open
WHO: Byerly and Kitty and thou or even you
WHAT: Open post!! open post
WHEN: The month of KINGSWAY
WHERE: EVERYWHERE but mostly in Kirkwall and in the Gallows
NOTES: Warning: chatterboxes
WHAT: Open post!! open post
WHEN: The month of KINGSWAY
WHERE: EVERYWHERE but mostly in Kirkwall and in the Gallows
NOTES: Warning: chatterboxes
[ Starters in comments!! Feel free to tag in or start your own thread it's groovy ]

the gallows courtyard
The voice rings out from behind him in a tone of delighted surprise. Of course Sonia's been looking for him, now that she's more less settled in. She didn't come to the Inquisition for Byerly -- what a frivolous idea -- but he was the one who put the idea in her head in the first place. That, and it's been some time since they last saw each other; Sonia is absolutely dying to catch up.
She's wearing somewhat plainer clothes than she usually does at court -- much easier for travel. But her smile is as sunny as ever as she catches up to him with a hop-skip, her hands clasped behind her back around a bottle of wine.
"Fancy meeting you here," she chirps, her smile going a few shades more impudent. "I hear this place is all the rage these days."
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When he turns, his smile is only a little bit strained. Just a touch. There are just a few too many teeth in it. Aside from that, he manages an expression that's the spitting image of delight.
"Sonia Titania," he says. "I did not know you would be traveling."
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"Oh, how neglectful of me -- I completely forgot to send the fanfare ensemble ahead," she says glibly, tossing her hair over her shoulder. Whyever would she send word ahead when she could surprise him? She's aware that this isn't a pleasure journey, she knows that this is serious and dire and dangerous, but she always has permitted herself levity whenever the situation affords it. Sometimes more. She produces the bottle from behind her back with a grin. Straight from the Barra vineyards, of course. "I came well-packed, though -- all the essentials."
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"How charming," he says. And then, far more direct than is his wont, he follows that up with, "And will you take my letters back with you when you return?"
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"Dearest Byerly," she says in a tone of mock appallment, "you reduce me to a mere courier? As if I'd make this journey for something so trivial. Keep your letters -- I came to serve."
Go on, Byerly, tell her how foolish she's being. She's waiting.
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Not that she doesn't like the party circuit -- obviously. But Sonia's always needed to feel useful, all the more desperately so as the world seems to come apart at the seams around her.
"Besides," she adds, a little reluctantly, "my father thought it would be prudent to send me away from home for a time."
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It comes out flippantly, but there's a more serious undertone to it, somewhat subdued. They had all suffered loss, but none so deeply as her uncle. It isn't as though she doesn't know how it feels, and maybe she's being uncharitable -- but he's just so unpleasant.
"This," she says, leaning in and tapping the bottle with one fingernail, "is too public a venue for a private conversation. Spirit me away from here, will you? Let's have a drink, and I'll tell you all about my incredibly boring family drama."
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She's so good at causing them, too. She pouts at him, clasping her hands in front of her as she takes a half-step closer. "Can't you pretend like you're at least a little bit happy to see me? I've missed you, you know."
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"And I you," he says. Then he steps back and executes a proper bow over her hand. "Grant me your pardon, dear Sonia. The dangers of wartime make even an even-tempered man such as myself rather high-strung and anxious."
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"Consider it granted, dear Byerly," she says royally, and gives his hand a gentle squeeze. "Quite forgivable under the circumstances. I think a drink or two would do your frayed nerves some good. Shall we?"
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"Where would you care to go, dear Sonia? I would normally suggest the library, save for the fact that the library here is - quite irritatingly - crawling with people who have the most despicable hunger for reading. A high balcony, perhaps? So we might overlook the city, or perhaps the sea?"
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But, dutifully, he leads her through the fortress and up the winding staircases, to a room overlooking the sea.
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"You never did tell me what you're doing here," she says, glancing out the window. It does make for quite the view. "What service have you offered the Inquisition? I'll have to admit, that part of your last letter surprised me. I always thought you tried very hard to stay away from this sort of thing."
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But it's the story he must tell.
"I must admit," he says, "my concern was largely removing myself from the immediate environs of Denerim. I...ran into a spot of trouble."
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Well, this sounds like a story, and not, perhaps, one of the fun ones. Sonia seats herself at the little table by the window and tilts her head at him, gesturing for him to bring over the bottle.
"You? Trouble? Byerly, I'm shocked." Her voice is light, but her eyes on him are serious.
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It's perhaps still too early for the news to have gotten around. Perhaps he should be grateful for that fact. By doubts that Sonia knew the late Owain Underwood, son of the banns of Easterly Pole; he was a fellow with a bad reputation, a fellow who ran in Byerly's dissolute circles rather than her decent ones. But the word will spread in time. Byerly, who murdered a friend. Byerly, who really went too far this time.
"Well. Long story short, the Denerim city guard would sooner not see me any time soon, I think."
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"Oh, Byerly," she murmurs sadly, almost quiet enough to mask the hitch in her voice. She doesn't really know what else to say.
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Obviously. Clearly.
But the thing is, sometimes, when By closes his eyes, he can still see the surprised oh that the man's mouth had made when the knife had slipped in between his ribs. He can still see the way his hand curled protectively over his belly. He can still see the man's dull eyes, half-lidded, the life gone. It's -
It's not relevant here.
"Oh, Byerly, nothing," he says with an easy laugh. He can always pretend. Even with her, he can pretend. "It worked out for me. I don't owe him any money any longer."
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"Well," she says, sitting back in her chair and idly twisting her fingers in her hair, "you officially have better gossip in stock than I do. Or worse, rather, I suppose."
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