WHO: Wysteria, & Luana, with guest appearance by Raleigh Samson
WHAT: Wysteria and Luana go on an adventure to join the Battle of Ghislain
WHEN: Pre-Ghislain (gestures vaguely at travel times)
WHERE: All over the Maker's blighted earth.
NOTES: Phenomenally stupid decision making.

THE GALLOWS → Closed to Samson;
Only an absolute fool would have much ambition to be out there getting themselves killed, she had thought, and been quite satisfied with that conclusion even here in Thedas. Besides, what good would she be there really? She doesn't know the first thing about treating wounds or killing anything that doesn't have antlers or feathers. No, the Gallows was plenty good for her and it isn't as if the endless paperwork to be sorted stops simply because the Inquisition's fighting force leaves Kirkwall.
That had been the plan anyway. And then she'd found Alexandrie gone, off along with the rest of the Inquisition's force, and at once staying behind had been fundamentally untenable. She has prepared her speech for when she gets there - it involves quite a few What in spirits name are you thinking?. What she has not managed is to secure the damaged latch on her traveling case very well. As she's hurrying down one of the Gallows' staircases the day after the Inquisition's forces have left Kirwall, it pops open and spills all its contents at the feet of the man coming in the opposite direction. A change of clothes, a blanket stripped from her bed, a satchel of coins and a strange collection of miscellaneous objects - sticks and twine and vials of water that smash on the stairs - scatter in every direction.
"Oh! Damn it all! I'm so sorry, Messere!"
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But always his thoughts drift back to that fortress in the mountains, and the man there, his oldest living friend. Or whatever the word should be. The one who decided he should live, who bawled him out until he raised his eyes and straightened his spine, who made him get up and work. Samson realizes, though, that Cullen was only yelling at himself, only because it would have been so very easy for their places to end up reversed. He didn't really care; he was only afraid.
A fool, any way you look at it.
And so it goes, around and around.
And then a woman nearly crashes into him on the stairs.
Pelted with all manner of... stuff, little things all clattering about his ankles, he stops awkwardly in mid-stride, nearly loses his balance, and in regaining it steps down hard on one of the unbroken vials. It breaks.
"Whoopsie-daisy," comes a friendly voice from several stairs down: a short man tailing the tall one by several paces. He's armed. The tall fellow is not. Unless you count a surprised glare as a weapon, that is—and when deployed by these particular eyes, pale-and-red in their sockets, it had might as well be called such.
"Maker's arse, woman, what're you doing tearing around like that? I nearly broke my neck on all your," a flustered gesture, searching for words to describe this mess, "bits and pieces."
Tall fellow's voice is a touch less friendly.
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By the sound of it and how carefully she begins plucking shards off the stair, it's more out of concern for his foot than for the vial - but oh, there's that too isn't there? Damn it. She'll have to find some replacement container for it and fetch more water from Kirkwall's horrible dark harbor while she's on the ferry. And what will the oarman think of her? Maybe she can simply make her way down to the ferry slip and collect what she needs before the boat even arrives or--
"My apologies. Oh, sir, collect that shoe for me won't you?" This to the shorter man farther down the stairs. A boot has gone heel over toe halfway down to him. Back agian to the tall man immediately at hand: "I have a boat to catch. I'm so sorry. I'll find some way to make it up to you. I really had no intention of trampling anyone at all, but it took me far longer to decide on which things to bring. I'm sure you know the feeling. It's a terrible thing, isn't it? Looking at all your belongings and trying to guess which of them you'll need before you go a place. Maybe the weather will turn. Or maybe I'm taking more than I need or-- pardon me."
Mortified, she shoves a pair of small clothes into her case without looking at them, much less folding them. If she's red in the face, it might as easily be from a lack of oxygen as it is from embarrassment. "Anyway. I always find I'm struck by sense a sense of indecision in those instances, even here where there really isn't much at all to choose from."
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Despite his apparent mood, Samson does clasp said boot to keep it from falling, noting vaguely how small it feels in his hands, and even manages to reduce his death glare to a convalescence frown by the time Wysteria's squared back up in his field of vision. She's saying so many words right now. If he's meant to follow them all, that's too bad, because many of them have flown right past his head, never mind in one ear and out the other.
"Here," he interjects, and waves the boot at her—not to hand it back, exactly, but to shoo her off from the worst of the mess on the stair. "Here, now, I'm all right. Just leave the glass." That one big booted foot of his is, in all likelihood, fine, but he does lift and step it carefully back anyway, for the benefit of her concern. Apart from that, he seems prepared to loom there, big and awkward, while she fusses with her scattered belongings.
The guard clears his throat to get the general's attention, conveys a message to him with an arcane movement of his blond eyebrows.
Samson sighs raggedly.
He then stoops to assist the frazzled young lady in sorting the less, er, delicate of her fabric effects. The blanket, perhaps. That seems harmless enough. "Come on, then," resigned as hell to the effervescent company he's about to keep, "let's get you off to your boat."
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This, said as she tucks everything back into it's rightful place - clothes more or less all folded, a series of remaining unbroken vials carefully wrapped in a pair of stockings and tucked inside one of the boots.
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Maker's balls, this girl's mouth moves more quickly than he can think. This must be what it's like for old folks around younger folks all the time. Wait, does this mean he's old? Shit. Maybe it does.
Frowning, for that seems to be his default expression anymore, he locates the hairpin and pinches it—pinches it between—pinches the bloody thing between index and thumb, and thusly presents it to her, un-trod-upon. His is a large hand with long fingers, pale and cold, cold as autumn.
"There. Anything else we've missed?" After looking all around the stairs by his feet, he twists to look at Ser Derry, who shakes his head.
"Looks like that's the lot of it," Derry says, pleasant as ever. Why the hell's he always in such a good mood, anyway. "Shall we?"
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"An escort too! How lovely." With a deft weave, Wysteria navigates about the tall gentleman on the stairs. "I don't suppose I could convince you to run along ahead to keep the ferry from going, could I?"
He looks fit and quick - the kind one, not the man nearest to hand. No, he has a rather rangy, ill look about him - recovering, she thinks, and maybe that accounts for how sour his disposition is.
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Anyway, he lifts up an arm to let Wysteria pass without bumping him—whether she was about to or not, considering how they've just met, he'll not take any chances—and turns to follow thereafter. "He can't," he grunts.
"That's right, messere. 'Fraid I'm meant to keep an eye on this one." Note, for example, how Derry never wanders further than a few paces away from the man in question. He's letting Samson walk ahead of him now, in fact, rather than taking the lead himself.
"Ser Derry here's got to follow me wherever I care to go. Like a faithful hound. Only, if I step out of line he gets to put a bolt between my eyes." Samson taps himself on the forehead, helpfully, and finally cracks a smile—or something approaching one, anyway. Crooked, like. "Or would get to, had he bothered to bring his crossbow."
"There's always next time."
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But to hell with it. She's curious.
"Is there a reason you might be expected to step out of line, sir?"
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"Indeed, gentle as. He's adorable, really."
"All right, get off it." Hers is a serious question, though, and should be respected with a serious answer, for which he clears his throat as though to dispel any bits of banter still remaining. He's keeping his strides a bit short, so as not to overtake her while they all travel—and keeping a cordial distance from her person, outside of arm's reach. "The truth of it is, I'm a prisoner of the Inquisition. Have been for the greater part of two years, in fact. But you needn't worry any. Truth is, my lady, I'm lucky to be where I am. Hang on," he interrupts himself, and raises his arm to signal a pause.
While Ser Derry's hand doesn't move to his sword, he tenses in the moment, and his friendly expression grows tight. He knows better than his muscles do that this isn't a hostile gesture—but only just.
Samson's only pointing to a certain doorway. "That's a service passage, there. It'll be quicker down to the docks."
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Ha. Escorted by a prisoner and his escort. If she were more of a wit, there might be a joke to be made there. Unfortunately:
"You must be a very useful sort of prisoner to be kept so long, Messere. And to be allowed outside of your cell. I wasn't aware the Inquisition was so generous. Well, no. I suppose I did." They give her things to wear and sensible shoes and she thinks they would have done all those things even if she hadn't officially put her name on the books. Granted, the shard in her hand has something to do with it-- but still. No one is making her pay off what she'd been given out of her stipend and they very well could. "Have you been here in the Gallows all that time? I confess I've never noticed you. Which isn't unheard of, I suppose. But I pride myself on having something of a keen, observant eye."