exequy: (Default)
Kostos Averesch ([personal profile] exequy) wrote in [community profile] faderift2022-07-26 11:20 am

open | full circle pt 2

WHO: Many people, mostly mages and rifters and Templars/Seekers
WHAT: Stop that Circle!
WHEN: Late Solace
WHERE: The College of Magi, Cumberland, Nevarra
NOTES: OOC post! Please note we are not doing the points game part yet. But we will later and your tags will still count then.


I. THE JOURNEY

After the meeting, there's time to talk, pack (lightly), and get a full night's sleep. But after an early breakfast the next morning, everyone heads up to the eyrie at the top of the Gallows' central tower to load onto griffons.

They do it with the sanction of the Division Heads, accompanied by some rules, like no violence, and some mandatory company. A few Templars (and a Seeker) are sent along with them, in Riftwatch uniform rather than their more traditional and more inflammatory armor. Mages and rifters and interested others have the choice of donning their uniforms or not.

The trip to Cumberland is short an uneventful. Trained griffon riders and the animals they've bonded with lead the flock, but other griffons follow cooperatively behind, each carrying one or two riders and their effects. The group lands once or twice in the Planascene Forest to stretch their legs, have a meal, etc., while the griffons help themselves to a buffet of wildlife. A few of those without bonded riders might need some extra persuasion to get back in line, when it's time to go, but nothing goes significantly wrong.

II. THE COLLEGE OF MAGI

It's late and dark when they swoop down on the city, but the College of Magi is easy to spot, because it's a palace with a hammered-gold dome roof that shines in the moonlight. The griffons land and consent to being tethered in an enclosed courtyard that, after years of neglect, is no worse off if they trample the greenery a bit. The doors inside are guarded not by Templars, but by Cumberland city guards assigned to keep looters out of the palace in the mages' absences. Once they've taken in the presence of the griffons and uniforms, they put up no resistance to Riftwatch's entrance.

Inside, the halls are quiet and opulent: in addition to the famous collection of sandstone busts of every Grand Enchanter from the last 600 years lining the entrance hall, there are marble pillars, bright frescoes, vases, art, gilded vines crawling the walls. Everything shines and glitters in the light from the braziers on the walls.

The mage who comes scuttling down the hall to give them a bewildered greeting, robes flapping and a basket of bread on his arm, is Senior Enchanter Erfried Neumayer, noted Loyalist, formerly of Hossberg. He is well into his nineties, spry but mostly blind, and very friendly. He explains, eventually and in pieces, that they have not even started the conclave, unaware they might have needed to rush, and the others are currently having a late dinner and an idle chat in the dining hall. Thus the bread.

The rest of the mages are not glad to see them, albeit mostly in a polite and/or passive-aggressive way. They make a fuss about not being prepared to house or feed any additional participants, but in the end do show everyone to one of the bunk bed-filled rooms that used to house apprentices.

The first night and every night afterwards, Riftwatch has overnight watches—not to watch for danger, but to make sure the other mages don't sneak around and convene while they're asleep. (A few of them might be caught trying to organize exactly that.) The beds are musty from years of disuse but otherwise fine. Food is grudgingly provided.

Before, after, and between sessions on the floor, there's time to explore the palace. Said to have been donated by a Duchess to keep her mage child in the comfort she was accustomed to, the College is an arguably over-the-top display of wealth and comfort, dusty from disuse but still overflowing with gilding and cushions, baths and kettles enchanted to heat and cups enchanted to cool and dozens of other magical novelties that make life a little more comfortable, art and a badminton field and a massive library. The Harrowing Chamber looks like a place where someone would be honored to complete a rite of passage; the dungeon exists but is small, clean, and devoid of spooky skeletons. It's exactly the sort of place that could serve as evidence that living in a Circle was great, actually.

III. THE CONCLAVE

The conclave, such as it is, begins the next morning, in a room whose domed mahogany ceiling has had it dubbed the Red Auditorium. It's designed to hold a few hundred attendees at a time, so the fifty or so Loyalists (and Aequitarians and Lucrosians) and dozen-plus Riftwatchers have plenty of elbow room.

At least in a parliamentary sense, Senior Enchanter Erfried is in charge—to Riftwatch's benefit. The Loyalist Contingent leads with an attempt to ignore Riftwatch's presence and ram their proposal through with no further discussion or procedure on numbers alone, but Erfried is a stickler for the rules. The name of the game is delay, distract, divert.

Fortunately, the mages prove delayable, distractible, and divertable. Creating a record of attendees and participants devolves into a series of short debates about who counts as a Circle Enchanter anymore and whether rifters have any right to be there, which easily take up half a day. From there, arguments about whether the Conclave has met all the finicky requirements to actually count as a Conclave swallow a few hours as well. Unfortunately, two witnesses profess a messenger was sent to alert the Grand Enchanter, and there's no evidence she did not reach it, so Erfried allows things to continue. In theory. Having spent so much of the day on procedural matters, there's no time to get into substance before adjourning for the evening.

Breakfast the next morning is interrupted by the arrival of the small team Riftwatch sent to alert the rebel mages at the front—and by Grand Enchanter Fiona herself, riding behind Ellie on Artichoke. She's only one mage, but she's an angry and important one. And others are coming. She makes a show of being concerned about whether it will be enough people to counteract the fifty-odd Loyalists, to avoid inspiring them to work too hard, but within Riftwatch, word gets around that they'll definitely have the numbers. All they have to do is stall.

The Loyalists do make every effort to resume the proceedings and make progress toward voting on their proposal. How unfortunate that circumstances prevent it. (Invent your own circumstances. Filibustering, general chaos, and minor property damage are all fair game.)

IV. THE CALVARY & THE DEBATE

The Grand Enchanter's people arrive only a few hours later than expected. There are easily a hundred of them—enough to doom the proposal, certainly. There's a sense of doom among the Loyalists when the proceedings resume. A few leave early in defeat. But the rest stick around, as they finally, finally proceed into discussing and voting on the substance of the proposal, and make fairly impassioned arguments on its behalf.

They evoke the history of the Circles: a compromise that saved them from being hunted by the early Inquisition and from being confined in Chantries to do nothing with their gifts but keep the fires lit. The hundreds of years of peace (they say) compared to what's come before and what will come after.

They say there was a mage child in the Nahashin Marshes, turned out by his illiterate and reclusive family, who appears to have lived alone for several years before recently reappearing, warped from possession, to slaughter his entire village. A town in Antiva realized a few of its new residents were mages and burned their house down, killing one and leaving the others with nowhere to go. A young fellow who'd wandered away from the Inquisition's camps once he came of age was caught picking pockets in Ferelden's West Hill and, in his attempts to flee, froze all of the tavern's occupants solid. Several didn't survive the thawing. They report—with no actual statistics, but a few anecdotes—that incidents of (child abuse cw) suspicious child drownings are on the rise. They ask, rhetorically, whether rifters think they will be left in peace by their neighbors when Riftwatch is gone.

And they go on for quite some time about their responsibility to Thedas. The risk of mages amassing power and establishing dynasties—a hundred years stand between that and a new Tevinter, optimistically. The risk of kings and emperors seizing control of the mages within their own borders, if mages are beholden to them rather than to the Chantry, and wielding them against their own people or their neighbors.

They have a reason for every item in the proposal. It's all very depressing and very sincere. A sizable number of the rebel mages from the front are moved by the presentation of the problem, if not convinced that their solution is correct.

But in addition to talking (and talking and talking), they also listen. They don't really have a choice, now that they're outnumbered. While only Circle Enchanters are technically permitted to vote in the College, Erfried will give anyone the floor for at least a few minutes. And between impassioned speeches, there are regular recesses when the Red Auditorium dissolves into more private conversations. Some are quiet, some are loud—but most mages have years of training in keeping their composure, so only a couple get worse than half-raised voices.

V. CUMBERLAND

With the mages from the front, the pressure on Riftwatch lets up somewhat. There's no longer a need for every Riftwatcher to be on-site at all hours of the day to prevent the Loyalist contingent from voting, so there's time to slip out into the city, whether for business—posting messages, buying supplies, running Riftwatch errands unrelated to mages and Circles—or just a break.

VI. THE RESOLUTION

In the end, not much happens. The proposal is voted down. It is not replaced by anything. But a date is set, three months in the future, to reconvene in a more orderly and less underhanded way to consider other options for mages' (and rifters') future. The Grand Enchanter also consents, in good spirits, to this future gathering deciding whether she stays in charge.

Riftwatch is invited. They have until then to do whatever maneuvering and advocacy they can.

It counts as a victory.


NPC NOTES

  • You can do threads with NPC'd mages, or you can thread around their presence: discuss strategy, complain about a conversation with an NPC that happened off screen, take a break from the speeches outside, etc.
  • Feel extremely free to make up NPC mages of your own! For natives this can include mages they already know or have history with. If you make up an NPC who you'd like kept in mind in the future, you can put them on the wiki page for this plot.
  • The Loyalist camp consists mainly of Loyalists, but also some Aequitarians and Lucrosians. They're a mix of mages who sat out the war, Loyalists who fought with Madame de Fer against the rebels, and mages who fought with the rebellion but have since come around to wanting some kind of system back.
  • The rebel mages who arrive on scene are mainly Libertarians, but also have some of every other fraternity—Aequitarians, Resolutionists, Isolationists, Lucrosians, and a few Loyalists along for the ride. They're all mages who fought with the rebellion and then joined the Inquisition.
  • Grand Enchanter Fiona is present! If you want your character to have a significant conversation with her, either to get info or try to convince her of anything, do an info request—since she's so important and influential on her own, deciding what she would say or do is a mod call.
  • You can invent friends/future contacts from either camp for your character to keep in touch with on their own. I don't have any info beyond the scope of this plot to hand out right now, either as a player or as a mod, but for the belated Part III in a few months I will try to gather folks whose characters have Done Work in the interim to distribute influence/information accordingly.
luaithre: (124)

[personal profile] luaithre 2022-08-09 01:49 am (UTC)(link)
"They like feeling listened to,"

is more of a guess than a certain philosophy. And Julius is good at doing that, transmitting that sense of attention, even when he's talking uninterrupted. Speaking of an audience—

"Do you want to walk with me a bit?"

He would like to spend a little time, with those he enjoys the company of, without worrying as to appearances. Not his own, obviously, but they're already reflexively careful in common company, let alone mixed.
overharrowed: (choking on the bones)

[personal profile] overharrowed 2022-08-11 12:24 am (UTC)(link)
"Let's walk," he says, easily. It's been a long day, and spending some time with Marcus sounds pleasant. As they go, of Marcus's first comment, he adds, "I've never understood why some people find listening so difficult. You find out all sorts of interesting things."
luaithre: (125)

[personal profile] luaithre 2022-08-12 12:43 am (UTC)(link)
The College is expansive enough that privacy is easy to come by, although the most Marcus makes use of it is to simply walk at apace, only just shy of accidental contact, arms folded. He makes a sound of agreement as they go.

"We're a gathering of people who aren't very used to it," he says. "Being listened to. Even the Loyalists, I'd say. If we're to proceed peacefully," that if, clearly not a given as far as he is concerned, "then we'll need to manage that. Yourself and Derrica are well placed for it."
overharrowed: (how did I live)

[personal profile] overharrowed 2022-08-12 12:48 am (UTC)(link)
"She's doing well at this, don't you think?" he says of Derrica. "I know she feels she's behind, but I think she's already changed a few minds." He can't help but wish she'd been around to be part of the delegation to negotiate over the phylacteries, but there was still plenty of work ahead of them.

More broadly, he adds, "We're never all going to agree. Mages aren't more monolithic than any other group in Thedas. But it's in all our interests to find a sustainable way forward. What the Loyalists are proposing isn't stable, but we can't just ignore their concerns if we want to do any better."
luaithre: (1)

[personal profile] luaithre 2022-08-12 12:56 am (UTC)(link)
Marcus' immediate silence is of the agreeable, thoughtful kind. (It definitely helps to have lived with him for a year and a half to be able to tell.) Turning a thing over in his mind, and he doesn't keep Julius in too much suspense, at least speaking before the other man might feel moved to fill in the silence.

"That's not nothing," he says. "That what the Loyalists are proposing isn't stable. They think it is that, a return to safety. Stability."
overharrowed: (endlessly kneeling)

[personal profile] overharrowed 2022-08-12 01:04 am (UTC)(link)
"Yes, they do. Well, most of them at least." He'd caught a glimpse of Cassius Black, earlier. "And obviously they think us biased when we suggest otherwise, so it's a case that needs to be made with evidence. But we don't lack that, if we can present it in a way they'll hear."
luaithre: (7)

[personal profile] luaithre 2022-08-12 01:15 am (UTC)(link)
"Or difficult to ignore," sounds like a counter, more banter than argument. Marcus glances side along, Julius being not the only one of the pair of them to deviate from their stated intentions today.

But not from their character. "Evidence exists," he adds, more seriously.
overharrowed: (hiding in my room at night)

[personal profile] overharrowed 2022-08-12 01:30 am (UTC)(link)
"It does." He sounds mainly thoughtful. "We don't have unlimited time to get everyone on board, but people can change their minds. I'd like us to get as much sincere cooperation as is feasible." He glances back, with a small smile. "I mean, I suppose I am a bit biased, as I'm myself a piece of proof that minds can change."
luaithre: (124)

[personal profile] luaithre 2022-08-12 01:46 am (UTC)(link)
Marcus only replies to that, first, with his next step forward swerving him so that his shoulder bumps gently into Julius', a kind of silent reference to the old joke, the one about a very attractive rifter witch and her powers of persuasion. He would like to think of himself as somewhat convincing, too, late as he was.

"That fight I had with Kostos," he says, a slight pivot, but not a complete break from the topic, the thing he is feeling after. He hadn't wished to say much about it at the time. His partners had kindly not pressed him. Now, he says, "He said to me I sounded as though I wanted war."

(Well, it was more vulgarly stated than that, which was the main reason Marcus struck out at him, but these are details—)

"Desired it," to be precise.
Edited 2022-08-12 01:47 (UTC)
overharrowed: (I see my anecdote for it)

[personal profile] overharrowed 2022-08-12 01:50 am (UTC)(link)
His first instinct is to say he doesn't believe that of Marcus but he finds, after a moment, it doesn't need saying. That it's a given is a comfortable sort of thing, and a pleasure in its own way, but he sets it aside in favor of the matter at hand.

"Do you think he believes that, or was he just trying to get a rise out of you?" he asks, thinking it over himself with that he knows of Kostos. (Less than he probably should, given how long they've shared an organization and a living space.)
luaithre: (45)

[personal profile] luaithre 2022-08-12 02:02 am (UTC)(link)
"Certainly the latter," is wry, the kind of conclusion that is much easier to come to later than it is in the moment. Marcus' tone is a little dismissive; he can handle Kostos, at least on the level of handling someone he still considers an ally, and not an enemy.

However. One hand he has hooked into his elbow splays his fingers, relaxes. "But it wasn't from nowhere. In that I likely insulted him, some, but we were speaking of rallying. I was," an amendment. "And in the event of a war, he thinks we couldn't win."
overharrowed: (poets and saints)

[personal profile] overharrowed 2022-08-12 02:16 am (UTC)(link)
Quieter, Julius observes, "The Loyalists aren't the only ones who are afraid." It's hardly news, but it's easy to lose sight of, in the middle of everything else. He stays close, thoughtful still (and still more inclined than usual to have Marcus literally to hand, after what they've both recently been through).

"If it comes to war," he says, quieter, after a short pause, "it will be a qualitatively different one than the last. In some ways to our advantage and others to our disadvantage. But I don't think war is inevitable, yet."

Then again, he hadn't thought so the last time, he can't help remembering.
luaithre: (201)

[personal profile] luaithre 2022-08-12 02:30 am (UTC)(link)
"Not yet," Marcus will grant, probably not just because he thinks Julius is pretty and wants him to like him. They've had enough disagreements to know that they can emerge from the other side of it.

No, he wants to see those that can operate in places like this succeed, even if all he can do is smolder and glower from the back. There's a pause, and it's a conscious easing of tension when he then says, "I don't know how many of them would prefer a farm on an island to all this," with a nod to all this. Marble and gilt.
overharrowed: (someone is watching)

[personal profile] overharrowed 2022-08-12 02:42 am (UTC)(link)
"Not all of them need to," he says, and it's clearly something he's thought of before. "In any world where that farm is possible, it's not the only thing that's possible. Even in the dream we had, I was on a ship to a place like this to keep trying to win hearts and minds. Some mages are going to want to angle for position in whatever new order arises. Some are going to want resources for study, or a half dozen other things." A bit wryly, he adds, "I can't picture Madame de Fer farming, regardless of how well we do here."
luaithre: (99)

[personal profile] luaithre 2022-08-12 02:55 am (UTC)(link)
Marcus had spoken, a little, to the Orlesian shard-bearer who had trailed them there, about keeping in mind some vision of the future. A utopian impulse, but an important one. Makes the war worth more than simply a means to purge himself of that deep volcanic well of anger, a means of revenge. He nods his agreement, and gives a quiet, smokey laugh at this last thing. No, he cannot either.

"We deserve many futures," he says. "Just as everyone born without magic has them."

It's not so simple. The Circles may be a preference belonging to an individual's desire for comfort and safety, but there are those who can only see them as a means to corral all mages. A nation separated from all other civilisation, a new Free March city-state or some piece of Fereldan land, likewise needs numbers to function. But all the same, there ought not be only one solution.

"Before," he starts, that single word doing a lot of heavylifting, "did you never wish for what other men could have? Inheritances, a family of your own."

Speaking of listening. There are just certain things that Marcus had never understood of those fellow mages who didn't burn for the loss of what was taken from them. Well, he imagines that ninety-something-year-old Erfield is rather content in his lot in life, but the rest of them.
overharrowed: (was there something that I missed)

[personal profile] overharrowed 2022-08-27 12:39 am (UTC)(link)
It's a logical question, given the direction of their talk, but it surprises him a bit all the same. Perhaps it's just been so long since anyone asked him, in as many words.

(He can't help but think of the shape of things he and Petrana did and didn't discuss, after they went to Castle Selwyn.)

His initial quiet isn't a resistance to answering the question; it's a pause while he tries to put it into words, to decide which parts of his story are necessary to make the answer understandable.

"I went to the Circle when I was six," he says, quietly, finally. "And I was good at it, you know? Lessons, routine, learning new things. I threw myself into that, and I envisioned the type of future I could see." He glances away, muted, though not disengaging. "There was one scare. A woman I was involved with, we thought for a moment she might have been pregnant. A bloody relief she wasn't, it would have been a mess at best and possibly much worse if she actually had been. But I did have a moment, when I thought... But then I put that away for a long time."

He exhales and looks back at Marcus. The guarded expression isn't for him in particular. That he's talking about this at all is a measure of trust. But old habits aren't easy to release. "If I came from a family like yours, that particular opportunity's loss might have shaped my thinking sooner."
luaithre: (124)

[personal profile] luaithre 2022-08-27 01:05 am (UTC)(link)
A family like yours is the kind of phrasing he has to pause over—but better instincts set it aside. Unimportant. Julius is looking at him, so there is enough telegraphed there that it isn't a startle-worthy surprise when he feels his hand being taken, fingers slid in between his. Calluses from casting and, increasingly, labour, the cool press of a ring set with obsidian.

Marcus doesn't know very much about the Selwyns, save that they are called Selwyn, ranking amongst Ferelden's answer to nobility, and that Julius does not bear their name.

"Tell me of them," he bids, and not just because. A determined edge to his tone, of someone who wishes to understand a thing, and can think of no more graceful way to go about it (if he'd lent any thought to grace).
overharrowed: (echoing vistas)

[personal profile] overharrowed 2022-08-28 11:19 pm (UTC)(link)
It occurs to him, abruptly, that no one has ever asked him. Not so directly, not with any sort of right to know. It seems suddenly absurd to him that he's gone nearly 40 years not talking about them mainly by just making it quietly clear he didn't want to. (He and Petrana had talked, exactly once, after she met them; it still feels different.)

He doesn't pull his hand away.

"The sum total of what I know comes from memories before I was six and a single Inquisition assignment," he says, "I'm hardly an expert." With someone else, he might have tried to leave it there. But he doesn't want Marcus to wonder if it's a lack of trust, or anything to do with him, and that's what pushes him on to say:

"I was the middle of two brothers. My older brother died in the Fifth Blight, fighting. My younger brother is left to be the future bann, one day. The little I know of him, he'll do alright at the management parts, and probably leave politics alone. For a holding the size of the Selwyns', that probably won't be any particular problem. The current bann isn't any good at politics either, he just deludes himself otherwise."
luaithre: (125)

[personal profile] luaithre 2022-08-28 11:36 pm (UTC)(link)
The notes of reservation are there, but Marcus pays them little mind save to notice them. Mages, talking of their born families, has never in his experience been an easy subject. That it isn't easy for Julius makes it different in a way that is difficult to express. He characterises—well, both of his partners, really, as being distinctly utilitarian about the things that others might be more protective over.

Still, Julius speaks of it as asked, and Marcus listens. The structures of it, the conflict and potential made plainer. He'd understood some shape of it, had assumed. "And why did you say that," pressing, "about the family you came from, shaping your thinking? Compared to my own."
overharrowed: (I see my anecdote for it)

[personal profile] overharrowed 2022-08-28 11:48 pm (UTC)(link)
"They didn't want me. Before they knew I was a mage."

For all his tone is matter-of-fact, it sounds childish to Julius's own ears. It's true, and he knows it in his bones, but that doesn't stop him from feeling somehow weak and peevish to observe it aloud. He's also aware that people usually encounter claims that parents didn't want their children with some skepticism, so he goes on:

"My father pinned all his hopes on my elder brother. They were very alike, in temperament. Quick to anger. Entitled. I mean, I shouldn't be too hard on my brother, I suppose, he was only eight the last time I saw him in person, but my father understood him. He saw in him the heir he wanted. My mother ... She was always kind to my face, but she'd never stand up to my father in my behalf. And she usually couldn't be counted upon to do things she promised me. She wanted me to be quiet and obedient, mainly, and once Thomas came along well. They each had a favorite and I was the extra."

It's all just as quiet and even as he started, as if it had all happened to someone else.
luaithre: (7)

[personal profile] luaithre 2022-08-29 12:05 am (UTC)(link)
Midway through, Marcus squeezes Julius' hand, an assurance of—something. However the other man might interpret it.

It's in the name of affording Julius some reprieve (but not forever) as he says, "I didn't really think much of it when I penned my name down in joining Riftwatch, writing Rowntree," a glance. "I'd never asked anyone call me that before. Names circulated some while the rebellion formed up, but even then.

"Now I think almost everyone does, in the Gallows." It's more amusing, than anything. "Even after all this time, I still half-expect my father to be standing behind me whenever it happens. I know Petra thinks it's proper."
overharrowed: (such a storm of feelings)

[personal profile] overharrowed 2022-08-29 12:20 am (UTC)(link)
"She doesn't understand why I don't use Selwyn," of Petrana. His voice is warm, fond, if still quiet. Marcus's hand in his is welcome grounding, under the circumstances. "I mean, she understands that I feel strongly about it, so she lets it stand, but I know she saw the bannorn when we were there with the Inquisition and did the arithmetic of my being the eldest living son. She saw opportunity there, and I see why but..."

He lets that thread drop, and instead takes up a parallel thought. "When I used to want people to call me 'Enchanter,' more than I do now, it wasn't really about being a Loyalist or not. It was that it felt like something I'd earned. A garment that fit. I suspect some people's surnames feel that way."
luaithre: (201)

[personal profile] luaithre 2022-08-29 12:35 am (UTC)(link)
There is a silence, there, the kind where a truth serum would probably compel Marcus to fill it. It is mainly allowing the thing Julius says to stand uncontested. There is validity to it that can exist without Marcus' permission, and so, there's just a rueful twist to his smile, subtle.

A thread picked back up. "Is that something you'd want? Your inheritance? To put aside the question of earning it."
overharrowed: (I've had my time)

[personal profile] overharrowed 2022-08-29 12:47 am (UTC)(link)
He's not sure those things can be separated, which feeds the pause following the question. Finally, he says, "I can think of many uses, for those sorts of resources. And if we think we can use it as a lever toward recognition of mage inheritance rights more broadly, perhaps it would be selfish not to try. But I can't imagine personally running it the way a well-run bannorn should be run. That isn't where my ambitions lie, all other things being equal."

A briefer pause, and he adds, "I can't imagine living there again."
luaithre: (12)

[personal profile] luaithre 2022-08-29 01:53 am (UTC)(link)
"Then don't."

It's not up to Marcus, and the slight half-smile that comes with his advice knows it. Whatever it is the three of them choose to be or do, he suspects his share in it is more negotiable. "I've no doubt you or Petra could find a way to wring use of it, if you like, without it needing to be for the rest of your life."

The joined hands between them get a slight jiggle as he adds, "Although I remember something said in that dream we shared. On titles."

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sliding towards bow y/n

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