Cassandra Pentaghast (
stabsbooks) wrote2016-07-31 02:50 pm
for
obi_wanmanshow
The name had been a part of her nearly all her life, as familiar to her as her own. When it had first appeared - glowing golden script on her inner arm - she had been fascinated, spending hours upon hours staring at it, tracing the letters with one finger, dreaming about the kind of person her soulmate might be. The name was strange to her, not Nevarran or Orlesian or anything she had heard of, but that had only added to the mystery and excitement.
His name had appeared on her skin at the time of her first flowering - one more marker on her path from girlhood into womanhood. If she had been the sort to go to school and have friends, it might have been the kind of thing to giggle over with the other girls, to shyly hide away, only to shriek in feigned indigence when her sleeve was playfully pushed up and the name finally revealed. As it was, Cassandra learned from tutors, and rarely had contact with other children. The name, like her beloved books and dreams of dragon-hunting, became a solitary escape, a daydream of a better life.
Both had faded, in time, as such things do. Fantasies of true love and romance had been replaced by the realities of work and duty (though Cassandra had never quite been able to let go of her fondness for romance, if only entirely fictional ones). And the name on her arm had faded from a bright gold to something duller and duller as the years went on, until it was something that could not be seen at all except in the brightest light of day.
(The longer it took, they said, the more your soulmate's name faded, the less likely you were ever to find him at all. And this one - an unknown, foreign name, one belonging to a man who clearly lacked either the interest or the means to seek out a soulmate with the name Pentaghast, well...)
Cassandra herself couldn't say exactly when it was she had stopped expecting to find him. Certainly it had been nothing overnight, no sudden revelation. She had simply woken up one day, no longer a girl in her twenties eager to make the world her own, but a woman in her late thirties - accomplished, certainly, perhaps even fulfilled - but utterly alone, and more and more likely to stay that way.
But the name is still a part of her, as much as it ever had been. And so it is that when she hears it spoken aloud for the first time, she doesn't even blink; hearing the words she had whispered so reverently to herself for twenty-five years is as natural as breathing.
"Obi-Wan Kenobi." She nods sharply, focused on her work, ignoring the tiny voice in the back of her mind that is urgently whispering something, something is happening, this is important - She holds her hand out to shake - her arms, as they always are these days, fully covered by long sleeves that meet her gloves, the barely-visible name securely hidden from even the most prying eyes. "I am Seeker Cassandra Pentaghast."
His name had appeared on her skin at the time of her first flowering - one more marker on her path from girlhood into womanhood. If she had been the sort to go to school and have friends, it might have been the kind of thing to giggle over with the other girls, to shyly hide away, only to shriek in feigned indigence when her sleeve was playfully pushed up and the name finally revealed. As it was, Cassandra learned from tutors, and rarely had contact with other children. The name, like her beloved books and dreams of dragon-hunting, became a solitary escape, a daydream of a better life.
Both had faded, in time, as such things do. Fantasies of true love and romance had been replaced by the realities of work and duty (though Cassandra had never quite been able to let go of her fondness for romance, if only entirely fictional ones). And the name on her arm had faded from a bright gold to something duller and duller as the years went on, until it was something that could not be seen at all except in the brightest light of day.
(The longer it took, they said, the more your soulmate's name faded, the less likely you were ever to find him at all. And this one - an unknown, foreign name, one belonging to a man who clearly lacked either the interest or the means to seek out a soulmate with the name Pentaghast, well...)
Cassandra herself couldn't say exactly when it was she had stopped expecting to find him. Certainly it had been nothing overnight, no sudden revelation. She had simply woken up one day, no longer a girl in her twenties eager to make the world her own, but a woman in her late thirties - accomplished, certainly, perhaps even fulfilled - but utterly alone, and more and more likely to stay that way.
But the name is still a part of her, as much as it ever had been. And so it is that when she hears it spoken aloud for the first time, she doesn't even blink; hearing the words she had whispered so reverently to herself for twenty-five years is as natural as breathing.
"Obi-Wan Kenobi." She nods sharply, focused on her work, ignoring the tiny voice in the back of her mind that is urgently whispering something, something is happening, this is important - She holds her hand out to shake - her arms, as they always are these days, fully covered by long sleeves that meet her gloves, the barely-visible name securely hidden from even the most prying eyes. "I am Seeker Cassandra Pentaghast."

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"They seem willing enough to obey orders thus far," she observes. Or perhaps that is just the young Templars on their best behavior in the Seekers' presence, but she prefers to give him the benefit of the doubt. "You have done well in managing their fears without giving in to them."
But now he does have Chantry support, and she is determined to get to the bottom of this, whether Kenobi's suspicions are correct or the templars' are. She meets his eyes; it is easier, now, with work to discuss, something familiar and...and safe to focus on. "I have studied your reports. I tend to agree with your assessment. But we must be sure. What you have suggested - it is a serious accusation against the farmers. If it turns out that apostates have been behind these things all along, and we declare otherwise, the farmers will feel unsafe. Defensive. They will feel that the Templars do not care for them, and are willing to sacrifice their well-being in order to let apostates run free. That relationship will not be easy to salvage."
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He had failed. If Obi-Wan had been able to cope with the situation properly, he wouldn't have called for help and she... Cassandra would never have met him. Perhaps that would have been easier for her, he thinks; yet another failure, then. He could have hoped to make a better impression, perhaps.
"Your authority must necessarily speak with more force than my own, in this matter. I'm sure it'll all be resolved quickly."
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"Let us hope that it is," she agrees, and then immediately wonders how much she agrees with that statement. The sooner this is resolved, the sooner they will be obliged to discuss...other business.
She tries for another question, another topic of conversation entirely, and fails, instead lapsing into an awkward silence and glancing out the window. His name burns on her arm, strangely hot under her sleeve.
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They ride in silence, for a time. Obi-Wan remembers to breath, and remembers not to think about the spirals of her name running up his arm. He tries to remember to relax his hands, tense in their greaves.
And then the carriage is slowing, and they are there, at the farm where this all began, burnt-out husk of the haybarn still hulking against the view of fallow fields.
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By the time the carriage finally comes to a halt, she's on edge and nearly sick with unrelieved anticipation - or maybe that's merely the bumpy country road. She manages to stumble out into the sunshine with some degree of grace, glancing around the farm, her eyes inevitably drawn to the burnt beams that marked where the barn once stood.
Without a backwards glance, she makes her way slowly across the fields to the barn, waiting until she senses Obi-Wan in her peripheral vision to speak in a quiet murmur. "The barn has been tested? They cannot tell if the fire was magical in nature?"
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He'd been quite proud of the girl's quick-thinking and loyalty, at the time, though it made things more difficult, now.
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But their conversation is cut short as one of the other Templars hails them; the owner of the farm had noticed their arrival, and is - well, it's difficult to tell if he's eager to share his version of events, or simply eager to get a Seeker away from his farm as quickly as possible. Cassandra takes a breath, squares her shoulders, and glances briefly at Obi-Wan before lifting her chin and marching toward the farmer.
The interviews go as expected, the local farmers even more terrified of Cassandra than the templars and mages at the Circle had been. She does her best to be as nonthreatening as possible, though it's difficult to keep her cool when one of the older residents starts ranting about witches in the woods and mages using blood magic to curse his crops.
But finally, the day is over, and she collapses into the carriage with a loud sigh, slumping back against the seat in an entirely unladylike and un-Seeker-like posture. She doesn't acknowledge him when Obi-Wan follows her in, though she does speak, irritably, half to the ceiling.
"I do not know how you deal with these people, day in and day out."
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It was nice to know that someone here saw how ridiculous this all was.
"If it's any consolation, they were being considerably more attentive than usual. Last time, it was only the one witch she'd seen-- the number seems to change."
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She trails off, shaking her head. There's something like a joke on the tip of her tongue - a wry do you mean to say that I am unreasonable? - but she bites it back. It is too soon, and though the day had gone smoothly enough (the locals aside), it's too easy, now that they're back in the carriage, to remember all the tension and discomfort of the morning's ride. She falls quiet again, frowning slightly. The thought of another awkward, silent ride back to the Circle is not a cheerful one.
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"Let's just say, they like the sound of their own voices," He hesitates on the sarcastic observation, at least you get to leave then discards it as too cruel. Too unfair, "It's a quiet place, not much happening, we don't even have a local Chantry, except for the one on the Circle's grounds. Some people would rather invent trouble than be bored."
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Perhaps she should not be too quick to judge. Perhaps he likes it here. It's not so unreasonable, is it? Far from the demands of the Chantry, the troubles of the world, nothing more pressing than a few bored farmers and one burnt-down building in which no one was hurt...
"It is...peaceful," she says at last, unable to keep the skepticism fully out of her voice as she glances out the window. She pauses, watching the sun dip closer to the hills on the horizon. "And beautiful."
Well. Perhaps not beautiful, but...nice. A good enough place to make a home, she supposes. She falls quiet, her heart conflicted and unhappy once again.
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"Yes," He said, with only half a thought for the sunset, "Beautiful."
When he was a boy, he imagined the woman with the endless name to be the kind of fine lady who featured in tales, with impossibly long wind-tossed hair, and a wardrobe of silk brocade. Growing up, even after joining the Templars as an initiate, he'd wondered how the Maker could think someone like that well-matched with him. He was replaceable, utterly, and someone like that was as fine-hewn and precious as diamond. That made it safe, somehow. No point in trying to measure up to a fine lady, when it was impossible.
The implacable reality of Cassandra Pentaghast was so much worse, and so much better than he might have imagined. A rich and well-coiffed princess was one thing, but the stories one heard about Seeker Pentaghast were right out of a completely other kind of tale, the kind that Obi-Wan had always liked to imagine himself starring in. But then, they weren't just tales, they were reality. She was reality, as sharp-edged as a sword, strong features, strident voice, but so real. Undeniable as a force of nature, and he wondered if it was only the mark on his arm that drew him to her-- it seemed to him that he would have admired her, whatever their circumstances.
She was sitting here, a few feet from him, lit red-orange in profile and stunning in her strength. He looked out at the farmlands instead and only just managed to stifle a sigh. So what was the use of ambition, after all? Nothing. It all came to nothing.
"It's not my intention to..." He stopped, searched for the right word, then bulled on, gracelessly, "...It's not my place to have a right to any answers. But tonight, or tomorrow, or the day after, I imagine your duties will take you elsewhere, while mine will remain here, at least for the time being. If no... We may never see one another again."
Duty, that was the crux, wasn't it? He could not meet her eyes, and his voice seemed somehow remote, quiet and somehow vulnerable. He watched the last sliver of the sun slowly narrow as he spoke, wavering in the last heat of the day on the horizon.
"Is that, what you want? I won't trouble you again, if that's-- whatever your answer."
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"We cannot - "
The idea is unthinkable. The soulbond is beyond revered; it is sacred, the core tenet on which society is built. Soulnames have started wars, and ended them; the soulbond overrules differences of nationality, class, politics, and race. Duty to one's profession is nothing compared to the duty to one's soulmate, even for those who have sworn oaths to the Chantry and its various orders as she and Obi-Wan have.
To walk away from him, to act as if they had never met at all -
But - can't they?
No one else knows, after all. Certainly she had not spoken her soulmate's name aloud in years, or allowed the mark to be seen, and she suspects the same is true for Obi-Wan. She has no close family left, no one to look for him on her behalf or care if she ever finds her soulmate at all. And it's not as if they're likely to run into each other ever again. She could leave tonight, return to the Grand Cathedral, and never return to this small, nondescript Circle or its stubborn farmers and rebellious templars again. She could leave him, and neither of them would ever breathe a word of it to anyone.
The thought makes her heart twist painfully and then drop, leaving her chest feeling empty. She stares wordlessly, her voice, when it comes, a hoarse whisper.
"Is that what you want?"
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He thinks, first, that he should lie. Give her some assurance, somehow, or at least not influence her choice in the matter. It seems unconscionable that he should try to coerce her. But Obi-Wan knows, that if he did lie, or demurr which was as good as lying, he would regret it, for the rest of his life.
No. No, he doesn't want that. The idea that she could turn away, and leave him, that she might still do that, that... that even now, the last he'll ever know or hear from the name he's borne for a secret lifetime, it fills him with a terrible dread. It makes him think of the things a man could do, to forget-- drink, and lyrium, endless work to mask the future days marching ahead, each alike to one another, a life as bland and as tasteless as mash until the day the Maker finally took him home.
"But my life isn't the only consideration. Yesterday, your reaction... that was honest. I could never ask you to bind yourself to someone-- or to anything, you wouldn't freely choose. I would never want to."
So, even if it breaks him, he'll calmly watch her go, and keep the fallout as private as he may, and never breathe a word. Let that sin stand between him and the Maker, if he could be forgiven for it. He knew full well what sacred ground he was trespassing on.
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She's such a fool.
"I must apologize for my actions yesterday," she says stiffly, to the floor. "I..." She what? She had been shocked? Afraid? Unsure what to say to him? She shakes her head, at a loss.
"I have no explanation."
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Or, he thought he did-- her lack of an answer, was an answer in itself. Her stiff formality its own recognition of distance, holding him at arm's length. But he had promised, both to himself, and to her, so he resolved to say nothing. Instead, Obi-Wan focused on each breath, and then the next; stay alive, that was all that mattered.
"It's quite alright."
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She cuts herself off, breathing hard, and shakes her head in a quick, aborted gesture before dropping her head into her hands. "I...I am not good at this," she admits finally, quietly. "At...explaining myself, or dealing with...this." She drops her hands helplessly.
"But I do not want to simply leave."
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But, she didn't want to leave. Or, at least she didn't want to call it nothing, and leave, which was enough to set his heart beating just a little too quickly.
"I come from a family so poor, that they gave away three of their children to the Chantry, because they couldn't feed us. And I didn't know much about Nevarran royalty, but it was a fantasy, to think we'd ever meet-- I might as well have had Celene Valmont on my wrist, or nothing at all, for how realistic the idea was. I gave up hope. And then I never picked it up again."
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"If you have spent your life dreaming of a fairytale princess," she says carefully, each word dropping into the air like lead, "I am afraid you will be disappointed." She sweeps her hand down her side, gesturing to herself. "I am blunt, and bad-tempered, and rash. I have little use for court niceties and less for the name of Pentaghast. I am not," she takes a breath, shaking her head, "graceful, or delicate, or feminine - "
Or any of the things one might expect Cassandra Allega Portia Calogera Filomena Pentaghast to be. She can hardly blame him for whatever fantasies he might have spun about her - how often had she done the same, tried to paint a picture of the mysterious Obi-Wan Kenobi in her mind? But it's awful, all the same, to hear him speak so eagerly of his fantasy of Nevarran royalty, and to realize just how far she might be from his idea of her. His ideal.
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Right Hand of the Divine, leader among Seekers and Templars alike, heroic, bold, the woman who crashed one dragon into another, saved the life of the Most Holy. A thousand songs and stories with her name still circulated.
"I think I'd have been half in love with you even if I hadn't known your name. You're so damnably competent, it makes me feel like a stumbling child by comparison."
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"They exaggerate," she murmurs, for what seems like the millionth time to the millionth admirer. "The stories...there is hardly any truth to them."
But there's no heat behind her protests. She's learned better than to think anyone will listen (and has had one too many people demand to know the truth - did she ride one dragon into another and save the Divine, or did she not? - and has had to admit, one too many times, that yes, that is more or less what happened).
She looks up at him, studying him with new eyes, and something that is not conflict or crushing disappointment stirs in her chest.
"I did not know what you might be," she says quietly. "Where you might have come from - the first idea of where to look." She pauses, her forehead pinched in remembered worry. "But I thought you might find me. I thought you must - that you would seek me out." It's not as if she would have been hard to find, after all.
"When you did not...I did not know what to think. That you were dead, perhaps. Or that you did not care - or were somehow incapable of coming to me." She looks at him, not bitter or judgmental, but curious. He may not have had the resources she did, but neither is he a cripple, or so destitute as to be incapable of traveling at all. If nothing else, they have the Chantry in common - he could have sent a message long before now.
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The fantasy was perfect, in a way that reality never could be. Even the fantasy of her rejection was pleasant, in its own way, because he could imagine himself as noble and true and that she would go on and find some other love. And then he could go back and imagine it again, happier, and never put reality to the words. But it was all just pretend; no deeds suited his imagination. The blank pages were impossibly wide, and the letter never got written, and he never had to face true rejection, because he never let himself be vulnerable to it, and...
"And now, here we are, just the same. It seems the Maker had a different plan."
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But the words stick in her throat, refusing to spill free. It is too much to tell him how she feels - how the thought of one day joining her soulmate, whoever he might be, had never been one of obligation, but the most joyous, privately indulgent fantasy of her life. The one dream she had carefully kept hidden away and preserved, even as the rest of her life swept by out of her control.
She can't say it, even knowing that she should - that he deserves to hear it. But she's guarded her heart for so long, and the thought of making herself so vulnerable, even to him -
She swallows, instead, her expression grave.
"Here we are," she agrees, and dares - cowardly though she is - to meet his eyes. "Truly, it was the Maker who sent me here, who brought us together after so many years."
Which is all very fine and romantic, but does not answer the question of what they are going to do next.
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"So. If neither of us wants to leave this behind, then..." He trails off, thinking, "Perhaps I should put in for a transfer, to Val Royeaux?"
He meant it to sound resigned, or at least certain, but some part of him still craves it, the affirmation of her intentions. The sliver of hope.
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She blinks at him, suddenly nervous, not to mention entirely surprised at the suggestion. "You...you do not want to stay?" She gestures out the window, at the fields and hills beyond, the last rays of the sun now barely clearing the horizon. "Your peaceful Circle..."
It would have been easier, perhaps, simply to take him at his word, and accept his willingness to so eagerly sacrifice, to uproot his life for this. But she finds she cannot do that. Not to him. He had admired her from afar, as so many had, and already it is strange that he knows so much about her, had followed her life from afar, while she still knows next to nothing about him. Not disquieting, perhaps, but...she is at a disadvantage, and she knows it.
If she simply accepts his offer without question or concern for his own desires, she fears it will set a terrible precedent.
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