[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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Her fingers slip around to grip his throat. Light pressure, precautionary. She's fought against shamans often enough to know the dangers of leaving them able to speak totally freely.
She doesn't think that his word is good, either, if he is claiming Marcoulf tried to blackmail him. So, you know, she's just going to stay here. Not crushing his throat, just careful.
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From the beginning, Lakshmi says. He can't see what Benedict's face looks like in the shadow Magni casts, but he can imagine the expression clearly enough. From the beginning starts with the Wounded Coast at night. From the beginning loses him a clear opportunity.
He slides his eyes to Lakshmi - her shoulder anyway - and says, "We were given an assignment. I believe he was of the opinion it was below him, and so I did the work alone. Afterwards, I suggested to him that if he heard of any work - the paying kind - from the Inquisition's guests that he didn't care for, that I would have it. It's possible I worded it poorly, or that he thought I would report him for avoiding his work if he didn't do what I asked."
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He's wise enough to be silent at first, now gripping Magni's arm and hand with his own, as much for balance as it is to buy himself breathing room. But he nearly chokes himself when Marcoulf concludes his story, and Benedict interjects with a plaintive "NO!"
A gasp after the fact indicates he moved too much, and he looks to Lakshmi again, pleadingly.
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Even if there wasn't exactly a lot of love lost.
"Magni -" sharp on her words, that says they're talking later, about this, but it isn't happening right now. Right now, she needs to sort this out. "Let him breath." she snaps, redirecting her gaze but to the same measured point. "Benedict, what do you say happened?"
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“You cast any spells, if you bring any harm to either of them, nobody will find your body.”
Quiet, before her hand drops away to let him breathe and speak more easily. The scar she’d felt was not so dissimilar to one that marked her own throat, and she can appreciate the amplified anxiety attached to anyone near your throat after that.
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Though he glances at Lakshmi, and then at Marcoulf, he seems reluctant to let the Avvar leave his line of sight.
"He's-- been following me," he explains, "watching me, for weeks, months-- he threatened me."
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Knows she plays stakes higher than most, knows she deals in absolutes far steeper but they tended to get results more often than not. So she digs on it. "You see, the way one deals with blackmailers, is killing them. I'd rather not kill a friend." Marcoulf can object to the familiarity later. "So I want you to be very clear, and honest, about what you say happened. Again, please and this time, don't be vague and say things like 'a servant man has been following me about'. "
It's punctured with one very stern look to the both of them.
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Well, Benedict? How would you put it?
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"I-- I went to see a rift," he explains, "--months ago, before the battle. And--" Now he looks to Marcoulf, half afraid, half furious, "--and he followed me, held me at knifepoint, nearly drowned me, and hasn't left me alone since."
He folds his arms miserably, his left hand tucking under, both of them gloved. "He's threatened to tell Coupe, and I-- I'm not stupid enough to think they won't find something to accuse me of." A wounded glance to Magni: let no one deny the bias.
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"You're not telling me something. I go to rifts all of the time, I fell out of one. They've yet to be a reason to do anything but from time to time call me a demon." She swears, one of these days - "One of you, spit it out already."
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She doesn't seek to intimidate him. Not a friend, both because she values him and because she doesn't imagine either of them would need to intimidate the other. If their friendship, the history of work side by side carries any worth, then he will speak. Magni looks at him intently now.
"Where is your faith?" Because whatever has passed Benedict knows already, and he can trust not to go past her, and with that even if he doesn't trust Manikarnika for his own sake, perhaps he can trust what she will do for Magni's sake as things have progressed and bettered.
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(He's distantly aware of how tight his chest feels, dread like a cold hand at the scruff of his neck. You've lost your footing, the pressure of it says. You never had it. What now, what now, what now?)
He could insist: it happened at night. That he saw a Tevene mage alone in the dark going to a Rift near Kirkwall on the eve of battle. That even now this might all of this be a charade to cover whatever Benedict had meant to do there by pretending at honesty and that the trip had been of no real consequence. Or, or, or. But what's it matter, really? Either way the reason for him being in the courtyard has already slipped well through his fingers.
Marcoulf's attention flickers. He looks to Magni. "What he says is true. I followed him to the rift, and I did put a knife to him, and I have followed him since, and I did say I would tell the Commander if he refused to do what I asked."
Without looking at Lakshmi: "Will your draw your knife again now, Madame Bai?"
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Attention momentarily drawn from either pleading with Lakshmi or eyeing Magni warily, Benedict watches the Orlesian in disbelief.
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Soft, as always, though she looks intently towards her friend. They have had their differences; he does not approve of her and her lady, and that she can understand. His relationship with nobility is more complex and experienced than her own, and her acceptance of spirits and those who might walk or cross the Land of Dreams is very different his. They have been friends for many seasons, worked side by side, saved each others lives and protected each others backs.
The disbelief in the Vint's face spurs on the suspicion that twists in her gut. "If that is the truth, all of it laid out, then you swear it on my life."
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There. Done. What do reasons matter.
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So that left.
"Which leaves you, Benedict, what were you doing near a Rift that could be so damning to you?"
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"...I'll tell you," he says quietly, now only to Lakshmi, though he nods his head in Magni's direction: "but... not with her here."
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And the Vint speaks, and though she doesn't scoff, her mouth twists with a cynical smile.
"Tevinter and Orlais are so civilised."
A look to Lakshmi, brows just slightly raised, to see what she wants her to do. Admittedly that Manikarnika was willing to do a favour for a wretch like this might mean her sentimentality has compromised her, but if she is given a nod then she will walk past Marcoulf, pauses only to look at him intently, mark her doubt, and moves on some twenty metres away. Enough for the Vint's precious privacy, close enough to return and defend her lady if needed.
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Didn't stop it from being a headache all the same.
But with them gone, she turns, fixing a look on Benedict that isn't quite as harsh, a more blatant concern. "What on earth is going on, Benedict?"
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The illuminating glow of it, now doubling on Lakshmi's, will be unmistakeable even with his back turned.
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There was a lot of words for it. That she didn't expect it. That she didn't know that a native could have this happen to them. That he needed to go report this, immediately, because she was beginning to realise that the only way to make this stop was to cut it off herself.
The chief one of course was: you little idiot.
"Benedict, what have you done?"
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"I had to," he asserts quietly, a frightened boy trying for a man's resolve, "my mother..."
Few dignified sentences start thus, and yet.
"...she wanted me to match my bodyguard." A hard swallow, and, "...who has since disappeared. So I'll find another use for it."
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"Does she not know how we are treated? Does she not know that this could kill us? To ask her own son - "
It takes her a moment, a second, so visibly livid through her whole body. "And no one but Marcoulf and your mother knows?"
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He doesn't know the answer to the following questions, all save for the last. He gives a timid shake of his head in response: no one else knows.
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