lysoke (
lysoke) wrote in
makinglies2025-09-27 05:54 pm
Entry tags:
Respite
Respite
The lake is dark and calm with a small breeze by the time they arrive at its shores. The stars above reflect perfectly in the still waters before them, and a small copse of trees lines one side, starting on their side of the river and jumping along the other side.
Chris takes a moment to re-prepare the spell he hadn't been able to cast in five years and gestures vaguely to the area around them as a suggestion for what the others can do. Gathering in the forest, sitting on a nearby over-turned log, it didn't matter to him. What he needed was an hour without interruption.
He settles down on the ground and presses his hands together as he closes his eyes to focus on the image in his mind. Within minutes, the white, shimmering outline of a large building forms in thin air. The gentle glow of its light barely spreads from the growing structure.
As promised, it takes the full hour before the slowly filling-in form is complete and finishes with a jaunty, echoing click.
Chris takes a breath, now sitting in front of the stoop that looks annoyingly like the one he'd passed earlier in the night, and gets back onto stiff legs as the glow fades away, leaving smooth, but otherwise unremarkable, white stone behind.
"Here we are. Home for the next however long we need. I'll start working on food and water next." Once they're inside, anyway, which is why he takes back his things from where he'd left them and leads them into the temple, marked only with the carving of ravens on the black wood of the double doors.
Inside is something just shy of opulence. The same polished white stone makes the walls, though black and gold veins course through the marble. The floor is the inverse, a black stone with white, shimmering speckles like a night sky if looked at for long enough. A single window faced East high up on the wall. The temple was alight with sconces at regular intervals along the walls, illuminating an open area that held all the offerings of comfort Chris could think of.
A large hot-springs-like bath, complete with a miniature waterfall, took up the left side of the room and ran into a smaller, similar bath at dog-height. Next to it, covered by a retractable screen, was a shower. Along the back wall, a raven's head emblazoned the white wall in black and watched out over a set of tables, chairs, and a couple of sofas. The majority of the center was clear for walking, but the right edge and right side of the room held a deeply inset pit of pillows, cushions, and blankets in various soft (black and purple) fabrics.
Finally, in the middle of the right-hand wall, there were two closed doors that, when inspected, revealed one room with a large, soft chair and rug, while the other room was made of nothing but stone with jars, pitchers, and plates on shelves along two walls and a cork wall perfect for catching daggers on the other side.
"I hope it works for everyone. I didn't...I didn't make separate bedrooms this time. I didn't figure we would need them tonight."
Chris takes a moment to re-prepare the spell he hadn't been able to cast in five years and gestures vaguely to the area around them as a suggestion for what the others can do. Gathering in the forest, sitting on a nearby over-turned log, it didn't matter to him. What he needed was an hour without interruption.
He settles down on the ground and presses his hands together as he closes his eyes to focus on the image in his mind. Within minutes, the white, shimmering outline of a large building forms in thin air. The gentle glow of its light barely spreads from the growing structure.
As promised, it takes the full hour before the slowly filling-in form is complete and finishes with a jaunty, echoing click.
Chris takes a breath, now sitting in front of the stoop that looks annoyingly like the one he'd passed earlier in the night, and gets back onto stiff legs as the glow fades away, leaving smooth, but otherwise unremarkable, white stone behind.
"Here we are. Home for the next however long we need. I'll start working on food and water next." Once they're inside, anyway, which is why he takes back his things from where he'd left them and leads them into the temple, marked only with the carving of ravens on the black wood of the double doors.
Inside is something just shy of opulence. The same polished white stone makes the walls, though black and gold veins course through the marble. The floor is the inverse, a black stone with white, shimmering speckles like a night sky if looked at for long enough. A single window faced East high up on the wall. The temple was alight with sconces at regular intervals along the walls, illuminating an open area that held all the offerings of comfort Chris could think of.
A large hot-springs-like bath, complete with a miniature waterfall, took up the left side of the room and ran into a smaller, similar bath at dog-height. Next to it, covered by a retractable screen, was a shower. Along the back wall, a raven's head emblazoned the white wall in black and watched out over a set of tables, chairs, and a couple of sofas. The majority of the center was clear for walking, but the right edge and right side of the room held a deeply inset pit of pillows, cushions, and blankets in various soft (black and purple) fabrics.
Finally, in the middle of the right-hand wall, there were two closed doors that, when inspected, revealed one room with a large, soft chair and rug, while the other room was made of nothing but stone with jars, pitchers, and plates on shelves along two walls and a cork wall perfect for catching daggers on the other side.
"I hope it works for everyone. I didn't...I didn't make separate bedrooms this time. I didn't figure we would need them tonight."

no subject
"I'm not especially in the mood for sparring if that's what you want me to help you with," he tells his friend as soon as they're outside. Amelia's boyfriend. Would he be so genial if he knew what the Archivist had done a few hours ago? If he knew how close Jon had come to feeding on Amelia. Even if he can tell himself it was an accident, it's not one so easily forgiveable as most.
Jon swallows that down as he wraps his arms around himself again, as much for the cold as for his need for some sort of pre-emptive defense against any prying Wolfe might do.
"You sounded like you were enjoying yourself with Amelia."
no subject
Wolfe himself doesn't venture past the threshold for fear of losing all his clothes again. Instead he leans against the frame and hooks his thumbs in the waist of his pants. "We talked about our - my - situation. It settled some things for both of us and honestly I feel a lot better than I have since we arrived. A lot more stable, anyway."
Deciding he's made Jon feel silly enough to get at least a little vindictive, which is going to help the little exercise he has in mind or so he thinks, Wolfe motions to his friend with his chin. "And... why are you outside?"
no subject
Jon stomps back inside. "Just tell me where we're going so we can give them privacy." He gestures sharply over to Chris and Amelia. He has his guesses as to why he's been invited to do this, after all. Clearly it's to give the cleric and the rogue a chance to talk.
Even if he really needs to talk to Amelia, as well.
no subject
He follows Jon on into the other room and shuts the door behind him, ignoring his instinct to check and see if Amelia and Chris are alright. He'd be able to hear if they had a row, he's sure, even witb the door closed.
"So the idea I had I got from one of those stupid school things we had to do on Duplicity, but it actually worked. And its not sex, don't worry," he adds, seeing Jon getting ready to protest.
"We make a list of useful words and their meanings, then rip up the paper into strips. One of us will draw a paper and say the meaning and the other has to say what word that is. If they're wrong, its worth a set of push ups or sit ups, as you prefer." He figures he's going to get far more wrong than Jon will, which will be both a boost to Jon's ego and to Wolfe's physique. "And if one of us gets three wrong in a row, we can have a penalty. Say I miss three, then on that third one I have to do the push-ups one handed or with you sitting on my back or something."
no subject
"I thought this was exercise for you." The Archivist wrinkles his nose at the prospect of doing push-ups or sit-ups. It sounds like a sneaky way of trying to get him to exercise, too.
He knows he could probably do well, but... What if he messes up? Some of his confidence is more fragile than usual at the moment.
no subject
"I figured I would probably be the only one getting anything wrong if this afternoon was any indication, but I can be the only one answering if you prefer," he shrugs, gesturing for Jon to follow him. "I have to help make the list though or there's no way I'll know anything on it."
no subject
His eyes trace over Wolfe's muscular arms before returning to his face, expression wholly skeptical. "Or are you trying to distract me from something beyond Chris and Amelia? I wasn't going to try to listen in. I'm not that nosy." Mainly because he thinks he'll get what he needs to from Chris if there's anything to tell.
And he's been hearing Amelia's self-flagellation most of the day.
no subject
"And Amelia has needed to apologize to Chris for much of the day, considering he was out. We're giving them space." He says this reluctantly, as if Jon is prised it from him. He has a little, but its not as if he wouldn't have told him. Let Jon have the social win, though, he thinks.
cw: paranoia
This is still an important exercise, particularly as it pertains to reading, but he needs to share the idea with someone. If this is a place where deals with gods are viable... why not try for a little more to ease their way? Fluency in a language takes months, and he doesn't want to be wholly reliant on Chris and Amelia in that time. He loves his partner and... tolerates the fourth member of their party. Only having a broken understanding of what's being said around them or a translated version that could be amended or altered to avoid telling them things is terrifying. He needs to be able to understand at least one language.
no subject
He's done a lot of thinking about Gods ever since Chris pledged to bring them here. Wolfe was never a man of faith in higher powers but he did always recognize that asking a higher power - even a mortal one - for anything was a tricky proposition. At the very least they need to be careful of how they ask.
"I'd much rather just have the language plopped into my head, I'm not against that, I just want to make sure we don't offend any deity's sensibilities. They're real here, and could make our lives utterly miserable." Finding paper, he sets it out and pauses to comb his fingers through his beard. Its becoming a bit more full now; he should shave. "We can talk to Chris about it, see what he thinks?"
no subject
It's a sentiment Jon might ordinarily agree with were it for just learning magic, itself. But to be reduced to a toddler's level of communication for god only knows how long... His pride, again, struggles with the idea of it.
"But fine, we can ask Chris about it. Be careful with the paper and whatever you write, by the by. With things like that costing an arm and a leg, we'll need to be more precious about it than we were in Duplicity. We'll need to be more precious about most things... We can play your game, but if I miss something, I'm not doing push-ups or sit-ups. I'll..." He glances off to the side, trying to think of something else. "I'll think up a compliment for Amelia."
no subject
He shrugs, then looks down at the paper and smiles a bit. "I think this is some of the conjured stuff so we'll have to remake it later. Being precious about paper is something we'll both have to get used to though, they're not nearly as scarce in Thedas, though certainly more difficult to get than in Duplicity.
"...Though I am curious why that's the thing you'd jump to as a penalty. Do you dislike her so much? I always thought she was being hyperbolic when she said how much you don't get on."
no subject
Jon sighs again, softer this time. Wolfe's question makes him look away. "It's not... much hyperbole. We're like oil and water. I don't- She's violent and unpredictable. Like Daisy before she... before terrible things happened to her, and she decided she wanted to try to be better. My friend Daisy. I can work with her, but I can't deal with her turning every bloody molehill into a mountain." He would certainly never do such a thing! "I- In any case, I should think of nicer things to say about her. Clearly."
no subject
Settling down, Wolfe takes up a pen and starts writing some words they would probably use. 'Hello', 'Magic', 'Cat', 'Dog', and so forth. He remembers what Jon said about Daisy, how she was incredibly violent and in the clutches of the Hunt, but tried to be better. It's not unlike Amelia, though there's no Entity clouding her thoughts. She does enough of that on her own. "I know, that's part of Chris' problem too. It makes her difficult to talk to, let alone rely on. She's trying to be better, though, even though she doesn't think she's worth the effort. She'll find a way. It's in her, I can see it, but it will take practice."
A thought occurs to him and Wolfe grins in amusement. "I do think it'd be helpful of you to think on her good points. Just don't be surprised that if you do compliment her, she may be confused and think you're hitting on her."
no subject
He looks at what Wolfe is writing and takes another page to start on his own list. 'Please' and 'Thank You' go first. His grandmother taught him manners, if nothing else, and it's polite. His eyes catch on some of the web motifs around the room and he adds 'Spider' to his list.
no subject
He pinches the bridge of his nose, shakes his head, then flips through the dictionary. He adds a few words in pairs; 'bad' and 'good', 'wrong' and 'right', 'yes' and 'no'.
"For being able to hear her fears, you could at least use the knowledge to try and understand her."
no subject
His list adds in 'moth' and 'raven,' then 'hand' and 'book' as his attention wanders the room for ideas.
"I can hear her fears, and that just tells me what's wrong while she's spiraling. They're not reasonable fears. Not- They're nothing I can do anything about, anyway." He trails off as he realizes it's a bit like the pot calling the kettle black there, but his unreasonable fears are different. At least he's already had his existential crisis. "They're things she needs to figure out answers for herself. She's not going to listen to me if I tell her I've been there. She doesn't like me enough for that."
no subject
With a sigh, Wolfe starts shredding his list into papers with one word on them each. "I know you're trying, but she is too, no matter how much it might seem to each of you that the other isn't. I do appreciate your abilities to still be civil with each other, at least."
He finishes up and rummages around for some sort of container to hold the papers. He manages to come up with some kind of decorative bowl that has a spiderweb motif fitted with raven skulls at intervals. "How... unique."
no subject
His eyes light on the bowl that Wolfe finds, and Jon can't help frowning. "I really don't care for the motifs he's got in the temple today. I keep thinking we're going to see spiders hiding up in the corners of the room. There's a spider god here, as well, that I read about in one of those books. Lolth."
no subject
It doesn't escape his notice that there is one common denominator here, though. He's glad when Jon changes the subject.
"I don't care for them either, but that's what we get for distracting him while he casts. I doubt any other god has power here, though. It is meant to be a temple to the Raven Queen, even if we're using it as a sort of... hotel," he winces a bit at that, glancing around as if the Matron is going to come out of somewhere and scold them. That would be ridiculous. She clearly knows what they've been doing, she sent Topher.
"All I know about Lolth is she's the Spider Queen and evil. Do you think she lords over manipulation, like your Web?"
no subject
He finishes ripping up his strips and drops them into the bowl. "All right. There are the ones I have for you. How are we going to do this? Alternate picking from the bowl and just... go from there?"
no subject
"I suppose? I hadn't really thought that far." Seeing as most of the words are ones they'd gone over earlier in the day, Wolfe just adds his to the bowl and settles back onto a sofa. "You can pull one for me first, if you like. Better mix them around a bit though."
no subject
[Intelligence Checks Jon:
21 - 21 - 8
Intelligence Checks Wolfe:
11 - 1 - 20]
Jon's far better in the early part of the game as he has a run of luck with words he'd chosen himself. Wolfe, by contrast... struggles. There's one point where he misses 3 in a row, and the Archivist takes some amount of pleasure in positioning himself on the mage's back as he does a few push-ups as his punishment. "We really need you exercising your mind more than your body."
His haughty teasing is rewarded by immediately tripping over two different words and narrowly missing making it a third. "I- Well... Amelia. She's... she has nice hair? And... she's a competent teacher for knives."
no subject
He does try not to be smug when he manages to remember a few words Jon doesn't. He's gracious in a very obvious way, though, needling passively without saying anything about it at all.
"Really? Nice hair and competent teacher? Is that the best you can do? Though I guess from you being a competent teacher is a high enough compliment. Try again for the first."
no subject
None of that is particularly important, though, and they've reached the end of the bowl. "In any case, they've had more than enough time to talk. Or fight. Or do whatever they're going to do. I think it's safe to step out again. I really do need to talk to Amelia." He gives Wolfe a look. "And I'm not complimenting her. I didn't miss three in a row."
(no subject)