WHO: Kostos/Alistair/Jehan/Silas & Various Others WHAT: Miscellany WHEN: Kingsway WHERE: Probably Kirkwall NOTES: See comment subject lines! And if you would like to do something feel free to just drop it in here.
She squints a little, curious about that smell, and tilts her head just a little, to look him over. "Red lyrium," she says carefully, wondering if that's some kind of weed. That sounds like something that would grow in coffee, which is something she is depressingly versed on, because she had to move to the ass end of nowhere.
Red lyrium.
"That sounds like something you pull out of the ground and burn before it infects the rest of your crop, and you don't look like a farmer."
Dry, but not sarcastic. That was a compliment, right? Surely. Even farmers don't want to look like farmers.
He considers her for a moment, looking thoughtful in a habitually irritated way that doesn't actually mean he's irritated, then looks back at the journal in his hand. "Red lyrium is an alternate form of—lyrium." Obviously. But he doesn't know how to describe lyrium to someone who appears not to know about it, anymore than he would easily be able to describe air. "It's a mineral. It's magic. The essence of it. The red version destroys people." He turns the open journal in his hands toward her. The handwriting is atrocious. "Can you read this?"
She takes the journal and looks at it, and squints a little. She's not very bookish - she only went to school regularly up to the age of 14, after which it was sort of give and take - but she knows how to read cursive, and Ana Luisa makes her read old documents that were written by hand in worse handwriting than this.
She reads out a bit of it, but it doesn't mean anything to her, saying the words aloud. Things that probably mean something to this dude. "You know," she says, looking up at him. "Magic isn't this complicated where I'm from."
They do mean something to him. The most important thing they mean is that, since they made sense, she can read the handwriting. That means he needs her to not-hate him enough to agree to help him, after this, and that means he shouldn't say that where she's from is the Fade and whatever world she believes she remembers does not actually exist.
(That is, also, only his opinion. But good luck convincing him he's not right.)
"Where you're from," he repeats—and it sounds skeptical, despite his total awareness that he should avoid sounding skeptical, because he just can't help it. "What is magic like?"
She takes a moment and reads to herself, and nothing in this book makes sense. However, that serves the purpose of making it so that when she answers him, she sounds distracted. "Only the priestesses do it, and the Caipora, I guess, if that's what you call what it does. They can make things happen." That's not very descriptive, so she looks up and tries again. "Mostly illusions. And some like. Magic that doesn't seem like it's magic but just really coincidental coincidences."
no subject
Red lyrium.
"That sounds like something you pull out of the ground and burn before it infects the rest of your crop, and you don't look like a farmer."
no subject
Dry, but not sarcastic. That was a compliment, right? Surely. Even farmers don't want to look like farmers.
He considers her for a moment, looking thoughtful in a habitually irritated way that doesn't actually mean he's irritated, then looks back at the journal in his hand. "Red lyrium is an alternate form of—lyrium." Obviously. But he doesn't know how to describe lyrium to someone who appears not to know about it, anymore than he would easily be able to describe air. "It's a mineral. It's magic. The essence of it. The red version destroys people." He turns the open journal in his hands toward her. The handwriting is atrocious. "Can you read this?"
no subject
She reads out a bit of it, but it doesn't mean anything to her, saying the words aloud. Things that probably mean something to this dude. "You know," she says, looking up at him. "Magic isn't this complicated where I'm from."
no subject
(That is, also, only his opinion. But good luck convincing him he's not right.)
"Where you're from," he repeats—and it sounds skeptical, despite his total awareness that he should avoid sounding skeptical, because he just can't help it. "What is magic like?"
no subject
That's so much better.