Entry tags:
[closed]
WHO: Silver, Flint
WHAT: Two pirates scouring Kirkwall's bookshops in the service of important diplomacy work.
WHEN: Early Drakonis
WHERE: Kirkwall
NOTES: Doing their JOBS.
WHAT: Two pirates scouring Kirkwall's bookshops in the service of important diplomacy work.
WHEN: Early Drakonis
WHERE: Kirkwall
NOTES: Doing their JOBS.
It is their fourth stop. They've wound their way through the more prominent Hightown booksellers, having worked their way from out of the company of skittish shopkeepers anxiously overseeing the systematic scrutiny of their shelves by two alleged pirates and into the clutches of what can only be described as Kirkwall's most peevish old bat:
"I don't care who you think you are; you can't be here this long without purchasing something," she'd wheezed at them in the cavernous old place, one hand trembling at the head of her cane and the other arm wrapped around a ginger cat with large blinking eyes.
Which is why they now own a collection of romance novels with increasingly unlikely love interests, including but not limited to a Chantry sister and a shapeshifting witch, between them. It's also why they're being left alone now to pick through the labyrinthine shop's back room, wading through unorganized stacks of used titles, and--
Choking on dust, mostly.
"Have you considered simply copying the book instead?" This said into his sleeve while scrubbing a thick layer of grime from one of the room's upper shelves.

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The low thud, thud, thud, as Flint rehomes a series of books from the shelf at eye level to the one just below it that he'd already combed through creates a persistent rhythm which grounds the room. The old books leave his fingertips all discolored; one of them is mysteriously and unpleasantly sticky.
(Is that dismissive of their new clutch of books, or dismissive of the direction the men might be turned in? Unspecified.)
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The thought strikes John with such intensity that all he can do is bark a laugh. Even if it wasn't the old bat's deliberate design, it's fairly genius. He lifts one book to examine the cover, observe the place where the gold-stamped letters are peeling up at odd angles, before dropping it into the crate he'd just emptied.
"That shelf isn't going to bear much more weight," he cautions, though what's a broken shelf in the midst of all this disrepear, before continuing, "And that's not much of a suggestion."
But then, is there any urgency? Is all that's necessary a lurid book about a Cetus to keep things in check? (Yes.) What further commentary on the topic can there be?
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He pauses, elbow hooking briefly on the shelf before it occurs to him how dirty it is. The brief contact is enough to leave behind a smear of grey all over his coat's arm by the time he unhooks his elbow. "Do they need a better one?"
It's a real question as much as it isn't, half sly bullshit in response to that barking laugh and half actually cognizant of the fact that-- well, would he know? When was the last time Captain Flint more than a few hours with the men who make up 'his' crew?
https://i.ibb.co/ZKgXLPS/yzvp3j1.gif
And Flint is the answer to that? Maybe not.
Maybe this is just a fool's errand, another exercise in trying to press at the jagged edge between them and see how far it extends.
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"The question Val Chevin presents should resolve into work for them in short order. If they're restless now, they won't have the luxury for much longer."
A cloud of dust rises from the flipping of pages, the routine displacement of volumes from one space to the next.
"In the mean time, I'm of a mind to send you to Orlais." A glance - clarifying: "On business. With Rutyer."
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Punctuated by two more thunks of discarded books rattling into the crate.
"You're considering sending a Fereldan and a pirate to complete business in Orlais?"
Is this how Gwen had felt when John had tried to engage her assistance in subterfuge all those months ago?
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Here, his eye line slides down from the top of the ladder with slow, painfully desiccated humor to land on Silver. You know things about boats, don't you?
"Apparently pirates used to be fashionably outrageous."
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Inevitably, the same prickle of mortification and irritation rises in him. He may well be considered outrageous, but for a more singular reason than pirates of the past. The feeling will pass. Or he will be able to set it aside. He takes a moment to pluck through the contents of another box. Pamphlets, ribbon-wrapped diary, oversized, moth-bitten collection of maps—
"Why me? Is there an element of this that can benefit our business?"
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"As things stand here, there's no way for us to bring both ships to bear. Our odds of securing the channel and retaking Val Chevin are increased with a strong allied force at our elbow. After the breaking of the blockade Orlais' force will need to be reinforced.
It benefits the war.
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They are far removed from John's journeys to Llomerryn.
John draws a palm down the spines of a stack of books to better squint at their titles. A few would be interesting, if he weren't trying to seek out one book in particular.
"Then I'll go to Orlais with the Ambassador, and see if we can't secure the ships," John acquiesces. "Though I'd point out that you accompanying him would have much the same effect as my presence."
If this is official. If this is for the war, and not for their war, which more and more exist separately in John's mind when he considers the actions they take and which conflict is served.
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—is a joke, like they are still telling them.
"I've given him the idea with the expectation that he ask Orlais for something in exchange for their use of our ships. If I'm there to assist in the negotiation, he'll find some reason to suspect whatever agreement we could arrive at between us. You might have better luck. At the very least, I suspect you'll get farther with Rutyer than I would."
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Which they are, of course. Even in the wake of Nevarra and all that's gone wrong since, their ultimate goal is surely unchanged.
"Have you left him with some idea of what he should be negotiating for?"
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A slab of books is relocated to the lower shelf, his sleeve employed for scrubbing dust from the spines of the exposed volumes behind them.
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"Alright."
The inevitable acquiescence. What reason does he have to refuse?
"And is there anything else I should know?"
There's some terrible humor in John putting that question forth, but it must be asked.
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(That he is tired, he does not think.)
There is a slim volume newly exposed on the shelf, its thin spine mottled with dust which will need more than his sleeve to fully clean away. He draws it out into the light.
"Just that Madame de Cedoux knows what we did in Nevarra. That likely means Enchanter Julius will too."
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"Is that all?"
It is no small thing. How long has Madame de Cedoux known? What prompted sharing the truth with her? The question unspool further and further, but John poses just the one. Just a singular question, one that John could answer for himself.
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This isn't the question he'd anticipated.
"Should there be?"
three hours for this tag
"I imagine there is, but you have chosen to keep your own counsel on it."
Alright, so we're doing this.mp3
#blessed
"If you have questions, you're welcome to them."
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There are more delicate ways to phrase it, but John opts for blunt, looking up at Flint haloed in motes of dust. The pretense of rare novels is momentarily forgotten.
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Which sounds like the quiet flex of a heel beginning to dig in.
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"If we are to continue in our partnership, if I am to be of any use to you here, then we must find some way to reconcile this."
This covering so much space, the fracture that has split between them.
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"We." That is for making space and measuring it with as well. "I'm sorry. I was unaware you felt any desire to reconcile with any of this."
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That their discussion aboard the Walrus in the wake of their return from Nevarra had not been enough. The strain has not resolved itself.
And perhaps some of this is John's own discontent exacerbating the situation, robbing him of patience. If things had gone differently when Nevarra fell beneath waves of the dead, or if circumstances had provided John with a clear path to some utility, he may never have raised this question.
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"You know where I stand in this. I said--" A pause, a glance shot down the length of the store room. There is no sign of their doddering old chaperone, though her orange cat is there at the end of the stack watching with fascination all the dust being stirred up. In a low, even tone that will not carry, Flint continues, "You know what was said. If you require clarification, it has more to do with your position than mine."
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