Cullen (
howtoactfereldan) wrote2017-04-11 08:59 pm
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Cullen sets a brisk pace on their way back to Skyhold. He's been away long enough; he's ready to relieve Briony; he's ready to go about receiving full intelligence reports from Leliana instead of the truncated, heavily coded ones he receives in the field.
He is also ready to personally see to the laundering of his coat.
And Cullen is also ready to take at least half a day, and preferably more, to revel in solid walls and doors that lock.
As they ride through the sally port, Cullen glances over at Alistair. "I'll need to see Briony, and then I'll likely be called to the war room -- you're going to see Kieran?"
He is also ready to personally see to the laundering of his coat.
And Cullen is also ready to take at least half a day, and preferably more, to revel in solid walls and doors that lock.
As they ride through the sally port, Cullen glances over at Alistair. "I'll need to see Briony, and then I'll likely be called to the war room -- you're going to see Kieran?"
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He's making calculations, adding to a piece of scratch paper covered with other such calculations: timetables for travel, comparing arrivals to averages, cross-checking supply chain contracts with the specified times.
Angles of calibration, for the proposed extra battery of siege engines to replace those destroyed in the Arbor Wilds. They can and should do better on those specifications, Cullen writes in a sharp hand to Josephine. Engines coming out of Val Royeaux two years ago could exceed those parameters with ease. They're trying to get something past us.
Damned if he can figure out what. Or why.
We should meet to discuss this at your earliest convenience.
Cullen feels like he's been writing that phrase a lot today. And every time he does, a little more life is sucked out of him.
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Is Cullen still working? ...Who is he kidding. He's positive Cullen's still working.
Still: he scoops up the books, plus all his sketches, and dashes from the library. If Cullen shoos him out again, he'll just run a few laps around Skyhold.
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A pause point is within sight, though it's a dot on the distant horizon. When Alistair comes in, Cullen won't lift his head; his hair will be rumpled from running his fingers through it; the room will be cold from the brazier he never bothered to relight.
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With a nearly-silent sigh, he pads over to the chaise, depositing his things alongside the book he couldn't finish that morning. Don't interrupt, he tells himself. There are things he can do that don't involve interrupting.
First among them being the brazier, which he relights from a torch off the wall. Gradually, the chill in the room dissipates; Alistair warms his hands over the small grate.
Food probably ought to be next, but that involves asking the dreaded have you eaten recently? question that always makes Cullen pull a face. Interruption and annoyance. Best Alistair wait on that.
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Cullen looks up, and realizes there's a dull throb at the front of his skull.
"Oh," he says, sounding surprised. And exhausted. "Hello."
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He rubs the back of his hair.
"You have my word I'll be quiet this time." A beat. "Unless you'd prefer a break?"
(He wouldn't ask, but...well, exhausted is certainly one word for Cullen's tone.)
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This is not a lie. More like an exaggeration.
"Rather just push through."
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If Alistair's skeptical of that claim, he does a good job of hiding it. He scoops up his books and sketches; approaches the desk. "I'll be upstairs. And -- "
He lays the small sheaf of paper alongside the legit reports.
"Don't fall asleep before you read that one," he finishes, before giving Cullen a peck on the cheek.
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His smile blossoms to a grin as he returns the squeeze.
"See you soon."
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That's -- another few hours worth of work? Not so bad. He can do that.
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Anyway, it's not really fussing, is it? It's just making sure Cullen gets a decent night's sleep in an actual bed.
...All right, maybe it's sort of fussing. A little.
After shedding a few layers, he makes himself comfortable with the book he found about the Exalted March of the Dales. Kenric's tome about Ameridan rests at his side, opened to a spot near the middle.
(Not exactly light bedtime reading, he'll admit.)
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But he hits a roadblock sooner than he'd expected -- and it's nothing important enough to wake anyone or roust them out of the Herald's Rest.
So, with a sigh, Cullen reaches for the fair copies Kenric made of a few of the documents that Lavellan turned up. I thought they might be of some interest, Kenric said; Cullen couldn't quite tell if he was merely acting more scattered than usual in the name of avoidance, or if he was genuinely distracted.
When Cullen reaches the journal, he thinks, distantly, that his money's on the former.
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Just say you're attacking them because they attacked you, he remembers thinking.
And now, of course -- well. He's acquainted with Lavellan. He's met his fair share of elves, city and Dalish. He knows about Fiona.
The book he found could've come straight out of his lessons fifteen years ago, and the way it talks about the elves rings so hollow.
When he can't bear to read any more of it, he trades it for Kenric's book; soon after, though, he has to close that one, too, and tips his head back to regard the branches spreading above him.
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He should save it to go over with Alistair. That would be best.
Absently, his fingers fiddle with the bracelet on his other wrist. He leans against the arrow-slit window, looking out at the fires in the valley.
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Is it quieter downstairs, or is he imagining it?
Technically, he hasn't finished either book yet. Technically. But the odds of doing any more reading seem slim.
Alistair swings his feet out of bed and pads to the ladder; rather than descending right away, he peers down into Cullen's office, just to check.
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Five more seconds, he thinks.
"At what cost?" T. asked me that once. I said it costs nothing, but I don't know. I met a man who'd fought longer than I, but his mind had faded with age, and he could not answer. The point remains that I can do more. I can be more effective. We've all seen the demons, what they did. We've seen what some would do with blood. The better question is, who pays the cost if no one takes this chance?
He breathes out, slowly.
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The ladder creaks, despite his best efforts to stay quiet as he descends.
Already, he's thinking up excuses that won't make it look like he's hovering, or impatient, or anything of the sort. Most of them revolve around grabbing a snack from the kitchens -- and asking if Cullen would like something, too, as long as he's out.
Just...some small way he can take care of Cullen when he's this worn out. Something.
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Cullen lifts his head, turns around --
And brightens, a little.
He drifts toward Alistair, picking up the 'report.' "Looking forward to reading this."
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(Some of it's relief that he hasn't disturbed Cullen after all.)
"I made sure it was very thorough," he says, meeting Cullen halfway; his fingers brush over Cullen's elbow. "No stone left unturned."
A beat.
"No, really, I flipped over a few stones in the broken tower just to make sure everything was in order."
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He presses a small, chaste kiss to Cullen's scar.
"How do the rest of the reports fare?"
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"Would you like to bring it upstairs?" he murmurs at last.
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