Entry tags:
[OPEN] there is a light that i leave on
WHO: Wysteria, Marcoulf, Flint and OPEN
WHAT: Open post/catch-all/buries myself in top levels
WHEN: Harvestmere
WHERE: Kirkwall and misc
NOTES: Prose or brackets are a-okay. Feel free to hit me up on DM or discord if you want something specific that isn't here. Just posting a wildcard and winging it is awesome too.
WHAT: Open post/catch-all/buries myself in top levels
WHEN: Harvestmere
WHERE: Kirkwall and misc
NOTES: Prose or brackets are a-okay. Feel free to hit me up on DM or discord if you want something specific that isn't here. Just posting a wildcard and winging it is awesome too.

no subject
"It may be possible," he says, selective and slow despite their isolation. "To find some use for Rogers' papers despite their current state." No need to let them sit idly until they their code can be cracked open; Who's to say where you got those papers?, Gwenaëlle had said. Which isn't useful because the answer that had first occurred to him is unchanged: Lots of people. A better question is: "Who's to say what other papers might be written in the same cipher, in a similar hand, and where they might be found? Should we find ourselves on some Tevene ship, it wouldn't be beyond belief to recover documents like it from some drawer or logbook."
Which reserves the question of how they might come by such an opportunity with enough honesty to not cast the papers into immediate suspicion, but--
Breathing in through his nose, cold air knife sharp, Flint straightens and casts his attention off the skiff's bow. His hand there at the tiller is quiet still, but the one laid across his knee nearest John picking contemplatively at some seam while he studies the sea. The wind is shifting out there, the tell tale sign of rippling water running cross wise to the pull of the tide. Eventually, he knows like instinct, that gust will find them here too. If he looked long enough, he might track its path all the way to the point it catches this small boat then blows past them to the coast. If he cared to, he could raise the sail in this lull and be ready when it found them.
"There are hungry crews in Llomerryn." Said abruptly, as if it naturally bears some relevance. "There might be some open to direction."
no subject
There is a missing link. The restless motion of Flint's hand illustrates that for John, whose hands are still, folded together. They come alive know as John leans an elbow on his good knee. His hand doesn't grasp the tiller, but the edge of the boat alongside Flint. What gets them aboard a Tevinter ship? What use can they make of water-logged papers?
"Correct me if I'm wrong," though John doesn't think he is. "But you're suggesting that we take it upon ourselves to give them something to hunt?"
But not only that. John feels a spike of adrenaline. There is always a moment of exhilaration when the fringes of a wild and improbable plan comes together beneath his fingertips. His grip tightens on the side of the skiff.
"Outfitted, of course, in way that benefits our case."
And in the meantime, they work to become trusted. That is certainly nothing new for John, who has made it his business to become essential. He can be essential here.
no subject
(That wind does find the skiff - a cutting edge which first slices about them then hacks inland.)
"If there's to be a fight with Tevinter, they must first be seen as the undeniable aggressor." Flint's looking at him directly now, his shifting hand having stilled. "If Tevene ships were found making raids on certain coastal towns and interrupting wealthy trade while the Magisterium stalls with debate over the new Archon's legitimacy, no one would have reason to doubt the obvious."
no subject
"So we make Tevinter the aggressor. And I'm sure in time, they'll oblige us by doing it themselves."
By that time, it wouldn't matter. The wheels would already be in motion. John smiles, shark-sharp. There are logistics to consider. They'll need to find these crews. They'll need to outfit them properly. And they'll need to point them in the right direction. But the outcome—
"You know, if we find the right men, we won't even need to pay them."
It's the kind of joke born out of the giddiness of realizing they've struck upon a perfect course of action. It will take time, surely, but once it began gathering momentum, it would demand a reaction. By that time, the pair of them would be trusted. Reliable in some way. John knows he'll have to carry that weight more than Flint. But it can be done.
no subject
"We find the right men," Flint is saying to him, certain as daylight. Here, as always, in this drawn thin space, they are knife to whetstone. They sharpen each other. "And they'll recognize the opportunity to be had from the kind of intelligence we might provide."
He could be talking about Llomerryn pirates, or a half dozen lords or bannons or merchant kings who might invest in the promise of Minrathous cracked open as an egg. He could be talking about the Inquisition itself. But first and most foremost--
"It would be faster to make your way to Llomerryn overland. Arriving by a gate rather than the sea could obscure your connection to the account long enough to secure reliable connections with two or three likely crews."
i'm so mad
There is no stutter in the beat of conversation. There are moments when John is taken aback by how well he has come to know Flint's mind. It is strange to him to realize that he understands his place as an extension of Flint; no objection rises in the wake of the realization that he is the one who will go to handpick these crews. Flint's hand is as steady on the rudder as his tone is as he speaks this plan into existence, setting John's path the same way he has done as he directed the skiff to carry them here.
"I know how to stay unnoticed."
It was not so long ago that John was anonymously making his way from land to ship to land again. It might not be so easy considering his leg, his crutch, but John thinks he can manage it.
"I'll find us two, to start. We'll see how that goes. If we need a third, we'll have a better idea of who to use by then."
John does not reach for the rudder. He clasps his hands in front of him, body still bowed towards Flint. What does it mean, that this measure of trust, this shared duty, no longer weighs heavily upon his shoulders? When did he grow accustomed to it? Of all the things that have become a responsibility and worry, this partnership is not one of them.
:'^)
(Going to Llomerryn. Being the Walrus' quartermaster. Playing the grim spectre in Billy's fictions. Sitting a handspan apart in a small boat being battered by the wind and cold, discussing what's required to bend the world to meet them.)
"We'll want crews not yet entrenched in whatever affair Llomerryn is presently engaged in. Fresh faces, or ones that haven't seen the kind of success we could offer them who are now looking for some scrap of legitimacy to float their name up the list while the rest are killing each other." But-- "I trust your judgement.
no subject
The profession of it, spoken aloud, burns like an ember. John feels it as if Flint has set a hot coal on his chest and let it burn it's way through John's ribs. Flint's trust is a peculiar thing. John finds value in it. He finds he would rather not part with it. He holds Flint's gaze for a long moment, letting the searing heat of that word subside before he replies.
"We're going to need a taste of something to give them right at the start."
John is skirting around the idea of asking Max. He will ask her eventually. But it's better to get this venture started without her. It's better for her not to be their sole source of information. Her assistance came with strings, and John isn't secure enough here to be able to navigate that in a way that ends in mutual benefit.
no subject
"The trick," Flint says, and none of his heat has subsided. He is intent, leaned forward across his knee. Compass needle twisted away from North and toward a magnet. "Will eventually be to supply them with intelligence their own spies would have no possibility of feeding them. But that's something we can make inroads toward."
Better, he thinks, to start with what they're able. To not let this opportunity as the world is waiting with baited breath for Tevinter to make decisions about its path forward slip through their fingers.
no subject
There is great destructive power in these words. It is slow-going; it will be like the kinds of spells John had once painstakingly taught himself, the kind that were wrought of layer upon layer of murmured incantation. But the end result—
The end result will be bloody. But John couldn't flinch from that now. He watches Flint's expression and he nods, finding no flaw in his reasoning. John's fingers lace together as he draws a breath, mind ticking over possibilities.
"And I'm well-placed for that. When we get back to shore, I'll see about tallying which of our contacts could be promising in a few months time and after a little work."
Diplomats hear plenty of things. John will simply have to take on some work. And there is always Max, who hears all things, but who he knows Flint will be reluctant to utilize.
"This will work."
John says it with quiet marvel, pleasure with what they have wrought outweighing the faint trepidation over the end result. He raises his eyebrows at Flint, trying to find some echo of that surprise without any expectation that he'll see it echoed back to him. Flint's moments of doubt are few and far between; John doesn't imagine he'll be privy to all of them.
no subject
This will work.
He doesn't grin at Silver, but the sensation of it flashes in his face. That belief turns him bright and sharp, all adamant momentum and wildly unsatisfied. Thrilled by it. For a moment, it's as if he's running toward two inexplicably equal things - undecided which he means to chase, but certain of his speed and footing. And-- Then Flint straightens from this, and it isn't a disappointment to do it (two inexplicably equal things). The conspiracy curve of his shoulders shakes free as his hand returns to tiller and sheet. The cleat is undone. The sail is trimmed in consideration for wind and direction.
In the cutting cold, the skiff heads up into the weather.