At some point during Strand's first few weeks with Riftwatch, he's approached by a tall, fussy-looking fellow with a writing board. He raises his hand in a little wave to get his attention, his smile as pleasant and bureaucratic as one please.
"Warden Strand?" he confirms, "I'm Benedict Artemaeus, Personnel Officer. I just wanted to see how you were settling in."
The Scouting office is where this evening finds him. Copying maps, annotating others; a blank patch of coastline sketched into crag. Strictly unofficial. Call it freelancing.
He marks the creak of footsteps before glancing up, taking it in. A slight delay, and Strand stands, stretches out a hand to shake. Pulls out the nearest chair.
"No complaints," Brisk, gentlemanly. At odds with the obvious dip of Ander to his tongue. "Though I trust it's little to Minrathous."
Edited (oh my god i was so confident this wouldnt be a second beep and then...where/when) 2025-03-10 04:16 (UTC)
Benedict shakes his hand easily, pleasantly surprised by the invitation to sit down-- he accepts it, balancing his writing board on one knee as he crosses his legs.
"Sorry?" He blinks at Strand at the mention of Minrathous, remaining pleasant-- perhaps he misunderstood.
"What do you know of the Warden Siorus?" Personnel officer — whatever little that seems to account — it might well be something. "Left Riftwatch last Harvestmere."
"And there was nothing else strange?" Fingers pluck the air before his own face — pay attention, yes, but also a prod to memory — "No lasting changes?"
Edited (ugh figuring out voice) 2025-04-09 23:34 (UTC)
Well into Cloudreach, Strand has had the room to himself; the cats ceded their territory some time ago, though there's been a periodic stench in the room from when one of them gets ideas. None of them are present when their benefactor comes shambling in from the corridor, looking as wan and thin as is possible for someone the general size and shape of a bronto, and it actually takes Barrow until after he's sunk down on his bed to realize the room is already occupied.
Someone's things were here. Shirts twice his size, decent whiskey, a razor that minds sharpening. He's gone through it all, he's put most of it back,
(Tavarys is here, he needs a drink.)
But a few weeks on, he's ready to clear it. Let them toss it in some closet for the next of kin to come knocking, and that's what he's at by the time Barrow arrives. Strand stoops up from the box he's been tossing the odds and ends into — assesses —
The answer to the question sits dry and unspoken on Barrow's lips for a moment as he stares at the newcomer, and it occurs to him in this period that answering honestly would open him up to a level of intimacy he is quite keen to leave behind after the ordeal. Too many people have seen too much of him, recently.
"Fighting fit," he grunts instead, obfuscating the reality behind brusque dismissal. He feels like he looks, which is like shit. "I'm Barrow," he adds, glancing expectantly back to Strand.
"Strand," Lamentation isn't in the paperwork, but Obeisance was; so he doesn't expect pushback. "Warden. Out of your hair soon enough."
He slings the box onto Barrow's bed. Here, have that back. His gaze is steady, and if it'd be kinder to look away, he doesn't. The hand out is calloused to shake.
(Pale and sweaty and unable to stop trembling, the last thing he'd wanted was anyone's kindness.)
An explanation at last, and Benedict is not as horrified by it as he may have expected. A quirk of his brow, and, "...would you like me to... put them in touch with you?"
Soon enough. What's that supposed to mean? Is he dying?
Barrow follows the box with his gaze, turning it back on Strand with tired, slightly narrowed eyes-- why did you have that-- but he's not about to start a fight. Instead, he shakes his hand.
"As much as cats are anyone's, I s'pose." Long ago he'd promised a friend he'd care for her half-grown strays; she's not coming back, but at least they're still here.
"Stalking," Barrow corrects amiably, his smirk growing and then receding again. "They've got good ears and noses, even if we give dogs all the credit for that. And they wander about, catching vermin. Hard to avoid 'em."
He pauses a moment, rubbing lightly at the overgrown stubble on his chin. "Where'd you say you're from?"
Narrowing his eyes slightly, Benedict thinks on it.
"Tavane and Strange you can just ask, I think," he muses, "they're," motormouths, "open books. Orlov will need a lighter touch, but I think if you explain why you want to know...?" He shrugs a shoulder.
"Thank you," He isn't so sure. Strand has never been a delicate man, and Benedict's already proven easy to fluster. That isn't promising for his definition of light; shuffles Orlov to the bottom of the list. "You've been a great help."
"Oh." His laugh is weak, raw-- a stupid oversight, he realizes, but everything is a little harder right now.
"Right. Like dogs just fine, of course." He's trying, keeping this conversational when all he wants to do is lie down, go to sleep, ignore the world for a while.
He could tell another bad joke, ask after stories: Camaraderie, in the rough manner of the Order; of the docks. No point. The man looks a zombie, and they've exchanged pleasantries enough to call the matter settled. Strand lives here now. Barrow isn't dead.
All that's needful.
"I'm to see a man about a horse," He'll do no such thing. Risen, Strand shrugs up his coat for the door. "But I'll leave the sugar."
His head tilts toward the bed, eyes lifting in an exaggerated point: There's a pouch of tobacco, weighing down some broadsheets. And with that, he's gone.
action jumpscare
"Warden Strand?" he confirms, "I'm Benedict Artemaeus, Personnel Officer. I just wanted to see how you were settling in."
too scary goodbye
He marks the creak of footsteps before glancing up, taking it in. A slight delay, and Strand stands, stretches out a hand to shake. Pulls out the nearest chair.
"No complaints," Brisk, gentlemanly. At odds with the obvious dip of Ander to his tongue. "Though I trust it's little to Minrathous."
ok i'll miss you
"Sorry?" He blinks at Strand at the mention of Minrathous, remaining pleasant-- perhaps he misunderstood.
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Glowing signs, pictures in the air.
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"I-- yes," he agrees blandly, "but Kirkwall's not so bad. Really." eventually
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There must be some question to answer, box to check.
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"I..." Well, they're in Scouting, so that answers that. "...do you have any questions?" He clears his throat. "About Riftwatch?"
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"Not a lot," he admits, "...he turned into a bogfisher sometimes." There was that.
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"He was a person, and then he was a bogfisher," he explains-- it's not that weird, mages exist-- "and then he was a person again."
hewwo
None of them are present when their benefactor comes shambling in from the corridor, looking as wan and thin as is possible for someone the general size and shape of a bronto, and it actually takes Barrow until after he's sunk down on his bed to realize the room is already occupied.
"Oh," he greets, distantly.
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(Tavarys is here, he needs a drink.)
But a few weeks on, he's ready to clear it. Let them toss it in some closet for the next of kin to come knocking, and that's what he's at by the time Barrow arrives. Strand stoops up from the box he's been tossing the odds and ends into — assesses —
"Feeling better?"
Can't be much.
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Baudin, Hermione, Jayce, Porthmeus.
"Have all remained with Riftwatch?"
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"Fighting fit," he grunts instead, obfuscating the reality behind brusque dismissal. He feels like he looks, which is like shit. "I'm Barrow," he adds, glancing expectantly back to Strand.
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Benedict nods.
"Can I ask...?"
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More or less.
"Your people are safe, we'd know by now. But I need their accounts."
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He slings the box onto Barrow's bed. Here, have that back. His gaze is steady, and if it'd be kinder to look away, he doesn't. The hand out is calloused to shake.
(Pale and sweaty and unable to stop trembling, the last thing he'd wanted was anyone's kindness.)
"These your cats been about?"
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Soon enough. What's that supposed to mean? Is he dying?
Barrow follows the box with his gaze, turning it back on Strand with tired, slightly narrowed eyes-- why did you have that-- but he's not about to start a fight. Instead, he shakes his hand.
"As much as cats are anyone's, I s'pose." Long ago he'd promised a friend he'd care for her half-grown strays; she's not coming back, but at least they're still here.
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"They found me," he replies, "they're all right." He's not, but it's fine. Everything is fine.
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Worth the price of peace. Wouldn't be the first time something's pissed in his boots.
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He pauses a moment, rubbing lightly at the overgrown stubble on his chin. "Where'd you say you're from?"
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"Tavane and Strange you can just ask, I think," he muses, "they're," motormouths, "open books. Orlov will need a lighter touch, but I think if you explain why you want to know...?" He shrugs a shoulder.
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A joke: Only idiots get themselves born into Cairn.
"Ferelden, is it? You're breaking with tradition."
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"...is there anything else you need, before I leave you alone?"
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"How's that?" Breaking with tradition.
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Ferelden, dogs.
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"Right. Like dogs just fine, of course." He's trying, keeping this conversational when all he wants to do is lie down, go to sleep, ignore the world for a while.
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All that's needful.
"I'm to see a man about a horse," He'll do no such thing. Risen, Strand shrugs up his coat for the door. "But I'll leave the sugar."
His head tilts toward the bed, eyes lifting in an exaggerated point: There's a pouch of tobacco, weighing down some broadsheets. And with that, he's gone.