Decided to spend the @cityelfweek free day sketching an idea I had forever ago. For context, this is about a year before Inquisition, juuust before the mage rebellion.
They all smell the smoke before they see itâ an unassuming plume that rises from Jennaâs window, belying the danger within. Cries ring out through the Alienages, followed by orders, and soon a line forms through the streets and to the banks of the river. Buckets with water spilling out the sides lead a trail to the danger. The faces of their young are wet with a sheen of sweat and fierce with determination, knowing that if help will come at all, it will come too late.
The fire burns around the water heaped upon it, gathering smoke and rising higher within the walls of Jennaâs home. The work continues, quenching a patch of flame before another can alight. It eats at the roof, thatched straw collapsing to the horrified screams of onlookers.
Then, all at once, it is a memory.
Panicked cries turn to confusion, questions ringing out as harsh as commands while Jenna braves the ashes to salvage what she can of the ruins of her life.
Some swear their last bucketful of water had been the one to quench the flames. Others know what they had seen: it had not simply been put out, it had been suffocated. Erased. Only smoke remains, rising harmless into the midday sky.
It does not take long for rumours of magic to rampage through the Alienage, cooler than the fire, but no less deadly. In the commotion, no one sees the stranger slip from their midst.
No one but Nessa, at least.
Sheâs lived in the Amaranthine Alienage her whole life, and there are few places in it someone can hide from her like. She catches him in an alley, the smell of a storm clings to his tattered clothes despite the bright summerâs day blazing overhead. It had been decades since sheâs last breathed that scent, but sheâll never forget how it raises the hairs in your nostrils. The stranger tenses at her approach, but tellingly doesnât reach for a weapon.
At least, none wielded by traditional means.
âI have no coin,â he tells her in a weary voice, âand little else to my name but the clothes on my back.â
âIâd say you have more than that, ser. A gift I hear only the Maker can give you.â He flinches, ducking his head so his hood hides his face. She steps forward with her hands cupped around her elbows. âYou stopped the fire, didnât you?â
âI donât want to hurt you.âÂ
There it is again, she thinks: the sky, come to touch their little corner of the world.
âNeither do I, but I know some who would.â She smiles, despite the bitter taste that lies on her tongue just from speaking their memory. âYou wonât be safe out here tonight, and I have a roof. Supper, too.â
The stranger regards her from a distance, as though trying to pry the truth from her words with a glance. Not an unfamiliar look. Those sheâs helped before had been just as slow to trust. There are no words in the Kingâs tongue silver enough to undo that damage.
âYouâve been bit before. I understand, but weâre just two people, my husband and I. Out here, you put yourself in the whole cityâs hand.â Nessa moves down the alley. One hand reaches out in welcome. âSo come with me.â
The trip back home is less peaceful than usual. They take the back ways, skirting windows and doors before coming to Nessaâs. If she hadnât lived her whole life, itâd be an easy place to miss. Little adorns the entrance save a potted plant and an awning painted faded yellow. âHere we are,â she says in a sing-song tone, like she were welcoming in any old neighbour.
She ushers him in first, the slide of the lock the sole indication that not all is as it seems.
Inside, the aroma of dinner rises first to meet them. Rosemary and onion overwhelm the senses, drowning out the dust and the dirt. âLooks like itâs pottage for tea,â she remarks. Looking to the stranger, she canât help but smile at how stiffly he stands. âWell, go on then, make yourself at home. Iâll get you a little something to drink.â
âBring home another stray?â her husband asks. Heâs hunched over the pot like an old witch at her cauldron, flyaway grey hairs waving as if they had little minds of their own. They deflate when he looks over and sees who she came home with, cheeks fattening with a little puff of air as he tuts, âOh, Nessa. Weâve talked about this!â
âWhat was I supposed to do, Tal? Edithâs probably got the Templars looking for him already.â Itâs an argument thatâs played out half a dozen times over the last half a decade. She canât rightly say who had won the last one, though from the sigh that comes from the kitchen, sheâll say she can count this one hers. âHalf the quarterâd be up in flames if it werenât for him.â
Her tone softens for the stranger, rounding on him with a pleasant, âhow do you take your tea?â
âWater would be preferable, please,â he answers without a momentâs consideration.
âComing right up, love.â Stepping into their little corner of a kitchen, she adds to her husband: âSee? This oneâs got manners, to boot!â
Talâs response is reduced to a disgruntled huff, attention fixed upon the simmering pot. Like heâs watching the Queenâs dinner cook. Nessa grabs a mug from a peg and tilts it into the clean water, returning to find the stranger had taken her advice. Despite how he hunches in his seat, there is a proud set to his shoulders. His hood drapes around them, revealing a clean shaven head and a severe jaw. A man of some years, but still young to her old eyes.
âSorry about Tal,â she says as she slides into the seat across from him. âHe doesnât mind, really, he has to protest only so he can be right if something ever goes wrong.â
âHis concern is not unwarranted. They will not look kindly upon your aid, should they find me.â He palms the cup, a layer of frost forming under his fingertips.
âWeâve had some close calls, but weâve managed alright in the end.â
âYouâve done this before?â
âOnce or twice. More since the Magesâ Collective have caught wind of my sympathies.â
âDangerous sympathies.â Ice begins to form in a thin film upon the waterâs surface, moved by currents invisible to the eye. He drinks deep from the cup, voice lighter in the wake of it. âIt is a wonder you would trouble yourself at all.â
Nessa smiles, a little pained. âI could say the same of you.â
âPerhaps I speak from a place of regret.â Heâs looking at her again, like heâs trying to read a book. A stubborn line creases his brow, and she suspects heâs come away wanting.
âWell, itâs a shame if you do, though I canât say Iâd blame you either way.â Her fingers find the familiar grooves in the tableâs surface, and work into them, thumb stroking the seam of the wood like an old cat. Pockmarks dot the table where a little hand had driven the prongs of a fork into the surface. Tal had always meant to fix them, but he couldnât bring himself to anymore than she could bring herself to throw out the old toys gathering dust in the closet.
She supposes heâd be about the strangerâs age, now. Taller than her, with his fatherâs dark hair. If it hasnât already started to go white.
Her hand fists on the table. A sigh carves through her chest.
âItâs the way the world is. Nothing the likes of us can do to change it, eh?â
âI would not discount your courage,â he says. âThe world may yet change in our lifetimes.â
âA young manâs hope,â Nessa laughs, âbut Iâll pray for it the same.â