Lady Alexandrie d'Asgard (
coquettish_trees) wrote in
faderift2019-05-15 10:59 am
Entry tags:
closed | we could do revenge, revenge, revenge, revenge
WHO: Anders, Byerly, Colin, Lexie
WHAT: Planning the downfall of one trash-heap Templar
WHEN: Nowish (before we all start spouting the opposite of nonsense and Anders leaves to be tragically murdered rifp)
WHERE: The balcony of the apartments, where all the best vengeance plotting happens
NOTES: cw: probable discussion of sexual assault, suicide attempt may come up, maybe some links later?
WHAT: Planning the downfall of one trash-heap Templar
WHEN: Nowish (before we all start spouting the opposite of nonsense and Anders leaves to be tragically murdered rifp)
WHERE: The balcony of the apartments, where all the best vengeance plotting happens
NOTES: cw: probable discussion of sexual assault, suicide attempt may come up, maybe some links later?
The weather is not fine, on the whole, but it is fine for this manner of gathering: the sound of light rain, the droplets themselves hardly visible in the light haze of mist that is the remnant of the ambitious heavy fog that covers the city below that has made it all the way up to Hightown, and mild enough to sit out on the covered balcony of Alexandrie and Colin's apartments. It is mid-afternoon, but even so, candles had been set out along with luncheon to combat the particular shade of dour grey seemingly unique to Kirkwall. Alexandrie's staff sets a fine table, even in the relative informality of the balcony setting, and while the purpose of the gathering is hardly the meal, Alexandrie primly insists on conversation about lighter matters until the last plate has been cleared and replaced by a cut-crystal decanter of brandy set out on a tray with four small matching glasses.
"So. The matter of Balfour," she begins, taking up the decanter and raising it slightly along with her eyebrows—anyone? The man is denied both given name and title; not a small mark of disrespect from the mouth of the ever-solicitous Alexandrie. "I assume we are all in agreement that he is well deserving of what recompense we can deliver."

no subject
“If the four of you can’t work together and be polite with each other, I am going to ask you all to leave and we won’t do this at all.”
A serene threat, slightly undercut by the fact that he meant the three of you and not the four of you. As sometimes happens in conversation, he counted the number of people present instead of the number of people he is talking to.
no subject
"A jaunt to politesse, then," she murmurs afterwards with the smooth regulated tone she employs with strangers; Alexandrie the woman has changed places with Alexandrie the courtier. "If you would elucidate on the potential use of your 'favors' before we consider the riskier and far more public proposition of framing an abusive Templar and those who aided and abetted him for high treason against the Chantry, Byerly?"
no subject
"Nothing particularly rousing, I fear, my dear," he says. "I would that I could present you with some truly exciting prospect. Instead, it's simply dull politics as usual." He leans back, throwing an elbow over the back of the chair behind him. "Balfour's neighbor - Bann Uthor of Dyer's Valley - has a rather vested interest in seeing the Bann's interests disrupted. A healthy dose of familial unrest would take Balfour's attention elsewhere, leaving Uthor with free rein to poach some of the freemen at the edges of Farland."
A rolling shrug. "Uthor to bring the charges and to press the case. Uthor is liked and respected; Kenneth is not. Others would go along with it for potential gain, or for spite. And then - perhaps a small intervention to ensure that dearest Kenneth understands that the protection of his son would cause...consequences." By way of a circumspect explanation - "I've a few choice bits on his personal history in my little bag of tricks."
no subject
"We still need charges that a court will see. Particularly when the new Divine has shown support for mages to be reduced back to the lack of rights we had before." His voice is wooden. "Colin's is not a case that would have any traction."
no subject
Colin glances away thoughtfully. "I was...seventeen? No, sixteen. And Kinloch Hold was considered one of the best-behaved Circles. Trying to put this under the authority of the crown would be tricky at best. The Chantry won't like it."
no subject
"Perhaps no-one would see your case on its own merit. As you say, justice does not work that way for mages, and they are not alone in that. No-one cares if the son of a Duke rapes a servant-girl. No-one cares if he kills her in the process. Unless you give them reason; threaten them with loss, or reward them with gain. The latter is better.
"The gain in the end, for you and those like you, is that those who are not privy to those dealings will, perhaps, begin to believe the Chantry does care. And that is, thread by thread, how you weave new truths."
no subject
He gives a languid shrug. "To kill a man is a simple thing. Death and destruction is the easiest path." A slight lift of his glass - not directly at Anders, in a show of remarkable restraint. "If all else fails, you can murder him later."
no subject
This is a lot more believable than Colin expected. He glances over at Anders, a gleam of hope in his eyes, before looking back at the other two.
"But they still can't prosecute what isn't illegal in the first place. Though I'm...not actually sure whether it's legal or not. It wasn't exactly part of our education."
no subject
"Technically, it may be illegal. Rape is not legal. Where it gets blurry is if we are, by legal definition, people. We've some sort of inheritance rights now it seems," which is entirely worthless for a vast majority of them, "which isn't retroactive, but the personhood line may be complicated enough that it's humiliation. Though this leads to a whole other question: what do we offer the initial contacts to make them want to look into this rather than try to simply silence it?"
no subject
He flutters his fingers at Anders. "Well, that and who owes you a favor. Not even a flaming sky negates the power of an owed favor. And it just so happens that I am owed." A slight bow at Lexie - "And I suspect I'm not the only one who is."
no subject
"It matters little. Byerly and I are in agreement; the legal merit is almost entirely immaterial." Her eyes slide to Anders. They contain only detached courtesy now, and the tone of her voice matches it exactly. "Having never had access to the halls of power due to the place mages hold in the South, it is perfectly understandable that you believe the only options to be either trying to convince the emplaced system of justice that you should have rights as any other citizen of your class or the violent overthrow of that system." No judgement, there, only a statement of fact. "The Chantry views mages as you say. Justice works for mages as you say. And so, for you, those are the only options. For us," she indicates Byerly, "there are more, and for this purpose they have been placed at your disposal.
"What it will require is that the two of you are willing to trust that we know how to feel, draw out, and work the power made by men every bit as well as you may feel, draw out, and work the power provided you by the Fade."
no subject
It’s worth more than another bottle of poison. It’s worth living for, if he can live in a world that isn’t constantly trying to drive him to that brink. Moreover, it could make life worth living for the next victims, a glimmer of hope for other mages, rather than supplying yet another corpse for the pile. He just has to accept what it means for him.
“It’s to be another walk through the Void again,” he sighs, “but I know the way.” He leans his elbows on the table, considering further, a hard gleam coming to his eyes. “This was exactly what he was afraid of me doing in the Circle. He threatened me with death and worse to keep this from happening. I’m ready to make it come true for him. I’m ready to make men like him think twice.”
no subject
Luckily, it's not his faith they actually need and he knows it.
"I'll be here for you," he says quietly to Colin. "Anything you need."
Then he's looking over at the other two evenly. "You'll keep us appraised of how things are progressing and if there are any expected or unexpected challenges that arise?" He can't promise them anything - they'll not understand it based on how they've been acting - but he can hint at having resources. And, for once, use the wrong impression someone has of him. If Byerly thinks he's nothing more than a destroyer, then maybe Byerly will have greater motivation to not fail.
no subject
The earnestness disappears, of course, as quickly as it came. His eyebrows lift, and he shrugs, all the irony back in him. "But yes, dear fellow, we shan't work in secret. I promise. When revenge is nigh, you shall know it."
no subject
What sin greater than naivete in Orlais?
"Mais oui," Alexandrie affirms. "If we manage this correctly," in her eyes: 'which we will,' "you will be brave and strong, and he will bear the full shame of his actions."
no subject
"I appreciate it, but there's plenty of humiliation to go round. People defending him will have all sorts of things to say about me. I could even have been charged with his corruption, in the Circle."
Not that Greagoire was like that, nor Irving. He glances away, brow furrowed.
"The Templars who hear about this will have to condemn one of us. They're pretty eager to distance themselves from stories like mine. I wonder if we could make it easier for them to condemn him instead. Most of the Knights-Corporal in Kinloch Hold knew what he was doing, and they could ruin me if they united against me."
no subject
"If there's some other sort of blackmail that can be put on the Knights-Corporal, if some of them are doing something underhanded to obtain lyrium, perhaps?" It might be cruel to use their addiction against them, but if they hadn't turned a deliberate blind eye to cruelty and suffering it wouldn't come up. "Divide them so they've reason to condemn this one."