he can't quite believe what he's looking at, well. There's that. ]
This would be easier without boots. [ But he'd have to release his double-handed deathgrip on the reins to hold them for her, so she leaves them on, getting a good grip around the front corners of the saddle. Legs dangling on either side of the horse again, she presses up and takes a testing swing, forward and back, the momentum helping throw her legs up into the air behind her as she rolls her weight forward onto her hands. She doesn't quite get all the way into a handstand, but the potential seems there. Her horse makes a confused whuffling sound but continues plodding onward. ]
Alright [ Yseult says, tucking the front of her shirt into her trousers ] That was only a test, it didn't count. This next one I'm going to do it.
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)