tony stark. (
propulsion) wrote in
faderift2021-04-25 10:10 pm
open and closed.
WHO: Marcus Rowntree, Valerius Hildebrand, Tony Stark, Loxley
WHAT: Some open starters, some closed starters. Hit me up in DMs or plurk if you want to do something!
WHEN: Cloudreach
WHERE: Location
NOTES: TBA
WHAT: Some open starters, some closed starters. Hit me up in DMs or plurk if you want to do something!
WHEN: Cloudreach
WHERE: Location
NOTES: TBA

no subject
Within that pause lives pain and suffering and loss. John could dredge any of it up, but if he had not yet drawn the raw tangle of those truths out for Flint or for Madi, he will not attempt it for Marcus Rowntree.
Instead, he looks again at the stablehand, clocking the faint tuneless whistling accompanying her work, before tipping his head towards the open doors.
"Walk with me?" he invites. "I've questions, yes, but it's all better discussed without chance of an audience."
no subject
The brightness of a spring day is beginning to vanish with an incoming shelf of grey cloud from the south. By nightfall, it will bring down a cleansing rain, one that will burn off by the morning, having done the vital kind of work that raises flowering things from the earth. For now, it's just sort of chilly, grey, and characteristic of the Free Marches.
The looming Gallows structures does a lot to contribute to the shadows. He does not look up at them as he says, "If your aim is to extract from me promise of my silence," business-like but not impatient, "you needn't be concerned."
no subject
Of all the mages circulating through Riftwatch, Marcus Rowntree is the most direct in his approach, the most transparent as to what he holds dear. There is a reason John had let the time pass. It hadn't felt like a gamble to presume Marcus would keep this secret, even with a newly-arrived bevy of templars at hand and ample opportunity for him to do otherwise.
Yes, John might have asked, had Marcus not said. But it would have been confirmation of what was already a near-foregone conclusion. Marcus wasn't the sort of man who would wield a secret such as this as a threat.
"I don't intend to put much stock in events of that dream," John continues. "But if you care to tell me, I'd like to know what reason you had within it for switching sides."
no subject
Mages, of course, can never really put down their weapons, just as Marcus could always change his mind, or Silver could choose to do whatever he likes with whatever information he gleans, but it's the thought that counts.
He thinks about how to order his answers, willing enough to speak to it now that there's been some time to live with it, and after a few moments of thought; "I know I didn't see it as my switching sides. Or I strived to believe that, of myself. But it felt as though I was being true to my convictions, to see mages live freely in Thedas, and it was Riftwatch who failed to realise this. Or my closest friends within it.
"And the forces of Tevinter offered something else. An end to it. The Chantry can't cast its shadows, if all its structures are torn down, once and forever."
He can't imagine Petrana would be close friends with someone who would balk at a light bit of heresy, but Marcus glances at him to gauge response, all the same.
notifs betrayed me please forgive
But he is slow to respond, gathering his thoughts as they pass from the stables along the cobbled walk towards the Gallows itself.
"I understand," comes first, thoughtful rather than accusing. "And I won't pretend that in our waking hours I have not felt constricted by the unwillingness of others in our company to recognize that those of us among them with magic may want more from life than what the Chantry deigns to give us."
Here is where such a thought comes from, John means. From Byerly Rutyer and Thranduil quailing at the idea of crossing the Chantry, and Yseult's unending refusal to pursue any course that may leave even the most minor form of change in it's wake.
Some sickening prickle of unease accompanies all of this. To speak these things aloud, align himself in such a way, feels akin to driving a stake through his own body, pinning himself in a place he had never intended to inhabit.
"Do you believe your work here could someday bring about any of your hopes?"
To see mages living freely. To see the Chantry torn down. Either or.
flat circles
Marcus absorbs this, accepts it, and watches where they're going. His eyes tick up to the looming shape of the Gallows, considering an answer.
The truth of it being, "I don't know," and leaving it there for a moment. Then, "This place, the Gallows, Kirkwall, has gone through its share of change. But where Kirkwall broke its bonds from the Imperium and its slave practices, the Gallows stood as a prison. You could wake up to the sounds of the ship bells in the bay, and even voices, if the wind carried them, of free citizens going about their day, and then through the other wall—"
Well, he needn't describe it. It isn't the object of his mentioning.
"Now it's something different again, different enough that I was willing to step foot here again. What the shape of the world will be, after Corypheus is fallen, I don't think will be decided by those who stood apart from his falling. But I heard there was a group of people who splintered away from the Inquisition, and therefore the Chantry, and it seemed like a good start."
no subject
It is not so far from the one John has made himself, or what he and Flint have circled, over and over. And it comes out to the same thing, more or less: that this is a group of people who stand apart, are not yoked by the Inquisition yet mean to do some sort of battle.
It is a start. What kind of end it meets will depend on what they make of it.
"I'd avoided coming this far south, before we realized we had such a need for allies."
A wry smile. Look what they had gotten them. Nascere, cracked apart, fallen into the sea.
"It was costly," is what John says instead. "And I am aware that there are those among us who are not so interested in what comes after Corypheus, because a return to what existed before him was comfortable for them and they would not see it too far altered."
Had life been comfortable for John, far in the north? Did it matter now if it were? The place he might have made a home is consumed by sea and spirits.
"But I believe I may as well make myself plain to you, after all we've shared. I would see Corypheus thrown down and defeated, yes, but I would also see the way paved for us to make a more hospitable place for ourselves in whatever comes after him."