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 ]

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She keeps it in her proverbial pocket for the next hour, determined to recall it when next she sees Mister Rutyer. It's all well and good to be reminded of your especially silly cousins when you're far away from home, but it's another matter entirely to let a perfect stranger potentially take advantage of what is a very small sliver of comfort. After two weeks of being trapped in the Gallows being told at every opportunity that anything and everything is likely to kill her or try, it would be prudent to exercise just a little caution.
Which is why she makes quick friends with a boy in the Inquisition stables, exclaiming with delight and surprise at every strange animal inside, and also why she promises out loud to be back in the evening with a treat for her new favorite horse, and why she is very specific about introductions when her guide eventually shows his face. After all, if you're going to be murdered the best revenge is making sure someone knows who ought to hang for it.
With that taken care of, she feels perfectly free about having herself a pleasant time forcing Byerly Rutyer to come along with her to all manner of stinking Lowtown squares and cramped, depressing Hightown gardens and - finally - to the walled garden where Kirkwall's chantry once stood.
The guards are the gate are a disappointment. She squints at the guarded entrance from under the eaves of a shop across the courtyard and for the sixth time today makes an effort to push her hair back behind her ears.]
It's a shame the walls are so high. But I suppose that says something about the whole place all on its own, hm?
[She wrinkles her nose, gives the guards across the square a last dirty look, and turns finally to ask Byerly for his no doubt very important opinion.]
Well, I suppose the rest of my list can wait for now.
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He almost can't believe his ears. The rest of the list? Can wait? What, but surely - surely - the sewers need inspecting? Or doesn't she want to look over three hundred years' of archived maps of the city...? But he suppresses his sharp comment in favor of a smooth: ]
If you're quite certain, I am a bit parched. And I believe you owe me something. Shall we find a tavern?
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That sounds lovely. These shoes have really begun to out wear their welcome, I'm afraid. We passed a public house two streets back, if I'm not mistaken.
[Really, he's grown into much more tolerable company as the afternoon's worn on.]
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[ He toys with telling a salacious lie - got kicked out for a barfight, or in some public disgrace - but instead settles on a factual: ]
They water down their ale. There's a better one this way.
[ And with a tilt of his head, he leads a block on, to a fine establishment - well, fine-ish. It's less decorated and flashy than the one they'd passed back there, but it's far cleaner, rather quieter, and with fans stirring the air, ensuring that a breeze keeps the place fresh. By looks at the girl and guesses - ]
Wine?
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[It is nice to be off her feet. She'd meant to see to the matter of new ones right off, but the matter of winding through Kirkwall's twisting, labyrinthine squares and streets had distracted her enough that only now is she regretting not being more direct. But the little tavern's chairs are more than adequate and the shadow of it tucked back from the direct sunlight is cool, if not the air. Give her an hour and she's confident she'll be fully recovered.
(A drink will help though.)]
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Now. You owe me.
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That's right. Though first it really must be said, Messere Rutyer - that I had my doubts about your qualifications as a guide to begin with. Nothing to do with your character of course and everything to do with the fact that you aren't from Kirkwall. But you've been very helpful actually, so thank you for that.
[Keep on like this and she'll be well on her way to having no regrets about having him fished out of the harbor. Not that he's pleasant company, but he's a very familiar kind and she's finding after the absolute inundation of newness recently that something she knows the workings of is a welcome distraction.]
What kind of story would you like to hear? A true one, I assume.
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[ He smiles, and lifts the glass to her, and takes a very very small sip. He is masterful at nursing his drinks over very long periods of time. ]
Tell me one that's important to you.
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Well. [Tap, tap, tap. She'd really prefer not to be wearing these gloves.] --Well I wouldn't want to offend you in any way, Messere Rutyer. And the place I come from is very different from this one, you understand. And I've been told expressly to be very cautious about talking about certain things outside the Gallows.
But, if you can promise some discretion then I'll tell you something very interesting. And if you can't, which is understandable given everything else I've asked of you, then I'll tell you all about, I don't know, my cousin Bartie's wedding two summers ago or something. It's still being talked about. It was a disaster of course, which would come as no surprise if you knew either my cousin or the lady in question or the lady's brothers but you don't and so it might make for a good cautionary tale.
[She takes a healthy sip from her cup.] Or I suppose I could tell you about the church as it's very different from what you have here, but that's dull.
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[ He presses a hand to his chest, the soul of earnestness. (With his free hand, he pours her a bit more wine.) ]
I am the soul of discretion. I wouldn't confess a secret under torture.
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Then the first thing you should know - for context only, of course - is that the place I come from has a very different version of what you call mages here. Never mind the question of what they're good for and who's dangerous to who, which I gather is a question on lots of people's minds lately, but the energy itself that they use here isn't at all the same as what's drawn on at home. They're like cousins themselves, I suppose. Similar in the nose and coloring? From what I've read, range of magicks here can be quite like what we have at home, but the methodology? Completely different.
[She makes a dismissive gesture with her hand - not important to go too deep down that particular rabbit hole when the only thing he needs to know is that the rules are different from whatever he expects to hear. That disclaimer is only meant to make the rest sounds reasonable.]
So once a long time ago in Kalvad -- oh, that's the name of the place where I'm from, by the way. Not the whole world, just the country. I'm from the middle lowlands myself. But again, not important-- [clearly if he's expecting a master storytelling, he's going to be sorely disappointed] Anyway. it once used to be that Talent was rare and powerful and the people with it were very great indeed. Talent being one's raw magickal ability, of course. And we call people with it magicians, not mages. Or well, specifically they're called [and here she says a short word in a markedly different language, just as clipped as in Common but alien nonetheless.] --but that's not really relevant either. I doubt anyone here speaks Kalvadan, so you won't need to know it at all. The point is that the number of mages was once rather small. Only a few hundred or so in the whole country and in the old days of the six kings there were even less. But now, since I've been alive at least, there are even more people with the skill.
There's a whole theory of magick as a reservoir from which everyone draws, there being only a finite amount of it. The more magicians-- er, mages--, the less there is to go around. What's completely stupid about this entire theory is the fact that no old magician's ability has gone sour just because a few hundred children can suddenly do charms and tricks, but you try pointing that out to a paranoid old man and see how far you get--
[She pauses here, reaching for her refilled glass and faltering as if for the first time in as many moments she's actually hearing what's been coming out of her mouth. She wilts very slightly.]
None of this is really a story, is it?
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[ He smiles at her quite pleasantly. Say what you will about Byerly, but when he puts his mind to it, he's quite good at putting people at their ease. ]
Please do go on. Have you found yourself pointing that sort of thing out in the past?
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Her left hands drifts absently to her right, making as to twist a rings on her fingers that aren't there. Clearly an absent habit - or an absent slip anyway.]
Yes, actually. Frequently. It's a very changed world, Mister Rutyer, and a number of men and women who are used to the way things have always been done will do and say all kinds of things to be offended over it. The men especially, I find, though I'm sure that has no bearing in this place whatsoever of course.
[She'd hate to cast aspersions on her present company. Besides, he's not so old.]
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[ By his earnest expression, you'd think he doesn't even notice the irony of him saying this to her. ]
But by Andraste's voice, I think that if there were any possibility here of magic running dry, all of Thedas world would celebrate.
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I can believe it. You all have a very puzzling approach to the whole question of magick and its use and how to best train children with it and what good or bad it is. Do you mind? [--This as a precursor to her topping off her glass from the bottle. It really has been a long afternoon and the weather is postiviely sweltering. She might eat something soon as well, she thinks but-- well. There's time.]
Not that I can't see the logic. Or the reasoning, rather. If becoming a magician was as dangerous where I'm from as being a mage here seems to be, there might be stricter rules there too. --Do you know many, Mister Rutyer? Mages, I mean. Ones that haven't gone bad, I suppose, though I'd be very interested to hear about ones that have. I can't quite picture what I've read in books and I think I might be missing some cultural context.
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I had a rather long-running affair with one in my younger days.
[ He, being a gentleman, waves her hand away and pours the wine for her. A lady ought never pour her own wine. (He pours heavily.) ]
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But nevermind any of that as Wysteria's eyeballs threaten very briefly to pop out of her skull. She doesn't blush, but all at once the woman before him has transformed from a gregarious but largely sensible young woman to shameless gossip. She gasps so loudly it probably strains something, then eagerly laces her fingers together and leans forward the better to catch every (hopefully) scandalous word.]
No! Tell me everything. What did your family say? What did her family say? Oh, I knew you were an absolute card from the moment I laid eyes on you. How could you?
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[ A fond smile, and a sip of wine. Then: ] But tell me, dear girl - does it make me a card to fall for someone?
[ There's a bit of pleasure in deliberately withholding the information she's clearly the most interested in. And there's quite a lot of pleasure in her delight at the scandal. Perhaps the two of them can be friends after all. ]
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Falling for someone? Oh no, Mister Rutyer. I'm afraid my evaluation is based entirely on such a combination of things that there's almost nothing you could say to change my mind. Here, let me lay it out plainly for you. [Wysteria takes a last brief sip from her glass, then moves it clear so she might motion innumerating the evidence as if dealing out a hand of invisible cards.]
First of course there is the manner of our meeting which I'm sure you'll agree was irregular. Second, your eagerness to accompany a pretty young lady without a chaperone all over the city which may not be especially irregular here, but I guarantee I've committed murder if the news somehow travels back through the Fade and reaches my mother's ear. Third, while there is nothing at all wrong with falling for anyone, in combination with points one and two I can't help but wonder what's become of this poor young woman and her no doubt shattered heart and - evidently - virtue.
['In bed' indeed.]
Now the last point on its own could be nothing, but for the sake of completeness I should also mention the fourth exhibit. [Here she takes the bottle by the neck and lifts it from the table for emphasis.] You've not done nearly enough work on this.
[She sets the bottle down with a half full and thoroughly optimistic thunk.]
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Young man.
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She chokes on it.]
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I'm flattered, by the way, that you think that someone would have a broken heart over me.
[ He pours himself a bit more wine, smiling serenely to himself. ]
And you know, Miss Poppell, there's more to a woman's virtue than whether or not she's let a man into her bed. I do hope that you haven't been convinced that your sole worth is your chastity. Such a dreadful lie.
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It'd been a near thing, aspirating the wine instead of spitting it everywhere. Gods, she can feel the burn in her sinuses--]
I don't-- what?
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That women are, all too often, made to believe that virtue lies between their legs. A grotesque thing, in my opinion. After all, what sort of man is considered virtuous? One who's courageous and brutally murderous and heartlessly cruel on the battlefield. But, Miss Poppell, I'm here to tell you: you, as a woman, can also be brutally murderous and heartlessly cruel. You can have that sort of virtue, too. I believe in you.
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