daud | the knife of dunwall (
wolfofdunwall) wrote in
kingdomsofrain2018-08-29 10:57 pm
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dishonored meme

***
a dishonored meme
'ever since the empress died, it's been getting darker in dunwall. but it's that moment just before the light goes that matters most of all.'
the isles are caught amid fractious days, and you find yourself living among them. perhaps - probably - you’ve lived here all your life. perhaps you’ve been brought here by some magical means. whatever the case, you’ve made or will make a life among the isles.
if you were born in or around the isles, what’s your lot in life? are you nobility? a person of great means? a member of the city watch? a shipmate? an inventor? perhaps a civilian just trying to make your way through the rat plague. perhaps a thief, a gang member, an assassin. perhaps a witch or a devotee of the outsider, or perhaps an overseer, scourge of the occult.
when you comment, add a little bit about who your character is in the dishonored world. what your occupation is (if you have one), what you think about recent events, what you tend to do with your days. (if you want to give multiple options re: who they are, feel free!)
you might also want to offer some prompts: scenario ideas, picture prompts, quotes, words, whatever you like.
no subject
This is what it takes for disloyalty to happen, just doubt. The only family he's known might be broken apart for this. Also, their Leader is the only link to the powers that they have. A direct link, mind. Without him, they would be nothing but glorified murderers in gas masks.
(And it's not like Oscar himself didn't think about attempting to call The Outsider himself to get that mark, just in case anything should happen to Daud. Powers or none, he's human and an assassin. Especially now, seeing as their leader killed an Empress. Someone is bound to want revenge or sweep them away to cover their tracks, Jessamine was loved by the people but surrounded by snakes. And the fact is they as a people in this profession aren't expected to live long, despite what his own fellow Whalers think.)
Oscar hears the telltale rasp of his throat clearing. He figures if anyone could find this place he comes over to think, it's Daud. He stops looking at the moon to look at Daud.
He tries to not automatically salute in sight of him. No one else is here, there's no need for an outward show of respect.
"I know, I come here sometimes to think and be alone. Promise not to tell anyone about it?"
He loves the Whalers like his own family, but sometimes he needs time alone. Especially now that Thomas is the new second in command and he's been scouting for him on his missions lately. Leading to Oscar inheriting the friction amongst his fellow assassins Thomas has been getting lately.
Sometimes, he misses Billie. When she was around, no one was jockeying for power. Or maybe he has just naive enough to believe in that.
no subject
Daud doubts that this boy is among the ones who've been chorusing in mutinous whispers. Oscar's deadly when pitted against outsiders, but among his fellow Whalers, he seems to lack malice. Seems more than others to take them as brethren. (Which makes a kind of sense, perhaps. The boy was the youngest recruit Daud's ever accepted, brought in partly due to Thomas's unceasing requests. Has known the Whalers for over half his life.) And if Oscar's like Billie in his preference for distance, the boy's like Thomas in his unerring loyalty, the formalities that spring from apparent earnestness.
He turns his head toward Oscar, quickly looks him over. The boy makes a lonely figure in the moonlight, though that's a useless thought, means little (lately, he's been plagued by useless thoughts, idle observations and sentiments that serve as distractions, nothing more). If Daud were in a less abstracted mood, he might have raised an eyebrow at the boy's question. As it is, he only turns his gaze back to the ruins around.
"They don't need to know of it.
"It's quiet."
no subject
He's glad Daud will keep this private place of his own private, it means he can still have a few moments to himself even with all the whispers and doubt going about the gang.
"Precisely. It's why I come up here. Sometimes... I need time to myself to think. Do you need me? Has anything gone wrong Master?" After all, it does seem a little suspicious that he would come here.
no subject
And those words. 'Has anything gone wrong.' A question Daud can hardly begin to answer for himself, certainly can't answer in front of any of his assassins. The answer would be too ranging, deeper than he cares to think. So he pulls out a cigarette, lighting it in a practiced motion. Takes a draw.
"No. I would have summoned you if I did."
Really, he doesn't need to flee so far to find silence anymore. Over the past six months, he'd become accustomed to having Billie on his tail, trailing him so keen it could take half an hour or more to lose her. Now that she's gone, there's little risk in keeping closer to base. The other Whalers watch, yes, but theirs is a more distant observation, better satisfied hanging back (then, too, Billie was perhaps the only one he'd have accepted such tailing from).
"We can all use a little quiet."