Entry tags:
- ! open,
- ! player plot,
- bastien,
- benedict quintus artemaeus,
- derrica,
- ellie,
- fifi mariette,
- florent vascarelle,
- gela,
- james flint,
- julius,
- loxley,
- matthias,
- mobius,
- petrana de cedoux,
- redvers keen,
- stephen strange,
- tsenka abendroth,
- vanya orlov,
- viktor,
- wysteria de foncé,
- yseult,
- { peter parker },
- { tony stark }
player plot | when my time comes around, pt 2
WHO: Anyone who didn't die here.
WHAT: A sad week.
WHEN: Approx Solas 21-30
WHERE: Granitefell, the Gallows, wherever else you want.
NOTES: A second log for this plot. Additional posts/logs will cover the time travel/fix-it components—this one is for the time period where no one knows that's a possibility.
WHAT: A sad week.
WHEN: Approx Solas 21-30
WHERE: Granitefell, the Gallows, wherever else you want.
NOTES: A second log for this plot. Additional posts/logs will cover the time travel/fix-it components—this one is for the time period where no one knows that's a possibility.
Those who fly out to Granitefell arrive a few hours after dawn to find a smoldering gravesite and fewer than twenty living souls, Riftwatch's five included. The survivors have done what they can in the intervening hours, but there's still work to be done to tend to wounds, move the bodies—especially the delicate ones—and help the remaining villagers, mostly children, build pyres to see to their own dead before they're relocated somewhere safer. Somewhere with roofs that aren't collapsed or still lightly burning.
Carts to carry Riftwatch's dead won't arrive for some time afterward, and bringing them back takes just as long. It's a few days before they're returned to the Gallows, preserved from decay as best everyone could manage but nonetheless in poor shape from the battle. Pyres are an Andrastian tradition for a reason—to prevent possession—but burials and mummification aren't so unheard of that anyone will be barred from seeing to their loved ones as they see fit.
Before, during, and after any funerary rites, there are absences. Empty beds, empty offices, voices missing from the crystals, pancakes missing from Sundays. Belongings that need to be sorted and letters that need to be written. And, perhaps most pressingly, work that still needs to be done, including the work left behind by those who can no longer follow through on their own projects or tie up their own loose ends, as the world and its war keep moving steadily onward as if nothing happened at all.
Carts to carry Riftwatch's dead won't arrive for some time afterward, and bringing them back takes just as long. It's a few days before they're returned to the Gallows, preserved from decay as best everyone could manage but nonetheless in poor shape from the battle. Pyres are an Andrastian tradition for a reason—to prevent possession—but burials and mummification aren't so unheard of that anyone will be barred from seeing to their loved ones as they see fit.
Before, during, and after any funerary rites, there are absences. Empty beds, empty offices, voices missing from the crystals, pancakes missing from Sundays. Belongings that need to be sorted and letters that need to be written. And, perhaps most pressingly, work that still needs to be done, including the work left behind by those who can no longer follow through on their own projects or tie up their own loose ends, as the world and its war keep moving steadily onward as if nothing happened at all.

no subject
It can be ignored. Derrica's eyes are wet but her voice is steady.
"Please let me help."
Perhaps with the management of the office behind them, or the dog at their feet.
It is a transgression to offer more, Derrica thinks. To say I'm so sorry when it will find no purchase between them and do little to ease Petrana's grief besides.
But it feels a transgression as well, to let her go.
no subject
It strikes her, at a distance, that she has no mourning clothes. Perhaps somewhere in all of Marcus's frippery, he was so prepared.
“I can think of no good it would do either of us,” she says, finally.
no subject
There is so little she can offer. Even this, an extra set of hands, is near useless. Petrana is capable. She is more self-possessed than Derrica, who felt herself crack upon this demonstration of Marcus' trust in her.
"I know there is nothing I can do to ease this for you, not truly. But if there is some small way I can help you in the coming weeks, I would like to."
no subject
“Thank you, Derrica. That's most kind.”
Her jaw feels as if it's going to break from being clenched so tightly against herself.
no subject
They are very different, Derrica considers. She has never thought of it in exactly these terms before, all the ways their lives have forged them into vastly dissimilar shapes.
Maybe it is an unkindness she is doing, anchoring Petrana here with her.
"I sat with him there," she says, abrupt. "He wasn't alone while the preparations to bring them home were made."
Is she speaking of Julius or Marcus? It is hard to distinguish. Derrica isn't separating them as she offers this sliver of a recounting.
"We never have to speak of it. To talk about it is..."
The words don't come to her, won't take shape. She is thinking of Ellie, aware suddenly of similarity where she might have previously found none.
"But you don't have to sit with it alone. Is all I mean."
A little like a parting, implied in these words. Petrana may excuse herself. Derrica will stand here and try to drum up the strength to open that door. They needn't speak any further, now that the offer has been made.
no subject
She cannot come unraveled, else they take that from her, too.
“I understand,” she says, half-turning, to acknowledge her. To make eye contact, for all that her face remains as a porcelain doll. “And I will remember the preferred shape of your kindnesses, and when there is a future time that you need them, I will be glad to do it. It will be no burden to me.”
There will always come more sorrows. If her life has taught her anything, it has taught her that.
“But I must tell you honestly,” as she feels much less need to tell most others, “that if I am to bear this, now, then I cannot also bear you. I'm sorry for that.”
She means it for a kindness, that Derrica not feel she has failed, that she not wish to dash herself on an unassailable cliff-face, that she not think there was another way to offer that might have been welcome.
bow?
"Don't be sorry."
This, of all that's passed between them in this hallway, is such a clear expression of need. Of a thing Petrana needs, and what she cannot tolerate. Derrica catches hold of it with both hands. Steps back, towards the observant dog, the door behind him.
"Please, don't let me hold you here."
If Derrica seeks her company again, perhaps she will come bearing a task. Something detached from every part of this, as much as the business of Riftwatch can ever be in the coming days, or months.