Pleased by their visitor, Evrion stands with his hands clasped in front of him. He doesn't recognize the girl, but it's no matter; he's happy to accept spirits on their own terms, or in whatever forms they take. "We haven't met you either," he points out, stepping forward, "what's your name?"
Kostos could guess. Could confirm. But she's an abyss—all spirits are, varied across a hundred different feelings and instincts but every one of them untempered and bottomless—and not one he can navigate. The draw of an idea.
Casimir would have probably liked her.
Kostos avoids looking at her, with her dead girl's face, which means looking at the tree, puzzling over the candles, the bones. (He'd never been to an alienage before the Inquisition, and he'd never asked what it is they honor, how it slots together with the Chantry, if it does.) But he's listening, too, if only so he can intervene if Evrion drifts off course.
"You have," To Myr, a bone picked delicately between thumb and index: The wing of something small. "You’ve looked for me. You don’t need to lie about it, I won't tell."
Wanting radiates from him even now. A glance up at that, furtive reassurance — a secret passed between brothers, or a Senior Enchanter's indulgence. Radius and humerus flex impossibly against the air; she casts the bone aside to flap into the breeze, and away. Watches its path, then licks a finger (makes a face), to ponder Evrion’s question:
"I don’t know if I have a name," It isn’t the answer of someone lost. She knows what she is. But a name’s a funny thing; a mortal thing. Those change. "Maybe I could. Will you help me find it?"
He seems the likeliest candidate, burning bright as melted candles in all this dark. A wisp drifts in passing; her eyes gleam with suppressed fire, draw it to her extended hand.
The look he shoots her is sharp, startled in its recognition.
She isn't wrong: It is the path his heart treads when he dreams. But he'd made a rule of never looking off it at what the dream's denizens might offer--never treated consciously with anything larger than a wisp. That way lay seduction by the Maker's first children, promises of anything and everything (knowledge) to tempt even one of the Exalted.
He looks away and joins Kostos in silence. Many faithful mages treat safely with spirits, he reminds himself, tamping down the urge to hustle Evry away from this one. (Collusion follows speaking, then experimentation, then they find you out and make the fatal offer: Tranquility or death.)
Something reaches bony fleshless fingers around the tree from the far side, clutching, clasping, digits tapping closed one by one. Shapes bulk in the shadows. An empty eye socket peers out of the mass; a tooth flashes. "Stop," Myr breathes to the lot of it; he knows where this goes now, and why.
no subject
"We haven't met you either," he points out, stepping forward, "what's your name?"
no subject
Casimir would have probably liked her.
Kostos avoids looking at her, with her dead girl's face, which means looking at the tree, puzzling over the candles, the bones. (He'd never been to an alienage before the Inquisition, and he'd never asked what it is they honor, how it slots together with the Chantry, if it does.) But he's listening, too, if only so he can intervene if Evrion drifts off course.
no subject
Wanting radiates from him even now. A glance up at that, furtive reassurance — a secret passed between brothers, or a Senior Enchanter's indulgence. Radius and humerus flex impossibly against the air; she casts the bone aside to flap into the breeze, and away. Watches its path, then licks a finger (makes a face), to ponder Evrion’s question:
"I don’t know if I have a name," It isn’t the answer of someone lost. She knows what she is. But a name’s a funny thing; a mortal thing. Those change. "Maybe I could. Will you help me find it?"
He seems the likeliest candidate, burning bright as melted candles in all this dark. A wisp drifts in passing; her eyes gleam with suppressed fire, draw it to her extended hand.
"We could both look. I could help you, too."
A deal.
no subject
She isn't wrong: It is the path his heart treads when he dreams. But he'd made a rule of never looking off it at what the dream's denizens might offer--never treated consciously with anything larger than a wisp. That way lay seduction by the Maker's first children, promises of anything and everything (knowledge) to tempt even one of the Exalted.
He looks away and joins Kostos in silence. Many faithful mages treat safely with spirits, he reminds himself, tamping down the urge to hustle Evry away from this one. (Collusion follows speaking, then experimentation, then they find you out and make the fatal offer: Tranquility or death.)
Something reaches bony fleshless fingers around the tree from the far side, clutching, clasping, digits tapping closed one by one. Shapes bulk in the shadows. An empty eye socket peers out of the mass; a tooth flashes. "Stop," Myr breathes to the lot of it; he knows where this goes now, and why.