Entry tags:
WAR TABLE MISSION: People of Riftwatch
WHO: Diplomacy interviewers and interviewees
WHAT: As outlined in this ooc post, Diplomacy members have been asked to interview other members of Riftwatch to gather information so they can have pamphlets written about them.
WHEN: Whenever
WHERE: Diplomacy office
NOTES: None as of yet
WHAT: As outlined in this ooc post, Diplomacy members have been asked to interview other members of Riftwatch to gather information so they can have pamphlets written about them.
WHEN: Whenever
WHERE: Diplomacy office
NOTES: None as of yet
The Diplomacy office has a rather nice set-up: there are a few comfortable chairs and couches, and the offices themselves are well-supplied with coffee, tea, and drinks of a stronger nature. So, at the very least, the interviewers and their subjects will feel relatively comfortable during their conversation.
If things go according to plan, each interviewer will be set up in the office when their interview subject arrives. Benedict Artemaeus will have opened the door and shown the interviewee inside and will have gotten them a drink of their choice. From there, it falls to the interviewer to ask the first question.

no subject
It's not Gela's fault. She knows that. It's not something Gela could have predicted because it's not something that she knew, so there's no point snapping at her about it and she doesn't, just sets her jaw and looks at some point over Gela's shoulder, shrugging—
She is proud. It means a great deal to her, and at first she can't figure out what the difference is. How thrilling it was for Mhavos to know her work, why this grates, and it's — easy, actually, when she examines it. She hasn't published new poetry since she left Orlais, half a decade ago now, a different person entirely. She's written, still, of course, but it stings to be congratulated on a publishing career that's been stalled out for years by someone who might not care for her writing at all, once she reads it.
Is her most interesting accomplishment something she did years ago in another life? Believing that she'll live to do it again is still wobbly—
“My work isn't the sort of thing that you can casually recommend to a person you don't know,” she says, finally, “and I don't know you. You're free to seek it out and find out for yourself. I believe the library carries much of it.”
no subject
A soft hum accompanies a doodle on her page: a bird. Or, the shape of a bird. Maybe something bird-like, but only to her. "Why do you say that?" She doesn't sound put-out. She adds, "Would you like me to ask you about somethin' else?" Because she was thinking that she would put a note about where to find Gwenaëlle Baudin's work should any reader reach the end of her interview curious, but if they're all under another name and not casually recommended...
Her pen hovers above the notes she's taken, ready to strike them out.
no subject
It would be frankly unkind to recommend her writing to some people, unwarily and without caveat, and that that's all the warning she provides is— a choice. But a choice from which she moves swiftly on:
“Someone who is interested in my poetry has any number of resources to draw upon, my writings themselves, speculation in Orlais from before I was publicly associated with them. Associated works,” Lady Cyprienne's suite of poems — she's never used a pseudonym, lives her scandalous life out loud, shielded in part by the reputation of her family — had pointedly mirrored and referenced some Sauvageon works, leading many to wonder which of her known lovers Sauvageon might be.
No one had actually guessed Gwenaëlle, before she took credit.
With a shade of actual humour, “It was profitable to me to take credit. I was briefly able to take some ownership of being a footnote to my father's fuck-ups because sex sells, and I am the unwanted remains of quite the sex scandal. But,” frankly, not because she's offended by Gela but because she's almost certain she lacks the context that Gwenaëlle acutely understands, “dwelling on that profitable poetry, when I have published nothing new and done nothing publicly but brazen out the embarrassment for money, is going to start to make me look desperate and grasping. I am proud of my work. I don't need it to be spoken of with malicious pity by people who would have liked to see me fall further. Hopefully,”
with a quirk of her mouth,
“I've done anything of note within the last six years. What sort of scope are we working with? What kind of portrait are you looking to paint?”
no subject
Matters can always be worse. Gela thinks for a moment, and taps her implement against the page.
“Well,” she ventures unperturbed, “The scope was to do a little profile on each of you, nothin’ especially large, or wordy. I thought I’d profile you as a writer but it might be more excitin’ to talk about other things… like that new boat of yours, in the harbour there. Could do a little piece on the decor! Or on your place in Riftwatch, and the work you do. Is there anythin’ about yourself you’d love for more people to know about?”
no subject
literally nothing, but Byerly had asked her to do it and caught her without an immediately good reason not to besides general disinclination which had not survived being pressed. The dubiousness of her expression as she thinks her way through it probably makes that at least somewhat obvious, mulling over the options.
“I've trained with Riftwatch specifically,” she says, after a moment, having weighed it up and decided she'd rather venture into this territory than risk strangers reading about what her private space is like. “I came to Skyhold and the Inquisition because I received an anchor-shard, and I was with the Inquisition for several years as...” The word prisoner seems strong, but she'd been unwilling and not allowed to leave, so she finally settles on, “A guest,” a little dryly. “I had no combat experience nor any interest in getting any. One of the previous division heads, Commander Coupe, before her retirement from the position with Forces, took my initial martial education somewhat...forcibly in hand. That could be interesting.”
no subject
(Of key note: Skyhold Inquisition (circled), no combat forces recruit)
"That is interestin'," she muses, extending out the line of that last t along the page, meandering with the tip of the pen, "Did you agree to the education because of the shard? What did you learn?"
no subject
Could she have leaned on her grandfather? Probably. Would he have brought his weight to bear, if she'd asked him to, and prevented this from happening? Probably. But at the time, she was more prepared to be forced into something that terrified her than to be seen to hide behind his influence— in part a matter of pride, and in part because it wouldn't always be there.
It wouldn't always be there, but people would remember how she used it. And they'd remember that when he was gone, and she wasn't able to any more. She isn't above exploiting that connection, merely judicious with its use and consequence.
“Initially, I was taught to handle daggers. The reason I was in Forces as a noncombatant— when I originally joined Riftwatch in the role Silver holds now, master of information, I joined as a member of Forces because I felt it'd be inappropriate to be a member of the division my then-husband was then responsible for, and of the other division heads at the time, Commander Coupe was the only one I trusted not to force me into a situation that would get me killed due to my inexperience and Riftwatch's lack of alternative competent hands.”