Entry tags:
the holy dove was moving too
WHO: Solas and you
WHAT: Open post
WHEN: Throughout the entire month
WHERE: All around Kirkwall
NOTES: N/A
WHAT: Open post
WHEN: Throughout the entire month
WHERE: All around Kirkwall
NOTES: N/A
LIBRARY.
Solas spends much of his time in the library as he always does. There are books open in front of him. They're written in Common, in Elven, one or two with scraps of Qunlat littered around the margins (this is Kirkwall, after all). He is devouring what he can, still studying and investigating everything that he can, making notes and putting pieces of parchment to one side, putting things to one side, closing books but not getting up to put them away.KIRKWALL.
What proves clear, eventually, is just how much time Solas is actually spending in his studies. For a man that enjoys sleeping as much as he does he is not getting much of it - and he has no other symptoms, so this is clearly a personal endeavour rather than anything from his own suffering. The piles of books get larger, higher, and he can often be found scowling at them, as if they should have more answers than they do, as if the hours he had spent uncovering the history of Kirkwall had been entirely pointless.
He sits in a corner keeping to himself, waiting, frowning, reading and reading. He makes himself comfortable eventually, pouring himself a cup of something to drink - not tea - before he gives himself a moment to shut his eyes and relax.
When not in the library, Solas can be found wandering Kirkwall, investigating things he might have otherwise missed. He doesn't linger much in taverns or bars - they're hardly the kind of place he'd waste his time, even if it means he might be able to discover more of what the 'common' people might be interested in - but he does travel to Darktown at times, does look into the depths of what it is like for the elves here, offering what he can to aid them as little as it might be. He is a familiar face to some of them: they are absent from the Dalish and so the two of them get along far better than he might with anyone of the clans.WILDCARD.
Eventually, he makes his way back to the Inquisition proper and spends a little time wandering around the gardens, arms crossed behind his back and his attention focussed on the herbs, on the plants, on the things that interest him. He does not seem to mind being interrupted, if anyone has the desire, and he seems in a pleasant enough mood before he makes himself comfortable on a bench, drawing a book from somewhere and beginning to read, flicking the pages absently.
( Find him in the Gallows, near his room, hanging near Galadriel and anywhere else your heart desires! )

thranduil.
The loss of Adalia has frustrated him, left him angry and irritated - he knows that their relationship had been faltering, had been falling apart, but he also knows that it is a relief to have one less person to be wary of, one lesson person for him to be concerned about. Too many people had known his experiences, his secrets, and with the number whittling down to just two he feels more comfortable, more relaxed.
It does not mean he forgives Thranduil - trust has been broken all the same, there's no denying that - but the loss of one person makes some of the edge relax, makes him miss and long for the companionship of someone who truly understood him. Someone who was more like kin than anyone else had ever been and there's no denying the fact that what he shared with Thranduil was something unique in Thedas.
Gathering the package in his hands, he makes his way to the Provost's office and knocks, once. Sharply.
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He is still favoring his uninjured size, and opens the door slowly for it, looking at Solas and looking-- surprised? Confused if nothing else, but it melts into placidity; he beckons the other elf in, to the room that is unchanged since he last saw it but for how there is no waiting food, no usual effort to make it seem homely or intimate.
"Do come in," he says, halts. "Or are you here to deliver something for the Division?"
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He manages the tension in his shoulders by focussing his attention on his hands, on the gift. It's something he had spent time commissioning, making sure it was right, appropriate, and the urge to throw it away had been almost overwhelming. If it hadn't been something that he had spent so much time on, something that he had been so intimate in the creation of... He might have done so.
"No. It is not division related." Solas walks in, ignoring Thranduil as best he can, placing the package on the desk. "It is for you."
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“For me?” he says. “What for?”
Behind the closed door of his bedroom is the last gift Solas had given him, in the fresco, where Legolas’ face had been so lovingly rendered. And then not a month hence, Legolas had arrived, whole and hale and a comfort to Thranduil’s aches and concerns. Thinking the two events are connected is foolishness, but Thranduil has been drawn to folly as of late.
He pulls at the twine and unwraps the object slowly.
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"You are getting married."
As if that explains it all, as if that explains why Solas had dared come. If he had been able to dispose of this, to get rid of the mirror before he had managed to find himself forced to come here, to deposit this, to leave this gift here because it felt too painful to throw it away. It is something so intimate, so special...
Unwrapping it shows a handsome mirror, decorated in the way of the People, centuries before now. It reflects some of the designs of the eluvian - and if anyone asked he can simply say he had seen Merrill's or read stories. An easy enough falsehood to craft because, like much of what Solas has said in his time, it is not a lie.
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“Ma serannas, Solas.”
He sees the hand of the elvhen in this, in the eluvians he has walked through, in the ruins that are accounted old by Thedas’ standards. He loves it. He cannot wait to show it to Gwenaëlle, to admire himself and her in it.
“A perfect gift for a vain and prideful bride and groom.”
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"You are welcome."
With the gift given, Solas knows that his job is done. He turns away, washing his hands of the situation. The job is done: the mirror has been given and he has no reason to stand and stay any longer, no reason to bother with hovering in the Provost's office as if he has any right to be there.
"I am sure you and your wife will make use of it."
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He doubts it, of course, but the look if it is cunning enough.
“It would be fit only for a nug, if it were,” and on cue, there is a squeak, a rustle, Leviathan padding out from behind the desk, seeking treats as he sniffs at Solas’ ankles.
Thranduil sets the mirror down with reverence on his desk, on the wrappings. “Will you come to the wedding?”
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It's enough to stall Solas, at least, hesitating as he frowns, watching with an intensity that is impossible to hide. The nug that comes out and hovers near his legs is enough to have him frowning, pausing for a moment before he shakes his head and does nothing, does not offer any treats.
There's some hesitation to him, a twist in his stomach, but he breathes out and forces himself to calm down.
Thranduil is not going to like his next answer. He finds that he does not care much, his heart heavy and his throat tight.
"No."
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wildcard.
He doesn't treat her any differently, however angry he is, however he's cut them off. Whatever she knows, which she suspects is substantially less than he thinks—
It's hard not to feel, in the face of how easy that has seemed to be—how smoothly done, how she'd never have known if she didn't have Thranduil's unhappiness to mark it by—that it can only mean he was always false to her, and that this simply requires nothing different of him.
He didn't leave Thranduil to die when he had the chance, so maybe that's not unsalvageable (for his sake, she hopes not), but more than anything it's a tired feeling of old embarrassment that lingers. That again she's presumed too much of someone's sentiment, hoped for something that she shouldn't have, and can't have even the satisfaction of feeling her mistake is anything significant. When she knocks at his door, Hardie close at her heels, she doesn't carry more notes as she might usually—and she is trying very much to look as if she isn't looking very serious.
It's important not to be bothersome, or to make a fuss. It's worse if she makes a fuss.
“Hello,” she says, and her usual warmth with him isn't absent, just muted; her fingers fidgeting behind her back until she flattens her hands and clasps them in front of her. “I just wanted to come and collect my anchor-shard notes.”
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Thranduil is separated from him now, but that does not mean that Gwenaelle must be as well. He is still as good to her as he has always been, still been good enough to make sure the ripples of his ire and frustration did not colour her, as what she did was simply exist.
He likes her. He is fond enough of her. That is not likely to change, no matter how he feels.
Solas opens the door without too much pause or hesitation, watching her for a moment before he nods, stepping back to allow her entrance to the room. The fact that she has come for her notes does not seem to surprise him and he steps over, unlocking the box without too much word.
"Of course." Unlocked, opened for her. "As you wish." They are not his to keep, after all, and he's memorised what he had been permitted to read anyway.
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And it makes sense, now, how stand-offish he can be. How little he shares, how careful he is, how protective of his privacy. How artfully he does it, that most of the time it might scarcely seem noteworthy. She's never been wholly confident that she doesn't exaggerate her idea of his fondness—that he isn't only tolerating her, after all, that he might tire of doing. It's so, so easy to fill the gaps with old logic, with the things that have always made more sense to her than someone else's honest sentiment: that it is practical to be kind to her, and that Solas has proven himself to be eminently practical.
She trusts him, in a sense. Enough that she is comfortable, not pursuing more than she knows now—because he is practical, because he is clever, because whatever else is true, in this moment the Inquisition's interests are everyone's if they aren't a fucking fool. He is not that, so everything else can wait, must wait—
She can't quite be still. Behind her, Hardie paces the doorway, sits down and doesn't whine; she straightens her fingers against the paper before she can crumple it in her hands all unintentional. “Thank you,” she says, politely, and—
—means it for a hundred other things. For tolerating her, if he did; for not leaving Thranduil on the battlefield, for being someone Galadriel could reach for, for not dying and being one more fucking thing, though that last one seems something perhaps they don't need to worry about in him, too much. It's very abrupt, suddenly, when she presses her notes to his back because she's wrapped her arms around his middle; she doesn't come up very high, her eyes screwed shut to take one more liberty.
She's small, and warm, and so tense it seems entirely plausible that one wrong move could send her flying apart in a thousand directions, but for the moment composure or something like it is still within her grasp.
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Solas does not shoulder any blame in this. He does not think there is any point in pretending otherwise. Thranduil is the one that Solas is upset with and the one that he broke the trust that had been so deep and sure between them. It is not something he can ignore easily nor something he can choose to act as though had not happened. It is impossible for him. Not with all the weights he carries and the dangers that lay at his feet.
What he does not expect is her politeness, the way she acts with him, the shape and the movement of her. She does not seem to treat him entirely differently from the way she had before, which makes him feel a touch on edge, a touch unsure. Nothing has changed in the treatment despite what she knows, and it makes Solas aware of her more than he has been before despite the easiness of their friendship and the calmness of their camaraderie before now.
The embrace has him stiffening for a moment.
The only people who have ever dared embrace her are Thranduil and Galadriel, two people that he finds closer than others. For a moment his hands hang uselessly at his side before he lifts them up and slowly wraps them around her in return, careful and as appropriate as he can manage, ignoring the tension he feels and acting relaxed. He is a master at that.
"... Of course. There is no need to thank me for anything, Gwenaëlle."
What else would he do? He is gentle with her because there is no reason to punish her. Not yet.
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It has seemed so much more bitter to lose a friend for nothing.
“There is,” she says, and it's almost light except that she means it, matter of fact.
She hesitates, a moment longer, and then—
“Well, I'll leave you to it.”
Her face falls, a little. She can't help it.
library.
But she was someone rather more fond of being on horseback. Of being out and moving, most certainly. So she comes to the library with a purpose rather than a great passion to read. The book she's after, it turns out, is taken at the moment by --
-- Well, shit. She eyes Solas briefly, across the small room. She hadn't approached him, at any given point by herself. Especially not after... well. That.
Right, well, the Rani of Jhansi rode her horse off a fortress with a sword in each hand. Or some such nonsense. This surely wasn't half as legendary as all that. So she can do it now, as she comes up to him. Clearing her throat with a polite cough. Neither too close nor too far.
"Master Solas?"
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He can recognise why she might be loathe to come near him, to approach him, to ask for anything. He knows things about her that might not pleasure her and he has seen her at what he might imagine to be near her worst, both in and out of the Fade. It does not amaze him that she might not prefer his company, given that.
Still, he lifts his head and puts his pen down better to give her the focus she deserves, watching her with a raised brow before his face softens into something like a smile, soft and inviting.
"Madame Lakshmi. What might I do for you?"
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Her hands stay at her side, thumb hooked over the curl of fingers, brushing worn callouses. "I do not mean to bother your studies," she gestures to it, tapping the cover the one with her still good hand, fingers long, scarred. "But it seems we are after the same book."
Hopefully. he wouldn't object to her borrow it too long.
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Instead, he watches her, eyes drinking her in, thoughtful, before he focusses on what she is asking of him, measuring her. She is not quite as he remembered her, very different from the Fade - but there is likely good reason for that.
"It is no trouble." Solas reaches for the book and moves, standing, reaching to offer it out as he leans over the table. "I have other books to occupy myself with while you borrow that one. What are you studying?"
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It's that woman that looks over the book, picks it up carefully with a marked respect for it. Smoothes against the edge of the pages. The tenets she had lived her life by. "Myths, legends, historical works."
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Nodding his head, he takes a seat.
"What kind of historical works? Dwarven, human, elven, or simply Tevene?"
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"All. If this is to be my lands, my people, I would know them all like they were my own." She kicks a smile, brief, at her own expense. "I am sure you've noticed, I tend not to do things by halves."
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"Then you should know the truth." He's careful with his words but carries a confidence that he cannot deny, nodding to another pile of books. "The true history of Thedas, unmarred by legend of whispers from time. They are there if you wish to look for them."
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But then, she is the woman that favoured wearing plain clothes, that ever preferred practicality. She would leave that to her husband, rest him. But Solas looked rather than dressed down, someone rather sturdy for his work. But then, she was a daughter of Brahmin, raised to greatly admired the wandering esoteric that had dotted her childhood stories. Wise men who turned their back on earthly gains, in pursuit of higher knowledge.
Her gaze turns, listening keenly, to the books he indicates. "And which version is that? The one the chantry tells?" The smile there, well, he had heard exactly what she thinks of the Chantry. "Or some other?"
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kirkwall/gardens.
That's only rarely. He isn't outdoors for fun; he's outdoors because he's more finicky about his face than the weather, and the healers are out of the salve he's been slapping on his jaw at night to try to minimize scarring, and that means he's making his own. Or trying. Maybe. It's possible he'll instead take handfuls of ingredients to Anders or Isaac or his strange, haughty little cousin and ask for help, if he can stomach it.
In the meantime he's pinching leaves off of the winter elfroot—not too many—and playing his usual silent games (that no one else will ever know about as long as he lives) with a wisp that's bobbing around his shoulders, but half-heartedly and slowly, because he's cold and mad about it.
It's too slow, and too half-hearted, and when Solas sits down to read, the wisp decides, for whatever spirity reason, that he looks like more fun. It's already reached him when Kostos turns around to glare at it, then at the elf, like maybe it's his fault.
"Leave him alone," he says—to the wisp, not Solas, and it stops where it is, hovering a few feet away from him and pitching its quiet whirring hum lower in dismay.
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He barely notes Kostos wandering around the garden, far too wrapped up in his own reading. The book isn't something of particular importance, at least - some old retelling of history relating to Tevinter and the slave trade, all told from a very Tevene point of view which is disagrees with in both knowledge and principle - but he does notice the wisp.
It makes him lift his head.
"Ah." He's about to reach up and touch the small thing, as if that might make it easier to understand, when he hears the voice and finally seems to register that Kostos is actually there. His hand lowers slightly, as if he's something of a scolded child, before he presses his finger between the pages of his book and settles down, tilting his head.
"I do not mind." The glare seems to do absolutely nothing for the just-there smile on Solas' face.