Entry tags:
closed.
WHO: science nerds
WHAT: vibe check
WHEN: drakonis
WHERE: wysteria's haunted house
NOTES: all fine here.
WHAT: vibe check
WHEN: drakonis
WHERE: wysteria's haunted house
NOTES: all fine here.
There has yet to be a chemical fire today, so Ellis feels it's safe to spread his mending out on the side of the table Tony and Wysteria haven't covered with sheets of paper. He's been carefully repairing items of clothing over the course of the afternoon, and is presently meticulously reinforcing the seam at the shoulder. It's comfortable in Wysteria's ramshackle, lightly-haunted house, and Ellis has decided not to examine that too closely. (Once he does, this place will likely cease being comfortable for him at all.)
As he's worked, he's kept half an ear on the conversation. Most of the discussion is theoretical, touching on subjects he's familiar with but can't parse well enough to contribute. However, Ellis has developed an ear for the kinds of turns a conversation takes before it veers into dangerous territory, so it's best not to zone out completely.
"It sounds like you need a dwarf," he says, when their conversation hits a lull. "If you could persuade one of their artisans or smiths to work with you."

no subject
"A fair amount," he answers, delicate. The turn in conversation exacerbates the gnawing sense of...shame, maybe. It's the kind of guilt that comes from a job left undone and ignored; Ellis has been in Kirkwall for long months, and he isn't so sure he shouldn't be ranging across Thedas or delving back underground with whatever Wardens aren't tangled in affairs in the Anders or elsewhere. "I was part of a few expeditions meant to explore the lost thaigs."
Regardless of what Alistair had said, Ellis finds it hard to shake the inclination towards secrecy. But still, talking about exploration veers away from what exactly they'd been looking for and the clusters of darkspawn they'd encountered. One is easier to discuss in Wysteria's warm, cluttered kitchen than the other.
no subject
"Expeditions, you say? Why Mister Ellis, I had no idea you had such a history of being integral to academic research prior to this point. You really should have said something before now."