Richard Dickerson (
nonvenomous) wrote in
faderift2021-04-27 08:07 pm
CLOSED | Nug Quest
WHO: Adrasteia, Holden, Jone, Joselyn, Sawbones, Val de Foncé, Wysteria, and Dick.
WHAT: Poachers run afoul of a Riftwatch research expedition.
WHEN: Cloudreachish. Time is a flat circle.
WHERE: Minranter River, Free Marches
NOTES: Animal cruelty, some gore.
WHAT: Poachers run afoul of a Riftwatch research expedition.
WHEN: Cloudreachish. Time is a flat circle.
WHERE: Minranter River, Free Marches
NOTES: Animal cruelty, some gore.
JOURNEY:
Their trek north across the Free Marches to the Minranter is light and mild: Jone’s mule, Loghaine, hauls the bulk of any heavy gear. The wind stays brisk beneath steady cloud cover, only rarely committing to rain, and there’s an inn to curl up in once they reach the river. Have a drink, rent a bunk with a moth-eaten blanket, splurge on the “luxury” suite upstairs.
For those that aren’t willing to cough up the coin, there’s always the stable.
Further into the wilderness, the white noise roar of the river at night makes for restful sleep and long watches, where the crack and rustle of a bear through the underbrush or the sound of approaching horses might go unheard until it’s too late. At times flashing eyes reflect the watch fire from the treeline, only to melt away without incident. Pawprints pressed into the river sand and traces of bone-littered scat hint at the nature of their nightly visitors -- more fascinating to some than others.
DESTINATION:
Vultures spiral overhead -- an ill omen, easy to mark at a distance. Far below, hoof-beaten grass is streaked with gore where a herd of nugs was pursued out onto the river flats, blood still wet despite the wind, one little body left broken underfoot on the trail. They never had a chance.
Ravens squabble and hop between flayed corpses left to stiffen on the beach. Flies zip from haunch to haunch, spoiled for choice.
There are a dozen nugs here, most of them quite young. Their skulls are crushed, the sand churned with tracks where they struggled.
A few still have their hides. The leather is mundane, for anyone who has the heart to check.
Further west across the river, campfire smoke drifts skyward over the trees where the sunset fades orange to purple. A pained squeal carries across the distance, accompanied by the sound of cruel laughter on the wind. Eventually a few of their voices rise in song.
The killers are close, and night is falling.
AFTERMATH:
An earlier drizzle keeps the fire from spreading into the surrounding wood: by the time the battle is dying down and the nugs are freed, the flames have dwindled to a forlorn lick across blackened canvas and crates of supplies. And the corpses: some burnt, some on the beach, one bobbling slowly downriver.
Something should probably be done about those.
The two fade-touched nugs they’ve rescued need tending. They are wild and distrustful, but they are also exhausted, and injured, and desperately thirsty.
Near the remains of the campfire, a spit-roasted nug still has attracted a fly or two, but still has meat on the bone. There are fade-touched nug hides to be found on the wagon that survived.
A few dazed mounts linger where they were tied off at camp or tangled in the woods nearby -- at some point, a dracolisk had plunged past Jone into the battle-darkened water. Like the armor of their previous owners, they’re rugged and diverse -- beasts captured, won and stolen. A great, shaggy white Avvar horse has taken to Adrasteia, lipping at her sleeve.
Let them roam free or round the others up for an easier ride home.

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Jone's own intimate knowledge of the tanning process is always kept hidden, less useful than ignorance. She settles down a bit, watching the Warden work. "Done this before, have you?"
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She takes off her gloves for this, and pulls out a small pouch from a pocket somewhere, placing herbs under her tongue. For the smell, clearly. After that, Adrasteia gets started on the messy and frankly gross business of skinning the beast and separating out the useful bits of meat.
"My husband, Helec, taught me when I was younger. I grew up outside of Amaranthine; I didn't know anything about dressing an animal. Fishing, however." She gestures with the knife. "It's just a bigger, more complicated fish really."
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"He was a hunter, your husband?" Elven hunters, she assumes, are a superior breed. The few she's worked with on the merc circuit certainly knew how to survive. "Nice catch, that is."
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If they weren't here looking for something specific she might suggest that they take a break for something like fishing.
"He was." Warmth colors her words; her face is clearly the one of someone with fond memories. "Both a hunter and a nice catch, Helec. Very funny too, always good for a laugh." Adrasteia smiles at herself and then looks up to Jone. "Have you ever been married?"
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Who ever would sink so low into depravity to tie their ship to hers?
Still, it's a nice thing, a kind thing, that look on the Warden's face. A fond kindness Jone has never felt, but seen in others enough to know it's a normal feeling that naturally occurs. Soft gentle happiness. May as well be on one of the moons.
"How'd you meet him?"
She assumes she knows the end of the story. She's talking to a Warden. It has to be darkspawn.
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But Jone is correct in believing she knows how this story ends.
"He came to Amaranthine for trade; we met at the market. I found out later he went back every day for ten days to see if I'd return, but I only went once a week."
She continues with the deer carcass as she talks.
"Later, in the next season, he was stranded in the city. My cousin took him in. We were married before the year was over."
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"How was the wedding?" Jone's never been to an elven one, for reasons she reckons are pretty bloody obvious.
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The hide of the stag has been dealt with at this point, and Adrasteia moves on towards separating out meat from organ meat. "This was a year, a year and a half after the Blight? Plus the darkspawn attacks on Amaranthine a few months afterward. It was quiet, and pretty inside the Chantry, I thought. He brought in flowers and had strewn the petals all across the floor, much to the Sister's chagrin."
She swipes at her forehead with the back of her hand, streaking a little blood across her brow with a frown. "Dalish weddings are usually overseen by the Keeper of the clan, but his clan was..." She gestures. "We never learned if they died or were simply ran off."
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Of course, if it's elves, if it's Wardens, if it's Ferelden before the Blight, there's no happy ending.
"Amaranthine's as good a place as any, if it ain't Ostagar." Jone wonders how the elf woman will feel about a her mule named Loghain. It's a joke, but she doesn't imagine Wardens will find it much a funny one. Or maybe they won't care. Haven't they bigger things to worry for?
"How old were you, when it hit? Fourteen I was, and a lucky cunt besides; ran from Denerim the week before it were sacked."
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"Are we nearly the same age?" Adrasteia grins. "I was twelve, just about to turn thirteen; my parents died before my fifteenth birthday. Fortunate that you'd left, for what it's worth. My understanding is that the Blight didn't leave much of Denerim intact."
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"Been back recent like, it's all changed save the streets and some of the neighborhoods. Some things can only go one place, I reckon. Were Amaranthine hit so bad?"
They likely are the same age, and that gives Jone pause. A dead husband, service to an order of honor, and this woman has landed in the same place as reckless, loveless, bitter and spiteful Jone. She can't let her mind linger on how cruel this world is.
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She shakes her head. "Unlike you, I haven't been back since I left; I don't know how the reconstruction effort went, only that there was a strong Warden presence at one point." A pause. "They'd been given Vigil's Keep, at the end of the Blight. I wonder if any Wardens are still there..."
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Wanted. The urge has long since passed.
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She smiles at Jone. "I didn't particularly want to be a Warden, as a child. I wanted to be a seamstress. Seemed like they always had work, and an opportunity or two if they were skilled enough."
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Elven seamstresses aren't unheard of. The folk are good tailors, tinkers, and workers generally. Jone knows she wouldn't have been. "Wanted to be a knight as well. I reckoned... never gonna be anything, may as well imagine."
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She sets some organs aside. Liver, heart, lungs.
"But you're a well-known fighter, now." A gesture, with the knife. "Is it more or less what you imagined knighthood would be?"
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"I were a small thing, in those days," she says, voice soft, "thought knights had honor. Thought anyone did."
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Which is to say: most people set theirs aside for a bit of wealth, and an improvement upon their station. Adrasteia peers up at Jone seriously.
"Don't seem much like the dishonorable type to me, honestly, but I've been told I look for the bright in others and ignore the shadows."
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She says it while staring at her wrist, imagining the green glow under thick leather gloves.
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She pulls the glove off, waving with a hand that glows slightly in the half-light.
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"Other than it being there, has it changed anything for you?" Stronger dreams in the Fade, or something, she imagines, could be possible.
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