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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Still, he had earned their respect over time, those who weren't hateful zealots. He wonders if he's comparing Janica to himself subconsciously and placing more trust than is warranted. Or more pressure. What if she folds?
Wilken's temper is enough of a concern he's hesitant. "Is that what your gut tells you? That he's truly the better choice? Or is it just concern over her age? She has proven herself solid in the time I've known her." He's not willing to override him without hearing him out fully.
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Dorian knows it well. He's quite familiar with doing what's best for himself instead of politically. He doesn't need to explain that to Cullen right now or ever, really.
"You know Kirkwall in a way I cannot as I've never lived here. When you make this decision, ask yourself what will make the city better and is it worth the consequences?"
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"I'll interview both of them and make my announcement by tomorrow. I appreciate your input." He believes he'll have a better idea of who can better handle it by seeing how they react to the possibility.
"Since we both have one another's time and at the moment, is there anything you need or want to bring to my attention? Any concerns or questions?" It seems as good a time as any to allow for it. He doesn't know when he'll have another moment to spare. Quiet one on one time with anyone is rare for him these days.
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He thinks for a moment, drumming his fingers on the arms of the chair he is in. "What sorts of goods can we get? The herbs are running low and the healers could use more. Perhaps with most of the demons culled you could send more in the field to help rebuild, give them a purpose. They're a bit aimless and it's frustrating them."
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"It's not a bad idea. I'd say avoid the Wounded Coast for the time being. The place is crawling with slavers and raiders looking for stragglers to capture and sell. I imagine mages are going for a pretty price at the moment. Take them toward Sundermount. The Dalish clan there has moved on from what I understand. It should be safer. As safe as that place ever is."
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"Slavers, you say? Hm, that does sound dangerous." He'll certainly keep the elves away. Slavers are always looking for elves. No one in Tevinter questions where elves come from. "I'll make sure no one wanders there."
Except Dorian himself. His fellow countrymen could use a reminder that Tevinter isn't allowed to take slaves from the South. There are enough in the Imperium to satisfy the demand.
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"I'll draw up the permission. You can take as many as you need for extended foraging at the mountain." Anyone who was going to make a run for it has already made a run for it. Those staying behind have done so for a reason. He's not going to treat them like prisoners. Kirkwall needs as much help as it can get from all quarters.
"Watch for dragons, too. A couple of years ago, I heard rumors a few had settled at the peak. They may not all have been wiped out. There could even be Darkspawn." There were also rumors of more ancient evils. He hopes they all have the sense to stay out of the deep ruins there. They won't find much to help them in the bowels of the earth, nothing but trouble.
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He might as well see how much independence he can get these mages to embrace while he's here even if he doesn't know a damn thing about gardening.
His eyebrows have not dropped one inch. If they had anywhere to go they would leap at the mention of dragons. "Oh goodie. Dragons. I'm so thrilled."
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He frowns thoughtfully at the idea of a garden. "It would have to be raised planters. I imagine we can manage it if we bring in the right sort of dirt." Coming from Honnleath makes him no expert on the rearing of crops.
"I suppose that means you likely don't want to hear of the arcane horrors and revenants? I could curl your toes with all of the tales I've heard of trips to Sundermount. The plants there, however, seem far more potent and useful than those growing closer to the walls. I suppose there's always some sort of a trade, and it's the closest place you can harvest without encroaching on owned lands. I'll give you access to the maps I have. You'll need them." Part of him wishes he could accompany them. Getting out of the city for a few days would be a relief, despite the danger of the destination.
He can't. He has duties here, and he's currently indispensable. It's not the ego stroke it sounds like it would be. He feels all of that weight on his shoulders all of the time, heavier than plate by far. He moves to a shelf with several neatly stacked scroll cases to find the maps in question while he's thinking of it.
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Dorian could fight and had fought a few times but nothing quite like what he had encountered coming here. Kirkwall was teaching him to be a better fighter and a better mage. He won't say that outloud but he is rather pleased with the developement of his skills.
"Why don't you come?" he asked, noting the slightly wistful look. "You and your Templar friends can search the area for bandits with the city guard or round up any wayward blood mages practicing their ugly arts. Stretch those legs, get that skirt out in the breeze."
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He sighs and shakes his head. "I don't think that I can. If I traipse out of the city for several days, it's not going to look good. People will worry there's some threat we haven't made them aware of, or the Seneschal might need me. I'm not... I'm afraid my days of such forays are over for the foreseeable future." He hates to say it, as though the office didn't already feel like a cage.
"I probably should spare you a couple of templars, though."
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Dorian could see the man easily taking the position of Knight-Commander officially but he doubted it would be a happy appointment. There's nothing that screams ambition and power in Cullen. He wants to argue that he should do it anyway but he doubts it will get him anywhere.
"A few Templars would be nice. Some of the mages will feel safer." Dorian doesn't like the Templars all over, always watching. How these mages can tolerate it baffles him. "Still, come with us sometime. If only to bring the officials to survey the damage to the coast. The City Guard Captain should see it and be out there doing things."
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"All right. I'll have those texts sent to you. Take the maps with you and share them with the other mages. I'll have the permission writ filed by this evening, and all should be in order. I'll see you again in a couple of weeks if all goes well. Maker watch over you." He's not thinking in terms of dismissal, except there are easily a dozen other things he needs to see to within the next couple of hours, and he has subconsciously begun to manage his time accordingly, blocking things out according to priority and time needed. It leaves little time for pleasantries.
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"Permission writ," Dorian snorts as he gets to his feet. The idea is ludicrous to him. Mages needed permission to go somewhere as if they were children instead of adults capable of rational decisions and their own actions. "The South is an odd, odd place. I'll see you when we return. And as always you can come find my company if you're bored or need an opinion. At least someone around here listens to me."
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The next couple of weeks for him pass the same as the previous, an exhausting blur. By this time there are no more survivors to be dug from the rubble, but they're still forced to find the corpses. For every one that they don't, there are reports of walking dead wreaking all kinds of havoc.
News continues to arrive from beyond Kirkwall, Circle uprisings, brutal sanctions, chaos and madness spreading like wildfire. With his hands more than full with Kirkwall, Cullen can do little beyond pray for Thedas and tend to his own hearth fires. Unexpectedly, he and Aveline grow closer, finally able to set aside the intense rivalry and anger between guards and templars due to Meredith's political posturing. They function more as a team now, tried in the tribulations of the city since the destruction and made stronger for it.
Although he spares some thoughts in that time for the Tevinter and the other mages on their mission with three of his men, he has to believe that they're competent enough to come back in one piece and successful.
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The Templars are... chilly to him. They know he's helped but they just can't trust a Tevinter mage. They're always watching and Dorian private chaffes under all the attention. He gets a bit petty about it, really, using magic for mundane things like warming water and picking plants.
He teaches the other mages things he knows as well. Force magic is a wild school he's never heard or seen in Tevinter so he's eager to trade his knowledge of necromancy for their tricks. He's quite pleased with all he's learned but he imagines the Templars have much to report.
When they return to the city, he hears of the chaos beyond in the rest of Thedas. It's also when one of his dwarven contacts comes to him with news of a cult. He seeks out Cullen immediately.
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He looks up from a report when Dorian sweeps into his office and sets it aside. The look on his face looks like business. "I take it this isn't about herbs," he says, bracing himself for bad news.
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He tosses the letter his dwarf contact gave him down on to the desk. "That is my friend, Felix, we grew up together. He's one of the few people who know I'm here. A mutual dwarf friend of ours passed that to me today. His father's joined a cult, the Venitor, who are worshiping some Elder One. He's worried because his father and the others are talking of what's going on here."
Dorian feels a bit of worry as well. It's never good when Tevinters go back to worshiping the Old Gods. "I'm going to write him back, pass it threw the dwarves, but whatever these Venitori want it can't be good."
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"That we know of, of course." There's always a chance they could be undiscovered. Cults are notoriously good at disguising their activities in this city until it's too late.
He wonders if this means they're about to lose him in pursuit of this new threat. If so, he could hardly blame him. That's something dealing with his homeland, something that could impact people he knows and cares about. Cullen has known for a while they won't be keeping him here forever.
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He can't go back and fight it in Tevinter but perhaps he could do something here. Kirkwall, Ostwick, the coastal cities would be the first places a Tevinter cult would land. It would be their foothold.
"If Felix tells me they're coming and he will if he knows that they are, I'll tell you that as well but the docks should be watched if they can be."
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"I'll make certain it's filtered only through certain channels." The last thing they need is for panic to spread. The only thing he can imaging going over worse with most Kirkwallers right now than word of another Qunari invasion would be news there are Tevinter infiltrators out to raise some Old God or dread evil. Maker's breath, as though they don't all have enough to worry about already.
"The foray went all right, then? You didn't lose anyone?" He imagines if he had, that news would have been first to the table rather than the letter. It doesn't hurt to ask.
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"Your Templars will be annoyed with me," he says after letting out a deep breath. "I perhaps felt a bit resentful for their presence and annoyed them on purpose. No one got hurt and no demons were summoned. There are some raiders moving in to the mountains but they were easily scared off."
Magic seemed to terrify them. Dorian didn't understand such a visceral fear of magic. It had always been a comfort to him, his strength and power. It kept him safe. "Besides a few blisters, sun burns, and sore feet your mages are fine."
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"I'm also glad they had the chance for some field experience. It's something I want to institute more frequently. The world is changing, and we need to change with it if we've any hope of keeping things together." He rubs his hand over his lips and down his chin. He feels stiff, as though he has been sitting in one place for too long.
"When I take this news to Guard Captain Aveline, I'd like for you to come with me. You have knowledge of your people, what we should watch for and expect. I'd rather her not get it filtered through me." He rests his hand lightly on the letter. "Will you be ready early tomorrow morning? It's easiest to catch her at the barracks then."
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"You could, oh I don't know, give them freedom," he offers as a suggestion with a casual shrug of his shoulder. "The South is falling apart because of the Circles. The system is broken. Time to move on, try something new."
He wouldn't say he's an activist but honestly it doesn't seem that hard to him. He makes a face at the idea of early mornings. He's had to do that a great deal recently. "Fine. I will be up and we can chat to the Guard Captain. Besides what's in that letter, however, I can only tell you logical assumptions about what's going on."
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He frowns and reaches to tap a finger on his desktop. "Regardless, it's not my call to make. I answer to the Divine. She has yet to make her will known. Until she does, I maintain the Circle as it is to the best of my ability and try to undo the damage my commanding officer did during her tenure." There's a tiredness that creeps into his voice when he mentions Meredith and a hollow expression in his eyes. It's still hard to reconcile the woman who greeted him when he stepped off the ship to the person she became ten years after the fact.
"I know Aveline. She'll want it from you, however brief or sketchy on details." It would also ensure that she understood there's a Tevinter in their midst and that Cullen trusts him enough to bring him into important things. It will help the man in his dealings in the city in the coming weeks.
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