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#this is the last we'll see of erridge and samient
partystoragechest · 4 months
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A story of romance, drama, and politics which neither Trevelyan nor Cullen wish to be in.
Canon divergent fic in which Josephine solves the matter of post-Wicked Hearts attention by inviting invites four noblewomen to compete for Cullen's affections. In this chapter, the Ladies say their farewells. But--
(Masterpost. Beginning. Previous entry. Next entry. Words: 2,764. Rating: all audiences.)
Chapter 44: Not Over Yet
The Ladies rose before the sun.
Despite their late night, they were duty-bound to wake early. Lady Samient was to leave before dawn came. They all had to be there to see her off.
They gathered in the courtyard, the first rays of light creeping over the mountains. It would be that light which would guide her retinue—no more than a dozen troops, for small was discreet—to the Free Marches.
“Do you think Vichy will be glad to see me, looking like this?” Samient asked, of the Inquisition armour she wore—identical to that of the soldiers who lingered nearby.
“I think it shan’t matter what you wear,” said Trevelyan, “he will simply be happy to see you.”
“And at least you shall be matching,” Lady Erridge teased.
Samient laughed, the joke causing her to settle somewhat. “That is true.”
Trevelyan had never seen her Ladyship quite so nervous as this. It was a shame she would miss the reunion. She so wished to know what Samient was like in the presence of her lover. What a happy, silly mess she might be!
“Do not worry about your father,” the Baroness reassured her. “Lady Montilyet and I shall deal with all that. You focus upon the journey home.”
“Thank you,” said Samient.
She glanced back to the retinue, all in rows, receiving orders from their Captain. The time was nigh. Lady Samient brought her hair up, and tied it into a bun atop her head. Her ears entirely exposed, she ran a finger over the very tips—pointed and proud.
“Shame they’ll have to go straight back under a helm,” she muttered.
Trevelyan smiled. “Though not for much longer.”
“And never again after that.”
Her ritual of readiness must not have gone unnoticed, for her Dalish liaison—a young Elven man called Loranil—took the opportunity to run up, and report in:
“Your Ladyship, we’re ready to march.”
She thanked him, and away he went. Now was the time to follow. Reluctant, she took a step back.
“Well… I suppose I should make my way, then,” she mumbled. “I, um, well—”
“Oh, come here!” Lady Erridge cried, rushing forward. She threw her arms around Samient—soon followed by both Trevelyan and the Baroness. Tangled together, warmth shared. One last time.
“We love you, you know,” said Lady Erridge.
“I know,” Samient replied, sniffling back tears. “I love you too.”
“Have a safe journey,” Trevelyan wished her.
“And write as soon as you can,” the Baroness added. “Tell us everything of your Clan.”
Samient nodded. “I will. I will.”
Each woman held on tight, unflinching in her devotion. It was the sort of embrace that could anchor a ship in a storm. The sort of embrace that could melt the deepest winter. The sort of embrace that could outshine the very sun, and sear even a dragon’s tongue.
Yet, like all good things, it would have to come to an end. One last squeeze, and they parted. Taking a deep breath, Lady Samient took another step back.
“Farewell. All of you. And be happy. Please.”
Though holding tight onto one another, the Ladies began to wave. And they would not stop until Lady Samient was truly gone.
No, Giles. She wished to be remembered as Giles.
Giles found her place within the regiment. A few words were said between her and the soldiers, which seemed to make her smile. She placed her helm upon her head—at least it concealed the tears—and, with one final look back, marched out of Skyhold.
May Ghila’nain guide her home.
***
No sooner than the remaining Ladies had recovered from this, than it was Lady Erridge’s turn.
Her carriage had arrived. They all had gathered. Her things were packed. Orroat’s horse was hitched. It was time.
Naturally, Lady Erridge was inconsolable. Whimpering, tear-stained, and red, she threw herself into Orroat’s arms, and begged: “Can’t we stay just one week more?”
But Lady Orroat shook her head. “I would agree to your every request, my love, but I am afraid if I say yes, you shall never leave.” She tapped Erridge lovingly upon the nose. “And I do not know how the Bann will continue to survive without you. Your poor mother had to sew a dozen more handkerchiefs for him, last time I visited.”
“Oh, dear.”
“Don’t worry”—Orroat dabbed her eyes, ineffective as it was—“we managed to see each other as children, so this will be done as well—and we’ll pass through here plenty, I imagine.” She turned to Trevelyan and Touledy. “You are always welcome in Coldon, of course.”
“I would be glad to visit,” said the Baroness.
“As would I,” Trevelyan agreed.
Lady Erridge whirled, and took hold of their hands. “Oh, please do! I do not wish this to be our last meeting!”
Trevelyan feigned shock. “Why, are we uninvited from your wedding!?”
“Oh, no, no! Of course you are invited. What a wonderful day that shall be. No—a week! It shall be an entire week of festivities! I promise you.” She looked to Orroat. “Don’t you think?”
“If you so wish, my love.”
“Thank you, my love.”
Their saccharine nature was the only thing, at that moment, keeping Trevelyan from crying. Although, she had to admit, a tear did well upon her eye.
“I’m afraid the carriage is ready, Tam,” said Orroat, solemnly. “We’ll need to clear the mountain range before sundown, so we’ll have to be gone soon.”
“Oh, dear!” cried Erridge.
She looked to the Ladies, frozen in place. Hesitation held her back, the knowledge that the next moments with them would be her last—at least for now.
Yet those moments were not to be squandered. Lady Erridge surged forward, swaddling both Trevelyan and Touledy within her embrace. The loveliest, warmest, kindest hug yet.
Trevelyan savoured the feeling.
“You know,” murmured Erridge, “were it not for you, I would have never known myself in love with dear Hul. It was only in befriending you that I realised my feelings for her were different.” She snuggled in closer. “Though just as precious.”
“We love you,” whispered Trevelyan.
“We do,” agreed Touledy.
“I love you both,” said Erridge.
It was this sentiment that seemed to provide her the strength to step away, for nothing could be so enduring. But even as her fingers slipped from Trevelyan’s arm, she whispered to her:
“I’ll miss you terribly, Wicky.”
Trevelyan smiled. “And I you.”
But missing her would have to do—the carriage was loaded, the drivers seated. Lady Orroat opened the door.
“Are you ready, my love?”
“I think so,” Erridge replied.
She offered her hand. Lady Orroat took it, and kissed it, and guided Lady Erridge into the carriage—but did not follow. Not yet. Instead, she looked to the Ladies.
“Thank you for caring for my dear Tam so well,” she told them. “I cannot express how much it means, to know she is loved. I hope to make her even half as happy as you have.”
Trevelyan nodded. “Good. For if you break her heart, we shall kill you.”
“Painfully,” the Baroness added.
Lady Orroat smiled. “I would expect no more and deserve no less.”
She clambered into the carriage, setting beside her dear Lady. Trevelyan watched, quite satisfied that their message had been heard, and that Lady Erridge was in good hands.
And those good hands kept her stable, as Erridge fumbled over Orroat’s lap, to poke her head out of the window.
“Farewell!” she called. “We shall meet again! I love you!”
The signal was given, the reins taken up. The carriage began to trundle away.
“We shall meet again!” repeated Erridge, as it slipped into the gatehouse. Her voice echoed off the stone. “Farewell!”
“Farewell!” the Ladies cried. “Safe journey! Farewell!”
And then it was off, the carriage rumbling over the old stone bridge. Trevelyan imagined that, within it, at that very moment, Lady Orroat had taken Lady Erridge’s hand, and held it tight. It was not so hard to believe.
Good. The sooner they were married, the sooner they would all see each other again.
For now, though, sadness remained a most stalwart companion.
Trevelyan pulled her napkin from a pocket—the poor little cloth only just having dried from its use earlier in the morning—and dabbed at her eyes. It was a wonder she had any tears left. The Baroness, similarly, dried her own. She looked to Lady Trevelyan, and, wordlessly, linked their arms together. Just two Ladies left.
“Come,” she said, “my carriage will not be ready for another hour. Let us pass the time. May I see your new quarters, before I go?”
A good distraction. Trevelyan nodded.
Together, they wandered, back towards the keep. Up, into the Great Hall. Calmer now, than yesterday. The normal sort of hubbub and ambience.
They turned not towards the rotunda door and its guest corridor above, but towards the door to Montilyet’s parlour. Tucked within, they knew well enough, was the little landing that preceded her lounge. And off this landing, were two sets of stairs.
They took the ascending route, to an entirely new corridor. Stretching out above the parlour, snaking into the Inquisitor’s tower, this corridor housed the rooms of some of the Inquisition’s innermost circle.
“I couldn’t quite believe it, when she told me where it was,” Trevelyan admitted.
“It is a privilege to be amongst them,” mused Touledy.
They turned into the tower, ascended a little way up… and soon enough, came across a door.
“This is it,” Trevelyan said, turning the key. “Though I warn you—it’s not mightily impressive.”
She opened up, and wandered in. The Baroness followed, and put on a good show of admiration—but Trevelyan knew it was merely politeness.
This room she’d been given was a touch smaller than that of her guest room. Understandable—guests were to be impressed with comfort; residents simply needed somewhere to sleep. The furnishings were more basic, too—but better than the ones she’d had in the Circle, by far.
The bed, though not four-poster, was of a sufficient size. “Though you’ll not test this one,” she teased the Baroness.
“I believe that is someone else’s duty.”
Trevelyan laughed. “And here is my desk!” she quickly continued, proudly showing the little bureau. “I’m truly glad to have this. I’ll be able to work here, should the Undercroft be too busy. Oh, and look!”
She pointed to the window just above it, that allowed the morning’s light into the room. The Baroness peered out, and gasped at what she saw.
“Oh! Are these not the same mountains we saw from your stargazing spot?”
Trevelyan nodded. “Yes! I can sit here, on a night, and look out—without having to get so cold!”
Touledy grinned. “But how then will you secretly rendezvous with the Commander, hm?”
“I believe you’ve already suggested a method!”
They laughed, and Touledy regarded the room once more. There was little else of note—a trunk and drawers, for storage, and a pair of chairs—but she nodded approvingly nevertheless.
“It may not be much, but I think it is lovely.”
Trevelyan smiled. “I know. So do I. And—”
There was a rapid knock at the door. Trevelyan perked. The Baroness’ carriage could not have been ready so soon? She rushed over, and opened up. A scout stood on the other side.
“Morning, your Ladyship. This just arrived for you—urgent.”
They handed over a small piece of vellum. She could tell by the writing it was a bird-message, transcribed.
“Thank you,” she said, letting them hurry on their way. She shut the door, and wandered back toward Touledy.
“Who is it from?” her Ladyship asked.
Trevelyan steeled herself. “I think I know.”
Though her soul screamed not to, her eyes began to scan the words:
Daughter,
If there is no engagment, there is no reason for you to stay. We shall be travelling to Val Royeaux. Meet us there, or we shall have you fetched.
Bann Trevelyan
Trevelyan’s lungs stopped. The paper fell from her hand, spinning to the ground. They couldn’t—she gasped—they couldn’t just come for her? They couldn’t take her away. No, no—
Touledy, leaning hard on her cane, managed to collect the message from the floor, and read it for herself. Her eyes widened.
“Stay calm, Lady Trevelyan. Everything will be all right.”
Trevelyan shook her head. “But they—but they… I didn’t think they would come get me! I thought they would just leave me be. Why won’t they leave me be?”
Shaking, she found the arm of a chair. The Baroness guided her into it.
“Shh, stay calm. It is all right. You are of the Inquisition now. You have protection. They cannot simply pluck you from Skyhold. We should tell Lady Montilyet of this. She still owes you a debt.”
The Baroness rose, and hurried to the door, sticking her head out. Grunting, she rushed back.
“The scout is gone,” she explained, “so I shall find Montilyet myself. You remain here. Stay calm, all right? Breathe. All right? Breathe.”
Trevelyan did as instructed, taking breaths in, and pushing them forcefully back out.
“Good,” cooed Touledy, stroking her arm, “very good. I will be a moment. Just a moment. We will have this sorted, I promise you.”
Trevelyan nodded. Seeing that permission, Touledy gathered herself, and left the room. Her cane tapped away with a heightened rhythm. Tap. Tap. Tap. Tap.
But when it vanished, Trevelyan was left with only the sound of her own breathing. She clasped her hands together, till her knuckles turned white, and held them against her chest. Breathe. Breathe. Breathe.
A knock at the door. Touledy was faster than promised.
“Come in!” she cried.
“Arcanist?” came the reply.
Trevelyan turned. The Commander stood in her door. She lost her breath again.
“Are you all right?” he said, abandoning what he carried upon her dresser, and pulling a chair up beside her. “What’s wrong?”
She pressed a hand to her mouth, unable to say it without crying. “My parents…”
No use. She passed him the message, instead. He read it. His face fell. His head shook.
“No,” he breathed. “They cannot take you from Skyhold.”
“They’ll try.”
“Then what if…” He tried to catch her eye. “What if you told them we were engaged? Would that settle them?”
“No!” Trevelyan stood, tears falling anew. “I don’t want to do what they want! I want to do what I want! I wanted to be done with them! I just…” She bowed her head, and wept. “I wanted to be free.”
She felt her body buckle—but no sooner than it had, than it was held upright. The Commander enveloped her in his arms, held her tight against his chest. She clung to him in turn, buried her head within the fur of his mantle. It was all him, keeping her together.
“No one can take you from Skyhold without your consent,” he murmured. “I promised to you. You are safe within these walls. They could send an army. They will not take you from—here.”
Trevelyan nodded. Her breathing slowed. She believed him. She believed him.
Footsteps—hurried, heeled footsteps—neared.
“Lady Trevelyan!” came Montilyet’s voice, as she rounded into the room. “The Baroness has just told me! Are you well?”
Trevelyan shook her head. The Commander, slowly, gently released her into Lady Montilyet’s arms.
“It’s all right, Lady Trevelyan,” she told her. “I will go to Val Royeaux myself if I have to! You are an Arcanist of the Inquisition, and you belong here.”
Trevelyan sighed. “I want to stay.”
“I know. You will.”
Further footsteps. Trevelyan glanced toward the door, and saw the Baroness had arrived as well. But—the Commander was gone.
“Where is he?” she asked.
“He slipped away,” the Baroness revealed. She wandered over to the dresser, and admired the bouquet of flowers that had appeared upon it. “But it seems he left you a gift... I shall find someone who can fetch a vase of water.”
The Baroness withdrew. Lady Montilyet sat Trevelyan down, and brought the flowers to her. Trevelyan accepted the arrangement, gladly. Such a beautiful little bouquet. Poppies, and spinwort, crystal grace and daisies. Put together by one with no knowledge of flowers. Ever more beautiful for it.
“Trust me,” said Lady Montilyet, sitting beside her. “I can deal with the Bann and Lady Trevelyan. Easily.”
But Trevelyan shook her head. “No,” she said. “I want to deal with them. Myself.”
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