Michael Ralston (
brittlest) wrote in
abraxaslogs2021-08-09 05:10 pm
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Who: Michael Ralston & Various
What: Catch-all for August
When: post-Horizon, but will probably use this space as I see fit throughout the month.
Where: Castle Thorne
Notes: Feel free to hit me up on discord or plurk if you want to plot something or want a ~*~bespoke~*~ starter. Prose or brackets are a-okay; I'll match your preference. See Ralston's optional opt-in info HERE.
THE CASTLE.
WILDCARD.
[You know the drill. Feel free to hit me up on disco or plurk if you feel moved, but I can roll with pretty much anything.]
What: Catch-all for August
When: post-Horizon, but will probably use this space as I see fit throughout the month.
Where: Castle Thorne
Notes: Feel free to hit me up on discord or plurk if you want to plot something or want a ~*~bespoke~*~ starter. Prose or brackets are a-okay; I'll match your preference. See Ralston's optional opt-in info HERE.
THE CASTLE.
There is a man in Castle Thorne who walks with a cane and has made little effort to seek out anyone's company. By all accounts, he is easily missed and cuts a fairly unremarkable figure—he is neither particularly tall or short, nor especially good looking or plain. In fact if not for the tell-tale tunic and trousers and a penchant for haunting the guest quarters, he might be easily mistaken for some servant or native of the castle who is only as interested in these out-of-world travelers as he is employed to be.
And yet—
[A] Here he is, making use of the library available to Thorne's 'honored guests'; he has rooted his way to some back series of shelves, and is presently standing at the foot of a ladder clearly doing the mental math on scaling it to reach an upper series of books when movement at the end of the stack draws his attention. Ralston snaps his fingers at whoever has had the distinct misfortune to cross paths with him, saying,
"You. Step this way for just a moment."
[B] Or he is in some quiet courtyard available to Thorne's guests, sitting on some bench in the shadow of a high stone wall where the air of the day is most temperate. He has an orange in hand, and is peeling it slowly with every appearance of waiting for someone. Ralston's dark eyes search out any figure who happens to pass across the yard. If he happens to recognize them as either an ex-prisoner or someone who has demonstrated a particular talent for the little magic spells being taught by the Thornean mages, he will whistle to get their attention and motion for them to come closer. Worst comes to worst, he might flick a bit of orange peel in your direction to clarify the urgency of his demand for conversation.
[C] Or, rarest and strangest of all, Ralston might be found in some part of the castle where he shouldn't be. Perhaps it is a merely a rarely used back staircase, or a quiet corridor in some wing of the castle which guests have ostensibly been discouraged from visiting, or he is quietly letting himself into a room in which he has no business being.
WILDCARD.
[You know the drill. Feel free to hit me up on disco or plurk if you feel moved, but I can roll with pretty much anything.]
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That sense of pressure gives—not dissipating, but cracking outward so the thing it holds inside can come out of it. A seed pod with something growing out of it. The widening of an aperture which allows light come through. To call it a thing which hooks and pulls would be inaccurate; but it is there, living and real. Present and close in a way few things are. And it's like he is standing once more on this side of that portal to which they'd been walked to those many days ago, sweat prickling and an ache in his marrow and the thrill of the Singularity waiting on the other side; only here in this quiet little room, it's Kirigan who has opened the easy way through to it.
How simple it would be, he senses, to slip quietly along to that place in the other man's wake. He memorizes the shape of it like it is a map. As if following it is a simple matter of remembering and not—
He doesn't stir from the foot of the bed. He doesn't touch him. But after a brief thrumming span of time, Ralston commands: "That's enough."
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the Darkling gazes up at that strange monument from the very foot of it
fifteen, eighteen,
and lays his hand upon it, just to see. The spark that meets his touch first buzzes, then melts into a yawn, impossibly wide, a vast and ancient thing that first pulls his face slack and then creases it with something like strained recognition—
and still his face, his body, they do nothing.
no subject
A sharp, ineslastic jab to the general's shoulder.
(It's too far for Ralston's hand to reach, but is well within range of the cane he's fetched back into his hand.)
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—just in time to be welcomed back to his body by a gentle stabbing. Almost before he's opened his eyes, he knocks the stick away with a blind, boyish, elbow-first gesture that can only accurately be described as flailing. Just the one flail. Immediately afterward, he collects himself—which means, in part, giving Ralston a cross look.
"Hilarious."
Technically complying by not using his hands, wow, incredible. Fucker. (Kirigan would've done precisely the same thing.)
"What happened?"
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(It would be easy to lie. You spoke; you called out; someone tried the blocked door and I thought to bring you back because of it. Something to legitimize his impatience.)
"You tell me."
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"I was there." Obviously, he doesn't say; he pauses, actually, and rubs his thumb once across his fingertips, recalling a sensation. "I touched it. The monolith."
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"Was it as you remembered? Did it answer you?"
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He flicks an offhand gesture at Ralston: up. Get off the general's bed. The general himself remains seated, meanwhile, and goes on to say,
"It looked the same, but the way it felt... it reminded me of something from long ago." Longer than one might guess, looking at him—but this, what they call the making at the heart of the world, is older than old. It is the first thing. The first of anything. And he could say all this to Ralston,
or
he could say, shittily, "I'd try to describe it, but you really ought to lay your hands on it. If you're interested."
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Click. Leaning on the cane, Ralston straightens fully—or as near to it as he ever bothers with.
"Then the next time you go, I'll follow you down." Simple. Bristling. He didn't care to remain seated there at the foot of the bed like a faithful pet anyway.
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"And how will you do that?"
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"Your passage into that place clarifies the way forward. The door stays open behind you."
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He means it, according to the attentive movements of his eyes.
Ralston sounds as if he's done this before. Or something like it. But perhaps he's just extraordinarily adaptable—a fine quality to have, and one Kirigan expects of all his favoured Grisha. This stranger is turning out to be useful in unexpected ways, and the more this continues, the more firmly he resolves into a person-shaped thing with details worth examining.
"Is that all it would take? Another traveller nearby?"
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Incredible, how loathsome that word can be under the correct circumstances. Ralston lifts his chin so he might return Kirigan's examination with a study of his own down the length of his faintly crooked nose.
"How should I know? We've only just begun."
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"So we have."
These people, the people of Thorne and all those they love and all who might defend them, will come to regret what they have done. The pleasure he takes from this thought is that of a child closing his hand around a pebble, smooth and dark.
Ralston's reward: a momentary indulgence.
"Sitting up or lying down?"
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There is a narrow chair which he frequently makes use of, much to the detriment of anyone else who might care to sit somewhere other than at the edge of their bed. With a disparaging sniff, Ralston shifts in pursuit of it now—dredging it around by its arm like a sullen child so that when he sinks down into it, he is facing Kirigan rather than some alternative.
(Though it hardly matters. He doesn't need to see him to sense his progress.)
no subject
While settling in place, he murmurs, "You should be so lucky." Despite the timbre of his voice, which flows with a warmth not at all out of place at his bedside, the amusement it carries is unmistakably mocking. Right after, he clears his throat to banish it.
"We'll meet in the centre. There's a woodland nearby—stay clear of it."
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"Don't tell me you've elected to protect someone's things while they're away. How shockingly sentimental, General."
This, as he settles into the depths of the chair with such devotion that it's as if he's willed himself to become a part of it.
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After a deliberate pause, he looks to the face of the man himself.
Then he says, "I'd really rather not."
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"Lie back," he says to the man who has already settled himself quite firmly against the headboard. "It requires concentration, doesn't it?"
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He responds with a sigh, and turns his gaze aside, as though in concession to this—whatever this is. Assertion of autonomy. Rebellious compulsion. This ongoing argument Ralston is always making against everything. He has been more than patient with it—permissive, even. Polluting his bed, though, with the shoes he wears outside? While gently wringing his hands, the Darkling takes a second to imagine the horror witnessing such a thing might provoke among his Grisha—Ivan would be enraged by it, bless him—and finds it faintly comforting.
And then he flicks his wrist and lifts the shadow beneath Ralston's chair to knock it on its back, and doesn't even watch it happen. Good-bye.
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With a sharp cry, Ralston spills after it in apoplectic disarray.
He writhes there tangled in the geometry of the upended chair. Recoils from the ravenous pain that snarls through his shoulder, the heat of it so shocking and the change or altitude so shocking that he doesn't immediately realize why his face is wet or how exactly he might have contrived to strike it. And then he tastes the metal and it's incredible, isn't it? How freely a broken nose bleeds, hot and copper into his fingers and onto his clothes and the floor.
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"Are you bleeding?" When he comes back to the bed's edge, lowers his feet back to the floor, he does so without even the slightest urgency. "How in the world did you manage that?"
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"Bastard," is spat back, spittle and red and fundamentally reflexive, from behind it. Only he can't both shield his face and twist off the hot bolt of pain jagging through his shoulder, and so with a scrabbling lack of grace Ralston abandons the attempt in favor of bleeding freely across edge of the rug so he might dredge himself free of the chair.
There's no grace in the arrangement. Half sitting, half lying, he holds his right arm tight against himself. Had he caught himself that way? Twisted as he fell after the impulse to catch himself? Ralston reaches after the cane where it's rolled to a stop, the red heat of fury and mortification and the sick nauseous feeling that comes with sudden pain burning in his face and the back of his neck and low in his belly.
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Were they in Ravka, Kirigan would remain seated there and watch him scrape himself off the floor, and perhaps chide him for bleeding on the rug—the urge is right there on his tongue—but this is neither his palace nor his rug. He must consider where he is, and how bad it would look if someone came to the door only to find it blocked off and this friendly little scene unfolding beyond the barricade. Observing Ralston's tender movements, how he carries himself, the state of his face, he concludes: bad.
So he rises. In a moment he'll drag that little table back to where it was previously, but first he walks to Ralston, stops just shy of the blood, and crouches down smoothly to equalize the level of their eyes.
"I don't know what this is," he says, one finger tugging the rest of his hand to vaguely indicate this, more as a concept than the physicality of it, "but I can see that it hurts, and that you hate that it hurts, so I believe it. I can also see you're repulsed by the idea that you might have to take any lesson from this. Even so, I hope you'll make the effort." The smoke of confidentiality leaves his voice, then, and it's back to business: "Now, I'll fetch a healer for you, yes?"
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"Yes," is snarled, Ralston's bloody lips curling back from the flash of enamel behind them. Wounded animals often show their teeth. He can feel the heat burning in his face, the taste of shame of frustration more sour at the teeth than any metallic blood tang. "Do that."
Get out of this room. Take that paternalistic and patronizing air with him.