Geralt of Rivia (
bialy_wilk) wrote2022-06-02 09:45 pm
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{ pfsb } The Isle of Mists
He'd had to force himself to slow down, to take their time as they traveled. First to Novigrad, to speak with Zoltan and Roche; then to board a ship to Skellige, where Ermion agreed to assist without hesitation and where Queen Cerys offered the aid of her finest knight – her brother, Hjalmar. He gets a message to Triss, does his best to do the same for Keira and Letho, somewhere in the wilderness.
Geralt sends them all to Kaer Morhen, and knows it won't be enough.
Lan Wangji is a quiet, reserved traveling companion. Geralt feels a pang at separating him from his husband, but it's not enough to make him want to send the cultivator back. Selfishly, he wants the man here, in case Ciri is in trouble. In case he needs to send her with her friend while he himself holds the path behind them.
They rise early, travel all the day, and camp at dark. On the ship to Skellige, Geralt meditates, his only other option to prowl the decks like the wolf of his name. And once they've reached the islands and found their allies, Cerys gives them a small sailing dinghy and sets them on their way.
Geralt steers them to the very edge of the archipelago, past looming, jagged rocks and endless tracts of gray, wavering sea, until they reach a place where the mists curl ethereal fingers along the edge of Lan Wangji's robes. The witcher heaves the little boat to, then reaches for the bottle he's stored in the qiankun bag Lan Wangji had gifted him what feels like a lifetime ago. "This had better work," he mutters, and uncorks the glass bottle to free the firefly spirit which Avallac'h had conjured. It flutters into the air, then describes a slightly wobbling path into the gray, hazy depths of the mists which stretch before them.
Geralt sends them all to Kaer Morhen, and knows it won't be enough.
Lan Wangji is a quiet, reserved traveling companion. Geralt feels a pang at separating him from his husband, but it's not enough to make him want to send the cultivator back. Selfishly, he wants the man here, in case Ciri is in trouble. In case he needs to send her with her friend while he himself holds the path behind them.
They rise early, travel all the day, and camp at dark. On the ship to Skellige, Geralt meditates, his only other option to prowl the decks like the wolf of his name. And once they've reached the islands and found their allies, Cerys gives them a small sailing dinghy and sets them on their way.
Geralt steers them to the very edge of the archipelago, past looming, jagged rocks and endless tracts of gray, wavering sea, until they reach a place where the mists curl ethereal fingers along the edge of Lan Wangji's robes. The witcher heaves the little boat to, then reaches for the bottle he's stored in the qiankun bag Lan Wangji had gifted him what feels like a lifetime ago. "This had better work," he mutters, and uncorks the glass bottle to free the firefly spirit which Avallac'h had conjured. It flutters into the air, then describes a slightly wobbling path into the gray, hazy depths of the mists which stretch before them.
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Drawn from his thoughts by Ciri’s observation, he manages the tiniest of smiles for her. It is not difficult, when he thinks of the joy of talking with Lung Tien Xiang. It seems Ciri’s dreams are more than dreams.
“Indeed that is something I might do,” he allows. “Tea is important in proper hospitality.”
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Geralt's expression softens. "I like that one a lot better."
"Me too," she admits. "But those dreams, and the others, ended in some tower. No matter what I'd dream, in the end I'd enter a tower."
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“Was it a familiar tower? One you might have seen before?”
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She looks from Lan Wangji to Geralt and back again, leaving her fingers curled around those of her friend. "The tower was stark and dead, but at the same time, I felt I had to enter it."
Geralt makes a quiet sound. "Did you?"
She shakes her head. "No," she murmurs. "The dreams all ended with me searching for the entrance."
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Ciri glances back at Geralt. "Only, the last time, instead of the tower..." She smiles, and her eyes warm. "I saw your grizzled face. If not for the scar over your eye, I'd have thought I was still dreaming."
Geralt studies her for a long moment, as though he can't get enough of seeing her features, then looks down. The expression in his eyes is hollow and desolate. "I was afraid you were dead," he says, low. "Found some dwarves here. Said they'd tried to wake you, but you were cold as ice, and you weren't breathing."
"And yet you came in," she murmurs. "Both of you."
Geralt glances up. "Well," he says, trying for humor. "Who listens to dwarves these days?"
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"These are not the wisest of men," he tells her, dryly. "And we would not have left you here in any case."
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He reaches to pick Zirael up, handing the sword back to Ciri. "Got a boat on the beach. Once we land, we'll head for Kaer Morhen. On horseback."
"Right." Ciri squeezes Lan Wangji's hand once more, then lets go to push herself to her feet. "Conventional means of travel. They're just better."
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"Perhaps someday I shall teach you to fly the sword," he offers. "Then you may consider that conventional as well."
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"A portal would be faster," Geralt agrees. "But it'd also draw Eredin to us immediately. Rather not risk it." He turns for the door, and Ciri falls in behind him as he continues grumbling. "Besides, I hate portals."
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Geralt's curse draws his attention immediately from his own musings, and he looks ahead to spot the small boat already underway, with a crew of dwarven thieves.
"Opportunistic as well as cowardly and foolish," he observes.
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The witcher grimaces at the fast-disappearing boat. "Listen," he says. "We gotta think of a way to -- "
Ciri glances over at him as his voice trails off, and feels something in her gut freeze as he carefully exhales, his warm breath fogging in suddenly frigid air. She wheels about and makes a low sound of fear at what she sees: black sails like fangs, frost-limned and horrible moving slowly through the mist. "The Naglfar," she whispers, full of a childish dread.
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"We must move," he says, low and urgent. "Quickly."
Back to the hut, perhaps, and through a door to the inn, then from the inn to elsewhere. He hopes to the depth of his spirit that Ford-daifu was not wrong in her assessment, but is willing to trust it now as it has proven true so far.
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"They'll know where we've gone," she says, her voice shaking. "They'll know how to find me!" The inn, perhaps -- or another world -- her thoughts tumble over one another in a rush.
"They already do." Geralt reaches out to take her by the shoulders, and she looks up at him, feeling as helpless as she once had as a young girl, when visions of the knight in black with his winged helmet haunted her ever dream. "Ciri. Take us home."
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She does not have to face this fight alone. Not any longer.
He shifts position so that she can see him past Geralt's shoulder, if she but looks, and nods agreement and support.
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This is how it has to be, she realizes. Even if she were to bring them to the inn, the Hunt would still find her eventually. She'd still need to run.
They have to end it. She reaches first for Geralt's hand, then for Lan Wangji's, her own trembling, and stands between them a moment, fixing Kaer Morhen in her mind's eye. The crumbling walls, the scent of the river below, the clean bite of the cold air, Vesemir's beloved face.
Ciri breathes deep and closes her eyes, focusing. There's a moment of stillness, and then a flash of green light, and then nothing left of the three who had stood there but the mist slowly swirling to replace them.