The first, amused flicker of a smile gives way to a more contemplative frown.
"I see."
There's some humor in it, but when set against the bigger picture, all the other instances in which Byerly Rutyer had expressed himself in regards to Rifters and mages—
"Does he know about you?"
Not the rift shard. The rest. The other things Richard is capable of that Derrica knows only parts and pieces of.
“I’m marked as a mage on the list of Rifters maintained by the Research Division.”
Isaac saw to that for him. Or perhaps the Provost. He’d like to think it wasn’t Wysteria. Regardless, distaste carves close along the bones of his face, hard in his nose through a glance down the blanket to his feet.
And she is, as complicated a thing as it might be.
But the worse thing is surely what has been demonstrated: anyone, including someone like Byerly Rutyer, could skim that list and pluck out a private thing, just like that.
"And I'm sorry that he knows."
Derrica doesn't put her hand on his knee over the blankets. But she does bump her knuckles up against his calf as she rearranges position, adjusts how she is leaning her weight. It's a very small thing, easily ignored.
It only makes sense he should have some level of awareness. Dick’s eyeline shifts from the foot of his cot to the nudge of knuckles at his leg, and inevitably from there back to Derrica.
“The caliber of cowardice it suggests is frankly quite impressive, never mind the open insult to my service.”
He could go on like this, probably, but doesn’t, whatever else pent up and released in a short sigh.
"He is a coward. It's what guides him in his dealings with us."
One of the few things to recommend Byerly Rutyer: his willingness to admit his own shortcomings in that arena.
Though admitting it doesn't shift the harm that cowardice causes. Derrica's gaze has also dropped to her fingers tucked against Richard's leg, and she shakes her head.
"Is it only the Ambassador, or is there something else that concerns you?"
He’s quiet again, the rasp of his breath mingling with the rustle of his bedding when he stretches against it.
It’s a question that doesn’t bear answering, really, an impulse towards dry honesty -- the list of things that don’t concern him would be substantially shorter -- lifted up and let off in a huff of salt, the ghost of a scoff.
“I’m just tired,” he tells her. Tired and unhappy.
Derrica recognizes the sentiment. I'll be alright standing in for so many things that cannot be easily solved.
But that's the trouble: the understanding that what is troubling Richard cannot be solved by Derrica, as much as she might like to.
"You can tell me, if it helps," is the best offer she can make. Someone to listen. Someone who will likely agree. Her fingers nudge very gently against the bend of his knee, underscoring the silent offer.
A slight shake of his head will have to stand in for more specific discouragement.
He follows it with an even look in aside, half apology in earnest, half a probe through her feelings on being turned down for a vent session. A conversation about the totality Dick Dickerson’s troubles isn’t in the cards.
However:
“You asked me previously where my magic comes from.”
There's no disappointment. The offer is made. It's Richard's choice what to be done with it. If there's no comfort in speaking of his troubles, then she doesn't intend to press.
Maybe he will remember the offer sometime later. Maybe not.
Regardless, she turns in towards him, bringing up one leg to rest carefully on the edge of the bed. Settling in, if he intends to speak of it now.
“There is an entity that comes to me in my dreams,” confessed as matter-of-factly as he might report on a delivery of fresh towels to the baths, Richard adds, by necessity: “Less often, now.”
His affect hasn’t changed with the subject any more than it has with her settling in, tattered and listless under his blanket.
“I thought for a time it might be my god working to reach me through the veil.”
Listening to him, Derrica straightens, spine stiffening at the strangeness of Richard's admission.
There is some familiarity. Derrica has drawn spirits to her. She has heard spirits murmuring to her through the Veil. This is a skill she's been honing her whole life, but it doesn't sound as if Richard is referencing something quite the same.
"Do you not think that anymore?" she asks, carefully, softly.
Heat rises beneath the hard planes of his bony face, stings at his eyes, wrung back by a tendon-cracking flex at the back of his jaw. It stays set out of alignment for a moment. He sniffs. Dry, as if in evidence. A steady breath clears the rest.
And he’s back again, locked onto her knuckles at his knee as to assert to himself that they’re the only part of her really here for him to have this very normal and professional conversation with.
The restoration of dignity makes answering easier with this particular cat out of the bag.
“I’m certain it wants the same things most of you do.”
He, it.
Resentment sits harsh in the lines around his mouth but there is nothing evasive about his reluctance to resume eye contact. Nothing to signal deception.
"There is always reason to be cautious with spirits."
A lesson Derrica remembers from the very earliest days of her childhood. Not a warning meant to scare or to discourage, but to bring clarity to what was being done each time a Seer opened themselves up.
"Do you know what I am?" is a gentler question, though her scrutiny of him doesn't lapse as she offers it.
She'd promised information too, on the ferry that night.
It’s rational to agree. He’d seen the aftermath of the abomination that tore through the Gallows the year prior. Or maybe it was the year before that. The books and records he combed through afterwards were explicit and often well-illustrated.
Never mind the demons he’s seen himself in the field.
“I know that mages skilled in healing magic are more inclined to work closely with spirits of the Fade.”
Speaking about it in the context of study is easier still, second nature crept in to file tender details behind titles and volumes and chapter headings. Some of his splintering has room to smooth itself under that added structure.
She has considered that sometimes, whether her skill in this field is due to her skill in another.
Before she continues, she takes a brief assessment of the room around them. At Richard's knee, her fingers pluck anxiously at the folds of the sheet, the only outward sign of nerves.
"I'm Rivaini," she persists. Richard is not of this world, and will not draw such conclusions himself, apparently, though Derrica knows him to be a diligent researcher. "I know more about spirits because of what we believe, and because of what I was raised to become."
The fabric whispers between them. She forcibly stills her hand, releases the fabric as she straightens once more, folds her hands over her knee.
It’s the fidgeting that barbs into his periphery and brings his eyeline more presently onto her in aside, the change in posture. He lands on her hands resettled over her knee. Most of his research has been more insular to his own interests and the interests of those close to him -- research around personal safety and potential. Research for the war effort.
The intricacies of Thedosian culture have often evaded him. The humans are cruel to elves and the dwarves are cruel to their own. The Chantry’s approach to tending mages has been primitive and at times desperate. Tevinter is full of interesting ideas and potential and blight.
Still, he’s been around long enough and done enough reading that the Seers in Rivain tugs a thread of recognition, albeit hazy, unspecific.
“I’ve heard of them,” he says, in the hedging tone of one who is supposing only just now that he should’ve read more closely.
"I'm one of them," she says quietly, slower, watching Richard's expression closely. "We speak with spirits. Commune with them."
Here, some shared ground. Some expertise that might be useful to him, if he cared to call upon it.
"I hear them," is more to the point. "And I know you're a cautious man, but I hope that you know how cautious you must be when something from beyond tries to converse with you."
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But rebuttal is stalled by the introduction of a question. It's unexpected. Derrica doesn't expect to be the top choice for Richard's confidences.
Her answering "Yes," is tentative, as if expecting Richard to change his mind.
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“When I attempted to communicate my suspicions about Brother Gideon to Rutyer he was reluctant to meet with me in my quarters.”
This is likely to make her unhappy, he suspects -- something a little sharper in the way eye contact narrows in aside.
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"Why?"
Why was Rutyer reluctant?
Why tell her this at all?
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Obviously. Crow’s feet etch in stark where the crook of half a smile might fit, could he be bothered to force it.
one more time
"I see."
There's some humor in it, but when set against the bigger picture, all the other instances in which Byerly Rutyer had expressed himself in regards to Rifters and mages—
"Does he know about you?"
Not the rift shard. The rest. The other things Richard is capable of that Derrica knows only parts and pieces of.
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Isaac saw to that for him. Or perhaps the Provost. He’d like to think it wasn’t Wysteria. Regardless, distaste carves close along the bones of his face, hard in his nose through a glance down the blanket to his feet.
“Not that it was a secret closely kept.”
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And she is, as complicated a thing as it might be.
But the worse thing is surely what has been demonstrated: anyone, including someone like Byerly Rutyer, could skim that list and pluck out a private thing, just like that.
"And I'm sorry that he knows."
Derrica doesn't put her hand on his knee over the blankets. But she does bump her knuckles up against his calf as she rearranges position, adjusts how she is leaning her weight. It's a very small thing, easily ignored.
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It only makes sense he should have some level of awareness. Dick’s eyeline shifts from the foot of his cot to the nudge of knuckles at his leg, and inevitably from there back to Derrica.
“The caliber of cowardice it suggests is frankly quite impressive, never mind the open insult to my service.”
He could go on like this, probably, but doesn’t, whatever else pent up and released in a short sigh.
“I’d initially considered Riftwatch a reprieve.”
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One of the few things to recommend Byerly Rutyer: his willingness to admit his own shortcomings in that arena.
Though admitting it doesn't shift the harm that cowardice causes. Derrica's gaze has also dropped to her fingers tucked against Richard's leg, and she shakes her head.
"Is it only the Ambassador, or is there something else that concerns you?"
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It’s a question that doesn’t bear answering, really, an impulse towards dry honesty -- the list of things that don’t concern him would be substantially shorter -- lifted up and let off in a huff of salt, the ghost of a scoff.
“I’m just tired,” he tells her. Tired and unhappy.
“I'll be alright.”
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But that's the trouble: the understanding that what is troubling Richard cannot be solved by Derrica, as much as she might like to.
"You can tell me, if it helps," is the best offer she can make. Someone to listen. Someone who will likely agree. Her fingers nudge very gently against the bend of his knee, underscoring the silent offer.
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He follows it with an even look in aside, half apology in earnest, half a probe through her feelings on being turned down for a vent session. A conversation about the totality Dick Dickerson’s troubles isn’t in the cards.
However:
“You asked me previously where my magic comes from.”
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There's no disappointment. The offer is made. It's Richard's choice what to be done with it. If there's no comfort in speaking of his troubles, then she doesn't intend to press.
Maybe he will remember the offer sometime later. Maybe not.
Regardless, she turns in towards him, bringing up one leg to rest carefully on the edge of the bed. Settling in, if he intends to speak of it now.
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His affect hasn’t changed with the subject any more than it has with her settling in, tattered and listless under his blanket.
“I thought for a time it might be my god working to reach me through the veil.”
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There is some familiarity. Derrica has drawn spirits to her. She has heard spirits murmuring to her through the Veil. This is a skill she's been honing her whole life, but it doesn't sound as if Richard is referencing something quite the same.
"Do you not think that anymore?" she asks, carefully, softly.
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“No.” He doesn’t.
And that seems to be the end of it.
Good story, Richard.
“I can never quite make out what he’s saying,” he continues, unprompted. Why not. “It’s cruel, in a way.”
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There is, fortunately, no place on the leg nearest her where Derrica could put her hand without hurting him. But the instinct is there, to reach out.
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And he’s back again, locked onto her knuckles at his knee as to assert to himself that they’re the only part of her really here for him to have this very normal and professional conversation with.
“Not directly.”
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It is not accompanied by a nudge of her knuckles. The slight pressure of that contact remains unchanged. But her eyes are very intent on his face.
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“I’m certain it wants the same things most of you do.”
He, it.
Resentment sits harsh in the lines around his mouth but there is nothing evasive about his reluctance to resume eye contact. Nothing to signal deception.
“I don’t believe there is any cause for concern.”
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A lesson Derrica remembers from the very earliest days of her childhood. Not a warning meant to scare or to discourage, but to bring clarity to what was being done each time a Seer opened themselves up.
"Do you know what I am?" is a gentler question, though her scrutiny of him doesn't lapse as she offers it.
She'd promised information too, on the ferry that night.
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It’s rational to agree. He’d seen the aftermath of the abomination that tore through the Gallows the year prior. Or maybe it was the year before that. The books and records he combed through afterwards were explicit and often well-illustrated.
Never mind the demons he’s seen himself in the field.
“I know that mages skilled in healing magic are more inclined to work closely with spirits of the Fade.”
Speaking about it in the context of study is easier still, second nature crept in to file tender details behind titles and volumes and chapter headings. Some of his splintering has room to smooth itself under that added structure.
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She has considered that sometimes, whether her skill in this field is due to her skill in another.
Before she continues, she takes a brief assessment of the room around them. At Richard's knee, her fingers pluck anxiously at the folds of the sheet, the only outward sign of nerves.
"I'm Rivaini," she persists. Richard is not of this world, and will not draw such conclusions himself, apparently, though Derrica knows him to be a diligent researcher. "I know more about spirits because of what we believe, and because of what I was raised to become."
The fabric whispers between them. She forcibly stills her hand, releases the fabric as she straightens once more, folds her hands over her knee.
"Have you heard of the Seers in Rivain?"
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The intricacies of Thedosian culture have often evaded him. The humans are cruel to elves and the dwarves are cruel to their own. The Chantry’s approach to tending mages has been primitive and at times desperate. Tevinter is full of interesting ideas and potential and blight.
Still, he’s been around long enough and done enough reading that the Seers in Rivain tugs a thread of recognition, albeit hazy, unspecific.
“I’ve heard of them,” he says, in the hedging tone of one who is supposing only just now that he should’ve read more closely.
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A little smile tugs at her mouth, nodding.
"I'm one of them," she says quietly, slower, watching Richard's expression closely. "We speak with spirits. Commune with them."
Here, some shared ground. Some expertise that might be useful to him, if he cared to call upon it.
"I hear them," is more to the point. "And I know you're a cautious man, but I hope that you know how cautious you must be when something from beyond tries to converse with you."
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bow on this y/y?