1. Xestsemon AU
Jan. 21st, 2012 08:31 pm[Entanglement AU set a year or a bit more in the future, in no way shape or form canon, locked to
birdhousesoul]
Hawke is chopping wood. The sleeves of the short-sleeved shirt she's wearing are rolled up as far as they can go, leaving her shoulders bare; it's cool out, breezy, but chopping wood is hard work even when you have her muscles.
She's still muscular, in a lean way. Thinner than she was, without regular access to brickstuff, which might have been unappetizing but was at least nutritious. Her hair is longer, shaggier, pulled back with a brown headscarf to keep it out of her face; her clothes are the usual shirt and trousers and tight-laced boots she's always favored, though much patched and darned. It's not an easy life up here, but she gets by. The villagers have accepted her by now. She's been here almost a year, working as a hunter and trapper; it was a small enough place that they didn't have one of their own, and while at first they might have been wary of the strange woman who'd walked into town, they were won over over time. Friendly gifts of meat and fur will do that. Taking down a rabid bear who'd attacked over the winter had helped rather more. They don't ask about her past and she doesn't cause trouble, and all in all it works.
Behind her is a house, more like a shack, only two rooms to it. When she'd arrived it'd been so long abandoned and run-down no one else had cared that she'd moved in. It'd taken months to fix it up, but those were months she looked back on with pride. Staring down at her hands, sawing and hammering wood, making things fit together, half-remembered lessons from her childhood spent watching Malcolm Hawke at work. You have to work with the grain, not against it. If you go against the grain you'll break the wood. Make it want what you want. She's fiercely proud of her tiny, still pretty pathetic looking shack. It keeps heat in and cold and rain out. Mostly. And it's hers.
The planet is Xestsemon, the feudal one she visited not long after arriving in the Void. She'd liked it at the time. Dirty and misogynistic and flawed, but familiar, the sort of place she knew, a society she could blend into and hide in. Rat-spit mountain villages are much the same no matter what world you're on.
Hiding had been important, for a while. It hadn't been hard. Wait until the station was just about to leave, slip down-planet with Teo, tell everyone you're coming back with someone else so they wouldn't look for her until it was too late. Plant a few false leads and move, as fast and far as possible, away from the few spaceports the planet had. Up into the mountains. One tiny speck of a person on one planet in one gigantic universe, multiverse. It went beyond a needle in a haystack, and that's just what she needed to accomplish.
It's not such a lonely life. She still has her dog, though he's beginning to show his age and then some; the rabid bear had gotten a good swipe at his side, and the scar is still there. Teo's slowed down a lot. But they manage. And she takes pride in that, too. She holds her pride close, because it's such a surprise to have it again.
And if there things she doesn't let herself think about, people she doesn't let herself think about, it's impossible to tell here, in this moment: Hawke, shirt-sleeves rolled up, woodcutter's axe in hand, chopping wood for the fire and then pausing to wipe sweat from her brow.
Hawke is chopping wood. The sleeves of the short-sleeved shirt she's wearing are rolled up as far as they can go, leaving her shoulders bare; it's cool out, breezy, but chopping wood is hard work even when you have her muscles.
She's still muscular, in a lean way. Thinner than she was, without regular access to brickstuff, which might have been unappetizing but was at least nutritious. Her hair is longer, shaggier, pulled back with a brown headscarf to keep it out of her face; her clothes are the usual shirt and trousers and tight-laced boots she's always favored, though much patched and darned. It's not an easy life up here, but she gets by. The villagers have accepted her by now. She's been here almost a year, working as a hunter and trapper; it was a small enough place that they didn't have one of their own, and while at first they might have been wary of the strange woman who'd walked into town, they were won over over time. Friendly gifts of meat and fur will do that. Taking down a rabid bear who'd attacked over the winter had helped rather more. They don't ask about her past and she doesn't cause trouble, and all in all it works.
Behind her is a house, more like a shack, only two rooms to it. When she'd arrived it'd been so long abandoned and run-down no one else had cared that she'd moved in. It'd taken months to fix it up, but those were months she looked back on with pride. Staring down at her hands, sawing and hammering wood, making things fit together, half-remembered lessons from her childhood spent watching Malcolm Hawke at work. You have to work with the grain, not against it. If you go against the grain you'll break the wood. Make it want what you want. She's fiercely proud of her tiny, still pretty pathetic looking shack. It keeps heat in and cold and rain out. Mostly. And it's hers.
The planet is Xestsemon, the feudal one she visited not long after arriving in the Void. She'd liked it at the time. Dirty and misogynistic and flawed, but familiar, the sort of place she knew, a society she could blend into and hide in. Rat-spit mountain villages are much the same no matter what world you're on.
Hiding had been important, for a while. It hadn't been hard. Wait until the station was just about to leave, slip down-planet with Teo, tell everyone you're coming back with someone else so they wouldn't look for her until it was too late. Plant a few false leads and move, as fast and far as possible, away from the few spaceports the planet had. Up into the mountains. One tiny speck of a person on one planet in one gigantic universe, multiverse. It went beyond a needle in a haystack, and that's just what she needed to accomplish.
It's not such a lonely life. She still has her dog, though he's beginning to show his age and then some; the rabid bear had gotten a good swipe at his side, and the scar is still there. Teo's slowed down a lot. But they manage. And she takes pride in that, too. She holds her pride close, because it's such a surprise to have it again.
And if there things she doesn't let herself think about, people she doesn't let herself think about, it's impossible to tell here, in this moment: Hawke, shirt-sleeves rolled up, woodcutter's axe in hand, chopping wood for the fire and then pausing to wipe sweat from her brow.
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Date: 2012-01-22 08:03 pm (UTC)She walks forward more slowly, without whatever panic drove that first step. "That was the bear," she says, and there's an echo of those nightmare nights in her voice. "I'd fallen, slipped on a patch of ice I hadn't spotted in the dark, and Teo leapt in the way. Distracted the thing for the crucial seconds I needed to throw a knife in its eye." She kneels next to Anders, places a hand on her dog's hindquarters; Teo relaxes incrimentally, as though the touch grants permission, and turns his head to lick Anders' face.
"I did the best I could with it, afterwards. There's no sort of healer up here, as you no doubt noticed. I had to rely on what I'd scraped together from watching you all those years. It's a miracle it wasn't worse." She doesn't have to say that it's a miracle Teo isn't dead. Anders will be able to read it for himself. "It was a few months ago." She doesn't want to ask, but it's Teo, so she does. "Can you do anything more for him?"
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Date: 2012-01-22 08:21 pm (UTC)Funny how there's always work to be done, and how Anders falls right into step. "If I'm going to try anything at all, we need to boil some water. Lots of it. Now, I can speed that along with fire, but I'd rather reserve my mana for Teo, you understand. Better to do it the old-fashioned way, draw lots of water and dump it in a nice big cauldron and put it on the hearth for a bit. We need linens or any old cloths, for steaming poultices. Whatever you've got will do."
Patting the mabari's broad skull, he stands and looks at Hawke expectantly. "Show me the buckets. I can carry water with the best of them." He hopes her source of fresh water isn't far.
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Date: 2012-01-22 08:57 pm (UTC)She frowns in concentration and bites her lip a bit at his statement about hot water and lots of it, though impossible to say why. Where are the buckets isn't such a difficult question, after all. "Haven't actually got a big cauldron," she says. "One small and one medium. Haven't actually got much of a hearth, come to that. You might have noticed this place isn't very big." She glances up at the shack. From the angle where they're crouched you can just see the edge of the chimney, some smoke coming through; she's got a fire on in there. Not surprising. It's early spring, and still cool weather, even in the day. She has dinner going in one of those cauldrons, the sort of stew that simmers all day above a hearth and can be largely ignored; Hawke's always been an indifferent cook at best, a campfire cook. Worse, a Fereldan campfire cook. Take things, put in pot, boil forever. She's not bothered; it still tastes better than brickstuff.
"Linens and cloth I've got, plenty of them." She gets to her feet, walks around to the other side of the house, where there are two large buckets stacked, one inside the other. "There's a creek just about five, ten minutes over that way. I've worn down a path to it by now, you can't miss it." She gestures the correct direction, picks up the buckets by the handle and holds them out to him.
Funny how there's always work to be done, how easy it is to fall back into the habits of working in tandem.
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Date: 2012-01-22 09:36 pm (UTC)With that, he's headed for the buckets, approving of her good sense in procuring or perhaps making a decent shoulder yoke for the carrying of same. She'll have some time to herself while he retrieves the first two buckets full. Already he's thinking about what's under Teo's skin, how the fibers of muscle will have been torn, what damage he'll need to do first before he improves on the mending. It won't be fun for anyone. He's never been an Entropy mage, he can't use Sleep, and anesthesia is a doubtful proposition. As Karl used to complain, no doubt quoting some ancient authority: When soporifics are weak, they are useless, and when strong, they kill. The Xestsemon-indigenous equivalent of elfroot can only numb so much.
Teo's a brave boy. It will all work out. Whatever Anders damages, he can heal again. The worst that can happen is Anders will have done no one any lasting good, and then he'll be on Hawke's bad side, but he's already been that, so what does he have to lose?
The first two buckets he brings back, he calls: "Now would be a good time for whatever kettle we're using to materialize. I haven't got one hidden up my —" It's not out of a sense of propriety that he stops, it's more a sense of Maker, that's a horrible thought, ouch, and he finishes, "— sleeve."
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Date: 2012-01-22 11:26 pm (UTC)She takes a deep breath, as though preparing to say something--then doesn't, dispels it, shakes her head just a bit. "It's through here," is all she says finally. "You better come in." She opens the door wider, picks up the buckets and carries them inside.
This is what Anders will see, going from left to right:
On the left is the desk he noticed earlier, piled with a stack of furs and assorted trapper's tools. Small ones, most of her real tradework is done outside, where she has a frame set up for stretching hides, and so on. There's a miscellany of things on the table, the sorts of small useful things you use in daily life. Above it is a long shelf with small pieces of wood, carved or whittled in various shapes, only a few of them completed, the level of skill varying a great deal; clearly, someone's learning as she goes. There is indeed a wooden duck mixed in among them, and if Anders looks closely he'll see it's actually the original Quackers, not an approximation. One of the few things she brought with her out of Kirkwall's ruin. There's another duck much like it nearby, and she clearly used the first as a model.
Alongside the rest of the left wall is the hearth. Not a big one, and rather crowded at the moment because she's managed to hang a washtub up in it, though clearly with some effort; it's roped to the spit, and not designed for this purpose. Metal washtub, the sort for washing clothes or people, assuming the people in question don't mind crouching down, maybe sitting if they get a bit squished. It'll do for this purpose, hopefully. On the floor next to the hearth are two cauldrons, one small and one mediumish; the mediumish one steams as though it's just been pulled off the hearth, which it has, and the room smells like something that might be rabbit stew, or something like it. Hanging from the wall are a few cloves of garlic and some dried herbs; Hawke's picked up a few cooking tricks, anyway.
The middle of the floor is decorated with two cured fur pelts--wolf, or something like--as are blank parts of the walls, either to make the place look less barren or to help keep heat in. They accomplish both tasks. There's a small doorway (no door) on the back wall, which leads to a tiny room clearly being used for storage, and nothing else.
Along the right side of the wall is Hawke's bed, which isn't a bed so much as a makeshift mattress on the floor, the sort made by sewing two sheets together and stuffing them with bracken or grass. It's piled high with blankets, and over it all is, unmistakeably, a large bearskin. There's another shelf on the wall behind the doorway, with a bare handful of books, which she must have gotten down in the lowlands or larger cities as she moved up, because few people in a village like this can read. There's a window next to that shelf, in the middle of the right wall, letting in sunlight; some thick cloth has been nailed above it to make curtains, and another nail serves as a hook to pull them out of the way. The window and fireplace provide most of the light for the room, though there is a small stack of candles resting on the bookshelf. They're a bit dusty, clearly hoarded for times of need rather than used flippantly.
None of this is what's significant.
What's significant is that next to Hawke's bed is something like a box attached to part of a barrel. The sort of thing a haphazard, still-learning carpenter on her own might put together to use as a cradle.
It has an occupant, currently asleep, with a feathering of black hair like his mother's. Teo is curled up at the foot of the cradle, resting and guarding.
Hawke allows Anders his first moments of observation--and realization--in silence and what relative privacy she can give him, concentrating on emptying her buckets into the washtub-turned-giant-kettle-thing. Once that's accomplished she sets them back down and stares at the fire for a moment.
Eventually she turns back to look at him and take in his reaction.