Oh almost none, excepting of course the magicians' college. But that's rather a different arrangement. It's not wholly unlike a Circle in a way in the sense that there are certain requirements as to the apprentice's arcane talents. And even there, I would estimate there are fewer ladies and most of them practice only specific disciplines.
Well I can't imagine this is actually of much interest to you, Mister Rutyer. Remind me, was there something you wished to make known with respect to this lyrium business?
Why should it matter to me? I'll never go back there, and nothing about it will ever figure for much here in Thedas. It's all rather irrelevant, Mister Rutyer.
Hm. I shall never return to the house I was raised in, but I still shudder when I smell a scent that reminds me of the place. Iron never forgets the anvil.
Oh, I probably stole that line from a ballad. Do you fear my censure in some way? You have already more than proven yourself here, so the only consequence to sharing a tale of how abominably you were used back there is, I wager, that I will curse at them.
I wasn't abominably used. [She's very swift to say so, and there is something in her tenor that's quite firm.] How it all works there is just complicated, and so makes for a very dull story to anyone who isn't familiar with the little details. And there are things in Kalvad that are entirely different from what they might sound like in Thedas, and they would give off a poor impression.
[ There's a moment's hesitation - only a moment - as he fights the urge to...Well, to lie. To lie in a glossy, easy way, to laugh and report on the whole sordid story like it's an amusing anecdote rather than a mire of misery. To do what he's always done. But in the end, what brings him to his blunt honesty is not, perhaps, his pledge to not lie to her; rather, it's his awareness that she won't share any sensitive secrets until he's abased himself. That's how secrets work - why he was always such a successful spy. You don't worry about your dignity around a man devoid of the stuff.
So. ]
My father was the fifth son of his generation, and unsuited due to both temperament and talent to either religious service or the military. So he was given a threadbare inheritance - an old estate on a rocky beach. The only prosperous souls in our holdings were the smugglers, and smugglers, of course, pay no taxes. So. The way out of such genteel poverty would be to make a favorable match, but my father also had no charm. And so my mother came with next to no dowry at all, and our fate was set.
This is not, of course, to imply that poor families cannot be happy. Many who are without money are rich in love. But our coffers were bare there, as well - as you'll likely be unsurprised to hear. You're well aware how irksome I am when I am but a mere acquaintance; imagine how irksome it would be to have me as your son and heir. Combine that with the Rutyer family's curse of madness, which bit at my father - led him to the most peculiar obsessions, an odd desire to accumulate the strangest things and pile them up in great rotting heaps - Well. The stench alone would have driven an even-tempered and cheerful lad into melancholic fits.
[ His shrug is nearly audible. ]
I imagine you were likely hoping for something more interesting - I fear it's all dreadfully ordinary.
[For a person very prone to interruption and swiftly and immediately expressing her opinions on any subject which arises, no matter how aggravating or impolite, Wysteria miraculously manages to maintain near-religious silence throughout this confession. And afterward, though aware of the impulse to directly correct him (she wasn't imagining anything; she was merely broadly curious), she manage to hold her tongue for the beat necessary to think better of it.
Maybe it feels like a very long silence. Like maybe a month long silence, were someone to acknowledge the timestamps on these tags. Maybe it's just enough time to begin to feel a prick of reservation for having said anything at all—]
It is very ordinary, [she says at last.] But I suppose ordinariness doesn't really matter to a little boy, and I can see why you wouldn't wish to think on it. Particularly as you're so far removed from it now.
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Date: 2022-05-28 09:23 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2022-05-28 09:41 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2022-05-29 01:52 am (UTC)[Here, finally, a prudent pause.]
Well I can't imagine this is actually of much interest to you, Mister Rutyer. Remind me, was there something you wished to make known with respect to this lyrium business?
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Date: 2022-05-29 03:08 am (UTC)Yes, that's right.
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Date: 2022-05-29 12:53 pm (UTC)And just to make absolutely sure, Madame - You are being truthful with me? As I endeavor to be truthful to you?
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Date: 2022-05-31 03:08 am (UTC)[Duck and roll.]
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Date: 2022-05-31 03:13 am (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2022-05-31 03:21 am (UTC)Are you actually curious, dear Madame de Foncé, or are you asking merely because you want me to stumble?
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Date: 2022-05-31 03:30 am (UTC)[See? Honesty. And you're most welcome for it.]
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Date: 2022-05-31 03:32 am (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2022-05-31 01:57 pm (UTC)So. ]
My father was the fifth son of his generation, and unsuited due to both temperament and talent to either religious service or the military. So he was given a threadbare inheritance - an old estate on a rocky beach. The only prosperous souls in our holdings were the smugglers, and smugglers, of course, pay no taxes. So. The way out of such genteel poverty would be to make a favorable match, but my father also had no charm. And so my mother came with next to no dowry at all, and our fate was set.
This is not, of course, to imply that poor families cannot be happy. Many who are without money are rich in love. But our coffers were bare there, as well - as you'll likely be unsurprised to hear. You're well aware how irksome I am when I am but a mere acquaintance; imagine how irksome it would be to have me as your son and heir. Combine that with the Rutyer family's curse of madness, which bit at my father - led him to the most peculiar obsessions, an odd desire to accumulate the strangest things and pile them up in great rotting heaps - Well. The stench alone would have driven an even-tempered and cheerful lad into melancholic fits.
[ His shrug is nearly audible. ]
I imagine you were likely hoping for something more interesting - I fear it's all dreadfully ordinary.
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Date: 2022-07-05 03:54 am (UTC)Maybe it feels like a very long silence.
Like maybe a month long silence, were someone to acknowledge the timestamps on these tags.Maybe it's just enough time to begin to feel a prick of reservation for having said anything at all—]It is very ordinary, [she says at last.] But I suppose ordinariness doesn't really matter to a little boy, and I can see why you wouldn't wish to think on it. Particularly as you're so far removed from it now.
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