Ser Gendry Waters (
bullhorned) wrote in
eachdraidh2014-11-27 08:43 am
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Forge Three - (Audio/Action)
Bloody fairies never manage to get things right, do they?
[Like many, Gendry received his boon two days ago, but he hasn't gotten any closer to making proper use of it. Oh sure, walking back and forth through a set of mirrors is a jolly experience, but it's a pain in the ass if they're both in the same room. Though he won't deny he did have a bit of fun setting them across each other and walking through the portal over and over. But! That's not what he'd wanted!]
Seems if you want something decent, you've got to be specific. Seven hells... [He has no choice! He must do the unthinkable:] Stiles, you still about?
[Yes. He must ask STILES for help. That most dreaded of occurrences! Sure, there might be other people who could teleport him from Cothromach to Troichean Beinn in a blink of the eye. But those are other people and Gendry's faith in other people is roughly equivalent to his faith in this war ending amicably. If he's called a suspicious bastard, then it is a one hundred perfect accurate description of him.
But the locket is still in his hand and he realizes he's addressing both courts at large. Damn.]
... just, be careful about your boons, eh? The fairies like to be stingy, if you let them. [There. He's done the community at large a favor.]
[At the Cothromach]
backdated to 26th
When Gendry wasn't in his room messing about with a set of magic mirrors, he was hard at work at one of the forges. Though he wasn't officially apprenticing at any of the shops, one of the master smiths had agreed to hire Gendry on while he was in the city. So that meant keeping busy as he hammered tirelessly at some new sword. His Shard ached as he drew on its power to give superhuman blows. It was hard work and the sword wouldn't even be his, but he now knew enough about dwarven magic that he could finally give his uncle a good and strong sword. This is what he'd been doing ever since the battle had ended and he'd at last turned his work to other projects. This item was now nearly done and by evening, after he'd honed it to a razor's edge, he would find his uncle's home in the Cothromach to come knocking.
27th
After his message on the lockets, Gendry left to be at his normal routine. He was living in the Keeper's tower now and so he would eat his first and last meals of the day there. Other hours would see him in the market, working at one of the forges earning his wages by small commissions of tools or shoeing horses. Hardly work for an apprentice of Bordan Gret, but he did not seem to mind this simpler work. For those looking to find him or simply anyone in the city looking for goods, he was an easy man to find. His grumbling about boons aside, he was in as good a mood as he could be expected to be in.
[Like many, Gendry received his boon two days ago, but he hasn't gotten any closer to making proper use of it. Oh sure, walking back and forth through a set of mirrors is a jolly experience, but it's a pain in the ass if they're both in the same room. Though he won't deny he did have a bit of fun setting them across each other and walking through the portal over and over. But! That's not what he'd wanted!]
Seems if you want something decent, you've got to be specific. Seven hells... [He has no choice! He must do the unthinkable:] Stiles, you still about?
[Yes. He must ask STILES for help. That most dreaded of occurrences! Sure, there might be other people who could teleport him from Cothromach to Troichean Beinn in a blink of the eye. But those are other people and Gendry's faith in other people is roughly equivalent to his faith in this war ending amicably. If he's called a suspicious bastard, then it is a one hundred perfect accurate description of him.
But the locket is still in his hand and he realizes he's addressing both courts at large. Damn.]
... just, be careful about your boons, eh? The fairies like to be stingy, if you let them. [There. He's done the community at large a favor.]
[At the Cothromach]
backdated to 26th
When Gendry wasn't in his room messing about with a set of magic mirrors, he was hard at work at one of the forges. Though he wasn't officially apprenticing at any of the shops, one of the master smiths had agreed to hire Gendry on while he was in the city. So that meant keeping busy as he hammered tirelessly at some new sword. His Shard ached as he drew on its power to give superhuman blows. It was hard work and the sword wouldn't even be his, but he now knew enough about dwarven magic that he could finally give his uncle a good and strong sword. This is what he'd been doing ever since the battle had ended and he'd at last turned his work to other projects. This item was now nearly done and by evening, after he'd honed it to a razor's edge, he would find his uncle's home in the Cothromach to come knocking.
27th
After his message on the lockets, Gendry left to be at his normal routine. He was living in the Keeper's tower now and so he would eat his first and last meals of the day there. Other hours would see him in the market, working at one of the forges earning his wages by small commissions of tools or shoeing horses. Hardly work for an apprentice of Bordan Gret, but he did not seem to mind this simpler work. For those looking to find him or simply anyone in the city looking for goods, he was an easy man to find. His grumbling about boons aside, he was in as good a mood as he could be expected to be in.
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"Would you prefer a bird?" She asked with a mild smile.
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Robert Rat, it seemed, was the very youngest in his large and eager rat family -- nosing about in the hopes that they should find a veritable paradise of grain in the deep sopping holds of the ship. His family was a family of hungry opportunists. But Robert Rat! Oh. No. See, Robert Rat was an explorer.
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"Which one is this?" He asked, because it was one of those letters that were scarcely found in words and so he couldn't recall what sound it made.
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"Six. X. It's in tax, as well. And -- oh!" Her face split into two different expressions. Her eyes were pleased while her mouth remained disciplined. "There is an x in axe."
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"Oh. That one," he said in dull memory of having learned it already. "So this says here..." Ah! "Eex-plo-rer? No. Explorer."
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"One wonders why an explorer takes his family when he explores, but--" Rats, really. How was she to know their ways? "Yes. Explorer. And you see the way explore is there inside the longer word? Words build upon words, just as letters build upon letters."
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Her interpretation of the author's intent was given mildly. Thoughtlessly. And only after a moment did she consider the unintentional double meaning behind the phrase. So, trying to regain ground, Sansa shook her head. "Common as in regular. As in -- all places, it seems, have rats in common. Winterfell had rats," she offered with a shiver. "The Red Keep had rats. And the Eyrie."
Rats were a fact. Unavoidable, even to the high-born. A man could write a story about a rat and every reader would know exactly what that rat might look like.
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Some highborn child reading about a family of exploring lowborns might accidentally feel sympathy for them.
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The song, he knew, had become more practiced since the Red Wedding, however. Tom had hummed it once when they had ensnared a Frey into a trap upon the road. Gendry did not know the words, though. He knew the meaning less than that.
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Another shiver. Perhaps of disgust; perhaps of good common sense. The topic tread a little near other honest problems, and so she pretended to brush a mote of dust from the page. "Explorer rats cannot be so terrible, though. They must be brave. Enterprising."
Thieves, she also thought. But did not dare to say aloud.
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"Seven of them," he said. "Why is it always seven? Our last story, it was seven dogs. In the first, there were seven sisters."
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"Sacred even here, mayhaps."
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Gendry had a much easier time believing in the deficiencies of people than in the sacredness of numbers.
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"It's an attractive number. That's all there is to it."
Even Sansa wasn't really certain what she was arguing any longer. But it sounded witty. She thought.
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This, he knew, was not what she had meant when she called seven attractive. But he had taken refuge in being intentionally daft as though he could disguise his ignorance with even more ignorance.
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She complained. As though the sharp-cornered finality of a seven brought her more joy and settlement than the ever-looping eight ever could. And to demonstrate this fact, she leaned the slate against the open book and looped first and eight and then, next to it, a precisely cornered seven. She knew where the seven began and where the seven ended. But the eight! Its tail and head were lost in the connecting curve of chalk.
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He picked up his own chalk and took her eight and looped around it again and again and again until its edges were so thick that it looked more like a half formed snowman than it did a number.
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It was a cynical way of thinking to be certain, but it held its own optimistic slant of an unending story where the struggle was real, but the conclusion uncertain. It was like a summer that didn't end, but he didn't need the Starks to remind him that winter was coming.
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"Well," she began, and smudged her fingers across the too-thick eight. It was so drawn on again and again that it did not come free of the slate. The seven, however, was easily erased. And once it was gone she put the slate aside. "Our stories will have endings. Our seven rats. We'll have to reach them eventually."
And she now so fervently hoped the ending would be a happy one. Indeed, she lifted a few pages aside and seemed to be peeking ahead to read the last few lines.
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By story's end, the captain's eyes had been poked out and he'd been tossed over the ship to be eaten by sea gulls. Whatever fairy tales might be when it came to happy endings, they were often barbaric in their lessons. Cruel captains were done in by the end of the story. Robert the Rat paradoxically even was elected as captain at the end, but turned the position down! But he and his family stayed on the ship afterward, closing out on a mostly happy ending. Gendry was not impressed.
"No one would let rats stay on a ship," he complained after the story was over and the candle's wax diminished by over an hour's worth of time. "Someone would swat them all with a stick and toss them over the side."
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