Entry tags:
closed.
WHO: Bastien, Derrica, Edgard, Flint, Julius, Marcus, Tiffany, Tsenka
WHAT: It's a lovely day for a rescue mission
WHEN: Vaguely late Justinian
WHERE: A day out from Val Chevin
NOTES: Viiiolence
WHAT: It's a lovely day for a rescue mission
WHEN: Vaguely late Justinian
WHERE: A day out from Val Chevin
NOTES: Viiiolence
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What? Nothing, surely. Nothing can or will touch him now. And they won't be caught unawares again. But the idea that someone cunningly, deliberately orchestrated these events and the price they'd nearly paid for it, weighs heavily on her. Julius could have died. And what would have happened to Marcus if Tsenka hadn't been able to reach him?
"Wrists first," she decides, prompting. Not touching, just waiting. Letting Marcus offer them to her on his own.
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"During the fight," he explains, clearing his throat. "One got me with their blade."
And then they did him the courtesy of seeing to the wound, is the implicit addition.
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She draws in a deep breath, lest she say something unkind. The anger biting at her isn't going to help anyone, not unless she can funnel it into something productive. For the moment, that is healing Marcus and trying not to regret stopping when the templars had surrendered.
"I'm so sorry, Marcus."
All the marks on his body don't quite compare to what it must have been like in that carriage. No one has said exactly what waited for him, but no one has needed to. Tranquility, or death. Anyone's guess which, though they are nearly the same in Derrica's opinion.
"Let me see it," comes of the heels of an outstretched hand. Derrica can't imagine he would want someone, healer or no, to be pulling at him after what he's been through.
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Then, he peels back his sleeve, its tearing making the task easy enough, and works at the bandaging as well, letting soiled cloth fall to the ground. It's a shallow but messy wound, cleaned of dirt but not of the blood allowed to dry dark on his skin. He offers out the arm then, with a nod to permit her to see to it.
It's during that he says, "Thank you for coming."
Not simply for seeing him safe, but for bringing Julius, for putting Riftwatch's relationship with the Chantry into tension, for taking Tsenka at her word, for all of it. Even for managing the Seeker.
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Her hands settle lightly at either side of the slash. Her power flows from her palms, lapping cool at his skin. By and by, the wound closes. Only the crust of dried blood remains to mark the space where the slash had once lived. She doesn't look up at him until the spell completes, and her fingers have curled around the rubbed-raw mark on his wrist.
"You're welcome," she answers. Sincere. "There wasn't any other option."
Of course she would do all of this for him. She would have done more, if need be.
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Marcus glances away, in the last direction he spied Flint moving, to where Bastien had moved to consult with the Seeker. The nearby griffons, a valuable resource. He can imagine arguments, debates, consideration of cost. There is a dead Templar, now, inconveniently heavy in his armor, and several more who won't forget it. But at the same time—
No, Tsenka would have acted. Julius. And Derrica. Himself, if it was any of them.
His other hand comes around to clasp hers, feeling himself sharpen a little, more direct in the way he looks at her. Maybe thanks to the wound closure, or the simple nudge of ambient healing energy. Or the will to be present. "I don't recall their administering," he says, voice still hoarse in his throat. "I must have been unconscious. They tried not to get too close while I was awake."
It doesn't matter or justify anything, but he would prefer to be imagined as sinking retaliatory injuries than passively kicked around. The corner of his mouth twitches, not a smile, but a gesture towards it. He's very tough and cool, is all.
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"Did they keep you out the whole time?"
Eyes moving over his face, intent on the answer.
She would like to call it cowardice. But she knows that these templars were cautious. They hadn't wanted any losses at all. Of course they'd given Marcus a wide berth when they were able.
It wouldn't be such a damning thing, if Derrica weren't aware of what fear rooted that deeply can lead to in others.
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Marcus' eye is drawn to the group of Templars, kept separate and apart. In the heat of summer, in this strange truce, they've taken off their helms. Their expressions are still difficult to read, though, especially at a distance, but what can be read is nothing revealing: tension, stoicism, wariness. Waiting for whatever happens next to happen, and not wholly trusting that it won't be violent.
He looks back to Derrica, and some of the hardness his expression had automatically taken just now ekes back out. "Magebane," he says. "It's still doing its work. There was something else too, for the sleeping."
Overkill, perhaps, but as a counterpoint: he doesn't look like he made any of what happened to him easy for anyone else to accomplish.
"I suppose they'll walk, now."
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But empty-handed. That is the aspect most important here. Marcus will not have to climb back into that wagon.
"The Lady Seeker and Bastien will accompany them," Derrica tells him. Her hands are very light where they ring his wrists. No magic, yet. Her eyes search his face. "They're going to gather the letters. We'll get to the bottom of this."
They'll find the danger, and root it out. This can't be a thing that happens again.
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No, Marcus does not envision a world where Riftwatch agents would feel moved to kill or punish, somehow, prisoners of war, let alone prisoners of some sort of misunderstanding. It is not based in logic or dashed hopes that he feels some odd dislocation. A sort of abstraction of anger at what feels like injustice, over and over. The way blame deflects as easily as light off a shield. They were doing as ordered.
But Derrica says this next thing, and he draws in a breath, lets it go. Nods. Important, that they unearth these lies.
"I want to finish it," he says. "Find her and finish it."
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It's due to him. It had been his life threatened. (If they had not killed him, they likely would have made him Tranquil, and Derrica cannot say which is worse. It is nearly the same.)
Her hands are very gentle, cupping his. Looking up into his face.
"But you're hurt. You need rest. There's time enough for rooting her out, after you've returned to full strength."
With any luck, she may simply walk back into the Gallows. If they can keep Marcus' return and Julius' survival quiet, all these suspicions to themselves, then there's likely no reason why she wouldn't return as planned.
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"The letter I received," eventually, touching on something else, something that belongs to him. "Fitcher might have fabricated it, unless she intercepted it instead. Withheld it, had it given to me to set a trap."
He'd had some time to himself to think it through, and now it feels as though it's come together, in some awful way. "If all that, then my—my contacts are somewhere. Migrated, or in danger. Julius said the settlement was abandoned."
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The break there, the change in direction referring to people who must be important to him in some way.
A glow washes out from her fingers, applying a cool chill to his skin.
"Do you think they were harmed?"
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Marcus tips his head, neither nod nor shake, still watching their joined hands. "I don't know. By the sounds of it, they've been gone a while."
They'd written, asking him to meet with them. Then he never did. The knowledge of that gnaws, abrades, and much like the whereabouts of one Madame Fitcher, there's precious little he can do of it in the moment.
He draws his focus back up. "Did you know her? Fitcher."
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Attendance at her card games. Sharing a room in Antiva with her and Kostos. It does not amount to any real familiarity, and that had not troubled Derrica at the time. There are others within Riftwatch that she does not know beyond whatever contact that work establishes between them.
It hadn't troubled her. Had this not happened, it never would have.
"She was close with others I knew. Richard Dickerson. Laura Kint," Derrica supplies. Her hands do not lift away from his.
Just because the wounds are gone doesn't mean all is well with him. Derrica is certain of that.
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Even if in this moment, it feels a little like floating driftwood in an ocean. Marcus has never enjoyed standing around and making plans without immediate ability to enact them, and after feeling particularly stupid and helpless for the better part of a week, it's a hard mood to shake.
He admits, "I didn't know her well," as he explains, "But she assisted me. After Naegle, after the Abomination, I was tracking missing letters, evidence of more forgeries. It was dating back longer than Naegle, and after him as well. But she assisted me. She's the fucking clerk."
And if he thinks back, to the little biting comments here and there (I suppose they don't teach children in Circles to say please)—well, there will be plenty of time on the way back, and in his recovery, to catalogue those too. Here, in the sun, by the road, Marcus is still speaking quietly, but tensely, as if unable to totally part top and bottom back teeth with bridled anger. His hands are relaxed in Derrica's, despite this.
He might have to apologise later. He would prefer, ideally, to keep his composure to those who are kind to him.
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It's of a pair with a thought she's had before. (Benedict Artemaeus handles all the Ambassador's mail, keeps all his appointments, manages all his paperwork.) Fitcher had placed herself well. And the scope of what she might have accomplished in her time with them—
"We know now. We can start sorting out what she might have done."
Pray that some of it can be remedied.
Her hands flex around his. Gentle still, drawing in a step closer. All that has been done to him, all the lies, culminating in this violence, it is no wonder he's angry. He's entitled to it.
"We'll find her, Marcus."
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Derrica steps in nearer, holding his hands, makes her reassurances and promises, and perhaps if it were anyone else, Marcus would give into his current mood and shake free from soft grasp and placation. Makes a conscious effort, instead, to not do that.
Nods, and then slips a hand from hers to touch his palm to her cheek, a mutely grateful gesture for more than only her rescue and healing.
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She so fiercely wants to make this alright, but knows it is not so simple as a reassurance. It is even perhaps beyond her to do anything other than what she already has done: healing, and heartfelt words. There is blood in the road and it is not enough. Not enough to repay all of this.
"You're alright," is a different reassurance, imparted as her fingers grip his own. Highlighting something she has learned over time: it is an act of stubbornness and spite and defiance to continue living, when those who imagine themselves arbiters of such matters will it otherwise. He is alive and safe and whatever waited for him at the end of this journey will never come to pass. That is a kind of victory.
bow time
His hand drops back over hers again in a last rough clasp, some offering of reassurance in kind. Yes, he's alright. Stubbornly alive, spitefully, defiantly. And the singing choir of various aches and pains at every little movement is a testament to exactly that that, as he feels it next when he breathes in deeper.
Right. All that, still. "I'll sit for the rest," he suggests, now allowing a little curl of dry humour to enter his tone, grasping less tightly onto his own sense of pride as he moves for somewhere shady.