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.

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But over the last couple of years, something else has gotten stronger than the inhibition. Hardy enough to even acknowledge that Benedict matters to By, cares about him, and might be a helpful presence.
He crouches in front of Byerly, then tips forward out of the crouch to kneel with a knee on either side of his. He holds his jaw in both hands.
"Hey," he says. "Tout va bien, By. You're here. We're here. Look at me—" with encouragement from his hands, trying to raise Byerly's head. "You remember everything?"
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"This is - unmanly," chokes Byerly, who sashays everywhere he goes and likes to wear gowns and yet still can't escape from this expectation of himself. Can't help but hate himself for this fear. But it's Bastien and Benedict, and so the shame is muted, more than it would be for others; the implicit apology hardly lingers.
And he looks up, his red-rimmed eyes meeting Bastien's. He clutches desperately at Bastien's wrist. "I remember it. I remember...what it felt to die, and then - and then I was in de Tolly's parlor. I - Did you - Were you all right? Both of you? They didn't - " He swings his head around just far enough to see Benedict, though he can't turn his face far. "They didn't come after you as well, did they? Maker, tell me you both lived."
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"We did," he says quickly, glancing to Bastien and back, "we both lived. We helped bring you back."
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He’ll mention his lost hearing some other time, when it will be romantic or funny. Or just when it won’t be one more thing to add to the overwhelm causing By’s panicky sentence fragments.
“Except for missing you.”
Maybe that’s the point where he would cry, if they were alone. But tending to By with an audience/co-tender is one thing. Crumbling himself would be another. The wall holds.
At a delay, he softens his hold on one side of By’s face. The side nearer to Benedict, specifically, to allow a little more movement to look in his direction. But only a little.
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But, with his eyes closed, he turns his blind face towards Benedict. And he whispers, "Thank you."
But then, immediately afterward: "I can't believe I was so stupid. To not see it coming...I - Did Yseult make it out?" The question seems suddenly vitally urgent. His eyes come open once again, and he looks Bastien full in the face, expression pained. "Did she pass along my message?"
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“She offered to, but I said no. She said I already knew, and I.”
The explanation of what exactly he thought and felt will have to wait, because now he’s glancing at Benedict, buttoning up his feelings and face again for his presence.
“Benedict told me about your letter,” he offers as a redirect, because it is not so private, and because it makes him feel less guilty. “A bit of it.”
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Then he looks back to Bastien. It's strange how guileless he is in his assumptions. The world-weary cynic, for whatever reason, doesn't think that either of these two would have suffered from any sort of base or petty emotions and would work as a team. Perhaps simply because of an underestimation of the effect his death would have, but perhaps it comes out of trust in them.
"Did you take on leadership?" Then, to Benedict, "And Artemaeus - did you manage to find some allyship with Flint? Did you secure a new place?"
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"I'll be certain to hold it over your head the rest of your days," he says with a gentle dryness, growing somewhat more withdrawn when the line of questioning continues. He shakes his head, but then adds: "I barely had the time."
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“I left.”
He’s still kneeling in front of By, hovering over his legs.
“Benedict told me when I was all packed and on my way out,” he has to say, because look at that horrible timing, that inexpert manipulation, but he also offers freely: “I would have left either way.”
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But - Well, perhaps it's a failing of the imagination. Sometimes it's hard to imagine a person - even a beloved person whose face you've memorized - as being truly different from you. But Bastien's definition of honor is different. It's always been different.
(And he crushes down the rebellious, stray thought that rises to mutter, actually, isn't that dishonorable?)
"I - see," By says. Then he takes a breath and says, "Well, that's all right," because that's better than asking whether the issue was that Benedict took too long to mention it or whether the issue was that Bastien left so soon. "It sounds like you all held it together quite well in spite of our losses. All of Riftwatch - to be able to execute on a plan like this. Stark and Flint and Yseult must have performed their duties phenomenally well."
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He wrinkles his nose in an expression of subtle irritation when Byerly waves it off, but there's no reason to kick up all the mud again right this second. He won't take potshots, he'll be the bigger person. Bastien.
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“Stark, mostly,” Bastien says. “It was his team. His idea.” He sits back on his heels, reluctantly willing to tolerate that extra five inches of distance from Byerly’s face. For now. “And he came to find me. Maybe we should buy him a present.”
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His gaze is turned down to the stone beneath him. He's lost for a moment. What more can he ask? What other information might cut through his confusion? He still half-hopes for a slap from one of them. He feels so...doubled. Like he himself is an actor observing the actions of a character he's playing, yet somehow without the power to break away from the script. It all feels like a dream.
And so he swallows. "I - suppose I ought to get up. Before someone sees me like this." Then - "I - don't know how to thank you. Either of you. For all that you did. I feel as though I'll be indebted beyond all possibility of repayment." (It's easier to fall back on these formulaic niceties, even towards these two. It's safe. Easy and thoughtless in a way that more heartfelt speech wouldn't be.)
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—and, less pettily, a plan that involves being genuinely alone with Byerly for the first time. To kiss him without feeling either rude or observed. To let his own guard down at all.
He’s still watching By’s face, keen-eyed, like maybe he can see past the polite mask if he examines it closely enough.
“Maybe we can find our girl, yeah?”
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“Yes,” he says, and for the second time forces himself to stand. (Maker, please, please, let them see no one on the way to his room. He will have no strength to put a wry and jocular show on. Not that he has to do so to keep secrecy - but he does have to do so.) “Yes, let’s go.”
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"I'll see you in the morning," he says quietly-- it's perhaps too much to expect that anyone properly continue their work today, while all this is unfolding. But he'll be back, bright and early, where he belongs.
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Whiskey might have loped off to a garden in their absence, but more likely she’s in the office, basking in shade—or sniffing around Byerly’s room, obsessed with his fresh scent after a month without it.
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A nod to Benedict. His gaze is grim, but grateful.
He and Bastien walk in silence a moment, crossing the courtyard, approaching the tower. It's only been a few days, in his estimation, since he was here, and yet there are signs indeed that it's been longer. The vegetation is heavy and lush, as it gets in late summer. Overhead, a line of geese fly, perhaps heading north for the winter.
"How long has it been?" he asks. "Since the battle." (Had Bastien said? By can't remember. For a moment, he fears that it has not been a matter of weeks, but of years. Is that conceivable?)
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It’s impersonal. He doesn’t talk about Byerly’s body, or what he did, or who he talked to, or when he left, or what he took, or where he went. The only thing that distinguishes it from a report to a superior on important tactical details is the fact that he’s clutching By’s hand the whole time, even when the stairs and the mismatched lengths of their legs threaten to make it awkward.
He doesn’t let go until they’re near the office doors, and only then because Whiskey—the laziest creature alive, they’ve established—has recognized a scent or the pattern of Byerly’s footfalls and come bounding through the office door with more manic energy than she had even as a puppy, loose skin sloshing around her face, baying once before switching to an overwhelmed whine at the sight of him.
If By is still interested in being slapped, the dog will handle it—with her front paws, with her tail, with her entire body.
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So maybe it's the forced aloofness that leads him to not really expect the sudden assault. Byerly didn't even know that Whiskey could jump - she'd done it a few times as a puppy, to be sure, but once she hit adulthood she'd decided it wasn't really for her. She even often wants him to lift her into bed, huffing and puffing at her weight. And so he's staggered backwards by the force of her -
"Oof - "
And lands with his back against the wall behind him. She can't reach his face to lick, and is clearly deeply outraged by this inability; so he bends down, and she slobbers on his face, and he finds that he's crying and hugging her, and whispering, "I'm sorry" into her neck as she gives little whines of shock and delight. (Though her reaction is not tempered with any anger, or any regret, or really even any sorrow; her joy is pure and unadulterated. So, truly, she's probably not the one he's apologizing to.)
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When he comes back he sinks down beside them. Whiskey tosses one swipe of her tongue in his direction, a yes, hello, love you too before returning to the vital business of trying to be absorbed directly into Byerly’s skin.
It’s a desire he can relate to.
He doesn’t interfere with their reunion. He presses in against By’s side without needing to push her away. Gets an arm around his back without disrupting her. Rubs her back with his other hand out of affection and gratitude.
Byerly has said he’s sorry more than Bastien ever wanted him to, when he wanted him to. He whispers, “Shh,” and then, “I missed you,” which is such a small thing to say. Like By had gone away for a little while. Like his absence was less than total; like he was out there somewhere, cheating at cards and annoying people into donating money in some faraway city, and Bastien knew the whole time he only had to wait.
He should cry, but he doesn’t. It’s easier to talk now that he’s gotten started though, in this unwatched space, with Whiskey still whining even as she begins to settle down and accept leaning her full weight heavy into Byerly as a substitute for writhing with joy—
“I missed you so much I didn’t know how to do it.”
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"I thought about - " Byerly creaks out, fingers buried in Whiskey's wrinkles, compressing and stretching them by turns, "how much I wanted you to join me. And how little I wanted you to. I missed you so much. But I'm so glad you would have survived - Fuck, it's such a mess." He buries his face into the crook of Bastien's neck, arms tightening around his dog.
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He tries.
“Yeah,” he says. A mess.
And he tries to think about what Byerly needs from him. There is nothing in his catalog of human observations for this. What does a person who’s come back from the dead need?
“What did it feel like?” comes tentatively, primed to be retracted at any sign that Byerly would rather not talk about it right now.
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