imbroccata (
imbroccata) wrote in
faderift2020-07-18 03:46 pm
Entry tags:
Hunt A Crow
WHO: Byerly, Fitcher, Lino, Yseult
WHAT: Hunting down and killing Lino for being a shitlord
WHEN: mid-late Solace
WHERE: Denerim
NOTES: violence and death, but don’t worry; lino won’t succeed in murdering a child
WHAT: Hunting down and killing Lino for being a shitlord
WHEN: mid-late Solace
WHERE: Denerim
NOTES: violence and death, but don’t worry; lino won’t succeed in murdering a child

Here’s the sitch:
- Early in the month of Solace, an Antivan Crow by the name of Gio will visit the Gallows. They’ll snoop around briefly but mostly they’ll seek to parlay with leadership. Turns out, Lino is on their shit-list and Gio has been sent to kill him. Gio sees an opportunity for Riftwatch to get some approval points with Antiva and the Crows. Why not just kill him yourselves? Save Gio the trouble, yeah? They can’t offer the name of Lino’s contractor or target, but they give a location: Denerim.
- By the looks of it, Lino barely has a day’s lead, having scarpered as soon as he got wind of Gio being at the Gallows.
- To make matters worse, Denerim has decided to hold a cèilidh, at which all manner of folk will be in attendance. Queen Anora will be making an appearance, and lesser nobility from all across Ferelden will be there. It’s a veritable smorgasbord of assassinatible targets. Byerly will have gotten word of this celebration. Stands to reason that whoever Lino’s target is going to be at the cèilidh.
- Your mission, whether or not you accept it, is to leg it to Denerim as fast as you can and stop Lino. Kill him. Stop him from killing his target. Feel free to get yourselves a funnel cake or two from the shindig.

RUMOR MILL - OTA
I. THE GALLOWS
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[ Byerly looks rather uncharacteristically serious when he comes to visit. Of course, there's still a lightly ironic smile on his lips, but it looks forced. There's tension in his shoulders and in his hands. ]
A moment.
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What is it?
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[ From Denerim, with the city's name given enough weight to make it clear which personage that letter comes from. He closes the door - and then, for good measure, locks it. ]
Perhaps you remember our Antivan friend who went missing recently.
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And?
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[ A letter, laid on her table. ]
And there is worry that he is going for a rather...prominent target.
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We're a strange detour from the queen. You've alerted your employers?
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Yes. But they want what assistance we can spare. [ He shakes his head. ] If none from your division, then I at least must go. But I'd sooner have someone -
[ His vague gesture is a substitute for a word adjacent to competent. ]
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You've arranged passage to Denerim?
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Aboard a courier ship. It leaves in two hours.
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[ She nods. ]
I'll meet you there.
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II. DENERIM
The festivities have been in full swing for a day by the time Lino makes it to Denerim. It would've been faster if he hadn't taken precautions to cover his tracks, but with Gio appearing at The Gallows he just can't take the risk of them catching up.
So he doesn't have the advantage that infiltrating the fete setup would offer. He can still find the best vantage point, determine the event that offers the best opening. The joust is tempting. Plenty of distraction. Sword and shield won't work. The action is too centralized, not enough room to pass an assassination off as mishap.
That just leaves the archery contest. Wouldn't it be a shame if a contestant's shot went wide and hit a target they weren't aiming for?
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The famed capitol in the South, with it's muddy cobblestones and muddy splattered white wash and, thanks to the good temper of the season, it's mud rather than slate colored skies. The banners and streamers improve the look of the place somewhat, at least, and the music bursting from every miscellaneous courtyard and square in the city is well enoguh. Were it not from the grim nature of their business it might not be described as all bad.
However.
"I resent this Ferelden habit of going around with nothing worn on one's head. Surely without hat or hood, the man will spot us from sixty paces away," say says absently to what might seem to those about her to no one in particular, though the sound of it travels through the pale crystal hooked on her cloak pin. Fitcher cuts her way carefully along between a series of tents reserved for competitors. Presumably, her compatriots are doing similarly through their respective thirds of the competition grounds. They have little time, and have split up to make better use of their their meager numbers. "Messere Rutyer, have you considered that your people might benefit from a trend of veils?"
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I.5 - THE WAKING SEA
But in the aftermath of the little storm, with the weather cleared and the sea running light, she at last makes an appearance above decks - looking slightly pale and tired, but otherwise in good enough spirits - to stretch her legs and get some fresh air. Somewhere in the bows, out of the way of the working of the little ship, she stumbles across one of her traveling companions.
"It seems," she says, slotting herself comfortably in alongside Byerly. "The cure to seasickness is to simply allow oneself to become acclimated to misery."
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"Life," he responds simply, with a gesture of his long fingers to indicate the applicability of that lesson to the whole of existence.
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"What a pessimist you are." Her eyeline slides sideways to him. "You're not displeased with me, are you?"
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He props himself up on the rail, elbows braced, hands dangling, face likewise turned into the wind. Face turned, not coincidentally, away from her, which has the effect of obscuring his expression, not giving her any cues until he's heard how she'd tell this story.
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She drums her fingers absently at her center, then offers this too: "That it would seem I didn't trust you with it."
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"You say it would seem as though that were not the reality," he responds. His voice is light - loud enough to carry over the spray, not so loud as to strain. He wonders if there's any remorse over that choice. He wonders if there is any part of her that would be actually disappointed to lose his regard, or if it would be something that would leave her utterly unbothered.
"Perhaps you simply thought I would have assumed it," he says. "Antivans, after all."
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From this angle, there is hardly anything by which to measure him by.
"Must I continue to address the back of your charming head, Byerly?"
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"I did not think you an ordinary clerk," he says, "to be fair."
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No she isn't. Standing there beside him, moving beneath her lightness and good cheer, lurks some ripple of uncertainty. Or wariness. Or regret. Or some other thing.
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