Ser Gendry Waters (
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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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Her voice dropped to a whisper. It was a concern unshared with any other Westerosi or ally in the city. To Jon, even, she maintained a chilly façade of trusting the strange man implicitly. But Ser Gendry had been there. Ser Gendry had known, and had voiced his own concern so very early on when Sansa was herself still taken with the minister's prowess. But since then...!
"He and Saralegui. I--" Her gaze narrowed a moment. Sansa had knit a thought together in her own head but she hadn't dared speak it aloud. She wasn't certain if now was the time. "Saralegui, at least, is tremendously fond of him..."
And that gave her pause. Saralegui was half-ally and half-enemy, and she did not like the implications of friendship between her city's servant and the sharp-tongued Lord of Redgate.
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"Aye. It's good you look," he agreed at last. "Do they add up? The sums?"
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Her fingers fluttered. Baelish had been Master of Coin for the whole kingdom and had committed such tricks in his time! And then there had been her Lord Husband, pouring over the books in the wee hours of the morning instead of sleeping in their marriage bed. Oh, she could have kissed those weighty volumes.
"It's likely work I needn't watch so carefully. If a mistake is made, I won't be the one to recognize it."
She needed a Steward. A proper one. Someone who could stamp her influence upon the city in defiance of traditions already existent.
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"And copying letters? Why do that?"
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But that, she supposed, was not really the heart of his question. She bit her bottom lip and (with only one hand) tipped the book of tales and slate both up onto the desk. This kept her somewhat stationary, and so she didn't need to rattle the comfortable overlap of elbows. Sansa's chin tipped by a few degrees. "I want to remember what I've written to others. I want to be certain of what they've written to me."
In other words, she did not want her careful diplomatic words to become so tangled a web of poorly-remembered implications and half-lies that she lost herself in them -- strung herself up by an inability to remember which words were promised to which person. It wasn't a terribly clever practise, and all it truly did was underline how little trust she had in herself.
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THANK YOU
It was clear now that it was not just him sacrificing time for these lessons, but that she too was giving up duties to continue them. For that, he owed her a gratitude he was never so good at putting into words, but which were mercifully easier to put into writing.
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"Well done." Sansa (only briefly!) curved her fingers over Ser Gendry's forearm. The letters were not tidy and some looked to be in the wrong case, but they were chalky proof of his own initiative. And proof, as well, that she'd managed to teach him at all. "Very well done, Gendry. You remembered they're two different words!"
Bustling with pride, she tapped the space between the THANK and the YOU. People so often smushed them together when they talked, she would not have blamed him for thinking it all one construction. And so she laid praise at his feet for small victories, letting honestly replace the empty courtesy she would otherwise have mumbled: you're welcome, Ser.
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"So they are," he agreed. "That wasn't so hard."
No, the words were easy. The choice of them was the real difficulty.
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But the thought struck her as a bittersweet one. The better he got with his letters, the less he needed her. Oh, she knew enough now to know he would not ignore her completely once he'd learned his fill. But the fear still nibbled: he'd have no reason to come 'round, in the evenings. They would have very little to talk about or reason to meet.
So, selfishly, she added: "Not that there isn't still a great lot of work to accomplish."
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"As you say," he said though hardly as dismissively as he had in the past. For a moment he frowned thoughtfully, worried that perhaps there was an end to the conversation. He quickly latched onto something more cheerful. "You'd like those mirrors I was given," he said almost stupidly. "They're... very pretty like."
He assumed she liked nothing more than pretty things.
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"Are they?" Her eyes dipped from slate to him and back again. At first, she seemed to only be polite in her query. But then! Ah! After a moment, she stiffened. "They're big, aren't they? Your mirrors. Big enough for you to travel through. By the Seven..." A mild oath! But then she can hardly disguise a sudden grip of jealousy.
"And you are tall. Can you see your whole self in them, Gendry?"
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"Aye. I don't even need to stoop to use them. Not that they do much good as they are, unless I fancy seeing my backside from both reflections." He clearly saw no value in that. "Though your sister did tumble through one. That made for a good laugh."
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"A-are they kept in your chambers?" Sansa didn't doubt Arya's presence there was little more than brattish mischief. Just as she would never fear for her own integrity were she to ever step inside the same room. But there was protocol to be considered. And, perhaps, a crackle of envy. Why did Arya get to play with huge luxurious mirrors when all she'd want is to tumble through them? That wasn't even how mirrors were meant to be used. She tried to focus on this indignation instead of sparing too much thought for Gendry and his horrendously casual discussion of his backside. Gods.
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He nodded. "Aye, the both of them. There's the trouble of it. They're useless like that."
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Indeed, Sansa could think of a great many things for which two mirrors would be ample. Checking one's hair, for one. Ascertaining the drape of a gown, for another. And all of them, she knew, irrelevant to a creature like Ser Gendry. It was by-times marvellous how much he reminded her of someone else -- of Mya Stone, who wore iron and leather and likely carried with her that same smell of hard work. Neither Mya nor Gendry, she thought, would have much love for a mirror. And their eyes were alike, surely. And their hair! Thick and black like Renly's -- like King Robert's, she thought -- and now and then during lessons when the smith pushed his unkempt hair off his brow she thought of how Mya did the exact same. The Mule Girl must have cut her own hair with a dagger, for it was always short and shaggy and now at a length with her unknown half-brother's. Mya, Sansa thought, was pretty. Prettier still if she'd ever bothered with silks and laces.
"In time, you may find you like owning mirrors," she hazarded.
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It was a loose compliment with a shred of self effacing humor. But it was true because for how little he might make of it, there was no denying that Sansa Stark was a sight to behold. Any man foolish enough to think he had a chance, would have loved a chance to be at her side. Gendry knew better, for her heart was closed to all. And certainly not open to his sort!
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She trailed free. Sansa did not so often let herself lose the point of a sentence. Generally, she plotted the careful course of her meaning before she opened her mouth. But now it was all a mess, because he'd praised her and she in turn had meandered her way clumsily through a half-dozen comments on things she barely understood. Who was she to talk about his whiskers? It wasn't as though he sheared them often--
She sat up a little straighter, thus freeing her elbow. Thus retreating back into her own prim perimeter of personal space. "My apologies. I shouldn't have said any of it. The mirrors are yours to use as you see fit. Of course they are."
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"I don't have a brush," he said with a mild shrug of his shoulders. The one arm that had been nearly locked with hers was now rotated freely. He ran a hand through his messy hair. "I ain't got much need for one. It ain't so long as to need it."
As for shaving! Well, he did that blindly and very sporadically. It was not uncommon for him to leave patches of unshaved skin and the small beard he kept on his chin was ever uneven.
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Honesty was difficult. It was difficult, too, to decry his appearance when he had so kindly said something of her own. But his mop of thick Baratheon-like hair had been a mess since he'd arrived. Had Gendry been a brother of hers, she would have long since scolded him for it.
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Because, of course, she assumed he'd arrived straight from his rooms like any civilized creature.
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If he did not smell of sweat and grime, it was only because he had mercifully jumped into the river beforehand. That was becoming a favorite aspect of the Cothromach to Gendry. While he would never have any great love of bathing, there was nothing so satisfying as a cool and cold dive after the sweltering heat of the forge furnace. Troichean Beinn had many things, but it did not have this small network of subterranean streams to enjoy.
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One small syllable could be so heavy. So laden with a thin and stingy understanding. Sansa, by contrast, preened for every appointment. What else did she have to arm herself with but precision and poise? Even that girl -- Kelsi, was it? -- praised her for such a careful presentation.
"Well," she began again. One hand gestured vaguely in the empty air. "It is all of it pointing every which way. As though you dumped water over your head and then let it dry however it wanted."
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He resisted the urge to touch the hair and rearrange it.
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