bestdressed: (1980115 (46))
Dorian Pavus ([personal profile] 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
monsterbytrade: (:humoryou)

[personal profile] monsterbytrade 2020-05-07 04:43 pm (UTC)(link)
Geralt returns the humorless smile with one of his own, and inclines his head at the irony of human affairs.

He'd said as much as Anetta admits to Dorian earlier in the night-- some men were content to be led by a woman, be it by one head or the other. Antivian life at such elevation might be hard for one mentally or emotionally unsuited to such pressure to succeed (with often untimely and curiously tragic death waiting to mark failure) and so, it seems, has Valentin found his own course of action forward. Geralt thinks it is rather clever of him, to be honest. "It is indeed," he says to her last point, "and nothing that I want to put myself in the middle of."

Geralt finally brings his eyes to Dorian. After willfully holding his attention away, even for such a short time, returning to the mage feels like a full inhalation. No, he will not be paid tonight. No, he doesn't care. "Shall we?"

He waits for Dorian and they are both at the door before he pauses, his hand on the frame, and looks back at Anetta. "The contract specifically tried to exclude me from taking it," he says, because he must. "Which means that even if he doesn't know what you are, he knows what I am. And he wants you dead." The knowledge is a better apology for the slights they took against her tonight than anything else he can offer.
monsterbytrade: (;oh sweetie)

[personal profile] monsterbytrade 2020-05-08 11:34 am (UTC)(link)
As Dorian's warm fingers come to rest against his arm Geralt momentarily feels the jump of his pulse in his throat and he wonders, briefly, if the reaction is something that Anetta can sense. His face is smooth and controlled but such a visceral undoing would be something Geralt has no basis for; his body has always reacted exactly how it is supposed to react. He knows it and can account for it, always.

Except for the brief pressure of Dorian's fingertips.

Geralt nods to Anetta and turns, leaving at the mage's side without any rush. Out of direct line of sight and in tandem with Dorian's sigh, the witcher glances at his companion. "Better to get it done with, then." Not knowing Dorian's exact position within the man's house, he can only consider his own personal ramifications-- which aren't many. Geralt couldn't care less if Mercurio is angry with him; as far as he is concerned the contract is null and perhaps Geralt wasn't the witcher that the man wanted but he was the witcher that he got. This will be an end of it and there is little threat that could be laid against Geralt personally; he is not physically afraid of anything Mercurio could level at him in his disappointment, and the Antivian has no reach into the witcher brotherhood.

The slipping of the spell breaks the train of thought before it reaches perhaps its less than obvious conclusion-- that, impossibly-- there is more that could be done to bother him because his world is just a little bit wider than it was before tonight. Geralt doesn't think that Dorian might have things to lose here, and certainly hasn't thought as far as witcher and mage as a them in a forward trajectory that would carry one or both past the doors of this great villa.

It is perhaps a little selfish to admit that he's really not thinking past a bedroom stained with magic and unbuckling the harness that cuts the long lines of the body of the mage at his side. No, Mercurio is truly given hardly more than a passing thought now that the largest threat is no longer looming; he simply cannot compare.
monsterbytrade: (;nice jaw bro)

[personal profile] monsterbytrade 2020-05-08 10:32 pm (UTC)(link)
"I'll come with." There is no hesitation; that is the easy part. He must deal with Mercurio, tell him that the contract is null. It is the question that comes after and the way that Dorian's eyelids lower just so slightly that steers the next course of action.

They're not quite rejoined the party. Geralt turns and hedges the mage back into a corner, out of the direct line of sight from the patio. The roar of the guests seems leagues away and they are very close. He does not touch because if he's begun that he thinks that he'll have to finish. "I might be thrown out," he says, his rough voice a broken sort of murmur. "This is Mercurio's house and I'm going to tell him something he doesn't want to hear." All Geralt has is an amulet tucked away that will call him a portal home. No horse, no bedroll, nowhere else to go. His voice drops lower. "But I would take you on the forest floor under the stars if that were the only way that it could be managed." There is a husk in the words that inspires bloodflow, as if in his mind Geralt is already peeling away the layers Dorian is wearing.

And he is close to it.

Geralt inhales loam and his eyes shutter slightly. He forces himself to step back, and then again. His heartbeat is faster than it should be. "Lead the way."
monsterbytrade: (;sword drawn)

[personal profile] monsterbytrade 2020-05-09 12:34 pm (UTC)(link)
The hand against his chest feels like one of the most monumental things that Geralt has ever had to deal with. He had not touched Dorian for a reason but then all his intentions are shattered with a deliberate hand and his nostrils flare slightly as his fingers curl into fists. The expression that races across his face is desperate and struck and that it appears at all says a very great deal about how much Geralt is fighting against every instinct in him that wants to make a scene here in this crowded corner, just outside a party. Let Mercurio find them-- let Anetta drink-- so long as they do not disturb him getting what he wants.

He steps back. It is a wonder that the ground does not swallow him whole.

And even so, that I wouldn't be the one taking you?

Dorian might be amazed, the things that aren't often said to Witchers. Men such as Geralt are so often bared even eye contact or casual touches and here is a mage happy to threaten him with so intimate a thing? It is as if someone has hung a gong at the very center of his ribcage and beaten it violently. Geralt thinks he is walking a straight line as he stalks through the party and toward the last place he had seen his host-- guests scatter out of his way-- but he can't be sure.

Mercurio and his own lady (not a vampire of any sort and looking in general quite like a horse) are entertaining two others on a more secluded part of the patio. The merchant prince takes one look at the incoming Witcher and his own mage following in the wake that he bends in and murmurs something to his guests, who incline their heads and stand to go. Two lightly-armed guards step to block Geralt's way and are almost thrown aside with a twitch of Aard; the sign is pulled at the last minute and snap of cross-wind breeze buffets his own hair and Dorian's robes. Geralt takes a forced breath and waits and perhaps it is good, a moment to calm his nerves. He lets the swell of the party in, the smells and sounds and small magics strung here and there all looming louder and larger until everything becomes an overwhelming sort blanket, smothering individual inward thoughts. By the time the guards step aside the tension had bled from his shoulders and his face is less sour. Mercurio beams as they come closer.

"Our Witcher is here, my dear. Just look at him-- no wonder I didn't notice you amongst the guests, dressed so finely. Have you--"

"Your contract is null." Geralt's voice is low, gravel, and cuts directly through Mercurio's inane chatter. He knows very well that the man knew he was here but even had he not, the time for pleasantries is passed.

For a moment there is comedy; the Antivian prince's face hangs open and in shock and his wife sits up as if someone had stuck a post straight up her ass. It takes only a moment for the wind to shift, however, and this time Geralt's had nothing to do with it. Mercurio's face clouds over, his eyebrows drawing into a thick line even as a muscle in his jaw begins to spasm for the way his teeth are being forced together. He stands, slowly. "Tell me then, Witcher." The words are very, very carefully measured. "Why is that?"

Compared to his employer, Geralt now is the perfect picture of ease. "You have no monster. Your brother is under no thrall other than his prick and perhaps the first good business decision he's made in his life. The contract is null." It is not the most delicate of explanations, but it leaves little room for argument.

Mercurio's face pales and then flushes a deep scarlet. He stares at the Witcher for a long moment before his attention rakes toward Dorian. He draws himself up, his chest inflating under his expensive fabrics like a sail catching the wind. "You were supposed to deal with this--" a bejeweled finger is jabbed in Geralt's direction "--thing!" He might be talking about the man or the situation, but the truth is that he is demanding an answer to both problems.
monsterbytrade: (;simple and clean)

[personal profile] monsterbytrade 2020-05-10 10:01 am (UTC)(link)
"I--! You--! He--" Mercurio can't seem to find exactly who he wanted to curse, his face moving toward a rather alarming shade of red until his wife lays a hand on her husband's arm. He shakes her off with snap of motion but he does draw a breath and seems to settle, taking a moment to smooth down his doublet unnecessarily before he returns dark eyes to Dorian. His heavy moustache still looks like it's ready to tremble when he speaks, however, his tone low though hardly a match for Geralt's own growl of vocal cords.

"You should not take such a tone with the man who sponsors all you projects," Mercurio says. "You're nothing but a spoon-fed court mage who had a job to do! By the Maker, Pavus, it wasn't even a hard one." His disgust shifts back to Geralt. "I wrote a contract that was ignored by the brotherhood-- you should not have been allowed in the door."

"Yes," Geralt replied, his voice cool and even. Even had he come at the man in a fury this impartial cloak would have been drawn tightly around him quickly enough; this was business, and witchers did all business the same. "But I was, and that makes the terms of the contract refutable. Witchers are given leave to act in the case of duress." Which Mercurio nor his guests are in, obviously, but the letter of law is a fine thing to have on one's side. Mercurio looks as if he's swallowed a toad. "I will not ask for payment. The contract is closed."

Family business, indeed. But who would want to make this their family?

"Mutant trash," Mercurio hisses. His arms sweep outward in a needlessly dramatic gesture. "Get out of my house! And you," to Dorian now, "you as well. As long as we are in the business of ending contracts tonight, consider yours withdrawn." His wife sniffs. A proper lady by all Antivian standards, she's never really cared for Dorian's flamboyance.
monsterbytrade: (;oh sweetie)

[personal profile] monsterbytrade 2020-05-13 09:10 am (UTC)(link)
No, the witcher has no trouble. And yet for a moment there is hesitation, his yellow eyes on the angles of Dorian's face as if he's looking for another reality below the precise and cutting words that he'd just used to end his tenure on his own terms. Before them Mercurio is yelling with forced cheer to his guests that everything is fine and the guards have rushed away-- no doubt to find more light. But Geralt simply stands and takes his time to find the assurance in his companion that doesn't mean there won't be regret tomorrow but at least that tonight, certainly, is over.

Mercurio stalks toward them from the gloom, leaking hot air like a kettle left on the flames for too long. "I never want to see you near my house again! Not anywhere in Antiva! I own this city, you jumped-up pompous little cu--"

And that is as far as he gets, because all the rest of the charming words spewing from his mouth are cut off with a swift palm to the chest, too fast to be tracked in the dark. His breath flees his lungs in a whoosh and without his guards nearby to help, Mercurio is left gaping like a fish and sitting down heavily on the flagstones, a sack of potatoes dropped on the spot. He's wheezing like a bellows, his knees sticking out at rather ungentlemanly angles. Geralt gives it a moment and then leans down, brushing nothing from Mercurio's shoulder before grabbing the man by the forearm to haul him to his feet under the pretense of help. "Thank you for your understanding in giving the mage a night to collect his things," he growls, the words offering no argument even if Mercurio could catch his breath. "Now perhaps you should see to your party considering it's rather dark suddenly and you're surely not the only one tripping over his own feet. Well enough that there are no monsters about, wouldn't you say?"

And maybe Mercurio doesn't see the flash of the lean, white smile, but that is fine. It is only for Geralt, anyway.

He turns back to Dorian and nods. He'll clear out his rooms first, at least, as some small show of good faith that he doesn't feel but knows better than to push. Besides, he doesn't think that he'll be needing his rooms anyway. Now that he knows the way he can lead the mage if the man would rather keep the lights off. Truly a fitting end to a rather obscene party. The best guests will make it an excuse to carry candles around and continue on, if Mercurio has the sense to spare them, but none of it matters a bit to Geralt. He won't be coming back out to the patio.
monsterbytrade: (;the feels)

[personal profile] monsterbytrade 2020-05-14 08:43 am (UTC)(link)
Geralt gives no reaction to the arm in his, because what should he do? One option is to shirk the easy touch not because he doesn't enjoy the slight weight of Dorian's arm but because he does, which leads the second option-- and he doubts that the party is truly dark enough to hide two men rutting. He is left with controlling himself regardless of the warmth against his side and the deep smell of loam in his nose.

"Nice weather," Geralt mutters, which is to say that he can find little nicer to say about Antiva then something so banal. If Dorian will need to find somewhere else to go... certainly the assurance is the truth and mages have ways, networks, of finding such places, even Necromancers. Perhaps especially Necromancers, is the truth of it.

He pauses at a junction between the wing where he'd been placed and the wing where the mage was housed. Here the scones light the corridors with wavering soft light. Geralt pulls his arm away from the mage with something like a sigh pressing at his chest. It is quiet. They are alone. There is no monster and now no employer-- and if he reaches out and begins something then it will most likely start and end right here on the cold flagstone, he knows that as surely as he knows himself. Just a little more control. So little. Geralt clears his throat. "I need to go get the rest of my things," he says. "I'll meet you at your rooms."

And then a strange thought occurs to him: that despite all the dancing away and together they've done over the course of the night, it has been, all of it, obvious yes, but also unspoken. At the crossroads in the hallway, Geralt turns to Dorian. He remembers the sharp edges of the conversation a year ago: If you intended to stay the night, perhaps we might spend it together. A brittle memory considering how he acted then and what he feels now.

"That is." Geralt inclines his head slightly. "If you'll have me."

It is Dorian's right of refusal, tonight.
monsterbytrade: (;fuck)

[personal profile] monsterbytrade 2020-05-16 06:05 pm (UTC)(link)
Dorian is lucky, then, that Geralt is not a man given to showing emotion-- there is no want to tear down that smile, no need to do anything other than accept the offer with a softening at the corners of his eyes that feels like a smile, no matter the still-line of his own lips. Somehow on Geralt the stillness wears like a sigh of relief; surely Dorian would have had enough cause to send him away, even after everything. The Witcher's hand twitches upward, as if it has mind to reach out, and then settles again. He inclines his head and then is turning, walking, going. He's ready to be quit of his dark, cold and uncared for rooms, ready to find out what he's denied himself for a year.

The hallways are empty through the guest corridors, everyone determined to wait out or make use of the dark on the patio to have a good time. That is fine with Geralt-- he wants no distractions. His boots clip a pace just shy of a lope against the flagstone and his mind is somewhere between how Dorian's robes come off and getting to find out where else the mage might have smudged his golden paint... or if Geralt might be allowed to take his own liberties with the stuff. He can only blame himself for the fact that he doesn't hear the guards waiting inside his rooms until he steps inside.

They are courteous and cold. They do not attack him, cuff him-- they simply wait. They are here to show him out and Geralt's throat closes as he stops with the door to his back. What can he do? There is no visitation rights, there is no way to stop himself from ever opening the door and all Geralt can do is gather his things under their cool gaze and then be escorted toward the front, away from Dorian.

Something in his chest contracts, tightly. His steps don't falter but he wants to make them, wants to turn back if it means fighting because the only thing he has to lose is the man waiting for him.

Geralt doesn't.

Outside the yawning front gates he pulls the token from the bag slung over his shoulder. "Got a nice pair of trousers from the deal at least, Witcher," one of the guards laughs. "Better than you deserve." Yes, it probably is. Geralt looks up at the stone of the villa and imagines Dorian waiting for him. The token is bought and will take him back to Kaer Morhen-- another would cost more than he has, now that the contract has come to nothing. A bird sent would reach no one after its travels because Dorian had been fired and he will be gone in twelve hours. There is no point of contact.

"Fuck."

Geralt cracks the token and walks into the portal.
Edited 2020-05-16 18:06 (UTC)