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.

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Darras, if I ask the horse to go any slower than this she'll just stop, and that isn't the deal that we made. I'll be fine. It isn't even that far to fall.
[ She's determined now, and not about to be swayed by his sudden misgivings, not after she got the feel for the possibility of it on that first half-attempt. She takes a wider grip on the saddle this time, prepares the same way as before, back and forth in time with her mare's slow walk, and then all at once kicks her legs up, pushes both arms straight, and there it is: a handstand. It's far from perfect form, legs bent and shifting to hold her balance, head at an odd angle, but she holds it for several full seconds before awkwardly lowering herself back down, half-kneeling on the back of the horse, still gripping the saddle before hauling herself back into it, red-faced.
She smooths her hair back with a hand, and straightens the collar of her shirt and pretends she isn't pretty proud of that. ]
It turns out that getting back down is the hard part.
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[But of course--of course--she does as she pleases. And despite his apprehension, Darras would have to admit, if forced, pressed, otherwise coerced, that he wold have it no other way. There should be no one that stands in the way of Yseult doing as she pleases. If she could just not dash her brains out as she was doing it, that would be lovely.
But of course (of course) she manages, brilliantly, hauls herself up into a bloody handstand on the back of a moving horse. With that peculiar mixture of apprehension and pride and some other more difficult emotion muddying it all up, Darras feels a seize in his chest--and he grins, he can't help himself. The moment hangs, a few seconds, and then she's hoisted herself back down again, graceful as anything, and Darras, like a fool, is still wearing a smile.]
Marvelous. [Dry, in contrast to that expression. He takes firmer hold of the reins, ready for her to demand he make good on his promise.] And you with your brains still in your head. Is this what the Inquisition hired you for?
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Yes, [ she confirms, ducking her head to fiddle with her shirt and unwind the reins from the saddlehorn where she'd looped them ] Clumsy circus tricks, to improve morale in the ranks. You can join me and put your card and coin tricks to similar use.
[ Once she and her horse are settled again, it is, as he fears, time to call in her prize. She gathers the reins up again and looks over, brow lifting in question. Deeming him ready enough, she urges her horse into a trot, determined to speed up but willing to at least ease him into it. ]
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[Women called Yseult, is the unsaid qualifier, implied by his deliberate separation of that third category.]
Real men and women of the Inquisition, now. They might be tougher to trick.
[Probably not. Yseult is a different story--no easy mark, her, not when it counts--and so he takes his reins more firmly and tries to imitate her. Horse starts a brisk trot, jarring Darras' teeth in his head. He turns his grimace to a forced grin.]
Don't s'ppose I can talk my way out of this.
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But nothing's getting him off the hook now. She's won the wager fair and square. His question gets a quick and unsympathetic shake of her head. ] No. [ She smiles, and urges her horse faster. ] Keep up now.
[ The road stays flat for only another mile or so before it begins rolling upwards, gentle isolated hills at first, but they grow in size and frequency, until they are hardly down one before beginning to climb the next. The farms along the road give way to forest and eventually the trees overhang the road enough to provide some shade, and persuade Yseult to give the horses (and Darras) a break. ]
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When they're out of the worst of the sun, and the forest is closing in around them, that's when Yseult allows their page to flag. The tree branches knit themselves together overhead, spreading out across the road that she has put them on. Without the farms, there are fewer carts, fewer other people on the road.]
Happy?
[--He prompts, without unwinding his hands from their grip on the reins. Too tight, for the pace, but it's keeping him grounded. The shadows from the trees consume the dirt of the road, changing the color outright beneath where they stretch.]
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Nearer.
[ She turns, sweeping damp hair back from a cheek and assessing him over her shoulder. ]
We can take a break now [ she offers ] stretch our legs, eat something. Unless you'd prefer to push on. Are you afraid of forests, too? [ Surely not. ]
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[Rude, and there's nothing stopping Darras from raising his eyebrows at her to demonstrate his mild offense.]
I don't remember saying I was afraid of horses. Intimidated, sure. Healthy respect for the beasts. That's not changed, by the way, I'm still wary. Good time to throw a man off would be when that man put aside the fear of being thrown off, and all.
Likewise, I'm not afraid of the forest. Is it uncanny, to be in a place of such darkness? It is. That's not fear.
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You've never been in a forest before.
[ It's not a question; it doesn't need to be now that she's thought it. Of course he hasn't. When would he have been, between shipping out as a child and spending all his life at sea? Maybe a jungle isle on one of his adventures, but she thinks not, by the way he is gripping the reins still, the way he says it. The woods aren't that dark, not yet. There's a strip of sun down the middle of the road still that's rarely blotted out, and more sunlight streaming through the overhanging branches to dapple the dirt below. But compared to before, it's like a tunnel, and one that's narrowing as they go.
She slows her mount from a walk to a stop and slides off, wrapping the reins around her fist and leading the way toward the edge, where grass meets gravel. ]
Come on, then.
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[Sarcasm, an answer that confirms what she's guessed. She doesn't make it a question so Darras knows that she's worked it out. And it's nothing to be embarrassed about, so he's not. He's not some shrinking peasant, stuffed full of superstition.
What's more, he's seen trees. In Afsaana, there were trees. Small decorative ones, in the finer district. Fig trees, and a few that flowered in regular season, and dropped petals that blew about the streets like confetti. Along the coastline, by the beaches and the roughshod fields of the seacoast, there were trees here and there, a copse or two that might provide some shadow.
Those trees weren't these trees, grown toweringly tall, with their branches twined together in a canopy. Darras slows when Yseult does, slides off of Horse when she climbs down, but he's wary, still. Horse is surprisingly complacent in all of the shifting movement, for one thing.]
Come on to where, exactly? Is there something worth seeing in there, besides more trees?
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She doesn't go far, at least not right away, just far enough off the road that she can tie her horse to a tree and have the chances of someone spotting her from the road and coming to steal her away seem minimal. She waits for Darras to do the same, unloading a smaller sack from her saddlebags, which she slings over a shoulder. ]
How many stories are set in a wood? [ she asks, attempting to break through his grumpy reluctance. She thinks about reaching for his hand, tugging him along with her, but doesn't reach out. ] And you're not at all interested to see one? Look how tall the trees are.
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[He makes quick work of tying Horse off to the tree. Not that he'd be opposed, if someone were to make off with the beast--it's not his, after all. It would be damn inconvenient for their return to Kirkwall.]
I don't know many stories set in a wood, so I don't tell many stories set in a wood, 'cos I don't spend a lot of time in a wood. I have seen trees, y'know.
[All the same, he looks to where she's indicated. Tall indeed.]
How would you climb one? Those branches, they're far up there. Can't grab them from the ground. D'you just leap and hope you're able to grab on?
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If it's too high to jump you use a strap looped around the trunk and then walk up. [ She mimes what she means a little, with her hands, but doesn't dwell on it.
She's led them away from the horses and the road, not far enough to get lost, but enough that when she stops moving and talking it suddenly seems very quiet. Leaves rustle, birds chirp, a small animal hops through the brush. There might be a stream through the trees a ways if they listen very carefully. ]
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That's why hitching his gaze to Yseult seems safer. A drowning man might cling to a scrap of wreckage. Darras looks at Yseult, who looks the same here as she did laying in bed, or sitting on a rock in Antiva, or stood in the shadow of the little room in Llomerryn, or silhouetted by the haze of battle on the deck of the Dragon Storm.
All that sentimentality means: when she makes that motion, of how to climb a difficult tree, Darras is looking at her. His nose wrinkles.]
You what. You're having me on.
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[ Yseult can see that he is skeptical and she could probably demonstrate if she wished. A horse blanket or a belt would work at least well enough for him to get the general idea. But instead, she puts one hand on her hip as she turns towards him, a brow arched. ]
Was doing a handstand on a horse not enough to earn me a little faith? Must I be constantly proving myself?
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Faith I've got.
[It's possibly too declarative, for the narrow line they're walking together. He doesn't regret having said it, once he's said it. The twinge that he feels, that's more uncertainty than anything else. Does he still carry that faith in her? Yes. And then again, no. What was once good and sure is brackish, and Darras doesn't know where next to step.
Better to keep good humor. He has surer footing there. So he's quick to tip his head, like a man bartering at a market.]
Now, doing a handstand on a horse, that was to coerce me to pick up the pace, and we both know it. An arrangement we entered into willingly. What's more, this isn't me asking for you to prove yourself. This is me, thinking that using a strap, looped around the back of the tree, sounds like a mad way to climb a tree.
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You could climb a rope up but those are really the only options. And sometimes you don't have a rope. How would you climb a mast if you needed to reach the yard but there was no rigging?
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[Obviously. And false enough a claim to tip toward the ludicrous, which ought to be enough to indicate his mood is running closer to the good than the bad, in this moment.]
Before I was captain, now, I'd just climb it. Ever seen the green monkeys of Salle, the way they climb trees? No ropes, no strap. That's where I learned.
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[ She leans back against the nearest tree trunk, slinging the bag on her shoulder around so she can pull out a skin of water. She drinks, and then holds it out toward him. ] Lunch? [ There's more in that bag; she came prepared. ]
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[An immediate rejoinder, just the way he has for any of his stories. A grin cracks his composure, softens his eyes. In a way, this is everything he wants. Familiar patterns and conversations. Familiarity itself. They've pretended for so long, and when they're stood together like this, it's as if they could go on pretending.
He reaches out to take the skin from her.]
And here I thought we were on an assignment. Think the Inquisition would be so eager to be accepting your help, if they knew you were dawdling out here with me?
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But it is necessary to take a break from time to time to ensure that the horses don't overheat. They seemed to be straining, and I thought it best to trajectory precautions.
[ The horses looked fine. She flashes him a smile. ]
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[He raises his eyebrows at her, gives it a beat, before he raises the water skin to get a good long drink for himself--then another quick sip, before he wipes his wrist across his mouth.]
Kind of you to be thinking of the horses. Are you sure it wasn't yourself that you were worried about? You're looking a bit pink in the cheeks. Could be that freckles start to show through soon.
I think lunch in the shade's a marvelous idea. For you. And the horses.
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She tosses him her bag, which contains bread mostly and some fruit, and slides down to sit at the base of the tree, leaning back against it and stretching legs out in front of her. ]
I didn't bring much I'm afraid, I didn't think it would last in this heat.
[ As she waits for him to serve himself, she presses a finger at her forearm and watches the skin pale slightly and then the color return. ] I think all my freckles may have merged into one.
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And--busy cataloging the lunch offering--he only catches the end of her assessment, the frank press of finger to forearm. It makes him grin anyways, as he holds the bread out to her, so she can tear off a hunk to start her off.]
Now, that's a disturbing image. Perhaps you'd better stay here and I'll go off and do all the work myself, and pick you up on the way back. What d'you think? Your conscience stand that sort of laziness?
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It might, as long as I can trust the work is being done. [ She'd never, but she is admittedly not in any great rush to get back on the road now that they've made some solid progress instead of their early plodding. ] But there have been reports of bear attacks in the mountains; I can't abandon you to be eaten.
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