ABRAXAS MODS (
abraxasmods) wrote in
abraxaslogs2021-08-28 09:41 pm
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Entry tags:
- !event,
- !npc,
- alina starkov; the hanged man,
- amos burton; the lovers,
- cirilla of cintra; the devil,
- coraline finch; the tower,
- estinien wyrmblood; the hermit,
- geralt of rivia; the hanged man,
- gideon nav; strength,
- hector; the magician,
- himeka sui; the fool,
- jaskier; the sun,
- jon sims; the high priestess,
- jon snow; the emperor,
- kiryu kazuma; the tower,
- sam wilson; justice
WELCOME TO THE FREE CITIES!
WELCOME TO THE FREE CITIES!
Welcome to The Free Cities! The portal exits outside the capital city of Cadens. The first impression of the city is its sheer size. It sprawls out across the landscape like a great hulking beast at rest. The wall that encircles it barely contains it, the buildings of Cadens practically bulging against its restraint.
The air here seems thicker somehow, tinged with a scent that’s acrid and smoky. Smog hangs high over the city, belched out by smokestacks that tower over the industrial district. The desert stretches out behind it, dotted with towers and dust clouds that disappear into the horizon. Multiple gates lead inside and each is staffed by soldiers in unfamiliar uniforms that wave a steady stream of people through without appearing to pay much attention. People are coming and going almost all of the time, to and from the outposts and areas of activity around the city proper. It’s difficult to tell just what’s out there beyond the impression of tall metal structures and a great deal of labor. Wagons carrying travelers to Libertas and Aquila roll out from the Travel Post outside the city wall.
Anyone who can sense magic will notice a much lower concentration here. No one will be stopped or questioned at the gate, even if the soldiers seem to take note of the fugitives from Thorne.
The activity and sheer number of citizens can be overwhelming. It’s crowded and loud and feels constantly in motion with everyone talking and yelling over each other. It’s easy to get swept up in the ever-moving throng or find oneself ducking into the mouth of a narrow alley just to breathe.
Anyone who’s willing to make their way to the northern part of the city and Portham Hall will find Prime Minister Marlo Reiner available to receive them.
The air here seems thicker somehow, tinged with a scent that’s acrid and smoky. Smog hangs high over the city, belched out by smokestacks that tower over the industrial district. The desert stretches out behind it, dotted with towers and dust clouds that disappear into the horizon. Multiple gates lead inside and each is staffed by soldiers in unfamiliar uniforms that wave a steady stream of people through without appearing to pay much attention. People are coming and going almost all of the time, to and from the outposts and areas of activity around the city proper. It’s difficult to tell just what’s out there beyond the impression of tall metal structures and a great deal of labor. Wagons carrying travelers to Libertas and Aquila roll out from the Travel Post outside the city wall.
Anyone who can sense magic will notice a much lower concentration here. No one will be stopped or questioned at the gate, even if the soldiers seem to take note of the fugitives from Thorne.
The activity and sheer number of citizens can be overwhelming. It’s crowded and loud and feels constantly in motion with everyone talking and yelling over each other. It’s easy to get swept up in the ever-moving throng or find oneself ducking into the mouth of a narrow alley just to breathe.
Anyone who’s willing to make their way to the northern part of the city and Portham Hall will find Prime Minister Marlo Reiner available to receive them.
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He'd thought he'd met a gentle vampire lady who could understand him, and it had nearly led to his ruin.
It's a good song, though, the story well-told by a compelling singer. Hector watched the dark figure Jaskier conjures, and tries not to think of Lenore, auburn-haired and pale, capable of kindness and cruelty in the same breath.
He flips a coin into the open lute case, hoping to inspire other listeners to loose their purse-strings and do the same.]
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Another coin rings in his case and he opens his eyes to --
Shit. Being a professional, he doesn't miss his next note, but for a moment the images fades until the woman is back, her dress having turned to bat-like wings that stretch out behind her, the flash of teeth.
The song ends with the vampiress's grim finale at the end of a silver sword, which is not romanticized.
Jaskier takes his bows, snapping his lute case shut with a boot. The performance was over for now. This felt more important than a few coins.
Hector is here. It surprises him somehow, after -- all right, it was a bit on Jaskier for not actually checking before he stole his kiss and tossed himself into a portal (so Yennefer could not, in fact, kill him). Yet his heart now flutters to see the necromancer again, and he meets him with an easy smile and a sparkle in his eye. He only just holds himself back from asking what Hector thinks of it.]
You know, you needn't pay to listen to me. You've earned special privileges at this rate. [But he is, indeed, touched. And glad to see Hector has the coin to spare.] I'm happy to see you again so soon, my friend.
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But Hector can't properly brood about doomed vampire romances while very human bards are ending their performances and smiling so brightly at him.
Hector isn't surprised that Jaskier is here. He'd seen the portal the man had dashed through (though he had been a little dazed by the sudden kiss). It had only been a matter of time before he found him, and he'd tried to use the time in between wisely, getting himself and Alucard's lodging squared away.]
Shhh, you should pretend not to know me. I toss you a coin, and the people around me loosen their purse strings so they don't seem stingy by comparison.
[Not that it makes a difference at this point, with the show over and the lute case shut. But Hector's smiling as he says it, and shaking his head fondly. Being told he is special has chased away the melancholy from the song.]
If you keep saying things like that, you'll never be rid of me.
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I believe that only works in church.
[Jaskier returns the smile easily with a little wink on top of it. It really is good to see him, especially after Alucard was so very... Alucard-y.]
Oh no, the very thing I'm after! How terrible. [He ducks his head to remove the lute from around his shoulders, very carefully tucking it into its case after tossing the coins into a pouch. He can always play more later, but for now... a break sounds wonderful. And the company even better.] How do you feel about taking your coin back in the form of a drink? Plenty of taverns around here.
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[But Jaskier isn't new to the game, so how he tries to earn money is up to him, ultimately.
Hector nods. He didn't set out for a drink, but he's not going to say no to a pint with his favorite bard.]
I could be persuaded. We might as well start learning our way around the taverns here.
[Hector isn't entirely sure which Free City he'll settle on, but no harm in getting to know Cadens.]
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There's no telling where they'll go next. For now, he's eager to begin to learn the current city's taverns.
Perhaps its other inn rooms. Later.]
I see you have have your own share of experiences with priests. [Luckily, where they were going, there would be far less chance of running into many of those. Thorne, at least, did not appear very big on priests, nor religion. Not that didn't involve the Singularity.]
Come. We'll find something a little better than swill. [He offers his hand.] How are you faring? I don't suppose you've found a little niche for your brand of trade yet?
[It's not a prod; he's honestly curious. If one with Hector's skills has an opportunity to hock them.]
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He takes Jaskier's hand, unused to such casual displays of affection, but so, so open to it.]
I'm doing well enough. It's easier to find work of the mundane variety. It takes some... delicate inquiry to find patrons for my real work.
[He's not looking to get burned at the stake, he means. It seems less likely that will happen here than back home, but he's still cautious.]
You, on the other hand, have a skill anyone can appreciate.
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He squeezes Hector's hand, leading him along. To be fair, he doesn't know many taverns himself yet -- far from how he would know every single one, even in the poorest of towns, like the back of his hand. It's always been exciting to him, exploring new cities, even if in the end they had nothing to offer.
But a new city with new company -- now that was even better.]
That... right. Delicate. Makes sense. [It's not hard to assume that others may not find Hector's quirks as attractive as Jaskier. To be fair, if it'd been a human corpse and not a frog, his opinion may have changed dramatically.]
Well, several skills, I like to think. [He winked.] Drinks aside, if you ever need aid, you know you can come to me.
[Look, Jaskier knows very well how easily he can make money. But he imagines it's a bit harder for necromancers.]
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...except Jaskier is offering to take care of him. And not in the forced way he's experienced in Styria. Just... being supportive, and without any expectation of Hector working for him.]
...I can? [He asks, not disbelieving, but shaken. Jaskier hasn't asked anything of him, but he'd raise an army for the man, no questions asked.]
I'm sure you say that to all the necromancers you meet. [He jokes, because he does not know how else to deal with the way his heart is thumping its way out of his chest.]
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Hector, of course. Normally I would have much more to offer, were we back on the Continent, but -- we'll go for the budget options, if we must.
[The joke takes him by surprise, considering Hector's response. He snorts.]
Ah. I promise I am not so generous to every one I meet. [To be fair, he does actually know more than one now. How fascinatingly bizarre his life has become.] For one, I certainly couldn't afford it.
[A tease. He draws Hector's hand up to kiss it.]
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Hector doesn't even mind if Jaskier does lavish his affections on more than just him. Just experiencing it is enough. He'll find ways to be useful to Jaskier to pay him back. He's never cared much for money or power before, but if he can earn it for the sake of the bard, he'll try.
Jaskier kisses his hand, and Hector tries to be cool about it, even as his cheeks heat up.]
I-I'm sure you'll charm the Free Cities and have money enough to support a harem if you choose. We'll have to keep an eye out for more surly silver-haired candidates. [You have weird tastes, Jaskier, is what Hector is teasing.]
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At least his skills still work so well.]
I appreciate the vote of confidence, yet I don't believe harems are for me. How could a man get a word in edgewise? [Spoken like a man who doesn't take over nearly every conversation he's a part of. And many he isn't.] Ah. Oh. I may have a type, yes, but that does nothing to erase your own natural charms. I've met far surlier.
[He means, by some standards, Hector is practically a bright flower.
He stops them under a swinging wooden sign depicting some tentacled creature wrapped around a boat. From the look of it and the smells emenating outside, certainly a tavern. He tugs at Hector's hand.] Shall this suffice? Perhaps you can fill me in on the potential fantasies you've had involving us and harems. Or other silver-haired charmers.
[Look, if he’s gonna throw the idea out there…]
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Oh, the concern is conversation? [He teases.] You're confident with everything else entailed.
[He spares the tavern sign barely a glance as he follows Jaskier in. One alehouse is as good as any other until they've had a chance to actually try them out and experience their service.]
Oh, I can fill you in, but it will get ribald. After a day on your feet, performing, wouldn't you like a pair of lovers to lay you down and care for your every need?
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[And there's a little pep in his step as he says it, with the confidence to back it up. Why, it wasn't as if Yennefer's little entrance was his first step into an orgy. It just happened to be the first one he was dying in.
He tilts his head and slides onto a bench where a few dirty tankards still sit. He shuffles them off to the side.]
Hector, please! Ribald is my middle name. Well, not literally. It's actually Alfred. But I'd much prefer ribald. [He lets out a fluttery sort of sigh, bumping Hector's shoulder with his own.] Stop, you needn't tease me with such an exquisite fantasy before I've even had a drop to drink. [Forgetting the fact he definitely invited him to do this in the first place.] You wouldn't have a twin tucked away anywhere, would you?
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'Alfred', eh? [He's going to ferret that away for later teasing.]
No such luck, I'm afraid. [God, his mother would be turning in her grave at the thought of Hector doubled. Well, she would if she had a grave. Well, fuck her.] There's only one of me. But I can do the work of two, have no fears there.
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[It won't be the first time he's been teased about it, but no worse than his surname, which he'll keep to himself for now. It no longer holds the weight it once did, anyway. Ah, the days when he didn't even have to introduce himself.]
Ah. That makes you all the more precious then. [He waves at a passing barkeep.] Two of your, ah... third finest ales, please. [He's on a budget, all right.
The dark-haired woman gives him a grunt, but that's good enough. He turns back to his company.] I have not a single fear about that. Two hands is plenty for me. [He wiggles the fingers of his two own hands, which is all he has in offering, anyway.] Well, now that we have a moment of freedom and no listening ears, perhaps we could find the opportunity to... learn a bit more about each other. If you'd like, you can ask me anything.
[It is indeed unfortunate that one of Jaskier's favorite topics is himself. But they could definitely go back to the harem fantasies, too.]
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He smirks to himself at that 'third finest' order. His bard is so practical. Hector likes practical. Practical people tend to stay alive.
He takes a seat and props his head on his hand, looking at Jaskier.]
Alright. A question for a question? Tell me when you decided you wanted to be a bard. With your family, surely you were spoiled for choice.
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[Maybe. Most of everything he does is very respectable. Look at him out here on his own (with companions) making a life for himself. Again. And it could make one his age so damn weary with the thought of having to do it all over. But he is! Respectably.
Flirting with necromancers by respectably taking them for drinks.
Which hit the table, just as he leans in to share the same space as Hector simply because he wants to. Respectably.]
Ah, a bit of a heavy-hitter already? [He pulls his pint close and swirls a finger around the lip as he considers.] Oh yes, I was a spoiled. Still, I was very young. I can't pinpoint the exact moment. I always had a penchant for music, you know; even as a child, I studied music with the enthusiasm of a fly on manure. And being a bard sounded fantastically more exciting than being a viscount. I wanted to write of adventures. Exciting things.
[Not that he still isn't a viscount, and isn't a noble, but... he moves through courts as something else other than another courtier. More importantly, he is remembered for what he creates, not what blood flows in his veins.] And, for certain, I wanted to be treated a bit more spectacularly than your average noble. [He gives a smile.] Especially a bard as talented as me.
[And humble! Perhaps it says enough he doesn't speak of his family as involved in the decision. No, he set on his path quite firmly. Went to university, studied. Did all he needed to do. Set out to make his own way when he was still in his teenage years.] I went out on my own with a lute in my hand and not much else, fresh from university. Perhaps the real moment I decided was when my first few performances resulted in a few, ah... thrown condiments. And I carried on.
[Which was still perfectly unjustified. His earlier songs were, er, not his best, but much better than the malarkey his fellow bards could be found shoveling out.] So shall I turn the question on you? When does one decide to become a, ah... [The word. Fuck, what was it? Yes!] A forgemaster?
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A university graduate, eh? [That's the most surprising part for Hector. Education was so rare in his world. Hector considered himself fortunate to be learned, but college was never an option for him. He's still adjusting to the fact that the people he knows now had a completely different upbringing.]
And look at you now. No more condiments, only coins and praise being thrown at you. [Maybe he really should let Jaskier take care of him.
He shrugs as the conversations shifts back to him.]
I wanted a dog. My father was an alchemist-- they are notorious for being obsessed with money and power-- and he trained me from a young age. He wanted me to focus on my studies, and all I wanted was a dog to play with. [He tends not to talk about his family, but here he is, sharing. He wants Jaskier to understand him.]
I thought he couldn't object if I was able to make a pet that cost nothing, needed no feeding. I was seven or eight at the time, and hopelessly naive. So I found a dead dog that had been struck by a cart and brought it back to life. It should have been far beyond my abilities, but I had a natural talent, I discovered.
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He misses those days. Sometimes. And now where will he go when winter comes here? He would always return to Oxenfurt or Toussaint. And now... well, perhaps winter did not even come here to Cadens.
Dare a spot of flattered blood come to his cheeks? Maybe for a second.] Oh, stop. You're far too kind.
[But also keep going.
Though he's more than happy to hear about Hector's life. He has such a smooth, even voice, even when speaking of the most mundane. Though it is not to say what Hector tells him is mundane in anyway. He watches his face as he speaks, his brows only moving higher to react in surprise. An alchemist? That was certainly not fairly common.
Ah. But fathers obsessed with money and power? Dreadfully common, unfortunately.
Jaskier lifts his head from his hand. He doesn't need to say much about his father's reaction. It's not terribly hard to guess, and yet he can't help but think: of all people, shouldn't an alchemist be a bit more fucking understanding, especially with a child? With some of the things out there, a dead dog was a minor inconvenience.]
Sounds like a right bastard to me, if his immediate response wasn't to laud your talents. [Of course he's defensive on Hector's behalf. Not only because he likes him, but it simply -- it reminds him of the shit he's heard people say about Witchers, too. Spending their lives helping people only to get ruined by busy mouths.] It's not like every child out there is doing the impossible. By gods, you should've been a prodigy.
[In his estimates. The amount of nobles who would've paid out the ass to see their dead exotic birds again. Or peasants who needed oxen that wouldn't slow. So many creative endeavors out in the world, unfairly snuffed out like candles because they couldn't be understood.]
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No, no lauding. Far from it. I eventually found people who appreciated my talents. They just... all turned out to be vampires.
[But yes, there are so many non-terrible ways he could apply his powers, if only he was given the chance. He feels like the bard understands that, and that makes Hector melt even more than Jaskier's smiles and clever fingers and lovely voice do.]
Speaking of prodigies... [He loops his foot around Jaskier's ankle, keeping him from scooting his chair away from Hector's.] What is your favorite song?
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Well. Now you have very human fans. At least one.
[One that had no reservations to all but cuddling up against him, if that's what Hector wants. What's a bit of sad backstory between lovers? You know, if you ask him, it makes the necromancer even sexier. All that tragedy and he still can flush with the right compliment.
He leans in close to him, letting a hand fall onto Hector's thigh.] Ah, my favorite? You mean of my own? [Because of course his favorite song was one of his own, thank you. He's just that good. He makes a long hmm as he considers.
What is it, really? He thinks, of all of them, that his first real hit may be a favorite -- he certainly owes a great deal of his fame to it. But there is one thing that's bothered him.]
You know, it's a funny thing. I wrote a song before... before I was brought here. I never had a chance to perform it before this mess. Yet I think it may be my favorite, even if it's a bit maudlin. Her Sweet Kiss.
[Maudlin is putting it a bit lightly. His fingernails drag up Hector's thigh as he recites with a gentle, breathy tune, low enough that it's only for the two of them:]
I’m weak my love, and I am wanting /
If this is the path I must trudge /
I welcome my sentence /
Give to you my penance /
Garrotter, jury and judge...
[Those last lines had taken at least a day and a half, and he is very proud of it. Not bad for a quick rewrite after certain... hm. Events.
He smiles.] I should make you come listen when I finally perform it.
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Yes, I'm curious to know what the master bard likes the best.
[He leans into Jaskier's side, enjoying the feel of Jaskier's fingers against his thigh, and listens to the whispered lyrics.
...and, um, is Jaskier ok? Don't get Hector wrong, the phrasing is clever, the tune haunting. From the sampling he hears, it is indeed a good song. But...]
And this was from right before you arrived?
[Who hurt you, Jaskier?]
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I finished it the night before I was fished out of that bloody well in Thorne. Right at the base of the mountain I'd been venturing down.
[The dragon mountain, that was. After he got no dragon in the end. He was not still mad about it. Definitely not.]
Oh, don't look so worried! [Though it is cute, his eyebrows coming together like that.] I can guess what you're thinking, but it's not about me. [But is it about Yennefer? Sort of, but no one needs to know that. He's had plenty of experience with love to know she's not the only one the song makes him think of.] Though I certainly take inspiration from my life. And that isn't to say I haven't had my heart broken... [He gives a wistful sort of sigh. He hasn't thought of the Countess in a while, what with everything happening. But her picture in a frame in Sam's house, in his domain, simply proves how he carries her still in his heart somewhere.
Well. She's in the past, and now he's here, with a drink and very good company.]
A bit maudlin for this moment though, isn't it? I believe that means I get a question. [He considers it. He's rather sure Hector would answer plenty, but he is particularly curious about one thing:] When you were around all those vampires... did you ever consider becoming one?
[To his credit, it might not work like that in Hector's plane. Which would be rather fascinating.]
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Yes, that was the deal.
[He shrugs and withdraws his hand.]
In terms of assessing the threat of associating with them, I had to consider it, but in the way you mean, no. There was no guarantee that I would still be able to forge if I transformed, so it was never worth the risk. And while an extended lifespan would afford me more time to study, I've never sought true immortality. You can't work with death the way a necromancer does and not understand that it is the natural ending.
[After spending some time with vampires, he understood better than ever that life wasn't meant to last forever, and staying alive that long came at too high a cost.]
Besides, I enjoy the sunlight too much. You don't truly appreciate the light and warmth of it until you've spent a few months on a vampire's schedule.
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maybe end it here if you're good? lmk!