dirthsal: (Default)
ⲧⲁ𝓵ⲓⲛ 𝛓ⲏⲓɾⲁ'ⲛⲉⲏⲛ ([personal profile] dirthsal) wrote in [community profile] faderift2024-10-11 11:43 am

closed: onboarding with hr

WHO: Talin Shira'nehn, Bene, Stephen, Gwenaëlle, Clarisse
WHAT: Talin (finally) completes his onboarding
WHEN: Hella backdated to his arrival at the end of September
WHERE: Various area of the Gallows
NOTES: Individual starters in comments!




After helping get the fennec family relocated, Talin is finally free to actually go about signing up for Riftwatch. It's mostly a boring affair, giving his name for records, making his mark on this paper and that. Who would have known saving the world involved this much paper?

It takes a long while, but the end result is this: he's an official member of the Riftwatch now, with all the protections and responsibilities that provides. His first mission: meet with the various leaders and answer any questions they have for him.


elegiaque: (185)

[personal profile] elegiaque 2025-02-19 08:40 pm (UTC)(link)
She laughs—

“I’d let you,” she admits, “but the purpose of the exercise is that there’s not always going to be anyone else to help.”

This, Gwenaëlle states casually as fact, not an excess of caution for a possible ill-outcome but something impending, inevitable, as one prepares for anticipated changes in weather. There’s plenty that Stephen, too, can help to manage about their home; some things his hands are not up to, and the finicky nature of getting up and down the exterior is almost certainly one of them.

A tilt of her head in the direction Guilfoyle had left, “He’s very bossy about it,” with real affection.
elegiaque: (148)

[personal profile] elegiaque 2025-03-09 07:36 am (UTC)(link)
Gwenaëlle’s dry smile says no, he doesn’t, but what she says is—

“He joined me here when he retired. I find it’s useful to find him things to do, or else he starts finding them for himself and he also thinks he’s a good deal spryer than he is.” ‘Sitting down tasks’, she calls them. “He’d not think much of me calling it pride, probably.”

He also doesn’t think much of it when she refers to the bequest that funds his lifestyle now his jointure, but where she’ll bluntly share her life story with a stranger, sharing that particular jest would feel like an invasion of his privacy and the peculiar relationship he has shared with her family for so long now.

“I don’t know precisely how long he worked for l’Comte de Vauquelin,” she adds, considering, “but I’ve always believed he and my mother came to his employ around the same time. I don’t know that that’s actually true, come to it.”
elegiaque: (073)

[personal profile] elegiaque 2025-03-21 09:30 am (UTC)(link)
A fair question; she notes his willingness to ask it, where others might’ve elected not to take the risk. Pursued it elsewhere, or lost interest in doing so before the chance arose. It’s not a mark against him — nor, really, a mark for. It’s just shading in elements of a picture that will take time to come into full focus.

“He serves at his own pleasure these days,” she says, dry; their dynamic is familiar and comfortable, and the moreso now for the discomfiting instances of his deciding not to do as she wishes.

What once was instruction is now conversation— the distinction messy but necessary. Not better or worse, just different. Sadder if she thinks about it too hard.

“Anyway. My lord father’s father fucked his way into a title; married up, got hers. My lord father, l’Comte, fucked his way out of it. The bastard child of his chatelaine cannot be his heir, so it was really quite profoundly awkward for him to have passed me off as such for as long as he got away with doing— when he died at Ghislain, his titles, estate and assets passed back into the bloodstained hands of that bitch on the throne.”

She says it very casually. Fuck Celene forever!!

“Before that disgrace, I was the favourite grandchild of my lady mother’s father, l’Duc de Coucy, who didn’t see any reason why that should change only because we share no blood. He paid for the boat. He’s also old enough to have personally put the boot in Ferelden, and Guilfoyle not much younger, so—”

An illustrative tilt of her hand. She landed soft, after her fall from grace; she’s not stupid enough to only wring her hands in and over temporary luxury. The ability to send her grandfather her bills won’t last forever. She needs to know what happens after; it needs to be her decision.
elegiaque: (198)

[personal profile] elegiaque 2025-04-14 02:52 am (UTC)(link)
“It’s probably similar,” she says, drolly, squeezing out her washcloth and considering the shape of the boat that she’s dangling from as they speak. This thing around which she has built so much certainty in recent years, and the shape of this conversation something that once would have frightened her beyond the telling of it.

It seems so pointless to be cagey or circumspect about any of it, now. He could hear it from any number of sources if he wished; why pretend otherwise, when she can say in her own words when asked?

(Stephen had found it a little confronting, too, when they first met.)

“You walked past my mother on the way in.” A statement that doesn’t sound like she assumes he realised that, rather establishing a premise she assumes he hasn’t taken for granted, “My sisters were in Halamshiral when Celene butchered it. Baudin is a city elf’s name.”

And fallen out of use among humans generations earlier as a result; her complicated feelings on having claimed it to share with her mother and sisters when it had been given to them by a man she’d never known nor had any claim on are— another story. Another time.
elegiaque: (184)

[personal profile] elegiaque 2025-04-21 11:57 pm (UTC)(link)
Gwenaëlle looks back at him for what feels like an entire age, a moment of solemnity amongst soap suds and her firm grip on the ropes holding her in place at the side of her ridiculous boat. She’s thinking of Halamshiral, but she’s thinking of the sound she hadn’t known immediately was a Dalish arrow landing in Guenievre’s throat, too, of the butchered shape of Herian Amsel’s ear, of the tension that unavoidably existed in Skyhold and in the Gallows when their Dalish population was higher and tolerances lower.

Despite her active disinterest — to Thranduil’s ongoing despair, once — she hasn’t avoided understanding enough of the elvhen she’s encountered to not recognise both what he’s saying to her and in its context, its significance. That is is significant. That the average Dalish elf has a far greater reason to distrust her than the reverse, she knows that; knows how much power was in her hands to harm, when she was angriest and bleeding her grief, how little could be turned against her.

And here, a thing that she’s not offered to any Dalish elves, nor been offered in return: kindness.

She fixes her gaze back on her work,

“My ex-husband is a rifted elf,” she says, “and he could go places and ask things I couldn’t. He was able to learn what had happened to them for my mother, before her death. Not everyone even gets to know. I know that. Couldn’t give me any chevalier names, of course, but what’re you going to do.”

Her hand flexes, like the answer to that question might have been terrorism in another life.

“Thank you,” is tacked on with an awkwardness that makes its sincerity obvious, in turn; an unexpected thing.