Entry tags:
open | now give me something to believe in.
WHO: Cassian Andor & you
WHAT: A liaison from the Shadow Dragons arrives
WHEN: Bloomingtide
WHERE: Minrathous + Kirkwall
NOTES: Some injury description
WHAT: A liaison from the Shadow Dragons arrives
WHEN: Bloomingtide
WHERE: Minrathous + Kirkwall
NOTES: Some injury description
arrival.
It’s a late spring night when a stranger arrives at the Widow Tavisa’s Boarding House.
Most regular guests would take the front entrance and speak to the innkeeper in the main room; but this one slips through the back entrance and takes an out-of-the-way servant’s staircase, into a shuttered wing of the building which isn’t supposed to be open to the public. But those rare people in the know might be aware that this leads to Riftwatch’s secret outpost in Minrathous —
The darkhaired man slumps against the locked door leading into their safehouse. He knocks on the door in a fixed, staccato rhythm identifying him as an ally. He has a hand pressed to his side with worrisome urgency, jaw tight and teeth gritted against the pain; he knocks again a little louder, in case whoever’s on watch is dozing.
No one’s expecting a new arrival right at this hour. It’s not ideal.
settling in.
After finally getting vetted and officially joining, Cassian tucks the Riftwatch pin into his pocket and starts to get the lay of the land, gathering information, pressing a finger to the pulse of this new city he’s going to be calling home.
There’s a kind of amiable affability to this new arrival, his smile calculated to be inoffensive and mild, even as the gears are very busily ticking away behind his dark-brown eyes.
You might find him at the Gallows bar, pouring himself a drink and smoothly sliding into the chair at your table to pry: “So, what’s your favourite place in the Gallows or Kirkwall?”
Or wandering the battlements of the towers and looking out across the city. Rebuilding is expensive, and so some parts of Kirkwall still bear the marks of the Venatori attack a little over a year ago: collapsed buildings that never got raised again, battle-scars and scorch marks from dracolisks. “What was it like?” he asks. “The Venatori attack.”
He also goes for long walks through the city, right past the alienage (although his gaze lingers), and venturing into the deeper recesses of the city slums. One particular afternoon, he emerges from Darktown blinking half-blinded into the dim light of Lowtown, which is right about when a few thieves assemble around him for an attempted mugging, knives brandished. “I really don’t have time for this,” he says to the ringleader, looking more annoyed than frightened; which is right about when a Riftwatch colleague might turn the corner and encounter the scene.
( Also happy to receive wildcards, or to write up a bespoke starter for you; just hmu @

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“All sorts,” she answers, and by the looks of things, she intends to show him.
“I’m Josephine. Was one of your parents an elf?”
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But Minrathous had been unsafe for elves for generations, long before he joined the fight. We’ll tell everyone you were born here. His mother and father in Ferrix assiduously covering their tracks, smoothing over his history, getting the right paperwork to say their son was a good and proper Imperium citizen.
Kirkwall at least seems safer than that. So after that lingering hesitation, teetering back and forth over the metaphorical line in the sand and uncertain whether to step over it, he finally walks forward and joins Josephine. Further down the quiet unpopular street where no one’s likely to overhear.
“Cassian,” he says. “Yes.”
He hadn’t meant to mention any of this at all, would ordinarily never have volunteered this information off the cuff— wouldn’t have done if it she weren’t so obviously elven herself— but still, he gives the bare minimum. “My mother. But I grew up with humans. Never lived in an alienage.”
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"What do you know of them?" Alienages.
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There’s a whole story there in the margins, familiar and well-worn for so many elfblooded people who have managed to pass as human. His tragedy is not unique. It’s just another iteration.
And which is how Cassian wound up here: painfully curious, lollygagging, staring down the street, trying to catch a glimpse of the world which was so alien to him. He could say more: we were from outside the city, his only frame of reference was Dalish,
but he stays quiet on that, for now.
“Did you grow up here?”
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"No," she answers, allowing the redirect, "I grew up in the country outside Val Royeaux. Moved to the city when I was older, though I've never lived in an alienage either."
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“So you just visit too?” Cassian asks. “Do… favours for friends?”
He’s picking his way through the conversation, a little stilted and awkward, clearly out of his element. Of course the concept of mutual aid and neighbourly community isn’t alien to him, but he’s so over-aware of how out-of-place he feels here. The closer they walk into the neighbourhood, the more he’s looking at all of their surroundings rather than the woman beside him. His head tilts back and back, to stare up at the vhenadahl towering over the neighbourhood.
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"As with anywhere, look for the community and you'll find it. We may live in the Gallows and our neighbors here, but nobody's confined." Tilting her head to one side to peer around him, she waves at somebody on their doorstep, her nose wrinkling in a silly grin-- yes, she was just here, she's back again.
"What sort of things can you do? Manual labor, caring for children? ...reading?" The last one is spoken as a massive long shot, but she looks hopeful anyway.
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The resulting list, when he takes out all the rest, feels depressingly short.
“I can read Trade, Tevene, and Antivan,” he confirms. “Manual labour. I’m handy with disassembling and reassembling dwarven craft, if it comes up. I can cook.”
She might be a maid, but he still sounds a bit like he’s delivering a report to a superior; an automatic instinct.
gives u sidequests
"That'll be more than enough," she assures him, and, glancing around, points out a house with several children playing idly in front. "If you can cook, they'll be glad of it; [that lady] watches all the children during the day, and I doubt she'd mind having an extra hand in the kitchen."
Pointing to the man who'd just waved at her, she adds, "drunks destroyed [the guy's name's] produce wagon in Lowtown the other night, he needs help repairing it but no one's had the time."
scoops them into my quest log
“Will you introduce me?” he asks. “Suspect this goes a bit easier if…”
He trails off, a helpless gesture of a hand, indicating his own face. It had mostly been a benefit in his work, letting him glide through Tevinter with less scrutiny, but now it makes him stand out.
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And she does, taking Cassian around and introducing him one by one to the neighbors of the alienage. By the time they're finished, Fifi's list has been compounded many times over by an assortment of requests, more than one person could ever hope to accomplish in a year, perhaps a lifetime.
After they've made the rounds, she walks him back to the alienage entrance where they met, offering a slightly apologetic but nonetheless pleasant smile. Here we are.
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After the third townsperson needing help mentions a violent goose having gotten loose into the alleys and needing retrieving, he’d pulled a battered notebook out of his chest pocket and started jotting down notes, names, reminders. Normally his work couldn’t be logged anywhere, but these were innocent enough: a well mechanism which needed re-tuning, a delivery of apples which needed transporting across the city, basic errands here and there.
Once they’re done and heading back to the entrance, he exhales. He’d been warmer and chattier while they were schmoozing; now the mask sinks away again, the man reverting back to more contemplative. His demeanour seems to subtly shift where and when as needed.
“For not being from Kirkwall, you seem to know everyone here,” he remarks.
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"Not everyone in Kirkwall," she says plainly, turning to glance back into the alienage, "but here, perhaps." She releases his arm, resting her own back over her basket once more.
"A person who's alone in a place can get lost there," she adds, a bit evasively, "I try not to."
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it's still an alienage,
"but I think you know what I mean. It seems homey. I grew up in a small town; it reminds me of that."
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she realizes with a tinge of remorse, it's a life defined by loneliness. Being nothing to so few for so long, one forgets how real people are meant to behave. The way he stood so awkwardly and aimlessly at the entrance; if she were displaced again, found herself on the other side of the world, might she not do the same? Wouldn't it be easier to give up entirely?
"I'm glad you came," she says in a moment of unexpected candor, her smile flickering. She glances down, away, heaves a little sigh of defeat.
"...Fifi," she amends, "you can call me Fifi."
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“Is ‘Fifi’ for friends?” he asks. Half-joking, maybe, but it’s a real question too.
omg I missed this entirely
"Familiarity," is all she says at first, but follows it up after a moment with, "it seems like something you're in need of."
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“Was it that obvious,” Cassian says after a moment. Then, neutrally: “Agents aren’t supposed to get homesick.”
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"Everyone gets homesick," she says, "especially agents." What could be more thankless than being on the job every hour of every day, always checking over one's shoulder?
"I suppose you don't mean agents of Riftwatch?"
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“But I’m—” was? am? he supposes he still is, “a Shadow Dragon, too. Before all this.”
They’ve spent the whole day together, in and out of people’s homes, he’s been offered tea and homemade hearth cakes from Fifi’s friends; so being cagey about the remaining details felt wrong, especially when any glance at his recruitment report would say where he’s joining them from.
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He had mentioned Tevinter.
"You fight the Venatori up north," she hazards; it seems right. This is the farthest north she's ever been.
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The Gallows was— ostentatious is the wrong word for it, but it certainly catches the eye, looming and forbidding in the harbour as it is.
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"Freemen of the Dales," Fifi says quietly, tapping herself on the chest, "sort of. A long time ago."
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“The Orlesian civil war, right?”
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"I joined after my husband was killed." Her smile is sad, but composed. "They said they would prevent more senseless death for the crown." spoiler alert
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I completely spaced on this aaaaaa
it’s ok!! i think that’s a good place to wrap anyhow :’)