altusimperius (
altusimperius) wrote in
faderift2025-02-07 02:48 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
Entry tags:
[closed] let's go girls
WHO: Bastien, Benedict, Byerly (the Better Business Bureau)
WHAT: DRAG NIGHT
WHEN: sometime in [mumbles] winter
WHERE: Kirkwall
NOTES: will add if necessary, I don't think anyone who's offended by any of this would last very long in this game
WHAT: DRAG NIGHT
WHEN: sometime in [mumbles] winter
WHERE: Kirkwall
NOTES: will add if necessary, I don't think anyone who's offended by any of this would last very long in this game
Fausta was an amalgamation of things: undergarments and cosmetics and shoes from Byerly, a wig and hair decorations and a fine Minrathousian gown from the Scouting closet, all mishmashed together in a convincing approximation of a wealthy lady in Tevinter's high society. It had done the job, and Benedict enjoyed the effort, but has since summarily refused to participate in Kirkwall's scene until he's gotten all the details just right.
And finally, he has: it's the night of an event in one of Lowtown's more curious establishments, and, having born witness to it before but in plainclothes, Benedict is ready for Fausta to make her society debut.
Or, at least, he will be when they're finished getting ready-- having arrived at Byerly and Bastien's house with all his things and a fancy cheese tray, the preparations have begun.
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
"He came to tell me he was sorry for how things went when you all had forgotten us," he says, "and I gave him a hard time for about ten seconds, and he had a tantrum about it."
Because he's weak! Your protege is weak, Byerly!
no subject
no subject
He flips the paper in his hand to resume reading below the fold.
" — which was funny."
no subject
"That is funny." Objective facts are objective facts. "And quite arseholish, too. That does not answer the question of why it is persisting."
no subject
no subject
"I am going to get ready," he says, restrained and dignified and dismissive, rising from his seat and tossing the paper onto a pile of others.
He does not toss Rat Red anywhere. She's coming upstairs with him.
no subject
"You know, dear lad," he says, "in Ferelden, you'd be cut down where you stood if you implied a man's dog wasn't loyal to him above all others."
This is not a joke.
no subject
“It’s all my fault, I suppose? Because I didn’t correctly interpret cruelty as what was clearly just a joke at my expense?”
no subject
"What happened the other month was miserable for him. Specifically for him." By plays with his eyeshadow palette a moment, then decides to be a bit reckless. "How much has Bastien told you of himself? Who he truly is?"
no subject
He turns back to the mirror, and begins to line one of his eyes with kohl, a slow and painstaking motion. "I know his name. And I know he picked this one when he was a child."
no subject
no subject
no subject
It's matter-of-fact and simple. No specific highlighting of why that loss of memory might make Bastien particularly prickly; he trusts that Benedict will see it at once.
no subject
no subject
no subject
"All right," he says, yielding quietly, "but that means he gets to speak to me however he wants, and I just have to roll over and let him?"
He glances away again. On the topic of soft spots, Byerly knows better than anyone where this one lands-- it wasn't overnight that he and Benedict reached the rapport they have, and it was a journey punctuated from the start with the latter figuratively rolling over every chance he was given.
no subject
By offers a wry smile to the mirror.
"Just - this time, it might be worth it to let him be a bitch. We can all take turns. Which - I think your turn to get a pass on bitchiness is coming up next in the rotation."
no subject
no subject
"I'll get you a chit. You can cash it in."
no subject
His smile meeting his eyes, he focuses back on the mirror again.
"I do love Rattie though," he adds lightly, "I hope she knows that."
no subject
Then - "The other thing to know - the key to my beloved's heart - is to just listen to him. Insist on listening to him. He may be prickly at first, but don't give up. Just stay with him and say nothing. He'll crack eventually."
no subject
“Fine,” he agrees, in a manner demure enough to fit the face taking form, “I’ll try.”
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)