To feathers with ye

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To feathers with ye
Do you have any good inheritable skills? I need a reason not to send you home.
is this what you ask every woman you meet?
[TXT]: You were blackout drunk.
[TXT]: In front of my little sister.
[TXT]: At her birthday celebration.
[TXT]: Do you have anything to say for yourself?
[ TXT ] : sure
[ TXT ] : id like to request better drinks next year
"...Edelgard," Alfonse sighed, crossing his arms. How was he to present this? 'Hey bestie, I revealed your deepest secrets unprompted' was probably not a good way to open things up, especially not when Edelgard did not fully trust him yet. He had deliberately refrained from discussing the particulars about her involvement, sure-- he hardly even knew the extent of it himself-- but he had still mentioned it to her.
"I have an update on our-- on Garreg Mach's attackers," he explained, "but... I am not the only one who knows. I had to inform a few others about... well, the adversaries we suspected to be behind it. Unfortunately, I may have, er... mentioned that you were also aware of them. Know that I only did it to ensure I would be believed. If I had just professed knowledge of individuals that absolutely nobody else possessed, I don't think I would have been believed..."
It hadn't mattered in the end. The information they uncovered had supported his word much better than namedropping Edelgard would ever have managed to. When he had brought it up, Alfonse had anticipated bringing the whole group back to speak with her and discuss their findings. That, suffice to say, was not how it had played out at all.
"Know that I did not say you were involved with them in any capacity, only that you were aware of them, and that it was not right for me to speak to your experiences in your place. That being said, I think it's only fair I keep you in the loop with who else has this knowledge."
"Hm. Are you saying you would run the risk of ruining my namesake so you yourself could be believed?"
Annoyance gleaned on the princess's face, showing as much with lips tightened and a foot tapping on the loud ground beneath them. "Even if you did inform them I wasn't involved, would it not raise suspicion by encouraging the idea that I happen to be conscious of their existence?" She would do anything to learn the truth; to shed light onto this sullied world. She would not bring herself down before that began.
"I don't know what you said exactly, but yes. My experiences are mine alone to tell. Speaking in my stead is unpermitted." A beat. She did want an update, but could she believe what she was told? She refused to break eye contact, even as her mind turned to ask what was next.
She wasn't thereâ Edelgard didn't know the context nor atmosphere, but she failed to see a proper reason. She already knew of at least one person that caught glimpse of Alfonse's words, but she kept Yunaka's name to herself. It was better that way.
"Provide me a list of names."
It had been some time since the battle of Garreg Mach. They had reclaimed the monastery, peace had returned... but some things still sat heavy upon Alfonse's mind. One thought in particular plagued him-- a sight he had seen in the city, an encounter he'd been unable to forget. War was not new to him. The tragedies it brought weren't either. This, however, had shaken him in a way he hadn't been prepared for. Seeing a human spirit so thoroughly broken was disheartening in ways Alfonse had never anticipated.
When he saw Dorothea, Alfonse usually failed to meet her gaze. It was hard to think of anything to say after what they had been through together. Now, though, that the two of them had a moment alone, Alfonse needed to bring up what they had witnessed. He needed to know if she, too, was haunted by what they had encountered together.
"...The person we saw when we arrived in Enbarr," Alfonse murmured, eyes gazing towards the horizon instead of at Dorothea, "the one who begged us to... you know. Do you think they found help? Or... do you think they passed on after we lost sight of them?"
post-epiphany reunions
they died.
there was no question about it. such was life on enbarr's streets, a reality that'd been seared into her memories and left behind scorched earth. she'd seen it happen to her own mother â the coughing fits, the shivering, the gradual incoherence that set in until one day, she lay still and could not explain what was happening to the scared child at her side.
dorothea had begged to save another like them in leicester, taking to her knees and wrapping her arms around that miserable, skeletal frame â and had that not been a lesson in of itself?
"set her down. you'll... understand this grace someday, i guess," selena said. "i know you want to hold out on hope, but... she's in pain. she's DYING, for gods sake. let her have this one last request."
there comes a shaky exhale, long and drawn-out, before dorothea addresses her companion. "i think they've passed on," she supplies cautiously. "i'd like to hope they were found and nursed back to health, but...i'm not so optimistic. that's not the city i know."
that mournful, verdant gaze follows his to the horizon, scanning the clouds for something she does not know she seeks. "we prolonged their suffering...."
"...but i couldn't kill them, alfonse. i suppose that makes me selfish, doesn't it? i couldn't heal them, refused to do what they asked, and in the end, i wound up doing nothing at all. a mark of a bad person, i guess."
and they, like so many of enbarr's nameless souls, likely passed on knowing they did not matter. poor and unassuming, little more than another speck on those well-traveled roads. a fate she had narrowly avoided herself, by a mere sliver, had she not been scooped up by mittelfrank.
"the least we can do is remember them. we owe the person that much."
đŤ 3
"Oh. You're, er..." Alfonse mumbled, eyeing the woman before him. She was... one of the two, he knew that. Which version was she, though? Figuring that out would be rather important, given how different the two women with the same face could act. One of them would roll right over Alfonse before he was prepared if he wasn't careful... and Zephia would probably be able to make Alfonse uncomfortable too.
"...Why are you looking at me like that?"
Pocky Game â No longer accepting!
âł Rolled: 2
"My, thatâs almost hurtful. What if this is simply the way I look?â
That would certainly be a sight to see, wouldnât it? Because as she sits, idly turning the box of treats in her hands, she looks at him as if heâs a lone insect that has wandered close to a flickering lampânot interested enough to snatch and keep inside a decorated jar, but certainly curious enough to keep watching. Itâhim, the boy; it, the insectâmust know that the heat will scorch its wings, and yet it canât help but circle by, drawn to light and the idea of warmth. Were she any more restless, she might pluck it mid-flight and toss it into the flames that have enraptured it soâbut she will not, at least not today. If Griss had spoken true, she will have plenty of opportunities to watch him and people just like him throw themselves into certain danger, all for little reason beyond simply being told to.
âWell, no matter. Come; if Iâm expected to play this silly game, then youâre expected to play along, yes?â She draws a treat from the box and tosses the remainder onto the desk behind her. Zephia knows the rules by now, more or less, but that doesnât mean she feels any particular need to abide by them. Instead, she remains seated with one leg crossed over the other, and holds out the chocolate-dipped biscuitânot at the level for him to take with his hand, but for him to lean in and take a bite for himself.
âThereâs no need to look so anxious. Iâll even let you win this first one,â she says, âif you can muster the courage to participate, rather than standing there like a terrified hare.â
[ âď¸ ]ă ¤.ă ¤what does guilt feel like to them ?
From: Ask Meme
Watching someone die in front of you that you couldâve saved. Liina, a childhood friend of Pattyâs, died right in front of her, with a doctor refusing to try because he âdoesnât do chairty workâ. She never learnt who did it, so even if revenge could close the ache, there was nobody who she could exact it on.
A part of her has recovered from the guilt, though. Being able to prevent the Liberation Army from accidentally killing Febail by convincing him to join her side was cathartic. Even if she couldnât save her friend, she could still save her brother.
[ 𧨠]ă ¤.ă ¤whatâs the quickest way to set them off, even if they hide it well ?
From: Ask Meme
Comparing her to other Annas in a way that downplays or dismisses her own work efforts. Coming from a canon where she knew about other Annas, their achievements and successes in both professional and personal life, it gave her a very persistant imposter syndrome that she carries with her even past their departure. The guilt of feeling like she should be doing more in the pursuit of business, yet wanting to explore her other passions (travel, cooking, tailoring), is something that she's actively working on.
A part of her wants to defy that destiny, to close shop permenantly and change her name, and move on, but she loves business and her current identity too much to consider doing so. Yet the shackles of strangers still cling to her, and maybe they always will.