Nahariel Dahlasanor (
nadasharillen) wrote in
faderift2019-02-04 09:09 pm
open | neither snow nor rain
WHO: Nari, Lexie, you~
WHAT: Guardian catch-all for some ladies. (Well, one Lady and one elf.)
WHEN: The Present!
WHERE: Kirkwall
NOTES: prompts I have promised people will be appearing below as I get to them!
WHAT: Guardian catch-all for some ladies. (Well, one Lady and one elf.)
WHEN: The Present!
WHERE: Kirkwall
NOTES: prompts I have promised people will be appearing below as I get to them!
Nari
I.
With the sleet keeping everything near-constantly coated with ice, Guardian is hardly the right month to be jaunting about between the Gallows towers and the towers that hold the massive machinery designed to raise and lower Kirkwall's immense chain net. The massive machinery that hasn't been used in two decades, ever since Viscount Threnhold had used it to strangle Orlesian trade and the Divine had ordered the city's Templars to 'convince' him to lower it. Threnhold's successors had been loathe to use it with such a tangle in the recent past, and so its mechanism is full of two decades of largely untended metal shifting, weathering, rusting in places.
The winter seas are rough enough that an assault by sea isn't likely, but the thin dark Dalish woman had shrugged and said that the Archon's Palace raising into the sky above Minrathous hadn't been all that likely either, and so here she is, on her way to the Chain tower, a pack of tools slung over her back. A pack that has been repaired several times, and by the look of it is about to need one more: something heavy looking is inching its way out of the back of it with every step she takes. Won't be long before that's lost. Hope it's not important.
II.
What Guardian is the right month for is being here near the hearth in the Hanged Man's taproom with a hot mug of mulled wine and a mallet, tapping chairs back together and listening with quiet amusement to a harper on one side and two tipsy men one-upping each other outrageously in order to try to take the same woman home on the other.
The important thing, really, is that the weather is outside, but the entertainment isn't unwelcome.
“Are you listening to this?” she asks, looking up briefly with a crooked grin spreading across her face, “The taller one has gone from fisherman to ship's captain in the space of five minutes.”
[ or something else! ]
Alexandrie
Winter here has not brought the lovely romantic fluffy pristine snow she'd dreamed of. It's desperately horrible in Kirkwall, and what work she can do from home she does from home with great relief. Unfortunately there are still meetings to be had, new correspondence to discuss, and every so often new books, scraps, and sheafs of paper arrive for the Inquisition that are in need of translation. All these things are in the Gallows, and so, begrudgingly, is Alexandrie.
She can be found now, looking far less disgruntled than she actually is, sitting at a table in the library with a letter in one hand—at which she is frowning with extreme delicacy—and a painted porcelain cup of tea in the other, her maid doing a spot of embroidery close enough at hand to refresh it when that becomes necessary.
“Ah!” she exclaims quietly, her glance warm and pleased over her painstakingly painted smile, “C'est parfait. Have you a moment to spare?”
[ ...or something else! ]

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"Do you remember the story," she is soft as well, "of Geneviève and I losing ourselves in the woods behind the château?"
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Alexandrie looks up, her face bare and plain and open. "I presume nothing. I am only on unfamiliar ground with my small fire, with my sister gone to search for something to keep it alight, not knowing if I shall see home, or anyone, again, with the path I tread to get here washed away. I know only that you are missing from me, and it was I who went away, and that I do not deserve to return. But also that there are sheafs of music packed away at Val Fontaine that I cannot play alone, and that I miss the shelter of your arms on the roofs of Val Royeaux, and to hear your stories through your shoulder. That I want you to smile when you think of me, to be able to smile when I think of you."
And she does smile, now, small and beside the shining track of tears.
"And that whatever you say to me of it now, I will leave here believing."
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"I had a love before you. Long before you. She is - always has been - cold and distant. Sometimes I wonder if she loves me back. But I fear I will never love any so much as I love her.
"In the days after we parted, you and I, she came to me. And she offered me something more, a consummation of my lifelong passion. It is not good, what we have; it is not kind. It is likely to be the death of me. But I am not strong enough to turn down this feverish desire, dear Alexandrie. So you see - it is not a rejection of you; it is this other love affair, one which demands my loyalty."
He turns, then, and meets her eyes.
"Will that help?" That story? Immensely true?
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She looks at him carefully, as if committing something to memory, and closes the lid.
Then, with a quiet fondness like the run of a hand through hair, or the soft press of lips to a forehead, "Adieu, Byerly."
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Nothing more than that.
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