Mhavos Dalat, a pleasure. (
murderbaby) wrote in
faderift2019-08-01 09:17 am
open | intro log.
WHO: Mhavos Dalat, resident newbie, & YOU.
WHAT: Mhavos takes stock of... all this... weird fucking shit.
WHEN: Aug 1-3ish, presumably everything in here doesn't happen the same day.
WHERE: Various places around the Gallows and Kirkwall proper.
NOTES: Poetry, discussions of slavery, a nerd whining about religious authenticit. Will update if anything intense happens.
WHAT: Mhavos takes stock of... all this... weird fucking shit.
WHEN: Aug 1-3ish, presumably everything in here doesn't happen the same day.
WHERE: Various places around the Gallows and Kirkwall proper.
NOTES: Poetry, discussions of slavery, a nerd whining about religious authenticit. Will update if anything intense happens.
a. OUTSIDE THE CHANTRY.
It's All Fool's Day. Mhavos has read of this holiday, but he's never been given leave to witness the celebration. He fins himself curious, and a little daring; he's got nothing else on his schedule, anyway.b. GALLOWS LIBRARY.
Outside the Chantry, a play is being put on. In front of a respectably sized bonfire, play actors dance about, mimicking the sacred immolation of Andraste. Mhavos stands in the crowd, watching intently. At one point, he almost flinches, before crossing his arms and shaking his head. To himself, he murmurs, "That's not what happens."
Among the rows of long tables, Mhavos has collected around him a fair pile of books. He pages through one, writes something down in a ledger, scoffs, and returns it to a different pile, before selecting another. This pattern repeats, complete with Mhavos moving his lips to read each word, several times. Coming close, one will find the books are written in both Orlesian and Trade, and detail a large range of subjects.c. THE STREETS OF KIRKWALL.
Occasionally, one may hear Mhavos murmur, "terrible, terrible," under his breath, his Orlesian accent thicker than usual.
You are presumably minding your own business, wandering aroun town, doing whatever it is you do with your day. That's fine. That's fair. Allowed.d. LOWTOWN.
A gentle hand taps your shoulder, or, if you're particularly tall, your elbow. Turning around, you'll find Mhavos Dalat, an elf with an Orlesian accent. He hands you some coin, or an object that's definitely yours.
"Excuse me," he says mildly, "I believe you were pick-pocketed."
After memorizing a map of Kirkwall, Mhavos is set and determined to explore as much of it as possible on his free time. Lowtown is inevitable, and Mhavos isn't much afraid of it. He's just an elf, after all, and he elects to bring none of his belongings. It's easy enough to pass through without making any waves. Any ripples.e. HIGHTOWN.
He watches a street performer, an elf juggling a series of hard wooden balls. The performer is a bit clumsy, and their clothes are tatty, and the balls are chipped from old paint, dented from years of use. It's clear why the performer hasn't moved their act to Hightown yet.
The performer drops two of the wooden balls, and they thud on the dirty ground before Mhavos deftly kicks them up into his hands, balancing them gracefully in his hands before throwing them back. The entire maneuver is quick and fluid, betraying far more grace than Mhavos had meant.
The performer thanks him, and Mhavos quickly makes his exit from the scene, walking fast, face down.
There are street preachers in every part of Kirkwall, but from Mhavos' survey of the city, the worst are most certainly in Hightown. He listens silently, walks by them, ignores them, until he can't stand it anymore.f. WILDCARD.
On matters of faith, Mhavos has little care. But being uninformed...
You'll find him standing before one such preacher, an annoyed look on both their faces.
"That's inconsistent," Mhavos says, voice mild despite his expression. "Either we are bidden to choose the direction of our lives-- as you say, to be with the Maker or against Him-- or we are all acting in accordance with his will, but you cannot have both. If you preach, you are asking us to choose. If you preach that His will shapes our lives in every aspect, you are contradi-"
He's cut off by a loud shout from the preacher, and the words 'knife ear' are heard. Mhavos massages the bridge of his nose. "You clearly haven't read the Messendrine Epistles..."
[yo i'm down for anything, mix and match prompts, come up with new stuff, whatever. hmu @wehwalt (i'm open to adds!) or a dm if you want to discuss anything!]

no subject
She tilts her left hand so he can better see the dull green glow in the center of her palm binding her to the war effort long before she made the choice to throw all in.
“So. Riftwatch as well. You've read the re-releases, I take it,” since he recognised Gwenaëlle Baudin where Val de Fonce had been so fucking appalled to discover that Jehan's wretched little baby cousin was the Ilde Sauvageon he'd so admired, “those were all—I did that after we came here, but before we. Seceded. Whatever the fuck it was we did.”
There is a similarity to her writing voice in her sharpness, but her casual conversation wants for editing. She can polish what she puts down in a way she's never mastered, face to face.
“It was appropriate to use a pseudonym when I had a reputation to protect, but I'm not a Vauquelin any more.”
And her reputation is an entirely different beast.
no subject
He inclines his head a quarter inch. "I have- had... My selection was limited to the library of whomever employed me." Or is it whoever? He hates Trade. "And what time I was afforded. Le Comte de Tiratlé was a fan."
And he has no clue how to offer condolences, and why should he want to? But it's clear he believes her utterly, now. He can't help it. He wants to believe it's true. The logical part of his mind squirms for purchase, and is ignored completely.
"I preferred the re-releases. Your edits and commentary gave them more context."
Not what he meant to say.
no subject
There is no need to offer condolences; she's still smiling. Warmer, if anything, for his stated preference.
“Art when it leaves you is a hundred little deaths,” she says, thoughtfully. “You die and are remade every time someone reads it. What you intended didn't matter. The impact matters. But I wanted—”
She hesitates.
“I wanted to remind everyone whose words they were. Thank you.”
no subject
"I read your books over and over; I'm sorry to have killed you so many times."
Too close to the metaphorical, far from literal. That's what art is to him, anyway. A freedom from the bounds of the actual, wrapped in the words of something just close enough to be familiar, uncomfortable, gentle and sharp.
"I admit, I have a preference for more strict metered form, but your verse was always... it was touching enough that I forgot the indifference to structure. Or perhaps that aided it."
my feet remember the way / twenty-one steps, staircase, balcony, the third door / the graze of stone under my palms, a collision
He knows it was a poem about loves and lovers, but he always felt that one line, that little verse, encapsulated how he felt when leaving the scene of a murder, halting and intimate and horrid.
no subject
A statement about expressing something, through poetry. A luxury that she might not have had when she wrote those things, and expelled them from herself under a carefully chosen nom de guerre. She wouldn't say she isn't indifferent to structure because the point has always been that she would like to be; that she could take refuge in this thing where she was allowed to be. Where she allowed herself to be.
It's been a while, she thinks, since she talked to anyone about her poetry. The thought doesn't tilt one way or another; she only sits with it.
“I've thought about publishing newer works, but we've been—”
A gesture, towards the Gallows. She's hip-deep in Riftwatch's war effort, and has been for some time. Poetry had fallen somewhat by the wayside, or at least sharing it. “I gave my husband a book of everything I'd written about him for a gift.”
I have sharpened the blade for you, she had whispered to paper in a piece she might say she has half-forgotten and she has not, which had not been about him but about her and republished with all the rest, unedited, without comment, I have held myself still.
no subject
He's not jealous, and a moment of pinched anxiety at the back of his mind hopes dearly that she doesn't think him so. Nothing can be done for it, though. Keep on, keep on.
"I'm glad to see you here. I'd wondered... how you'd fared." After everything I'd heard. And a line from a poem he read long ago, written anonymously. "Orlais eats its own."
Orlais eats its own,
Hunger never fed.
Children without shoes,
Offer elves as bread.
no subject
Orlais eats its own. Yes, doesn't it.
“My fall from grace has had a cushioned landing,” she says, wry, aware of Guilfoyle sat behind them in the ferry, patient as a rock. She does not have the current means to maintain his previous salary. She had said so, and he had looked at her for a long time until she gave him something to do, anyway. Then, instead of what she's sure she's going to say (moreso than if it had happened in Orlais, which it did, but not with her there as well) until she opens her mouth, she says, “My mothers didn't die for me to waste my opportunities.”
Annegret who had chosen not to speak at the end and Guenievre whose throat had been a wreck where the arrow struck her and could not, and Gwenaëlle, carrying their legacies in hands dripping their blood.
no subject
He listens to her story. He hadn't heard of her mothers. He never knew his, but he understands the wanting for a lost past. If his Alienage had not been purged... who would he be?
"It only takes one boat to keep many from drowning."
no subject
She has pinned her birth mother's name to herself like a badge of honour. How she feels about that is less relevant than the importance of doing so.
“It hasn't turned out so badly,” she says, her smile small and lopsided and like a poem, private. “Now, I might have something to say about the world needing to come to the brink of absolute catastrophe in order for me to find a better place in it to stand, but—”
Her eyebrows rise meaningfully.
“It's probably my artistic temperament.”
She thinks she's hilarious.
no subject
"Since I've come here, I feel as though the world has forgotten itself. Is that always the state of Kirkwall?"
no subject
This is better, but it's also exactly what anyone might imagine it would be. And, probably, could only have ever been done in Kirkwall, because Kirkwall is terrible.
“My husband is the Provost for Research, he's always,” her nose wrinkling, some poorly defined gesture communicating much less than her writing might. “Something is always on fucking fire.”
Figuratively.
Occasionally, less figuratively.
no subject
Cautiously, Mhavos says, "he... wouldn't happen to be, ah... forgive me, I can't think of a gentler way to say it; he wouldn't happen to be an irregularly tall elf?"
no subject
And what a surprise he and Thedas were to one another.
“He's less tiresome about it than he once was, but he takes a general interest in elves. I expect he'll remember you, too.”
no subject
He shakes his head. "Forgive me; that was rude. Only, I've never encountered..." He's at a loss for words. "He was perfectly polite. If anyone as a nuisance, it was surely me."
no subject
It's a little droll. A little self-aware, even as she's quite rudely calling out what ought to go unmentioned; the careful way that such interactions are navigated by those who have been obliged by circumstance to become skillful. Gwenaëlle has always thought there's something ironic about how much better some elves are forced to become at the game Orlesian nobles play, and it's hard not to find it bleakly funny at the cutting edge.
She'd have been as oblivious as her peers, in another life.
“Imagine him with round ears and suddenly he makes sense. But elves are—very different, where he's from. I'd have had pointed ears if I were born there, for a start. It's a source of great consternation to him.”
no subject
And how bleeding wise would it be to say that to someone elf-blooded.
He looks down, scratching the back of his head, allowing himself to show real, true embarrassment, and that in itself is freedom enough.
"He... he did not strike me as the aristos to which I am ...accustomed." A sigh. "He endured my whining about religion and a short lecture on architecture. If I'd known... please, convey my apologies."
no subject
“Thranduil 'endures' very little he doesn't have to, especially in Thedas, where the number of things he does have to endure is a good deal higher than his fanciness was previously accustomed to.” 'Some elf's lecturing in the street' is not something he's going to face immediate political consequences for failing to tolerate; it's been her observation that while his patience with elves is not unending, it is a deep well.
Probably, he was interested.
no subject
"I'll just have to assume he's from some place where being an elf means a fair amount more than it does here." And a fair amount less. Wasn't he just mentally comparing experiences? What a hypocrite he is.
"In any case, I'm glad I know the both of you. A bracing introduction to Riftwatch, but one I'd not go without."
no subject
If anyone is going to take her husband seriously, it will not be her, particularly when she can remind him of his arduous adjustment period.
“But,” drolly, “I hope we don't give you an unwarranted impression of Riftwatch's overall competence. I do have to believe that our work will be successful, or else what's the point, but I strongly suspect it'll be by sheer luck.”
no subject