Entry tags:
open | and now that you don't have to be perfect,
WHO: Gwenaëlle Baudin, et menagerie, and you?
WHAT: Baby got a houseboat, and it's move-in day. Find her at the Kirkwall docks as things are unpacked into it, or after that across the harbor at the Gallows slip where it'll be secured for the foreseeable future.
WHEN: Shortly after the return from Cumberland.
WHERE: Kirkwall harbour.
NOTES: Y'all I have coveted that houseboat since it went up on the rewards page.
WHAT: Baby got a houseboat, and it's move-in day. Find her at the Kirkwall docks as things are unpacked into it, or after that across the harbor at the Gallows slip where it'll be secured for the foreseeable future.
WHEN: Shortly after the return from Cumberland.
WHERE: Kirkwall harbour.
NOTES: Y'all I have coveted that houseboat since it went up on the rewards page.
Originally some manner of riverboat not intended for the purpose it presently serves, the houseboat that is for now moored perfectly in line with the anchored Walrus in the harbor isâ something of a monstrosity, an eccentricity built up over time, not impossible to move under its own power but more commonly affixed to a more purposeful vessel and tugged along behind it. Having won it in a game of cards from a local who'd been tired of the lifestyle and tired of Kirkwall besides, it's taken some time for the Duke de Coucy to consider it sufficiently worthy to relinquish his granddaughter intoâ
which is to say, the interiors are now substantially finer, even if she'd put her foot down and insisted she didn't want anything done to the exterior that wasn't absolutely necessary. No need to turn it into obvious thief-bait, for a start, and besides: she rather likes the aesthetic. It's shabby and shambling but it was in otherwise good repair when it came into her hands, surprisingly sturdy and featuring beneath the water a wine-cellar kept cool by the ambient temperature around it where she's spent much of the morning while the rest of her belongings are brought in by de Coucy footmen and servants packing her stockpile of only slightly stolen Vauquelin wealth in the locked store-room behind the wineracks.
With only slightly stolen de Coucy wine, naturally.
GwenaĂ«lle emerges from below as trunks and furnishings are still being unloaded from carriages come down from Hightown, Small Yngvi the cat sleeping in a pinned up portion of the front of her skirts and Leviathan, the nug, doing laps of the exterior in an effort to understand his new environs. Hardie sits sentinel on the deck in front of the door, supervising the efforts of the de Coucy men (who are, in fact, being supervised by Guilfoyleâ) and upon consideration GwenaĂ«lle sits down beside him, fingers in his fur, occasionally answering questions about where something needs to be put and if she would like it unpacked, also, or left to her (or Guilfoyle) to manage later.
Once everything's been securely stowed, a boat waits to haul it over to one of the empty slips surrounding the Gallows, where GwenaĂ«lle will finally have significantly less of a commute. The last thing to be done before that, of courseâ
âI have always wanted to do this,â GwenaĂ«lle says, and smashes a champagne bottle against the balustrade, just above the brand-new sign identifying the vessel as La SouverainetĂ©.

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And she isn't opposed to a good idea coming about, either, for that matter.
âI'm not opposed to suggestions from someone who appreciates her.â
She loves Byerly; she is sure whatever suggestion he might have ,for instance, is 'this thing is hideous, let your grandfather rebuild it entirely'.
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"And this... duke." He is not even going to attempt to replicate the subtlety of that pronunciation. "Would he be opposed?"
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So: probably not, as long as Gwenaëlle is herself in favour.
âAnd he's in favour of anything that improves her for me, I know that much well.â A beat passes, and she adds, âMoney is no object.â
At a glance from the outside, that fact may not be obvious.
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"Then she has a bright future ahead of her."
In his experience, the best way to answer that addition, and other such variations on I have all the money in the world, is to focus on the project at hand. Conveniently, that's how he prefers to respond to most things. Everything funnels back to work. Absolutely everything.
"So we understand each other, I should preface any brainstorming by telling you I'm not a carpenter." In case she somehow looked at him and thought he might be one. "But I have designed buildings. âWell, a building."
One very, very, very large building.
"Have you decided on colours?"
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When they're talking about what he might design for her best girl, well. It seems relevant.
âI've access to carpenters,â she says, lightly, âbut I'd not ask many of them to design me a house.â A house? Sure. Hers? Another story. (She's going to let any commentary she might have made about hard labor and his brace pass, but it's probably a matter of time before there's a joke about it doubling for a hammer that's too well timed to let go.)
âBeyond...dark? I want to keep the mood of her, as much as I can. Not so black she'll heat up past what's bearable to touchââ
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But wait, his pitch isn't over yet: his hand flicks a gesture up, led by his index finger. "Copper makes a fine roof, so you could even tile your many eaves with it. Unless, that is, you intend to race your house, in which case you may want to keep the weight down. However,"
the tilt of his head says this is the good part,
"my recommendation would be bronzeâwhich, while an unconventional choice, is significantly more resistant to salt."
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âBronze,â she repeats, like she's committing it to memory; like she's committing much of what he's said, picking it apart and filing it away. The kitchen part is most interesting, especially becauseâ there is Guilfoyle, for now, but there will not be Guilfoyle for always. There are things that she's having to learn because sheer stubbornness will not keep him here forever to simply do them for her, and those are things she has to think about, now, aren't they.
Her own home means her own responsibilities, especially given the unlikelihood she'll replace him in time. For now, it is well enough to take Florent and steal an entire pizza from the Gallows on pizza night, and for Guilfoyle to trek between the boat and the Gallows laundresses or supplement their kitchen with the Gallows' supply... for now. The point of La Souveraineté, though, is the idea of there being a future past now, where the conveniences of being parked up at the Gallows may not be there to be relied upon.
She's smiling, properly, when she says, âI'm known for my unconventional choices,â and even on first impression it may come across as something of an understatement. âWould you like to see some of what we've done with her interior?â
(She has actually just forgotten that she still occasionally needs to introduce herself to people.)
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He doesn't think it as a word, this isn't some scheme. Not much of a scheme, anywayâthe satisfaction of a job well done isn't exactly a criminal bounty. It's simply a nice thing to push himself out of his mood, to make great effort to engage despite the big cold fist in his belly and the handful of guts in its persistent squeeze, and be rewarded for it. He's spent enough time feeling only sad and shy. Weeks, now. It's getting boring.
So he answers, "Absolutely," and looks to where he's meant to board. "Just, eh... just a second, I'm not really," accustomed to boats, but here he comes to the ramp anyway, grasping whatever's there to grasp (tightly, pale knuckles jutting), shuffling the first step as a gauge to be sure his legs aren't immediately going to get creative about this. So far so goodâup he goes.
Sea legs: you're welcome, he has none. Expect him to stand with his feet spaced a little wider, the one unhinged knee turned in, faintly wobbling, like a three-legged calf... and completely game for it.
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âMind the stairs,â she says, ââthere's sort of a lot of them,â more considering, looking back toward her home. The entrance has a short stairway up to its porch and front door, and given the size and shape of her from the outside...well, it can't come as a great surprise that she's mostly twists and turns inside, too.
La Souveraineté is, when he reaches the foyer, far more luxurious inside than she appears from the exterior; polished wood, hanging silks, velvet upholstery and brightly twinkling lamps of various colours, fashioned in metal and glass by local craftsmen. The general effect is a stark difference from the inhospitable appearance from the outside of the Gallows.
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And it's still early enough in the day that he can manage a few more without immediately having to rest for very long, though it remains to be seen how the vessel's relatively gentle play within its degrees of freedom will factor in. Not a bad thing to try out while his schedule is still light.
When he reaches the foyer,
he stops, with one hand braced lightly on the wall, and surveys the indulgent decor with slow sweeps of his eyes, his head pivoting after them.
"You weren't kidding."
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âWhy spend my money when I can save it and spend bon-papa's?â is probably rhetorical. She tips a hand to encompass the passageways from the main foyer, where there is space for a portrait to hang but nothing there, yet. âThe gallery,â is a room directly off the foyer itself, a narrow loop of hardwood floor, cabinets and selected pieces of art encircling a deep, cushioned depression, âthe below-decks,â a closed door, although she briefly opens it so he can see that the immediate view is simply darkened stairs, âthrough to the rest of this floor,â a hallway, which is a little wider, âand up to the rest.â
...stairs. She wasn't kidding about the stairs, either.
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ânot exact. More undercity than topside. One would be hard pressed to achieve Piltover's unyielding symmetry in a shell of this characterâgiven measuring tools, he reckons he would find a scarcity of perfect right anglesâbut some might try to force her into shape.
"It... reminds me a little of home. These especially," with light gestures to the nearest table lamp, to the one hanging just there, led by his finger. "The coloured glass. You see it everywhere, lit up like this... usually with," how do you explain neon lights to a person, "rarefied gases," no, "which... are visually similar to, eh. To glowstones."
Nice.
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âLike veilfire,â she offers, after he's groped around his explanation sufficiently that she's more or less confident of having ascertained the shape of what he's grabbing at. âI've seen mages light veilfire torches, in elvhen ruins usually. And I've a dress that uses enchantments that look like candlesâ true fire would be a catastrophe waiting to happen.â
It's more of a wearable chandelier, and she's worn it both with and without an appropriate under-dress. Considerate of her to so expertly light the angles of her arse if it's going to be on display of an evening.
âThese lamps are throughout, anyway, I rather fancied them.â
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But that's a footnote of its own, just a sour tickle somewhere in the periphery of this otherwise promising visit, so he can bite his tongue about it for a second and lean on this instead:
"You've seen veilfire," and that is interesting as hell. "Torches only? Or... did they discover any runes?"
And did they light it, and did it trigger an ancient spell, and did you feel it, and what was it likeâ
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Not a deal-breaker, necessarily, although it's like to put anyone in mind of Tevinter, the wide streets of Minrathous, and the rest of Thedas is still afraid of all the wrong parts of that nation.
In her view, at least.
âI don't recall seeing it other than on a torch, though, but we're constantly falling arse-first into complex ancient magics, so it may be that a veilfire rune just didn't stand out amongst whatever unhinged bullshit was happening around it at the time.â
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"Whatever it was must have been truly unhinged. I can't think of much that would distract me from unanticipated ancient magics."
He's now clutching his crutch under his arm to hold it, releasing the grip to lift his handâthe left one, with the strange crease in the palm.
"I've been wondering if there isn't some way to store the energy produced by these anchors. It goes without saying a lamp wouldn't be the objective, but... perhaps a convenient side benefit."
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Brave idiots are not in short supply, generally, and even besides someone who might just be gameâ
well, any benefit they can turn these things to before they kill them.
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But he's just here to check out her house.
"I suspect most people might consider it extreme to weigh one's own mortality against inventing a new lamp."
Then again, that's pretty much how he and Jayce metâ
"Let's put that one on the back burner for now."
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âIt isn't urgent. And the behaviour of the anchor-shards over time is less predictable than I think we all expected it to be, anyway.â
Unnecessarily messing with that probably needs a more compelling motivation than sick new lamp if it might involve trying to hustle some of Stark's budget.
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Read. He'd have been forced out of his shell much earlier were there not so many writings in which to conveniently bury himself.
"Actually, I'm... I'm looking forward to tracking its development." He opens his palm, works the big joint of his thumb to watch the meat of it bulge and the skin bunch up around that strange greenish crease. "Should it decide to develop."