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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"Infection may come before blood loss. A day or two. If you'd prefer to sleep on it."
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"She'd decided we were short on time before arriving. The only reason to not have the rest of it out of you in this moment is because we gave her what she needed," he says into the shaded room. It's possible though, isn't it? That the appearance of her impatience had been merely affect to induce this very train of thought. He lingers over the arrangement of that possibility for a moment. But what is clear:
"'Slowly' gets her nothing if the goal of this was to safeguard a push into the Marches."
A day or two. That too an uncertainty.
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"If Starkhaven alone is enough, it must be wrong." She's less sure than she sounds, the line of logic slippery in her grasp. "She'd have asked what we'd planned." Wouldn't she? "The wait to confirm we're not holding back. Or the magic wasn't urgency, just changing the game."
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Then, clipped— "We'll know for certain if she doesn't return in the hour. Tell me if the bleeding continues."
Maker only fucking knows the fully effects of that ugly knife. Or how to measure the passage of an hour in the pitch darkness with nothing but suspicion, the thud of his pulse heavy in his knee, and the uneven shape of Yseult's breathing. But it can't have been that long by the time that Flint raises his voice to call for the guard. It's a bark to carry over gales and regardless of whether it sounds hoarse and compressed in this little storeroom, there can be little doubt that someone will have heard if they're listening. That someone will come if they are required to.
Instead, silence is the answer both in this hour and in reply to any successive attempt to draw attention down to this little storeroom. There is no lamp to keep lit. There is no water in a well turned wooden cup. True to Fidan's word, no one at all attends to them in the long stretch that follows.
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That long stretch drags on, until broken finally by a soft slide of cloth against wood followed by a loose thump of flesh deadweight against dirt, the clank of shackles. There's a muffled sound of pain, and then a scramble of limbs and chain moving away from him followed by retching and ragged breath. She spits, and says, hoarse, "There's the infection."
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In the dark, wrists raw from the shift of chain and iron and throat raw from the attempt to hail some answer from the beyond the storeroom door, it's easy to imagine some sour tang lingering in the air on behalf of it. It's the memory shape of the scent—putrifaction and poultices in combination—which comes to permeate every lower deck surgeon's ward and for'ard bulkhead space in the aftermath of bloody fighting. If it isn't real here yet, then it lies in wait alongside fever and disorientation—more ravenous, he thinks, given the lack of either water or fresh air.
"Someone will come before it's run it's course."
He has decided to be confident on this point. What use is there in contemplating the alternative (though in the back of his head, he does compulsively make to turn it over; if they were to leave her here—)? Meanwhile, so long as someone comes then there are options yet available to them.
"I don't believe I ever thanked you for that book."
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(If they die in some stuffy Hasmal cellar as a product of all that, he will have a few complaints.)
"And here I thought it might be some pointed character assessment. It was the account of a Rivaini sea captain," he says. "He disappears across the Amaranthine."
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The sound he makes hums low in the dark, reservation and affirmation both.
"Irritatingly, yes."
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Once, in a momentary fit of impracticality, Yseult proposed to Darras that they give up their careers and sale off across the Amaranthine themselves to explore something other than the depths of Thedas's shadowy underworld or the yawning gap between their moral codes. As all good partners should he took up her slack, took on the temporarily abandoned role of realist to raise doubts sufficient to sink that idea in its berth. It wasn't Riftwatch then that drove her to suggest it, but Yseult thinks of it now. Did Alrazin meet a better end than this? Maybe, maybe not. If nothing else he was certain of his priorities.
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Although there are plenty of ways to be miserable on a ship, particularly one which has fallen off the edge of the world. Certainly they're all more romantically imagined than sitting on a floor in a dark room with a shattered knee, but what practical difference does that make?
"But ordinarily, no. Not really."
Bold words from the man who'd all but told her and Byerly that he'd given defecting from Riftwatch serious consideration.
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Yseult is both generally uninterested in philosophizing and ill-equipped for the sort of abstraction it requires. And impending death isn't about to increase her patience. But the sound she makes--the second one, after a little hum of agreement that being elsewhere might be preferable--is sort of musing, both on what he's said and on what she might say next, which ends up being:
"Are you sure you're not already? The double meaning of the gift was intended more as warning than suggestion."
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No, her intended meaning hadn't gone entirely over his head then any more than it does now. But he's had his proverbial knuckles slapped for pontificating once already. Why press some broad point when she's plenty miserable all without his assistance?
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"I don't know how long I'll remain lucid," she says after a moment or two, with some of that deliberate matter-of-factness that is so often irritating in meetings. "If you should escape, I would appreciate it if you told Darras that I said I'm sorry."
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More dismally, equally unspoken: if she dies, it seems highly unlikely that he would return to Riftwatch any time soon to make those apologies for her.
But if either thought occurs to Flint in the dark (and they must; this isn't the first time he has sat in a cage, and he has argued similar points to himself before), neither shows. His ready answer, without preamble—
"I will. I'll see that he hears it."
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"I've been nearly killed a number of times," she says, in the same tone in which someone might comment on a town they've visited before, "Several in ways that felt quite stupid. I confess I'd rather thought if I survived all that, it would be for something. Not storybook heroics," to head off mockery, "but this is a bit of a waste, isn't it."
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"In this room, yes. It is." Has he ever seen a death that wasn't a waste? That wasn't both more and less brutal or consequential than it was meant to be?
"But if we're right and Tevinter goes in the direction we imagine, then Riftwatch will need to be moved to be effective. You and I may not be particularly popular members of that company"—has the brittle curve of dry humor to it, though it lands less effectively than it might without a look to punctuate it—"But it's a good story. And someone will find a way of turning it to their advantage."
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"Silver and Bastien will manage it, I'm sure. Between them they might even convince the others they liked us after all. Perhaps that's best for everyone. Riftwatch gets a unifying tragedy and more pleasant leaders, and we don't have to bother with it anymore."
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(No. But yes.)
"Who said anything about being unpleasant?"
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"I'd considered the same."
And reached a similar conclusion, clearly.
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starts chess clock (but also no pressure sad lmf @ my own damn self)
Is it reassuring that even in a dark room leagues removed from the Kirkwall's war table and every possible ulterior motive that Flint will still opt to take the cheap shot at the Ambassador? Probably not. But—
"Your being honest wasn't a mistake. I might have benefitted from a similar tack."
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She still sounds more dryly amused than anything, like his secret agenda--its existence an open secret since the Nevarran Papers even if its details remain obscure--is a sort of almost-charming eccentricity. It's difficult to be too concerned with its potential for future complications just at the moment.
"I can live with mismatched priorities." A beat. Even drier: "I very literally do. It's knowing there's something I might trip over in the dark but not what or where that I can't abide. Blood magic might at least provide some refreshing certainty."
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