[Being Astarion, the latter is the safest bet... and also the correct one, technically.]
Maybe. [He never asked, ghosts being what they are. The way culture in Thedas tends to deify and villify however it pleases, and how discussing it seemed to hurt. Like nooses and old flames, sometimes the hint of a story is enough.]
One of her allies was for certain— not that I actually blame him, given what I’ve heard of her.
[Well.]
Not that I blame him at all, regardless.
I might enjoy every flavor there is to catalogue, but it’s not as if people get to choose which ones actually melt across their tongues.
[Even so:]
...doesn’t mean I’m thrilled to find myself the odd man out, though. Irony of ironies, and all that.
Go two hundred years seducing people and without feeling a thing, and—
Oui. And the whatever goes on. All that has happened to you, everyone you have met since you arrived—in five years you will have seen five times as much.
[ When he was deep in the muck of unrequited love, he would have loathed anyone who told him there was something better waiting. Doubly if they did it from the perch of a dizzyingly happy relationship. So he's not going to say it. He's only going to imply it. That's much better.
What he would have liked someone to offer him, down in that muck—or on his perch, too, honestly— ]
Tell me about him. Nothing private, I mean, but... What is it that has you so aflutter? The eyes?
A dream he doesn't let himself hope for, and yet wants all the same.]
His eyes, yes. Pretty as they are. [And there's the temptation to leave it at that level precisely. Stick to the figurative shallows of it all: talk about how he's breathtaking to look at, captivating in a fight. The strength of his bridge line or the narrowness of his hips. How his voice thrums when he speaks, so characteristically his own, and unmistakably unique. The little downturned slant to his ears, a little doggish— and entirely precious, compared to the knifing sharpness (ignoring the local terminology) of the ears Astarion possesses and is used to from his life in Toril (not home, anymore).
At first, yes, back when this world was all fresh tracks in untouched snow to his mind, he was drawn to each of those superficial facets with ease, but now...]
I wasn't alone, you know. In enslavement, I mean. Enthrallment. Whatever you want to call it.
My master had countless other spawn at his beck and call, and when he sent me out to hunt for him— as I've mentioned to you before— I was at least able to drown myself for a time in the company of the living. [And soon to be dead.] I knew people. I thought I knew them all, much in the same way I imagine a bard does, too: set your sights on someone, watch them for a time, and their world might as well make itself into an open book.
Usually an ugly one.
And it never bothered me so much that I was a monster when everyone else around me was one too, albeit just a different sort of breed: the rich, the greedy, the callous, the lustful, the utterly, selfishly spoiled— who always will be exactly what they are from the moment they're born till the day they die.
[There are times when he's proud of his fangs. His eyes. His ability to be terrible and terrifying in perfectly equal floes. There are times when he can't stand to look in the mirror, if only because he still sees everything he's lost for good.]
He's different.
And I don't mean because he understands what it is to be so trapped, and I don't mean because he suffered. I've met plenty of others that have in all its varying degrees, and there certainly isn't a shortage here.
When he's beside me, I find myself capable of so much more than I ever thought possible.
[Not better. Not kinder. Not gentler, the way some people insist it's meant to go, where betterment is the only goal of being near someone else, just— ]
[ Is it better or worse, to do this over the sending crystals, where Astarion can't see the way his answer makes Bastien smile? On one hand it might embarrass him, shut him up prematurely; on the other, it would be answer enough on its own, if he saw it. No need to say anything. ]
Good.
[ Since he has to say something. ]
I think that is more than a lot of people ever have.
[It's better, honestly. Not because he can't see the look on Bastien's face, but because of what's said if only to fill otherwise dead air— and how off guard the truth of it catches him.]
...I...
[Hm.]
I suppose you might be right.
[A pause, then, as though determined to switch tack:]
[ All quiet sincerity, for that word. A glimpse of raw beating heart. But then— ]
But I am the luckiest man in all of Thedas. An outlier. Anyone who holds their lives to the standard mine sets will wind up bitter and miserable. You must not do it.
[He doesn't want to laugh at that, you know. It's far, far too easy a joke, and more than that, too rewarding: if he lets Bastien in on just how little it takes to make Astarion snort in earnest, he'll never—
Oh. No. Wait.
He already knows that.
(And besides, Astarion actually is laughing already, so.)]
Right, that's it. I've had all the talk of love and happiness I can stomach. Go on. Shoo.
Get out of here, and go back to winding yourself around the man tighter than his own belt.
[It's warm, for the record, his tone. And don't you dare bring it up.]
no subject
Maybe. [He never asked, ghosts being what they are. The way culture in Thedas tends to deify and villify however it pleases, and how discussing it seemed to hurt. Like nooses and old flames, sometimes the hint of a story is enough.]
One of her allies was for certain— not that I actually blame him, given what I’ve heard of her.
[Well.]
Not that I blame him at all, regardless.
I might enjoy every flavor there is to catalogue, but it’s not as if people get to choose which ones actually melt across their tongues.
[Even so:]
...doesn’t mean I’m thrilled to find myself the odd man out, though. Irony of ironies, and all that.
Go two hundred years seducing people and without feeling a thing, and—
Well.
As you Orlesians say: c’est la whatever.
no subject
Oui. And the whatever goes on. All that has happened to you, everyone you have met since you arrived—in five years you will have seen five times as much.
[ When he was deep in the muck of unrequited love, he would have loathed anyone who told him there was something better waiting. Doubly if they did it from the perch of a dizzyingly happy relationship. So he's not going to say it. He's only going to imply it. That's much better.
What he would have liked someone to offer him, down in that muck—or on his perch, too, honestly— ]
Tell me about him. Nothing private, I mean, but... What is it that has you so aflutter? The eyes?
[ An invitation to gush. ]
no subject
A dream he doesn't let himself hope for, and yet wants all the same.]
His eyes, yes. Pretty as they are. [And there's the temptation to leave it at that level precisely. Stick to the figurative shallows of it all: talk about how he's breathtaking to look at, captivating in a fight. The strength of his bridge line or the narrowness of his hips. How his voice thrums when he speaks, so characteristically his own, and unmistakably unique. The little downturned slant to his ears, a little doggish— and entirely precious, compared to the knifing sharpness (ignoring the local terminology) of the ears Astarion possesses and is used to from his life in Toril (not home, anymore).
At first, yes, back when this world was all fresh tracks in untouched snow to his mind, he was drawn to each of those superficial facets with ease, but now...]
I wasn't alone, you know. In enslavement, I mean. Enthrallment. Whatever you want to call it.
My master had countless other spawn at his beck and call, and when he sent me out to hunt for him— as I've mentioned to you before— I was at least able to drown myself for a time in the company of the living. [And soon to be dead.] I knew people. I thought I knew them all, much in the same way I imagine a bard does, too: set your sights on someone, watch them for a time, and their world might as well make itself into an open book.
Usually an ugly one.
And it never bothered me so much that I was a monster when everyone else around me was one too, albeit just a different sort of breed: the rich, the greedy, the callous, the lustful, the utterly, selfishly spoiled— who always will be exactly what they are from the moment they're born till the day they die.
[There are times when he's proud of his fangs. His eyes. His ability to be terrible and terrifying in perfectly equal floes. There are times when he can't stand to look in the mirror, if only because he still sees everything he's lost for good.]
He's different.
And I don't mean because he understands what it is to be so trapped, and I don't mean because he suffered. I've met plenty of others that have in all its varying degrees, and there certainly isn't a shortage here.
When he's beside me, I find myself capable of so much more than I ever thought possible.
[Not better. Not kinder. Not gentler, the way some people insist it's meant to go, where betterment is the only goal of being near someone else, just— ]
I'm finally at ease.
no subject
Good.
[ Since he has to say something. ]
I think that is more than a lot of people ever have.
[ Even if it isn't everything he wants. ]
no subject
...I...
[Hm.]
I suppose you might be right.
[A pause, then, as though determined to switch tack:]
But maybe not more than what you have, I think.
no subject
[ All quiet sincerity, for that word. A glimpse of raw beating heart. But then— ]
But I am the luckiest man in all of Thedas. An outlier. Anyone who holds their lives to the standard mine sets will wind up bitter and miserable. You must not do it.
no subject
Oh. No. Wait.
He already knows that.
(And besides, Astarion actually is laughing already, so.)]
Right, that's it. I've had all the talk of love and happiness I can stomach. Go on. Shoo.
Get out of here, and go back to winding yourself around the man tighter than his own belt.
[It's warm, for the record, his tone. And don't you dare bring it up.]