WHO: Tony Stark, Joselyn Smythe, Richard Dickerson, Wysteria Poppell, Vanadi de Vadarta WHAT: A group of nerds and one cool elf investigate some strange reports coming out of a Free Marches village. WHEN: Second week of August. WHERE: Free Marches NOTES: TBA.
Or, more accurately, a feel: with Vanadi's consent, she might as well get stuck in because she isn't certain that the weed she pulled out of him brought all of its root with it, and it stands to reason that there must be roots.
It has to sprout from something, besides just 'Vanadi'.
Her mouth presses into a thin line as she presses her fingers in through broken skin, the sensation slightly dulled for her by her gloves—which are probably not making it any more pleasant for him.
Well, it doesn't feel great. But on the other hand, he and pain are well acquainted. Vanadi merely stares with great determination at the nearest tree trunk, his lips set to a thin line and shoulders gone tense.
"Feel free to keep me updated," he murmurs, in a voice only somewhat strained. Would a running commentary make this better, or worse? Maybe he'll get to find out.
“If you want to complain about Stark later, you can't quip like him now,” is a conversational warning, and also a completely unfair pretense that she and Wysteria and probably Richard aren't all, in their own special ways, just as fucking bad. What else it is, is the nearest thing he's going to get to a genuflection toward acknowledging that he is the last sane man surrounded by reckless nerds.
A running commentary might have helped, though, because the point at which she draws back and unsheathes not Richard's much more impressive knife but the slim, sharp blade that she carries for purposes similar to this that are usually not attached to another person—
well, it's not as though any questions he might have at this point he can't draw his own reasonable conclusions about, but it's been established: Vanadi likes warning, but he's overlooked the part of this where he's really going to have to be more specific about that desire if he wants to get any.
“I'd offer you a stick to bite down on,” she says, “but under the circumstances I don't recommend putting any sticks in your mouth.”
"I would never complain about -- such -- ah, neatly manicured facial hair," he mutters, the words broken and chopped up by probes into his shoulder. Just what is she finding in there that takes so much feeling around? God, he hates this, and even more when the slim little blade comes out.
It's for the best, he reminds himself, and takes a breath to hold his shoulders a little straighter. She doesn't strike him as someone who needs the encouragement, but nonetheless he adds, "You're doing quite well, keep going."
It'd have been more comforting, probably, if she'd said something about healing, or at least surgery; it would have been less accurate. The sort of desperate patchwork of an alchemist's knowledge and mundane hands that she could put together had inarguably been the difference between life and death at times during the war, but she is an alchemist, an apothecary, a researcher. The staff, as she had so eloquently informed Richard shortly before this wound was received, just does smacking.
But she's pretty good at dissecting things and learning about them. She has the stomach for this, holding his wound open and digging inside it with her knife, feeling for where she thinks the roots seem to be emerging from—
“I can't be as certain as a healer that that's all of it,” she says, when she's deposited bloody roots into a new specimen jar, her gloves filthy with gore. “We'll have to keep an eye on it.”
Dissection, she says, and Vanadi manages not to shudder, but maybe only just. He peels his eyes from that anchoring tree trunk to land them on the sight of those bloody roots instead, which has his lip curling in disgust -- which is about when he realizes that at some point he's set a hand at Joselyn's waist. The wayward hand rests there lightly, clenched into the outer layer of fabric like a hitchhiker. He doesn't move it.
"You're going to need new gloves," he mumbles, and his shoulder throbs. "That's too much blood to wash out."
“I have more in my satchel.” Not so many more that she's going to be careless—but she'd come with the intention of mucking in, and packed accordingly. If she'd imagined that involving more actual dissection and less of this more conversational kind,
Riftwatch, much like the Inquisition, is ruled by a fate that laughs at plans.
“Let me give you something for the pain. It'll dull it only a little, but it won't cloud your mind.” Injured and drugged up. They're already pressing their luck here without getting reckless to boot.
(Joselyn, admittedly, having a slightly different definition thereof than some.)
Ah, more gloves. A prepared woman. He leans in a little, and the hand knotted into her clothing rests lightly against something more solid. Hip, he thinks. A small thing, but comforting.
"What do you have?" he asks, never too tired or pained to be wary. It would have to be something he's familiar with to be any kind of welcome, and the odds of that in this strange world are rather low.
“I have a lot of things, but I'm going to give you a few drops of an elfroot-based tonic. Dull the pain and not your wits, but it isn't strong and it won't win in a fight between its capacity and your aggravating the wound.”
There's a small pause.
“If I step back so I can change my gloves and get it, are you going to fall over?”
He's still considering the answer and whether or not that's something he's interested in when he's quite distinctly called out. Vanadi blinks, withdrawing his hand to take a quick step back.
"Ah -- no. Sorry." It was nice while it lasted. "I'll pass on the tonic, though. It isn't so bad as to need dulling. A few bandages and I'll hardly notice it."
no subject
Or, more accurately, a feel: with Vanadi's consent, she might as well get stuck in because she isn't certain that the weed she pulled out of him brought all of its root with it, and it stands to reason that there must be roots.
It has to sprout from something, besides just 'Vanadi'.
Her mouth presses into a thin line as she presses her fingers in through broken skin, the sensation slightly dulled for her by her gloves—which are probably not making it any more pleasant for him.
no subject
"Feel free to keep me updated," he murmurs, in a voice only somewhat strained. Would a running commentary make this better, or worse? Maybe he'll get to find out.
no subject
A running commentary might have helped, though, because the point at which she draws back and unsheathes not Richard's much more impressive knife but the slim, sharp blade that she carries for purposes similar to this that are usually not attached to another person—
well, it's not as though any questions he might have at this point he can't draw his own reasonable conclusions about, but it's been established: Vanadi likes warning, but he's overlooked the part of this where he's really going to have to be more specific about that desire if he wants to get any.
“I'd offer you a stick to bite down on,” she says, “but under the circumstances I don't recommend putting any sticks in your mouth.”
no subject
It's for the best, he reminds himself, and takes a breath to hold his shoulders a little straighter. She doesn't strike him as someone who needs the encouragement, but nonetheless he adds, "You're doing quite well, keep going."
no subject
It'd have been more comforting, probably, if she'd said something about healing, or at least surgery; it would have been less accurate. The sort of desperate patchwork of an alchemist's knowledge and mundane hands that she could put together had inarguably been the difference between life and death at times during the war, but she is an alchemist, an apothecary, a researcher. The staff, as she had so eloquently informed Richard shortly before this wound was received, just does smacking.
But she's pretty good at dissecting things and learning about them. She has the stomach for this, holding his wound open and digging inside it with her knife, feeling for where she thinks the roots seem to be emerging from—
“I can't be as certain as a healer that that's all of it,” she says, when she's deposited bloody roots into a new specimen jar, her gloves filthy with gore. “We'll have to keep an eye on it.”
no subject
"You're going to need new gloves," he mumbles, and his shoulder throbs. "That's too much blood to wash out."
no subject
Riftwatch, much like the Inquisition, is ruled by a fate that laughs at plans.
“Let me give you something for the pain. It'll dull it only a little, but it won't cloud your mind.” Injured and drugged up. They're already pressing their luck here without getting reckless to boot.
(Joselyn, admittedly, having a slightly different definition thereof than some.)
no subject
"What do you have?" he asks, never too tired or pained to be wary. It would have to be something he's familiar with to be any kind of welcome, and the odds of that in this strange world are rather low.
no subject
There's a small pause.
“If I step back so I can change my gloves and get it, are you going to fall over?”
no subject
"Ah -- no. Sorry." It was nice while it lasted. "I'll pass on the tonic, though. It isn't so bad as to need dulling. A few bandages and I'll hardly notice it."