tony stark. (
propulsion) wrote in
faderift2020-07-25 10:28 pm
Entry tags:
open.
WHO: Tony Stark, Loxley, Marcus Rowntree, and your fine selves.
WHAT: Tony works a forge, Marcus trains, and Loxley invents sunbathing.
WHEN: Covers off Solace.
WHERE: Around and about.
NOTES: Probably just a couple replies per prompt would make my life easier. Select the man of your choosing. Feel free to convert to action spam style tagging, I don't mind nor care. If there is something specific you want to do, let's wait a week, big AC-related wink, or hit me up in inboxes!
WHAT: Tony works a forge, Marcus trains, and Loxley invents sunbathing.
WHEN: Covers off Solace.
WHERE: Around and about.
NOTES: Probably just a couple replies per prompt would make my life easier. Select the man of your choosing. Feel free to convert to action spam style tagging, I don't mind nor care. If there is something specific you want to do, let's wait a week, big AC-related wink, or hit me up in inboxes!
tony stark;Clang. Clang. Clang.
These are the familiar sounds coming from the smithy, where it is almost unbearably hot. The air tastes of smoke and metal, thick with the occasional cloud of steam. The forge is burning with colours of bright white and yellow rather than gold at what Tony approximates to be probably 2800 F, maybe hotter. It's at his back with his attention paid forwards at the anvil, on which he rests a glowing-hot length of metal held secure in tongs in one gloved hand. The other hand wields a hammer, bringing it down onto soft metal with almost trance-like consistency. Embers spark and catch on his wrists, his arms, but only occasionally.
He almost looks the part. A coarse leather apron drapes down from his waist, and he's wearing a sleeveless jerkin of similar material, keeping arms exposed to the warm, fire-flecked air. The stand out difference would be the goggles he has fashioned himself at some point -- round, tinted lenses, secured with a strap. He flips whatever he's making around as the heat begins to leech from the iron, and Tony Stark resumes his meditative assault of hammer falling upon metal. He's been doing this for a while, now, arms soot-streaked and slick with exertion, muscles tense even where he grips firm the tongs, from wrist to shoulder.
As the iron turns from bright white to fading orange, he turns to shove the potential sword back into the furnace, and, pulling off his goggles, brings his forearm up to wipe his brow. Not necessarily in slow motion.
marcus rowntree;It's getting late into the morning, the sun creeping towards one of its rare clear sky zeniths. Marcus Rowntree has the space mostly to himself, so it would seem, and who can blame anyone. It is hot as shite. But he has used this excuse all week not to do much of anything, and so he has summoned himself out into the training courtyard to roll through the motions of combat. Exercises, mainly, a collection of stances through which he moves his heavy, bladed staff through the air in swoops that are both powerful but controlled. Restraining the easy urge to let gravity and momentum wrest precision from him.
It's nothing they taught in the Circles. In his Circle, anyway. He came to all of this quite late.
Anyway he is also shirtless.
And when he is done, blade hitting the ground in front of him with a flicker of fire scorching the earth, he is breathing harder than he had been before, and drops the staff into the dirt beside him, runic incisions on the metal flashing hellfire orange for a moment before dimming. He is already walking directly to the barrel of water left out for this purpose, and at first, hovers his hands over it. A glimmer of blue light dances off the murky surface, cooling the water within just a little. Marcus picks up a bucket, matter of factly submerges it into the water, and brings it back up, full, to tip over his head, flicking wet hair out of his face as he does so.
loxley;But all of that sounds like a lot of work, doesn't it?
Loxley is opting for leisure, when he can find it, and with a natural resistance to fire, has never feared the potentially damaging effects of prolonged exposure to the sun. Back in Tassia, when his hue was a bronzed-gold, he tended to darken up quite handsomely, and he's noticed, now, the qunari grey actually has some pleasing undertones of silver when it's in a certain light. So he is reaping the benefits on a lovely afternoon, having found an area of the island coast unbothered by deckhands and ferries and the like, and, after laying out a woolen cloak he has brought along for this sole purpose, lies upon it like a lizard beneath the open sky to sun himself. Quite a few pieces of clothes have been set aside, his weaponry resting atop of it, down to just a light pair of shorts and some dark-lensed glasses that the Research academics had been developing some months ago.
He is on his belly for a while, and you'd be forgiven to think that he might just be fully asleep, until he rolls his lazy way to lie on his back, positioning an arm under his head.

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she is not expecting to find quite so much of him. though, of course, the heat is oppressive and she is perfectly aware that he is a man of particular physicality, so it should come as no surprise—there is absolutely no cause for gawping at him like a green chambermaid—she had opened her mouth to speak and as she can't recall what she intended to say, she closes it.
in a timely fashion, she will console herself later. )
Am I interrupting?
( her laces are far too tightly wound for this weather. she will have to rectify it. kirkwall is so humid. )
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His second is that perhaps he should put a shirt on.
But Kirkwall is so humid, and he settles for not dousing himself a second time. The shirt he uses to wipe his face for now, and he shakes his head for 'no'. ]
But I'd've been glad for it, if you had.
[ He moves to go collect up his staff from the ground, the wear of his workout making his motions a little slower going, lazier in the heat. ]
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( he will have to put a shirt on for it, )
but is your afternoon otherwise spoken for?
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He balances the end of the staff on the ground, the near-black metal not quite gleaming, coated in patches with a fine sheen of dust. ]
No. If you'd care to lay a claim.
[ Maybe that is neither rudeness or guilelessness. His expression is interested, dimly curious. ]
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(as if she can't see below his collarbones, that is.) )
I have business in Hightown, ( she elaborates, ) and I had thought you might accompany me, if the Gallows doesn't have pressing need for you.
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loxley
Athessa is out walking, looking for a spot where she too might lay out and bask, though her motives are rather less about sunning herself and more about the curious desire to get high outdoors. She's not usually picky, opting for a low roof or the gardens at the Gallows, but today she wants a beach. Sandy, if there is one, to save her the discomfort of pebbles digging into her bruised shoulder.
When she quietly approaches the spot where Loxley lay, she clucks reproachfully.
"Tsk tsk," shaking her head, and coming to stand by his set-aside affects. "Leaving yourself open to attack, with your weapons juuuust out of reach. What are we gonna do with you?" Her smirk tugs at the edges of the bandage on her face, but so long as she doesn't break into a full grin she won't have to do any wincing. (No grinning around Loxley? She's doomed.)
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Now he reaches to his face to tug the glasses down enough to peer at her over them and up at her.
"Haven't seen you in a bit. What's that you have?"
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With a little sigh she sits herself down beside him and addresses what she assumes he was referring to: the blunt roll of elfroot she only planned to smoke half of. How convenient.
"Elfroot," she says, and offers it to him to hold while she kicks off her sandals. "It makes everything feel nicer."
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But Loxley is rolling to lie on his side, propped up on his elbow. Now his back is to his weapons and everything. Hopefully Athessa isn't one half of a murder attempt or something. He takes the joint, rolling it between his fingers as she settles.
"That sounds very exciting. Undercover in Orlais. You ought to regale me."
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The match is one used to light the fireplaces in the Gallows, far longer than necessary for Athessa's purposes, so she uses the dagger on her hip to first cut it shorter, then begin to split it from wood to tip to turn one match into two.
"Three of us on reconnaissance, three on infiltration and recovery. A magic artifact. But: something went wrong," The match splits clean. "The infiltration team got captured, subjected to torture, so the rest of us have to hatch a plan--" She strikes the match, then plucks the blunt out of his fingers like she's airlifting it. "--get them and the artifact out before the Venatori find out too much or they kill our friends," The match breathes life into a fresh, glowing cherry, then shakes the flame out, leaving smoke trails in the air. "And get out without a trace."
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tries to remember my own oc's backstory
different kind of thirst; closed to ellis.
Tony is pretty sure Ellis is always interested, or good enough at faking it. Tonight, at a watering hole located between their path to Hightown and the docks, and as they sit with ale by the open window that might have a chance at catching cooler winds, he's circled around to a thing he had mentioned in passing. "I mean, the 1940s were basically Thedas," Tony says, and maybe Ellis can tell from tone if not context that this is probably not perfectly true. "And not just the hideously destructive, extremely expensive ongoing warfare part. But he was dug up out of the ice like eighty years later, and they wound him up, slapped some stars and stripes on his ass, and sent him off to go do the thing. Save the world, punch the bad guys, you know. Hero stuff.
"And he uses a shield," he concludes, lifting his tankard. "So, you're basically twins."
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The winding flow of discussion has turned to a person Ellis doesn't know, will never meet, but is likely a better man than Ellis has ever been. He tips his own tankard slowly back and forth, waiting for the stab of discomfort to pass before he speaks.
"I wouldn't say twins."
The mildest of objections, maybe something that shouldn't have been said at all. Ellis could let this all pass, but there are moments where he feels a spark of conscience, some discomfort at their perception of him. He thinks of Richard, spitting compliments at him as Ellis confiscated his wine, and sighs.
"There aren't many who would say Wardens are heroes."
Passing over those who would say Ellis in particular is not a hero. Somewhere, Teren looks up from her paperwork and clutches a knife closer.
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There are a few worlds of difference between Steve Rogers and Ellis, not even just this one, but it's one of those personality quirks that stands out keener to Tony than the rest. Not modesty, but being, like, a good person as if it came easy. He didn't love it in Steve, like it was just hiding something else. He likes it well enough in Ellis, maybe 'cause it seemed like it made sense with the everything else, like it wasn't hiding much.
Except--
"Why not?" is a little sharp, a prod of a question.
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"Some thought we are failing our purpose," Ellis says finally. "And we have made mistakes, of late."
Ha.
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But he is niggled, now, and maybe it shows in a slight shift of energy. No longer lazily reclining into his own storytelling, but sharper, looking forwards. Tony refills his cup.
"Are we talking about Wardens, though? I thought I was talking about you."
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mr tony
The request was, however, very melodramatic. The clerk in charge of assignments could easily be forgiven for assuming the Chantry has been devastated, mere moments from complete ruin as more of a structural problem than one of bad photoshop. He and Tony had managed the entire trek under the veil of misinformation only for it to lift when the letter-writer revealed the maimed fresco alongside heart-felt pleas that they fix it (and, to his increased distress, the amused chittering of a small crowd).
They'd arrived late, so vague sympathy had been enough to dodge real questions and real answers. Tomorrow morning would be another story.
"The nug's better than I can do." The nug being the bad photoshop, which had previously been Andraste. He drops one boot, moves on to the second. "So unless you're secretly da Vinci, we've wasted everyone's time."
mr leo
"Not so hot on painting," he says. "But I'm pretty good at buying art. Well," he unfurls the leather and tosses it onto the bed nearby, "Pepper was. Is, I guess. Total hoax, by the way. A painting's worth two million only 'cause the parties involved agree it totally is, but whatever. You see what I'm saying."
Right? his eyebrow lift inquires.
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It's not great.
The light from Tony's anchor pulls focus in the uneven lighting of the room, competing with the small lantern set in the far corner. Fitz idly turns his attention to his own hands, similarly wrapped, and presses his thumb against the palm with a matching shard until he feels the dull ache.
"Shame she's not here. Bet she'd have a great PR spin for pitching the Blessed Nug."
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"She's be great," he agrees, tone light, like how you don't want to touch something in case it burns.
Thump. The next boot falls too.
"But why not. It already pulled a crowd, out there. Scenic little village, low poop-to-mud ratio on the main drag. Maybe someone pretentious and bored'll take interest, pay to fix up a few things around the place. Do you think this place has room service?"
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Tony's got a good point. Not everyone at the tiny Chantry had seemed like a local, so the tourism's already kicked off on its own. The town might've struck on a blasphemous goldmine. Convincing their contact it's worth the indignity will be a stretch, but Tony's basically a snake oil salesman who just happens to sell useful things, so.
Fitz considers all of this, then he says: "Do you think you'll ever get back to her?"
He's a bit too wrapped up in thinking to have noticed that careful tone, but he probably would've ignored it anyway. He's more a 'stick your hand directly on the hot stovetop' kind of guy.
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get out of here with your ship icon
nO
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Marcus
But once he finishes and dumps the water over his head? Jenny Lou grins and lets out a loud wolf whistle. It kicks up a little breeze that funnels through the training yard and stirs the air.
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He submerges the bucket again in water, as he projects, "Can I help you?"
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She jumps off her perch and ambles up to him, "You're one of the mages, yeah? What was that you were doing?"
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And he thinks he recalls her petting Petrana's dog, but her aptitude in magic stands out clearest in his memory. At her second question, he glances towards where he'd dropped his staff in the dirt.
"Battle casting," he says, "I've heard it called. It was practice."
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"Is that something anybody can learn?"
sorry this fell out of my life and inbox