Entry tags:
[closed] DANGEROUS GAME
WHO: Kylo Ren, Anna, Etienne, and Marcoulf
WHAT: In exchange for his support at the front lines, a small group has been dispatched to clear bandits from the Comte Chantral de Velun's estate. Spoilers: they're not bandits.
WHEN: Early Harvestmere
WHERE: Orlais, the Heartlands
NOTES: CW: violence, death, murdering innocent folks on the behalf of THE RICH, setting-typical discrimination; it's not great, bob. ASSIGNMENT INFO
WHAT: In exchange for his support at the front lines, a small group has been dispatched to clear bandits from the Comte Chantral de Velun's estate. Spoilers: they're not bandits.
WHEN: Early Harvestmere
WHERE: Orlais, the Heartlands
NOTES: CW: violence, death, murdering innocent folks on the behalf of THE RICH, setting-typical discrimination; it's not great, bob. ASSIGNMENT INFO


no subject
"There is always trouble to worry over," she answers. She is hyper-vigilant, while the rest of them sleep, she'll be prowling until the sun starts to rise. And on that subject, "Do we expect our travel to be uneventful?"
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"Travel can be dangerous, but we're well armed with a mabari in our company. Trouble on the road will look elsewhere unless they're very stupid." And he can't imagine anyone dumb enough to try it will really cause any significant delay. "Besides the weather is good with plenty of food to be scavenged." He fetches up a second apple and waggles it at her before setting his knife to it.
"That helps."
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All that seems unnecessary here, where Marcoulf tells her that it would be an aberration for their armed party to be attacked rather than the norm. Where they've lit a fire and actually thought to sleep around it. She worries her tongue on the cut of her teeth, feeling out of her depth.
"I don't..." She stops, brows furrowing. She doesn't need the food or the good weather. Maybe one day she'll relearn how to eat, how to rest, how to appreciate good weather. "I'm a hunter. City, forest, hinterland-- I hunt, I stalk, I kill. That's what I'm good for."
Not foraging.
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"You misunderstand." But that's to be expected. She's an odd woman, fallen through a hole into this world. No reason to expect she'll know it's meant to work. "Highwaymen in search of money will be practiced enough to recognize we're not worth the trouble. The rest, the ones that might be reckless enough to pay us mind, mostly attend to their work to avoid starvation. With so much in season, the risk of that kind is low."
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"I see," she responds without embarrassment. She'd rather learn the ways of it now than for it to cause her some kind of trouble in the future; in the moment. There was always trouble to worry over.
"I don't understand this world." As though that needed to be said, and she knows it didn't. "Much of it looks the same, first brush, then... Something different under the surface. But not that different."
Mortals, humans, people... they were just never that different.
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"That seems common with you people," he says, the particular selection of the words unarguably brusque but clearly absent - no purposeful unkindness to them. He doesn't much mind Rifters, beyond that fact they they're all lunatics. He does glance up at her thin, something wry and good tempered in the corner of his mouth behind the scraggly red whiskers. "Is the sky blue where you're from?"
She's not the first Rifter he's asked. At this point, it's practically a personal joke, no doubt funny only to him.
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How did one count time when time was frozen. When the only thing that progressed the cycle was the illumination of the lanterns cast upon a shadow play of monsters.
"Until the rift."
The Hunt always started at dusk. Through midnight and the blood moon. Into the darkness. Then when a new hunter came to begin again at the first lantern... dusk again. She tries to remember blue skies over Yharnam.
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Now who isn't in on the joke.
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Is that her elusive sense of humor? It doesn't sound like she's trying to be funny, but she did also know that Yngvi had been leading her on a dance explaining dwarves to her. If he was willing to call it a filth pit, why shouldn't she? Maybe it would irritate someone and she'd have a fight on her hands. Something to swing her whip at. Blood to spill.
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It's still funny though, especially out here in the Orlesian wood turned all golden and gorgeous with the lateness of the season. You couldn't pay him to work underground, but even beyond his simple aversion to the prospect of being under so much dirt, he imagines there must be parts of Orzammar that fit her description. The Deep Roads were proof enough of that, weren't they?
"You're a funny little thing, aren't you?"
Marcoulf, you're hardly broader than she is.
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"T'was a Carta who said it, or so he claimed," she responds listlessly, doesn't admit that she wouldn't be terribly perturbed to pick a fight. She's been scrabbling and scrapping since she was a child. In a way, it's really the only thing she seems to know how to do. She's done nothing but polish that skill-- turning from a little thief, to a little thug, to a little murderer.
She looks up at his assessment of her though, an eyebrow arched irritably, lips pursed. Sometimes she wishes she had been born a man, then she'd never hear those words again. As it is, they are familiar though. Echoes of the elder hunters who had trained her, been her friends and her family. Her gut aches.
"Never been known for my good company," she agrees. "And now I've been a Hunter too long."
And she saw beasts and terrors everywhere.
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"Nonsense," he says as he fetches a leather sack from the same bag. "You mind yourself and don't talk too much. There's worse kinds." More annoying ones, anyway.
A few handfuls of flour are poured into another shallow bowl, a cup of warm water fished from the pot. Marcoulf sets to mixing it with his fingers, muttering at the heat.
"Who did you hunt for?"
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"The Hunt..." her mouth twists. "People in Yharnam turn into beasts. First it was just a few, then a few more. That was the Hunt. We protected the city."
Silent a moment, "We didn't. We couldn't."
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It sounds like Templars and mages and broken circles. It sounds like abominations spilling out into the streets and countryside unchecked. It doesn't sound strange - these things are more normal than they were when he was a boy - but it is odd to recognize the things that Rifters say as something familiar.
There's an argument to be made here about the comfort of the expected and what demons might use that. There are people who would hear it and see it as proof that the ruling of a Divine-less Chantry can't be true, that Rifters must be demons. But Marcoulf has no business in politics and he thinks if they are demons, then Rifters have been doing a sorry job of tearing the world to pieces.
"A shame," he says. It is, even if it has no bearing here and even if saying it will make no difference to her. "Something like it happened there in Kirkwall too. The city nearly razed to the ground and blood running red in the street, evidently."
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Maybe there weren't werewolves and other twisted beasts lurking the streets of Kirkwall in packs in the night, but this place had its own ambitions, its own misguided magicks, its own arrogant researchers. She hadn't left the Hunt in Yharnam. There was no leaving the Hunt. The Hunt was everywhere.
"Not a surprise," her tone as dull and matter-of-fact as his own. She likes that about him. Minds himself. Doesn't say too much. "Wouldn't surprise me if they did it all again, a few years time."
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"Let's hope to see it," he says, a macabre kind of humor as he rolls the sticky dough between his hands and divides it into pieces. Presses them flat. Wraps the skinned apples in them.
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"From a distance," she agrees. A tragedy at a distance, without all the wretched nuance she had come to learn about in Yharnam: all the good intentions and evil ones, all the desperate bargains and delusions.
She stops her skulking, taking off her gloves to kneel by the fire and add the apple he had handed her to the workings. If she's not going to eat it, it might as well get prepared with the rest.
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Even better would be to hear about it while drinking in some distant tavern, he thinks but doesn't say as he retrieves the wet cloth from the now boiling water and shakes it out. It's laid damp out over his knees and the wrapped apples twisted in each corner until they form four tightly wound hanging bundles. Marcoulf cheerfully runs a stick between them, sets the lot in the boiling water and hooks the stick on the edges of the pot. At last, he dusts his hands. There; in an hour they'll have something worth eating.
"And you, my dear?" Asked as he wipes out the shallow bowls, stacking them inside each other. "Are you reliable?"
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It was easier to play the stoic Hunter all buttoned and tied up in her leathers. That was why the Hunters wore them, a meticulous facade that helped them to remember they were not beasts, but nor could they really be men while on the Hunt. That was why she bore the whip, to keep the things at a distance. That was why she wore the hat and the gorget and the gloves, to keep their blood from touching her. It wasn't practical armor, it wouldn't protect her from fang, claw, nor magic. Not her body anyway, but maybe a little sliver of her mind.
Even then, how reliable is her mind. Her hunt -- for the truth, for answers -- had ended with her turning tail from the screaming monster on the beach, running back to Yharnam after having seen too much. The Yharnam of the Dream was at the center of a web of nightmares. She had peaked into each and not had the courage to go any further.
"For this," she decides to be the best answer. "Reliable enough if... you need a killer. A scout."
She could creep and crawl like a shadow, usually to the ends of gutting creatures open from behind and revelling in the rain of their blood-- but she could probably control herself. Probably. Although, when was the last time she had to?
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There'd be no reason for her to be here at all then, of course - the circumstances of her arrival having something to do with the way to the work is coming undone like a blighted sweater -, but the point stands. These days, living on your sword or barbed whip or whatever bloody thing you might care for is easily done so long as you don't kark it in the process.
"But good. I suspect there's some fighting to be done ahead of us."