ℭ𝔦𝔯𝔦𝔩𝔩𝔞 𝔬𝔣 ℭ𝔦𝔫𝔱𝔯𝔞 (
wiedzminka) wrote in
abraxaslogs2022-01-31 10:13 pm
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[ CATCH-ALL ] i'm allied to the winter
Who: Ciri, Geralt, Rinwell, Jaskier, and others
What: Catch-all for February plans
Where: Cadens, the desert on the road to Aquila, Horizon
When: throughout February
Warnings: will add as needed. probably violence. spoilers for season 2 of the witcher!
Closed headers below, but open for plotting! Hit me up if you'd like a starter. Feel free to PM Ciri's journal or catch me on Plurk at
belleteyn
What: Catch-all for February plans
Where: Cadens, the desert on the road to Aquila, Horizon
When: throughout February
Warnings: will add as needed. probably violence. spoilers for season 2 of the witcher!
Closed headers below, but open for plotting! Hit me up if you'd like a starter. Feel free to PM Ciri's journal or catch me on Plurk at
no subject
Eventually, Ciri runs out of things to use as excuses, and the knowledge that Geralt is waiting makes her anxious enough that she has to give in. She needs to know; there's no avoiding it.
She decides to lie down near the fire, letting her body rest even if it isn't quite sleep, and slips into the Horizon.
As usual, she appears in the courtyard of Kaer Morhen. The wolf is already beside her. ]
...Geralt.
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He rises to meet her. The tension is taut around her. Geralt doesn't waste time avoiding the topic. She will want to hear what he has to say. ]
I found her at last, in the Horizon. She doesn't...recall as much as Jaskier and I. She knows she struck a deal. But not afterwards.
[ Not that she lied to them. To nearly the very end, she had lied to him, to Ciri. She'd known, and she'd lied, anyway. Taken Ciri, anyway. He understands Yennefer wants to believe she isn't capable. But the truth is, Yennefer here or Yennefer in those memories—they are not different people, just as he isn't different, either. Nor Jaskier. They remain themselves. ]
There's more. [ He pauses. ] She hasn't got her magic here.
[ He worries. That's what it comes down to. She's without her magic, again. And it troubles him what she will do to get it back, even if she were to insist she never would. ]
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She hadn't thought Yennefer might remember only up to a point. She'd assumed that Yennefer would have either experienced what Geralt and Jaskier did, or not. Ciri certainly hadn't expected she might lose her magic. However these visions -- dreams, memories, whatever they are -- work, clearly they are more capable of affecting someone than should be possible. (Then again, what is possible, anyway? The word is meaningless at this point.) Ciri thinks of Jaskier's bruises.
She closes her eyes. Lets out a slow, measured breath. ]
What else did she say?
Why wasn't she responding?
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He draws his attention back to Ciri. ] She claims she received no messages.
[ She isn't lying. Not about that. Yennefer is many things, but if she were truly avoiding them, truly didn't want to speak with him, she wouldn't lie about it. She would just defend her decision to do so, fiercely, whether justified or not. And he'd seen her form flicker, her connection to the Horizon unstable. If she can barely grasp her place in that plane, then it stands to reason that perhaps her connection to these messages they receive is equally unstable.
He sighs. He does not tell Ciri what Yennefer said, exactly, but what he says is perhaps telling enough. ] I don't trust her. [ He wants to. He does. He knows better. ] But I think you should speak with her. When you're ready.
[ Ciri needs to decide for herself, how she feels. And she can only do that if she talks to Yennefer face to face. Asks her what she needs to ask her. ]
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It isn't just a vision, not even a memory. It has changed a core part of her being, and on top of that, her connection to the Chaos of this sphere, despite the way it tends to behave differently.
During their lessons, Yennefer had insisted Ciri go back to the basics, taught her of Chaos and how to pull and harness it, how to coax and ask the world to do her bidding. But Ciri's problem has never been that she can't reach out to Chaos; it's that it will overwhelm her. Here, the rules have been different than those she'd been trying to understand and work on during her travels, but in many ways, the fundamental problem hasn't changed.
Ciri shakes her head, where an ache is beginning to throb at the sides of her skull from the strain and the stress, and moves past Geralt to pace the yard agitatedly. ]
I do not understand how her connection to the Singularity could have changed so drastically. No such thing happened to you or to Jaskier. Why is this happening?
[ She ignores the rest of what Geralt says, or at least does not acknowledge him. Turning back so briskly her braid flips over his shoulder, Ciri paces in the opposite direction, toward him. ]
Why now?
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[ It's probably not an external force, is what he means. Yennefer's domain sits in the Horizon, no matter how twisted it's grown. Jaskier has been able to speak with her finally, not long ago. So her connection hasn't waned or disappeared. Just destabilized. He's never told anyone except Jaskier about the Horizon; to him, it'd felt only natural. That he wouldn't be able to focus for shit afterwards. But he knows Yennefer, without her magic nor the Horizon on top of that—she'd feel cut off, one more thing taken away from her.
The matter of Yennefer's loss of chaos and her inability to reach through the Singularity at first—the causes are interlinked, but not the same. He suspects that isn't why Ciri is asking. It's not theories and speculation about Yennefer's magic she's after. It's why this has affected all of them and only them.
He's thought about it. Often. For awhile. ]
The events of the Dimming may have disturbed the Singularity. It's had adverse effects on your magic in the past. [ He looks up at Ciri. There's a pause, but not hesitation. His gaze is firm. He is not blaming her. But nor does he want to hide what he thinks to protect her. That isn't what she needs. ] You have the power of foresight through dreams.
no subject
...what.
[ But before Ciri can process what he's just admitted, what it might mean in connection to what's happened to Yennefer (he'd had his mind fucked with, so what about her?), Geralt moves on to another problem entirely. In a way, he answers her question.
Why now?
Ciri stares at him, wide-eyed and very still. She should have fucking known. She should have figured it out. It makes a sick amount of sense, doesn't it?
It always comes back to her. ]
I do not have the power to put memories in other people's heads. Memories I never experienced.
[ She points out flatly, voice low, but in the back of her mind, there is a sandpaper-scraping doubt that drags against her brain, a wriggling uncertainty like worms in her veins. All these years, all these places she's been to and people she's met, and the truth is that no one, not even the Aen Elle, have been able to explain to her the limits of her powers. If there are any.
And that is the most frightening thought of all.
Jaskier had called her selfish for immediately jumping to the conclusion that she must be source of his problems a few weeks back (it feels so long ago, all of a sudden). Ciri wishes it was only that. She might be selfish in plenty of ways, but unfortunately, she has also grown to have good reason to think in such a way. It's hardly a blessing. She never wanted all these things to be about her at all. ]
I didn't do this, Geralt.
[ I didn't mean to. ]
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[ Like Ciri, Geralt has come to understand that things simply are about her. The monoliths, the Wild Hunt, Voleth Meir, a dozen fucking kingdoms and more. They want her. For the what power she holds that he's yet to fully grasp. Destined.
She's tied to him. Part of each other.
He takes a breath. He gets up to join her, placing a hand on her shoulder. ] It's all right. I know.
[ He knows she didn't mean it. None of this is her fault. But their connection—there's no denying it anymore. And with the Singularity amplifying her magic, there's no telling what else is possible. It also...it doesn't matter. Whatever has bound them together, he doesn't regret it. Not now. ]
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[ And not even to the point where she is, but only a year or so? Why? It makes no fucking sense and she just wants to fucking scream.
She doesn't. Ciri looks away when Geralt grips her shoulder, fighting back the urge to pull back and shove him off. It isn't his fault either. It isn't even that his theory is unfair.
The worst part about all of this is that he's probably right. ]
...and now what?
Yennefer is without her chaos. Jaskier hasn't been sober since I found him stuck in his own damn shirt that morning. Who knows what the fuck is going on with the Singularity, and desire for violence is brewing on the streets.
[ Ciri scoffs, crossing her arms tightly, shoulders hunched. ]
If it's not one thing, it's always five others.
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Now what. That's a good question. He releases a breath and since she doesn't pull away, he slides his arm around her shoulders. ]
Now we face what lies ahead. Together. Same as always.
[ It doesn't matter if they've walked this path before, or what has caused it. Not for this. Ciri is right: if not one thing, then five others. If they had not received their rush of memories, something else would come along to throw their lives into chaos. To shatter what little calm they've found. That is simply how the world works.
At least now he knows. What Yennefer has done. What she may still do. It hurts, but it's better than finding out too late, the truth. ]
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I'm sorry.
[ That she'd snapped at him. That she is angry. That she is helpless to the powers that control her, and that he has seen it now, both here and in his memories, how being near her is signing up for misery and misfortune from all sides. She is sorry for not being stronger. For what has happened and will happen, everything Geralt remembers and everything he doesn't yet and all that neither of them know but she can't imagine being painless.
It's not an apology. It is an acknowledgement. She isn't sorry for what she's done; she regrets what she is. Like tar, sticking fast to anyone who steps too close, holding on until it chokes them, leaving only stains. If Geralt didn't know what he'd signed up for when he'd first laid eyes on her in the dungeon yard back in Thorne, he should understand now.
And, in a way, Ciri is also sorry that he does. ]
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[ He doesn't want her regretting herself or the past. Not the present, either. Certainly not a future that neither of them know. Because there is her history that makes up his future, but there's also the one they're living now. She's here, with him, and that's what's important.
It's true. He didn't know what he was signing up for. Not in the dungeon yard, but far back. Over a decade ago, in Cintra's court. He didn't know and if he had, he would've returned for her sooner. He would not have left her for so long, believing she was better off living the life she deserved, rather than stolen away from her family by a Witcher. He would've realized she was—
His. That she was always meant to be a part of his life.
He takes a deep breath. The snow falls around them. ] Come inside. It's gained a few extra holes. [ The faintest hint of wryness enters his voice, belying the gravity of what he is telling her: that his Kaer Morhen, even here, has fallen apart. It's her home, though, as much as it's his. And she knows what happened to it. He won't hide how it is from her.
Besides, he suspects she might want something tangible to do. Something she can help repair, after everything. ] I could use your help, patching it up.
no subject
If you're sure...
[ She sounds uncertain, pulling back only slowly. When Ciri scrubs the back of her hand over her face, there is a flicker across her features, her palm covering the scar and coming away leaving a glimpse of smooth skin, wider eyes and rounder cheeks. It is only for a moment, before she sets her jaw and she is the Ciri Geralt knows here again, with all her wounds in place. ]
Sure. I'll lend a hand.
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He leads the way inside. He's sure. The place needs to be cleaned up. And it has been, piece by piece: the last time Sam came, they put a table back together. It now sits next to another, and the braziers are lit again alongside the hearth at the center where the cooking pot hangs. The tree is still broken, but the medallions have all been picked up off the floor. Most of the blood has been scrubbed clean. The broken benches remain, dust and debris and the shattered bits of the monolith. Like blackened glass shards scattered over the floor.
The door shuts heavily behind them. It echoes in the hall. He wonders what she must've thought, coming here when it was whole. Knowing that it was not as she would have left it. Not as he would have left it, had he remembered.
He remembers now. But he supposes, it was never whole. Kaer Morhen has been broken since he was a boy. It doesn't make it any less of a home. He sees it as he walks, the ghost of a girl and her training sword in hand, practicing in the middle of the hall.
He's not altogether sure where to start. In the end, he picks up the bowl of medallions. It only feels right Ciri helps him hang them back up. She's the only one who truly understands what they mean. ]
no subject
Now, he leads her in, steps into the ruined hall with its evidence of being patched together bit by bit, and bends to take a bowl in which have been gathered the fallen medallions that had scattered when the tree broke.
The tree. The monolith. Ciri's eyes skirt away from it, down to the contents of the bowl.
It is... too quiet. Firewood crackles softly, and the wind outside gusts through the cracks in the old stone, but it is still too quiet, too heavy, and Geralt's footsteps echo. Ciri hasn't moved. ]
Geralt, I--
[ He'd told her not to apologize. She is tired of apologizing. ]
I want to fix it.
[ She means the tree. And so much more than that, but the rest is impossible. ]
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For a second, he's silent. These walls have held immeasurable loss for centuries, but now it's—it soaks the air, like freshly fallen rain. Nothing will bring them back. And he wonders, not for the first time, if he will be the last to fall. If there will be anyone left to look upon these medallions soon. If it even matters. Were they not always fated to fade from a world that never wanted them?
Ciri's voice slips between his thoughts. I want to fix it. He promised her he would fix so many things and he isn't certain he fixed much at all. He knows he protected her. He doesn't know if doing so made anything better. But maybe it isn't his place to fix what's broken on her behalf. Maybe that's for her to do. Maybe what's more important is that he's there for her, while she does so.
He looks over at Ciri. She seems almost small, and he places a hand on her shoulder. ] I'll help.
[ He bends down to where the split trunk has toppled over and waits for her to join him. The logistics are not especially significant in the Horizon. It only matters that they lift it and fit it back into place. ]
no subject
She picks up pieces of wood, avoiding the shattered stone as much as possible when it's everywhere. The monolith still glints inside. They cover it up, but it will be there the same as it always was-- now that Geralt knows.
Her hands press alongside Geralt's to the trunk, righting bark and branches.
It gets a little easier with each piece. Only a little, but it is a start. ]
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He isn't looking to change it back to how it was before. Only to fix it. What's done can't be undone. But it can be repaired. Healed.
When they place the final piece together, something seems to shift—the tree righting itself a little on its own. A thick crack down the middle shows where it splintered. Otherwise, it stands. Sturdy as ever. He looks up at it, wondering if Vesemir would have repaired it the same way. He imagines so. Rebuilding is what they do, until they no longer can. Until there's none of them left to do so. ]
It should hold. [ He glances over at Ciri. Only one part left: the medallions, waiting to be hung back up. He takes a nail and offers it to her. A moment passes before he says, ] I remember the Wild Hunt. Stepping into their world with you. [ He takes a nail of his own. ] When we first found each other here, you said they've been pursuing you across every sphere.
no subject
Briefly, when they finish and the tree stands more-or-less whole once again, bearing the scars of the past like the rest of them, Ciri leans her shoulder against Geralt's side. It isn't quite an embrace, might have been mistaken for brushing past except for the way she lingers a moment or two.
Then, she takes the nail and a medallion and begins the difficult work of rebuilding the memorial.
Without looking up from what she is doing, Ciri nods. ]
Now you've seen them too.
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He hangs the medallion up once the nail has been affixed. He tries not to think about what he has left behind back home. There is some guilt, lingering - not regret, because he knows what needs to be done, knows this is the best decision (isn't it?) - but it's not what he would've wanted had there been another way. There simply isn't. ]
You haven't felt them. [ It's both a question and yet not. ] Here, in this world. Not since we arrived.
[ Not even with her magic gone wrong that one time. It had drawn no real attention. Among the Summoned, it remains an incident that only he and Jaskier and Sam are aware of. He just...he wants to be sure. He wants to hear it from her, that she feels safer in this world than she has elsewhere. ]
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It's more that I presume they haven't felt me.
They have a habit of... catching up. Finding me.
[ She hesitates. ]
It happens when I use my abilities to open portals. Even if it's within the same sphere. My use of magic is like a beacon to them.
[ But she cannot use that magic here. Mostly. There was that time with Jaskier, when they'd run into the remnants of Geralt's overrun camp-- ]
Sometimes, if I try not to draw attention, it takes months.
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He doesn't dance around the subject. ] Nothing says we need to return to the Continent, Ciri. If you feel safer in this sphere...your home is with me. With us.
[ What world doesn't matter. The Continent is ravaged by war. There are dozens searching for her, armies who have torn apart villages because of her. If war arrives here, too, so be it. At least it will not be in search of her. To find her and capture her for what they might want. Not if he's got anything to say about it.
Months, she says. It's been nearly a year now here. That's the longest she's gone without having to flee, is it not? ]
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But then--
Your home is with me, he says. With us.
The fight rushes out of her like breath after a blow. To Geralt, it might feel like he'd been leading into the subject in a logical way; to her, it feels like he just led her into a hallway and yanked the rug right out from under her to reveal a hidden door they're suddenly falling through, a jarring side-step into territory she never even knew existed, let alone considered. Maybe it's strange, in retrospect. It hadn't crossed her mind.
She'd thought he (everyone) would want to go back. To their proper times and places. Even after the memory-dreams, or perhaps even more because of them. All of this already makes her head hurt; trying to wrap her mind around what Geralt is suggesting is dizzying.
Ciri's voice is small. Confused, more than anything else. ]
...Geralt?
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His hand lands on her shoulder. He peers down at her. ] You said it yourself. We've been pulled from our paths. [ There is no other him. There is no other Ciri, existing out there. Here, this is what they have of each other. And it isn't what they expected; it's cracked and worn, but it's theirs. ] We can't live our lives trying to turn back. We can only move forward.
[ If this sphere is where they can do so, then that's where he'll be. With her. Voleth Meir was right about one thing, if in the wrong way: she is the future. His future, he thinks. Until he found Ciri, he never believed he had one. For any Witcher, their lives leave behind at most an old medallion hung on a tree buried in the mountains. They haven't got futures. They haven't got legacies. For the first time, he has more than the promise of a bloody death, alone in the woods somewhere. ]
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[ She stops again, struggling to figure out what to say. And why. Does she want to protest because she thinks he's wrong? Or because she thinks he doesn't mean it? Because she isn't sure it's possible?
Simply because she's... afraid?
In a surge of desperation so shocking in its intensity it leaves her lightheaded, Ciri grabs a fistful of his tunic, gripping tight. Her heart pounds in her head, a tangle of thoughts trying to explode out of her at once, sharp shards of memories and hopes and fears all crashing against each other in a horrible din that won't let her fucking think.
She breathes in sharply, staring up at Geralt's steady eyes. ]
Do you really think it's possible?
[ Geralt has not lived through the parts of his future that brought her here. But he is here. And the way he and Jaskier (and Yennefer) had experienced memories they shouldn't have had yet still leaves her uneasy about it all.
At the same time though, he hadn't actually left. Maybe this is how it will be -- time fractured, having to catch up all at once due to some glitch in the Singularity's (or her) magic. They still don't know what caused it, and Geralt's theory that it's her makes an unfortunate amount of sense. She is the connecting factor. She is bridging their past and their future.
...as long as she is here, it's impossible that Geralt won't suffer the fate he has in her past. And yet, she still desperately wonders if she can protect him from it anyway. If things have already changed. If what he and Jaskier and Yennefer 'remembered' are only echoes.
Ciri leans forward, pressing her forehead to his chest. ]
Are you sure?
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