[CLOSED]
WHO: Character(s) Marcoulf and Benedict
WHAT: C is for casual extortion.
WHEN: Now
WHERE: The Gallows
NOTES: n/a, will add if necessary
WHAT: C is for casual extortion.
WHEN: Now
WHERE: The Gallows
NOTES: n/a, will add if necessary
[It's difficult to say when exactly it begins and at first it could be construed purely as coincidence, but at some point a paticular narrow man begins to make regular appearances on the margins of a certain chamberlain's work. He happens to be assisting some girl from the laundry bringing up fresh linens to a room being remade for a new guest; he is conveniently stationed at the bottom of some stairwell well frequented in the business of running the Gallows day to day; and so on.
Today, Marcoulf is sitting in the shade of some narrow side courtyard that Benedict happens to be passing through. He has his legs stretched out before him and a handkerchief with a half eaten heel of bread inside it spread on the bench beside him to suggest his time here may simply be some idle moment taken between work. He isn't following anyone; he certainly isn't a spy. But Marcoulf does look up when Benedict passes into the yard and nothing on his narrow face indicates he's at all surprised to see him there.]

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But after a while it starts to become too frequent, too planned. And being no longer in possession of a body double (the bastard fell back through a rift, or went wherever he went, at the worst possible time), confrontation has become considerably riskier.
So, feeling a chill down his spine at the sight of Marcoulf once again, Benedict meets his eyes momentarily and then quickens his pace.
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"You can ask me from there," he says, trying to sound resolute.
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"I believe you'd prefer me not to shout it. But I suppose I can."
His ankles have hooked now, one over the other, and his off hand is tucked idly into the crooked band of his sword belt. He seems perfectly content to wait.
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Glancing quickly to anyone around (one elvhen maid who looks between them and quickly leaves, clearly wanting no part of this shit), Benedict slowly, stiffly walks back toward Marcoulf until he's about a foot away.
"What," he says, sullen but anxious.
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Benedict's eyes narrow. Something's afoot, and though he isn't sure what, he doesn't like the energy he's feeling from Marcoulf.
"And why would you want to know that, you ferret-faced peasant?"
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Only he can. And if the Vint's to be any use to him, he may as well have some answer.
"I'm of a mind to find some work."
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"The Inquisition is lousy with them."
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Patience, he thinks. "Now listen, be civil or I'll forget my manners just the same. You see to the Inquisition's fine guests and their needs, do you not?"
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"Wait. You can be dealt in."
This he says quickly, as abrupt an attempt to stop Benedict as grabbing him by the arm might be. Marcoulf clarifies only, and is stilted and annoyed by the insistent timbre of his own voice: "Your guests must ask you for little errands or hint at things they might need. If the work is suitable for me and you were to pass it my way, in return I could give you a portion of my payment."
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Bene turns with a scowl. "What makes you think I would want your money," he snaps, "or anything else, for that matter? Why don't you go back to whatever hole you crawled out of, and leave me alone?"
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several days later
The letter is unsigned and brought by a courier, but its source should be obvious. And sure enough, when Marcoulf arrives at the designated time and place, there's Benedict, leaning against a wall and smoking a cigarette, watching the man's approach.
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'Call if you find trouble; both my hands work,' is more or less Anna's parting advice, which sours his temper from the start.
So come evening, there he is with his heavy half cloak wrapped about him and his sword hanging from his side. There's a lamp burning on the far side of the courtyard, but the moon in the narrow slip of sky above them is pinched so thin that the light seems hardly there. It's cold and dark and quiet, the metal of his belt jingling as he makes his way across the courtyard to the dark figure waiting for him.
(You're meeting a Tevinter mage you've been threatening in the middle of the dark with no one at your back, says a small voice in his head. If he kills you, you'll have deserved it. For fuck's sake, why does he keep doing this?)
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It was the long knife sitting at her back, it was the presence of Magni behind her as the pair of them hung in the shadows. Leaning against the wall, watching Benedict, ignoring the no doubt look she's getting from Magni from their discussion earlier over this.
Really, Lakshmi, a Vint?
But here they were regardless. Waiting for whoever it was, to appear. Let's him get close, not quite able to make him out in the dark. Could lean into the cold cool smooth of the blackwater, but better to save that feeling if it was truly needed.
Instead, hanging back like crows in rafters, she waits, waits until the figure crosses past them towards Benedict and then -
Her fingers lift, silent, predatory movements, signals with a short curl for Magni to follow her, footsteps quiet, body half silent as she moves. To draw her blade in a low hiss behind the figure with - hair she thinks is familiar. But soldier, she thinks from the way he carries himself.
And in one quick movement, gets her blade to the side of his throat from behind. "Shouldn't all good soldiers be in their beds by now?"
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Suffice to say, this isn't how she'd like to be spending her time in ideal circumstances.
She has to hang backfurther to be obscured from view. Nothing about her presence lends itself to subtlety, and so the recognition of the gait, someone she has worked alongside so long that she could almost groan with how stupid he is being, is delayed. Her eyes narrow in the dark, because surely not. As it is, it would seem Manikarnika's blade is at her (idiot) friend's throat, and she closes the distance to set a cautioning hand at her shoulder as she leans down to murmur her suspicion of just who it is to Manikarnika's ear, low enough not to be audible to the others.
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"Should they? It seems early yet."
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But then he speaks, and she can't mistake it for anything else. The blade pulling back immediately rather than - "What in the hell is going on?"
Her gaze sharp, darting between Benedict's smug face, and the back of Marcoulf's head.
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No words, still. Just quiet, and a hammer hanging in her grip.
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What he hadn't expected was either--both??-- of them recognizing his tormentor, and his gaze flickers warily to Lakshmi when she looks toward him. A drag off his cigarette and subsequent blowing out of the smoke keeps him steady, however, and willing to see this through.
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"You seem to know more than I do, Madame Bai."
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She thought she did. "I came to aid a victim of a blackmailer." It fixes unhappily in her mouth, gaze narrowing, working on the next piece of information.
"Benedict, do you want to explain why the man I can least imagine being capable of what you say, is standing here?"
She whirls, the knife still pointed, but more in gesture of indication than in threat. Stepping towards Benedict, a gaze that is not threatening, but it is demanding. He will start talking, and he will do so now.
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Quickly, she snaps her elbow backs to drive into the Vint's breastbone, to leave him winded. Yes, yes, she realises that's not conducive to speaking, but it's even less conducive to running, and if he went to Manikarnika for aid then he may not be pleased that his hero turn a critical gaze and questions to him.
So, she just... makes sure he can't run, her reach long, and steps backwards to walk around him and stand behind the little wretch, shoving him forwards so they can have a nice discrete conversation.
And she tilts her head at Manikarnika, a little I know, I know, sorry as she couples it with a shrug and grasps the scruff of his neck.
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