Entry tags:
[open]
WHO: Wysteria Poppell, Flint, & U
WHAT: Catch-all for Kingsway
WHEN: Throughout the month - backtagged and forward dated to your heart's content.
WHERE: Kirkwall, various
NOTES: Wildcards welcome; let me know if you want some specific and I'll pull something together for us.
WHAT: Catch-all for Kingsway
WHEN: Throughout the month - backtagged and forward dated to your heart's content.
WHERE: Kirkwall, various
NOTES: Wildcards welcome; let me know if you want some specific and I'll pull something together for us.
[Starters are in ye olde subthreads.]

[FLINT]
baths
"Hello, there."
Byerly's manner is perfectly reasonable and polite. Indeed, his general attitude stays friendly as he speaks - "I've been wondering for a while. What is it, precisely, that leads a man to take a childhood dream and decide to make it into a reality?"
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He slows as he takes a seat on one of the benches at the bath's wall, boots off and rings halfway from his fingers. After the briefest pause, Flint finishes removing the bits of metal and drops them clinking into one of his boots. "I expect it depends on the dream."
'Are you thinking of something in particular?' he could ask if he felt like inviting further conversation. He peels out of his socks instead.
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He stretches out a little further on the bench he's occupying. His speech has been calculatedly slow, ensuring that Flint is well enough naked that to leave would be truly embarrassing - an admission that Byerly is annoying him.
"So what would lead a man to stand, fully grown, fully formed, still waving a black flag and swearing rules don't apply to a blaggard like him?"
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Without looking up, he chuckles. It's a low huffing sound.
"I suppose you'll have to find a pirate and ask him." Flint fixes the man with a glance then, brief and flat and little else. Technically, he is a member of the Inquisition. Technically the ship in the harbor is in service of the same and flies no flag at all, black or otherwise. Technically any rumor that's been overhead or said or traded along the Kirkwall docks or otherwise is nothing more than gossip.
He finishes undressing, folding his trousers and small clothes with similar care, then pushes up from the bench and steps down into the bath.
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Or, well, that's what he's heard, at least. He's certainly never done anything like horse-training. Maker, could you imagine? So sweaty.
"You don't know any?" By shifts easily to this new conversational ground. He knows the insult has been comprehended; he doesn't need to belabor the point. "You come from Nascere, after all. They say the men there are wicked and the women worse." He sighs, pressing his hand to his heart and rolling his eyes towards the ceiling in an exaggerated simulacrum of mourning. "Would that I could have seen the place before its demise."
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hate to see you go, love to watch you leave
thanks i hate it
naval presence office (for araceli)
But that's fine. Let no one say Flint is above making himself obvious. A certain clarity can only lend to the comfort of their situation, all things considered.
He at least waits until after pouring drinks to ask the first of his questions.
"Have you decided what's to be done with the Venatori ship yet?"
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From a large glass bowl on the desk several black arms reach out imperious and demanding. The remains of a wooden ship mostly crushed, the sails billowing sadly with the jostling of the body as it starts to haul itself up and out--
"Fernando enough. Ignore him." Araceli shifts the bowl to keep Flint out of the firing line, judges the distance, then moves it another inch. The range judged. "Of people in this project only three of us have the experience to do it: you, myself, and Charles. Everyone else is some level of sailor or swimmer but that's it. And you've the Walrus. Although I can hear it: either the rifter leader takes the ship or she gives it to a pirate out of Nascere barely arrived, I can sell it but this place falls over itself to shine up all sorts as if it doesn't know how the world works."
Or rather it doesn't want to know. Who wants to know what goes into the sausage after all?
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They've certainly made the matter of appearances in relation to her job any easy. Improved the prospects of the Inquisition at sea? Certainly. But its reputation? For all that he's personally evaded saying the word pirate aloud, he's more than done his part to cultivate the murmuring of it. This without even acknowledging that sailors can't keep their tongues from wagging to save their own hides; with the Walrus' skeleton crew roving the Kirkwall docks these many weeks, no part of their occupation prior to entering the harbor can still be much of a secret.
"All things being equal then, it might benefit the project to give Vane something more to do than teaching swimming lessons and how to pull a line. In the sense that it would occupy him. The man doesn't do well at anchor. But," --and here really is his point; Charles can advocate his own captaincy if he cares to-- "That's not unique to him."
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With pirates there's an honesty to knowing exactly what a pirate is compared to say chevaliers who might preen and prance and be held aloft as gleaming and glittering things who have bloody initiations in alienages. Or Templars bound uncomfortably tight to a Chantry where more of it than Araceli's comfortable with was written after the sainted lady was martyred. It's getting people to see it. Hold their faces in the damn water and more than half of them would have it go up their noses before they'd take a drink.
"There's something coming up, I'd rather you'd hear it from me before it does the rounds: there's a Qunari dreadknought, the orders just came from Skyhold." If this is-- well if it's an exercise in trust then so be it, the rescue mission was one thing but Araceli's head was in no better state than his perhaps so there's this that she can extend to him. "This one hasn't sunk or exploded, it's abandoned, run aground from what the scouts have reported between Alamarr and Brandel's Reach. We're to recover it."
It's work, as she lifts her glass to take a healthy swallow.
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It's specifically not the kind of work he really needs, but it certainly is something.
"I don't suppose Skyhold mentioned how likely this is to be some kind of Qun trap while they were at it, did they?"
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[WYSTERIA]
Afternoon Lessons
Which is why she'd stuffed a few of the slimmer tomes under her arm and made her way outdoors. at the very least, she can get some fresh air as the information pours in one ear and straight out the other. That's the intention anyway. The reality is after an hour she's given up reading entirely and the books have been re-purposed as a tripping hazard for passerby as she's taken up a place on the stairs leading up from the broad, sun-baked courtyard. She's wearing a hat against the sun, but has taken to fanning herself with a sheaf of what were probably meant to be notes.]
"Good gods, what a positively stifling afternoon."
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That's not the case in this form, though, so they just end up tangled, and-
"Holy mother of god, what the hell-" she shouts, just as the rats squirm, one bites, and Luana throws the other into the air, and it lands on Wisteria. "Shiiiiiiiiiiit!" Luana manages, just before the rat scampers away. Both of them.
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Wysteria slaps the rat with her make do fan, makes a strangled noise that isn't quite a shriek but isn't really anything else, and is well on her feet and two steps removed by the time the rat and its liberated friend have disappeared. She's making repulsed sounds, beating the front of her skirts with the papers like she means to knock the dirt from them and--
"Just what do you think you're doing?" It's unmistakably a demand, the brisk word of a young woman well used to scolding a younger cousin or five. "Running around like a child! You'll crack your head open on a stone like that if you haven't already!"
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She flops over, then. "At least they're gone," she sighs, and her head is on the floor. "My head is fine. How can you be wearing so many clothes?"
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Honestly.
Sounding just as offended, Wysteria asks to be certain: "You're sure you haven't hit your head? That you're not bleeding. Someone will want to know if you've bled all over the front steps, you know."
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360 No Scope
She finds her way to the training yard - specifically to a stool which she has roused from somewhere and positioned carefully within view of the make-do archery range so she might watch from the shade of the high wall and ask a seemingly infinite number of questions of anyone who makes the mistake of pausing for too long or wandering too close in their search for a practice bow.
"Tell me, have you been practicing long?" She might ask. Or: "Did you shoot as a child?" Or: "Your aim is really rather good, actually. Have you shot in any tournaments?" Or: "Is there a particular way in which you must draw back the string?" Or--
And so on and so forth. It's no doubt delightful.
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He's not used to being addressed by most, and looks a little surprised by Wysteria's question, reddening instantly and looking like a child called on for an answer he doesn't know-- even though the question was about his aim.
"I... um. Yes," he stumbles, "the Grand Tourney."
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"Did you do well there? You really must tell be everything."
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But then she asks a question and ruins it.
"Oh-- uh--" Caught off-guard. "I did all right." He clears his throat. "...it was nice."
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*SWEATS AUDIBLY*
R i p cade
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Hightown Gardens (for lexie)
And she could do with a bit of that, even if it comes at the price of Hightown ladies giving her clothes or her hair or her gods know what sidelong glances over hedgerows and planters. She isn't the only stranger in a strange land here; surely they'll learn to live with whatever offensive thing she's done. She does her resolute best to ignore them as she drifts along the strictly organized flower boxes and patches of lawn, her gloves hands tucked absently in the small of her back as she bends to smell this flower or that.
It's only when she's spent some minutes studying a particularly strange growth of what looks like some kind of peony that she happens to glance up across the planter and happens to find herself directly across from a woman behind an easel.
Wysteria starts.
"Oh! Pardon me. I'm in your way, aren't I?"
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And it is, really. Bright and blue in the way that belongs to the first stirrings of autumn, the air filled with the restless energy of the seasons changing and the light breeze with the promise of brisk evenings to come. Even if it hadn't been a sky day, Wysteria still wouldn't have been in the way; Alexandrie has been watching her wander about in the garden rather than painting for the last ten minutes or so, musing about all the many reasons why a lady would be out walking prim and straight enough for her very carriage to be a preemptive riposte of any disparaging look or murmur. New here, for a surety, but unattended so soon? Perhaps a titled woman, down on her luck, or a Rifter, newly let out beyond the boundaries of the Gallows. Or simply an eccentric and willful lady such as Freddie is. (Although no-one is really such as Freddie is, the rare gem.)
Whatever the case, Alexandrie's curiosity is piqued.
"Do continue to enjoy the greenery to your heart's content," she continues, her smile bright and painstakingly painted, "I shall not protest."
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She tips back her head, the shadow of her hat falling away just enough so she might get a proper look at the patch of sky in question above them. It's-- fine, she thinks. Blue mingled with steel and streaked clouds, poked through by chimneys from the surrounding Hightown estates roofs and drifting streaks of smoke from unseen Lowtown industries. There isn't very much of it, is there? Not really. Kirkwall's walls are very high indeed. But strange, how it seems more pleasant for the fact that someone has decided to put it to canvas. That's a little endearing, isn't it?
"Yes of course, I see what you mean entirely. It's a perfectly pleasant view." She squints not quite at the sun. "Though wouldn't it be better painted from a tower or a high window than down here in the gardens? It might afford a better view of more of it, I mean."
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She's not all that bothered by the buildings or their chimneys. In fact, she is merrily editing them all out. Her sky is wide over the gardens. Her light, extrapolated, is unhindered by the grey dour walls.
"You are new to us, yes?" she inquires, wiping her brush and setting it down to indicate she'd be pleased to begin a conversation, her head tilting slightly towards the chair to her left that she has brought along for such eventualities as visiting with the others who regularly frequent the space.
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