Tʜᴇ Pᴀʟᴇ Eʟғ | Asᴛᴀʀɪᴏɴ Aɴᴄᴜɴíɴ (
illithidnapped) wrote in
faderift2021-07-30 10:44 am
Entry tags:
[ OPEN | PLAYER PLOT ] This is how it feels to take a fall
WHO: Tiffany, Barrow, Astarion and...you??
WHAT: an assignment gone terribly wrong
WHEN: week 5, segueing into week 6 of the plot, just after dragon tracking concluded with a terrible, literal bang
WHERE: the most silent portion of the Silent Plains, nearer to Hasmal, and not far from Tevinter's very nicely constructed base
NOTES: cw for injury, darkness, being stranded, absolute idiocy | OOC POST: here
WHAT: an assignment gone terribly wrong
WHEN: week 5, segueing into week 6 of the plot, just after dragon tracking concluded with a terrible, literal bang
WHERE: the most silent portion of the Silent Plains, nearer to Hasmal, and not far from Tevinter's very nicely constructed base
NOTES: cw for injury, darkness, being stranded, absolute idiocy | OOC POST: here
Previously: having successfully scouted Primus Taxarchis’ base in the Silent Plains, Tiffany, Barrow and Astarion make an unsuccessful escape under the fully alerted watch of the base’s active forces— provoking a near lethal counter attack that sees them crash landing not far away, and forcing the stranded trio to desperately petition for help.
That’s where you come in.

The ravine runs like a crooked gash throughout desert sands, deep and layered, sloping inward at an angle too steep to safely (or reliably) climb. Easy to spot from above, not as easy to get into without breaking an ankle or an arm, and impossible to freely clamber out of once inside: the stone is brittle and flaking to the touch, lean too much on it, and you’ll drop right to the earth along with it.
The caverns connected to it are far more accessible— the only downside is they’re labyrinthine in their knotted nature: it’s easy to reach an end too narrow to be traversed, or so broad that it loops back on where you’ve already been, descending downward in steeper layers, becoming a near honeycombed network at points.
Of course, you also might not be alone in the dark. This territory isn’t as unclaimed as appearances might otherwise suggest, factoring in proximity to the base the three had been previously scouting. Luckily no overwhelming force has been sent to give chase and comb the desert in pursuit, but that’s not to say there aren’t still eyes to be found in the depths of lightless pathways. Armor-clad agents working for the exact same reasons you are, their noses to the trail.
Well. Not the exact same reasons.
The temperature is freezing cold at night, and in the fuller depths of the caverns where light doesn’t reach, that’s a near consistent constant. Firelight might draw attention, for better or worse. Magic, too, and— despite earning the label of Silent— there is wildlife occasionally to be found. Proof of life’s perseverance even in the harshes of places, fleeting and skittish.
Or dangerous.
Whatever approach is taken, one thing is clear throughout: none of this is going to be easy.
[ooc notes:
-The trio rest at the very bottom of those lightless depths where they’d initially fallen, in varying states of wellness and action.
-they’re lacking in supplies, warmth, healing, mounts, protection, a way out— you name it they need it.
-time is a given: none of this will go quickly, so feel free to handwave or assume anything you need to to make your dream threads come true.
-this timeline wise takes place at the end of week five segueing into week 6, when Riftwatch forces are free to head home if they care to, but given that this is technically hostile territory between Primus Taxarchis’ base and Hasmal, it’s probably going to be a deliberate choice if your characters decide to come here.
-pls just don’t do anything to officially alert the nearby base in full, that would be Bad— and super difficult to do from a hole in the ground but mostly just Bad. Otherwise chase your bliss and make your wildest spelunking/survival/heroic fantasies a reality.
-ooc post is here, for all your delving needs and details.]

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“You talk about him like he’s— “
Normally he’d be better at sidestepping the fumble, but his thoughts are swimming in a puddling mess: he’s a half step behind where he intends to be, and so it only clicks just a second after he’s already started speaking.
Oh.
“Oh.”
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It's not nothing, it's not okay, she's not over it and never will be. It's not something that she can brush off and be strong about, or say any optimistic words, anything light and encouraging. The most she can do is lock it down.
"Yeah," she says quietly. Just confirming it for him.
Ellie lets the heartbeats stretch out for a second, two, and then, to her surprise it comes bubbling up.
"First time I ever killed somebody -- like, a person -- it was this asshole trying to drown him."
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“I’ve lured thousands to their deaths over the years.”
It's only a sign of that unique shell of trust between them that a man never given to empathy finds the will to add just a beat later:
“I’d say you were lucky to have someone worth killing for.”
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"Think you'd be surprised by how our body counts stack up."
It's said casually, though they both know that it's no casual thing, and Ellie sighs deeply, aching. Yeah. She's had more than a few people worth killing for.
"Really? Nobody? Out of all the people you've ever met?"
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He can't walk her out of it now.
“I...might not have been entirely honest with you earlier.”
A slow confession. Teetering across the tip of his tongue before tumbling free under the steady pull of weariness and lingering pain— that lack of a present filter that sees him far more sincere than he’d otherwise care to be.
“You see, disappointing as I'm sure it is to hear, I’m not actually a true vampire— only a vampire spawn.”
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There's more to listening than someone's words.
Ellie's attention follows the signs of pain, knowing what it is to be close to death, feeling the brush of icy fingers along your nerves, wondering if you'll see morning.
It's important to him, though. To tell her this. For someone to know this.
"Is there a big difference?"
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Vampires seem to be a strange sort of fiction elsewhere as far as he’s gathered, and in truth this would be easier if she were well versed enough to understand the nature of his own segue without the need for explanation.
But that’s not how these things go, of course. Not even in Faerûn.
“An eternity’s worth.” he says, the words sallow. Sunken into the rough shape of all things pitiable.
And resented.
“Traditionally speaking, the exchange is a simple one: once you've been bitten, your siring master would hypothetically return the favor— allowing you to bite him in turn, thus fully transforming you into a true vampire: a powerful force, beholden to no one. Unstoppable save for the matter of sunlight or perhaps a well-placed stake. Both easily avoided by even the most nascent of converts.”
He pauses there, imagining it might be obvious by now, exactly which part of the story comes next.
“My master never completed the process.” Bitterness coats his tongue like bile, but his tone is something more like lamentation rather than outrage; what a fool he'd been, to trust his heroic savior so completely. “He’d never intended to, in fact— after all, the fine print of our desperate agreement favored him over myself.”
“I was left a vampire spawn. And a spawn, my dear girl, is a creature without the mercy of free will. Our minds are aware of everything, of course, but our bodies obey only the commands given by our masters. Their living puppets.”
He scoffs into the empty air, his breath too cold to produce so much as a puff of condensation, leaving his throat dry when he adds:
“...and Cazador was especially cruel.”
Still, history is history. And there's a relevance to this story that he still intends to impart— skipping instead to the end to spare her asking after it.
“I only escaped an eternity of that thanks to this world somehow breaking the spell of it. Proximity, perhaps. Or...something else entirely. Either way, to cut to the chase: there was no one for me but him.”
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Ellie, even with the horrors she's seen in her short life, still can't fathom just how bad it could be, or the things it does to a person over time.
"Jesus."
Lifetimes.
"How long did he keep you like that?" she asks, her voice quiet, faint and cold.
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He slips a hand out from beneath the blanket after a moment, hating the silence for everything it is. The potential for pity that it holds.
In the end, he uses that motion to gently rap his knuckles against her arm— though the effort of it aches in protest— mouth working its way into the ghost of a faint smile.
“Barely a blink of an eye.”
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It occurs to her how deeply and how quickly Astarion latched onto her. He likely held himself apart from connections, from people who could be used against him.
It doesn't make her sad. It pisses her the fuck off.
Rolling abruptly onto her side to face him, Ellie puts her arm down to fully turn toward him, her eyes utterly serious.
"What would happen to you, if I killed him?"
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“Hypothetical games are for children and fools. I'm neither.”
A pretty indulgence. Fanciful fantasy. Neither saved him. Neither helped. And for it his teeth are sharp behind the curl of his lip when he punctuates that sentiment, red eyes vivid in the dark. Unblinking. Unwilling to pull away from her stare.
“Besides. If he somehow made it into this world, you’d be dead the moment you thought to look at him. And I’d be the one to kill you.” Not a threat— a certainty, and by now she no doubt understands precisely why.
“Never forget that.”
He has to exhale to bleed out the harshness scrawled across his features. The residual fear— the paranoia— everything he'd left behind in Faerûn. Everything he'd thought he'd left behind, only rearing its detestable head in the face of vaguely posited possibility. Everything forced from his mind only a beat later, under the reiteration that it would never happen. Cazador won't ever set foot in Thedas.
And even if it's living in denial, it's what he needs.
“...broadly speaking, however, if a vampire lord dies, its spawn are freed from their servitude— though they remain spawn, all the same.”
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Ellie stops short, meeting his ruby-red eyes, staring intently back at him. She's always been the type to feel strongly about people, and it's nearly always against her will, but she's surprised by how protective she feels already. What surprises her is how much he seems to be in return.
It comes from a place of fear. It always seems like it does, doesn't it?
Slowly, Ellie relents, her eyebrows knitting together in frustration, the tension seeping out of her shoulders as it does from Astarion's face, the standoff melting away at the same time.
"... gotcha."
With a deep sigh, Ellie picks at the edge of her cloak, pressing her lips together.
"Other than the eternal bullshit deal... how are you different from a-" Ellie pauses, frowning. She'd been about to say human, but Astarion's an elf. "-regular person?"
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“Normally I’d be cinders in sunlight. Water would burn like acid. I’d need blood just to survive, and my cold, dead heart wouldn’t be beating like it wants to die. Vampire spawn, you see, aren’t possessed of overwhelming power like our masters— it’s the drawbacks of vampirism that we’re gifted for our stupidity. And an eternity to wallow in them.”
He’s still watching her, having turned himself ever so slightly her way. It isn’t the most comfortable position for resting in the wake of being shot through with magic and dropped headlong into a ravine, but it is the most comfortable way to talk— and he’d rather see her face than the rocky crag lines overhead.
“But ever since I set foot in this world, the rules have changed: obviously I’m not reduced to ashes come daybreak, and I can eat and bathe and drink without the affair being absolutely miserable. I can even trespass without an invitation, free to move about wherever I like.”
The elation of it had been intoxicating when he’d first arrived— now, however...
“...I suppose in a lot of ways, someone might say that makes me mundane. But as you can see, I’ve still got my teeth, my quickened reflexes— I can smell and see with sharper prowess than most. And given the way I look...” Pale as a ghost down to the curls in his hair. Crimson stare. Long fangs. Albinism wasn’t always his curse, he imagines. “Perhaps only the downsides have shifted. I just don’t know.”
“And I haven’t been able to bring myself to test it out for certain...what blood might do, were I to drink it again, freely. What it even tastes like.”
Hesitation flickers in his voice. The uneasiness he hasn’t confessed to anyone just yet.
“It’s terrifying, in a way. Alluring in another.”
no subject
It's up there on her list of the worst types of pain.
So she listens, turning the idea over in her mind, surprised at the impulse that bubbles up to the surface.
"The way the Rifts work is all kinds of weird," she mumbles. "I knew they fucked with magic, but I didn't realize they could fuck with..." she makes a generalized waving motion at all of Astarion.
"Could be that it just tastes gross now. You think you'll ever want to find out?"
no subject
Mm.
His brow tangles, stare flickering. “Yes, I suppose. But I don’t want to drink from lowly, twitching vermin the way I'd been forced to before.”
No, a correction:
“—I won’t drink from them ever again.”
Not even the promise of wild game compels him to dip his fangs even a fraction as much as the vivid company he keeps. Curiosity to only be sated by drinking of a thinking creature, bright as the stars at night.
Supposedly they taste better, he'd been told.
“So now you see my problem: I can’t afford to lose whatever safe harbor I’ve been granted in this world by biting one of our own. And I can’t pluck off some alleyway vagrant without risking my own neck if I’m caught drinking blood in plain sight.”
And he won’t have his first time involve lapping up meager droplets of shed blood on a battlefield. Scavenging like a rat.
no subject
"Fuck that guy," she whispers under her breath. They both know who that guy is. It doesn't seem like enough, though. She curls her hands into fists to stop the fine trembling, the buzzing in her blood, until it passes.
She tries not to think about it. She's glad that Astarion hasn't made her promise anything. She knows she won't be able to keep it.
But of course, that leaves the question left unspoken, and that at least is distracting enough for Ellie to pull all of her attention to it. What would her blood do to him?
"I'd offer," Ellie says, frowning to herself. "I mean, for the sake of science, but-"
She hesitates. Even now, years and years later, Joel's warnings still hang heavy on her. Even in a world where it can't possibly matter.
"It wouldn't be a good idea. I don't know what it'd do to you."
no subject
So when he doesn’t sink immediately into pettiness or anything of the sort it's a testament to how much she’s earned from him. By being here. By listening. By not letting it all wash away like some cruel joke.
“...why not?” he asks, the slowness of its start the only sign he isn't certain he wants to hear the answer to that question. Or the one that subsequently chases it, both as cautious in their tone as though he's walking across only the thinnest of splintered ice.
“Are you ill?”
no subject
"Not exactly," she says, slowly.
She pauses again, trying to reason through her words. She doesn't want to freak him out or anything, but she doesn't want to make light of this either.
"Y'know those fucked up monsters I've talked about, from my world?" She shifts her gaze back to Astarion's face, hesitating again. The edge of her mouth twists.
"They're that way because of an infection. Spreads through bites. If someone gets bitten, they... y'know. Turn into one of those things."
She makes a gesture with her hand, uncomfortable, and rubs her palm over her right forearm.
"I've been bitten. More than once. But... luckily, it didn't take. As far as anybody can tell, I'm immune."
no subject
The sort of instincts they both maintain, after all, don't come from anything short of hellish.
“...an infection spread by being bitten? We’re more alike than I thought.” He doesn't see the way her fingertips coast smoothly across her forearm. The way it seems to almost illustrate the subject at hand— his tired eyes fixed only on her expression, and how she shifts to look away. “Well, theoretically, anyway. I imagine the ability to withstand conversion might make more than a few souls jealous.”
Still, his humor’s short lived, easing back into taxed sobriety only a moment later; he can sense it, after all, the uneasiness of the topic at hand.
And it is quite the topic at that.
“Have you told anyone else about this?”
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It's clearly not something she likes talking about.
"Not here. Glimmer knows, but anyone else is..." She shrugs, shaking her head. "Far away from here."
Ellie pauses again, hesitating.
"I've never infected anybody that I know of, and I've bled all over enough people to test it. But nobody's ever drank it, y'know?"
no subject
He's thinking, and given the gravity of his thoughts, and just how exhausted he is at the moment, it's clearly devouring the whole of his available focus. Because there's more to be considered than just whether or not her blood is— in a sense— poisoned, but the risk of that knowledge getting out.
They're close, now, the two of them. Like it or not, he's grown too fond of her presence to want to lose it, and so he hasn't any choice but to imagine her existence as an extension of his own in some stranger, less empathetic sense: if he were in her place, how would he protect himself? If she's told someone else, how can he trust them?
And more importantly, what is the precise nature of her supposed infection?
It swims in his skull, a sea of questions and half-formed answers, and it leaves the both of them seated there without a word between them for nearly a minute before he speaks again, his brow knitted tight enough to pinch.
"...and you've never bitten anyone?"
no subject
"Well... y'know. When you get cornered, can't reach anything. You can still bite." She gives a shrug, like this is a common occurrence for perfectly normal people.
"Nobody's ever caught it from me," she adds, thinking of the bite mark on Abby's forearm. How she'd been infection-free years later. But until then she hadn't really known.
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Instead his sidelong posture relaxes just a touch beneath the blanket she's gifted him, thoughts quick to turn towards the next subject of concern on his quickly solidifying list. It keeps him awake and alert, if nothing else.
"And this Glimmer. Can she be trusted?"
There's a sharpness to that question, unmistakable.
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She pauses, rubs a hand down her face.
"She wouldn't sell me out, if that's what you mean."
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Danger, he says, and there— entirely filterless from how his own head is still dizzied from blood loss— he tips his hand: transparent as glass for a singular beat.
“Tell me you at least know something of hers. Something that can be used as leverage if she— well, if she feels the need to let her tongue wag.”
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tags you from on top of a mountain bc I thirst
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cw: blood/self-harm
cw also for blood with brief mention of animals just don't come here
cw: body horror yeah just give up on this thread sry
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