player plot | when my time comes around, pt. 5
WHO: Everyone!
WHAT: Everything's fine and we're going to have feelings about it.
WHEN: August 15 9:49
WHERE: Primarily the Gallows! But potentially anywhere.
NOTES: We made it! You are all free of my tyrannical plot grasp! There is a final OOC post with some notes + space for plotting here.
WHAT: Everything's fine and we're going to have feelings about it.
WHEN: August 15 9:49
WHERE: Primarily the Gallows! But potentially anywhere.
NOTES: We made it! You are all free of my tyrannical plot grasp! There is a final OOC post with some notes + space for plotting here.
This is a timeline where, some mild chaos aside, things for the last month have carried on as normal. Riftwatch hasn't lost anyone at all. There were no funerals. The work continued. The late afternoon of August 15 may find people at their desks, in the midst of meetings or debriefs, in the library, in the sparring yard. Or maybe afield, seeing to errands or meetings or missions somewhere else in Thedas. Maybe, if they are particularly unlucky, they are deep in conversation with an ally or embroiled in combat with an enemy agent at the precise moment when the magical connection between two realities closes and the diverging timelines snap together into one existence.
At that moment, everyone forgets what it is they were just doing. Instead they remember what they might have been doing in the world where a third of Riftwatch's number was lost, despite their hands suddenly occupied with the normal business of handling pens or swords or books they don't recall picking up.
For the always-living, it may feel as though they have been magically transported somewhere new mid-thought. For the dead—the formerly dead, the might-have-been dead—it will feel as though they have just woken up. Perhaps they'll have a vague sense of a dream they now can't recall, in between their last conscious moment amid the blood and screams in Granitefell and awakening just now in a quieter world, or perhaps they'll have a sense of nothing at all.
For a few hours, the worse world will be the only one anyone can remember. Over time, memories of the other world—the only one that really exists now—will filter in, competitive with other memories in a way that might require everyone to double or triple check whether they wrote a letter or completed a mission in that timeline or this one. But the memories of death and dying will never fade into anything less real.
At that moment, everyone forgets what it is they were just doing. Instead they remember what they might have been doing in the world where a third of Riftwatch's number was lost, despite their hands suddenly occupied with the normal business of handling pens or swords or books they don't recall picking up.
For the always-living, it may feel as though they have been magically transported somewhere new mid-thought. For the dead—the formerly dead, the might-have-been dead—it will feel as though they have just woken up. Perhaps they'll have a vague sense of a dream they now can't recall, in between their last conscious moment amid the blood and screams in Granitefell and awakening just now in a quieter world, or perhaps they'll have a sense of nothing at all.
For a few hours, the worse world will be the only one anyone can remember. Over time, memories of the other world—the only one that really exists now—will filter in, competitive with other memories in a way that might require everyone to double or triple check whether they wrote a letter or completed a mission in that timeline or this one. But the memories of death and dying will never fade into anything less real.

no subject
Pianoforte. Right.
“I've heard about time travel before this,” she says, “something about my aunt, some other things. But I don't know what that was like. I don't remember anything except Granitefell, yet.”
no subject
It must have worked. Because a moment ago, surely, he was still wrenching that portal open and waiting for their return — and it feels like he hasn’t slept in weeks, because actually, he hasn’t really. His consciousness is running on fumes even if this body isn’t.
But he only has one friend with a house in Hightown and a pianoforte. Looking around the room, he could put two-and-two together, mostly, about where they are. Stephen has been to Hightown and he’s been to Val Royeaux; he recognises the style this maison is imitating.
“The last I knew, though, I was in the basement of the Gallows. This is your house, yes?”
no subject
A certain preference for precision can net a lot more information in conversation from her than is really necessary; she could have just said yes, or even, yes, approximately, or yes, sort of, and any of those answers would have been perfectly sufficient. It's not as if he doesn't know about the boat.
Still.
“We were going to play the pianoforte. I remember that, I mean not...today, I remember that conversation we had, before you went to Orlais.”
no subject
They finally got around to it, after Orlais?
A mad thought occurs to him, flint striking on steel. Stephen starts patting down his pockets with the absentminded and slightly frazzled look of a man who forgot his wallet somewhere, but then he reaches into a trouser pocket and finally finds what he’s looking for. Pulls out a small chapbook bound in twine. There’s a splotch of blood-red wine on the cover, which he sweeps off and wipes clean on his clothes; it’s slightly stained, but thankfully isn’t soaked. An odd sense of relief grips him and he clutches it a little too hard, fingers digging into the soft paper, before he crosses to stand in front of Gwenaëlle’s chaise. Clears his throat.
“I promised you this. Kind of had to break reality to get it to you, but here you go,” and with that small smile still tugging at the corner of his mouth, a little sheepish and a little pleased, he holds out the book. The latest publication from one of her favourite Orlesian poets.
no subject
her fingers close around the book. She teeters for a moment on the brink of tears or hysterical laughter, and looks down at it, instead, says,
“I didn't take you for quite that passionate a devotee to the arts,” instead of giving way to either impulse. “But Orlais wouldn't consider it excessive, only unlikely.”
She is all at sea, and not even on her boat.
“Merci,” when she trusts herself to look up, and she's still clutching the chapbook a little too tightly when she pivots both because she needs the information and because she needs to pivot. “Florent Vascarelle— he was alive this whole time?”
no subject
“He’s—” fine is likely the wrong word, he can’t attest to that, “alive and will probably be very glad to hear from you. I didn’t spy any naked elf dance parties through the window while you were away.”
These pivots are a little safer, and easier than examining the half-formed nascent impulse which had put that book on his desk; it was the same stubborn determination which once had him wearing a broken wristwatch for years. A reminder of what needed fixing.