ʟᴏxʟᴇʏ ( ᴄʜɪᴠᴀʟʀʏ ). (
charmoffensive) wrote in
faderift2022-03-29 02:19 pm
Entry tags:
open: a little rain never hurt no one.
WHO: Loxley, Tony Stark, Marcus Rowntree
WHAT: Three awkward ferry rides. (Or more, if I get more tags, but you know.)
WHEN: Drakonis
WHERE: The Kirkwall docks
NOTES: Tag any of these! I don't mind double ups. This is also just a general catch all post if you want to do something slightly different, or drastically different.
WHAT: Three awkward ferry rides. (Or more, if I get more tags, but you know.)
WHEN: Drakonis
WHERE: The Kirkwall docks
NOTES: Tag any of these! I don't mind double ups. This is also just a general catch all post if you want to do something slightly different, or drastically different.

marcus.
Gracelessly. First is a dog, a gigantic wolfhound who stiffly bounds from dock to boat with a clatter of blunt claws on wood. He is sopping wet from some fresh rainfall, which has likewise done nothing for the mud that covers each of his long legs and cakes to the underside, fur dripping with it. He immediately, once landed, shakes himself violently, and sprays everyone in a tight radius with flecks of mud and rain.
His guardian might have missed this assault, but it likely wouldn't have mattered, as Marcus is not quite as filthy, but nor is he clean. His clothes are of a rougher constitution than he normally prefers, simple garments of hardy cotton and leather, his hair dark with rain, plastered down where it's loosened from a low ponytail. Mud likewise, dried and wet in patches, clings to his boots and partway up his trousers.
Without much mind for the intrusion of either himself or the wolfhound he is with, he climbs aboard without a word.
no subject
But this cloak he's wearing is a rather nice one. He has kept it in very fine condition, and the wool it's made of is soft and warm. He's managed to keep it dry all evening, in spite of the rain, by stepping out only strategically, in those moments between downpours. And now, when he's in sight of returning to the Gallows, this spray.
So he doesn't object. But his sigh is melancholy and tired as he starts brushing at the cloth, seeing how much of the mud he can remove before it dries.
no subject
The dog, meanwhile, wags his tail lazily, and swings his furry head towards this new stranger. With a kind of lazy curiousity, the old dog pushes forwards some, grey-flecked maw (dripping with an equal mix of saliva and ambient rain-mud, likely drunk from a puddle somewhere along the way) nudging closer to sniff and generally get up in Linden's business with a blast of warm, doggy breath.
This, Marcus does note, and makes no compunctions about leaning forward to grab the big dog's collar to pull him backwards, if maybe not quick enough for everyone's liking.
no subject
There's a staff tucked in beside Linden, as well, which becomes clear when the dog is pulled away. Certainly nothing like what Marcus has. No blades, no runes, no decorations at all - could practically be a walking stick, but that the grip is in the wrong place. Linden shifts it in against himself as it comes into view - not exactly looking to showcase the magic kinship between him and Marcus, it seems. If anything, looking to hide it.
"Thank you," he mutters when the dog is dragged away from him, nearly too soft to be heard.
no subject
Marcus pat-pats the dog's flank as he settles, two firm thumps. From there, it would simply be a wet and uncomfortable journey to the Gallows, stinking of dog and rain-soaked cloth and mud and ocean, but at least done in silence. He has never felt inclined to make small talk to fill the silence, and the sound of the oars and water lapping against the sides of the ferry are meditative enough.
However, he does, of course, inevitably, spy the mage staff, and this is, of course, inevitably, enough to cause him to speak. "Marcus," he says, an introduction. Somewhat conveniently, the specific set of vowels and consonants in his name betray his own Starkhaven accent.
The boat pushes off.
no subject
But there it is. A tightening of the muscles, a slight widening of the eyes - and then a glance away.
"Linden," comes the reply. There is something of Starkhaven in that accent, too, for the keen ear. It comes across even more when he mumbles, "Terrible weather."
no subject
Alarm could mean anything. There are mages with their reservations too.
But where Marcus might be fine to allow someone to stew in their discomfort, less so with other mages, curiousity clear in his manner. "I don't mind it," he says, of the weather. "It's warming again, at least. Where do you hail from?"
no subject
Linden and Marcus are not really of the same generation; Linden is well more than a decade older than the other man. They certainly aren't of the same social rank, or the same prominence. But even so, two mages of Starkhaven, by rights, should have crossed each other's paths at some point. But, indeed, Marcus will never have seen Linden before in his life.
"What about you?"
no subject
So he nods. Starkhaven. "Me as well," he says. "But I also mean to ask which Circle."
Because his new mage elven friend clearly is not from his. Linden is also clearly older, but there were older Enchanters still that Marcus knew well, coming up, and so his dismissal of the possibility that he could simply have forgotten Linden or happened not to meet him is plain.
There's a shuffling, snuffling sound as Vysvolod investigates Linden's boots with a cold, wet nose.
no subject
"Hasmal," Linden answers. From everything he's been able to discern, as he's ferreted through the documents he's been able to find on the rebellion, it's a solid answer. The mages of Hasmal stayed put. And this man, this Marcus, didn't spend time there, or so he's heard: the mages of Starkhaven largely came here, to Kirkwall, to this cruel and cold island.
Then - "What of you? Where did you go after the Starkhaven Circle fell?"
no subject
He nods. Hasmal. Loyalists, neutrals, if there's such a thing as neutrality. He doesn't seem bothered, but maybe something makes sense to him, now.
As Linden shifts the conversation back to him, it's like Marcus is a little slow to switch gears from curiosity to sharing, although not unwilling, apparently. "The first time," has trace irony, and Marcus just nods to the looming shapes of the Gallows, slowing growing in size as they nearer. "And then after it fell good and proper, the rebellion took us to Andoral's Reach. The borders of Orlais, nearest Tevinter."
He reaches to scratch behind Vysvolod's ears. "I know not very much of Hasmal, save that its foundations must have been sturdier than ours were."
no subject
What Linden had felt in truth, when the rebellion had come, had been relief. Not because he was overjoyed to see the poor downtrodden fools find their freedom. But because it was a grand relief to have more apostates running around. The more grand and powerful and notorious spellcasters there were on the lam, the less likely it was that anyone would spare a thought at mousy, stoop-backed Linden.
"Did you see much fighting?" That seems a good question. Soldiers like to share war stories, and the emotion carries them away from the present moment. Their attention gets diffuse.
no subject
Here, he only nods.
At least, at first, lazily scratching Vysvolod's neck before pulling his hands away. He cups them to gather up some rain and then uses this to rid the excess dirt from his fingers and beneath his nails, mostly gathered from the dog and its propensity to roll in puddles and, beyond the city, muddy river mouths. Maybe, even if Marcus doesn't immediately offer up tales of glory or sorrow, Linden achieves that sense of diffuse focus anyway.
"How have you found it?" Or perhaps not. "Walking freely. I know it is a different thing, for elves."
no subject
But he'd made the decision to return to the Gallows, spend these last hours before evening looking in on his own office, climbing the stairs to the Division Head offices, taking advantage of the time to initiate some conversations before he need return to Lowtown.
Now it seems, a bath is going to be in order.
"Long day?" John queries, dry humor in the words. There's nothing to be done for the aftermath of the wolfhound's dramatic entrance, apart from a brief swipe at what few flecks of mud landed on his face.
no subject
It's good for him, these outings, as Marcus will have to later defend.
Marcus settles, unselfconsciously reaching out to encourage the dog backwards, hand on spine to get him to sit. "It will be," he says. "I'll have to see to the dog before myself, or neither of us will make it as far as our room."
no subject
After all, as sporadic as his presence may be, John does share an office with Petrana. He has some sense that Vysvolod replicating this trick inside would not be any more well-received by Petrana. Or Julius.
"Was this outing for his benefit, or for your business?"
In which business might be Captain of the Guard, or it might be simply Riftwatch, or it might be something else, something other beyond both of these things.
John isn't owed anything beyond the first two, regardless of all that lies between them. But the question is an open door, testing to see what Marcus might send through.