Entry tags:
[closed] if you're here and I'm here then who's flying the plane
WHO: Flint & Yseult
WHAT: Trust exercises
WHEN: Immediately pre-hasmal invasion
WHERE: Near Hasmal
NOTES: will include content warning in subject lines if applicable
WHAT: Trust exercises
WHEN: Immediately pre-hasmal invasion
WHERE: Near Hasmal
NOTES: will include content warning in subject lines if applicable
It's almost guaranteed that their contact has utilized the flow of refugees across the border and toward Hasmal as a cover to pass into the South, though they aren't meant to meet them in that. Doubtless every breed of intelligencier currently peddles their trade there, for if an agent of one secret network might slip in that direction then why not agents of all?
Rather, after crossing the broad width of the Minanter on one of the point-nosed ferries (in the company of a pilot with a near supernatural skill for weaseling extra coin out of pocket, but who tactfully neglects to intervene in the debate his passengers are engaged in), they hire a pair of horses and turn west toward what is allegedly an all but forgotten trading post by the name of Drake's Landing which is said to boast such luxuries as a nearly empty inn and the cheapest drink in the political tri-corner.
At some point—perhaps after the fourth or fifth narrow bridge that they have to coax the horses across, for the landscape is threaded through with twisting offshoots of the Minanter—Flint remarks, "If we come this way again, it would be faster to row in."
Maybe that's how the Venatori beat them to the Landing. Or maybe the ferry pilot had a raven in the little cabin at the back of his boat who had carried word of a certain notable captain of Riftwatch swiftly North.
Regardless—

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"Are you hoping he might be tempted to stay off the account after all this all finished?"
Would Darras Rivain take exception (in whatever charming, flashing smile way he might be prone toward) to the phrasing stay off. He doesn't know the man well enough to say so definitively.
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"Not hoping. We've a plan. Once this is over, we're finished with his work and mine. Assuming we both survive. Assuming it's ever over." There's no wood in reach to knock on.
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"I suppose it's possible Coupe was on to something. Slipping away before the work could strip her of the opportunity."
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He has been giving the shape of it a great deal of consideration. a passing impulse; moments of thought here and there, stacked together to make a small mountain.
"Something usually does. But that was true even before Corypheus took Tevinter."
Did his grandfather mean to haul nets until he could no longer?
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A few days, and then she'd put it all away. None of it seemed to change the work to be done; nothing to be gained by dwelling. Now, in the waning light she lifts a brow at Flint, arched high enough to become a joke. "Are you suggesting we may have missed our window?"
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Here, he laughs. Fuck it.
"I honestly don't know what I'm suggesting. Do I seem like much of an arbiter of happy endings to you?"
Surely not.
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Well.
(Would it matter? Silver had asked once. If he were tired. I'm sorry, but no.)
"I'm holding for a door. They're far easier to pass through."
A crooked look flashes back in her direction—dry humor like a cracked bone. And then timed as if to punctuate it, a key is turned in the storeroom's lock. Two soldiers pass into the room.
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When Fidan comes, her clever little knife is set to heat in the fire but rather than ply it, she sits cross legged on the floor before Yseult like a child and asks dozens of questions. Tell her about the South. Tell her about where you came from in it, Nina. Is your family large or small? No, I promise I'm not asking to be cruel. I am only trying to use the time we have been allotted. Now, what did you wish to be when you were small? Have you ever met a free Dalish elf? Are there any in Riftwatch? What about Riftwatch's griffons? Have you ridden one? Will you tell me one of their names?
"I like animals very much and I read about them in a book once," she explains as she stands to take the knife from the lamp's flame. The hot blade is quenched directly into the waiting pitcher of water and tucked back into her belt. She leaves without incident, leaving Yseult with only quiet for company rather than some new stinging wound.
It is a strange exception to an otherwise most monotonous application of misery.
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That she's more willing to speak of elves really is strategic, nudging gently at the suggestion that Fidan might be interested in--or wish to seem interested in--defecting. There are a number of elves in Riftwatch, more in the Inquisition. Some Dalish, she thinks, some not. Her eyes flick to the knife in the flame every few minutes until Fidan tucks it back into her belt. Brows rise at that, but Yseult waits til the door has shut behind the elf before sitting back to consider what the game was there.
Tagaris adopts the opposite approach. When Flint is shoved into the usual room, he will find the tub in its usual location, but the desk along the wall empty of its magister. The shackles around his wrists are connected to the hook in the ceiling, hoisted up high enough to strain shoulders but not so far that feet leave the floor. The mage guard then hands his staff to his counterpart, who flips it around in his hands like a club and with two casual swings obliterates Flint's knees. And then returns to his post. After an hour or so they move to the table and begin a game of cards.
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That there is nothing for it is maddening; the hot flare of furious determination (to say nothing) cedes into bitter exhaustion, and tears, and flattens into a single urgent impulse. Just tell them anything, it says, and instead he counts the stones visible in the lamp lit floor and informs the one guard when the other cheats at cards. Or makes it up.
(The gesture is not appreciated.)
When they eventually return him to the storeroom, it is almost certainly not under his own power.
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Yseult takes in the state of him and shifts as the door closes to offer a hand in rearranging himself upright or prone or whichever of his options seems least unappealing at the moment. There isn't really anything else she can do, short of assisting him into unconsciousness, and she doesn't pretend otherwise. Doesn't ask, either, what they did or what he told them after they did it. (If he's at all inclined to say, she assumes he will.)
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No, never mind it. He's not sitting up. The floor suits perfectly well.
What he is eventually inclined to say from there is, "We need to find out where we are."
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"Yes, I've been thinking about that." And perfectly happy to change the subject to something more her strong suit than comfort. "It's too large and dry for Drake's Landing, and given our state when we first woke I don't think they'd kept us unconscious more than half a day or so, a day at most. And they're too unsettled here for Tevinter, they haven't been here long. But they're not going to hold this many prisoners on the front lines, it must still be somewhere they feel relatively secure."
Which all adds up to...??? She runs out of track rather abruptly, and disguises it behind a gesture Flint can't see anyway. "That must narrow it down. But I'm not sure to what. Somewhere in the mountains? Antiva?"
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"Solas is too far overland," sounds like agreement. "Nevarra City," like a suggestion. It stretches believability, but with a fair wind and a swift boat on the Minanter—
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"We can't be too far north of the river, it's not that dry down here. And no one's tracked in any sand. The first room we were in there was a symbol on the wine casks, three crossed keys. I can't place it." The niggling frustration of that adds a little edge to her tone that won't require explanation.
"I could ask for something. Sweets, fruit, something an army doesn't stock. See how quickly they can get it to dangle in front of me."
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"Three. You're certain?"
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What? He might hobble free of this room? And then what?
"They belong to a string of trading partners along the Minanter. I don't recall the names." Rare finds in the Nocen and virtually meaningless by the time they might have travelled so far North. But.
"As cargo passes through each house, it's marked with a new key. Nevarra, Hasmal, Starkhaven—" After only a moment of struggling after the fourth, Flint makes a small noise of frustration and settles for, "Ansburg, let's say. You said it yourself; Nevarra City is in no position to trade. The only place to fetch a third key is Hasmal or Ansburg."
There are finer points to this. How a cask that had made its way to Hasmal might travel anywhere from that point, including east again. There, his rationale gets fuzzy and aimless. It's true that they could lie just west of Hasmal. But what the fuck would Venatori be doing there? Beyond what they'd already demonstrated in Drake's Landing.
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She lapses into silence for the stretch of a minute or two, forgetting perhaps that some portion of this exercise was intended as distraction. "So either we are in Hasmal itself or near enough to make no difference," she says when she's put her thoughts silently in order, "Or we are along the river to the west, or we are in the country to its north in some isolated place between the Imperial Highway and the Hundred Pillars. Our arrival in Drake's Landing concerned them, and if they were working on the border or in the Pillars, they could easily take prisoners to Solas. So along the river, or in Hasmal. There have been no reports suggesting activity in the area large enough to need a facility like this. But Hasmal has been distracted of late."
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There, he says, a thimble of reservation held in check. It's reasonable. It's also one of four reasonable arguments he can muster while laid flat.
(Her point regarding the lack of sand is a better one than the dead, he thinks; and it's true that at least the ache in his shoulders is less evident in the face of semantics.)
"Hasmal is convenient if they mean to take Nevarra. With the March looking toward Perendale, the bulk of any resistance there and in Hunter Fell, and an easy way across the border and to the river—they might sweep the unguarded length of the Minanter behind Van Markham and Pentaghast's backs."
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"With Nevarra City empty, they could be at least halfway to Cumberland before they met any real resistance. Hold both the Highway and the river at the great crossing. The troops at Perendale and Val Chevin discourage or slow any potential counter-attack from the west. What need is there for Hasmal?"
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Bodies are easy to move; seeing them kept would be another matter with Val Chevin isolated. What does he recall of overland trade out of Antiva? Is there some minor route which slithers along the foothills already waiting to be exploited? He wills himself to picture that great map in the Gallows' central tower, unsatisfied with the strung together shape of the speculation.
"Or they mean to cut off aid that might come most easily by way of the Minanter to Nevarra," is as much of a stretch. Why would the Marches concern themselves with that business now if they haven't already? Why bait them at all by nibbling at their edge? Why give up Ghislain? Why hold Val Chevin.
"Or they're looking to divide the March further. They've successfully split the force once already."
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