Mobius (
favoriteanalyst) wrote in
faderift2022-06-13 07:36 pm
Entry tags:
It is the whisper in the night, the lie upon your sleep
WHO: Mobius and open to the lot of you
WHAT: General existing, excuses to have shenanigans with people, dealing with bad sleep, your general open log
WHEN: Through Justinian
WHERE: Mostly in the Gallows, occasionally around Kirkwall
NOTES: Nothing in the body of the post, will warn if hinky shit comes up in the comments
WHAT: General existing, excuses to have shenanigans with people, dealing with bad sleep, your general open log
WHEN: Through Justinian
WHERE: Mostly in the Gallows, occasionally around Kirkwall
NOTES: Nothing in the body of the post, will warn if hinky shit comes up in the comments
Being in Antiva, assassination attempt aside, was actually very good overall. Parties had, shit investigated, minds changed. The political and economic ramifications are yet to truly be felt, but anything to help the war effort.
He'd forgotten about the dreams while there. At first, he wonders if they only feel worse because it had been some time. But it becomes clear that they are, in fact, steadily getting worse.
But that doesn't mean the work ends. So if nothing else, he'll get back to doing what he does best.
Most often, naturally, he's found in the library, its self-appointed librarian and custodian. For those whose tastes he's come to learn, he puts aside some books at a table where he does most of his work (reading, cataloguing, where he can be found to lend some assistance). Sometimes he's there far into the night, candles melting down to nubs (though thankfully there's still light into the evening these days) while he goes over some Research records or takes notes on the state of the tomes or whatever passes his fancy when sleep doesn't come easy. In the daytime, he tries to stay as alert and helpful as ever. Though as the days pass and the situation gets worse, he too gets worse. Fumbles a stack he was carrying, dropping things, taking longer than usual to direct anyone to the proper area, getting short with people when they give him some attitude.
Training is something he makes a point of keeping up with. While he'd still gotten plenty of exercise in his years away from duty and still wields a sword and shield like extensions of his body, he's wanted to get back into practice so his skills resharpen. He's done well, diligently, back into a blessed routine. Routines are easy. Routines bring focus. He's there in the mornings before the heat and humidity start getting too bad, but when sleep feels impossible, sometimes he's out there at the crack of dawn, chipping away at some poor dummy who did nothing to deserve the abuse. Attempts other weapons, two-handers and axes, to varying degrees of success. Sometimes it's more about working out some stress by swinging something big more than actually learning a weapon. In sparring, he's slipping, but the good(?) part is that his partner probably also is as well, so it all evens out.
He's probably gonna accidentally hurt himself. And he won't be happy about it.
At some point he more or less stops sleeping in the barracks altogether. This whole thing is an easy enough fix if it's just one person suffering, but when everyone is tossing, turning, waking up, sweating, panting, yelping, falling about? In that kind of space? No thanks. You might be able to catch him taking catnaps where he can. Or even where he doesn't want to but happened to nod off. In the library under a table or against a wall between shelves. On a small pile of hay by the stables. In the chapel. Right into his lunch only to jerk back upright with food plastered to his face. Standing up. (It's an acquired skill.) Spends a few nights in Kirkwall trying to seek some better sleep. Spoilers: doesn't work.
He loses track of days. He has to mark them very carefully so he knows when he last took lyrium. Wonders if he should go back to taking it daily, dip into the available stores more. It's there, for use. Why not? But the thought makes him itchy. Sure, he's tired, exhausted, with images at night that make him jumpy. Doesn't mean he's finally losing his wits. Isn't losing his mind. He doesn't need to make that day come any faster by increasing his intake. Just...needs to keep track. Days that turn into nights that turn back into days. Mark it down.
Prayer is something he does every day. Like training. Routine. But it gets...more, during the month. Goes to the chapel earlier, stays longer, goes there multiple times a day. If this is something demonic, then surely, surely the grace of Andraste and the will of the Maker will help them. Does he believe this? Well. It won't hurt, that's for sure. But that doesn't seem enough some days. What if it's the location, what if it's cursed for the atrocities conducted? He makes his way to the garden where the Kirkwall Chantry once stood, conducts his prayers there. He's not, apparently, the only one trying to take solace in a holy ground.
Occasionally, a fight breaks out. Occasionally, the racism and fear of the Other gets worse, becomes the worst. He tries to step in when he can do so safely, but sometimes a solid left hook is the only solution when words fail. Everyone's jittery, anxious, tired. He wants to help; Maker he wants to, but there's no soothing this, no balm he can give. He can only recite the words of the Chant and hope it digs into hearts.
By the end of the month, he's usually talking to himself, muttering under his breath. How long has he been reciting the Chant? It's not in order, doesn't have the whole thing memorized front to back, but there are whole strings of verses, occasionally a whole canticle. Sometimes plucks out relevant verses, repeats them to himself in the middle of whatever he's doing. If there are parts that seem unfamiliar, there might be dissonant verses in there, too.

no subject
Sure. Enough time here, you'd pick up on a lot. Most of the human population is of the faith, even if only because of the societal expectations, with the Chantry having so much control. But Astarion has a much more rounded understanding of the story than expected. Has he, perhaps, read it? Or hung around Chantries just waiting for a chance to swipe some goods and absorbed a lot along the way? Was it an attempt to blend in, given his usual insistence to those not in the know that he is definitely a native, certainly not a Rifter?
Astarion makes his conclusion, and Mobius...smiles. An easy and contented thing. The prayers are aimed at the Maker, as though they are all lost spearmaidens all singing for help and attention, but if the Maker's back is turned on all His creation, who exactly are they praying to? He reaches over and straightens out Astarion's artfully ruffled collar.]
I knew you were more than just a pretty face.
no subject
That, or he just likes it.
(Either way, its all still crafted from undoubtedly expensive silk, so apparently even rebellion has its limits.)]
Try to keep it to yourself.
The last thing I want is anyone in Riftwatch assuming I can do my homework.
no subject
[But like. Please don't.
If his fingers linger a little, it's clearly only because a silken top is foreign to him. It's pretty, not so much practical on the field. He's pretty sure he's never owned anything silk in his life, at least after he struck out on his own. But at last they drop away, back to his own lap.]
I do think someone's listening, at any rate. Actually doing anything with those prayers is another matter altogether. But there's no harm in each of us taking comfort where we can in times like these.
no subject
[It doesn't take a genius to realize Astarion's heresy would never travel far if he were ever entirely open in baring it.
Still, that pause on Mobius' end is noticed. How very curious.]
Mm. Spirits maybe. Old gods— possibly of the Tevene-favored sort or the elvhen type. Possibly the Maker, too, if he's still alive out there. I've known enough divinity in my time to never rule anything out completely.
But no, I didn't come here to criticize your choice in balms.
[How very genuine he sounds in that, before:]
I came here for the candles.
no subject
Tell me about the gods and would-be gods you've seen. I'd love to know a little more about that.
no subject
[He's not being facetious. Really.]
It's power that defines divinity by most measures. That, and immortality. [Which, admittedly, circles right back around again to power itself.] Demi-gods are a silver a dozen, for example: they can claim their heritage a thousand times over, but they're not really all that different from your average hero or villain. Even a vampire lord— like my master— could fell one if the circumstances were right.
Gods, though. The real ones, that is, you'll find in control of their own Realms.
There might even be an argument for the Maker being one such deity— and that first the Fade and now also Thedas are his Domain. The places where he holds absolute creative sway.
Yet in Toril, where I'm from, one little strand of a planetary blip on a string of such realms, the gods aren't as hands off as one might think. [Compared to Thedas' own deities, that is. He can admit that.] Admittedly I've never seen one for myself directly, but I've seen what they've done. And like swimming in a bay beside a monolithic whale, you don't quite realize what it is that's shadowing the ocean floor. Or you think it is the ocean floor.
Regardless, they do tamper.
And at times I think this world might be kinder. Your maker or Andraste or the Elven gods or their absence, perhaps. [There's a fairness to it, somehow. Neglectful, maybe, given how poorly the world is presently faring— but still:]
Because when you know beyond a shadow of a doubt that they could so effortlessly pluck you from your pain without even trying, it only hurts that much more when they don't.
[And oh, how Astarion prayed and begged and pleaded for help for so many years, only to be met with absolute, hateful silence.]
Still, though. Like I said before, it's just power. Gods have been usurped. They've been killed. They rot. Take Corypheus for example, he's a sham of a creature, but by the rules of what I've heard happened before in my own world, he could, if he killed or stole the power of any true god, become one himself.
And then there are the occasional oddities like Loki, for example. Or—
[Ah, no. He hadn't asked her if she wanted it known; their conversation was too private.] Well, Loki. Claims he was a god before coming here, but the Fade took it from him just as it took my own strength.
no subject
The idea that it's all only magnitudes of power that make one a god among others.
But the part he decides to pick up on, to comment on first, is the last. Astarion tries to avoid, nearly says the name, but diverts, and Mobius laughs.]
Or Sylvie, the supposed goddess who might as well be Loki's twin? [He knows. And she's never said anything about keeping it to himself. He isn't about to start saying it to everyone, oh, look at them, they think themselves gods, not to the general populace, but Astarion will know and understand better than most.] I've grilled Loki on what makes a god a god before. Gave me a lot to think about. Is a god still a god if they don't have the powers of one anymore, you think?