dirth: (i used to live alone)
the most fucked up wifeguy furry in thedas. ([personal profile] dirth) wrote in [community profile] faderift2018-12-16 07:38 pm

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


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.

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.
KIRKWALL.
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.

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.
WILDCARD.
( Find him in the Gallows, near his room, hanging near Galadriel and anywhere else your heart desires! )
shri: (» sit and watch you wiggle)

[personal profile] shri 2018-12-24 12:26 am (UTC)(link)
Hobo? Say it isn't so. Better than looking like a trumped-up peacock, in one Lakshmi's opinion.

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?"
shri: (» we know now we won't go)

[personal profile] shri 2018-12-24 12:45 am (UTC)(link)
"No, I thought not."

It seems he was willing to talk. That was refreshing at least. She didn't particularly blame anyone that she had so recklessly endangered for not being fond of her, to say the least. But at least - one part of it was salvaged. So she takes a moment, looking about for a chair to sit in. Smoothing the wrap of the saree skirts underneath her. Carefully arranging the pallu over her shoulder in the familiarity one has in clothing they're used to. Flicking it with her fingers before she reaches for the books he indicated.

"What we saw - " she clears her throat. A little tilt of her head skyward. You know where. "- was very different to what they seemed to describe. It did make me think perhaps they did not have all the answers." But that was more than a little true as she reaches for the nearest book, from what he was saying. "People. That is what the elves call themselves?" Not mocking, merely settling to learn.
shri: (» than a wolf at your door)

[personal profile] shri 2018-12-24 12:56 am (UTC)(link)
How similar it sounds, and something she had not wanted turns panicked in her stomach. Makes her swallow in the manner of stretching an old wound, an old hurt. That when it shows on her face is something plain - oh yes, she knows. She knows exactly how that goes.

Let it be, let them choke on it, let them die gasping on all the things they decide to not understand.

But she at least has the good sense of directing her gaze down into the book she has pulled. "Their immortality?"
shri: (» the wishes i've made)

[personal profile] shri 2018-12-24 03:34 pm (UTC)(link)
She let's the book settle in front of her, at once more taken by how he speaks than written words might accomplish from a book.

So instead, she fishes for one book of her own, the small pot of ink and short quill for just the occasion, and with it, as he talks, she writes. Breaking up to look at him, watch him, - not in trade but written in her own language, curving devangari script of a mix of Hindi and Marathi.

"How was it, that humans stole it from them?" is where she replies, as the sentence comes to an end. Looking back up to him after she's finished.
shri: (» this is the start)

[personal profile] shri 2018-12-24 04:17 pm (UTC)(link)
"How... Strange."

All of it really, she realises at it as she pauses there to begin her next line of information.

"I take it this is something of a resentment to many elves? Not least for the crude station they are reduced to presently."
shri: (» i move through town)

[personal profile] shri 2018-12-24 04:33 pm (UTC)(link)
"Typical," it's spat out before she has the good sense to stop it. But then, he's heard her say far more unforgiving things at this point, so it was probably mild admission in the grand scheme of things.

But she clears her throat. Her eyes staying focused on her page as she begins to scratch another set of words, this time, going left to right in another kind of script. "I have been told the story of the elf that fought next to Andraste. Though not from any member of the Chantry to be certain."
shri: (» and if that's true)

[personal profile] shri 2018-12-25 08:12 am (UTC)(link)
"I know this pain." As much and as little as she might say in such a way.

She thinks of the beautiful woman in Gwenaelle's painting. Stuck stunningly by the love of the one who commissioned such a thing. ( A handsome man, is the thought that isn't in the mood to think about ). So that's why a bastard wasn't good enough when many children no doubt were born to worse circumstance than Gwen was, a child of only her father's line should be enough.

( There is a question of course, how she compares them, a sense of France, England, and her own lands, that she should know better than to immediately correlate as the same. When she knew enough conversational French to get by, but a stilted, halting sort of Orlesian that was a mess in comparison. But nobility had not changed it seemed from their land to hers, to not know how Lords and Ladies liked to take their pleasures unthinkingly. Nevermind that these lands were not so caught up on a man or woman's inheritance for that to be half the excuse. )

Bastards, the lot of them. Is the grand sum up for all those thoughts. Perhaps that was why Gwen was a foul as she was, she thinks she might be that sort of woman as well if she'd had to stomach such nonsense without the armies, support and love from her own people to temper her anger to something else.

"I am sorry. I am sorry for the pain my kind have caused yours in this place. I know it does little to ease it. I have little enough sway in the Inquisition, especially now, but what I am in charge of - if there is something you need in particular - only ask."
shri: (» but now the odds now)

[personal profile] shri 2018-12-29 01:44 am (UTC)(link)
That gives her pause - because she thinks she understands but, well, she has certainly has learnt her lesson about her assumptions being things she relies on. "Do you say that because of how the People have divided themselves apart so much?"

She hovers there and wonders how to say that - there is no guilt. Guilt to her, was a mindless, grief-stricken emotion, that she did her best never linger in. It accomplished nothing.

"May I tell you a story, Master Solas?"
shri: what the fuck did you say (» make my soul clean)

[personal profile] shri 2019-01-04 08:29 am (UTC)(link)
"There was a land. One of many rivers, and filled with many kinds of people. Places that were green, lush and dense, so hot it felt like being wrapped in a blanket that opened onto a beautiful ocean. Others dry, arrid, with huge palaces cut into the rocky landscape that though they had no forests, they carved them as intricately as a jungle. It was ancient, for thousands of years, many had come. Not always peacefully, or with kindness in the heart, and there were fierce battle, proud warriors. The land was rich with spices, even poor men and women would adorn themselves like flowers. But in time, this land of many rivers softened them and they became part of it. Many people desired it after all, but soon they came to love it, they were part of it as it was part of them."

Lakshmi taps her finger, the nail clicking on the wood. Painting the history of Hindustan was a hard thing to summarise briefly, especially when so briefly to not weigh him down in details.

"But then another Empire came. They didn't care about the people. In fact, they didn't even consider them human - people - as you would say. They compared this land of so many cultures, faiths, nations, men and women to beasts. Beasts they did not value as more than labour. For their empire was so proud of itself it never thought it could be responsible of an ever greater evil. Monsters came dressed in their uniform, and at night, they turned into monsters and slipped into villages of the poor and hungry and like the wolves they twisted into, they ate them. Tore them limb from limb. Empty and hungry, and so much stronger. It took ten full warrior men to take down one if they were lucky. What chance did a farmer have?"

She swallows, the taste of blood thick between her teeth, the dust patching the back of her throat. but he had seen it in the fade with her. He had seen the red coated men. How their bodies twisted and ripped apart and devoured all in their path. Ripped and destroyed and gloried in their gluttony of gore.

"And the empire that had come to rule, did not care to know. It didn't want to know as long as they could get rich off this land, what did they care for their suffering? If the people were too busy fighting to survive the very night, how could the care when the temples were destroyed? Sacred animals slaughtered, thousands, thousands of years of traditions over turned."

Her tapping stops. Then she fixes, unafraid, vicious in a way that compared to the flare of her temper at different points, was cold and hot and so fixed on one, single point at the end of this story. "It is not guilt, Master Solas. Misunderstand me on all manner of things, but not this. It is not guilt."
shri: (» but if we go we go together)

[personal profile] shri 2019-01-07 12:13 pm (UTC)(link)
"I think I am the last one who is concerned when people are speaking out of turn."

A brief bubble of laughter at her own expense, the mouth on her that no, she didn't make any apologies for ( but when did she anything ? ). Instead, with it, she settles, easing back into her own chair. A jangle, of her belled anklets clattering in a faint chime, as one leg crosses itself below the table.

"But I could shout loudly again if you like, perhaps then I could find a new way to cross our Commanders."
shri: (» sparking up my heart)

[personal profile] shri 2019-01-15 03:42 pm (UTC)(link)
"Perhaps not, I... do not believe we here are so cruel as our detractors might want to think."

She smiles, brief, a tucked away thing as she smoothes a piece of hair away from her face. Only for it drop right back in the way, swaying agains the fixing of gold on her brow. It's idle, perhaps, a certain kind of easiness in present company.

Or maybe it is just that with him and anyone else of that room that had heard the truth, she is removed of a particular kind of burden that lets her ankles cross, her back lean into the chair and take a moment to form her words.

Because there is one more thing to be said.

"I am glad to find you, however... There is one matter I wish to speak to you about. Namely, that I want to give you my apologies. For... dragging you into the Fade."
shri: (» make the rain come)

[personal profile] shri 2019-01-22 09:49 am (UTC)(link)
That is news to hear. Her eyebrows lift, eyes sharp a moment as she is settled back into her back, fingers paused half uncurled, on the edge of something more than a pleasant exchange but resolute in keeping it so.

"... You are one of few it seems. Why is that?"
shri: (» you were sharp as a knife to get me)

[personal profile] shri 2019-01-25 04:40 pm (UTC)(link)
"This... Fade." She hovers, it still feels wrong, no matter the dangers that were said to her over again, how they spoke of mages, spirits, demons. It was wrong and confusing.

"... What is it?"

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