ᴇᴄᴄᴇɴᴛʀɪᴄ ɴᴏʀᴛʜᴇʀɴ ᴍɪɴx (
ungovernable) wrote in
faderift2016-01-29 10:26 pm
→ the serpent of nevarra
WHO: Benevenuta Thevenet, Dorian Pavus, Zevran Arainai, Nerva Lecuyer, Taashath, Rafael Viteri AND THE OTHER ONE. I don't know how to spell that and I already looked up Rafa's name.
WHAT: Pretty much what it says on the tin. And by tin I mean subject line.
WHEN: Covering a span of several weeks, after puppies and before showing up late to Emprise du Lion.
WHERE: Nevarra, mostly.
NOTES: Plotting post; original sign up post. Get at me at
matriarchal or via PM if you have needs.
WHAT: Pretty much what it says on the tin. And by tin I mean subject line.
WHEN: Covering a span of several weeks, after puppies and before showing up late to Emprise du Lion.
WHERE: Nevarra, mostly.
NOTES: Plotting post; original sign up post. Get at me at
Having taken Ayse's information to the Inquisition leaders, Benevenuta is dispatched with a small group to handle the matter in Nevarra. Feel free to do individual closed threads within the subheaders of anything you want to achieve in Nevarra, and we can work out amongst ourselves how best to do plot elements! We will try to spread out plot contributions so that we don't get bogged down in a ten thousand person thread for any one part.

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Scipio's mouth drops open a little, an expression of shock. Zevran's glance over his shoulder will find him still composed thusly. Disguises? Leaping down from above, in a surprise attack?
"That is," he starts, but no, he is too offended and finishes, instead, hugely indignant, "Why did no one tell me!"
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Well, the part about pretty might indeed be correct. The Wardens among their company do not seem the sort to be jealous over looks, or indeed the sort that would hoard the fun disguises to themselves. But appearances can be deceiving.
Scipio considers this. Then he considers Zevran, very seriously. "I will have to speak to Alistair, of this," he says. Very seriously. "But tell me--have you truly killed an ogre, yourself?"
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Perhaps he ought to have words with Alistair. Then again it is unlikely Ogres will be wandering about on the surface with no blight in truth. But where there is a blighted dragon there is often darkspawn. Sharing what he knows? May be to their benefit.
Then again, Scipio seems happy enough to do so himself. Zevran shall leave him to it. "Many, during the blight. They are large and formidable but when you know the trick of it? Not quite so terrifying."
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Regardless of these truths, someone should have told them. About the disguises, at least. They are experienced disguisers. This is very unfair.
Yet as put out as he is, Scipio cannot resist the lure of a good story. Yes: he must know more about the ogre's death. If nothing else, it will help to distract him from this sting of betrayal. "What is the trick of it?"
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A few near scrapes had him worried- and that was when he was at the peak of his game. Scipio? Would do well to keep a safe distance.
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All of which is true. This is a very good story, a good victory. Yet, personally.. easily done? Really, what he should have added to that, is: not. There are many talents that Scipio has. There are many skills to his name, many successes and many conquests, in fields of treasure, fields of theft, fields of lies, fields of love, and, yes, even fields of battle. Or, rather: duel.
One does not duel an ogre. One must, apparently, vault over their back and cut the back of their neck. In his head, Scipio tries to work out how high one would need to vault to do so. He is accomplished at gymnastics, can walk on his hands as easily as he does his own feet, sometimes even more easily, without enough wine in him. Could he vault so high as an ogre's neck?
"Do you ever," he starts, and frowns. "I mean to say-- do many people look around themselves and wonder, how it is they came to be where they are?"
Or is it just him.
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"Every day of my life." A rare shade of honesty- but he has known this floundering before. Experiences it regularly. "You learn to look at what you might do to better where it is you stand, and do that. If the Wardens have done little to train you in the art of killing darkspawn without dying yourself- I have been training rogues in battle. Making time to teach you what you would need will not be so terrible a thing. The simplest and easiest trick? You already have. The rest of us? We know Darkspawn by their roars or by their smell. You are a Warden, yes? Undergone your joining? You can sense them. That is why Alistair never learned to mind his flank during the Blight. He knew where his enemies were and could react based upon that rather than seeing them. YOu will learn to do the same."
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The honesty that he receives from Zevran is a kindness--and a little bit of a relief, too. Scipio nods, grateful. "I suppose the knowing does help," he says, "the-- preknowing, I mean. To have such a sense is like playing a rigged game, and these rigged games are the games that I am best at." Mostly because he can turn all outcomes to his favor. All the same: "You would truly take the time to teach me these other tricks? The tricks of the battle?"
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"Is that not the point of preparations for battle, to stack the deck?" Zevran's eyes crinkle in a warm grin as he pulls the rods one by one from his hair. "But of course. The wardens, aside from you and Rafa, are so grizzled, so serious, so Southern. They would be a great deal less pretty and interesting without you. Keeping you alive? Is a public service."
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"You are very kind, my friend, and very right." No false modesty here. Such qualities are qualities that he and Rafa have in spades, spades upon spades, and pretending otherwise would do them both a dishonor. "They are the ones of luck, to have us among them--for your reasons at the very least. How good it would be to show them still more reasons. Very well, then--I accept your offer, and will become your willing student. It would be an honor, for me. Not in the least because if your tricks with the hair are as successful as your other tricks, I will be the best prepared Warden among them!"
--For those curls are, after all, springing free and formed in perfect shapes. Truly, the work of a master.
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In their knowledge. Minds, so filthy.
Rod after rod he pulled from his hair, the soft gold now caught in a mass of ringlets. Zevran combed his fingers through them to test the give and nods to himself, satisfied. "I speak it as I see it, as the saying goes. When we return from Nevarra? I shall leave my evenings open to train you. Fewer witnesses so the grand reveal is all the more surprising, yes?"
And so any failures aren't mocked. Mostly.
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Pleased, he beams at Zevran, and sticks his hand out for a handshake. "We are so completely in agreement, my friend. And I will hold you at your word, and look forward to it!"
And who would have thought, that he would be eager for such lessons from la pasta rivale? Truly, the world is a funny place.
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Not having to explain what he means half the time by using certain words, certain references? Will make it go by quickly, that understanding a fellow countryman has in their very bones shall make this easier on the both of them. Perhaps, if pressed, he might extend the same offer to Rafael- as one cannot train half of a duo; it does not work as such. The pair work as one in most everything else.
"Perhaps extend the offer, too, to your partner. Things are easier on the battlefield if you know with great certainty that your left hand is as skilled as your right, yes?" If one does not have to worry after their fellows.
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But also... Also.
"I will suggest it to him," he agrees, diplomatically. Zevran's point is quite a good one. Perhaps if it presents it so to Rafa, he will agree. Yet honesty and respect for this small friendship inspires Scipio to add, "But he may not agree. He is not so..." How to say. Thoughtfully, he waves a hand, as if to pluck the words out of the air. "He finds less joy in things. This wardening, he finds it the harder."
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"You hear the song as much as the rest, you and he, yes? Suffer the dreams, the hunger?" Zevran had traveled with two new Wardens for the better part of a year during a Blight. He knew what troubled them. "Alistair does not much care to discuss these things beyond 'grin and bear it' but...if you, either of you wish for something that might help ease these discomforts, There are some things I know to ease the pain or offer a more restful sleep."
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There is, unfortunately, no way to slither away from these terrors of the night, the gnaw of hunger and the tune that exists, somewhere, at the back of the mind. These things cannot be escaped. These things are difficult to confront. And so they don't. Scipio trusts Rafa with his life, would trust him with his very soul, should it ever come to that, yet their conversations on such new complaints have been very limited. Easier to complain of the cold and whatever work is now expected of them. But Scipio knows what it is that he feels, and suffers. And to think of Rafa, forced to suffer such things: this is somehow more difficult.
And so Zevran's offer easily gets attention from him. "Truly?" It is an offer as kind as the offer of training. "To not sleep does make things so difficult, and--" He hesitates, wary of betraying Rafa's trust. To speak of weakness is not done. Yet his concern overcomes such thoughts. "Is it a potion, that would help? Or some other such thing?"
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He is not an official Warden but- any that traveled with them during the Fifth Blight came to know much. "Keeping a personal store on hand is not unreasonable. You are newly joined, I am told it levels out. Alistair does not eat quite so much as he did ten years ago, but it is still considerable. There are a few cooks that are more easily persuaded by Antivan Charms. As you are both quite charming it should not be so great a burden, yes?"
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He sighs. No use in thinking of it, but he cannot help but to think of it. Perhaps he can raise money, and send an orphan to learn at the elbow of the man who makes the fish stew. And then, when that orphan is a little older, and has learned the secrets and the subtleties, he can bring that orphan to live in Skyhold, and make he stew. It is a very long-term thought, but perhaps it will work.
In any case. "Your advice is good," he tells Zevran, with a smile, "and has given me much to think on. I do not know how Rafa will take to exhausting himself. Maybe tea. He does like tea."