Galadriel (
laurenande) wrote in
faderift2018-09-21 11:24 pm
Simple Gifts [Closed] - Part 2
WHO: Galadriel, Thranduil, Solas, Myrobalan, Merrill, Kitty, Lakshmi, Teren, Marcoulf, Jang, Obi-Wan, and Anders
WHAT: A trip to a perfectly normal Chantry in the middle of nowhere.
WHEN: Current.
WHERE: The Island of Alamar, Ferelden.
NOTES: Current warnings, to be updated: Mild Gore
WHAT: A trip to a perfectly normal Chantry in the middle of nowhere.
WHEN: Current.
WHERE: The Island of Alamar, Ferelden.
NOTES: Current warnings, to be updated: Mild Gore
The Abbey on the White Cliff
Around noon on the fourth day, Brigette and the other sisters gather up the people of the Abbey. Everyone who can walk, who can stand, is urged to join them in the auditorium--the doors at the end of the main hall are thrown open and the people welcomed in. Today Reverend Mother Alvar will be enacting her final miracle and, in the grand tradition of this Abbey, the people are invited to behold and take joy in the sight of it. They are encouraged to be there for the end of the previous Reverend Mother's life, just as they are encouraged to welcome the new Reverend Mother, Luca, as she assumes her new position.
The auditorium is a wide, stepped chamber that drops downward into an open forum and stage. The roof is high and domed and was once constructed of the same grey stone as everything else on the island. It was caved in at some point, destroyed by a falling tree, but it has been patched over with wood and canvas. The extensive scaffolding speaks volumes of how much effort has gone into restoring this room, but all of it stands still and empty in preparation for the ceremony.
Above the center of the stage, in the very middle of the room, visible from all angles, there is a great green tear in the veil--a massive rift cleaves the room in two. It churns sluggishly, ebbing and twisting, muted under the weight of whatever pall hangs across this Abbey. Around the rift there is a golden arch--the wood is carved into flames and swords and papered over in hammered gold leaf. Behind the rift there is a triptych depicting scenes from the Chant and each is lovingly painted and framed in gold.
The room is filled with chaos, but not of the sort one would expect in the shadow of a rift. The people who meander in, the pilgrims who take up the seats near to the stage at the base of the steps, all of them are smiling, all of them are happy, some are weeping tears of joy or remorse, but all of them are entirely unsurprised by the rift's presence. They take no issue lingering near it. Praise is heaped upon the carpenters for their diligence in finishing the arch, songs are sung softly as everyone gathers, and eventually the room is prompted to recite from the Chant as Alvar comes to the center of the stage. She is frail and those who spoke with her earlier will see how she has aged--twenty years in a day, it seems--and she leans heavily on Luca until she moves apart to stand on her own.
Here lies the abyss, the well of all souls.
From these emerald waters doth life begin anew.
Come to me, child, and I shall embrace you.
In my arms lies Eternity.
When she speaks the Chant, for a moment, her voice sounds youthful again--no older than Luca's--but it is fleeting and before the end she is breathless and thin once more.
OOC:
Hey everyone, this is part 2! I will be posting an initial thread for this scene that will be a free for all, but feel free to start a thread beneath the Ceremony Header if you want. Below I will be reposting the updated areas and people links, same as the previous post.
New Top-levels are welcomed, as always, but if you have questions please hit me up.
This section will contain the rest of this plot, unless we skyrocket to too many tags for me to keep them straight.

no subject
"I will do what I can...but..." she fights with herself a moment and retrieves something from the desk. It is a copy of the letter sent to the Inquisition. It is not noteworthy, it lists the donation, invites them here, expresses an admiration of their work, of the rifters by name. It is innocuous...to a fault, in fact. The lack of mention it makes, of miracles, of their beliefs, of the state of the Abbey is careful and intentional. It says nothing and asks for much.
"Alvar was the one who wrote and saw this sent. I do not know if that has meaning, if she wanted help in her decline...but I do not think that is so. She wanted you here. She wanted it badly enough to send any money we might've kept, might've used."
She hands him the letter and retrieves her hands, steps back on reflex, for fear or reprisal.
"I believe she--she tried to kill your friend."
no subject
What he can get is enough to arouse his concern; he'd heard it read before, but it's another thing again to see it now that he knows the abbey and all this leaves out. To see the rifters' names (he shapes the unfamiliar ones beneath his breath) spelled out.
It wakes an awful sense of foreboding in his heart; he had resisted all along the idea that anything sinister was happening here beyond the infestation with dark powers that had come uninvited, had believed the abbeyfolk as he found them--
"I believe she--she tried to kill your friend."
He crumples the letter in his hand, looks up at her sharply, expression between shock and betrayal. Galadriel who had gone missing; who'd had a foreboding of this place from the start. He makes a noise in the back of his throat, stops--starts again once he's shaken off the first awful spasm of you were wrong, wrong, wrong about all of it--
"Was she the only one who knew of the plan?" Alvar. Gentle Alvar, who had lasted the longest but Odetta. Who had treated him kindly and died to return his eyes to him.
Who wanted the relic back and for her own inscrutable reason invited one of their rifters into the jaws of a trap.
There's something almost pleading in how he looks at Luca, naked and betrayed as his innate trust wars against this new piece of information. Tell him something that lets him hold on to the goodness he's found here. Let it not all be tainted with murder and distrust, as the Wardens had said.
no subject
"If there is one, only she knows the extent of it. She was always clever, but the gift made her...hungry, desperate at times." Luca tells him and looks down. "She told me that your friend...that she was here to destroy the gift and strip back the life of those who had been given it anew."
She is standing closer than she would like, but he deserves the truth. He has been the closest to this, had been given a gift himself, and he deserves his anger, if he feels it.
"I saw the broken glass...the broken chair...but I did not see the blood until she had gone. She told me that she had...turned her away. Sent her off. I believed her and for that I am sorry. I am so sorry."
no subject
Though it's been so awful a few days that the right blow at the right point might do it.
But Luca's explanation suffices; it sits ill with what little he'd known of Alvar--but Luca had known her longer, had been closer to her, and from the sound of it the relic--the gift--twisted things about people. Made them hungry in ways they weren't inclined to before.
He looks down at the crumpled letter again and unfolds it before setting it on her desk. She kept their letters. "If she truly feared that," soft and sad, "I can see why she'd kill to protect it."
He'd already made his own foolish decisions to save these people and he doesn't have a relic pulling at him. "It isn't mine to forgive--I wasn't the one hurt for us not knowing," he says to her apologies, gently enough. "But I believe you'd not have wished our friend harm." He knows too well what it is to maintain his silence because someone he obeyed gave him a reason to do so in the face of his own qualms.
It does not do to dwell on that, though, not when there's so much to be done and Alvar's vengeful spirit might be lurking anywhere. He shakes his head slowly to dispel the last of his awful shock. "I'll tell them, though. I'll--see what I can do," they've already spoken of the Inquisition's distrust, to her frustration and upset; no need to reprise it, "to convince them she acted alone. And I'll turn them onto the cause of all of this so--we can put it an end to it."
An end to the miracles. Probably an end to the abbey itself and its gentle, cheerful life. But as long as its people survived--or most of them--it was some kind of victory.
He swallows hard and looks up, looks her in the eye and manages something like a smile. Even if he's got no brave words to go with it, he can do that.