[He touches the glass, raises it a fraction, and then once more discards it. He gets his feet under him, sets his hands at the chair's arms as if to rise--]
Well this has been illuminating as always, Rutyer.
Seheron was of interest to you, after all, wasn't it?
[ He continues quite civilly, quite as though Flint hasn't given any indication of anything aside from a desire to prolong this pleasant, comfortable chat. ]
[A pause. It's not in any way a turn in conversation, but maybe that's way it warrants it; Rutyer holding course on much of anything is unusual. That this is the thread he's chosen to pull on is baffling.]
[Perceptible there in the cheerfully lit room, the half righted line of his shoulders sharpens. The man tips his face to regard Byerly then, and for a moment there plays out some real flash of shock before it's replaced by a crackling stillness in the lines there - an impulse toward expression being actively flattened.]
[For an agonizing beat he does nothing at all save for some small movement from the hand at his side - fingers shifting, the calloused pad of thumb against the knuckle on his first finger. Then he sits. He resumes possession of the glass.]
[ Such an odd choice for a spy, if a spy he is. He gives himself away constantly with twitches and jerks, flutters of the eyelid, flaring nostrils. How clear that look of shock had been on his face. Even in his neophyte days, By had never been so transparent. Though, to be fair, he'd also never accomplished anything with his rage; anger no doubt carried the Captain far. ]
I am desperate to know what Tevinter will do next. More than anything else, I want to know that.
[Who did he ask? From where had he traced the information? It was possible - likely even - that someone from the Walrus had spoken some word out of turn. This is the trouble with keeping men in harbor, with putting crews on land. Inevitably, they will say the right thing to the wrong person who knows how to follow a thread to its source. Or had it been news from Nascere, intercepted en route here? Or had it fallen into Rutyer's lap by way of somene in Tevinter who had heard how the rebellion force had been divided and thought to run down its disparate parts. Or from the point of occupation itself - the maigstrate on the island now who had known enough about the basic elements of the man who had left the Imperium to speak on them?
The surprise, thinks some distant logical part, isn't that some trace of it has finally reached Riftwatch; it's that the person armed with it is Byerly fucking Rutyer. It's in how he uses the level he's found in his hand.]
Might I recommend asking them? [A bland statement - testing the limits of the snare.]
[ It could be an unobjectionable statement. "I've already sent messengers out there to my sources up north." Or it could be an accusation. The Captain has room to interpret it as either - to wiggle and kick within the snare, to fight it, to try to force this conversation into one of mild chatter about spy movements. Or he could charge forward and meet By directly and lay the accusation out plain. Which one will he choose? It's a fascinating dilemma. It will be exquisitely revealing. ]
[A flash of heat in his face - that untempered swell of anger checked and re-checked. It's clear what interpretation he makes.]
I can at best provide you with an educated guess, as I have to Yseult and Provost Baudin. In which case, I would say that Tevinter will wait to see what happens in Nevarra. If the fighting starts there in earnest, they may simply winter as they are - growing fat off Val Chevin and entertaining the Orlesian front line while Van Markham and Aurelia Penteghast's forces drive Nevarra into the ground. Come spring, the Magisterium will have had plenty of time to resolve their differences and mount a force - primarily slaves, who are no fighters but in numbers more than capable of overwhelming whatever remains of a Nevarran force made to do war through a winter - to push West.
[Semantics, rattled off crisply and doing very little to minimize the sharpness of his attention. The glass remains idle in his hand; he asks,]
[ Fascinating. So here it is that the notorious Captain Flint is craven. He doesn't think for a moment that he can put Byerly off the scent; that's transparent. Yet the old boar nevertheless limps from the hunters, instead of standing to fight.
Shall he weary the quarry further? There would be some joy in the cruelty. The captain is, after all, it must be noted, a massive dick. ]
Come now, Captain. Surely you can manage a bit more education than that.
Whatever it is you think you know [prickling, steely, a dozen adjectives that more or less amount to expressing the urge to strangle the man across from him] is wrong.
[ He leans back, the slouch allowing his hand to dip out of sight so his fingers can find the hilt of his dagger. Just in case the beast decides to fight. ]
So you were born James Flint? Such drama in that name, by the by. Theatrical. I do love it.
[If the boar were to turn, he'd have to launch himself forward over the width of the table. Even then, Byerly might be sitting back outside the easy length of his arm. Instead, he smiles. It's an unpleasant flexion, not so different from bending away from a wound and having the two torn edges of flesh briefly separate.]
A name can't possibly be the extent of what drives your suspicion.
[In a cellar, under a house built on a rugged patch of land Southeast of Seheron waits a box. Inside waits what was once a fine ceremonial sword. He imagines it ruined now - by the salt and heat and by how cheap the metal had been to begin with. He'd had the intention of pawning it, but it'd never been necessary.]
Here I thought that much must be obvious. [A drink from the glass - some effort to blunt sharper points failing in the flex of his spare hand.] I take it your contact neglected to mention that the commission you seem to know so much about was torn up over a decade ago?
[A show of repudiation. That says more than anything else does. It triggers some cold flash of relief - he knows nothing -, which passes hand in hand with a rigid stab of dread: What Byerly suspects could be more dangerous. Who will he tell? What will they do? There are plans in motion; whose scrutiny can they survive?]
What I think is that you're concerned, that you have no idea what you're doing, and that you're jumping to conclusions in an effort to make this arrangement manageable. Maybe if you tell me what exactly you think you know, I might begin to help you make sense of it. [Teeth flashing again:] As a show of friendship.
[ A corner of his lip curls up in droll amusement. The temptation is bloody strong to let Flint know exactly who he's dealing with. The way he phrases that, you'd think Byerly were a mage-boy, stumbling upon his powers, trembling on the edge of becoming an abomination. Or a fussing, clucking fool like the Seneschal. But the temptation has always been strong with men like Flint - these warriors, brusque and haughty, who treated By like a mincing fool - to stand up and shout, I am dangerous, I am more dangerous than you, I am more dangerous than you could ever be, and you need to see that. But By had resisted the urge in Ferelden; he can resist it here. ]
Maker, Captain, you know I'm a card player. You think that you can bat your lovely ginger lashes at me and have me show you my whole hand? I'll have you know that it is a point of pride for me that I routinely destroy my friends when we all come to play.
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Come, Captain. I'm sure you've very strong thoughts on what's to be done with the Qunari.
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[ A tiny, ambiguous toast to Flint. ]
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Well this has been illuminating as always, Rutyer.
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[ He continues quite civilly, quite as though Flint hasn't given any indication of anything aside from a desire to prolong this pleasant, comfortable chat. ]
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Was it?
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[ And then a twitch of his brows, for all intents and purposes looking genuinely embarrassed at the slip of his tongue. ]
Forgive me. Flint.
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Excuse me?
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Such an odd mispronunciation. My sincerest apologies.
[ He looks perfectly guileless as he gestures to the chair. Which is ominous: Byerly Rutyer never looks guileless. ]
Please, do sit. Pick up that drink. There's still so much to discuss. And I so dearly wish to be friends.
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Then by all means.
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I am desperate to know what Tevinter will do next. More than anything else, I want to know that.
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The surprise, thinks some distant logical part, isn't that some trace of it has finally reached Riftwatch; it's that the person armed with it is Byerly fucking Rutyer. It's in how he uses the level he's found in his hand.]
Might I recommend asking them? [A bland statement - testing the limits of the snare.]
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[ It could be an unobjectionable statement. "I've already sent messengers out there to my sources up north." Or it could be an accusation. The Captain has room to interpret it as either - to wiggle and kick within the snare, to fight it, to try to force this conversation into one of mild chatter about spy movements. Or he could charge forward and meet By directly and lay the accusation out plain. Which one will he choose? It's a fascinating dilemma. It will be exquisitely revealing. ]
So what are your thoughts?
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I can at best provide you with an educated guess, as I have to Yseult and Provost Baudin. In which case, I would say that Tevinter will wait to see what happens in Nevarra. If the fighting starts there in earnest, they may simply winter as they are - growing fat off Val Chevin and entertaining the Orlesian front line while Van Markham and Aurelia Penteghast's forces drive Nevarra into the ground. Come spring, the Magisterium will have had plenty of time to resolve their differences and mount a force - primarily slaves, who are no fighters but in numbers more than capable of overwhelming whatever remains of a Nevarran force made to do war through a winter - to push West.
[Semantics, rattled off crisply and doing very little to minimize the sharpness of his attention. The glass remains idle in his hand; he asks,]
Or was there something else you wanted to hear?
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Shall he weary the quarry further? There would be some joy in the cruelty. The captain is, after all, it must be noted, a massive dick. ]
Come now, Captain. Surely you can manage a bit more education than that.
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[ He leans back, the slouch allowing his hand to dip out of sight so his fingers can find the hilt of his dagger. Just in case the beast decides to fight. ]
So you were born James Flint? Such drama in that name, by the by. Theatrical. I do love it.
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A name can't possibly be the extent of what drives your suspicion.
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[ He savors that word a moment, rolling it in his mouth like a cigar. ]
The officer's commission has rather more to do with it.
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Here I thought that much must be obvious. [A drink from the glass - some effort to blunt sharper points failing in the flex of his spare hand.] I take it your contact neglected to mention that the commission you seem to know so much about was torn up over a decade ago?
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[ A quick laugh. It's a contented sound, like the purr of a fed cat. ]
Is that what you think, Captain? Someone's sold you out? Some enemy has given me all the pieces of this story?
[ A shake of his head. ]
Yes. I am well aware that a show of repudiation was made.
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What I think is that you're concerned, that you have no idea what you're doing, and that you're jumping to conclusions in an effort to make this arrangement manageable. Maybe if you tell me what exactly you think you know, I might begin to help you make sense of it. [Teeth flashing again:] As a show of friendship.
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[ A corner of his lip curls up in droll amusement. The temptation is bloody strong to let Flint know exactly who he's dealing with. The way he phrases that, you'd think Byerly were a mage-boy, stumbling upon his powers, trembling on the edge of becoming an abomination. Or a fussing, clucking fool like the Seneschal. But the temptation has always been strong with men like Flint - these warriors, brusque and haughty, who treated By like a mincing fool - to stand up and shout, I am dangerous, I am more dangerous than you, I am more dangerous than you could ever be, and you need to see that. But By had resisted the urge in Ferelden; he can resist it here. ]
Maker, Captain, you know I'm a card player. You think that you can bat your lovely ginger lashes at me and have me show you my whole hand? I'll have you know that it is a point of pride for me that I routinely destroy my friends when we all come to play.
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