Entry tags:
closed | Venatori Gone Wild
WHO: Bastien, Colin, Leander, and Nikos
WHAT: Tracking down Venatori who got deep into Orlais at the invitation of some idiot noble
WHEN: Early Solace
WHERE: Southern Orlais
NOTES: reference.
WHAT: Tracking down Venatori who got deep into Orlais at the invitation of some idiot noble
WHEN: Early Solace
WHERE: Southern Orlais
NOTES: reference.

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It's partly true. He comes closer to the fire, mostly out of curiosity at what might be cooking on it, but backs away again immediately because, on second thought, the idea of any added warmth on his skin is repulsive.
"We are the best that Riftwatch has to offer," he adds, because he is, at least, and he suspects the others average out to competent, "for handling the barons."
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It seems like a pretty safe bet, to allow it to be Yseult's decision. Meanwhile, he melts butter in the pot. Onions. He wishes he had onions. Yes, onions, mushrooms, garlic, a dash of diced chilies. But he all he has is meat, bread, butter, some nuts, and his little spice jar. Some of the bread has gone stale, and he positions it near the fire to toast. Once that's done, he crushes it onto a shallow wooden plate and adds a generous amount of his dried spice. They don't have eggs, but adding plenty of butter to the fresh beef he bought in the last village makes the breadcrumbs stick. Then it goes into the pan to cook in the remaining butter.
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He doesn't much like the story about a million bones in the wood. But there are millions of bones everywhere, aren't there. And it would be much nicer if this path had led them to a city or a baron's mansion instead of bumfucking woodsy nowhere, but.
Nikos takes another swig of wine and drives the stopper back into it by banging the back of his hand against it with finality. "If we're going to be fucking cowards about it, we should at least take two steps in so we can say we did. Look around. Go back and say we didn't see anything, not for lack of trying, and if she wants to send a whole squadron of elves in, be our guest. All of this after dinner, apparently."
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You see, through Bastien's placid yarning, Colin's culinary distraction, and Nikos's increasingly crusty monologues, Lea went meandering off with the slow, swinging, stiff-legged strides of boredom, taking little scuffs at the dirt with each. The wandering Venatori didn't even bother to dig a midden for themselves despite their size—careless—and their leavings lay in plain sight. Some might still be useful, but he wasn't scrounging for scraps, only nudging at evidence with the toe of one boot or the other, until he skimmed something surprising: a little piece of paper, folded, trodden upon. Overlooked, perhaps.
Upon opening it, he smiled, just a little, to himself. What luck: the ink's hardly even smudged. It could be a plant—the entire event could be staged, the group made to seem less savvy than they are—but this would be an awfully tedious act to keep up.
Post-announcement, he moseys back toward the trio, with a loose and hippy sort of walk, casual as you please.
"Or, rather, the map, leading from..." A pause, for effect, while he looks it over. "From the very estate we just left," meaning that of the Baron Loutain, "to the Arbor Wilds. Funny, that." Considering where they stand.
To Bastien, indicating the bit about Vinsier, "What do you make of this bit here?"
(He may look, even touch, but Leander isn't about to hand it off entirely.)
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No luck so far, with Averesch. But maybe the wine and some food will do what Bastien cannot. And if that doesn't work, there is always taking the opposite tack, and being less calm and more negative than everyone else until they feel compelled to set a better example.
Anyway, he turns, eyebrows raised and expression as pleasant as if someone had asked for his attention in his old shop, and leans over closer to peer at the map, without touching or taking. For a moment he's quiet, thinking back to the village, setting aside his first instinct long enough to be sure there isn't a better instinct hiding somewhere beyond it. There isn't.
"Warning them about the guard presence, perhaps," he offers, "unless the guards were a response to the Tevinters after the fact. If we pass back through we can find out."
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"Let's do that." He stabs the steak and flips it. "Good find," he adds to Leander. Goes to show what a scout can find when he's not, well, cooking dinner in the camp he's supposed to be searching.
"Who do we think drew that map for them?" he asks.
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But not so negative that he can't go over and look at the map, and its small scrawled notes.
"The 'A.' who recommended avoiding, maybe. There's an 'A' in 'Arnoul'--" Baron the first, that is-- "And an 'A' in 'Arcenaux'--" Baron the second. "And an 'A' in 'Bastien' and 'Leander', but buried, and 'Averesch' begins in 'A'."
So maybe it's Nikos' work. Just kidding. He looks sourly back toward where Leander had found the note, giving it a once-over.
"It's all very convenient, isn't it. If de Loutain is the A, the Vints were very familiar with him. Calling him by his given name."
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The hike's put him in a decent mood, too. Moving in a group through the wilderness with a staff on his back reminds him very much of Rivain. The better times there. He'll surely feel it tomorrow—he's already showing superficial signs of feeling it, that interlude of petulance being among them, and gamely ignoring them all—and perhaps a few days after, but for now it's all right.
"Mm. It's very interesting, either way. I'd like to compare this to any correspondence we've had from either of the barons, in case there are any similarities in the hand, or even the ink," he says, in a voice gone smooth with intent, circling finger and thumb to feel the paper between them. Brighter, then: "But, unless one of you is carrying any mail, that's a matter for later. Since we're already out here, I'd like to press on a bit before we head back to Vinsier, see if we can turn up anything else."
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He transfers all of that to one hand, held aloft for anyone who'd like to relieve him of, so he can kneel and unfasten the side of one boot, in pursuit of a curve of paper there, too.
Habit, he does not say, because what a strange habit that would be for a printer.
no subject
Hm.
His free hand goes for his belt and, with only a little fumbling, he produces a thin reed-shaped object. Sticks the end into his mouth, pops it open with his teeth--takes it into hand again, and tips out its contents into his palm, to join Bastien's letters.
Out of the tube comes a tube of close-rolled paper. Freed from its prison, the paper slowly begins to uncurl itself. Two pages, more writing.
"I'll want mine back."
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"What?" he asks softly, glancing at Leander because frankly neither of them exactly grew up doing this but Leander is probably closer to it than he is. He glances between these papers and his fellow mage.
"Were they," he looks back to the others, "do you have their handwriting on-hand?" Because that would be extraordinarily fortuitous.
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Colin happens to look at Leander at the exact moment he's turning a look on him, and for that one instant they are united in the camaraderie of what the fuck, amidst a trapezoid of glances between faces and letters. A beautiful moment to be framed in the scrapbook of the universe.
"You're mad," he says, slowly and carefully accepting a handful of materials that, as far as he knew, didn't exist a moment ago, or at least not where they'd be immediately useful to anyone. And yet here they are, sprung fully-formed from various body parts. "Both of you. Wonderfully mad." And a fine tactic, though he'd feel better about it if he'd been participating on purpose. (Next time.)
With a particular sideways look to Bastien, "What else've you got in there?" It isn't meant to be answered.
Presently, he finds himself a place to sit.
"I'll do my best to return them, but if someone higher up decides they're worth keeping... well, you'll just have to steal them back, I suppose. Not that I'm endorsing theft," a glance to Nikos, and then to Bastien, one eyebrow raised in what might be wry disapproval on someone else's face, but has exactly the opposite effect on his, "but it would be impressive."
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But it isn't meant to be answered, so he doesn't answer it. Instead he winks at Colin, friendly-like, and gives Nikos an approving look that's less friendly, because he doesn't seem interested in friendliness, and in the meanwhile crooks a finger at his side in an unobtrusive, absenty-fidgeting way that would signal amusement—or that a target had made an exploitable error, depending on the context, but in this context, amusement—if anyone trained to understand it were around to see it.
He was recently useless and half-dead in a desert, and now he is useless and likely to end up dead in a jungle, but at least he has this.
And steak, apparently. He inches closer to the fire again.
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"Plates, please."
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"I do like approval."
It's funny because he doesn't. Perish the thought of some follow-up thievery, says the sarcasm, pulling the curtain over it. Perish the thought, too, of him having his own agenda, a reason for having taken those letters in the first place. But don't they all? Bastien, with his letters--he clearly does, and that will take a second thought, a deeper investigation. Leander, Colin--maybe their motives less known, or more obvious. Work for Riftwatch, move up in esteem. Or perhaps they're something more obscure, something no one would expect, some secret well-kept behind friendly eyes. That's the thing about people.
But there's steak, too, which tastes, in Nikos' opinion, very good with wine. So he gets a plate and slouches closer to the fire, like he wasn't just sulking a moment ago.
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Leander doesn't bother with a plate right away, on account of he's got his nose in someone's personal property, and has somehow turned his narrow lap into a serviceable desk. A key to his very obscure identity: he knows how to wrangle paper in the woods. Spooky.
Without looking up, "I'll have mine later." The steak, not the approval. He'd meant it companionably, but whatever, it's not the first time he's failed to relate to a human being and it certainly won't be the last. Besides that, it's possible to get along with at least one Averesch simply by carrying on as though he's not being a complete dick, so this one still bears experimentation. (No luck so far; the science of moody twins shall continue.)
Still not looking up, "When did you take these?" Both of them, either of them, whoever feels like answering. "And where did you get a steak, Colin?"
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“The burned ones are from de Loutain,” he says once his mouth is clear, with the ambling pace and half-questioning stretches of words that signal he’s not really paid any of it much mind. “From his estate, I mean. They may not be his writing. The large one was inside a book. I think that is his.”
Thrilling notes on Orlesian history. There’s a bit of dust along the top where it was sticking out above the pages it had been tucked between.
“And the one with the seal was in Arcinaux’s entryway. Someone had dropped it behind a table. But it was sent to him, not from him, no?”
So an actual sample of his writing will depend on Nikos’ find, or else on a hike back to his estate to go hunting or back to the Gallows to review his original correspondence, and two-thirds of what Bastien has produced is likely useless. Useless for this. For building a bigger picture of the men’s lives, entanglements, dreams, problems, routines—less so.
Not that there’s any need for such a picture at the moment. Habit.
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"So we might go back and find something that we know belongs to them," he says around a mouthful of steak, "now we know what we're looking for. But if it was Arcenaux, why'd he tip us off? It would explain how he knew so much, but why send us after them?"
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He's eating steak now anyways, indelicate and disinterested in manners. It is good, wherever it comes from. He washes it down with a mouthful of wine.
"One is de Loutain's, one is Arcenaux's." The letters, that is. And beyond the invaluable handwriting, their contents will not be of any particular interest, for anyone other than Nikos, who is tuned specifically toward-- well, Caspar Perakis, really. Like fuck he'd tell anyone that.
"As to why the tip off, idle speculation will likely do little for us. Unless you want to make up answers as some fireside game." Not that he's likely to participate enthusiastically in that exercise, but still. The offer is there. With his fork, he gestures, magnanimously: be my guest. "Perhaps he was hoping we'd be killed while investigating."
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"Mm, it's possible. Equally likely, he doesn't care either way and just wants us to investigate somewhere else. The same could be said for de Loutain." Sobering now, and sitting up a bit straighter, "This one's somewhat similar to the map. It's one of the Arcenaux samples. Same foundation, perhaps... same teacher? Hmmn... not an exact match, I'm afraid."