Dorian Pavus (
bestdressed) wrote2020-04-07 08:14 pm
blood & wine (geralt)
A summer night in Antiva City is nearly as warm and fragrant as a spring evening in Minrathous. Standing in the midst of the villa's outdoor garden terrace surrounded by night blooming flowers and the press of silk-clad bodies and the scent of free-flowing wine, with the sea breeze off the Rialto Bay, Dorian is reminded enough of home so as to feel a pang of longing without the trappings of actually being in Tevinter. Antivan soirees have the potential to turn out as dangerous as Tevinter ones, but rarely do. The constant warring of the twelve merchant princes has nothing on the daily infighting and petty one-upsmanship of the Magisterium. But Antiva does have the better assassins, Dorian will give them that.
Tonight, however, he's being used as little more than a convenient decorator and a topic of conversation. The magical lights twinkling in the trees around the gardens are his doing, and the guests simply can't stop asking his benefactor how his court was assigned an altus mage of Tevinter. The truth is, of course, that his position here has very little to do with being officially appointed by any organization of mages or sorcerers, and more with being hired for his skills in return for a comfortable life away from the Imperium and the space and funds with which to do his magical research. It stings a little, of course, having to answer to Adrian Mercurio, a merchant prince and therefore an upjumped businessman, but at least no one here is trying to drag him back to his father, and absolutely no one cares who he sleeps with beyond idle gossip. The Antivans are a passionate people, and restrict little when it comes to sex or romance.
A peacock among a crowd of other exotic birds, Dorian still stands out. He is unapologetically Tevinter in the way he dresses and styles himself, from the kohl lining his eyes and gold dust on his lids to the scent he wears (cloves and orange blossom oil dabbed on his pulse points) to his robes, ivory linen with designs of feathers and serpents in spun gold, a high collar and an entirely bare left arm from the shoulder down. On his feet are soft sandals rather than heavy boots in deference to the weather, and his long fingers are decorated with jeweled rings. The picture of Tevinter decadence, and entirely out of place among the brightly dyed silken doublets and puffed sleeves and plumed hats and heavy necklaces preferred by the Antivans.
He does only the requisite socializing, and regrettably keeps his drinking to a single glass of wine. The purpose of this soiree is not, after all, merely to celebrate the success of recent business ventures, or to network, or even to display Mercurio's wealth. It's to reveal (and to slay) a monster in their midst, and it is apparently Dorian's purpose to facilitate this with the witcher they've hired, for whom he keeps a careful eye. It is, of course, nearly impossible not to be mildly distracted by thoughts of the last witcher he'd encountered, over a year ago now. That had been a pleasant meeting. Dorian isn't certain whether he's relieved or disappointed that Mercurio had specifically elected not to hire Geralt of Rivia; he wanted a monster slayer, he said, not a butcher. But surely there are so many other witchers on both the northern and southern continents that the chances that Geralt would answer this particular ad were slim anyway.
Which is why he freezes when he looks across the gathering and meets a pair of familiar yellow eyes by the trellis archway leading from the gardens to the main house
Tonight, however, he's being used as little more than a convenient decorator and a topic of conversation. The magical lights twinkling in the trees around the gardens are his doing, and the guests simply can't stop asking his benefactor how his court was assigned an altus mage of Tevinter. The truth is, of course, that his position here has very little to do with being officially appointed by any organization of mages or sorcerers, and more with being hired for his skills in return for a comfortable life away from the Imperium and the space and funds with which to do his magical research. It stings a little, of course, having to answer to Adrian Mercurio, a merchant prince and therefore an upjumped businessman, but at least no one here is trying to drag him back to his father, and absolutely no one cares who he sleeps with beyond idle gossip. The Antivans are a passionate people, and restrict little when it comes to sex or romance.
A peacock among a crowd of other exotic birds, Dorian still stands out. He is unapologetically Tevinter in the way he dresses and styles himself, from the kohl lining his eyes and gold dust on his lids to the scent he wears (cloves and orange blossom oil dabbed on his pulse points) to his robes, ivory linen with designs of feathers and serpents in spun gold, a high collar and an entirely bare left arm from the shoulder down. On his feet are soft sandals rather than heavy boots in deference to the weather, and his long fingers are decorated with jeweled rings. The picture of Tevinter decadence, and entirely out of place among the brightly dyed silken doublets and puffed sleeves and plumed hats and heavy necklaces preferred by the Antivans.
He does only the requisite socializing, and regrettably keeps his drinking to a single glass of wine. The purpose of this soiree is not, after all, merely to celebrate the success of recent business ventures, or to network, or even to display Mercurio's wealth. It's to reveal (and to slay) a monster in their midst, and it is apparently Dorian's purpose to facilitate this with the witcher they've hired, for whom he keeps a careful eye. It is, of course, nearly impossible not to be mildly distracted by thoughts of the last witcher he'd encountered, over a year ago now. That had been a pleasant meeting. Dorian isn't certain whether he's relieved or disappointed that Mercurio had specifically elected not to hire Geralt of Rivia; he wanted a monster slayer, he said, not a butcher. But surely there are so many other witchers on both the northern and southern continents that the chances that Geralt would answer this particular ad were slim anyway.
Which is why he freezes when he looks across the gathering and meets a pair of familiar yellow eyes by the trellis archway leading from the gardens to the main house

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His body slips against Dorian's as if they were meant to fit together, as if they should have been this way since the beginning of the party, Geralt's thigh between the mage's, chests together, hands up to hold. He kisses, nips at Dorian's lower lip even as he talks. Yes, distracting. He's not the only one. The fingers prickle against his scalp, warm. Geralt's hands slide around Dorian's neck, thumbs tracing the lines of his jaw that he'd followed a moment before. He kisses Dorian again, kisses the words from his mouth. It takes a moment to do anything more than give into this, to let himself taste and indulge. A year. For a year he'd made himself think of anything but this and now it feels impossible. How did he manage?
"We need to find a monster," he finally breaths, putting them temple to temple if taking their mouths out of line might stop what has been started. He can still smell Dorian. The close shave of the mage's hair against Geralt's cheek is sandpaper, fine and electric. "I can't-- we need to focus." He's not helping, he knows. But he also knows that he's been hired to do a job and he has to see it through.
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That is what he wants to believe, at least. But one cannot subsist on the taste of another's lips, no matter how enticing. Geralt is what he wants, not what he needs, however romantic that sounds. And Dorian is a romantic, no matter how many layers of skepticism and pessimism and personal heartbreak he buries it beneath. But he is also a pragmatist, and he is also reluctantly invested in making sure that innocent people aren't killed, even if they are the sort of people he despises.
So when Geralt manages to break away, Dorian doesn't stop him, and he doesn't seek his lips again, no matter how much he aches to. He catches his breath, and knows that Geralt can probably feel the flush heat in his face where their cheeks brush. It puts Geralt's voice directly in his ear, and the grit of it sinks deep and settles near the base of his spine. Why does everything about this man drive him mad?
"Of course," he agrees, and hears the reluctance in his voice, though he hadn't meant to sound that way. He disentangles his hands from Geralt's hair, and then does his best to smooth it down again without looking. Holding one another like this, temple to temple, they could almost be dancing. Which reminds Dorian of what he had wanted to explain. "I meant to say--" he begins, but no, he can't do it like this. His hands find Geralt's waist, resting there as he leans back far enough to look into his face. It doesn't make him want to kiss him any less, but but it does make talking easier, when it doesn't feel like he's whispering sweet nothings. "I meant--kaffas, just say that you're here with me. No one will assume I've hired you to kill a monster."
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Less soft. Less warm. Less tempting.
He settles for the man's forearms and exhales, long and slows as he considers possibilities other than leaving this entire country to the sea and the monsters who want it. Geralt isn't sure if this-- them, he and Dorian and this ridiculous inability to keep his hands off of the man-- is a problem or not yet but whatever it is he knows it to be less pressing than the creature that could be preying on this family. If the bruxa finds purchase she will dig in like a burr, catching more and more of the large merchant clan until she has a nest. An army. No matter how much he'd rather see where else on his body Dorian might have put that golden powder, he can't let that happen and the devil take it all.
So Geralt takes one step back, and then manages another, until there is space between them and then one more to force Dorian's hands to drop away even as he removes his own. "A sword is a sword, Dorian, and a silver one more damning still. No man's reputation can save me from what I am." It is bluntly offered, but not intended it to be harsh. He pulls a hand over his mouth with another exhale. Not taking his things isn't to be considered, at this point. He would not be in the same room as a bruxa without them. "Is there somewhere we could go to watch and not be noticed?" It might be harder to get an accurate reading on her but the price any other way might be too costly.
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Folding his arms together, each hand clasping the opposite elbow, Dorian wills himself to focus on the matter at hand rather than the man in front of him. The back-and-forth of his feelings--hope and desire followed by rational denial, like the rocking of a boat--is making him feel vaguely seasick. But he isn't so distracted that he can't realize the advantages of watching unseen rather than returning to the party directly. Thank the Maker for that. "There is a terrace that overlooks the garden. We'll be able to see everything that goes on below from there."
He manages a small smile, little more than a twist of his lips. "Mercurio doesn't truly need to know you're here until things are taken care of. Better to ask forgiveness than permission." Of course he'll be in trouble for that, but he's prepared. Whatever is between them, the fact remains that he'd rather be doing this with Geralt than anyone else.
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And here they stand. And so, fine. So much for prudence, so much for setting things wanted to the side in favor of logic; he has tried reaction and temperance and this is the result? Geralt is not a man who does the same things to the same result over and again and asks why nothing has changed. This time he will not push away.
The decision lets his chest expand fully for the first time since catching grey eyes across the party. It makes Dorian's closeness easier to bear, the cloves and loam that have Geralt half-mad with urges to simply act on baser instincts. By giving himself the option to indulge later, however-- assuming, of course, that Dorian agrees and this is not all some mad orbit in which they'll both die circling each other-- helps him control himself now. The bruxa is the problem at hand and must be dealt with now; undressing the Tevinter sorcerer and pressing him against the nearest available surface will wait until later.
Geralt does not deny the possibility of how much more pleasant the act might be when their fuses are wound short and tight from the simple act of forbearance.
His lips twitch at the corner into something like amusement at the adage from Dorian; he tends to agree, especially in this regard-- Geralt has generally found that people like Mercurio forgive more easily than they give concession, even when the necks of family members are on the line. "Then let's go set up on the terrace. Lead the way."
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Funny and quite telling, really, that he should think testing the bond between them riskier than hunting a bruxa, despite all of Geralt's warnings about the creature.
"All right," he murmurs, and double-checks his staff's harness before turning toward the door. He isn't going to touch Geralt again until this is over, he resolves. Or at least not like that. "Come on, then." With a gesture, Dorian extinguishes the candles in the room, and all goes dark.
He leads the way out, pausing to lock the door again behind him with a whispered spell, the air charged for a moment before it dissipates. He keeps to the back hallways. It's a more roundabout route, but it keeps them from crossing paths with any party guests. They climb a narrow stair at one point, and then cross a landing to pass through a heavy door. They emerge into the garden again, though not the part of it that's been lit up and decorated. They're a level above, but the voices and music are loud on the still night air. There is a clearly marked path to a patio a little way ahead, surrounded by flowering plants and trees thick with hanging fruit. But Dorian steps deliberately off the path, ducking beneath branches and parting thick, leafy plants to push his way through.
"We'll be able to see everything through the trees up here," he murmurs, keeping his voice down. There's little chance they'll be overheard by the guests above the music and revelry below, but Geralt had told him plenty about a bruxa's enhanced senses. The caution is warranted.
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Necromancy.
Shaking his head at the though, Geralt follows the man down the hall, happy to leave the pressure of the magic behind him. He shrugs his shoulders slightly as if discarding a jacket. Through the corridors and stairwells they go-- Dorian has clearly been here long enough to know the layout of the villa, Geralt is glad to find out. He wonders if Mercurio could go through the servant's routes with such surety. The scant handful of people that they see on their way all wear the livery of the house and most are carrying sheets or food stuffs; after a glance, they are ignored. The sounds of the party are a little jarring when they step outside, especially after what had happened in Dorian's room, but Geralt focuses and follows, ducking into the thick foliage as the mage does, finally taking a knee in a spot that gives him a good view of the revelry below: including Mercurio and his wife. Finally, for a moment, he gives his attention back to Dorian.
"Good." His voice is as low as Dorian's, though without a witcher's senses it might just sound like a whisper of thunder. "Point her out when they come in and we will see." There's a strange thought, that maybe she's just a woman. That's not the strangeness; it's the relief that the job would be over, were that the case. No killing, no money-- just Dorian.
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He concentrates on finding something familiar. Mercurio and his wife are somewhere to start, and looking at them returns some degree of focus to him. From there he flits face to face, guest to guest, from one jewel-toned velveteen dress to the next. The woman he seeks is tall and thin, almost angular, dark chestnut hair and pale skin, a thin face with prominent cheekbones; pretty, but sharp.
It's good that they hadn't attempted to return to the party, because he finds her far more quickly than he'd expected to. A chill moves through him when he recognizes Anetta, a disorienting lurch of surprise. He'd been looking for her, but hadn't expected to actually find her. Not yet.
"Geralt, she's already here," he whispers urgently. "She must have arrived while we were--" Otherwise occupied. No need to expand on that. He swallows--too loud with a suddenly dry throat--then continues with something more helpful. "Beside the fountain, the tall woman with dark hair dressed in emerald green. The man beside her in gold is Valentin, Mercurio's brother." The two of them stand shoulder to shoulder, she nearly as tall as her husband. She's silent while he talks with another man, holding a glass of wine in her hand like a prop rather than drinking it.
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Between the two of them, it's far easier to find Anetta. Next to her pale beauty, haloed by the wreath of her almost-blue hair, Valentin is wan and forgettable. She's not even looking up in their direction and Geralt can feel something tighten in his belly as she smiles at the man her husband speaks to, the expression full of charm and something else, a sort of craving. The man blinks at her and smiles back. "Not an alpor," he murmurs to himself. The tips of her bare ears are rounded. "Shit. I don't know." From here Geralt certainly could say that something about the woman is off, and that he has learned to trust his gut, but his gut is not conclusive evidence.
"Best way to know would be to get silver near her. How do we get her alone?"
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"She's hardly ever away from Valentin," he sighs. "But surely something could force her to separate. A threat? A potential victim? A mysterious note? Come to the upper terrace, you are in danger. That should work out well." He speaks with obvious sarcasm, but now that he's said it aloud the suggestion may have some merit. Curiously he glances from Geralt to Anetta, who is laughing for all intents and purposes like any other woman.
"Have you ever had a creature like this go peacefully?" He asks. "After being discovered?" Dorian shifts, bracing a hand against the garden wall separating the two of them from the drop onto the lower level. He looks to Geralt with bright, keen eyes. "Or is that not worthwhile, assuming they'll simply..." He waves his other hand, a swish of his wrist both vague and dismissive. "Do the same thing again somewhere else?"
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Geralt snorts quietly for Dorian's sarcasm but doesn't turn his attention from the woman below them on the patio, watching how she laughs with her chin down and her eyes open, until the mage asks his set of questions with moral implications. Geralt lets his eyes fall to the grass and then raises them to Dorian slowly. He wonders if the man asks out of genuine curiosity or because of the witcher's reputation-- certainly the same that had kept his name from the Antivian contract originally.
"There are many types of vampires--" that Geralt begins to decide there is perhaps exactly the type of flag that Mercurio had considered when penning his request, "--and they've all adapted since the Conjunction." Killing anything with intelligence is always a tightrope's walk and while bruxae are generally hardly better than feral, out of all of the creatures that prey upon people, vampires have changed the most based on their association with humans. So could this bruxa not have evolved enough to fit in amongst these jumped up caravan smugglers? He imagines that it's possible. "Or," he says with a flattening of lips, "you have a higher vampire and Mercurio will just have to get used to his new sister-in-law's strange drinking habits."
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Perhaps now isn't the time for lighthearted joking--no, it certainly isn't--but turning to humor and mockery in serious situations is a Dorian Pavus staple. Still, his mind is working all the while toward a real solution. A feeling of danger--yes, he can produce that artificially, and very effectively.
"I can cast a spell," he ventures, "that is likely to make her break away from everyone else. But I can't control where she goes or what she chooses to do. If we need to get silver near her, we'll have to pursue that dependent upon how she reacts."
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Geralt considers, turning to look back through the railing and down at the party. "Have you ever seen her reflection?" It's almost an idle question as he studies the luminescent woman again. She stands just far enough from the fountain as to miss the surface of the water-- coincidence or luck? He realizes that he hadn't really answered Dorian's question about letting a bruxa go. He rubs his chin with the back of his hand. "And, no," he offers belatedly, on the heels of his question. "If it is a bruxa, then she won't go... peacefully." He sighs. "So long as your spell doesn't harm her, what will it do?" To have her parted from Valentin would be a good place to start. It would give them time if nothing else.
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"She won't be harmed," he explains. "It's a more concentrated version of the spell I described earlier. It will effect her alone and levy a specific fear. If it works on the way it does on humans, she'll feel suddenly suspicious of large crowds and seek to isolate herself as quickly as possible." His fingers drum against the low wall in front of him. "The trouble is that I have no idea where she'll go."
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"Which means that we include Valentin. Or." Geralt turns his gaze back to Dorian. He might not know much about his companion but he does understand some of his control and strength with magic, enough, certainly, to know that the man does not need protection-- no matter how much the strange feeling that curls into the pit of his stomach demands otherwise. His yellow eyes are steady on the man at his side. "Or we use live bait." Either of the new suggestions puts Dorian closer to the line of fire; it is just a matter of degrees. He is open to other possibilities.
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"You're the witcher," he says softly, and meets Geralt's eyes with a smile, carelessly fond. "I'll defer to your expertise. But I would make excellent bait. As you well know, I'm incredibly appealing." Regardless of the situation, his capacity for playful flirtation hasn't diminished in the least. With slightly more weight he asks, "How can I help?"
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The weighted question is neatly sidestepped for just a moment as Geralt moves past it and suddenly Dorian is hemmed back against the tree behind him, one of Geralt's palms just above his shoulder against bark and his knee planted against the man's hip. The witcher is a breath away from lips, hanging there. "I do know," he says, a quiet, charged rumble between them. There is a fight going on inside of himself because his intention in moving was to kiss Dorian but remembering himself before that happened, he settled for words. They don't feel like enough. Now it's awkward.
Geralt pulls away, slowly, body first and then eyes. "Will anyone look askance at you if you walk into the party with your staff?" Fingers push into one of the small pouches at his belt and pull out a small circular trinket that glows in the fairy lights in the trees-- a coin the exact size of a gold crown, though lighter since it is cast entirely in silver. It is held out for Dorian to take. His pulse begins to even out again. "It will be easier to use this than to try and trick her into stepping somewhere to reveal her reflection. Touch her with it, hand it to her... if she's a bruxa she'll react to it, though it might be subtle. I'll be watching. Then-- I think, considering your position here with the court, it would be easier to move Valentin. Anetta will come as well." Geralt could follow without being seen.
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Weak to temptation, he might have drawn Geralt into a kiss himself. But he hesitates a moment too long, and Geralt eases away, like a serpent cautiously recoiling. Dorian pushes himself away from the tree behind him, breathing in deeply. Loam and overripe fruit. Geralt had told him once that he smelled like that. It isn't an unpleasant scent, though more natural than he would prefer.
"A mage like myself can carry his staff where he wishes. What they'll look askance at is the mud on my robes. But even that isn't inexplicable." He accepts the silver coin from Geralt, though his fingers linger against his palm. "I can do that, Geralt. Just stay close. I'm not certain what sort of reaction to look for."
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It is unnerving, the simple acceptance of a concept so alien to what his life has been up until now. Like the coin left in Dorian's fingers that feeling is a small, cold thing, quick to catch the light. Better to tuck it away and deal with it only as necessary.
"Can you--" Geralt wets his lips. He dislikes anyone being in his head but he understands the efficiency of such magic-- still, the question sits heavy on his tongue. Are Necromancers even taught telepathy? "Do you have a way we can speak when we're at a distance?"
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Still, it's reassuring to know that Geralt is invested in keeping him from harm. Having someone reliable at one's back can't be taken for granted, especially in the capital city of the country that prides itself on housing the most infamous guild of assassins in Thedas. He realizes how certain he is that he can count on Geralt's help should he need it. Which brings him to the crux of the matter.
"I can and do, naturally." And the prospect of doing so is actually rather exciting. He doesn't have much occasion to use telepathy. His attention flits from the flash of Geralt's tongue over his lips to the almost luminescent pair of yellow eyes trained on him. "You're prepared to trust me with that sort of magic?"
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He supposes that is the real question, the answer to which they will soon learn together.
Geralt has had mages use him before and has lived to tell the tale. He doesn't believe and doesn't want to believe that this will be one of those times but there is a part of tonight and meeting Dorian again that is so outside his range of understanding as to be relegated to instinct alone. He watches the storm of Dorian's eyes watch him. "Please don't make me regret it," he adds, voice low and far, far too crowded with something he doesn't quite have a name for.
Specific movement from below catches attention only because it is born of a lifetime and Geralt peels away from the mage's gaze with a reluctance that is written all over his face before he can push it back. Anetta and Valentin are moving, slowly. He pulls food from a tray, she returns her wine to another. From this angle Geralt can see that it is still full. He turns back to Dorian. "Go."
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But no matter how oddly certain he is of that, he is well aware that the only way to prove this is by doing. So he doesn't answer with anything more than a nod. Unstrapping his staff from his back, he uses it to get to his feet, crouching for a moment before ducking beneath the branches. The foliage is thick enough that he loses sight of Geralt long before he steps onto the path again.
A silent command causes the focus crystal on his staff to give off a soft white light, like a miniature reflection of the moon hanging high overhead. Before he gets too far away, he preforms the spell to link their minds. He speaks aloud under his breath, and without his usual flair. Even spoken quietly, the words resonate with power. It's dizzying at first as he is suddenly forced to sort through a second person's thoughts in addition to his own. He breathes in the fragrant garden air slowly and clutches his staff as the initial wave of nausea passes.
Geralt?
He directs the question pointedly to the witcher. This isn't a two-way connection; Geralt can't read his mind in return.
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It is never pleasant, as far as he is concerned. Fingers rub at his jaw because he knows the itch at his forehead is imagined.
I'm here. He moves closer to the railing now, watching below. Geralt's surface thoughts are ordered, neat, and as sparse as the man himself. The darkness and turmoil that compromise the base of him would have to be dug for and that would stand, certainly, as a breach of trust. They're moving toward the music. Perhaps you might ask her to dance. Dry, oh dry. It could be that, mentally, Geralt's humor is just a little more clear.
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You think I won't? I'm an excellent dancer. Dorian meets Geralt's humor with his own, smiling to himself in the dark. That tone and feeling carry through so clearly like this that he can imagine the slight twitch of Geralt's lips, the angle of his brows.
Rather than taking the long route through the house, Dorian returns to the party by way of an outdoor stair to the lower terrace. He reappears through the trees ringing the patio, and it's almost as though he never left. The magical lights he'd strung through the trees still emit a soft glow, the guests glitter, and the stench of sweat and wine and clashing perfume overpower the natural botanical scent of the rest of the garden. It's dizzying and his stomach lurches unpleasantly. Except--that's odd. It hadn't smelled nearly so strongly to him earlier. A side effect of his magic? Perhaps giving him some small taste of what Geralt normally experiences? It's so unexpected and bizarre that he stops short, leaning a little on his staff. He's never shared this much in a connection like this before, intentionally or otherwise. How is Geralt so different?
I understand why you aren't partial to events like this. I can barely breathe.
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After a moment he realizes that it's not only the ivory robe that is distracting; there is a faintest of echoes, as if his keen ears are picking up the clatter of the party revels from two distinct points. One is muted enough that he has to strain to hear it, but hear it he does. Odd. When Dorian speaks up again, Geralt's head drops from the slight tilt it had lifted into and he blinks, refocusing on the mage below. Even without the staff as a beacon, the witcher would have had no trouble finding the man in a crowd; no one else draws his attention the way Dorian does.
You-- The thought stops, crisply, as the connection between the mage's words and the echo is made. Interesting. You get used to it. Or you take up smoking. She is straight ahead about twenty paces.
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