Entry tags:
- alexandrie d'asgard,
- bastien,
- byerly rutyer,
- derrica,
- ellis,
- julius,
- kostos averesch,
- nell voss,
- wysteria de foncé,
- yseult,
- { athessa },
- { fitcher },
- { ket perrino },
- { miles vorkosigan },
- { poesia },
- { richard dickerson },
- { sidony veranas },
- { sister sara sawbones },
- { sonia barra },
- { vanadi de vadarta }
[ open: all arise! ]
WHO: you. yes, you there. you're invited
WHAT: Sonia is throwing a big party, because everyone needs an excuse to get good and drunk together right now. And dancing. There is always dancing.
WHEN: Justinian, shortly after the return of the jungle crew
WHERE: The suite at the top of the mage tower
NOTES: ♫ have some party jams ♫
WHAT: Sonia is throwing a big party, because everyone needs an excuse to get good and drunk together right now. And dancing. There is always dancing.
WHEN: Justinian, shortly after the return of the jungle crew
WHERE: The suite at the top of the mage tower
NOTES: ♫ have some party jams ♫
The month in the jungle was a long one, made longer by the total lack of any alcohol to mitigate the experience. Utterly unthinkable. Sonia is addressing a public need by throwing a grand party -- a public service, even. Besides, it's what she does. When was the last time she got to plan a party, anyway? Granted, this is not a Denerim soiree for the young nobility, but the venue doesn't matter. Only the people and the drinks, and Sonia is assuredly rich in both. It is also a fantastic excuse not to think about any of the bad things that have happened since she was last in Kirkwall.
The decoration in the residential suite at the top of the mage tower would be best classified as improvisational -- one of those drapes tacked along the wall for ambience may be a bedsheet -- but it's the spirit of the thing that counts. One makes do with what one has. In one corner are a few tables laden with spirits, some provided by Sonia, others by generous partygoers. There are a few Barra vineyard vintages in the mix, highlights of her personal collection, a testament to the celebration she considers tonight to be. There's a small selection of food nearby, mostly for snacking to go with the drinks, though guests are free to bring whatever they like to share.
And there is, of course, music. Someone here has brought a fiddle or a flute or a bunch of pots masquerading as a drum set. Maybe you've brought your very own a capella choir. Whatever the accompaniment, there's something to dance to. Sonia makes sure there is dancing.
Tonight is not for licking wounds or swapping grisly stories of terror and survival. Tonight is for feeling alive, getting properly and delightfully drunk, and having a good god damn time.

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"Oh, you don't give me enough credit," Miles practically sings. "I was causing a scandal long before I was actually born. A master of drama in utero." He takes another (unwise) sip from his glass, tilting his head to one side, as if in concession to some point. "Every family has its own fault lines. I wonder where yours lie." He searches out the young hostess in the crowd again, glancing her way. Hmmmmmm.
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He doesn't like the way that Miles' eyes are wandering. Not at all.
"You can open any history book. Look to the tales of the Rutyers during the Occupation and before. Vicious." Then, with a click of his tongue - "I thought you were doing your research. Not very well, it seems."
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And some scandals never quite make it to the page, either. Why so skittish, Byerly? Actually have something to hide?
"A family tree may even prove useful to your marriage," he adds thoughtfully, glancing away from Byerly again, into the crowd. "Unless you have gone out of your way to obscure your relation to your cousin from your wife -- which seems like it would be rather difficult to do, considering it doesn't seem to be much of a secret."
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"Oh, you know," he says, "just the part where when I asked her if you had any more family around here -- I was quite surprised when she introduced herself as your wife -- and she told me in quite certain terms she did not know of any relations to the Rutyer clan in Riftwatch."
He smiles and watches Byerly over the rim of his glass. The marriage itself strikes a funny chord with him -- Byerly is obviously hiding something. He must be. Just look at that sneaky sonofabitch.
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"Perhaps," he answers levelly, "my good wife recognized you for what you are, and chose to withhold information."
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"Or maybe," he says, watching Byerly drink, "your wife recognized you for what you are."
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"I'm not your wife," Miles says glibly. Coming out and just saying it would be incredibly gauche, and he's hardly sure of the details, but he is reasonably certain that this is the only reason that Byerly Vorrutyer -- Byerly Rutyer would be so skittish on the subject of family. So certain. So, so incredibly stupid. He pauses just a beat before saying, stupidly, "Very cousinly hug you gave the lady hostess back there."
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Not at all.
"What," he says, "are you trying to imply, Vorkosigan."
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Then, because he's drunk and full of spite and will not admit just how much he enjoys having the upper hand on Byerly, he ignores the flashing TURN BACK HERE sign the small, still-sober corner of his mind is desperately holding up, and says some more stupid shit.
"Imply?" Miles feigns wide-eyed innocence, a hand to his chest. "Oh, I wouldn't dare to imply anything. Just speculating in the absence of any established fact or explanation. Why, one can imagine all sorts of reasons a wife might want to claim ignorance of her husband's close relations or personal pastimes, given your reputation."
Here, Miles means Byerly's readily-available past reputation, generally speaking, as a despicable lout, something a little more artfully vague than the direct implication of I think you're fucking your cousin. Maybe they trip Fereldan acid and Sidony is embarrassed to have a raver husband, for all he knows. (He is pretty sure something is Up with that marriage though. It doesn't track.) He has yet to have actually dug up the Thedosian counterpart to the Tragedy of Byerly (Vor)Rutyer, but it sure sounds like he has.
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And then it comes back, as inevitable as a wave. The water draws back, but then it smashes against the seashore.
By finds that he's grabbed the man by his shirtcollar. The glass he'd been holding is on the ground, broken, and Miles is flat against the wall. If By had just a bit more strength, the man would be hauled up to eye level; unfortunately, though Miles is slight, Byerly is rather weak of arm. And so By is hunched over nearly double so that he can shove his face into Miles' face, voice a snarl of rage.
Under normal circumstances, of course, he'd have registered this barb and smiled and walked away. But he, too, is very drunk.
"And what do you know of my reputation, Kosigan?" His hands twist the fabric further. "You're nothing but a sad little dream of a sad little man. You'll be gone as soon as you came, and no one will give a damn."
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"It's Vorkosigan," Miles bites out despite himself, angry pride welling up like blood on a pricked finger. He only belatedly registers Byerly's weird emphasis on the prefix earlier. Does he know that can constitute a deadly insult back on Barrayar? Is he only guessing, the way Miles has been guessing at Byerly? But Miles actually knows another Byerly, so it's been a little more than just guessing. He's too drunk for this, and the room swims dizzily around his head for a moment before he closes his small hands over Byerly's fist, trying to pry his fingers away.
"Threatening to make me disappear?" There is a tiny, distant voice in his head (and it sounds a little like Ivan's) saying quit now, you're not even ahead. He barely registers it. The drunken smile that sprawls over his face looks uncomfortably vicious, the lips pulled too far back. Half of what Byerly's saying only vaguely makes sense. He's always assumed that Byerly's vitriol at him stems from the usual condescending ableist bullshit in combination with Byerly's vile personality, but something feels distinctly personal about this. Well, Miles concedes to himself in a fleeting moment of clarity, he had gone and made it pretty personal himself. "If this is a dream, then by all means, wake me the fuck up!"
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The optics of holding a tiny man against a wall, though, register to Byerly as being damnably poor as soon as his wave of fury starts to ebb. His breath comes quickly; he tries to slow it, tries to calm himself. He forces his hands to relax, extracts his hands from the cloth.
Do you laugh at me, then, dear Miles? In your head, are you always smirking at By the filthy, By the disgraced, Byerly the pervert? Do you share the rumor with those around you? Are you one of the ones who keeps it alive?
"Rifters disappear often," he says. "Our misfortune that it's taking you so long."
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On the other hand, maybe he read Byerly right, and he didn't miscalculate at all, in which case he will have learned almost nothing from this exercise.
"I'll be sure to mention you by name in my suicide note," Miles mutters through his teeth, straightening his shirt with a tug at the hem. He gets to his feet, a little stiffly, but doesn't make a great show of dusting himself off, because for once, he isn't interested in the attention. Yes, Byerly looks the worst of the two of them when he's got Miles up against the wall, but then, Miles had accused him of dallying with his own cousin. That's not a great look either. Getting drunk was a mistake. He decides it's Byerly's fault.