open: mabari crawl.
WHO: Open (with a closed starter)
WHAT: A team takes dog sleds into Ferelden's snowy southern reaches to procure an antidote to poison. So: a Balto knock-off and a game-canon body heat meme.
WHEN: Haring 9:46 (pre-dream plot, so no need to take it into account)
WHERE: Southern Ferelden
NOTES: OOC post. There's a closed starter for people who signed up to talk to the herbalist, but otherwise this is open to anyone, make-your-own-adventure style.
WHAT: A team takes dog sleds into Ferelden's snowy southern reaches to procure an antidote to poison. So: a Balto knock-off and a game-canon body heat meme.
WHEN: Haring 9:46 (pre-dream plot, so no need to take it into account)
WHERE: Southern Ferelden
NOTES: OOC post. There's a closed starter for people who signed up to talk to the herbalist, but otherwise this is open to anyone, make-your-own-adventure style.

The team's journey takes them from Winter's Breath, in the southern foothills of the Frostback Mountains, to the even-more-southern foothills, just north of where the map they've been given fades into ambiguity and a few depictions of enormous, cold-hardy beasts that may or may not truly exist. There's a smaller village there—Talon Point, named for a jagged rock formation in the surrounding mountains, under the protection of the Bann of Winter's Breath—that serves as a waypoint for traders and travelers to and from Orlais during the few months a year the mountains are traversable and the rest of the year as a conduit for trade with the Avvar and Chasind.
Other than the map, their guides are the dogs themselves. The lead dog for each sled team comes from a locally-bred line of particularly fluffy mabari. They're clever and communicative—albeit a bit less affectionate and more stubborn with these strangers than with their currently-absent masters—and used to making this journey. They know the way to Talon Point; it's a cold, snowy journey that requires making camp in the woods at least once, but otherwise, it's a straightforward trip.
The local accommodations are not much to speak of. With the inn shut up for the winter, the only place anyone can offer them to sleep is a barn. But it does provide a place to come back to, between bouts of splitting up to seek out the herbalist, who lives to the west and further up the mountains, or fanning out to the east to gather eshimeric. It's a reddish lichen that can be found growing in small quantities in the cracks and crevices of rocks, if they aren't covered in snow or if the snow is knocked away. Scraping together enough to allow for one dose and one do-over will take several days of dedicated searching.
The landscape they're searching is inhospitable, to put it lightly: deep canyons with narrow paths carved into their walls just asking for someone to nearly fall off the edge, pockets of dense woods that are difficult to traverse and easy to get lost in, expanses of barren land with no shelter from the wind at all, and frozen rivers and lakes which, of course, may not fully support the weight of someone trying to cross them. The sparse wildlife is mostly typical of the region, but now and then there's something—maybe a wolf, maybe a rabbit—that's unusually aggressive and still showing lingering signs of the blight.

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In other circumstances, it would have unequivocally been the right thing to do. It might still have been, regardless of all this misery and ice. Better soaked to the bone and half-frozen than tainted. Ellis had fewer fixes for that.
"You lost your coat in the midst of all this," he continues, quieter as the last of the laces come loose, freeing the sodden over-layer. "We'll have to do something about that tomorrow."
His hand is gentle at her shoulder.
"Turn round. I'll do the other side."
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"It was so heavy," she says after a moment more, tone almost thoughtful, drifting away from the immediacy of anger, "And then it caught on something, or caught the current? I'm not sure. It was dragging me. I couldn't get free of it." She thinks, suddenly, to look down at-- "Your hand." The instinctive reach touches the back of his wrist, safely shy of bloodied knuckles. "We'll have to see to that."
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Whether or not he's cracked some bones is hard to discern. The cold has fended off the worst of the swelling, though as he cautiously closes his fingers into a fist a little flare of pain sparks up in answer. Maud's fingers are cool against his skin, a reminder of what they're meant to be working towards, and that his hands are no part of it.
"And it'll heal," he presses, taking up the knotted ends of lacing to begin picking them apart. "I'm not bothered."
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She shivers and nods, drawing her hand away to let him get back to the task. "Still," she says, swallowing to get her voice back to a normal volume, "We should see to it once I've changed. I can do one useful thing today."
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"Let's worry about getting you warm first," Ellis tells her. The ache in his hand has been dulled by the cold, and the prickling of returning warmth isn't enough to trouble him.
Though at this point, with the outer layering of her dress falling loose, Ellis clears his throat and takes a step back.
"Is that manageable for you now?"
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"Yes, thank you. I can take it from here." It sounds like she's dismissing a servant, and she'd redden again with that realization if she weren't already flushed with the cold and coming out of it.
Ten minutes is enough to see her changed and her wet things hung from a makeshift drying rack, the smell of wet wool beginning to mingle with woodsmoke and straw in the tackroom air. Fewer layers, but supplemented by the blanket he'd supplied wrapped about her shoulders as she slides the door to the tack room open and rejoins Ellis by the now-blazing fire.
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"There'll be stew, in a bit," he promises, because Ellis can cook one thing, jokes about Fereldans aside. "But you should sit and warm yourself in the meantime."
Just in case. Just because Ellis isn't sure she's out of the woods completely and they've already worn out their welcome with the local healer, more or less. He's wrapped a loose length of linen around his knuckles, but left the hand mostly alone. Something is fractured, he thinks, but he's hoping once the swelling has ebbed that guess will be wrong.
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"Thank you," she says, and if her smile is a little strained, it's not the gratitude she's struggling with. "I'm sorry if I was short before. My anger is for myself alone. You've been very kind." An absurdly lukewarm statement. "In addition to saving my life, of course," she adds. "I do hope your hand isn't broken. I have some salve that should help sooth the swelling, if you'll permit me."
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"Drink this first," he tells her, offering her a dented mug. "It's tea. Nothing too fancy, but it'll do you good."
Something to tide her over, until the stew is ready. He gingerly flexes his hand, not yet reaching to remove the wrapping. Maud has never given him the impression of being squeamish, but she is still pale with cold and seems slightly dwarfed by the blankets she's wrapped in. He balks at asking anything more of her than to just sit and warm herself.
"I've carried that all the way from Amaranthine. Knew it'd come in handy," he explains. "Don't mention I'd been keeping it aside through the shortage last year, if you would."
Wysteria and Fitz can never know.
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For a moment she just holds the mug so that the steam warms her face, letting it dissipate before hazarding a sip. She'll savor it in silence for a few minutes, letting its heat and the fire's do their work. Her attention seems to have drifted, gaze fixed distantly through the fire, so it may seem rather sudden when she says,
"I suppose as a Warden you must have come near to dying many times."
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"Aye, I have."
His tone carefully even over the words. It's hard to tell with Maud, sometimes, whether she's fishing for a story or not. She hadn't struck him as someone keen to hear the more gruesome aspects of his work, even if Ellis were interested in speaking about them. Between his fingers, he slowly, clumsily twists a few stray pieces of hay lifted from the floor, watching the fire for a moment before looking up at her.
"This is new for you, isn't it? Being in danger so regularly?"
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She leaves thoughts steeping another minute or two before she shakes her head. "It seems as if I ought to feel either more or less than I do. Not-- ambivalent about having almost drowned. I don't know. Is that strange?"
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"There was a time, years ago, I'd gotten hit hard enough that it caved in my armor, broke some of my ribs. The bone," Ellis pauses over this detail, clearly deciding it's unnecessary as he lifts a hand to tap at his chest. "Here, was where it hit me. Hurlocks carry bigger weapons than I do."
It's an easy story to tell. He'd traded part of it away when he'd first arrived because it was straightforward, unremarkable, and everyone survived it.
"The Senior Warden had to drag me out. We were lucky we'd traveled with a healer, or else the wound would have killed me. But it only managed to wreck my breastplate."
It's a ways away from falling through ice. But still, the end point—
"But I didn't feel any particular way about it then. It happened too fast. If you had time to think about it then, it might have been different."
i thought it had been like 1 month which was bad enough but i see it's 2!! so feel free to ignore
The fire flickers, and she nudges at the end of a log with a toe, inching it slightly deeper into the coals.
"When you think back on that now, it doesn't bother you? To know how near you came?" Her mouth almost immediately curls into a smile both self-deprecating and apologetic, and she waves off any need to answer with a flap of fingers. "I'm sorry, I don't mean to sound dramatic. I will simply have to get used to such things."
gently inches towards putting a bow onto this
Yes, he had been bothered. But not for the reasons Maud might have assumed. Ellis doesn't volunteer the answer regardless.
"We'll work on avoiding you repeating the experience," is maybe the better option, in his opinion. Maud may very well be right, and her work with Riftwatch might require her to get used to near-death or at least, some level of danger, but still.
He clears his throat, straightening in his seat.
"Are you hungry?"