temperedheart: (battlefield)
hector ([personal profile] temperedheart) wrote in [community profile] kingdomsofrain2018-03-15 04:08 pm

word/quote prompt meme



the word/quote prompt meme

leave a word, set of words, or quote for one of my folks. or leave a comment and i'll respond with a word/words or a quote. (if you're searching for words, you might try this site or this site.)
wolfofdunwall: (don't start)

[personal profile] wolfofdunwall 2018-09-08 02:46 am (UTC)(link)
There. There, at last, the boy's admitting to reason. Which suggests he isn't so foolhardy or frenzied as rumors - and as some of Daud's Whalers - would imply. (It doesn't suggest anything of the sort, really. It'd taken too long to coax the boy to this point. Had taken the unrelenting words of a master assassin to draw out a simple 'I know.' Well, so the boy's prideful. Fearless. It might not be ideal, but Daud can work with it. He tells himself.) Daud continues to watch Oscar for several long moments, letting the boy's admission hang in the air.

"Well."

What'll it be, boy?
riveres: (Default)

[personal profile] riveres 2018-09-09 06:43 am (UTC)(link)
You just caught him at the right (and lucid) time, Daud. Honestly he's just trapped in a corner with nowhere to go and nothing to protect himself. So of course, he will agree to whatever Daud asks for.

"Do I even have a choice?"
wolfofdunwall: (leap)

[personal profile] wolfofdunwall 2018-09-12 09:22 pm (UTC)(link)
Shh shh shh... Let Daud pretend that there's solid reasoning behind what he's doing here. Let him pretend this isn't another in a line of ill-advised decisions, a sign of just how far the world is shaking beneath his feet.

"It isn't a pleasant one." Meaning that the choice is almost exclusively between agreeing to join and ending this conversation with a gaped wound to the throat. Meaning that there may be a chance the boy can escape without joining, but the choice is razor-thin, dependent on Daud's mood. "But you do.

"Are you opposed to the idea." Driven with a slight note of acridity, meaning 'does it disagree with your scruples.'