brennvin: (pic#16945201)
đšđŹđ­đ«đąđ đ«đźđ§đšđŹđđšđ­đ­đžđ§. ([personal profile] brennvin) wrote in [community profile] faderift2024-03-06 11:58 pm

closed | and the past is a bastard.

WHO: Astrid Runasdotten & Gwenaëlle Baudin
WHAT: Sometimes you see Hakkon’s Wrath with your own eyes and just gotta follow up on that.
WHEN: Drakonis
WHERE: Training yard, the Gallows
NOTES: Foul mouths, probably. Memories of animal harm.


Astrid’s settling in. Scouting missions have been carrying her far afield — just the way she likes it — but all roads do eventually lead back to the Gallows, and her restless feet often carry her to the training yard.

Today, though, someone else has beaten her to the archery range. Astrid’s head pops up over one of the low walls like a curious groundhog, watching goggle-eyed as GwenaĂ«lle practices, squinting one-eyed and sending frosty arrows across the field. To get a better view, Astrid eventually winds up perched on the brick wall itself, one leg swinging beneath her as she stares at the other woman’s giant bow, the one of unmistakable Avvar make.

And in any other context her reaction would just be hey that’s sick as hell,

(except she remembers what it looked like during that first fight at the rift, ice crackling in the air. She had picked up one of the arrows out of sheer curiosity and the cold had practically bitten her, fingertips burning with the brief nip of frostbite. If Astrid had questions, they’d died on her tongue shortly after, vanished when she was scoured empty during the battle. That pile of bloody fur lying heavy across her, suffocating dead weight, the people from Riftwatch had had to haul her loose—)

But that was weeks ago. Blinking, Astrid watches GwenaĂ«lle’s scrutinising arc. She waits until the next shot goes clear, before deciding to approach. (Some of the first lessons drummed into her: don’t fucking surprise someone when their arm’s currently holding back all that tension and lethal weight, an arrow ready to leap for your throat if you jolt their aim.)

She finally slides off the wall, boots hitting the ground as she walks closer.

“Hi,” Astrid says, behind the other woman. Let’s just get this over with. “I’m sorry, I don’t really— remember your name? But meant to say thanks. For the other day.”

The other week. Month. Who’s counting.

elegiaque: (109)

[personal profile] elegiaque 2024-03-23 09:29 am (UTC)(link)
GwenaĂ«lle sinks down beside Astrid and Hardie, and she breathes out something like a laugh as she does —

there's something soft around her eyes. Ah. He's been gone years, and still, Asher's legacy, “As he's not here to do it himself, and he wouldn't besides, I'll apologise on Asher's behalf,” she says, “a good half of those were about him. I heard, last I was in a position to hear, that Sibylla wore black for a half year after she heard he'd passed. I wouldn't have even had the heart to tell her to her face she was derivative.”

Though, from her tone, not for lack of thinking so. And probably, given that, it wasn't a secret, anyway.

“Yngvi,” or big Yngvi to people who only know her cat, which is funny because he's a dwarf, “would read them around the campfire, he told me. For critique.”
elegiaque: (160)

[personal profile] elegiaque 2024-03-31 05:34 am (UTC)(link)
“What a way to achieve it,” she says, with a sigh only slightly exaggerated for comedic effect. Really, truly,

but he had been the most alive person she thinks she'd ever known. Didn't he fucking deserve to be immortal, if he could? Any way that he could? Maker knows — and his Lady of the skies, and her better probably — he'd get a kick out of leaving behind a legacy of furious masturbating across southern Thedas. Slankets made from bearskins and stories of his sexual prowess and a dog named Hardie because he'd been meant to guard her and who had, til then, done the best job of it?

(Guilfoyle. But that's neither here nor there.)

After a moment, “He had a great deal of faith in the spirits. I saw crows, when I put my hand on the bow, and I still don't know if they were really there or not. I'd lost a great deal of blood. But that worship was so important to him and it is to his sister, and I always thought it made the most sense of anything. I didn't want to be overbearing with you about it, but you know. We don't all assume you're furry sex-perverts. If that helps.”
elegiaque: (108)

[personal profile] elegiaque 2024-04-07 02:51 am (UTC)(link)
Maybe (there's no maybe about it) that's exactly what GwenaĂ«lle finds so appealing about the Avvar approach to worship. It is complicated, existential, it is still a question of faith— but there is a degree, too, of certainty. Spirits exist. Spirits can be encountered, entreated; spirits touch the world in a way that is perceptible, in contrast to the distance of the Maker, who has sort of made not responding to prayers his thing.

She remembers crows, and Hakkon's Wrath is so real it's literally in her hands. Believing in that isn't complicated.

“And so's the string,” she says, thoughtfully, tilting the strange bow, “when it matters.”

Real, in all the ways that matter. She knows the string will be there when she needs it, and it is.

Her lips twitch, a smile: “You find things when you need them, no?” is a gentle way of turning it around on Astrid: maybe Riftwatch is that, right now, when she needs somewhere to land.
elegiaque: (152)

[personal profile] elegiaque 2024-04-07 03:24 am (UTC)(link)
“I don't think much of fate,” she admits. The idea of some great woven destiny, that the Maker or any other god might be pulling strings and placing people— it all seems, at best, profoundly unlikely. The gods of elvhenan are a fucking scam; what else is just bullshit? But: “I do think there's something to your own momentum. To... everything's only done with you if you're done, you know?”

It feels like there's something to that, maybe. Finding things when you need them in part because you are, in some way, seeking them out.

“This is a fucking absurd place full of ridiculous people trying to do impossible things. But that seems like a good place to be, if you need a broader idea of what's possible.”
elegiaque: (124)

[personal profile] elegiaque 2024-04-07 03:55 am (UTC)(link)
Someone else might have a better answer, a more thoughtful one, a more experienced one, an answer that's more reassuring—

GwenaĂ«lle says, “Not so far, but I haven't run out of things need doing, either,” sort of philosophically. “What I found...”

Hm. She studies Hardie, although not as if she thinks he holds the answers; he's just comfortingly familiar, while she works her way through how she wants to say the thing she wants to say. Finally,

“If you do enough, I think it becomes clear what you're doing that matters and what doesn't. And how much is— now and needful. There's no better you without you, now. You know?”

Maybe? Maybe that sounds mad.
elegiaque: (110)

[personal profile] elegiaque 2024-04-07 04:10 am (UTC)(link)
“About the shape of it,” she agrees, ruminative. “I suppose, I don't know where it ends, I'm only certain — if you try something it might fail. If you don't try anything, you've failed right out of the gate. So why not keep moving, then? What's the alternative?”

Stillness. Failure. A life dictated not by your decisions but by the way you are buffeted about by the decisions of others—

“But,” after a hesitation, because this is true too but she likes it less: “you learn nothing from never falling, either. I don't know. I imagine,” more cautiously, “that before that day we met, what happened then,” oblique, but it isn't as if they don't both know where her mind went, “might have been the worst thing you could imagine happening. And you're still here. So you aren't the same person you were, in a way, anyway.”
elegiaque: (099)

[personal profile] elegiaque 2024-04-07 04:54 am (UTC)(link)
“Well, and we didn't have griffons when I came here,” GwenaĂ«lle says, her smile lopsided and lovely, rolling with the lighter-hearted pivot smoothly— maybe not so gracefully as someone else might make it look as if a pivot hadn't even happened, but with enough ease that she'd probably been very purposefully leaving enough space for that heavy thing to be stepped around, if stepping around it suits better.

It warps the space around it, a thing like that. They both know it's there. Isn't this the point? It isn't everything.

“Keep moving and who knows what else we'll have.”