Entry tags:
there cannot be any sign of LIVING in this house!
WHO: Mother Pleasance
WHAT: Company is here.
WHEN: Drakonis
WHERE: The Gallows
NOTES: The fabled Mother Pleasance has arrived and is roaming the Gallows, as announced (warned, announced, very similar). This log is a container for threads requested on the OOC post. If you want Mother Pleasance to drop in on a thread already in progress elsewhere, holler at me here. Remember, she's out and about in the Gallows so CONSTANT VIGILENCE.
WHAT: Company is here.
WHEN: Drakonis
WHERE: The Gallows
NOTES: The fabled Mother Pleasance has arrived and is roaming the Gallows, as announced (warned, announced, very similar). This log is a container for threads requested on the OOC post. If you want Mother Pleasance to drop in on a thread already in progress elsewhere, holler at me here. Remember, she's out and about in the Gallows so CONSTANT VIGILENCE.


daily routine.
Mother Pleasance is chilly company. She is clearly given to humble, spartan tastes and eschews any offerings that strike her as too lavish. It is very easy to clock her as pious and rigid in her beliefs, with very little wiggle room as to what is and isn't in line with Andraste's teaching and the will of the Maker. While she strikes a somewhat imposing figure on first impression, she does seem genuinely curious as to the workings of Riftwatch and engaged in hearing the things they share with her.
Rising at dawn, she spends two hours in the Gallows Chantry, praying. Company is always welcomed, though they will be obligated to walk with her to the Gallows dining hall and engage in conversation while doing so.
Outside of meals, she occupies herself with exploring the Gallows and initiating conversation with anyone she meets. While she won't stray anywhere that gives the impression of being explicitly off-limits, she will inquire as to any areas that seem confidential. She seems intent on examining every inch of the Gallows, and familiarizing herself with these spaces by proxy if she can't physically look herself.
She ends her evenings with another hour in the Chantry, and then quiet reading in her room with a pot of tea. Lights out at a reasonable hour, door locked once she's ready to turn out the lamp.
Wash, rinse, repeat.
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The kitchen has always been one of the basic building blocks of pack life, and it's comforting to have something he loves so well translate across worlds.
Plus, kneading bread is a type of therapy all on its own.
So Jude, deputized impromptu commander of the Forces division, when asked what his daily routine entails, has invited Mother Pleasance along. Provided she takes him up on it early in the morning before her prayers, it will be before sunrise. If she declines, he'll find a time later in the day. Either way, when she enters the kitchens, Jude is just finishing up mixing up a batch of bread dough.
"Might be a silly question," Jude warns her, as he tips out the wet dough onto a floured board between them, then divides it with a blade, passing the Chantry Mother one half of it.
"But have you done this before?"
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And yes, this is her duty. Making bread alongside a man with green glinting from his palm.
Well, for a given definition of a man. A Fade-made being, resembling a man.
"There are no silly questions," she counters, dusting her floury palms. Moments ago, she had tied a borrowed apron over her robes in brisk, economical movements. "I was not always a revered Mother."
The movements do come to her, slow but sure.
"Is this how you spend your mornings here?"
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"Some people feel more comfortable forgetting whatever they were. Never saw the use in that myself."
Clear approval.
Jude moves easily, but lets himself warm up naturally, not straining himself by trying for speed. Instead he lets himself lean into the kneading, using his upper body.
"Yup," he says back, a concise nod. "A good start for my muscles, nice little bit of relaxation for my brain. Like a personal ritual."
He nods to her.
"Wouldn't compare it to praying. But meditation, maybe."
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Is there some space for prayer in this work? For Mother Pleasance, there certainly is. And yes, the meditative quality of the work lends itself well to the concept. Were she working alone, she may find some connectivity here.
But she is not alone, and her work is never far from her mind.
"What would you compare to prayer, as you know it? Or have found it, since you manifested here?"
The Gallows Chantry is clean, tidy and pleasantly arranged. It is clear that it has been maintained. (Or prepared for her arrival. She is not blind to that prospect.) But she wonders how many of these Rifters find their way to it. Who here has shown them the way to it?
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Gela provides the tea. She actually went and borrowed a lovely set, and carries it on a tray out to meet her guest. Under strict instruction, she is wearing her nicest clothes (not a patch in sight, you're welcome), and her warmest smile.
"Afternoon," she calls, spying her company on the path. She won't bother forcing her usual, peculiar accent for this: her true voice is fuller, unmistakably Nevarran, her register slightly lower. "That's good timing, isn't it? Was hoping I might run into you here so I could give you a little tour."
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Mother Pleasance is not inclined to turn down the offer. Every time she is guided through the Gallows, she gleans something new about it. And about its people, whether it is the person guiding her or the people they pass on the stairs.
"How very kind of you," is carries some mild approval. Noting the accent, as well as the scars, the absence of shard anywhere on her person. "Shall we have the tea first?"
There are little stone benches, chilly in this weather but suitable for their purposes. For conversation.
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It's normal tea. She got hastily talked out of providing one of her own odd blends for the drinking, and given something 'nicer' to steep instead, some lovely little Satinalia gift somebody hadn't used for themself. The stone benches are roomy enough that she can set the little tray down between them.
The garden is still coming back to life after winter, shaking off the frost. Green shoots are everywhere, reaching for the sun; elfroot is making a good home out of the brick closest to them, winding steadily up and up and up it.
Gela pours the tea without any preamble.
"This is one of my favourite places in the Gallows," is not sucking up. It is true.
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The garden itself is charming. It would be lovely in full bloom, though she is some weeks too early for that. (And loathe to stay longer, though she must resign herself to the possibility her work will keep her here that long whatever she may wish otherwise.)
"Do you maintain it here, as part of your duties?"
The elfroot must have practical use. And later, she must look over the other sprouts, consider what else may be growing in the soil here and how it may supplant Riftwatch's work.
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It's in coming to collect the Mother's used tea things that she offers out, in the mildest of tones, "are you enjoying your visit, Madame?"
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In which interested is the mildest expression of opinion she might have offered as an answer.
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"It's changed much, I expect," she offers politely, setting aside the tray to wipe down the table, now that the Mother has risen from it. "I wouldn't know-- I never saw it before Riftwatch."
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"How long have you spent in service to those housed here?" is the more relevant question.
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And yet here Wysteria is, glumly leading Mother Pleasance through a long explanation of the most dull fraction of Research's work. Having already touted the genius of her bicycle, she had turned at last to unrolling various schematics for the ARRIVED system out of the work room's largest table so as to bore the woman with great host of fiddly details regarding the purpose and near constant maintenance of the networked devices.
"It is all very simple once you get right down to it. We've identified the hallmarks or warning signs, so to speak, which herald—if you'll excuse the pun; it was entirely unintentional, I assure you—the opening of a rift in an area likely to, er, enhance the possibility of a Rifter's appearance. Then it's only a matter of flagging those signs when they appear, and dashing off quickly enough to rescue whomever may have fallen through. We shouldn't want any Rifter to be killed or to fall into the wrong hands, of course. —And all of this to say nothing of Riftwatch's ordinary rift monitoring, naturally."
Naturally. The little white dog sitting under the edge of Wysteria's skirts barks for apparent emphasis.
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But lo, a point where one might get a word in edgewise.
"And the Provost works closely with you on the development of all projects, or simply this...arrival system?"
Note the lack of capitals.
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"The Provost is generally understanding of the various fields of expertise to be found within his division. Given how he is a Rifter,"—is not so much a purposeful attempt to mislead but a forgetful one; without her left arm and the anchor embedded into the palm of her hand, what of Madame de Foncé is left to indicate that she's the same?—"There are limits to his knowledge here, for example. To say nothing of the fact that most Rifters purport to come from all sorts of different places, and so even that doesn't afford as much technical overlap as one might wish for if one was very particular about being overly strict about knowing everything, everywhere, at all times. But yes, he does invite and review the work."
With a great flap of parchment, Wysteria flips the schematic page over to its backside where they may observe a more detailed series of drawings of the alarm's casement box and its complicated guts. "If we'd still had one of the boxes here, we might look at it in person. That would be easier, I think. But we do most repairs in the field at present."
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"Do he review all your work? Even the," a pause, for the very unfamiliar naming of: "Bicycle?"
A question swiftly followed by, "I assume he expects some manner of explanation for those projects which draw on knowledge beyond his experience?"
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His smile when he joins her for the walk back to the dining hall is easy and charming.
"How are you finding it here, Mother? Any surprises yet?"
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Mother Pleasance is inscrutable, even only a few hours past dawn. She has tucked her hands into the wide sleeves of her robe, warding against the chill in the air.
"What did you take from the day's service?" she asks, direct in her prompting.
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"That although Andraste's crusade was literally against Tevinter, in a truer way it was against corruption of all sorts. That in times of war, it is easy to accept evil in the name of expedience, and to do wrong and think it is just. But the most important battle is against ourselves, and the cruelties and wickedness we might be tempted to."
It's a sincere answer. Both inasmuch as it sounds plausible, and inasmuch as it is truly what he took away from it.
"You?"
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Yes, it is a war. Yes, certain measures must be taken.
And yet, errors may be made. Is there a reason for such meditations to be close to hand?
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Perhaps it’s not that astonishing, though. He’s grown over the past couple years, has slowly managed to temper some of that habitual arrogance, and he talks enough to distract — and so he can, hopefully, deflect with enough benign rifter nonsense to keep her occupied. He’s been briefed by Tony. He likes to think he’s ready enough to handle one older woman.
But he’s not expecting the exact minute of her arrival at the Research offices, and he almost quite literally collides with her as he’s on his way out, bodily walking into each other with a spill of books. “Oh, damn,” he’s muttering, ducking down to pick up the texts, before he looks up and notices the robes, the habit,
(nun alert, nun alert)
but his startled expression soon smooths over again. He picks up his fallen books. One of them is, notably, A Study of the Fifth Blight by Sister Petrine, volume two. “My apologies. You must be Mother Pleasance.”
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"There is no need for apology," she assures. "I'll take it as a sign to better announce my coming."
Though it is true, she is unmistakable. There is no one else here in a Chantry Mother's arraignment.
"Have I disrupted your study? These are weighty topics."
The titles have been observed, unsurprisingly.
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By the time he looks up and meets Mother Pleasance’s eye, he’s at least attempted to school his expression into smooth, placid affability. “I’m a rifter,” a glint of green at his palm as he takes the book back, “so I’ve been studying what I can of the local history. I find it wise to understand the place you’re at, after all.”
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A strange thing to conceptualize, regardless. A spirit, devoted to study.
"Have you been among us long enough to form questions, or are you seeking more broad understandings?"
lol sorry he keeps picking yr characters’ brains about this