laura kinney (
justashotaway) wrote in
faderift2021-02-19 03:17 pm
Entry tags:
open. you believe what you want to believe.
WHO: Aenor Din'adhal, Laura Kint
WHAT: Catchall with open and some closed starters
WHEN: Immediately post-dream through the end of Guardian
WHERE: The Gallows and Kirkwall proper
NOTES: If you'd like me to write you up something particular, please PM
justashotaway or
dinadhal, PP , or disco dove#9906. Starters in comments.
WHAT: Catchall with open and some closed starters
WHEN: Immediately post-dream through the end of Guardian
WHERE: The Gallows and Kirkwall proper
NOTES: If you'd like me to write you up something particular, please PM

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"I know. I will, though."
He looks back down at their hands. There's a skinny little scar that runs between his knuckles, white with age. He doesn't remember where it came from. You forget things, eventually, but the dream feels like it will stay with him forever, just the way a really bad nightmare might.
And he doesn't want to ask. He wants, instead, to get up, to go outside, to walk on the battlements with Laura or go into Kirkwall or leave the city entirely, back to the woods. He thinks about Laura's pale skin, and the glow of the firelight, and the darkness of the trees. Kissing her, hard, all tangled against her. He swallows.
"Had you seen someone do it before? Blood magic?"
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(Much more than it does to her, certainly. She shouldn't let him know that.)
She's inching a little closer, thinking that maybe she can pull him into her arms and they can let silence say everything else for them--the idea of touching him isn't so disconcerting now, not with a promise from him--when he brings up blood magic by name. And then she's frozen again, just for a moment, her teeth clenching together.
Has she seen blood magic before? She assumes so, inasmuch as it appears to mean the bad kinds of magic on the rare occasions when people bring it up. The boundaries of exactly what qualifies feel academic to someone whose lessons in magic always featured her as the test subject. For Laura, blood magic is when it took away her choices. When it terrified her. When it hurt.
So. Closer but not exactly close, looking past his head until she realizes she's doing it and makes herself focus on his eyes, she swallows. If he knows, maybe he'll have more reason not to let the dream become truth. "Sometimes I did not do what I was told."
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And he doesn't need to press. Matthias can connect those words with some awful reality, something he doesn't want for her. Only it happened before him. He's a mage, and a mage is what did that to her. Shame and sorrow washes through him, and he feels, suddenly, as if he'll be sick.
He swallows that down. He holds tightly to Laura's hands. He makes himself look her in the eye. She has beautiful eyes. Beautiful, the color of the trees in early summer.
"I won't," he says, again. "I'll never."
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She can't remember if she's told anyone about that part of the magic before. She probably hasn't. People see the claws, and they know enough; they don't ask for more details. For people besides Matthias, she doesn't think she'd give them. Realizing that, though, that he's the only other living person who knows, however broadly, somehow makes her feel better and worse all at once.
(Eventually, she will feel better. Someday, a burden shared will be a burden lessened. Right now, she's filled with shame and sadness and worry for Matthias, who looks at her with such intensity. Her entire body is too light, not quite in her own control, liable to dissolve entirely if no one was keeping hold of her hands.)
It takes a few breaths, and she still feels off--trembling, she realizes belatedly, shivering like they aren't inside at all--but she can do something besides look at him, lost somewhere behind her own face. Carefully, with the eerie sensation that she's not actually the one doing it, just experiencing it from afar--not blood magic, something else, some feeling of distance--she lets go of his hands and creeps forward enough that she can sit beside him on the narrow bed.
There are things that can't be said, not easily, and one is everything that she means when she wraps her arms around him, burying her head in the crook of his neck. He smells the same as always, if more fearful, more worried, than usual.
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When he pulls in his next breath, it's shaky. When he holds onto her, there's no shaking to it at all. He is at least certain of this: how they fit together, how he wants her to hold to him and how he wants to hold to her too. She has to know that. No matter what was before, they have this.
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It takes time.
When she thinks she can tolerate it (at any time she could have, if she'd had to, but with Matthias she doesn't have to, he will not make her), she lifts her head enough to peer up at his face. Her cheeks are dry, her eyes tearless, but some tension still lingers in the angles of her face. "Before that...it was not a bad dream."
Which is to say, I do not wish to talk about this anymore.
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So Matthias even manages to give her a little bit of a smile when she pulls away. "It was a good dream," he agrees. He lifts one hand, carefully--and if she permits it, he will brush his thumb just beside her mouth, like he might work out some of that tension from her. "It felt--real. In a good way."
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But even if they seemed very, very close to losing the war, there still was joy to be had. Hard work, quiet moments, waking a sleeping man and kissing him in the middle of the night. Living like people live, others looking at her and seeing a person capable of blending into society for more than a few minutes at a time.
She can't quite bring herself to say those things aloud. The not-quite-a-memory, lying next to him beneath piles of furs and blankets, feels fragile. Mentally, she's shelved it with her best recollections of her mother, things to be remembered and guarded carefully. Instead, she tries to summon her I am teasing voice--not entirely successfully--and finishes the sentence with, "--you were very handsome."
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"Couldn't grow a beard, still." He remembers that much. "Probably won't ever be able to. I hope that's all right with you."
You know, for the forever they promised each other in the dark of their shared tent, years from now. It feels fragile to Matthias as well, but very real at the same time. He wants to ask about it, and opens his mouth to say something before he thinks, no, hang on, wait, not yet, not after you were just talking of blood magic. Keep them separate.
"You were beautiful. Still are. Don't think any war could have changed that."
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"Beards do not interest me." A beard would only obscure his face, and she's grown fond of seeing all of it. She reaches up, fingers alighting at his jaw, letting herself feel the plane of skin, muscle and bone beneath. Some part of her still feels like it's disconnected from the world around her, shut up someplace inside her own skull, but it's smaller than the rest of her. "And I think you are biased."
Still teasing, still not quite making herself sound teasing enough, but with a certain softness around her eyes that means a smile as much as the curve of her lips might.
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"No, that's not it. 'Cause you are, and you don't need me to say it. Like I will say it, 'course, but it's also true on its own." He shifts his hand, pushes back to carefully tuck some of her hair back behind her ear. And here's her face, close to his, perfect and pretty. "I reckon I could look at you forever. You really don't like beards at all?"
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So instead, shrugging at his answer--but with the corner of her mouth twitching up slightly, something shy coming into her face--she tells him, "I would see less of your face."
It's better than the other answers at hand: sometimes they smell bad, they can be unpleasantly bristly, they remind her of other people she'd rather forget.
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He rubs at his chin, thinking--then, spurred to sudden action, reaches for some of her hair. It's long enough that he can get a bit of it and lean in as he pulls it closer--and holds it over his upper lip, making a long and droopy moustache of it.
"But just look at this," he says through her hair.
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"You look like Bastien." (He doesn't, really. The only point of comparison is some dark hair over his upper lip. But for their purposes, that's enough, and it's the first thing Laura thinks of, anyway.) "I couldn't kiss Bastien."
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But he doesn't take her hair away from his face just yet. Instead he curls it around so it makes a loop, and holds that to his lip to make a very bad pseudo beard. "Less Bastieny," he guesses, though he can't see for himself. "Maybe the trouble is that it doesn't match my hair, yeah? When I was small we said it was demons that had hair that didn't match their beards. Stupid."
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"Beards might be a bit darker, but I mean like if I really had a beard what grew in as black as your hair, but I had my hair along with it. That's too much a difference, yeah? I ought to have at least a brown beard to go with brown hair. And if I hadn't, then," he clicks his tongue against his teeth, "demon, obviously."
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Of course, a child like he was might see a mage and think one step from a demon. Laura wouldn't be able to blame them. She doesn't say it, just aware enough to realize they likely shouldn't return to the subject of all the ways Matthias' magic might endanger others. Instead, she tells him, "Brown hair and a green beard."
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"Tell you what, when I've learnt the spell for hair coloring, I'll grow a beard then. Or I'll try. At least for a bit, only so I can change the color around. Brown hair and a red beard, but proper red. Like crimson red. Not ginger."
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"Good." There's a pause, as she wonders what to say--unlike Matthias, she hasn't jokes at the ready. After a moment, she settles on, "What kind of work will have to stop?"
It's conciliatory--tell me about your magic, the kind I'm trying to understand--and it's a test of sorts. His enchanter hasn't been teaching him blood magic, surely, but.
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No, she doesn't, obviously. Pleased to tell her more, Matthias sits back a little--not too far--and that means he moves his face out from under her hand but he reaches for it to hold it instead. It feels natural. When she'd walked in the room, things had been horrible. This is better.
"I'm trying to get better at healing, mainly. I'm getting quite good. Derrica reckons I could help with it, official-like--she said that ages ago but I dunno, I don't want to cock it up in some way. Spirit blade--Knight Enchanter Voss is helping me with that. And control, in general. I can write my whole name with fire but with everything else I'm crap."
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It's thinking of that--only more quickly--that leads her to add, "You want people to be better. That means you would be a good healer."
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"I think--I want to help people, y'know? I always have." Saying that after doing blood magic in a dream might seem counter to that statement. Matthias puts that thought--and his immediate defensiveness--to one side. "Healing is the most straightforward, like. And I'd be glad to learn it, and be good at it. I'd always want to be on the front lines, though."
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