Entry tags:
closed.
WHO: Bastien + Byerly & Gwenaëlle; Redvers + Barrow
WHAT: Working hard or hardly working
WHEN: Winter/Spring 9:50
WHERE: Various
NOTES: Catch-all for a war table mission + some jobs. Eternally available to plan additional things! Just hit me up.
WHAT: Working hard or hardly working
WHEN: Winter/Spring 9:50
WHERE: Various
NOTES: Catch-all for a war table mission + some jobs. Eternally available to plan additional things! Just hit me up.

CONTENTS
I. Byerly & Bastien deal with an Antivan problem (and take a detour).
II. Gwenaëlle & Bastien escort a Chantry Mother.
III. Barrow & Redvers fetch jellied pigs feet.

no subject
Long time? seems much less loaded than reviews of his family tree or icy inquiries about what had brought him to this part of the world. Particularly since he can even give a rather satisfactory answer.
"We've been friends for nearly two decades. Off and on. Oof, all right, I'm not that strong - " He'd been doing his level best to hold his arm out horizontal to provide the child in question (he will be damned to death if he can remember a single child's name except for Laith) a branch to dangle from, but he can't keep it up long. The wriggling grub who'd been holding on drops to the ground, then demands to sit atop his shoulder.
Byerly quirks an eyebrow at Anis, unsure if Papa will be accepting of the prospect of the grub cracking its head open. Papa nods, and so Byerly hoists the child to sit atop his shoulders. There's much exclamation of delight, and soon several other little bugs are demanding their turns.
"Those two were close?" By manages to ask Anis in between all the hooting and hollering, nodding over at Bastien and Amani.
no subject
"If he was close to any of us," agreement and not. A touch of cynicism from a little brother not little enough for the youngests' hero worship, trapped by illness and temperament while his brother came and went (but mostly went).
Amani chief among them. She doesn't reach for him now, stopping several feet in front of him. Fists clenched at her side. A family trait, this lack of inclination to fall crying into anyone's arms, even when they're back from the dead. But she isn't a bard. There's something on her face. Heartbreak, relief, outrage.
"I looked for you," is still not shouted, but sharp enough to carry. "I looked for you, I looked—"
"I know," Bastien says. He knew. He dodged and ducked and didn't go home. And so he owes it to her to be the one to close the distance, touching her shoulder as a checkpoint for discomfort before he hugs her to his shoulder. "I'm sorry, Nani."
No tears from either of them, but she clutches him back.
She says, "You sound so stupid and I can't believe you're still using that stupid fucking name—"
On Byerly's shoulders, the grub—Luja—whispers, "Stupid fucking name," with delight that makes it very obvious she will have found fifteen things to call stupid fucking by this time tomorrow.
Anis shakes his head, dislodging some snow beads, and gestures at the array of boys surrounding Bastien and Amani to stop standing there rubbernecking. Only his son obeys.
"Our mother thinks he must want something," Anis says while Laith the Younger trots back over. Maybe it's a bit of an apology for the woman's absence, the fact that he didn't send anyone to get her like he did Amina. But it's a little cynicism, too—a little not being entirely unwilling to rule out that this is a prelude to some request, even if it clearly can't be one for money. He's glancing sideways to check Byerly's face.
no subject
“Well,” says Byerly, “advance notice that she’s about to take the whole family out of the city is obviously off the table. So that can’t be what he’s after, eh?”
He realizes that his temper has gotten the better of him, and takes a moment to be surprised by it. Not very like him, to snap instead of lying in wait for a moment to take revenge. He hopes to the Maker that he didn’t seem defensive, and that Anis hasn’t decided based on his snarling that Bastien has evil intent.
Then he takes a few steps forward, bouncing little Luja on his shoulders. “Hey-ho,” he says, and then does a convincing horselike nicker, which delights the girl. She grabs onto his hair like it’s a bridle and starts steering him around. He obliges, trotting along, until he’s been steered towards the pair of Bastien and Amani.
“Don’t mind me,” he reports to the two of them. He sounds cheerful and lighthearted. “I’m just a horsey.” (Bastien will, of course, understand perfectly that Byerly is checking to make sure he’s all right.)
hi I'm back to demand continued indulgence
"That's a gallant thoroughbred if I've ever seen one. You better treat him with respect."
Bastien was smiling before this, but it makes him smile wider, and it makes Luja give Byerly's hair a chastened pat. Aside from some wiggling and one attempt to kick him into resuming his gallop, she's relatively patient through a full minute and a half of adult conversation, as Bastien introduces Amani and Byerly, and then Amani introduces Ahsan, who looks as bemused by the arrival of this mythical older brother as Bastien feels by the existence of this surprise little one.
"We should," Amani says—
And pauses to pry Luja off Byerly's shoulders while the girl makes a disappointed whining sound.
"We should get it over with now. Better than seeing her on your way out and ending on a low note."
Her is his mother, Bastien understands. He understands too that Amani, beyond assuming Bastien would want to see her, wants their mother to see Bastien—that she has a point to prove in their apparently ongoing fight about him.
And if he doesn't want to see his mother, exactly, and would probably be perfectly content to leave Kaiten again without having spoken to her, he's also not afraid of her. So why not let Amani make his point.
"Alright," he agrees, and Amani turns her attention to persuading Luja and Nadim and Ahsan to all go help with dinner, while Bastien turns to Byerly. He could say Byerly doesn't have to come. But Byerly will come anyway. Bastien may as well admit to wanting him to. So he admits it silently, by taking hold of Byerly's elbow to make sure he can't join the little parade of children and teenagers who have been successfully persuaded to go make themselves useful by the promise of cobbler and/or the threat of having to deal with their grandmother.
The walk is long. But with the children out of hearing distance, Bastien is able to explain himself a little better. Realizing they'd gone for real. Being taken in by bards. Riftwatch, once he couldn't ignore the war any longer. Amani hasn't left Kaiten since they arrived here, busy raising siblings and a son and caring for their declining father and running a shop, but she takes this in stride. The two absent siblings have given her practice accepting adventure stories without too much amazement.
She leans forward as she walks to look around Bastien and up at Byerly.
"You aren't from Kirkwall though," she says.
I'm delighted
Don't change. That chastisement lingers in Byerly's ears. It likely wouldn't be enough to draw honesty out of him, though, if it weren't for Amani's manner. But Amani is so calm in the face of stories of Bards and warfare and all the madness that had been Bastien's life; if that story didn't shake her, why would Byerly's?
"We met when we were young, Ba- Laith and I. Then parted for a while, and met again in Riftwatch. I'm in service to Queen Anora as an intelligence agent - a spy - but - well - " He smiles wryly over at Bastien and offers a shrug. "There is a greater good, beyond our own agendas and our own national loyalties. It's what we fight for."
Perhaps there is a bit of an agenda in saying that. Perhaps he's building a bit of a wall against the mother's disapproval by telling Amani in no uncertain terms that Bastien is a good man.
But he suspects that practical, clear-eyed Amani will also smell bullshit if it's laid on too thick. Not that this is bullshit (high-quality fertilizer, if anything), but it wouldn't help to cut the stuff a bit.
"That and a steady wage. And the cook there does a good job, actually. The grub's better than you'd think."
no subject
A small thing. He has to focus on the small things right now, little pieces he can chew on one at a time. He watches the way Amani watches Byerly when he explains himself: first with calm credulity, then a gentle wave of eye narrowing-skepticism that washed over and recedes again as she does the calculations and arrives at why not. Why not a spy in a Fereldan Queen's service. It's not stranger than the fabled tear in the sky, the blight and corpses and griffons, the return of a long-lost brother.
She smiles wide at the grub—her teeth are straighter than Bastien's but not much smaller. Her smile is aimed first at Byerly, then at Bastien, who smiles back mostly with his eyes, pleased she's impressed, proud of who he's managed to ensnare.
"He's there for the greater good. I'm there for the food—"
Amani says, "Of course," playing along.
"—and the men."
"Mmhm. You know, he looks kind of like that boy you liked. What was his name?"
Bastien opens his mouth to argue about how little Byerly looks like him, aside from them both being tall, then recognizes the trap she's laid out and manages to swerve to, "I don't know who you're talking about," in time to prevent losing a twenty-year-old argument about whether or not he liked their gangly, spotty neighbor.
Amani beams at him. The breath she heaves in and out could be an exasperated sigh if she didn't look so happy.
"I want to hear about it," she says around him, to Byerly. "All of it." But not this moment. Her walk is slowing as the snow-coated houses above them get smaller and less well-kept. She says, quieter, "She's worse than she was. You don't have to..."
Second guessing whether this is worth it after all—and Bastien understands, for the first time and all at once, that he got off easy compared to her.
"I'll be fine," he says. "And By was raised by dragons."
no subject
He finds that - painfully, with the ache of a stiff knee being unbent - he loves Amani. He loves her for the easy way she talks about the boy he liked, teasing and warm. He loves her for big-toothed smile. It is always difficult, finding a new person in your heart, because they hurt when they slot in there.
And it hurts to think of Bastien living a life without her. Who might Bastien have been, if he'd always had this nosy, loving, teasing sister beside him? Less hurt, to be sure. Less scarred. Maybe less willing to pretend. But Byerly, selfishly, knows that this is the Bastien who loves him, and so in some ways, he is grateful for Bastien's sisterlessness.
Still. Distracted though he is by the ache, he still does hear that warning. And so he scratches his cheek and asks in bard-sign: Are you lying? A neglectful mother, worse than she was, doesn't sound like a recipe for being fine.