Entry tags:
[player plot | closed] home isn't a place
WHO: Athessa, Bastien, Colin, [Derrica]
WHAT: Giving belated rites to long-dead family
WHEN: Harvestmere
WHERE: Somewhere in the forest...
NOTES: cw for animal death
WHAT: Giving belated rites to long-dead family
WHEN: Harvestmere
WHERE: Somewhere in the forest...
NOTES: cw for animal death

ARAVEL.
It takes a little more than a day to navigate through the Planasene Forest, riding at an easy pace, headed southwest. The terrain isn't unreasonable, but there are still fallen trees and unexpected cliffs overlooking the Waking Sea and places where the horses simply refuse to walk for some ineffably equine reason.
Early the second day, they find it. Home, if that word even applies to the overgrown clearing where the remnants of Athessa's clan lay.
The Aravel is still there, still intact. Weather-worn, but ironbark doesn't rot, and the enchantment on the landship is still alive. The same can't be said for the surrounding camp, with its tattered cloth and discarded tools, a ring of stones around a fire pit that's grown over with moss and plants and bugs. There are no bones offering testament to slaughter, nor signs of blood or strife. Just abandon.
PREPARATION.
There's a fair amount of stuff to do before the burial. Acorns need to be gathered, cedar branches collected, oaken staves carved, food hunted and harvested. Athessa will do the hunting herself, and on the day of the burial she leads a halla into camp, alive. She doesn't look proud, or particularly excited about being able to find one.
RITUAL.
Not far from the camp is a cave, rocky and shallow, with a flat stone floor. It was once an altar, or something like it. Faded markings, a few bundles of once-dried herbs that have since fallen from their line and litter the ground, and two decades' worth of neglect. This is where, once the detritus is swept away, the halla will shed its mortal coil.
But before that, incense is burned, a prayer song is sung, and leaves of a hina plant are crushed to a paste and applied to the palms and face. It stains the skin red, to represent the blood of the halla (without actually being blood), and the blinding of Ghilan'nain. The stain will fade before they return to Kirkwall.
BURIAL.
After the halla has been bled, skinned, and butchered, its heart offered to Andruil, it's just a matter of carving the horns into charms and burying them with the acorns. Twenty-five in all; one for each clan member. Each acorn will need to be planted with room to grow, so there's some trekking about to be done in order to find suitable plots. Then, the cedar branches and oak staves are laid upon the soil.
As they work, Athessa sings:Melava inan enansal
ir su aravel tu elvaral
u na emma abelas
in elgar sa vir mana
in tu setheneran din emma na
lath sulevin
lath araval ena
arla ven tu vir mahvir
melana ‘nehn
enasal ir sa lethalin
And it's easy to see why the stories about luring unsuspecting travelers to their fates came into being. The song drifts through the trees, reaching for heartstrings and pulling at them, melancholy and pleading.
WAKE.
The mourning may not be finished (nor will it ever truly be), but there must be room for celebration as well. The feast that is prepared by Colin, with the assistance of the other three, is a combination of Dalish, Rivaini, and Antivan, which is the result of trying to reverse engineer traditional recipes that escape the memory. There are hearth cakes, roasted root vegetables, a hearty halla stew (with perhaps more spices than Dalish cooking typically has), sweet grains and fruits, and a few bottles of a finely aged rowan mead to share.
Good food and good company around a fire, reminiscing about loved ones lost, sharing memories. Laughter interspersed with brief, bittersweet moments of silence.
THE RETURN.
The group returns to Kirkwall right on schedule, with ample time to loiter before returning the horses to the stables and catching the ferry back to The Gallows. Though the pall still lingers, it's not heavy or oppressive. It's just a bedsheet, diffusing the morning light until it's time to wake up and get out of bed.

athessa | preparation
Before they can get to hunting, gathering, and otherwise just getting things in order for the burial itself, the camp needs to be resurrected. The fire pit needs to be cleared so a new fire can be lit there, a new spit constructed, and tents pitched. All the while, Athessa keeps an eye out for things that might be salvaged, or contributed as an offering.
They found her grandmother's staff in the aravel, a book of songs, a small metal box and other ephemera. It stands to reason that some things left outside the aravel might have stood the test of time, too.
b. carving
Athessa sits on a log, tending the fire when it needs tending and otherwise spending time whittling the bark from the wood they procured. The cedar branches are simple enough; they need be nothing more than branches for the rites. It's the oaken staves that pose some difficulty. Or, moreso than difficulty, tedium.
It just means there's plenty of work to be shared, and whoever sits beside Athessa will get an apologetic smile, a knife, and a walking stick to whittle into shape.
"I think we can just strip the bark," she says, dredging her blade beneath the bark and the wood itself. "It doesn't have to be anything fancy."
c. halla
Obviously, there have been prior moments of emotion. Tears shed and stifled. Athessa has been putting on a brave face thus far, and doing admirably well at recognizing when she needs to take a moment away from the camp (or in someone's arms) to feel what she needs to feel. But when she returns to camp with the halla following after, she seems to be barely holding it together.
She introduces the great deer to the aravel, the way she remembers her father doing. The halla sniffs the wood and bobs its head, scratching an itch on the edge of the landship. And it lets Athessa pet its neck, pat its flanks and it amiably snuffles at her hand despite there being no food there.
This isn't like hunting. This is heartbreaking.
A
"I've never seen anything like it," he says. "Not even in the hands of the First Enchanter. I didn't know you had mage blood."
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“I think I was supposed to take after her, since my mum didn’t,” she says. It’d explain why the clan had been so relaxed about her role, if they were expecting her to become the Keeper’s Second. They might’ve just been waiting for her magic to manifest.
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What is she even meant to do with a Keeper’s staff? It’s not like she can use it. It’s taller than herself, carved from some kind of knobby, knotty wood and stained a deep reddish brown. The grip is wrapped in soft leather (or it used to be soft, and will be again once properly conditioned), and where the wrap is tied off dangle a few charms, hand-made, hand-carved, and a little golden bell.
Athessa taps the bell with one finger and it jingles sweetly.
“Even with that, she’d manage to sneak up on us when we least expected.”
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He offers Athessa the staff. "It's an heirloom now. A portrait of your grandmother."
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She hesitates, debating whether or not to take it. Like it might bite her if she does. Or like if she touches it, Keeper Danyhra will turn her gaze towards Athessa and be disappointed.
"What'll I even do with it? I can't use it."
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"Though it's up to you. Maybe it's...maybe since you can't bury your grandmother, you can bury this in her place."
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"Or maybe you or Derrica could use it?"
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"I want it to be of some use to someone," she says, finally reaching to trace the carvings with her fingertips. It just feels like wood. No spark, no sense of something more. "She might be gone but the magic isn't."
Tears track down her cheeks before she even realizes she's weeping, but she doesn't wipe them away or try to hide them. She just lets them fall, and nods, and smiles a little faltering smile.
"A healer should use it."
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He reaches out to tuck a stray lock of hair behind her ear.
"All that has to be decided for now is whether we're taking it back with us to Kirkwall."
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"I...wish I could know what she would've wanted," she says, taking the staff and leaning it against the aravel. The little bell chimes, twinkly, and Athessa closes her eyes to just breathe, and let more tears fall, and take stock of her grief. "Do you think... D'you think it's okay to assume the best of someone when you didn't really know them?"
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B
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Another strip falls, and he's quiet while he starts the third. He's willing to talk, of course, if she wants to, but also willing to just keep her company.
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It's definitely more her element than his, though. Trees instead of buildings, birdsong and silence instead of the overlapping sounds of people talking. Periodically Athessa will pause and just listen to the sound of the leaves, the breeze rustling them, the birds and the animals and the distant hush of the Waking Sea. It's peaceful.
"Ya know," she says, breaking the silence once she starts stripping bark from another staff. "I haven't the faintest idea what to do with the aravel. Like... do I just leave it here? Try to take it with us? Seems like it'd be hard to navigate through the trees."
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"Do you remember how they managed before?"
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"I know we moved around but I can't remember anything about it. I think we would sometimes use horses instead of halla, because I remember one of the horses stepped on my cousin Cillian's foot, and his toes were bruised purple for almost a month after."
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"Well," he says, and pauses. "If we could move it, would you want to?"
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"I suppose it's been there this long, it won't hurt to leave it here until we figure it out."
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"It should not be hard to find it again," he says. "And it's impressive that it is in such good shape, after all this time."
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A few more shavings of bark peel away, fall to the ground. Would she want to move the aravel? Would she want to leave it here?
Athessa lets the current oak staff and the heel of her knife-hand rest on her thighs while she thinks about it.
"Maybe we could gift it to another clan somewhere. I dunno what I'd use it for, but I think it ought to be used. It's what it was made for, after all."
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"It was a good idea you had," he says, "to reach out to the Dalish. If we do that maybe you will be able to see if any of them need it."
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"I almost didn't suggest it," she admits, rolling the oak back and forth. Ever the fidgeter. "Cos I'm hardly the best candidate. It'd be better if we had someone more—"
A vague gesture. She doesn't know what word she's looking for.
"I dunno. More Dalish."
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