Dorian Pavus (
bestdressed) wrote2020-03-01 11:35 pm
(geralt) the sorcerer's soulmate
Geralt of Rivia,
I write to you with utmost urgency, and so will not waste time with pleasantries. Witchers care little for smalltalk anyway, or so I hear. The kingdom of Temeria once again has need of a witcher, and none but you will do.
Some unknown creature has slaughtered a local lord and the entirety of his entourage of knights and servants on the road near the capital, and the squadron which was sent out by the king to find and kill the beast has not returned after nearly a week. One must assume they have met the same fate. The monster left prints of remarkable size in the ground near the site of the first attack, so it would belie that it likely did not take the travelers by surprise. But it is strange that so many of its victims appear to have died without so much as drawing their weapons.
The king is understandably cautious of mysterious and cursed creatures, considering his history. I request that you travel to Vizima with all haste, before more lives are lost. There I will meet with you to discuss the situation, as well as the matter of your payment. Be cautious of the southern road.
Yours,
Dorian Pavus, Magical Advisor to King Foltest of Temeria
-
It has been nearly two weeks since Dorian dispatched the letter by raven, and in that time, the road from Maribor to Vizima has become nigh impassable. Warnings have been issued to take a different route when approaching the capital from the south, but even so, there have been more victims. It is, therefore, a relief to be informed by a runner of the awaited arrival of the witcher he had sent for.
Of course, this is not the only reason Dorian's heart pounds as he pulls a heavy, fur-lined cloak over his shoulders and leather gloves onto his hands as he hurries to meet the witcher by the front gate. In fact, it hardly even comes close. The problem of the unknown monster no doubt requires the attention of a professional, it's true; but that it be Geralt of Rivia specifically is entirely Dorian's design. There is only one reason that Dorian is grateful to have ever set foot in the kingdom of Temeria: it is here that he has finally learned the identity of the man he's been aching to know all his life.
That he is a witcher comes as no surprise. Dorian determined as much himself years ago, given the rate of injury and recovery, and the severity of the wounds that he has apparently lived through. But that he would happen to be the witcher known for lifting the curse on Foltest's daughter five years past--Ada; a sweet girl, if still a bit skittish at times--had been a shock. Dorian had known from the moment the story was related to him; he remembers well the pain of teeth ripping into the tender skin between his neck and shoulder. And so he finally had a name for the man connected to the unseen hurts that have plagued him all his life--pain he's come to both resent and adore. (Though if he's being entirely honest with himself, it's more the latter, if only because it means he exists somewhere: someone just for him. A man who, if soulmates work for sorcerers the same way they do everyone else, is meant to love him.)
"Geralt of Rivia?"
Clutching his cloak around his shoulders, Dorian speaks the name aloud across the quiet courtyard, a note of hopeful anticipation in the inflection of his voice. Several yards away, a man stands beside his horse, armored and broad-shouldered with a shock of white hair and a pair of swords on his back, facing away from Dorian. Already, Dorian knows it must be him, as he feels an ebbing of the pain he has lived with for decades. It fades more with each passing moment, the dull aches and strains and old, smarting hurts that accompany years spent in the dangerous monster-hunting trade. Dorian knows them intimately; knows this man intimately.
He could trace the scars on his body from memory, though he has never seen his face.
I write to you with utmost urgency, and so will not waste time with pleasantries. Witchers care little for smalltalk anyway, or so I hear. The kingdom of Temeria once again has need of a witcher, and none but you will do.
Some unknown creature has slaughtered a local lord and the entirety of his entourage of knights and servants on the road near the capital, and the squadron which was sent out by the king to find and kill the beast has not returned after nearly a week. One must assume they have met the same fate. The monster left prints of remarkable size in the ground near the site of the first attack, so it would belie that it likely did not take the travelers by surprise. But it is strange that so many of its victims appear to have died without so much as drawing their weapons.
The king is understandably cautious of mysterious and cursed creatures, considering his history. I request that you travel to Vizima with all haste, before more lives are lost. There I will meet with you to discuss the situation, as well as the matter of your payment. Be cautious of the southern road.
Yours,
Dorian Pavus, Magical Advisor to King Foltest of Temeria
-
It has been nearly two weeks since Dorian dispatched the letter by raven, and in that time, the road from Maribor to Vizima has become nigh impassable. Warnings have been issued to take a different route when approaching the capital from the south, but even so, there have been more victims. It is, therefore, a relief to be informed by a runner of the awaited arrival of the witcher he had sent for.
Of course, this is not the only reason Dorian's heart pounds as he pulls a heavy, fur-lined cloak over his shoulders and leather gloves onto his hands as he hurries to meet the witcher by the front gate. In fact, it hardly even comes close. The problem of the unknown monster no doubt requires the attention of a professional, it's true; but that it be Geralt of Rivia specifically is entirely Dorian's design. There is only one reason that Dorian is grateful to have ever set foot in the kingdom of Temeria: it is here that he has finally learned the identity of the man he's been aching to know all his life.
That he is a witcher comes as no surprise. Dorian determined as much himself years ago, given the rate of injury and recovery, and the severity of the wounds that he has apparently lived through. But that he would happen to be the witcher known for lifting the curse on Foltest's daughter five years past--Ada; a sweet girl, if still a bit skittish at times--had been a shock. Dorian had known from the moment the story was related to him; he remembers well the pain of teeth ripping into the tender skin between his neck and shoulder. And so he finally had a name for the man connected to the unseen hurts that have plagued him all his life--pain he's come to both resent and adore. (Though if he's being entirely honest with himself, it's more the latter, if only because it means he exists somewhere: someone just for him. A man who, if soulmates work for sorcerers the same way they do everyone else, is meant to love him.)
"Geralt of Rivia?"
Clutching his cloak around his shoulders, Dorian speaks the name aloud across the quiet courtyard, a note of hopeful anticipation in the inflection of his voice. Several yards away, a man stands beside his horse, armored and broad-shouldered with a shock of white hair and a pair of swords on his back, facing away from Dorian. Already, Dorian knows it must be him, as he feels an ebbing of the pain he has lived with for decades. It fades more with each passing moment, the dull aches and strains and old, smarting hurts that accompany years spent in the dangerous monster-hunting trade. Dorian knows them intimately; knows this man intimately.
He could trace the scars on his body from memory, though he has never seen his face.

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"Bodies were recovered without incident?" he asks as he looks around. He studies the carts, examines the damage to determine if it was front beast or accident as horses and men panicked. He crouches down and pulls a tiny tuft of hair from a piece of split wood.
"No one reported seeing anything?"
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It's interesting to watch Geralt work, actually. He uncovers things that Dorian and his team hadn't even bothered to look for, intent as they were on getting in and out with the corpses as quickly as possible.
"There was no one to report back. They were all killed."
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"Don't still have them, do you?"
The bodies. He's asking about the weeks-old bodies. He knows they've probably been given funerary rites by now or otherwise disposed of, but it's worth asking.
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Surprise flickers visibly across Dorian's face. What would Geralt hope to do with corpses that long dead? "They've been cremated," he says, in the sort of flat tone that implies it should be obvious. "They weren't in any fit state for preservation. Or anything else, really."
As that doesn't give Geralt much to go on, he adds, "I saw them myself. Any that weren't in full plate were torn to shreds or crushed. There were tracks of some sort, too, the last time I was here, but nothing that seemed familiar to me. The attack occurred after several days of rain. The ground was muddy, and one of the wagons was stuck. I would guess that they got caught out while trying to free it."
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The witcher strokes a hand over her velvety nose.
"I know," he murmurs to the horse. "Roach always takes some breaking in, too."
Torn to shreds, crushed, tracks. He moves away to start looking for said tracks, and when he picks them up, he crouches down again to examine them. Geralt stands again and follows them for a few paces, but stops short of approaching the woods.
Seeming to have made up his mind about something, he returns to Roach and mount up again.
"Need to prepare some things. I'll come back out tomorrow."
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He holds his tongue as Geralt investigates further, somehow finding the weeks-old tracks. Even knowing where they'd been, they aren't apparent to Dorian any longer, but Geralt picks up the trail quickly. It's remarkable.
"That seems best," Dorian agrees as Geralt swings back up into the saddle. The sun is sinking swiftly. "What do you need?"
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If worst comes, he can work in the courtyard. He'd rather be somewhere he won't be bothered by stable boys and guardsmen. Geralt turns them back down the road toward Vizima.
"I can work outside if need be. As long as the brew won't be bothered."
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If they make good time, they can probably be within city limits again by nightfall. The trees around them look so much more ominous at dusk now, knowing that something huge and dangerous lurks nearby.
"Well," Dorian corrects himself, "I might bother you a bit. I'm rather curious about witcher oils and decoctions."
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"You're free to ask. As long as you don't try to touch or imbibe anything."
He would feel bad if he managed to kill Foltest's advisor.
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The two of them ride side by side on the return to Vizima, and Dorian finds it rather comfortable. Geralt is entirely new to him still, but he doesn't feel like a stranger. Truly, it feels like he's known him for a long time--and in a way, he has. There are parts of Geralt, he would wager, that he knows better than anyone.
It is dark by the time they pass the castle gates, and Dorian is frozen to his very bones. He's visibly stiff as he dismounts, and clutches his cloak close about him as he hands his horse off to a stablehand.
"I could show you to your room first," Dorian offers, "but something tell me that you would rather get straight to work."
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He nods toward the door they'd come through on their way out and follows Dorian once he heads inside. Geralt pays attention this time to the twists and turns they take.
"You do a lot of alchemy for Foltest?"
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"I do as much as he requires." Given Dorian's dismissive tone, it isn't much. "For the most part, I do it for myself. I have plenty of research of my own, and thankfully both the time and the resources to conduct it."
He leads Geralt back to his study, where a door on the opposite side of the room leads to a larger, though far less comfortable space. This is where Dorian does his practical work, clearly. Equipment for alchemy and more innately magical crafts--the distinctly Ofieri practice of runewriting, for one--are laid out across various benches, with open books and half scribbled on papers scattered throughout. It isn't organized, but it's clean, at least, as a magical workroom should be.
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After taking stock of the room, Geralt finds a relatively empty work bench to start setting out vials, jars, bottles, and herbs.
"Need to be able to render this down," he says absently as he starts to take off the swords belts strapped around his chest. No sense in keeping them on while he works. He takes off his heavy hunting gloves as well and replaces them with a thinner pair. He pauses to check his decoctions, considering whether he should make more of any of them.
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Without his heavy cloak across his shoulders and the cold air in his lungs freezing him from the inside out, Dorian feels lighter, freer--bolder. He steps closer to Geralt, near enough to touch. But he isn't quite that bold.
"Is there anything else you'll require? Dinner, perhaps, before you begin?" Geralt hasn't eaten since he arrived hours ago, and he's been on the road. He must be hungry. "I can send for it."
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It occurs to him that he hasn't eaten since that morning. He'd too focused after getting here to dig up a snack or something to tide him over and now he's about to start alchemical processes which will require his attention.
Dorian is close. Close enough that when Geralt turns his head, the only scents he can catch are the mage's: spice, pomade, citrus, something very faintly floral, musk. He holds back a quiet groan. He's always liked people that take care of themselves, or maybe those that have a small preoccupation with it. It always pays off, as far as he can tell.
He huffs a quiet breath and tries to clear his head. There is absolutely no good that could possibly come of sweeping things off any of the tables in here.
Though... there's always the wall.
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What would it sound like? His name in Geralt's voice?
He'll find out, he assures himself. He'll know what all of these things are like, eventually. He must. Geralt is meant to be his. It's astounding, still, to have him right here in front of him, close enough to touch, after all these years.
"I'll...I'll call for a meal to be brought up for us both," he says, too haltingly. With true reluctance, he steps back several paces, and then turns and retreats back through the open door to the study.
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He realizes it's starting to fade, though. Not because the injury itself has healed, though, something like that would surely bruise. He frowns and looks down at his hips, eyebrows drawn together as Dorian comes back into the room. Geralt looks up when the mage appears.
The closer he gets, the less Geralt feels.
Oh.
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But he has more immediate concerns. He wonders, with a lurch in hi stomach, if the two of them are far enough away that Geralt actually felt it. Probably so, or at least some of it. But will he notice? If he does, will he put it together--and what will his reaction be?
There's little to do but return to him and find out.
Dorian crosses the threshold into the workroom, once again leaving the door to the study open behind him. He doesn't rub at the spot on his hip, though it still smarts fiercely. Geralt is already watching him. Does he know?
He stops several paces away, looking closely at the witcher's face. His expression, predictably, conveys nothing. "Geralt?" He says his name softly, uncertainly--perhaps a little hopefully.
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He asks in the same, unaffected voice as ever, but his eyes are intent on Dorian. There are times that Geralt has felt cursed or let down by his inability to really express emotion with tone, but now he finds himself grateful for the excuse. He doesn't want to be wrong - doesn't think he is - but there's plenty of reason to approach this with some caution.
Geralt just assumed that--that this whole thing somehow stopped once he became a witcher. Whatever pains Dorian endured, at some point Geralt must have simply taken them for his own, even if he could find no explanation in the moment.
Why would a witcher still have a soulmate? Most people believed he didn't have a soul to begin with.
Though, he supposes enough people think the same way of sorcerers.
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He doesn't come any closer, but remains hovering halfway between Geralt and the door. He considers playing dumb a little longer; laughing it off with an assumption that Geralt must have heard him cursing. But that will only delay the inevitable. This has to be addressed. And despite their connection, he steels himself for rejection. Romantic tales about soulmates are fine, but how does the concept hold up in reality? Is he really Geralt's perfect match?
"It'll be a nasty bruise," he says, clearly unsurprised by the question. "But you know that, yes?"
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Geralt isn't sure what to say. Normally his stoicism covers social awkwardness just fine, but it's just the two of them here and there is no escaping he knowledge now. So he lowers his gaze - something that might be charmingly bashful in anyone else - and considers the things he has on the work bench.
"I didn't think witchers could still--" He pauses, reconsidering his words. Geralt finds himself wondering if Dorian is disappointed or appalled. "Sorry for uh... all this."
He gestures at his own body, referencing the multitude of injuries he's endured over the years.
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"You should be sorry. It hasn't exactly been pleasant." It's the truth, and he's cursed Geralt many times for the number of severe injuries he's sustained. "I've known for years that you must be a witcher. There wasn't any other explanation for how you could be hurt so frequently, let alone survive everything I felt."
Carefully, Dorian takes a few more steps toward the bench, though he doesn't want to crowd Geralt, especially if he needs more time to process this. Does he not want to look at him now that he knows?
"But still, I've..." Dorian's hand rests against the table, fingers curling around the edge. He's far from disappointed or appalled. He's hesitant only because he worries that he may not be what Geralt expected. "I've wanted to meet you for so long."
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Or Dorian simply hasn't had the need or desire to be in any kind of combat. Geralt offers the smallest tick of a smile.
He isn't upset or displeased, merely surprised, and the witcher generally doesn't like surprises. But this one isn't unpleasant.
Slowly, Geralt pulls his gloves off. He offers a bare hand to the mage.
"Nice to meet you, Dorian. I hope I'm not a disappointment."
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"Your idea of what constitutes a joke is disappointing, perhaps," he says archly as he peels his own glove off and sets it aside. "But despite everything, I'm rather pleased with the rest." Finally--finally, because he's waited most of his life for this--he puts his hand in Geralt's and closes his fingers around it.
He wasn't certain what to expect, but there is an immediate and palpable sense of connection--like a piece finally sliding into place, completing a part of himself that he hadn't known was incomplete. Geralt's hands are rough where his own are soft, but Dorian knows intimately how those callouses were formed. He knows the nicks and cuts and scratches on the knuckles that he smooths his thumb over. It's almost surreal.
"It helped me a great deal, you know," he says quietly, "just to know that you existed. That you were real. There were times when I needed that."
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"Did you know who I was?" he asks, curious now.
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