Entry tags:
closed. send out the morning birds to sing of the damage,
WHO: Martel, Adelaide LeBlanc.
WHAT: Comparative magical theory.
WHEN: Vaguely current/recent.
WHERE: Skyhold Garden.
NOTES: Martel is a warning, but if anything specific comes up, I will edit.
WHAT: Comparative magical theory.
WHEN: Vaguely current/recent.
WHERE: Skyhold Garden.
NOTES: Martel is a warning, but if anything specific comes up, I will edit.
Having returned from his adventure down the Frostbacks with the Orlesian elf girl (and her thrice-damned horse), Martel - does not immediately seek out Adelaide's company. He does not, as a rule, seek out company. Much less immediately. There is enough as needs doing that can or must be done by him that though he has had it in mind to do for a time, it's been...not urgent. While other things - he did not miss the Abomination, no - have been.
Still. He finds her in the garden, unhurried as he descends the steps, observing her. The way that she moves, stiff and deliberate; it is a moment before he announces himself, and not with a greeting--
"It seemed to me that as I have made myself a part of this organisation, I might make myself available to some of the relevant parties as to what uses I can be put to," not quite dryly, just sort of - as Kalten once put it, you know how he is. Martel talks a certain way, it's a problem with his personality.
And as for relevant parties, there are a few, potentially. But the simplest place to start is with the mages, and he and Adelaide are...
...acquainted.

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"Why not you?" by way of perfectly reasonable counterpoint. "There are many mages on the Council, but the number of mages in Skyhold with whom I'm acquainted is a short list and on your Council, you are the whole of it."
He could've gone to Dorian Pavus, but that probably wouldn't have endeared him to anyone. Maybe Pavus.
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Like Adelaide, who will never take him seriously. It's refreshing.
"Well, if there's anyone you think I ought to inflict myself on, do let me know."
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What they will make of him, if anything, is worth whatever vexation she might earn at pointing him in their direction. Dorian might be well pleased with Martel's attention. Vivienne, like her, may not have the patience for his ego.
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It doesn't sound like much, but Martel is hardly known for being effusive in his praise - that there is any, the sparseness of the remark is compliment in itself, no backhand on the back end of it, for all that he says it like an afterthought. He found little to object to in Dorian.
Probably there are those who'd take that as something to object to in him, but they'd likely have to work through the long list of his other flaws, first.
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In some way. Martel isn't one to bandy about flattery or insincere praise- in fact he is not one to praise anyone for anything whatsoever. She may not know the man terribly well but she has noticed that much.
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His tone is slightly too droll for him to play at being entirely unaware of the position that that Tevinter mage occupies in Skyhold and the Inquisition. Especially as he continues,
"Don't you, after all? The castle walls do have ears, my lady councilor." The tease in it lacks any bite; he is as near to relaxed as he ever seems to get, like the lion waiting for something worth tensing for.
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That he teases her isn't unwelcome.
"He offers good wine and intelligent conversation." A beat. "Decent wine."
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No, he is. He is an incredibly unreasonable man. But one that can also appreciate sharp edges, intellect, and competence where he finds it. (And prefers both of the latter to come with the former.)
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Unreasonably reasonable, perhaps. Unreasonably rational. Something to that effect. "You find him useful."
Much as he probably finds her useful, but that hasn't occurred to her just yet.
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It isn't quite the same thing, but - well, it isn't as if he doesn't think Dorian is useful. It's just that it has more to do with generally approving of his uses than it does considering them in context of himself.
...whereas cultivating Adelaide has rather more direct benefits.
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He was surprised enough to find himself in it.
"He bemoans the state of things at the top of his lungs, but he acts to a purpose and achieves a great deal while other people are complaining about the sound of his voice." A shrug.
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"You may end up sharing his fate; while the manner in which magic is learned and taught varies greatly- perhaps there is something of use in your teachings that can be applied to ours." Even if it is only 'hit the fool with a stick until they stop moving'.
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"Unofficially," he repeats, amused, at the thought of serving as Councilor LeBlanc's rifter advisor. It isn't a terrible idea; drifts him a little closer to the centre of things than he'd rightly planned on getting, but not too close. It isn't as if they're ever going to actually let someone like him serve on their Council, after all, and he has no illusions that Adelaide won't ignore his opinion and tell him he's an idiot for having it if that's her inclination.
"My practical similarities to your Templars might be useful, there."
Not that he'd speak for them - but a perspective that sits somewhere between both, an outsider's view with insight.
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Meeting for tea and meals would suffice for some time but- if it is possible to multitask? She would prefer that.
"In more ways than you think, truly." She's uncertain how to ask other than to simply do so, and thus thinks nothing of the asking. "It might be better for you and I to hold such conversations while you demonstrate for me what it is you will be teaching the apprentices. I should like to know what they are being shown ahead of time."
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Though if Skyhold means to give her a reputation for preferring biting brunet mages, there probably isn't much that can be done to stop it short of actually just marrying Alistair.
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Afterward, though- depending on her bruises. "We were instructed in basic staffwork in the Circle and little more; those who attempted to teach themselves afterward were politely discouraged."
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Even at a glance - Martel is not a man who has led a peaceful life. He carries himself like a nobleman, certainly, but he is far too alert to be only that; the tension that's always present, how conscious he is of the way that he moves, how deliberately he does so. The strength in his hands and the line of his body. The scars that she's seen (and half of Skyhold, when he first arrived).
"You should have a blade," he says, frankly. "Something discreet. A - last resort."
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It is not something she is proud of, that moment, but she is not so foolish as to assume such a thing may never happen again. There are the usual excuses, she is a healer, a teacher, violence disgusts her-
But as a last resort it is...slightly more acceptable. "What...what would you recommend?"
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He frowns at nothing. "Not a stiletto, as charming as that might be. Something with an edge."
If it sounds as if Martel has some experience of advising women of a gentler nature on their best methods of self-preservation...he has led an interesting life. Some of it even in the service of his King.
"I might teach you to duel," he says, thoughtfully, glancing at her. "Just for the discipline and motion. And I think you could be persuaded to enjoy a bout with a rapier. It's more of a dance."
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She'll likely be uncomfortable with that until she becomes accustomed to it.
"Most duels in the Spire did not make use of blades. I can't say I am not intrigued by the idea." Her, a duelist? A dagger is asking much, but learning a rapier-
Well if he thinks it will help, it will help.
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"The rapier is not my first choice to do anything useful with," he says, wryly, "but I carried one at court and I learned the duelist's steps." If his tendency to talk about it as if it's a dance sounds a little bit dismissive more than artful - well, it is, but he can appreciate it. Enough to see the value of teaching it to her. "The purpose of dueling with such a blade tends to be more for sport than intent to kill, and we can blunt the tips. Something to introduce you to a new way of considering your body that is less..."
His gesture is small.
"You aren't going to accidentally hurt me. Your muscles might complain the next day."
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The last earns a soft snort, the lightest snapping of her fingers. "Damn. And here I thought I'd finally have an opportunity to repay you the courtesy."
Yes, they can joke about how they met now.
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"I see your game," he says, amused. "You only want to learn so you can give me a taste of my own. Well, fair."
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