Entry tags:
CLOSED | a shadow crossed the sky,
WHO: scarlett johansson
poleaxed & chris evans
archademode
WHAT: Dirty jobs done dirt cheap.
WHEN: Mid-Cloudreach.
WHERE: Denerim.
NOTES: Discussions of past child abuse are highly likely.
WHAT: Dirty jobs done dirt cheap.
WHEN: Mid-Cloudreach.
WHERE: Denerim.
NOTES: Discussions of past child abuse are highly likely.
Long travel after long travel, Jone only wants rest; unfortunately, there is none for wickedness. Taoran Hawkwind always struck Jone as a small minded mercenary. She's never met the man, of course, but they've mutual friends. He always sounded a little thick, and his camp, just outside Denerim's walls, proves it. Jone talks shop with him anyway, joking that her 'armed guard' is actually a qunari, and this far south? Everybody believes it.
Taoran is doing grunt work, trying to get a rich merchant out of taxes. Not terribly clever, especially since he's going through the Brecilian to do it. Then again, Jone's always had a bias against Gwaren and Amaranthine and does she just hate Fereldan nobles? No, not interrogating that night now.
She agrees to go with him, lying that they could use the cash. Half pay up front is bargained for, and Jone immediately uses it getting them a respectable room at a respectable inn. Within the walls of Denerim, a thatch-roofed city stacked with as many pickpockets as rich men (and more that like to slum, besides) The Wailing Willow doesn't double as a brothel, as far as Jone can tell, so she hopes Gabranth won't pitch too much of a fit.
They can only afford one room with the coin Jone's scraped together, though Jone requests a divider, explaining in her poshest accent that they're not yet married.
The innkeeper rolls her eyes, but gets the divider.
As soon as the door is closed, Jone collapses on the bed nearest the window, luxuriating in sleeping on tightly bound rope and straw mattress. She's slept on better. She doesn't care.
"Ah, this is the life, innit. Going off to do something pointlessly dangerous on the morrow, but after sleeping on a bed."
No one they've encountered in Denerim has Jone's accent, because they've steered clear of the part of the city Jone's from. She hopes Gabranth hasn't noticed.
"What d'you think of Hawkwind, Gab? Besides that bloody name. It ain't his fault; his Da picked it out of a hat."

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"Gab, mate," she says, the smile obvious even in her voice, "grew up with three older brothers, I did, the four of us all stuffed in one room. I'll not be spooked for being seen in me knickers by a good mate."
She considers asking if he has anything to sleep in, or if he intends to try and find rest in that leather suit of his. She considers it, and recognizes it's none of her business. It'd only make him discomforted, judging from this most recent retreat.
"You've never disrespected me. Might be why I'm sharing a room with you, you knob."
The partition is for him. She wouldn't bother with one for Barrow or Si. She doubts they'd care.
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“We should leave before sunrise. Acclimate ourselves with the start of our route.”
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"Denerim were sacked..." She does some quick math, "close on twenty years ago? Blimey, I'm old. Anyroad, I know the streets, those ain't changed, but most all the shops have. Wouldn't be surprised if the neighborhoods've shifted, but I reckon not too much."
Which is to say, she knows where to look.
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He cannot conceal the narrow little glint of concern in his voice. This is not just about scouting their surroundings.
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"Completely," she says, wondering if her plan to sneak out without him is obvious. Wondering if he'll catch her. "Even if it's a maze now-- which it ain't-- I'll not go out with anything worth stealing."
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But he will not force her to say more, nor confess any amount of unease, if it truly exists at all.
"As you say." His tried and true concession, offering only one last beat before he's gone to little more than a silhouette behind the partition, settling down on a bed that feels— well, it works better than bracing across the ground, or a thin wooden cot.
"Rest now. I've no intention of holding myself back come morning, and I'll not wait for you if you cannot keep pace."
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After blowing the candle out, she lies on the bed and pretends to sleep. He said get out early, so she needs to get this done quick. Still, for a few hours her mind flutters between wakefulness and dreaming, and the images that stain her mind are typical. What is worse, to be remembered, or for every scrap of childhood to be razed into undeserving purity?
She sits up with a sigh, and begins, quietly as she's able, to pull her jerkin and breeches on, boots next. No expensive weapons, just the knife everyone keeps at their side. No money.
The Wailing Willow, a wooden structure like most of Denerim's lesser buildings, was made after the Blight, but that doesn't make it new; floorboards creak underfoot. She's never slept near Gabranth (why does that thought make her blood twist in her veins?) and doesn't know how deeply he sleeps.
She hopes, fiddling with the doorknob, that he sleeps deep as shit.
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By the time her fingertips are at the door, he's stirred, exhaling hard through his nose as he shifts across that dense mattress to squint blearily into darkness: there's something almost practiced about it in a way, how hard he fights the dull drag of sleep in favor of showing some semblance of alertness while rolling up onto his side.
He can make her out, yes, but her dress is another thing entirely, and it proves a certain amount of intent on her part. She aims to leave, not simply to fetch something from the inn proper.
"...what are you doing?"
Far from eloquent, his mind still swims with half-forgotten dreams.
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She feels a new sense of embarrassment, as though getting caught won't lead to a thrashing. And then, what is she, thirteen? She's an adult, she doesn't have to wait on anybody's permission.
No, she's a git; it's that she was caught in a lie.
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—before remembering he cannot read them in this world.
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It isn’t for the reason she cites.
“But you will not think to do this alone, else there was no point in my inclusion on this journey.”
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And he must mean it, for he fully sounds the part: no hesitation, no momentary pause between her question and his answer, his focus spent on working his heel in past the buckles of his boots before rising, reaching with swift, practiced precision for his armor to begin working it in place.
Unlike last time, he doesn’t ask for her help. It goes quicker without it.
“Which is why you’ll have me there.”
Not here, asleep, but at her side to weather the worst.
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"Just-- I know you're a judge and all, but where we're going... it ain't a place to judge anyone."
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His hands lingering for too long across the helm held before him, as if he cannot bring himself to put it on.
“Trust I would not do that to you.”
It’s better— should they be seen— that he does wear it. Something to shield them both from prying eyes, should she find naught but misery set before her tonight. Should she need the buffer of a Magister's silhouette positioned between herself and the world in which she remains mired.
So he does. And so he moves to stand at her back, ready to depart.
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She takes a deep breath. She takes another deep breath. She manages not to tell Gabranth he's better than she deserves. She can't imagine it'd do them any good.
She just reaches up, putting her hand on his breastplate, over where his heart is hidden by metal, bone and flesh. "Then I can get us through this."
The inn is quiet, and the night watchman at the doorway doesn't pay them mind beyond respectfully acknowledging their presence. Instinct takes over, after that; Jone's feet still know how to take her home.
"It's on the outskirts," Jone says, "'cos the smell."
She doesn't know anything about his past. She doesn't know if he's highborn enough to have no clue how hides are tanned.
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All he offers her is a nod, a low humming breath as he moves to keep pace with her strides.
“Should you need rest, I will stop at your behest.”
A polite way of saying take it slow if you need to.
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She is quieter, more careful, more deliberate. The brusquely confident woman, self-assertive and loud, is replaced by a cautious figure filled with second-guesses. She stops at every street corner, inspects every house, and ultimately? It doesn't matter.
The stench hits first, even at night. A stray dog watches them in moonlight, eyes reflecting the moon. It's no mabari, but a lean and starved creature, and it disappears quickly into the narrow spaces between cheap housing. Buildings are little more than bracketed thatch and mud. The ground shifts under them, winding into trenches, the tanning pits.
In a bleak whisper, Jone murmurs, "all the houses're wrong..."
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“Does enough remain for you to track?”
If not, he wonders if it would be best to surrender their efforts for the night. Returning in daylight might, at the very least, come with the benefit of gathered information by way of local interrogation.
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It isn't worth it.
Jone trudges on, knowing eyes watch them from the houses they slide between, and knowing every single watcher has deemed them too dangerous to bother with. This is what she meant, a place with no judgement. These people have nothing, and that includes choices. How can their desperation be held to law?
There's a pole between two of the pits, a long wooden structure that used to be a tree, before it died. Somehow, the message tree survived the Blight. Jone squares her shoulders, and begins to climb it with a deft familiarity; this is something she's done a thousand times.
"There's enough," she says as she hefts herself up. "If I fall, don't let me land in shite."
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But these are not his laws, and this is neither his world nor his home. Instead it is Jone’s mandate he dutifully maintains within these bounds, as devotedly as if spoken by Emperor Gramis himself.
“Then do not fall.” He chides, moving a step closer to the edge as if measuring whether or not he can truly grant her that request.
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She reaches the top, and her hand goes in a knobbly crevice in the wood. Her whole arm disappears into it, and sensitive ears will hear a small gasp. She retrieves something, a small flat object. Climbing down, she keeps it carefully gripped in hand, even as it slightly staggers her mobility on the descent.
Which is, of course, why she slips, falling right above Gabranth.
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But there is something to be said of fon Ronsenburg stubbornness.
His knees buckle, mud gives way beneath his heels, and yet with a decidedly livid sounding growl in his throat, he wills himself to go no further: locking his balance in place— her clutched fast against his plated chest— and neither of them lost to pit or mucked soil.
“Did I not say to use caution-“
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"Maker, I didn't- I weren't-" She shakes her head. Excuses never matter. "Let's get back," and there is the hint of fear in her voice.
Every second they're here, they inch closer to finding surviving family. Bede was a mage, he wouldn't have stayed in this pit, even as he might have crossed by it. But her oldest brothers, her cousins?
Redheads are always bad luck.
"I'll never do this t'you again."
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