FADE RIFT [INBOX]
LADY LAKSHMI
( Lady Lakshmi, Bai Saheba, Rani Lakshmibai )
( Lady Lakshmi, Bai Saheba, Rani Lakshmibai )
VOICE | ACTION | NOTES
- Unavaliable To All:
- 30mins around dawn
Only to Voice: - Hour training morning and evening
- Any time she's gone riding.
- When she's in the field.
Only to Book: - When she's otherwise in a meeting, leave a message.
- Very late at night or early in the morning.
Other: - She usually takes her morning meals in the mess hall with everyone else.
- Her days are usually spent in Kirkwall seeing to either her personal business or Inquisition tasks.
- She has a bath twice a day, every day.

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Because if she takes her eyes off his face, she might not see a lie, see something uncertain, that could mean this isn't true. "No, no it could not - " the flat refusal. The denial she pushes for the first time, so strongly back at him. She accepted anything, everything that had been given to. My Lord Shiva, I have given all to you, you cannot take this too. Not this. " - No." A deeper, deeper breath, as she tries to find something to make sense of it. "The report is wrong. You're wrong." She shoves her hand harder against his chest, even as she does not let him go.
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" - A girl - a rifter. Kitty Jones. Spoke like a Fereldon. She had brown hair - quick eyes. What of her? She was with them - "
Give her something, tell her, tell her she is not in this same loop. But it's too late. She can ask, and she already knows. This is where she must exist. This same place, over and over and over again. Let this cycle end, stop this pattern of life turning over itself like the snake that eats its own tail, heavy around her neck. Living when it should not. Consuming and consumed.
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Which she might even have asked him that if she could stop the wail of pain that comes out of her mouth. The building, choking up sound in the back of her throat. Might have stared him down if not for the way her legs give out underneath her, make her stumble between him and the door frame. Shoving him, but not letting him go, yanking him back as she falls against him. But she cannot hear herself, any more than she can form words for it. A strike in that helplessness, not to him, but to herself, for the red vermillion that she had placed upon her brow since she and Magni had placed upon each other's foreheads in the solemnity of make-do vows of fidelity. Smearing it away as all widows must do.
Hanging onto him, ugly, the grief as sudden as those same flames. Sudden, hot and engulfing. "Give them back - give them back." The words are pitched, mad with their pain, like she could rip the air apart if she but tried. But she never could, she never could.
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This is what is wrong with you: you've been holding all these sharp things against your belly with your bare hands. Of course they've cut. That's what they're designed for. Are you sorry for what you said to her last?, asks same razor edge too distant to hear over the sound of Lakshmi Bai's agony.
"Easy, easy," he doesn't say. But he does let her clutch him and he doesn't release her even if it means being dredged about to accommodate her grip and her need and the burden of her. It's fine. There's room for it.
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( It never will. She knows it, there is no breathing clearly. If this land has taken her from her Mother Ganga, if it has taken her from dry deserts and her Knight, her Tesla, her Devi, why not - )
"Why must they take my heart? I have arms, legs, eyes and ears. Why must my heart be taken from my chest?" Begging it, desperate, confused. That bloody hand beats against his shoulder, her forehead driven into his chest. Driving and holding, pushing and pulling. "How many husbands must I lose, how many children? How many- ?" But even the blows are weak, broken as her voice. "Please, I would give my body to ash, if it will give them back."
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Eventually that someone else says, softly as if talking to a child or a trembling animal: "Madame Bai, you should sit. Have you eaten today?"