[A month ago, his argument had been with Charles Vane - stay here, stay put, we are making more progress than you know -, and now that man is gone and here comes Rutyer having tripped over and picked up the same knife to undercut him with. You've been here this long, and what have you accomplished? A narrowness overcomes Flint's face where he sits across the table. It's as donning a mask - one of cold fury, but a mask all the same. His free hand, draped over the chair's arm and once flexing its grip there, has at some point gone very still.
At length:]
Have you shared this paranoid delusion with anyone?
Come now, Captain, I've watched as many melodramas as you. The masked traitor asks, Does anyone know? Our hero replies, I've not told a soul. And then a knife across the throat.
[ His long, long eyelashes lower, and he murmurs: ]
I assume, of course, that you do not consider yourself the hero of this tale.
[ Then: ]
Here's another. Tale, I mean. Delusion, if you prefer. Perhaps your hatred of Tevinter is true. And perhaps you see, quite rightly, that Corypheus will be its destruction. No true love for the land, no true love for anything, just a desire to see it burn.
[There is a naked sense of satisfaction in the other man's face and in the easy slump of his shoulders against the chair back. And Byerly has, he is certain beyond measure, no idea what he's talking about.
But this particular story is a hot coal he'd long carried in his clenched fist, and it seems that somewhere - before Kirkwall, before coming South for reinforcements, before the rebellion on Nascere had stuttered to suspension, but maybe in a torchlit room before a maroon queen - he'd found some method of putting it down.
No true love for anything, said so casually, burns the hand these days.
[ And it shouldn't shake Byerly. It shouldn't. Flint is just a man, and Nadine is living a quiet life a continent away - far from the war, far from the reach of any damned pirates. The very words are absurd. He ought to laugh right in the man's face.
And yet. And yet, for just a moment, a frisson runs down his spine, and his lips twitch, and he blinks.
And then the smile is back again, easy and casual. He gestures broadly with his glass, and replies - ]
It's the most singular advantage of being a man like me. I love nothing, and nothing loves me. It's honestly what makes me so spectacularly suited to this job, wouldn't you agree?
[ Then a sip. And he wishes he had the nerve to end it there, to let Flint walk out and try fruitlessly to find some path to revenge. But something foolish in him makes him continue: ]
I want only what I said from the very start. Friendship between us. Shall I define friendship for you?
The simplest of things. Just this: to not scheme against me.
[ Is that really it? Well, no, not quite. He also wanted to see Flint suffer and squirm, and to know that the fool Byerly Ruter was responsible. But it seems that that has been accomplished, despite that sole return jab from the man. And that is satisfying. And aside from that...Yes; Byerly fancies that that really is all he desires. The freedom to do this bloody job. ]
[There - some snapping tension. He laughs, a low frustrated sound, and takes another drink.]
You've put an extraordinary amount of faith in my ability to simply divine your intentions out of all the nothing in one hand and some ambiguous threat in the other.
Trust. [So flat and humorless as to be almost barking. Some ember of anger flashes briefly in his face, white hot, before being rearranged - not hidden, just not there at the forefront in the set of his jaw or the fixed point of his attention.]
I'm sorry. I must have misplaced it somewhere between you having no opinion on any topic whatsoever and the implication that I'm a Tevinter agent. What am I meant to be trusting you to do?
[ A spare, elegant shrug. Honestly, this oughtn't be so hard to understand. And it's not as though he hasn't incentivized the man quite thoroughly. Trust Byerly, or ruin of his reputation and prospects and likely control of his crew would follow. How is that difficult? ]
Your job, as I understand it and as is the case with every Division Head, is to support and guide our efforts here to help win this war. So long as that holds true, and allowing that your work doesn't begin and end with providing worthless commentary from the center of the room, then I see no reason why we shouldn't be happy partners.
[It's good brandy spoiled utterly, so he doesn't feel any guilt for simply throwing the rest of it back. Afterward, the empty glass is set aside - closer to him than to the bottle - and he once more moves to rise from the chair.]
[Once, as a boy, he'd fought another junior officer. He can't remember what was said to start it, only that somehow in the fury of the moment he'd left himself. Gone somewhere distant and unthinking, swallowed up by some force that waited under his skin. He'd come to only in the aftermath of having been struck by the sailing master with a belaying pin and had for a second or ten of dizzying pain been certain that this is what it felt like to become a mage. He was eleven. It had been the right time to be overtaken by something. The realization of bloody knuckles and bruised ribs and no trace of the arcane had been as much shock as disappointment - a cold fury of ruined want that dumbed the sting of the caning that came after.
There is something of that now - that bitterness in his mouth. He discovers that at some point, he's risen to his feet and set his hand back on the empty glass. The edge of it digs into his fingers and all the blood has drained from his face.
(He isn't a big man. Not really. But standing there, he is at once dangerous - there is a knife in his broad belt and his bare forearms are corded muscle and little else. Piracy is a hard life, and it must mean something that he wears so few scars produced by it.)
He picks up the glass and doesn't strike Byerly in the face with it. Instead, he makes do with taking the bottle as well.]
[ Of all the things - That hadn't been meant as provocation. Quite the opposite - he'd meant to build a little solidarity. Surely for a man who hates Tevinter, fucking over one of the highest of the Vints was a point of pride. But for a moment, By's hand found his blade, because for that moment he'd thought an attack was to come.
But there is none, in the end. So - very well.
He opens his mouth to protest taking that bottle, then decides - no. Let the Captain become used to drinking his liquor; there may come a day when that habit will be useful for introducing a little something extra. Hopefully not, but...Perhaps. ]
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At length:]
Have you shared this paranoid delusion with anyone?
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[ His long, long eyelashes lower, and he murmurs: ]
I assume, of course, that you do not consider yourself the hero of this tale.
[ Then: ]
Here's another. Tale, I mean. Delusion, if you prefer. Perhaps your hatred of Tevinter is true. And perhaps you see, quite rightly, that Corypheus will be its destruction. No true love for the land, no true love for anything, just a desire to see it burn.
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But this particular story is a hot coal he'd long carried in his clenched fist, and it seems that somewhere - before Kirkwall, before coming South for reinforcements, before the rebellion on Nascere had stuttered to suspension, but maybe in a torchlit room before a maroon queen - he'd found some method of putting it down.
No true love for anything, said so casually, burns the hand these days.
He looks Byerly in the eye, breathing sharp.]
I recommend you arrive at your point.
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[ The question is simple, and asked with a smile. And he waits; it's not rhetorical. ]
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[It's an easy threat and a year of quiet spent in the Gallows should make it seem toothless and hollow. It somehow doesn't.]
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And yet. And yet, for just a moment, a frisson runs down his spine, and his lips twitch, and he blinks.
And then the smile is back again, easy and casual. He gestures broadly with his glass, and replies - ]
It's the most singular advantage of being a man like me. I love nothing, and nothing loves me. It's honestly what makes me so spectacularly suited to this job, wouldn't you agree?
[ Then a sip. And he wishes he had the nerve to end it there, to let Flint walk out and try fruitlessly to find some path to revenge. But something foolish in him makes him continue: ]
I want only what I said from the very start. Friendship between us. Shall I define friendship for you?
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Please. Go on.
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[ Is that really it? Well, no, not quite. He also wanted to see Flint suffer and squirm, and to know that the fool Byerly Ruter was responsible. But it seems that that has been accomplished, despite that sole return jab from the man. And that is satisfying. And aside from that...Yes; Byerly fancies that that really is all he desires. The freedom to do this bloody job. ]
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I can't imagine what good that would do.
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To be given the leeway to actually be the head of diplomacy, instead of fighting you every step of the way? Yes, a mystery.
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Like I said, [he takes a sip of brandy] I can't imagine what working against you would achieve.
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[ A shrug. ]
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[There - some snapping tension. He laughs, a low frustrated sound, and takes another drink.]
You've put an extraordinary amount of faith in my ability to simply divine your intentions out of all the nothing in one hand and some ambiguous threat in the other.
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Is there anything else you'd prefer we discuss or is this as far as we get for today?
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I am asking for trust. Trust does not require understanding another's intentions.
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I'm sorry. I must have misplaced it somewhere between you having no opinion on any topic whatsoever and the implication that I'm a Tevinter agent. What am I meant to be trusting you to do?
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[ A spare, elegant shrug. Honestly, this oughtn't be so hard to understand. And it's not as though he hasn't incentivized the man quite thoroughly. Trust Byerly, or ruin of his reputation and prospects and likely control of his crew would follow. How is that difficult? ]
I didn't volunteer for it for my health.
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[It's good brandy spoiled utterly, so he doesn't feel any guilt for simply throwing the rest of it back. Afterward, the empty glass is set aside - closer to him than to the bottle - and he once more moves to rise from the chair.]
Now, if you'll forgive me, I have work to do.
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[ But - ]
One last thing before you go.
[ C'mon, sit. ]
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A pause. An expectant look.]
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Did you really fuck an altus' wife? And escaped with your life, after disrupting their precious bloodlines.
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There is something of that now - that bitterness in his mouth. He discovers that at some point, he's risen to his feet and set his hand back on the empty glass. The edge of it digs into his fingers and all the blood has drained from his face.
(He isn't a big man. Not really. But standing there, he is at once dangerous - there is a knife in his broad belt and his bare forearms are corded muscle and little else. Piracy is a hard life, and it must mean something that he wears so few scars produced by it.)
He picks up the glass and doesn't strike Byerly in the face with it. Instead, he makes do with taking the bottle as well.]
Enjoy your day, Mssr Rutyer.
[And then he is leaving.]
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But there is none, in the end. So - very well.
He opens his mouth to protest taking that bottle, then decides - no. Let the Captain become used to drinking his liquor; there may come a day when that habit will be useful for introducing a little something extra. Hopefully not, but...Perhaps. ]