Toodleroodle von Skroodledoodler (
doneisdone) wrote in
faderift2019-12-06 03:49 pm
[open]
WHO: Teren, Barrow, and Benedict, and YOU
WHAT: catch-all
WHEN: Haring
WHERE: Kirkwall
NOTES: shirtless dilf enclosed
WHAT: catch-all
WHEN: Haring
WHERE: Kirkwall
NOTES: shirtless dilf enclosed
Teren
She crashed a dragon into a tower. And though she lived, Teren was flung from the beast and came to land somewhere in the rubble below, where an aptly remembered healing potion was enough to keep her from expiring on the spot, but moving her body in any meaningful way has been a struggle since then.
Incredibly fortunate to have had no significant internal damage (at least that the potion didn't handle), and with any broken bones splinted and healing, Teren is simply far too sore to move from her bed. After all her big talk about the Wardens not getting into any situations that couldn't be solved without Anders or Inessa...
...here she is.
A captive audience, if perhaps not a happy one.
Barrow
The air is brisk, the day is fine, and Barrow is swinging a hammer around in the sparring range. He's been learning to use it since first arriving in Kirkwall, rather liking the idea more than the usual boring old sword and shield, but having never had the opportunity to play with one until now.
He cuts quite a figure in doing so, and should be approached with caution unless alerted first. He's also only wearing a shirt about half the time, since even in the Haring chill, physical exertion takes its toll.
Benedict
I. (open) There's a certain anxious industriousness to Benedict these days, and if the growing pile of writing-filled parchment he keeps carefully resting on the bench is any indication, he's got a project.
He's also made some pretty decent headway with in weaving a screen for the window with straw from the cell floor, which both prevents the cold wind from coming in and bathes the little room in a pleasant sepia light. It's clearly the work of an amateur, but one can almost mark how much his skill has improved from the start to where his progress currently lies.
He can often be found working on either project, or perhaps painting or reading, swathed in both of his blankets for warmth and powered by nervous energy.
II. (one thread please, first come first serve) On the night of the strange dreams that grip the denizens of Riftwatch, there comes a cry of abject panic from Benedict's cell, followed by the sounds of someone in terrible emotional distress.

no subject
Still, he stands there for a moment holding it, looking at Benedict instead.
“I thought I would keep you company for a while,” he says, eventually. “It was a mistake for me to come see you, probably, the first time—now I know that you are a nice young man who likes books, it is much harder not to think about you down here by yourself. I could not do it. If I do not talk to someone for a day, I start talking to the furniture instead. I would have named the piss bucket by now.”
no subject
"I can go a while," he admits, drawing up his knees and tucking a strand of lank black hair behind one ear, "...but... visitors can be nice." He's not ashamed to admit that. "Your name is..."
He hesitates, trying to remember. "...Bertrand?" He's seen him before, a thousand years ago it seems.
no subject
"Bastien," he corrects, and tags on, "de Royeaux," even though there are at least two dozen other Bastiens de Royeaux it fails to differentiate him from at all. He sits down on the stool, which is very short, meant more for helping to reach things than for use as a chair. "I used to be a musician, and then I was a printer, and now I am a diplomat."
Diplomat he says with a bit of emphasis and an eyebrow raise that clearly indicates he still feels like he's playing dress-up, with a title like that, even for a tiny ragtag organization like this.
"Did you like the book? I was told I could only give you serious ones, so, ah—"
So the new one he's delivered, which he's gesturing to through the bars to complete the thought, is The Word and Challenge of the Chant. But Byerly might be down, at some point, with something a bit lighter.
no subject
"I did," he says, and though there are fewer things he'd rather read about than the Chant, especially as interpreted by Southerners, literally anything is better than staring at the wall.
"I'm surprised you're allowed."