Entry tags:
player plot | when my time comes around, pt. 3
WHO: Anyone who's not dead!
WHAT: Various & sundry steps on the path toward time travel, including a dragon hunt and other fetch quests.
WHEN: August 9:49
WHERE: Miscellaneous
NOTES: This is part of this player plot. We have two (2) plot logs still coming up—one for time travel, one for reunions—but this is the last log the dead characters are banned from. Time travel will go up soon!
WHAT: Various & sundry steps on the path toward time travel, including a dragon hunt and other fetch quests.
WHEN: August 9:49
WHERE: Miscellaneous
NOTES: This is part of this player plot. We have two (2) plot logs still coming up—one for time travel, one for reunions—but this is the last log the dead characters are banned from. Time travel will go up soon!
Following Tony Stark's announcement and its glimmer of slightly insane-sounding hope, there's work to be done. The magic/science, of course; anyone with the ability to help construct a dragon-blood-powered time machine may be enlisted into that effort.
For everyone else, there are fetch quests: everyone collect three Stormheart and five Volcanic Aurum. Swiftly negotiating for raw materials or for jewelry or weapons that can be melted down—or stealing them, because whatever, there will only be consequences if this doesn't work—requires venturing out of Kirkwall to track down miners, merchants, and collectors. And then there's the dragon blood.
In the meantime, keeping things afloat and planning contingencies remains necessary. For now, this remains only something that might work. If it doesn't, this is still the world and the war they're stuck with, so keeping it from getting worse in any avoidable way would be ideal.
For everyone else, there are fetch quests: everyone collect three Stormheart and five Volcanic Aurum. Swiftly negotiating for raw materials or for jewelry or weapons that can be melted down—or stealing them, because whatever, there will only be consequences if this doesn't work—requires venturing out of Kirkwall to track down miners, merchants, and collectors. And then there's the dragon blood.
In the meantime, keeping things afloat and planning contingencies remains necessary. For now, this remains only something that might work. If it doesn't, this is still the world and the war they're stuck with, so keeping it from getting worse in any avoidable way would be ideal.

no subject
Instead, he says, "Pretty good," to get it out of the way, and then, "Holding up. We have a plan. You wanna hear it?"
A crack of a smile, as if anticipating the non and prepared to bulldoze over it in three, two—
no subject
Also silently, but less subtle, is the shrug. He reaches for what little is left of the watery ale he's been drinking with his stew and drains most of it with a swig.
"Sure," is weary, because he is not expecting what Tony is about to say. He's expecting something like: We're regrouping. We're getting revenge. We're going underground. We're taking the war to Corypheus. "But you are competing with the ghost of Lady Ashelineau's horrible vengeance on her mother-in-law," he adds, with a tap on his closed book for clarity, "so don't be boring."
no subject
"What's your deal?" is not as irreverent sounding as it might have been, a flash of that irritation in the sharp pivot. The rest is, likewise, not as harsh in delivery as the words might imply. "We lose sixteen people and you decide what's one more? We need all the help we can get right about now."
no subject
But he’s had some time. So he’s a touch abashed, more than dismissive, when he says, “I know,” before circling back to the first question with, “I don’t know.”
Extrospection is more his thing. But he makes an ineffectual stab at it.
“He was the only person who ever had any patience for me when I didn’t have my shit together. Which sounds pointed, right now, probably,” with Tony annoyed across the table, “but I don’t mean—we’re not that kind of friend. You’re exempt.” Although, “I tried to go see my parents,” borders on a that-kind-of-friend thing to tell a fellow, at least in the broader context of generally pretending to have sprung fully-formed from the forehead of Val Royeaux. “And I don’t know why. I don’t know what I thought would—“
Ineffectual, as promised. So he stops there, mid-predictable sentence, and gathers his shit back into a pile. As a gesture of goodwill he scoots the book a few inches further away.
“D’accord. Desolé. I will not be an asshole about your plan.”
no subject
It lowers some hackles enough for plan imparting, maybe, with the sigh-like exhale that follows, which is delayed when a server comes by with the bottle of ale he'd ordered, the cup that goes with it. Drums his fingers on the table edge before picking up the bottle by the neck, and pouring his helping.
"Holding you to that," he says. "Because it's gonna sound nuts."
Beer poured, bottle set aside, he takes up the cup. "We're gonna alter the timeline so that it never happened. Granitefell, everyone that died, all of it. With me?"
no subject
Where his hand rests on the table, a few inches from the book he has pushed out of reach, his fingernail taps the table twice.
"In theory," he says, finally, and counterbalances the wariness with wan smile. "And it is not boring, so that is."
The extent of his capacity to make a joke of it.
"How sure are you? One to ten. I will take a one," he clarifies, "if I can help. But for the sake of moderating expectations."
no subject
and there's a moment of processing his own answer, trying to confine the abstract into a mathematical measure of certainty, Tony's gaze flicking up over Bastien's head as the bottom lids of his eyes raise a little in thoughtful squint, and it's not purely a bit so much as a reflective way of being, and Bastien should at least understand that much,
"solid nine point six."
Which likely doesn't sound very moderate when a one is permissible, but also maybe that's still a huge margin of error. Maybe it should be ten or nothing when you're asking people to believe in something insane. Tony takes a sip from his cup, clarifies, "We're pending a few more proofs of concept," before setting the cup back down. "And stuff goes wrong, sure, that's life, maybe it won't work. But looking at the variables under our control, I'm sure.
"And it won't even matter if you were here or on whatever boat you were looking to catch out of town, but I think you should be a part of it. Plus, some of the margin is devoted to whether or not we can build a good enough team to get us the stuff we need."