Entry tags:
[open]
WHO: Flint, Wysteria, Miriam, Cassius & You
WHAT: Catch-All
WHEN: Post-dreams, nebulously Guardian-ish
WHERE: Various
NOTES: Warnings (if any) in subject lines.
WHAT: Catch-All
WHEN: Post-dreams, nebulously Guardian-ish
WHERE: Various
NOTES: Warnings (if any) in subject lines.

((OOC NOTE: Anything in bold is closed to one thread, though group threads a-okay.
Feel free to turn this into action brackets if The Spirit Moves You.
Wildcards welcome, bespoke starters available upon request.))

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And then back to Vanya. She's yet to fetch her drink back up.
"Your rank in the Templars. Did you ever have people reporting to you?"
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(He doesn't look about the room, though his eye contact is not so complete to be unsettling. When he's not looking at her, he's glancing at his drink or out at nothing in particular.)
"I haven't been directly in charge of anyone for years, though." He glances over the Mage-Templar War, and who he was and was not in charge of then, to add, "The Templars with the Inquisition were not well suited to integrating the individual hierarchies, without anyone having claim to being the hosts. I was disinclined to jockey for influence. The title had been largely a courtesy for years, by the time I renounced it." In more ways than the one she's asking about, but that one pertinently. "What makes you ask?"
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"You don't strike me as one of those cold officers who sends walking wounded onto the field is all."
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She taps below one for emphasis. It's a cynical, dry breed of humor that she drinks down with her next sip of ale.
"And it helps that you've been telling on yourself. If the Inquisition's lack of order were the reason you left it, I can't imagine that you'd come to Kirkwall to pitch back into the fight instead of just answering the Divine's invitation."
A spread of the hands. Ta-da. What a good magic trick.
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He's noticed how few templars and ex-templars are here (and, not incidentally, how different his demeanor is from the existing examples of the latter). It would have been hard to miss.
"And if I ask fewer questions of others myself," quieter, "it is not because I am not interested so much as I feel ... a lack of grounds."
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These are preferable questions compared to something like, 'Miriam, is there a reason you've chosen to needle a fellow newcomer instead of being prickly at some old hand of Riftwatch?' Nevermind that, and nevermind facts like how they hadn't been the only two agents of the Gallows tending to Kirkwall's streets or there is a card game in one of the fortress' dining halls tonight that she might have crashed if she just wanted easy company.
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Being a templar is Neverra is, he has since learned, somewhat different from being a templar elsewhere in the south; by now, he expects non-Nevarrans to look at him and see templar in their local dialect.
"Do you think I should be bolder, then?" A bold question in its own right, under the circumstances.
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"Talking about only yourself is a poor way of making friends," she says, dry over the lip of the tankard. Then ammends to add, "—Is the advice I'd give anyone. I recall Little Kaja having trouble with the concept too."
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Perhaps he should be a little bolder in the name of not coming off like an awkward hitching post. It's worth considering.
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"And I doubt anyone who's already of a mind to tell you to fuck off on account of whatever oaths you took or renounced will much care about the particulars of what you say so much as the fact that you're saying them."
That's a fact too, fair or not.
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He considers her for a moment, then adds, "What brought you here? To Riftwatch, not to drinking with me specifically." While he's been invited to ask a question.
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"Joselyn. She's with the Research division. Similar to me in the face, better taste in clothes and jewelry. If you haven't met already, yoh will. She's apparently been making a nuisance of herself among your lot in the training yard in the mornings. Sword and shield humpers, I mean. Not—" Templars or ex-Templars or whatever.
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It would be easy, then, to slide back into (companionable?) silence. Instead, though, he offers, "Is she looking for any particular sort of training, or just seeing what's on offer?"
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She lifts her tankard—and pauses.
"Why, are you offering?"
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"Right," she says. "Overthinking too."
Her resolve holds right up until she tips her drink. When it happens, Miriam's laugh is an undignified and half-quashed snort across the lip of the tankard. It comes seemingly standard with a pacifying gesture from her spare hand--so automatic that the two things practically overlap.
"Sorry, no. Don't offer; she won't appreciate it. I'll stop tugging the hook in your cheek."
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After a moment, he adds, "I would like to know more about you, if you would like to say. It's only ... it is hard for me to not worry about misstepping. Prodding a wound out of ignorance. I know it can make me seem stiff."
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"Are you accusing me of being wounded?" Is so reflexive that the beat which follows is visibly devoted to course correction in the name of stop tugging. So across the table from him, Miriam straightens. Squares her shoulders a little, both hands wrapping around the tankard.
"I know how to say no. Ask away."
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"What were you and your sister doing, before she caught an anchor shard in the hand?"
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"We were with the Inquisition. She did alchemical work for their Research division. I mostly mucked around in Orlais. Helped recapture Montfort." A tip of the head is like a shrug, the curtain of her dark shifting. "Field work."
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It's not quite a tease (he's not sure he's allowed that), but it's firmer ground.
"I suppose it's not so surprising we did not encounter each other then," he adds. "Larger organization, plus both of us out on field assignments frequently."
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"Not surprising," Miriam agrees. "But a little strange to think that over the hill someone else was doing more or less the same thing."
More or less.
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There's good sense in practicing that alternative.
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