Commander Cullen Stanton Rutherford (
lovingvambrace) wrote2015-03-04 01:11 am
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For
pavus_redemit Kirkwall
The taste of ash lies thick in the air. For once something manages to overpower the foundry stench and blacken the perpetual orange of Kirkwall's night sky. Rubble lies massed in the streets, flung from the highest point to almost the lowest. Insanity and sudden chaos in the wink of an eye, a fateful explosion that has Cullen still blinking back blue lines, negative light impressions burned onto retinas.
Knight-Commander Meredith has left the Champion with an ultimatum that she not surprisingly doesn't take, murder her companion and choose their side, or the mages will all face the consequences. Hawke has vowed to fight to the bitter end to protect the mages of the Circle from the Right. Cullen privately hopes that she'll keep that word whether he agrees with her sparing of the abomination or not. This is all moving too fast with blame falling in the wrong quarter. The right answer isn't more blood. Meredith is implacable with all of them drawn along in her wake of righteous fury.
Cullen doesn't stay silent, arguing about the Champion. Surely arrest will be enough. Kirkwall's nobility won't stand for one of their grudging own being murdered by the arm of the Chantry. It isn't their place, Viscount or no Viscount in office. To his surprise, he earns concession on that front.
Then there is no more room for talking. They come upon their first wave of demons and abominations slaughtering unfortunates. The night turns red and black, a mist of blood and ichor. Cullen bashes his way through wave after wave of evil torn straight through the Veil, called by violence and horror. His sword arm burns. His shield feels as though it gains twenty pounds of its own volition, all of that before they reach the Docks District.
He hears a sound up toward the boarded up Qunari compound, more fighting. He peels away from the main force following Meredith, promising to catch up shortly, and runs up the steep steps. Breathless at the top, he sees flashes of fire past the barrier. He throws his weight behind his shield and bashes it in enough to gain entrance. A lone figure stands in the long abandoned plaza battling demons with magic and not an abomination himself. Without further thought, Cullen charges into the fray. "Aid behind you!" he shouts. He doesn't want to be mistaken for another enemy in the fight.
Knight-Commander Meredith has left the Champion with an ultimatum that she not surprisingly doesn't take, murder her companion and choose their side, or the mages will all face the consequences. Hawke has vowed to fight to the bitter end to protect the mages of the Circle from the Right. Cullen privately hopes that she'll keep that word whether he agrees with her sparing of the abomination or not. This is all moving too fast with blame falling in the wrong quarter. The right answer isn't more blood. Meredith is implacable with all of them drawn along in her wake of righteous fury.
Cullen doesn't stay silent, arguing about the Champion. Surely arrest will be enough. Kirkwall's nobility won't stand for one of their grudging own being murdered by the arm of the Chantry. It isn't their place, Viscount or no Viscount in office. To his surprise, he earns concession on that front.
Then there is no more room for talking. They come upon their first wave of demons and abominations slaughtering unfortunates. The night turns red and black, a mist of blood and ichor. Cullen bashes his way through wave after wave of evil torn straight through the Veil, called by violence and horror. His sword arm burns. His shield feels as though it gains twenty pounds of its own volition, all of that before they reach the Docks District.
He hears a sound up toward the boarded up Qunari compound, more fighting. He peels away from the main force following Meredith, promising to catch up shortly, and runs up the steep steps. Breathless at the top, he sees flashes of fire past the barrier. He throws his weight behind his shield and bashes it in enough to gain entrance. A lone figure stands in the long abandoned plaza battling demons with magic and not an abomination himself. Without further thought, Cullen charges into the fray. "Aid behind you!" he shouts. He doesn't want to be mistaken for another enemy in the fight.
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He was not used to doing things like this but he was actually rather excited. The plan seem well thought out and not terribly risky. He would have to try and change his spells so they weren't quite so flashy. That would take some theorizing before they went out.
"But, do ask your men if they'll allow me to cast on them. I don't want to get accused of blood magic."
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"It's going to be an interesting time." It's clear he's ready for it and looking forward to it. He has been wanting to curb these criminals for a while now, angry that they've been taking advantage and preying on the outskirts while Kirkwall licks her wounds. They're about to find out she's not limping along quite that badly after all.
He polishes off his meal and sets his plate to the side to be scrubbed later. They don't want to attract wild animals and wind up fighting on two fronts. "Now we can rest for a bit and wait for darkness." He won't sleep. He's too keyed up for that, but he knows how to take advantage of down time when he has it.
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He stops himself before he goes in to the details. It's very risky magic and if he's not careful he could do something disastrous but it works on a very small, very brief scale. Alexius would be proud, he thinks.
"I have to figure out how to make lightning less visible otherwise I'll blind everyone on the battlefield not just our enemies. Maybe I should try ice magic," he muses, wiggling his fingers with a bit of mana flowing over them. "Flashy is not really useful to you and the others right now."
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Oh, eventually they would know they were being cut down and had warriors and mages in their midst. There's no sense in advertising to camps further away. He'll be advising minimal use of fire, too, for the same reasons.
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And then as the raiders started to die Dorian would really send those bastards in to a panic. Hopefully the Templars and Guards wouldn't panic as well. He frowns at the thought.
"Perhaps you should warn them that I work with Necromancy as well." It is unusual for him to care this much about the people around him. He typically cast whatever spell suited him without question. This is odd.
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"I'll be sure they know what to expect." It won't do anyone any good if they panic or fail to understand what is actually going on. They aren't going to like it. Cullen doesn't like it. He doesn't have to like something to recognize its usefulness.
He pushes himself off the driftwood log he's using as a seat and settles directly into the sandy soil with a few shifts to work any lumps out beneath him. Now he can lean back against the large sea faded bole and prop his head to relax. One hand comes to rest just above the line of his sash.
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He wrinkles his nose at the idea of sitting in the sand. It would take forever to remove the grains from his robes but apparently his friend is relaxing the night they charge in to raider camps.
"You needed this," he says, studying him. "To get away from it all and charge in to danger."
He's a bit amazed by that. Who found battle relaxing?
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No, never in his wildest dreams had he thought he'd be a Knight-Commander under any circumstances, much less these. Being out on the open on the hunt gets his blood pumping like few other things can. Knowing there's no ambiguity in it is even better. They're not hunting frightened children and youths. They're not even hunting crazed demon worshipers. Just bad men and women up to bad things who should have thought twice before bringing their brand of depredation here.
"I have a mind, yes, and I've never been afraid to put it to use. But this... This is what I know." Tactics for out thinking the enemy, then training for out fighting him.
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He can't imagine what the answer will be but if Cullen enjoyed tactics and battle he would do a great deal more of that if he joined the Ferelden army or some city guard. Templar seemed a strange choice to Dorian.
Then again, anything with Templars felt strange especially ones that smelled like lyrium constantly.
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"In Honnleath templars were seen as protecting people. Everyone, mages and those without power. Soldiers...well, soldiers served the king, and we didn't have much in the way of a town guard. They were a bit of a joke, old men with pot bellies and ill-fitting armor who marched around and thumped children on the backs of their hands for pilfering in farmer's stalls in the open market."
He cracks an eye open to look at him. "But the templars were grand. Disciplined, drilling, the arm of the benevolent Chantry, and before you laugh, try to understand my village was small and had an uncertain and frightening history with our one local mage of note, the unfortunate owner of the golem. Heady stuff for a young boy more quiet and introverted than his outgoing siblings. Our house was chaos. Happy chaos, but chaos. I wanted more, and I...perhaps naively believed that good intentions and hard work would be enough." A mouthful, he realizes, likely more than the man truly wants to hear. There's no taking it back now. He closes his eyes again.
"I imagine it's different when you're a mage. It...happens to you, not the other way around."
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"I suppose that does explain it," he says with a slight not. As a child Dorian wanted nothing more than to be a Magister like his father. Those were the days when he thought he would be just like every other mage in Tevinter. How wrong he had been.
"Templars are a bit of a joke in Tevinter," he explains, "The Army is much more respected. I would never dream of enlisting. That's for the lower classes. Yet, here I am with guards and Templars. My life is a very strange fever dream at the moment."
Dorian is not sure he likes it. He misses Tevinter a great deal and yet he's adjusting. It's a strange situation.
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"Maybe you understand my early motives better than I anticipated." Every now and then he sees a glimmer of an idealist in Dorian. It draws him at the same time it stings him. It hits close to home and reminds him of just what he has lost.
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"Ah, what's better than this. The annoying insects, the cold breeze, and the delightful name Wounded Coast," he says flippantly. No need for Cullen to know what kindness lurked in his depths. "Who would ever want to leave Kirkwall?"
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He's grateful enough for his help that he doesn't want to risk alienating him. He closes both eyes again. His face is more relaxed than ever it is behind closed doors. "You'll have a place with us for as long as you want it."
He adds after another moment or two, "But when the Seekers come, I recommend setting your sights on a new shore. Might be the ideal time to go visit the queen in Denerim."
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They were a branch of Templars and the Chantry, he understood that, but why they were more threatening was not exactly clear to him. There were no writings available in what remained of the library and asking the other mages mostly got him the sorts of stories children told each other to scare themselves silly.
He really wished he had some concrete evidence about this organization.
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The trouble in his expression is somewhat quick to melt away, though. He's still focused on their current objective. "Whenever it happens, it will still be a while yet. We'll have time to get you well away."
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He waves a hand at Cullen's concern. "Don't worry about me. You have enough on your shoulders and I am quite good at taking care of myself. You know, competent mage and all."
He's bothered that Cullen thinks he needs to escape before the Seekers arrive and that Cullen might think he would run just because some buffed up Templars walked n to Kirkwall. He's not sure which idea bothers him. The idea that he's bothered at all is really bothersome as well.
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The curl of his lips is entirely too smug, all the more so because his eyes are still closed.
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"The correct way to address me is Altus Pavus," Dorian corrects in his best haughty Tevinter voice. It is as natural as breathing to slip back to that superiority. "You would do well to remember that."
That's better. He feels back on equal footing now. He imagines Cullen is going to laugh at him for this. He feels oddly okay with that.
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"You know us Southerners and our uncouth tongues." He clicks it against the roof of his mouth once. "You really should settle in and relax a while. It's going to be a very long night and day. The sand has ways of sapping all of the energy out of your legs if you walk in it for too long."
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"Relax? How am I to relax when you can't even address me correctly?" he huffs, glaring at Cullen. "Altus, it's a u sound, you barbarian. These are the sorts of things that would get you ostracized from Tevinter nobility you understand."
He huffs again and hunches his shoulders forward. "I have to practice with my spells. I'll be fine."
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"Then get in some practice while I get in some rest. After everyone is done eating, I'll have to brief them anyway." He glances out past Dorian and smiles again. There's no good in the smugness of it.
"Third plate for Guardsman Hendyr. I'll take that coin when you come by it."
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He can't imagine Cullen anywhere near the Magisterium or the cut throat politics of Tevinter. He does take a brief fanciful moment to imagine him in the Tevinter armor and it's a nice imagine before he stops and thinks no further.
"I'll move so you can get your rest." He rises to his feet, intending on joining the mages.
"I haven't a clue what you mean, good sir. I would never gamble."
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"No one likes a welcher!" he calls after him. Shaking his head, he settles back down again. He won't actually nap, but he'll be a little more rested by the time the rest are done with their meals and cleanup.
He feels strangely optimistic for a man facing a difficult, dangerous night. He thinks that says a lot about the way things have been in Kirkwall the past few months.
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It's not terribly exhausting either for a mage of his skill and practice. By the time the sun goes down he's mastered three basic ice spells that will see him through any fight that might occur.
It's also about the time the Guard Captain starts to gather her men for the briefing on tonight's plan.
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