you magnificent fuck up (
apostatised) wrote2009-03-05 04:25 pm
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[log] set their sights on something new while there's still something left
When Doul arrives, he'll be met at the guarded nexus door by a young Arum man by the name of Ewar, who introduces himself as his Lordship's swordmaster and informs the older man he'll be escorting him to aforementioned Lord.
Castle Valdis is...an interesting place. Old, very old, but much of it seems new or at least fresh clean; recently renovated, much of that only recently complete. It's a life's work, this place, and Martel is happy to make it his. The lights that follow through the building are seemingly glass torches, lit up with enchanted fire by a command. (Some of the Arum men seem more used to it than others, but they all take it roughly in stride.)
The staffing is sparse, only the necessities, and Doul is led to Martel's library - to which the most effort has been devoted in restoration. It's an impressive room, and large. Martel, lately Lord of Valdis, is at one of the tables nearer the fireplaces and their cushioned armchairs, bent over a choice of maps and family histories.
"Thank you, Ewar," he says, without looking up and almost before the door is quite open.
Castle Valdis is...an interesting place. Old, very old, but much of it seems new or at least fresh clean; recently renovated, much of that only recently complete. It's a life's work, this place, and Martel is happy to make it his. The lights that follow through the building are seemingly glass torches, lit up with enchanted fire by a command. (Some of the Arum men seem more used to it than others, but they all take it roughly in stride.)
The staffing is sparse, only the necessities, and Doul is led to Martel's library - to which the most effort has been devoted in restoration. It's an impressive room, and large. Martel, lately Lord of Valdis, is at one of the tables nearer the fireplaces and their cushioned armchairs, bent over a choice of maps and family histories.
"Thank you, Ewar," he says, without looking up and almost before the door is quite open.
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The castle itself doesn't surprise him, but he keeps a careful eye on the way in, just to make sure he can find his way back out.
"Good day."
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"An explanation in brief - I came to Arum from exile elsewhere. My style of teaching and warfare come from a knighthood I once served and mercenary work of my own over the past - perhaps twelve years. In Arum, it's a culture; they are this world's-" telling word choice, "-finest warriors, and they are honest men who'll incidentally fight for whoever can pay their fee. In the past year I've begun teaching the young men of the nearest clan - my neighbours, as it were." He pauses, here. "I am essentially a reclusive knight-sorcerer in the mountains. With how early in my arrangements things still are, I have a variety of things I can offer you for work. The 'little baby mercenaries'-" someone else's phrase, used with amusement, "-require tutors besides only myself, for a start, and I'd be very interested in collaborating with someone else for what they learn. Rather the point of what I do here, from Koleika's perspective, is that what they learn from me can't be learned anywhere else in this world. Not quite the way I do it."
He pauses, though he's not finished, both for breath and for Doul to process.
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1. What sort of sorcery is he talking about?
2. What are the usual methods of discipline that are used?
3. Does he know if the mercenaries will understand him when he speaks? Do they speak Salt or Ragamoll? Does it matter?
4. What is it that Martel offers that's so different?
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"That being said, I've been out at sea for more than a decade, and I've never been overly fond of horses. Although, if needs be, I can work with them. Just as if you need someone to just haul stone and rebuild, I can do that too." He's not sure if he really ought to offer the last of his skills, but it's too tempting not to. "But, all of that aside, if what you need is a man to work in your library, I would be more than happy to help there. I love knowledge, books, and I was an accountant for a time. I am also familiar with books that cannot and should not be read by the untrained or handled by the unwary."
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...he can manage his own money, but it wouldn't hurt, now, would it? "That aside - it is what I need, yes. It needs maintained, and give me a hundred years or so and I might have things slowed down enough that I can handle that myself," wry, rueful, not entirely kidding, "but in the meanwhile, yes. There are books such as those in the collection, and I'd prefer not to hand them off to someone who'll damage or be damaged by. Your experience?"
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"I have an inventory of the collection as it is presently - books that require a warning are marked on it, and I store them locked in the upper level - that you might look at. Some of the languages will be, I suspect, very foreign to you - some of them I'm only learning now myself."
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"I will do what I can, with the ones I can read, and those that I can't, I will leave in as good or better condition."
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Which will, in fact, turn out to be pretty decent money, as well as naturally the offer of room and board.
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"No! I carry, you go outside. I am the boss of this house when Master goes away-" She still slips and uses 'Master' on occasion, though she isn't any longer a slave and certainly has never been the property of anyone in this household. "-and I know you."
Langler stop trying to get fresh with Eirene, she will seriously hurt you. She shuts the door in his face with a kick, and then turns, eyes widening slightly when she sees Martel- she hasn't yet spotted his company at this angle. The box, you see, is still partly in the way.
"Lord?" Ah, there's the correct title.
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"I would also like the chance to practice outside, with the others, if that's agreeable?" It wouldn't do to let his skills get too rusty by spending all his time buried in stacks of books, scrolls, and curious tomes.
It's also worth mentioning that his voice is probably unlike Pullo's in that it's constantly being described by his original author as being ridiculously beautiful. No, really.
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Eirene's entrance distracts him, and he rises with a sort 'one moment' gesture. "Eirene. You have neat timing, madam, I'm in the process of acquiring this library management of its own."
He refrains from offering to help her with the heavy load, perhaps because he's aware it's only a matter of time before she actually hits him with her wooden spoon.
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She's quite pale.
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"Ma'am?"
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Except It didn't sound like him. That would be both better and worse.
"Pullo?" she tries, uncertainly. "Titus Pullo?"
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"No. My name is Uther Doul, formerly of Armada and before that High Cromlech. I am sorry, but I ... I do not know anyone by that name."
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'What the devil is going on' is implied.
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Or suppress it until she can deal with this.
"Eirene," she says, "Sorry I--drop this--"
Martel already has the books handled. She thinks she should get out of this room, which requires walking, which requires coherent thought and not shattering into tiny pieces, even though that sort of feels like what's actually happening. She looks to Martel for dismissal.
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Looks like someone has not heard about alternates or cognates or whatever you want to call this. Doppelgangers?
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Doul will get an explanation of alternates - and the nexus and its dead - very shortly, most like; he's briefly ignored while Martel dismisses her, though.
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So she goes, but- not without a long look over her shoulder at the man who is not her husband but bears the strangest resemblance. That wasn't smart of her to do to herself, but she's always half-scared she'll forget Pullo's face once enough time passes.
If Langler tries to talk to her when she walks down the hall, she is going to punch him.
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He watches her go before awkwardly sitting back down. Now what? At the best of times he's not very good with people and their real emotions, and this is no exception.
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He considers how to finish this. "From what I've discerned, her death was horrific and her life previous had been largely as a slave. I don't know who it is she mistook you for, and I'm not going to ask her unless she feels the need to share it."
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"I don't know how you would like to work around this, but I will trust your judgement on what's best." And if it goes against what he's comfortable with, he'll leave.
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