Entry tags:
open + closed;
WHO: Viktor + Abby + Bastien + Edgard + Ellis + Mobius + Richard + Stephen + Tony
WHAT: catch-all for November
WHEN: now, kind of, but also whenever
WHERE: around the Gallows, particularly the library and Research division workroom
NOTES: Open to all/any, wildcards and tweaks welcome. Will match tag format. Content warning for terminal illness in some threads; will avoid on request. Also!! Hit me up if you want to share a job.
WHAT: catch-all for November
WHEN: now, kind of, but also whenever
WHERE: around the Gallows, particularly the library and Research division workroom
NOTES: Open to all/any, wildcards and tweaks welcome. Will match tag format. Content warning for terminal illness in some threads; will avoid on request. Also!! Hit me up if you want to share a job.
Nighttime cracks an eye to gloaming dawn, to a fog moving at a steady crawl between the Gallows and Kirkwall proper, like it's a huge vessel passing by, like it's going somewhere. Fleeing the sun, maybe. A futile effort.
Viktor likewise cracks an eye, two eyes, squints through a fog receding. He raises his head, wipes his mouth, drags a little reading glass on a chain into the gutter and shuts the book around it. On Astrariums, the cover says. Has he ever put his head down 'just to rest' and not ended up warping at least one page with biological humidity?
Since no one's kicked him out of it—or at least had any success to date, should they have tried—this single side room on the lowest floor of the library has fully evolved into a combination office and living space. From it Viktor emerges with crazy hair and an armful of other books, squinting and snuffling and stiff, taps over to the return cart stationed nearby, and adds them to his prior deposits. He then leaves with the cart; his crutch, leaned out of the way, stays behind.
From there he moves slowly between aisles, stopping here and there to slide a book into place, or to leave it out conspicuously so someone who climbs ladders can put it back where it lives. Once in a while he'll pause with a hand on the shelf to yield to a coughing fit, or else to wait for some other silent thing to pass, before moving on.
No one asks him to do this, he just does it.
Other times, he may be found on any library floor, or back in his ('his') little side room, either busy at the table, or asleep on the settee. (Or asleep at the table. Again.) The door is often open, sometimes left unlatched and open a crack.
On rare occasions he may be found on the library's stone balcony, either sitting alone on a bench (also stone), or leaning on the balustrade (is anything not made of stone here) to look out over the sea, nursing some private melancholy.
Later, when the tower begins to sound like it's waking up, Viktor makes the climb to the seventh floor and assumes his spot in the Research workroom. Settles his bony backside on the stool. Spins a dry pen around his thumb while he thinks.
It looks like he's pondering some deep mystery; what he's thinking, really, is that it's annoying that no one exists here who can check his work on this page or the pages beneath it. (Annoying, upsetting, a constant low ache.) No one needs to check that half of his work. It's fine. He knows it's fine. Still—
Should any be present, he might ask of someone he knows has worked with local runes,
"Can I run something past you?"
Or, of a rifter, or else anyone he's hardly spoken to,
"How well versed are you in the native runic system?"
Or it's any other day and he's just toiling away in here like anyone else might be. Coworkers will have found he tends to respond at least lukewarmly to working chatter, and that if he doesn't want to be interrupted, they won't have to guess—they'll know.
The sound of coughing follows him everywhere: a herald of his arrival, a sign of his otherwise quiet presence, a dry barking down the hall.

no subject
Viktor's metaphorical, perhaps spiritual, hackles twitch on those three syllables. His hand waits for the end of a sentence, and for nothing to come after it, so he can write without potentially transcribing what this guy is saying by accident. He can respect the use of an itemized list, but also, it is annoying.
Whatever reaction he has to the insult to his appearance, it manifests only as a tweak at the corner of his mouth. This assertion of bureaucratic authority, in his professional opinion, is whatever, and he plans to weather it passively until it runs out... until the mention of a potential ban. For that his head lifts, eyebrows already primed with stormy indignance.
"Are you— are you kicking me out?"
no subject
Apparently he hasn't been threatened with banning before. Mobius sips his tea, bobs his eyebrows.
"Am I going to have to?"
no subject
He's drawing a box around a cluster of scribbles, apparently worth distinguishing, as he says, "That would be an unethical use of your acting position."
no subject
This man seems to like to avoid answering questions directly. Mobius has no qualms temporarily banning someone with the intent of Go Take Care Of Yourself, Damn, and he's certainly been thought of as much worse. It's no big deal in the end if the guy's gone from the library for half a day.
"Take a breather. What's so important that you think you're allowed to neglect yourself?"
no subject
A flash of defiance, like the dry rustling of some creature darting through bush, its size unknown. The scoffing tone it leaves behind is complementary to his voice, low warmth turning an edge. Comfortable. Confident.
"Please. Your temporary authority over this library does not extend that far."
He turns his page aside, brushes the next one with the side of his hand to smooth it, begins to write.
"I appreciate what you're trying to do. I simply don't require it."
He does. There's a hole in that very shape which no one living in this world can fit.
no subject
He will not make it his job to babysit a grown man, but he can do it for a little bit. Said man hasn't even touched his warm leaf water.
no subject
"No."
As of that second look he gave it, the leaf water is now symbolic and thus fated to remain untouched.
"Have you had your fill of treating me like a child?"
no subject
Given the peace offering of a nice mug of tea is going completely ignored, he imagines food will go the same way. But he'll make the offer anyway.
no subject
Now that the acknowledgement of biological functions has been incepted among his thoughts, he's realizing he is, in fact, hungry, and the annoyance of it propels his hand to quicker scratching. The text it produces is all but illegible even to someone who can read the language, let alone a stranger in the universe.
He did thank him for the tea—but then other stuff happened, and now—
"I'm investigating the feasibility of developing basic infrastructural improvements for Darktown. If that interests you, and you can bear to stop condescending to me for five minutes, we can discuss it."
no subject
He's not looking for kids. And if anyone's his, it's Ellie. Maybe he should drop the petulant act, but if the man across from him can't accept the idea that someone cares about his health and the way he seems to not want to care for it in the moment, then--
"Pretty sure I left 'reasonable' behind a while ago." When Starkhaven fell, or maybe before that. Maybe when the mages rebelled. Maybe nothing in his life had ever really been reasonable. That's the point, isn't it? Ever since blessed Andraste graced him? But he isn't interested in debating what is or is not reasonable to someone who can't even be bothered to drink some water much less wash up.
He can't even really say he's interested in debating Darktown's infrastructure, either, but he's interested in the man, so he also can't say he's completely dismissive of the topic. Come at it from the side, then, and see how quickly that derails as well. (Does some part of him wonder how long this will go before he's told in no uncertain terms to fuck off? Hm.) "Is this what you used to do back home? City planning, engineering."
no subject
"Not city planning, no." But he helped change the skyline forever. "Engineering, yes. Mechanical," to clarify, "and arcane. To you, my work might resemble dwarven technology." He scratches out a word, replaces it. "I've been told I should visit their capital."
He is scrawny, thin as a wire, pale as bleached stone, roughly three inches shorter than Mobius himself, and more than a little sickly. Not one of the pieces in the outfit he's assembled from native garments fits his narrow frame quite right. Either he hasn't gotten around to having them tailored, or he doesn't intend to bother. But, to the credit of his self-respect, neither he nor the room smell bad, exactly—only like himself.
(Which, should the sniffer not be chemically compatible with him, might still be bad, but that's hardly his fault.)
no subject
"You should, if you're ever able. Getting into Orzammar sounds like it's a bit difficult these days," as though it's ever sounded easy, "but mechanical and arcane sounds up the dwarven alley. Could see if there are some surface dwarves that have some know-how, take a look at what you're sketching up."
Still, Darktown is a big undertaking, and any kind of renovation would still involve relocating people temporarily, and there are plenty of less than savory folks down there that could, would, endanger any potential building crews. "What manner arcane? How does magic in your world compare to here?"
no subject
As his focus fully departs from his notes (which are next to useless, anyway, as he was mostly writing out of stubbornness) (that bit he scratched out was definitely an accidental transcription of his own speech), Viktor's hand stills.
"But there are consistencies, such as the existence of a runic system, and its application in permanent enchantment... and our power source was a crystal that shared many of lyrium's apparent properties."
It's tentative, the way he begins to unfold—merely a decrease in the depth of creasing between his eyebrows, a faint relaxation about the shoulders—but even if he tries, there's no concealing the gleam in his yellow eye.