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#i had astarion in my party and the drows tried getting him to join so it'd be all 4 but he wasnt comfortable
killjoy-prince · 1 year
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Look I get Raphael is the literal devil but thats not gonna stop me from thinking his voice is hot
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trappedinafantasy37 · 5 months
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Let me tell you about my first time meeting Minthara and locking myself into the grove raid
I was having a chat with someone in the comments of my fanfic where I had told them I locked myself into the grove raid on my first run. They got really curious as to how I managed that. But, my response got a bit too long, so I figured I’d kinda do a bit of a writeup and reminisce about my first time playing Baldurs Gate 3 all the way back on Christmas Day and how I raided the grove with Minthara.
And oooo boi, where do I begin! Just a massive string of first time player who doesn’t know how to look, how to listen, or how to read. To start, never found Wyll in the grove (and when I eventually did he was big mad). I have no idea how I missed him. For some reason, my dumb ass also didn’t explore north of Blighted Village. So, I never found Karlach (and when I eventually did she was big mad). I went down to the swamp and Ethel just humiliated me, so I decided to go back until I was level 5 cause she was level 5. I never found Wood Woad so I never learned of the Shadow Druid stuff. I also never found the Underdark or Grymforge until exploring the goblin camp AFTER the raid so the only thing left for me to do was the grove.
Kagha wouldn’t talk to me cause she wanted me to go to Zevlor. I don’t know how I did it, but Zevlor wanted me to kill Kagha and just refused to talk to me when I said I wasn’t gonna kill Kagha. I also never found Mol so never got the quest to steal the idol.
So, all that was left was the goblin camp. Went downstairs to find the bear in the cage, I kinda figured it was Halsin. But, I think I picked the wrong dialogue options with the goblin kids and pissed off the bear. Long story short, bear got dead. All that was left was talking with Minthara and man she scared the absolute fucking shit outta me! When she told me to tell her where the grove was, I was literally too scared to tell her no and gave her the location. Don’t know bout you, but powerful and scary women can convince me to do just about anything! I felt awful, but it felt like it was the only way to progress the grove conflict.
Then I started the raid and saw that I still had the option to turn against her. I was so excited and thought “Yay! I can still save them AND I’ll have an army of tiefling and druids.” WRONG! I had 3 tieflings and only 1 was actually worth a damn and the druids slept through their big day. Minthara swept the floor with my ass, again, and again, and again. I tried that fight for 3 hours and Minthara won the fight every time. Mind you, I was severely under leveled and was doing the raid at level 3.
I may have found Withers, but didn’t know about respecing so Shadowheart was still in her default class of Trickery Domain (WHICH IS GARBAGE), Astarion who was an Arcane Trickster (WHICH IS GARBAGE), and Bae’zel who carried our asses as best as she could. And then there was me, a Rogue Assassin who loses her biggest advantage after round 1.
In typical drow fashion, she quite literally beat me into submission and I just said, “fuck it, I’mma join her.” Easiest fight in the game, didn’t break a sweat. When I talked to her in the inner sanctum, I genuinely felt nauseous to my stomach, but I decided I wasn’t gonna reload and was live with my choices, even if they’re stupid. I told Minthara that what we did was murder and we deserve to hang for it. Then she said “Look at me” and I was hooked. She has had me in her clutches ever since.
I did the goblin party and her and I went to the chapel. I figured I was gonna get a fade to black kinda sex scene. WRONG! It has got to be the most graphic and explicit sex scene I’ve seen in a game second to Cyberpunk. I was literally in shock the whole time. And then, afterwards, I cuddled with her and she wanted to talk about my feelings and I'm all "O.o, you're supposed to be evil?" The game may have been painting her as an evil character, but that moment showed that there was so much depth to her than just being an evil character. A moment most players will never see cause most don't raid the grove. I truly wasn’t expecting to see her again in Moonrise. And when I did, I knew I had to get her outta there no matter what.
Looking back on it now, it’s interesting for me to see how many things had to go wrong in order for me to end up raiding the grove. If I had found Karlach first, it wouldn’t have happened. If I found the Underdark/Grymforge first and leveled up a bit, wouldn’t have happened. If I freed Halsin, I probably would have killed the goblin leaders (including Minthara cause I did not know about the knock out method on my first play through) and the raid wouldn’t have happened. Hell, if I had thought to lower the difficulty to Explorer it wouldn’t have happened! But I didn’t get that big brain idea until the fight with Nere, well after the grove raid.
Minthara left such a massive impression on me because I did raid the grove. It really does make me think of her line “I would have just been another casualty in your crusade against the Absolute and no one would remember me.” If I did things right, that’s exactly who she would have been and probably would have been dead in most of my playthroughs. But, instead, I fucked everything up and she most certainly wasn’t a casualty and I don’t think I’ll ever be able to forget her. When meeting her in the goblin camp, never could I have imagined relating so much to a character. Out of all the companions, I relate to Minthara the most and Karlach comes a close second.
I don’t always raid the grove, but I will never kill her under any circumstance. Her and Shadowheart are the only two companions who have survived every playthough I’ve done and will survive every future runs cause I just cannot play this game without them. And it’s all because I was a chronic dumbass and raided the grove.
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alicelufenia · 3 months
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Had a couple weeks off due to life, but back with more Tavierra
I go back to the grove and release Sazza, since this will be my last chance.
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Due to a bug with the Sit Out mod the game wasn't letting more than Tav and Karlach fight in the Worg Pens. I sorted it out later, it's a common hiccup.
Of course I knock out the goblin children, I'm not a monster.
Halsin flashbangs my drow ass right in the face, then we break the news to him about Kagha.
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Does he?
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We deal with Halsin's (somewhat) understandable but embarrassing prejudice.
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Oh boy and this is the playthrough where I may even be romancing him! Fun first impression :D
At least he admits it may be unfair of him, and that we may "enlighten" him. Well y'see you're gonna love literally the next thing I do then cause-
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But first we talk to Ragzlin, and as this is my first time playing a cleric, this scene can play out different by doing the Speak With Dead spell yourself! Not that Tav would need the scroll as she has the forbidden knowledge of Thay (what can I say she got curious)
I go deal with Gut first. I just have the other 3 active party members sneak in through the back entrance to her room, and with a Silence spell up and surrounded by all of us, she doesn't stand a chance.
We split the party into 2 groups. Tav, Astarion, Karlach and Lae'zel head to Minthara's office (and stealthily clear the hallway outside the Worg Pens) while Shadowheart, Gale and Wyll return for Halsin to go kill Ragzlin and the goblins gathered with him.
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Bear time. Hopefully not the last time either.
We meet up with Sazza next to Minthara. I had already spoken to her without Sazza, so I was hoping there'd be a change with this scene, but it's the same as if you met her for the first time with Sazza. In my oc lore, Tav uses Sazza as cover for her "scouting" delay to find the grove.
I get Minthara to spare Sazza. I'm hoping to get her achievement this playthrough, otherwise I'll have to wait til the next one.
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Haha what, slaughter the grove that's CRAZY, who would do that their first playthrough? Anyway
What follows was an hour and a half of misadventures as I tried to be cute by agreeing to raid the grove, and then as she's walking out, smacking her with a Tasha's Hideous Laughter, hoping to initiate combat with her rolling on the ground with Emma's insane laughter.
The game claimed Tasha's had a 30% chance to work. In reality it felt like 0.01%, as she kept passing the damn save each reload! (it's almost like Paladins are really good with saving throws, no idea how I'd know that) but are you ready for some quality bullshit?
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At one point the combat log said she failed the roll, but she didn't actually get affected! It still treated her as if she'd saved successfully! What the hell game!
So in the end I just start the fight without the Tasha's opener, and beat her unconscious with Karlach's massive unarmed attack swings.
The way this works in the lore is that she merely gets dazed, and Tav's confliction over what to do leads to her sparing her, stripping Minthara of her weapons and leading the others to go join Shadowheart and the rest as they're finishing off Ragzlin.
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By the time they're done with Ragzlin, they return to see if Minthara is still there, Tav entertaining thoughts of interrogating her, or trying to contact the dream visitor to see if there's anything they can do. But they're too late: Minthara's already snuck away. Karlach is uneasy about this, but Tav, having to improvise now, reassures her the grove won't come to harm.
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By the way, look at the changes to the journal! Back in patch 5, this didn't say "defeated", it said "killed", even if you knocked them out.
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THIS screenshot is from December! Notice the wording change. I wonder when this happened, I didn't do as extensive testing at patch 6, so I didn't notice.
After reporting to Halsin, Tav makes good on her promise that the grove will be safe. By leading the party through a secret passage in the ceiling back out to the camp where they proceed to KILL EVERY GOBLIN. Can't raid the grove without an army, yeah?
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We use every drow's favorite trick, Darkness, to keep ourselves safe from all the ranged attacks and pick them off as they come to us. It's a total slaughter for the goblins.
And now the fate of Crusher in 3 screenshots
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Tragic.
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By the way, if you ever want to turn Zevlor's gift down cause you're a good person or whatever, you can still trade with him in the same dialogue and just buy the reward off him. Handy tip so you don't miss this unique helmet!
Everyone back at the grove is in a celebratory mood, except Tav doesn't feel at all like celebrating.
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I'm gonna say "It was a hell full of blood and ash" was her exact in-character description of the experience.
At the party she's in such a dour mood despite the energy of the participants that she finds herself even chatting up Astarion.
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Oh but that's where you're wrong Astarion! We killed a whole LOT more goblins than there were tieflings! Like 5 times as many! *sigh* and now we get to the heart of the matter and why she feels bad.
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Must resist. Urge to. Reload. Not this. Run.
So yeah, Tav's drinking, and seeking distraction. And so is Astarion. Hmm. Yeah sure, fuck it.
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And she did.
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All sarcasm aside, I am able to appreciate the subtleties of Astarion's romance scene. He can't hide his uncomfortable expression when we say we want to lose ourselves in him. "I thought so." HNGGGG but I have a good reason for this, eventually.
The next morning I have a talk with Halsin, deciding we'll head through the mountain pass (I'm not done with Act 1 yet, but I do want to take care of that area first now that the time-sensitive quests are done)
But first, I make a new main save and then proceed to speedrun to Moonrise Towers. I drink a potion of invisibility to sneak Tav past the Death Shepherds and into act 2, then follow Kar'niss all the way to Moonrise, where we find
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She's alright folks! :D And yes, I didn't loot her gear, just her weapons like I said. Y'all should know by now I would NEVER put Astarion in her armor, she's keeping all that!
Back to our main save, we continue to the encounter with the Gith at the mountain pass road, and continue onwards to Rosymorn Monastery.
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Damn I just think Tavierra looks good in this shot, lookit my baby stare down a dragon!
Next is, *sigh* Lady Esther. I convince her to take the Owlbear egg, and then have Astarion pickpocket her inventory while Tav distracts with her bard playing. The classic pair! She's not usually one for robbing people, but she'll make an exception for racism.
Speaking of racism:
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We explore the monastery, and I manage to find enough of the weapons to solve the Dawnmaster puzzle with just a bit of brute forcing it.
We arrive in the Creche, and I beeline it for why we're here so early:
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The two pieces of gear Tav needed.
The lore here is that Tav and Astarion find the githyanki stash of plundered treasures from across Faerûn. Tav has little qualms with "liberating" the stolen goods, and once again distracts them while Astarion cleans out their inventory. He does nearly get caught, but he deceives his way out of it and gets away scot-free.
Now in possession of a stolen artifact dedicated to Corellon, Tav's personal quest hits the next step, as she wishes to seek the favor of the father of elves on this journey, a long shot considering he's basically responsible for the ancient dark elves being cursed to become drow. At least she's got several elven companions to consult, and thus while it's not his main deity, she begins discussing religion with Halsin.
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One respec later and her build is now online.
Now that the goblin camp is done, my main stressor for this run is past. What was initially a struggle for survival is turning into a pilgrimage for our Chosen of Eilistraee. And soon-to-be Seeker of Corellon. This is definitely going to be a more religious and gods-focused playthrough than my first one. Next time I'll show off the builds for the rest of the companions, as I've done unique things with at least a few of them, and as the party hit level 6 on the way to the Creche, they're now established enough to show off.
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Note
Though come to think of it, has anyone criticized the fact that an unromanced Astarion asks to join the player with the Drow Twins? The player rejected his advances earlier in the game too. Interesting.
This is a good point, actually. But my guess is he's not getting as much crap for this probably because this is something in character for him to do, but I wouldn't be surprised if his fans justify his inappropriate behavior. Halsin is simply getting more crap because no matter what, everyone else insists his behavior is either the result of bugs or worse, it's something you are to blame for having him in the party in the first place, as if those of us who had this issue with him did it on purpose. If I knew he would've tried again in my first blind playthrough, I wouldn't have brought him in the party obviously. But it did happen (to others as well) and clearly his character left a bad taste in my mouth from that moment on.
As for Astarion, he can also try several times to have sex with you in Act 1 despite being refused once. If you hit 40 approval with him, he'll propose and if you refuse, he may try to hit on you once again at the party which may come across as inappropriate if you refused him before. So I do think criticizing him for this is legitimate.
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reallyverysane · 5 months
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How I Wonder
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Pairing: Astarion x fem!Tav, Drow, OC with backstory
Summary: Astarion deals with hunger of a couple different types. Tav offers her wrist but wants to offer more.
The road into the Shadowlands is full of spiders and flashbacks. Some tadpole assisted backstory, tender moments.
Warnings: Mostly plot, yearning, confused feelings, trauma babies doing the trauma tango, PTSD flashbacks, some world-appropriate violence, kidnapping, culty rituals, bodily harm, dissociation, just a bit of physical contact, nothing spicy.
Word Count: 7k oops
A/N: This is a continuation of Blush but can be read on its own too. This Tav has me doing so much research to make her backstory accurate to dnd lore, she is taking over my life a bit. There will eventually be actual spice in this series, but even though I've got outlines and plot points to hit, they just keep wanting to talk and form bonds with each other. Hope you enjoy!
The night air was crisp against his skin. The wind brought scents of dry stone and pine to him, along with the fragile note of a night blooming flower. Far in the distance Astarion could hear the staccato sound of laughter and off key singing as his companions settled in for another night at camp. Their narrow escape at the Githyanki creche and Lae’zel’s crisis of faith had left them rattled, but as they retraced their steps up the mountain toward the pass their spirits had lifted with the altitude. They would soon reach the shadow cursed lands and Halsin, knowing the despair they would face there, was aggressively trying to manufacture one last night of raucous mirth for the party.  As they had begun making camp for the night he had taken up his lute and bellowed out bawdy tunes with distinctly druidic themes. “The Bear and the Maiden Fair '' had brought Karlach to the ground with laughter, her exhaust ports singeing small fires in the grass as she choked on her joy.
Astarion could not quite bring himself to join in the merriment. His legs were aching from the climb and he was hungry. He had fully drained the gith doctor for what she had tried to pull with the Zaith’isk, but they had fought hard to get out alive and his trance had been rudely interrupted by Voss and the faith-shattering revelations he had brought them. He did feel sorry for Lae’zel, he knew what it was to have one’s deepest beliefs shaken to the core. Perhaps that was why he sought the solitude of this high precipice.
He sat on the cliff, his legs dangling off the edge over vast leagues of emptiness. The sun sank slowly over the temple in the distance and he felt a chill thinking of all the bodies inside. Yet another hoard of enemies taken down in their pursuit of a cure. He never used to care about the violence he inflicted, still relished the choreography of a good kill, the music of his blades expertly dispatching a foe before they even knew he was there. But traveling with this group of disparate weirdos had seemingly started to make him go soft. 
His thoughts crashed into each other, contradictory and chaotic. He was beginning to care for these people, something he truly never believed he’d feel again, but his apprehension for any kind of vulnerability mocked him for his twee little feelings. His survival had depended for so long on walling himself off to anything real. To anyone at all. He had learned too many times over what it cost, that warmth of closeness. It always ended in blood. 
And yet, he felt himself drawn like a moth to flames. He so desperately wanted to be let in, to be part of the crew. They were all so bonded, sharing stories of their pasts, consulting each other on their worries, finding small comforts in the warmth of an embrace. He longed to reach out to someone, anyone, as easily as they had. His years of captivity and pain had carved a deep chasm in his heart, one he was desperately trying to claw his way out of. 
Of course, she had seen right through his facade. Their alluring, ruthless leader had taken one look at him the morning after their tryst  and had somehow pierced the defenses he had honed over more than a century. Her ice and onyx eyes had bored holes into his back as he tried to play the carefree rake. When she had asked about his scars he had spat the truth at her, almost as a challenge, uncomfortable and exposed in the sunlight. He had made an attempt to divert her attention to anything other than his screeching, agonized soul, and she had let him. Still, he knew she saw more of him than he intended and it terrified him. He had nearly bolted from the sunlit glade the second she acquiesced to his deflection. It had been nearly a month since then and he still couldn’t get a read on the enigmatic drow. 
Tav was a mystery to him. Her sweet, generous disposition belied a shrewdness and pragmatism he found fascinating. She had divulged some of her past, her childhood as a cutpurse in the bowels of the City of Spiders, her frenzied and daring escape to the surface as a tunnel collapsed below her, but she had been sparse on the details. He had seen her expertly skate around specifics when their companions would inquire about aspects of her time in the Underdark. She had an electric way of weaving details of the Drow culture into her stories, distracting her listeners from the fact that the focus was rarely on her. 
That was not to say she seemed unwilling to connect with the others. She had formed a fast friendship with Karlach, trading awful jokes in between impassioned discussions of their best kills. As a parentless nobody alone in the heart of Menzoberranzan, Tav had learned quickly the art of survival. While she hadn’t spoken much about the devastating Storm Sorcery she wielded, she had regaled them with tales of her younger self and the warring factions of street urchins she had run with. The brutality of Drow society had been shocking to all but Lae’zel, who had greatly approved, saying that it had molded Tav into a strong and cunning warrior with great prowess on the battlefield. Tav had thanked the Githyanki enthusiastically, as though she truly appreciated the validation from one who actually understood the violence she had known. 
Astarion puzzled on the matter, retreating from the cliff edge as the first stars winked into being in the purpling sky. She had a hardened and remorseless attitude toward killing, yet her actions with the grove and her gentle handling of the members of their band proved she had the capacity for kindness he had never possessed. His had always been the way of self serving manipulation and guile, even before his foray into undeath. She truly did intrigue him, though he had kept her at a safe distance since the morning he had awoken, nestled in her arms, clinging to her like a castaway to driftwood on an open sea, with the taste of bile in his mouth. 
He had disentangled himself as quickly and smoothly as he could before sprinting out of the clearing to wretch her blood onto the base of a great oak. Her touch had felt like crackling lighting across his skin, setting him ablaze in ways he had not felt for decades, but the moment the storm had lulled, his memories had flooded back in nauseating waves. He had acted on instinct, used the only tool he had left to him, and he hated himself for it. Though he knew it was a necessary step in his plot to curry her favor and protection, he found he was surprised by how disgusted he felt with himself. 
The smell of roasting meat and fire shook him out of his dark reverie and he returned to his senses with a jolt. The sun had sunk just below the horizon and the glow behind the mountains was echoed by the campfire on the opposite peak. His hunger twisted, a cruel fist grasping in his chest, as the aromas of wafted down from where the group busied themselves making dinner and setting the camp. His mouth watered and his mind wandered to a vision of Tav’s smooth, ebony neck, the two delicate scars his fangs had left the first night he fed from her. The memory of her blood, the first non-rodent thing he’d fed on in decades, threatened to overwhelm him. 
“Godsdamnit!” he cursed aloud, turning with balled fists to trudge up the path to camp.
He needed to feed, and she was his only option on this high mountain pass full of nothing but uppity eagles and dead Githyanki. 
~~~
She watched him stalk into camp, just outside the circle of firelight, his face a hollow shell concealing the thoughts within. As he scanned the camp his gaze locked with hers, a near imperceptible jolt running through him. He pulled his features into a semblance of nonchalance and strode animatedly across the clearing to drape himself onto the ground beside her, back against the fallen pillar she was using as a bench. They had made camp in the long ruined husk of a stone temple, a protective brace against the wind that constantly howled at this height. 
Astarion began languidly trailing a finger along the outside of her calf, not turning to look into her face. 
“You know, darling” he drawled in a voice that reeked of duplicity, “it’s been ever so long since we were able to enjoy each other’s talents.” 
His finger traced up along the top of her knee, reaching towards the inside of her thigh. She swatted it away, quick and light as a dragonfly striking. He pulled his hand back with a sharp inhale and whipped his face to hers, eyes indignant and a snarl threatening to pull through his lips. She watched, bemused, as he fought to reign in his irritation and plaster a veil of pleasantness over his features. She saw the ragged glint in his eye and knew he was hungry and desperate to feed, his gaze subtly drifting to the pulse in her neck. 
“So your hunt didn’t go well, I take it?” 
“What? Uh…Whatever makes you say that? Can’t a man seek the company of a ravishing sorcerer of an evening?” His eyes narrowed, wary, clearly unaware that he practically radiated with the grace of a predatory animal on the prowl. Though his air had been light and casual, Tav knew a hunter when she saw one. His movements were just the smallest bit too practiced, a dance he had done a thousand times before. 
“If you’re hungry, Astarion, you only have to ask.” 
She didn’t begrudge him his mask, his choreography, she simply wanted him to see that she needed none of it. She had seen herself reflected in him so many times. The way he watched, always vigilant to the most minute changes in the attitude of a room, his body a figure study in relaxation while his eyes scoured his environment for threats.
When she had seen him flinch from her touch the morning after they had come together, her hand trailing too close to the raised scars on his back, she had felt the echo of his recoil in her own skin. She hadn’t picked up physical scars as brutal as his, but she felt the wounds on her soul ache when she heard him speak of his time with Cazador. When she had offered her sympathy he had rebuffed her, not believing she could understand the half of what he had been through. And maybe she couldn’t, but she carried the weight of her own pain, her own fear, and she had grown strong from the burden. Strong enough, perhaps, to help him shoulder his.  
His eyes searched hers, incredulous, their feline slant softening as he began to take in her face. She wore an expression of warm amusement, not a hint of judgment in her captivating gaze. One corner of her mouth pulled up slightly into a coy grin as she extended her wrist in front of him. 
“Go ahead, the rest of us already ate.” 
He started, gaze shifting rapidly from her eyes to her wrist and back. With slow, hesitant movements he grasped her wrist in both his hands and pulled it to his mouth. The smell of her skin, the blood so close to the surface, was intoxicating. Pulling in a deep draw of her honey and juniper scent, his eyes rolled and he let out a sigh against the taught skin of her wrist. She felt his cool breath like a caress, sending a shiver down her spine. He glanced at her again, as if to confirm it really was alright for him to bite her, and she nodded, her grin spreading to pucker a tiny dimple into her cheek. 
~~~
Eyes shifting warily around the camp, grazing over the figures of the others readying to bed down for the night, he searched for signs that this was all some elaborate trap. Surely this open generosity, this act of profound trust and vulnerability, must be designed to lull him from his defenses. It had happened time and again, with his siblings, his master. Some small kindness offered, only to be retracted at the last second and replaced with the scourge of a blade or a balled fist. He pushed the panic down, trying to relax the coiling knot between his shoulder blades. 
His lips brushed the skin of her wrist in a featherlight kiss before he pressed his fangs in as gently as his hunger would allow. The rush of her blood into his mouth surrounded him in the heady smell of her. It overtook his senses as he drank, blurring out the rest of the campsite and flooding his vision with a haze of indigo shot with silver. He focused on her pulse, strong against his lips, hammering in his ears. As he shifted his hands to hold her arm closer to him, fingers sliding around the back of her elbow, he felt her pulse flutter ever so slightly. Her fingers splayed, grazing through his curls and he heard her hiss. He worried he was hurting her and began to slow his pace when a soft moan escaped her slightly parted lips. His eyes darted to hers in surprise and found she was staring, lips parted and  pupils blown, directly at him. 
Smiling to himself against her wrist, still sucking her flowing blood, he pulled her down from the pillar. He twisted with her slowly so as not to break the seal against her skin.  She flowed into his lap like a cat, curling herself around to rest half leaning on his chest. He brought an arm around her ribs to steady her, his hand snaking up the back of her neck to rest in her bright silver and gunmetal hair. She leaned her head into his hand and her eyes fluttered closed. With her this close, senses drowning in the redolent perfume of her skin, he began to draw longer, covetous pulls from her wrist. 
Her blood sang in his veins. The pulse under his lips fluttered as she drew in a ragged breath, her back arching against him. Rolling her head forward to nuzzle into the slope of his neck, he shuddered as her lips brushed the underside of his jaw. He felt her breath on his skin like the heat of a campfire. She moaned low in his ear, a breathless, intoxicating purr. He was about to break the latch he had on her wrist to claim her berry mouth in a bloody kiss, when he heard a throat clearing behind him. 
“While I do understand your fervor, Astarion, would you kindly un-wrist our dear leader before you drain her like a particularly fine wineskin?” 
Astarion growled into her wrist as Tav seemed to shake out of whatever haze she had fallen into and chuckled. 
“I believe you’re right, Gale” She conceded, “ I do feel somewhat... lightheaded.” 
His arm remained wrapped around her shoulder, fingers twining into her hair of their own accord. He pricked his tongue with a fang and ran the bead of blood over her wound, closing it. Before letting go of her wrist, he kissed it again, this time in earnest, turning his eyes upward to meet hers. She stared down at him with the look of someone who has just awoken from a captivating dream, lids heavy and eyes shining with a secret glee.
“Thank you” His voice ragged and thick through the fog of his bloodlust. “Truly.”
He willed his hand to release its grip on her hair, glaring at the wizard for his obvious ploy to interrupt. As she slipped out of his arms and stood she leaned forward and brushed a soft kiss against his cheek. His other hand trailed down her arm as she rose, his fingers reflexively hooking against hers in a traitorous attempt to hold her with him just a short time longer. She hooked her fingers back to his for just a moment, long enough to pull his arm taught behind her as she retreated. As her fingers rolled off his he was left with his hand hovering in front of his face, frozen where she had left it, the feeling of her skin reverberating through his fingertips. 
“Any time Star!” She called over her shoulder with a grin as Gale pulled her into a discussion with Halsin about the properties of some mushroom or other. He sat, stunned, pulling the hand she had released to the heated spot where her lips had brushed his face. She had never called him that before. 
Nobody had called him that since before his life ended.
*  *  *  *  *
Bathed in the yellow light of the Blood of Lathander, the group moved slowly through the cursed darkness of the shadowlands. As the company entered the region from the high mountain pass they had been greeted by a welcome party from Moonrise, sent to escort the ‘True Souls' to the Absolutist stronghold. The plan had been to play along, acting as though Halsin was a prisoner they were keen to return to face punishment. That plan went straight out the window as the eerie blue light of the moonlantern revealed the aberration that was Kar’niss, the drider. Swallowing his unease, Wyll managed to learn the direction of the tower from the monstrosity as the rest of the group filed down the narrow passageway into the darkness, Tav bringing up the rear with Scritch and Scratch. 
Before any of the others knew what was happening, a savage roar ripped through Tav, a sound like her soul tearing. She leapt forward, her lightning magic crackling over her skin like a shroud, to bring a violent storm down upon the group of cultists. Tongues of lightning battered the drider, his many limbs giving out beneath him as the electricity shot through his nerves. Not expecting an ambush, the other cultists stood frozen, surprised, while the smell of scorched ozone grew with each new strike of lightning. 
“Alrighty then, guess we’re doing this the fun way!” Karlach was the first to surge forward, swinging her greataxe into the side of one of the cultist’s heads. The figure crumpled like a marionette with cut strings, and as she wrested the axe from the ruin of its face, a wild grin broke across the tiefling’s lips. “So much for diplomacy, eh Sparks?” 
Tav merely growled in response, her eyes lit a blazing white from within, never leaving the writhing form of the drider. As the rest of the group made short work of the band of cultists, Tav stalked forward, the lighting of her power coalescing into her palms. Walking into the swirling heart of the storm she had created, she loomed over the crumpled body of the monstrosity, teeth gritted and body trembling with emotion. She went to one knee beside the wretched creature, still being slashed through with forking lightning, and bent low to be heard above the cacophony of the tempest. 
“I swore I would never suffer another one of your kind to live, drider.” Her voice a dark snarl, she spat in disgust. “Give my regards to the Spider Bitch.”
The abomination sent up a wordless cry of agony, its face turned to hers, pleading for her mercy. Her mouth twisted into a crooked grin, savage and deadly, as she held her sparking hands on either side of the drider’s face. Her magic scorched the air as lightning arced between her palms, straight through the brain of the creature, its numerous eyes briefly blazing in an ice-white echo of hers before darkening to a lifeless black. With a shudder of disgust she rose, kicking the face of the drider away from her and breaking the concentration she held on the small tempest above them. 
The final crackling of lightning sounded and their ears rang in the unnatural silence. Tav stood, trembling, shoulders hunched, in a circle of scorched corpses.  As though a spell of silence had been cast over the group, they stood rooted in place, none daring to speak first. A ragged sob tore out of Tav as she brought the heel of her boot down against the temple of the twisted creature, caving in the pale face with its many empty eyes. She was shaking violently now, her sob morphing into a stuttering, wordless wail. 
At the sound of her pain the spell seemed to break, and Astarion found himself moving to her, body reacting before caution could hold him back. He called her name gently as he approached, so as not to startle her. She turned to him, her face streaked with tears and black blood, and nearly fell into his waiting arms. She buried her face into his neck, his arms coming around her back, crushing her to him and holding her upright. Her sobs were an echo of his own desperate soul.
“I’ve got you.” HIs voice sounded hollow in his ears as he pressed the words into her hair. “It’s over, you’re safe. I'm here.”  
She continued to pour tears into the collar of his leathers, body quaking with silent sobs. The group surrounded them, anxious faces stricken with concern. Astarion waved them back, silently meeting their eyes with a challenge. Do not intervene. 
The druid was the first to speak, ushering the group to begin searching the bodies for valuables or missives from Moonrise. They retrieved the strange lantern the dryder had carried and began to move off down the path to give Tav some space. As the eerie blue glow of the lantern receded, Shadowheart rushed back to hand the glowing mace to Astarion. 
“Take your time.” She placed a gentle hand on Tav’s shoulder and gave a light, reassuring squeeze. She shot Astarion a look of skeptical amusement, as though she couldn’t believe that he, of all people, would be the one to offer comfort and care to the drow. She cocked an eyebrow and mouthed good luck to him before scampering back to the circle of lantern light and following the group down the path of the broken road. 
When they had disappeared from view and he could no longer hear their voices, Astarion gently peeled Tav away from his chest. Her face was a mess of tears and inky drider blood. Her normally piercing eyes red and puffed from the tears, she wouldn’t meet his gaze as she sniffed and wiped her face with the sleeve of her robe. He felt a stab of grief reverberate through him, his mind flashing through an endless slideshow of painful memories. Gently raising her face to him, he saw the reflection of his own sorrow in her eyes. Her gaze darted wildly, an animal trapped in a cage, desperate for a place to hide. 
Astarion cradled her cheek with his large, cool palm, his crimson eyes capturing hers, forcing her to focus on him. 
“Breath, darling.” 
One arm still around her waist, anchoring her, she heaved in a rough breath. She leaned into his palm, letting it go in a protracted sigh. The jagged edges of her mind began to smooth, her consciousness slowly sliding back into her body. Only when he felt her pulse begin to slow and her breathing return to normal did he release her from his hold, stepping back and allowing his hands to fall to his sides. 
“Thank you, Astarion.” Her voice was croaky and low, her throat aching from the guttural screams she had uttered. “That was… I …” She trailed off, not knowing how to continue. Seeing a drider again for the first time since her escape from the Underdark had plunged her into a rage and fear she had tried desperately to leave behind. The sight of the hulking abomination had transported her into memories of chitinous legs pinning her to cold stone, white hot lightning arcing through her as the chants of cultists drowned out her screams. Her body had acted in pure instinct, moving to slaughter the cause of her suffering, pulling on the twisted power she had gained as a means of survival. Now, she only felt a dull, empty ache at the center of her. She was so tired. 
Astarion searched her eyes as she stood in front of him, miles or years away. She had always been somewhat volatile, a simmering anger beneath the surface of her placid demeanor, but this was the first moment he came to realize the truth. Her temper was not borne of pride or bravado, but was merely the instinctual defense of a person like himself. Someone who had, too many times, been presented with the choice to either fight or die. The frenzied way she had taken the drider down, her instant switch from sentience to instinctual brutality, these were the hallmarks of one who knew the truth of suffering. He felt his heart ache for her. A kindred damned soul. 
“You don’t have to explain…” His voice held none of its typical music, his tone flat and serious. “There are some things we carry with us, no matter how far from them we truly are.” He extended his hand to her, and she took it with fingers that trembled ever so slightly. 
“I will… I just can’t, not here.” Her eyes darted over his shoulder to the mangled body of the drider, legs curled in on itself grotesquely, face a black pulp. “Can we go?” Her eyes flashed with desperation and he squeezed her hand, pulling her with him away from the carnage. They headed down the path after the rest of the group, the hungry shadows held at bay by the light of Lathander. 
When they spotted the glow of the campfire ahead, Astarion stopped. They had walked here silently, fingers laced together, the heat of her skin gradually warming his hand. She turned to him with a deep sigh, eyes trained on the small circles he was rubbing into her skin with his thumb. 
“I can’t go back just yet. Too many worried faces, everyone holding back questions and treating me like I’m breakable.” 
Astarion scoffed, “Nobody thinks you’re breakable. You should’ve seen yourself back there!” he gestured up the path they’d taken with a nod of his head. “ You were positively lethal.” 
“Yes, and then I went mad and sobbed in front of everyone.”Her voice was a rasping whisper as she clung to his hand. “I can’t stand to see their pity, it just makes everything worse.”
“You’ll get no pity from me, darling. I don’t pity those who could call a bolt down and roast me where I stand.” His attempt at levity fell flat between them, a sly smile dying on Astarion's lips as she finally looked into his eyes. His breath caught at the sight of those deep onyx pools slashed with streaks of white lightning. He saw the haunted, anguished stare all the spawn in Cazador’s house had worn. Though he hadn’t seen his reflection in centuries, he knew his own eyes must carry the same look now and again. He dropped his gaze from hers, feeling as though she could see straight to the core of him. 
“You and I are more alike than I thought.” His voice was low and serious, a tone she had rarely heard him use. He paused thoughtfully, bringing their hands, fingers still intertwined, to his lips. “If you want to stay out here a while, I’m in no rush to get back.” 
Tav’s thoughts blurred at the feel of his lips on the back of her fingers. She felt the familiar pull to throw herself on him, shutting down any questions he might have with her tongue in his mouth. Why was it so easy to let him into her body but not her mind? She knew she could make it all disappear, the pain of the memories, the insatiable rage she felt for her past self, the fear. She could melt it all away with the touch of his cool hands on her body. He could pull her out from the chaos in her mind and keep her rooted firmly in the feel of him. 
She knew this was her mind’s way of running from the truth. She had to face the part of her past she was running from. In a guarded, secret place inside she knew that her feelings for Astarion could be so much more than an escape. Terrified as she was to admit it, she saw clearly who he was and it left her in awe of him. His past was laid bare in the jagged scars on his back. While she knew he was still hiding much from her, he had let her in in small ways, each time revealing more of himself. She knew he deserved the same. That she couldn't wear the mask for him anymore. 
Tav leaned her forehead into Astarion’s, their noses brushing together and mingling her warm breath with his cool one. 
“Will you let me show you? I don’t think I can explain it all without bolting for the hills.”
He nodded against her, stepping closer and gripping the back of her neck. He pulled her into a gentle kiss, lips almost reverent in their explorations. She fought the urge to deepen the kiss and flee into his arms. A soft moan of protest escaped his lips as she pulled away, but she did not fully retreat, allowing him to hold her in the circle of his arms.
She reached out with her tadpole and connected to his with a spine chilling jolt. In this connection their thoughts flowed together with no need for language. Her memories flashed in a dizzying wave, showing him the truth of her youth and the years she spent numb and cut off in a pleasure house. She felt his surprise as parts of her story became enmeshed with his own, seeing a double image of them both languishing in separate beds, strangers between their legs. He felt her memories as if they were his own, understanding the depth of the emptiness gnawing at her soul in those long decades of service to the Trade. She poured into him all the years of petty betrayal among the courtesans, the insipid dramas that nonetheless endangered her very livelihood. He answered with the squabbling between the sibling spawn. The backstabbing and conniving to gain a pittance of favor from their master.   
Tav pressed herself against him, yearning to somehow feel even closer as they clung to each other in the whirlwind of her memories. She balked as her thoughts delved deeper, wincing away from the pain of her deep buried past. Astarion’s presence in her mind remained unshaken, a questioning desire to know what she was trying to hide. She felt his arms grip her ever tighter, his hands balling into her hair and her tunic, a physical tether. She opened to him, tumbling down within her mind to the dark and jagged center of her torment. 
Her friend, or so she had believed, set her up. She should have known the posting was too good to be true. A live-in concubine for the heir of house Baenre. She had gone through the proper channels to verify the assignment, but the woman knew the procedures well and managed to dupe even the management at the pleasure house. Tav thought she was heading to a lavish apartment in a noble house for a year, maybe three. Instead she had been taken, snatched from her carriage like a mouse caught in the talons of a silent owl. She had hated herself then for allowing her instincts to become dulled and her reflexes slow. Through the tadpole Astarion saw how the shrewd cutpurse she had been in her youth berated her captured self mercilessly. Eighty years in the fog of distraction and numbness of a life without purpose had stolen her acumen for survival. 
Astarion’s heart bled for her, hearing the echo of his own self-hatred in the venomous words she berated herself with. Stupid. Naive. Worthless. He reached his mind into the cyclone of her anger and tried to sooth her with all the things he wished someone would say to him. Capable. Beautiful. Worthy. She shuddered in his arms and he was vaguely aware of his body pulling her down to sit on the ruined earth. Still holding the connection with the tadpole, her body almost lost to her in the swell of her grief, she pulled herself into his lap and he wrapped his arms around her like a shield. 
The next memories she flew to were tinged with a deep indigo haze, as though a part of her brain would not allow them to fully realize. Her captors had brought her far from Menzoberranzan, trussed in a wagon like a lamb for slaughter. She had begged for release, explanation, anything, and had earned herself a stinking sock for a gag. When they finally arrived at their destination, her horrors had only worsened as she was led into the crumbling throne room of a long abandoned stronghold to see a monster atop the throne before her. 
The drider loomed massive in the torchlight of the hall. He towered over the cowering servants at his feet. His torso, grotesquely morphing into the abdomen of a spider, was covered in black patches of coarse hair and chitin. Skittering toward her on eight segmented legs, he pulled her off her feet by her neck to bring her face closer to his. He was supernaturally strong, nearly crushing her throat in his grip. When he tossed her aside she crumpled into a heap on the cold stone slabs. He spoke to his attendants in a language she couldn’t understand and she had been hauled away to rot for months in a cold cell. She could hear the cries and lamentations of the other women in the cages, though as the weeks went by the voices started to go silent one by one. She grew to hold the understanding that she would die, shivering and afraid, in this dank cavern, with nobody to blame but herself. 
When her turn came to be dragged before the drider once more she resigned herself to the fate, hoping she would find a way to end her own suffering early. She had listened as the agonized screams of the other women had echoed off the dripping walls of the cave. They had begged and wailed to every god in the pantheon. None had listened. The hooded attendants had led her, bound at the wrists barefoot, into a bright circle of light cast through a moonhole to the surface. She turned her eyes skyward, squinting through the long tunnel of stone to see the full, cold moon and bright, distant stars. It was the first time she had ever seen them, and she had chuckled ruefully to herself that it would also be the last time. 
The ritual was built off ancient magic in languages long lost. She couldn’t guess the specifics, but as the cultists wound silk ribbons around her shivering frame the drider appeared from the shadows of the vast cavern, scurrying to her and caging her in with his revolting legs. His carapace covered body hung over her and his drow face leered down at her, sharp teeth displayed in a manic grin. The cultists circled around them, each standing at a point in an eight pointed star. They began a chant that shot ice through her veins. The drider above her pushed her down onto her back, pinning her with one leg as he used another to slice through the tattered dress she had been wearing since her capture. 
At this, Tav felt her mind lurch away, the indigo haze over her memory growing ever darker, obscuring the truth of her agony even from her. Her memory shrank to the tiny circle of light she could see through the moonhole on the high ceiling of the cavern. As she watched, detached from herself wholly, a dark silver cloud passed in front of her circle of light. She raged then, that her only means of focus had abandoned her. 
The chanting rose to a deafening clamor and she began to feel her body ripping apart. The ice that had started spreading through her veins now formed into shattering crystals. Her body arced with the pain and rage and fear. She had begged then, wordless cries tearing from her throat until she coughed blood. She had called in the primal language of pain to any god who might hear. She tore her throat raw, and heard nothing echo back in return. She wished only to die and have the agony cease. 
The anguish had shifted then, from a cold, scraping, ache to the white hot electricity of lightning. The last thing she had seen before the storm claimed her was the silhouette of the moon, shrouded in deep indigo clouds, with a crackling halo of ice-white lightning. The element had ripped through her, sparking from every nerve and out her skin to drive her attackers back, frozen in a tableau of torment as the lightning arced from one to another, connecting the points of the star around her. Then her vision had gone white and the smell of burning ozone had flooded her senses. She had called the storm down around her, lashing into the cultists and impaling the drider on a spear of pure, crackling, energy. 
Mad with pain and power, she had leapt skyward, following the light of the silver moon above her, the only thing she could see through her flash-blind eyes. Somehow, she assumed she would never know, she had ascended to the base of the moonhole where it opened into the cavern. Grasping with desperate fingers, the tattered remains of her bindings smoldering on her wrists, she had clawed her way up the crumbling wall of the tunnel. Her only goal to reach that beckoning orb sparking with power. She ascended as the ground gave way beneath her, scrambling to pull herself ever faster toward the surface. 
Her arms nearly gave out from the strain of the climb, and when she finally broke the surface, gasping and shaking, shredded dress hanging off her in ribbons, she had rolled on her back and shrieked her laughter to the bright moon. The stars seemed to laugh with her, twinkling in and out of focus as she bled out on the cool grass. 
She had awoken days later in the care of an elderly tiefling couple on the outskirts of Baldur’s Gate. They had heard her maniacal laughter and rushed to help before she slipped away. The man had been a healer once, and had been able to staunch the bleeding from a deep, eight pointed wound where her womb had been. She had stayed with them a month or so before moving on, grateful for their kind help but wary of any who would offer aid to a stranger. Her fear and paranoia had driven her into the sewers of the city, the only place she could escape the bright, noisy bustle of the streets, so unlike her existence in the Underdark. 
Astarion’s presence came forward once again in her mind. He had receded while her memory had relived her most wretched moments, observing in horror and wishing there was something he could do to lessen the pain. He held her in his lap, sobbing again softly into his shoulder, and severed the connection with her tadpole. 
“Oh, darling,” He whispered as he stroked her hair and clutched her to him. “I’m so sorry.” 
“NO!” She gasped, frantic, “Don’t you dare pity me!” Her face turned up to his, defiant, but the shattered and broken part of her soul looked out at him from the depths of her onyx and ivory eyes. 
“Never.” He cupped her face in his hands to steady her gaze onto him. “Tav. I will never pity you.” 
She shuddered, tears streaming down her cheeks onto his fingers. 
“You survived.” His voice was stern but soft. “You fought, and you won, and now you’re here.” 
She gave a tired nod, and a brutal sigh wrenching through her. 
“You’re godsdamned right, I survived.” Her hands came up to cover his and she leaned toward him, knocking his forehead with hers. “And so did you, Star.” 
“Tav?” 
“Hmm?” 
“Would it be altogether inappropriate if I kissed you right now?” 
“Yes, but do it anyway.” 
He obeyed, hungry and desperate. They melded together, each searching for absolution in the other’s touch. He felt for once that he was kissing her just for himself. Not for a master, or a plan, or even just to satisfy an urge. He kissed her because he wanted her to feel his care and adoration for her. Because he felt as though his body would catch fire when she touched him. Because in those moments when she had allowed him to see her deepest hurt, he had felt she saw him too. He was moved by the vulnerability she had allowed him to share. He knew hope was for fools, but he couldn’t deny the warmth in his chest as his tongue gently parted her lips and she met him with equal fervor. Their bodies entwined, the light of Lathander bathing him in the warmth of a false sun, he felt real for the first time he could remember since his heart had beat its last. 
She was going to be the ruin of him, and he thought perhaps he would just let it happen. 
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