Entry tags:
or are you emblems of truth?
WHO: Ellis, Ellie, Abby, Vanya, Marcus, Strange
WHAT: Road trip into the Hunterhorns.
WHEN: Cloudreach
WHERE: Hunterhorn Mountains
NOTES: Trying to find a Warden in a mountain range.
WHAT: Road trip into the Hunterhorns.
WHEN: Cloudreach
WHERE: Hunterhorn Mountains
NOTES: Trying to find a Warden in a mountain range.
THE JOURNEY
Seeking a camp in the Hunterhorns is—THE CAMP
Difficult. To say the least.
In the eyrie, in the midst of saddling the griffins and strapping supply-laden saddlebags into place, Ellis had unfurled the map and spanned the likely places a hidden contingent might be found. It had not looked like such a formidable stretch of mountain range to search, bracketed by Ellis' thumbs.
In practice, it is weaving through high peaks, bundled against cold. It is alternating between dipping low to examine traces that may be tracks or signs of a past camp, and soaring high to avoid less than hospitable wildlife or weave through jagged peaks. It is painstaking work, seeking a trail within even this narrow strip of range.
Each night, they must descend. Find a ledge upon which the griffons can land without scrabbling for purchase and nearly toppling. Hope for a cave that might house them, or a flat ridge upon which the griffons can roost while they sleep in the saddle.
And in the morning, they must do it all over again.
But eventually, the search ends.
Not in retreat, but in a small camp, cleverly hidden. We'd rather not be spotted by air, their leader says, a self-possessed, serious woman who introduces herself as Mila. She studies each of them intently, lingers on the griffon embossed on Ellis' breastplate.
Yes, they are permitted to stay. And to talk, mingle among the dozen or so Wardens within this camp. Ellis vanishes, first into a tent with Mila, and then later, when campfires are lit and a cask of wine is cracked open in a kind of welcome, into a second tent with a tall, dark-haired man, for a time.
The Wardens around the fire are pleasant enough. They answer questions. They speak frankly, if carefully. Some defer to Mila. Some prefer to speak in tandem with a partner. Some sigh through their recitation. But most speak of the same things when explaining what drove them away from their fellows in Weisshaupt—Questions that piled up and up, with few answers. Some speak of Adamant and the binding of mage Wardens to demons, and how many of those mages died of it. Or how many of those mages disappeared into Tevinter to be treated and never returned. Some object to the use of darkspawn and demons by Corypheus' army, murmur darkly about the rumor that Corypheus is a darkspawn himself. Some worry after red lyrium, and the new strain of darkspawn that have been reported as fused with the substance. Many speak of their distrust of Tevinter.What have they been doing? This is a topic the Wardens speak more freely about.
One, Reynald, speaks of something wholly new, absent from Riftwatch's records until now: he was tasked once with guarding a portion of the Deep Roads along with an entire contingent of Tevene Wardens. Venatori mages came and went, he explains. He saw nothing of what took place, but he heard darkspawn, and the jangle of chains, and red lyrium had been maneuvered out past the Wardens in near-overflowing carts.Setting up a pipeline, they explain. A pipeline to help Wardens, and any others who oppose the Tevinter regime or draw the ire of the new authorities in the Anderfels escape, and join them in the mountains.We aren't leaving, Mila will inform them the next morning. But now you know where we are.
They're trying to spread word, they say. They want it to be known that the Wardens are heading in the wrong direction, following bad ideas into worse outcomes. But this is not going so smoothly, because they are still Wardens, and they are occupied with protecting local villages from increased darkspawn activity in the western Anderfels. They have contacts in Hossberg, and in Weisshaupt, and in other towns and cities, and they travel when they can to grow their network and spread word, but they are only a small company, and all this takes time. Sometimes they do not have any time at all.
A send-off, of a kind: Mila's decisive answer to an unasked question and the implication of parting on friendly terms before shooing them onto griffon-back and out of their camp.

no subject
He wants to make a Nightmare on Elm Street reference; thankfully resists the temptation. There’s something to be said for seizing that faux lightness and batting the same kind of flippant humour back, but that quiet cast to Ellie’s voice deserves a bit more solemnity.
Just a little.
“Was any part of it good, being back there?” he finds himself asking, instead of deploying inaccessible pop culture reference #1282. “Homesick is probably an unusual description for a place like that, but…”
But surely it was still some kind of home. With Joel, with her girlfriend, on that ranch.
no subject
The next question deserves consideration, and Ellie quiets to give it that, letting everything rest in the back of her throat.
"I'm homesick," she says, haltingly, "but it's- for a time. Not a place. There's no going back."
Seattle wasn't it. And the last time she was at the farm, it wasn't it, either. Jackson would be crowded with ghosts. The mountains and woods with echoing emptiness. And Boston's good memories were buried in a shallow grave.
"Even with as fucked up as this place can get, I'd rather be in Thedas."
poss closed or yours to wrap?
There’s some kind of slow-brewing realisation buried under the topsoil, shifting beneath his feet. Ellie’s been building a new life for herself here, and yet he can’t stop looking backward; this is a man who once burned up his entire life and all his resources to get back to what he had before. Now that he can’t do that any longer…
He looks at the griffons near them, where they’re shaking out their feathers and tucking their heads beneath their wings for warmth, settling in to roost.
“We make the best of it, I think.”