cozen: (Default)
Bastien ([personal profile] cozen) wrote in [community profile] faderift2019-06-01 02:24 pm

open: lol never mind.

WHO: Open!
WHAT: A memorial that doesn’t go as planned.
WHEN: Justinian 1
WHERE: The Gallows
NOTES: Nah.


The ceremony takes place in one of the side courtyards that’s been converted into a garden, where the oppressive architecture is offset with flowers and trees. There’s a small pyre, for those whose traditions call for pyres, but no bodies to burn. Instead there are tokens, flowers, favorite foods, treasured possessions—not yet lit.

(For the others, the Dalish and Nevarrans and anyone else with a different wish, their friends and family will have made different arrangements alongside the pyre, probably, if they aren’t universally reviled.)

Anyone who wants to speak, whether it’s a prepared speech or a single spontaneous sentence, can do so. The tone is respectful but only so solemn. It’s been more than a week. For many, the worst of the shock has passed, and the sun has continued to rise and set, and there’s room between bouts of misery for fond memories and occasionally laughter. The memorial is a door that’s closing—slowly, kindly—and tomorrow, on the other side of it, the war will continue.

Today, on this side, the only people judging anyone else for crying are the assholes.

***

Across the harbor, more than a dozen filthy and tired people come to a stop on the docks, and the loitering ferryman pauses to take stock of them, then starts laughing. There isn’t even any local mythology about ferrymen and the dead. It’s just that funny to him on its own, that he’s been rowing miserable people around all week, and here’s the source of all that misery, dirty and tired but significantly less dead than believed.

When he stops laughing, he offers to dunk everyone in the harbor before rowing them over. For the smell, you know. No one is going to be happy to see them if their eyes are watering too much to actually see them. Then he laughs some more at his hilarious joke.

But he does eventually load up his boat—and maybe there isn’t room for everyone all at once, maybe some dramatic reunions will be delayed, maybe some people will be even more fashionably late to their funeral than the others—and carries everyone across the bay, still chuckling intermittently.

***

In the courtyard, the speeches and anecdotes (and singing, perhaps) wind down to long silences peppered with murmurs or sniffling. Someone is preparing to light the pyre. And then the gate creaks open.

coquettish_trees: (thousand yard stare)

Lexie, A Drama Queen | OTA

[personal profile] coquettish_trees 2019-06-02 03:50 pm (UTC)(link)
She had been half-laced into the darkness of her mourning gown, Marie pinning the matching lace half veil into her hair, when she'd suddenly said No. Off. Take it off. When Marie had hesitated, questioning, she'd turned to look at Coleus. Go and get it. He'd bowed exactingly and slipped into the next room. Marie, her face shifting as she understood, had looked at her with a naked sympathy she ignored and hesitantly began removing the veil.

And so Lady Alexandrie de la Fontaine is there on the morning of the day on which she had meant to trade that name, her hand tucked at her nearly-brother's elbow, pale and tired and determinedly resplendent in the dress she had been meant to wear to that purpose, silently watching the pyre being built as the breeze off the sea tugs at the gilded petals of the white roses in the oiled and shining upsweep of her hair.
thorndergod: (I don't know what I think.)

[personal profile] thorndergod 2019-06-02 06:27 pm (UTC)(link)
He's not completely certain she's got a firm hold on her sanity when she joins him wearing this, but Thor can't blame her. She's well and truly swept up into House Asgard now, with her family knowing her decision to leave them and without the comfort of a partner with which to walk into the Imperium's particular sort of drama. That she'll manage it he doesn't doubt. That she's ready for it today? He's not sure on that one.

"I have you." There are seats to the side, ones that won't clash too terribly with her green-and-gold and not at all with his black-and-gold, and he nods to them. "Would you care to sit?"
Edited 2019-06-02 18:34 (UTC)
coquettish_trees: (looking down profile)

[personal profile] coquettish_trees 2019-06-09 07:52 pm (UTC)(link)
She shakes her head minutely. "I should prefer to stand." The continued spirit of the vigil they had stood the night before, perhaps, the which she had finally understood during the undertaking.

The need for the appearance of strength at one's weakest is an Orlesian ideal as well. Even more important when you are surrounded by those who would rather see you overcome. Watch you weep, or bleed, or wail. Tenuously adopted though she may be, she had been allowed to stand for Loki as a wife would have. If she and Thor were to be the last of Asgard in the South, let it be known that even the last do not kneel.