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 ]

no subject
[ He strokes his mustache, pushing it back into place, then takes a breath and centers himself once more. Fixes his normal ironic smile back into place and says - ]
Well done. Shall we take your winnings to another table, or is this your game of choice for the evening?
no subject
he is absolutely capable of being rude about it, but it's still necessary and bickering about how much he'd like getting a smack might provide a tolerable diversion. )
By all means, don't limit yourself on my account.
no subject
Have you ever played wicked grace? That's a game of skill more than fortune.
no subject
( so prim, considering what she'd told him she gambled for. )
I know the rules. I haven't the face for it, though. Araceli will want me to learn that.
( if she understood what she exposed, she might have a care—but, then, it's just as she says. she hasn't the face for it. a little mirror, reflecting back the things she wishes to please the people who gaze upon her. striving to please, convinced of her own inability to do so.
she doesn't see it so clearly. clever, insightful, but her own largest blindspot. )
no subject
[ He smiles over at her, lashes slightly lowered in blatant flirtatiousness. ]
At once wicked and also full of grace. You seem perfect to me.
no subject
but she's slept with lexie's current shoulders and, being acquainted with his dubious charms, suspects not. )
no subject
[ He turns to her in mock-horror. ]
I'm flattered by your fancies, but you're a wedded woman. I could never, no matter how much you desired it.
[ More normally, less facetiously - ]
Besides which, back then, she was the hunter and I the prey. Not the other way around.
no subject
( gwenaëlle could singlehandedly destroy orlais's reputation for producing seductresses, that is just a fact. she seems for a moment like she might push that a little further—curious about the connection—but she lets it go, instead, )
But now I do have that massive husband to hide behind. I could seduce you if I wanted to, probably, I can say, who can prove otherwise?
( like, basic observation of her temperament could prove otherwise, but by the glimmer of humor, that is indeed the joke. )
no subject
And with my reputation, who would doubt you?
[ It evaporates quick as it came. He returns at once to his normal silliness. ]
So not wicked grace. Then perhaps the dice?
no subject
( at least she'll lose all her money to pirates having given it her very best effort to practise first. )
no subject
[ He lowers his head in a little bow. His facade is once again perfect - smooth as the surface of a funhouse mirror. Purposeful and controlled in his distortions and exaggerations. ]
Shall I counsel you on how best to play, or shall I serve as your opponent?
no subject
( a little wry. she thinks: probably he won't, though. she might not want to genuflect to the world that doesn't want her any more, but the lessons are harder to shed than she likes to admit, or to be called on—and it's not paranoia if she's usually right, if she can never go without second-guessing.
she'd hated that, how calmly and reasonably adalia had explained what she expected of her, how conniving it had sounded and how antithetical to her own self-perception. she'd hated it more because it was so fucking familiar. always assume the worst.
what's the alternative, getting screwed? she might still, but at least she can say she wasn't tricked. maybe. probably. )
no subject
A recapitulation of your current life philosophy, my lady?
[ But he doesn't linger long enough to let the barb sink in. Instead, he ushers her to a table of players. Five of them at the table right now. First, a couple out for a bit of sin, the two of them sitting side-by-side and making moon eyes at each other. They'll lose often, he suspects, but while making small bets. Here to have a good time, not to win. Clockwise from that pair is a swaying "drunk" who telegraphs his "intoxication" far too broadly. No doubt sober as the day is long. Far from being intimidated by the man's charade, Byerly decides that he'll be the one to wring the most money out of: you can get more out of someone who's here to win than someone who's here to have fun, and his ruse marks him as overconfident. Clockwise from him: a soldier, stiff and serious and cautious; the most significant threat. And beside him, a criminal more interested in lifting others' winnings than earning some of his own, if By doesn't miss the way his eyes track the other tables.
Byerly's people. He feels like he's home.
He slides into a chair, his posture easy and casual. Smiles at the others at the table. ]
Room for two more, dear friends? My lovely companion here wanted to learn the game a bit. She'll be facing down some truly fierce players soon - your help will be much appreciated.
[ The giggly couple smiles at Gwen; no one else does. ]
no subject
the drunk is trying too hard and hasn't spent enough time around actual drunks to carry it off, she decides immediately, but she smiles at the soldier. it is a thoroughly untrustworthy smile, and entirely instinctive, too; there is something about a certain flavor of stoicism that has always made her want to press her nails. it's the same impulse that had her batting norrington between her claws at the winter palace, and pressing her thumb into bellamy's injuries when he was being terribly manly about the whole thing.
she isn't predatory in the same way that lexie might be, but certainly she identifies prey quickly. trouble has always been a friend. )
I just hope not to lose all of By's money, ( very lightly. she can hear the edge, her mood turning on his remark and staying turned. they can probably hear the edge, too. the only place gwenaëlle has ever known how to hide is in plain sight. it looks like a weakness to exploit; the trick is actually managing for it not to be.
that will be the tricky part, because he really does get under her skin. )
no subject
Not overmuch of one, though. By knows this game, and he loves this game. At the table, he plays garrulous and cheery, chatting away on any number of things. Today his chosen topic is Ferelden wines; after he gets two glasses, one for himself and one for Gwenaelle, he begins holding forth (obnoxiously) on the superiority of Ferelden wines to Orlesian ones. The Free Marchers clearly have no interest in this topic, but his voice is pitched as such that it's just about impossible to shut out: the giggly couple are too wrapped up in each other to pay him any mind, but the three more serious players clearly are having their nerves frayed by the foolish chatter.
This strategy could, at times, backfire. Except that Byerly is also playing very, very badly. Not in obvious ways, but enough that he's bleeding a steady stream of silver into the pockets of the other players. Enough that they're willing to stick around (no matter how distracted and annoyed) so that they can land this fish.
Periodically, he explains to Gwen rules of the game - simply, broadly, guilelessly, and often incorrectly. The gallant male of the pair of lovebirds corrects him when he's quite incorrect, smiling in a besotted fashion to his paramour after every gallant correction. Even the pickpocket periodically makes dissatisfied noises and shakes his head at Gwen to communicate - he's wrong, don't trust him. The soldier, meanwhile, twitches like he's being bit by fleas at every piece of bad advice. ]