That's my understanding. Or at least during business hours. I've heard that there were merchants around in their stalls, but they most likely didn't notice as they were doing business.
Would the Dalish lend their time to aid us? If whomever is doing this is being so bold, a few well-concealed rouges on roofs, or perhaps some of Beleth's scouts without vallaslin, placed in the crowd...
[ he trails off. ]
Someone would not do this in a city quartering the Inquisition unless they had powerful friends.
[ Ugh, Beleth. Ellana doesn't want her brought in on this, and she definitely knows Yngvi doesn't, but scouts are useful and they need all the help they can get. ]
I can't speak for the Dalish. And I wouldn't assume all of them want to help city elves either. Best to ask for some non-Dalish scouts to look into this. People who would definitely want to help if they knew, and not just out of obligation. If you want to bring this to the attention of the Dalish, you may find some allies. I can't be sure either way.
[ She hums thoughtfully. ]
And someone who has probably done this before. There's been no slip ups so far we can trace.
Calling in too great a number might well reveal our involvement. I will find us a few who can keep quiet.
[ he is not sure of where these new lines lay in the clans. his own opinion aside, this is the sort of matter that brings people together. who couldn't empathize with this suspicious situation? ]
My source thinks it's abnormal that it's happening now, not that it's happening at all. Seems dangerous to have this operation going on with the Inquisition stationed here.
[ he bites his tongue. raging at the state of thedas has done little in the eighteen months since he arrived. it will do little now, and even less for ellana. ]
[ It's a bitter pill to swallow, but change in Thedas always crawls along slowly and takes two steps back before stepping forward again. Ellana knows this well, both here in the world ruled by humans and back in her Dalish clan. ]
I wish I could say 'nothing much' but-- this is important so, I'll be honest.
The clan. And... The future. And you. If you don't want to, this isn't some official thing. But I need to-- I want to know, even though it's all likely none of my business.
That's why I came back. I guess I never really told anyone I just. Hoped you would all...
[He'd gone home just long enough to turn his life on its back and leave it there, kicking helplessly like a stranded turtle. He could barely approach the topic sideways in conversation, most days, and coming out to say what had been happening with him.... that had been too intimidating.]
I couldn't... I didn't... It's...This isn't really what I meant to say.
Of course Beleth knows! [Beleth always knows. Beleth took one look at him and immediately knew everything.] And... The Ke-- Mother. And probably the whole clan.
[There is a pause.]
Please. 'How I've pretty well destroyed my life' isn't exactly what I wanted to talk about, today. Or ever.
Well I didn't know. You said you never told anyone. How am I supposed to interpret that?
[ Words mean things, Sorrel. Dear Creators. ]
No use talking about it if it isn't destroyed yet. That's the sort of thing you look back at years later and decide. Not while you're in the thick of things.
[Sorrel takes a deep breath and drags both hands down his face, muttering invectives under his breath to the effect of, this is why i should never be in charge of talking about anything. Alright, he'll try it again.]
Ellana. When I arrived in Kirkwall, the first time. [The time when he was still a good devout Dalish boy, doing what he was supposed to.] You never actually came out and said hello. You didn't come to the joining, you and I didn't exchange so much as a word the whole time Sina was sick, or...
[he falters]
...Or after.
[Deep breath.]
I wasn't angry, and I don't have a right to question it. You stepped away from the clan, which meant from me too, and that's your right. But now I'm thinking... I have a plan, and I need to know if you still consider yourself Dalish, if you still want that? Or, if stepping away is still your choice.
Because if so, then we can just forget all this, and go on the way we have and just be... People who come from the same place, I guess. I just want to understand. You know what year it is, don't you?
Did you honestly expect me to come forward and act like nothing had happened? I stood back and waited for you -- any of you -- to come to me. To show you still considered me a person worth knowing. I wasn't going to shove myself in your faces and demand recognition. I respected that you might not want to associate with a former Dalish. And then you became leader of the Elven Artifacts project so I figured I'd let you know I was a part of it. And still... this is the first you've reached out to me.
[ She pauses, wondering if she should have risked that step forward. She didn't want to be rejected, but maybe she should have been braver. ]
No, I'm not Dalish. I'm an elf, and I can help all elves far more by being out here doing what I'm doing that staying in a clan. I wrote a book, you know. No, wait, I guess you wouldn't know. It's about my journey to recover the Sulevin Blade, and it's just been published. A book elves can read written by another elf. That's how I'm going to help us move forward, Sorrel. I'm going to help all elves, but I'm not going to do it as a Dalish one.
[ She takes a breath and realizes that this is first Dalish elf she's really told her plans to in full. She's told city elves, Rifters, dwarves, and qunari about her plans, but never one of the Dalish. Has she been holding back because she hasn't wanted to hear their judgment? ]
It's-- it's Arlathvhen again, isn't it? That your mother kept me from. [ A year ago? Even six months ago? There would have been bitterness in her voice when saying that. But now she's achieved some sort of clarity. ] And for that, I'm thankful. I wouldn't be the person I am today if I attended and was traded to another clan.
I'm sorry if my dying wife distracted me from my social obligations.
[He says it without thinking, dry and bitter in the face of Ellana's triumphant ambivalence. If that's the way it is, then there's no fighting it; it can't be helped.]
I did know about the book. It was in your report, remember? The Cursed Blade. Not that I've been able to read it.
[Sorrel is quiet for a long few breaths.]
Well. I won't bother you any more. I can see that you know what you're doing, and you don't need, or want, my help. Ma serannas, Ellana.
[ There's a sharp inhale of breath, then she replies without thinking, same as him. ]
Fuck you.
[ She's shocked herself that she's said it, but it's out there now and she won't apologize for it, because seriously, fuck him. ]
I grieved her in my own way. I prayed to the Creators to look after her soul. You don't get to throw that in my face like I've done something wrong here. You're just like your sister, you know. Always has to be right; always has to get in the last word to show how high and mighty you are. No, I don't want or need your help. And if you don't stop separating elves into Dalish or not, no elves need your help either. And guess what? I get the last word this time. Dirthara-ma.
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