[open] Satinalia/Hand Your Life To Me
WHO: Riftwatch
WHAT: the greatest Satinalia surprise of all
WHEN: During the party.
WHERE: The Gallows' central tower top floor and Templar tower dining hall/kitchens.
NOTES: A smattering of violence and mayhem, but easy enough to opt out should you not wish to participate! Feel free to create regular party top levels if that's what you'd prefer, as the interruption will be fairly short in the grand scheme of things.
WHAT: the greatest Satinalia surprise of all
WHEN: During the party.
WHERE: The Gallows' central tower top floor and Templar tower dining hall/kitchens.
NOTES: A smattering of violence and mayhem, but easy enough to opt out should you not wish to participate! Feel free to create regular party top levels if that's what you'd prefer, as the interruption will be fairly short in the grand scheme of things.
Satinalia has arrived, and with it a bitter rain which threatens to dampen any attempts at outdoor revelry. However, the staffed dining hall in the Templar tower is decked out with festive tapestries and garlands, extra candelabra to offer more light to the large stone room, and a feast appropriate for any celebration. Kegs of ale and wine sit at the end of the food table with an assortment of bottled spirits, carafes of tea and coffee, and at least one variety of juice made from the fruit of a northern region, just for the novelty of it.
The night’s music is largely provided by Riftwatch’s own, with enough variety of musicians among the ranks that they’re able to swap in and out at will, do some dancing and drinking, and return to the fun.
It’s LATE EVENING when the first revelers attempt to trickle off to their beds, but find their efforts discouraged by the entryway’s unwillingness to budge. It would seem that it’s been barred from the other side; it will also quickly become apparent to anyone who tries the door to the kitchens that it is equally compromised, much to the confusion of any kitchen staff currently in the dining hall.
Before too long, a voice begins to speak over the open network, echoing strangely from each individual crystal in the room:
This is the promise we make in her name. We lead by example, untempered by the words of heretics. We fall to pave the way for the Maker’s paradise.
As was blessed Andraste in her time, we must be cleansed in fire. The world must move forward, ever forward, and to do this it must end.
We must all end.

no subject
He’s wild in the eyes, nastiness and pain distilled into a fight or flight rictus, the knuckles gripped to his dagger greasy with blood. The state of the leg he caught the brunt of the blast with doesn’t bear describing in detail; there are smoldering holes in his coat where spatter boiled through the cloth and into the hide beneath. Shrapnel glitters here and there. He’s missing a piece of his ear.
But shock hasn’t quite baked into disassociation.
He recognizes Derrica quickly enough to turn the dagger and cranes his face around after the door he last saw Weelright collapse against instead, coughing through his teeth. If he isn’t right here, he’s somewhere else --
no subject
And then a second impact, and wood cracks apart into pieces, blown off hinges, no longer a door at all but flying debris beneath the force of a meteorite swarm of Fade-summoned boulders that go hurtling through the entryway, trailing ember-flecked smoke and green light. And very possibly slamming into the elf standing immediately in their path if he hadn't taken that first warning to dodge.
The last remnants of door barring the way are dismissed with a gout of flame, and intruding to stand and block the entranceway is Marcus. He's gripping two-handed his mage staff, more battleready than the rest of him dressed in bright white linens and silver and no armor at all. (He'd had the presence of mind to at least discard his Satinalia mask lest it get in the way.)
The blunt end of the staff precedes him into the room, some spell half-cast and at the ready as he tries to make sense of moving bodies, flames, smoke.
no subject
He gathers enough strength to sit up, another Antivan fire grenade gripped tightly in his bloodied hand as he raises his eyes to Marcus' and then looks past him, as if acknowledging someone standing behind the mage.
"My Lady," he half-wheezes, so quietly as to be nearly inaudible, "I've failed you. They weren't ready."
His fingertips twitch over the glass of the flask. He's not going to let go of it.
no subject
Now, having come to a stop over Richard's prone form, encased in glowing barrier, in the midst of all this chaos, she has a different thought: He's going to ruin those linens.
Not that it's important in the moment, but still.
But with Gideon revealed, Derrica's gaze darts across the room to Marcus and hold there for a split second before she brings her stave down hard against the stone. The clack of contact summons a rune in the air before her, lighting up the space in the wake of Marcus' attack as a flurry of bright, crackling bursts of energy arc from her staff and soar towards Brother Gideon.
no subject
The vapor in the air having already been burned away, this second explosion is rather more contained.
no subject
He barely has hold of his dagger, tongues of flame still lick at what’s left of his cape
Pls.
no subject
With a sharp gesture, a gust of ice paints over Brother Gideon's blackened body, and another coats over the worst of the fire to Marcus' immediate right. Then, a turn his his staff draws the smoke in the room to a tornadoed point and vanish, leaving mostly a hazy film in the air that stings eyes but doesn't burn lungs, at least.
Another look is flicked Derrica's way, and he nods, and his, "See to him," and gesture to Richard, is not so much an order as it is an assurance that there's room and time for her to do so.
Marcus moves to the body, then. At least, it'd be in Gideon's best interest to be dead, and Marcus keeps the bladed end of his staff angled in his direction just in case he has chosen poorly. Otherwise, iron edge is used to perform a rudimentary search, nudging limbs aside, the folds of charred-iced clothing.
no subject
And so the shimmering barrier around Richard ebbs away, and she kneels beside him. He's a scorched mess, but all things considered, it might have been worse. There's no mistaking what that Chantry Brother had been attempting to do.
"What first?" she prompts gently, keeping her body angled towards Marcus as she sets a gentle hand on Richard's shoulder. Just in case, you see, that there's some other threat yet to be dealt with.
no subject
His trousers are blasted clear through to patches of exposed dermis across his right knee and in ragged strips across his thigh. The damage chars deeper in places -- severe but not irreparable. The high rise of his boot has likely saved him from a more terrible fate, leather chewed and blackened crisp, broken through here and there and scorched beneath.
Elsewhere, cuts and burns range from superficial to likely to leave scars. He’s bloody up to his elbow on the same side where he swept at or patted out his own flames.
He trembles beneath the set of Derrica’s hand on his shoulder rather than answer her, tension locked down painfully through his core in an (unsuccessful) effort to wring the rattle out. One thing at a time.
no subject
This, he snaps loose of its cord, pockets it. Lastly, Marcus wraps his hand around the dagger buried near to its hilt in the elf's chest, and jerks this free. Easy to miss, between all the flying rocks and bolts of lightning and fiery explosions, but not insignificant, the weight of it far greater than its balanced perch on his fingers.
He stands, holding it, and moves closer to Derrica and Richard. Questions start and die when he notes the severity of injury. Selects one, then, for its pertinence; "Was he alone?"
oops crashlands back in here
There is so much damage.
Her hands are very gentle when she eases him onto his back, the better to see the great sweep of what needs mending. One hand sets lightly at his hips, just above the worst of the damage to his leg, and the other sets over Richard's bicep. Two steady points of contact from which she means to begin. When she starts to hum, it's for Richard rather than to work the spell into his body. It's not a prayer or incantation. But it's low and soft and sweet, as blue-marked warmth flows from her palms and spreads across his skin.
And it lingers, cool light glowing beneath the splay of her fingers, even when she stops humming, raising her head to look up at Marcus.
"I didn't see anyone else when I arrived," is the best Derrica can offer, further compromised by the chaos she'd arrived to find. If there had been anyone else, there's a chance they'd departed before she'd entered the kitchen, or under the cover of smoke.
It's for Richard to contradict her.
no subject
There is an instinctive distrust to his watchfulness, how closely he struggles to track her through his rattling.
Clearly this is an operation he’d more commonly take charge of himself.
But he’s in no condition and the humming seems to put something in his soft mammal brain at ease besides, the more he listens. Remaining tension bleeds off with the ebb of five alarm pain to endorphins and healing magic. The floor isn’t so terrible, now that the kitchen is no longer on fire; he could stand to lay here for a little while.
“Thank you.” His throat is claggy with snot and smoke.
He nods, late, to confirm once it occurs to him: Gideon was alone.
no subject
Looks back and down at Derrica's report, eyes flicking to Richard for confirmation, which comes. Marcus nods, then kind of just—bends enough to place the weapon somewhere in reach, the blade greasy with blood.
"I'll come back with help," is more directed to Derrica, hand drifting to touch her shoulder, before he withdraws from the scene. The fragile web of her healing can be easily broken if they don't get a couple more hands in the necessary relocation to the infirmary.
slaps down bow
Of course, there is the question here: why had this man acted alone?
But Derrica can pose that later. Richard's thanks is answered with the lightest squeeze of her hand at his elbow. Now, she draws in a breath.
"I'll try to keep the pain at bay until he comes back," she reassures. "Close your eyes, if you like."
No obligation to continue conversation, not when Derrica is fairly certain Richard would rather melt into the stone beneath him. So there is humming again, and the soft wash of green light from her palms, chasing the pain off to a manageable distance while they wait here in the wreckage of the kitchen.