Entry tags:
[CLOSED] wheres the light that was promised me
WHO: Herian Amsel, John Silver, James Flint
WHAT: Extending an olive branch.
WHEN: Now-ish; after the return from Tevinter.
WHERE: The Gallows
NOTES: Politicking, proably
WHAT: Extending an olive branch.
WHEN: Now-ish; after the return from Tevinter.
WHERE: The Gallows
NOTES: Politicking, proably
At the end of everything, the Archon does indeed pass quietly from custody aboard into what seems like just as silent captivity within the Gallows. Where he goes exactly and how he's being kept, Flint can't say. That should suit him. By every reasonable measure, the secrecy of it ought to satisfy the low, unpleasant suspicion in Flint that says somehow, some way, Radonis will find some way to leverage the situation to his benefit for as long as he's left alive. But of course it doesn't. That's not how any of this works.
Which is why only a few days after they make their landfall, he informs John he's going to see Herian Amsel. "Come if you like," he'd said while securing his sword onto his belt. He'd purposefully tightened the strap and checks the buckle.
During the journey back across the Amaranthine, along the coast and hacking up into the Waking Sea, Flint had occupied himself with the task of beating against the weather back to Kirkwall. The division of their company across two ships had been reason enough to avoid protracted conversation, the guarantee that the Archon wouldn't be paraded through the streets of Kirkwall upon their return enough to keep him checked. Which: fine. He'd pushed as far on that tack as was safe, but now that they're all so settled and comfortable again, it's time to come at the problem from a different angle.
He doesn't send a message ahead to Amsel's office to let her know they're coming, but he is patient enough about being shown in. Once inside, the the first thing Flint does is express some mild sound of remorse over the thoughtlessness of the sword at his side. He removes it from his belt and hooks it magnanimously on the back of one of the available chairs before taking a seat.
Otherwise, the first thing out of Flint's mouth to her is: "I wanted to make my apology. The discussion"—a gentle word for it—"we had was more heated than the situation required."

UNFORGIVABLE
"Silver, actually," he amends, as he raises two fingers in answer to her unspoken question. An actual introduction seems almost...unnecessary at this point. Was the out and out argument over the Archon not an introduction of it's own? John offers his surname almost as an afterthought. If they're being polite, that's certainly part of the exchange.
"We have a...difficult history with the Archon, as I'm sure you can imagine," John says, which will surprise no one in this room. "His actions have caused a great deal of suffering."
John does not look at Flint, but the space in the wake of that statement is left for him.
me a week later: now who's the asshole
"Of course, very little of that suffering has been at the hands of Radonis himself," Flint admits. "Tevinter was Tevinter before him and it will in all likelihood continue that way long after everyone in this room is dead. Excepting the end of the world, obviously."
It could be a joke if only what it implies isn't so distinctly unfunny.
"Radonis's actions, such are there are, are no more remarkable than his support of a corrupt magisterium obsessed with its own power - his approval of men and women who make their names with the pain of anyone who would choose something different. I've seen it. I've known it. People I've cared a great deal for have been ruined by it."
Said delicately enough, though there's no question he's tired by it even in circumstances he's purposefully engineered.
"Tevinter will do whatever it cares to with or without him for as long as it stands, no matter who is in that throne. But," he says, leaning forward to fetch his cup of tea from the tray. "I'm sure you can understand how it's easy to blame the convenient person at hand in the heat of the moment."
i'm going to say that i move at a stately pace and stand by that claim, by gum
That much they had known. Tevinter and slavery went hand in hand, and in a state where slavery was legal, what other suffering could go on, forgiven? When blood magic was banned in law and ink but necessarily by moral codes, what horrors could unfold in the dark? "I do, and I think that your inclination is justified. I think we can... hope and work for Tevinter changing, but there are times I fear that meaningful changes that will bring an end to the suffering you speak of, rather than than simply unfolding from the orders of another, demand..." She exhales, and shakes her head. "Actions so severe that I wonder if their enactment would render those carrying them out just as bad as those they sought to better."
Trying to save the world is hard, gentlemen.
"I recall there being mention on the crystals of Nascere." A matter likely better left to people in particular projects to investigate further, rather throwing herself into ever communication when there was so much work to do. Sailors, Tevinter, Nascere - it all seemed reasonably connected. "Is that linked to Radonis, as well?"
a dignified pace, i'd say.
And it's a blessing that they can be the ones to say this first. Better that it be the pair of them stating very clearly that the island existed as it's own separate, sovereign entity rather than let the reverse be uttered.
"Tevinter has never had as firm a grip on the island as they'd wanted, and their current attempts have taken a high toll on the populace." John pauses. He looks away, gaze falling to the dog as it laps at Flint's hand. He thinks of Randall's cat, then Randall himself, and feels a brief pang of...something. Remorse? Among the many casualties John had always expected to weather, he hadn't thought Randall would stick in his head.
"And the suffering of their attempts has been very keenly felt by men like us, and our loved ones."
Which is again, making space for Flint to speak into. John certainly hadn't had any roots sunk into Nascere to mourn when Woodes Rogers arrived to set fire to it.