[ He needn't have been afraid. Byerly's answer is unhesitating, as certain as he would be if he were commenting on the salinity of the sea. ]
The only true difference - aside from the education afforded to nobles, of course - is that bloodlines come with certain reputations. And power comes from belief. If people believe you can lead, they follow. But those sorts of tales don't belong to nobles alone - King Calenhad himself came from common stock. Do you think there's a difference between them?
[ Bastien smiles, not so much relieved as feeling foolish for being nervous, and shakes his head.
Although, ] I think I used to. Not directly, but more like—you know how sometimes you will think someone is better looking than you—
Theoretically. [ He taps Byerly on his chin. ] If you can imagine yourself in the shoes of someone who is not the most beautiful man in Thedas. Then you might think someone is better looking than you, deep down, but on the surface you think, please, he is nothing special. His nose is crooked. And look there, I think that is a boil. And if he says to you he is better-looking, that is worse, but if he says you are better-looking, that is also worse, because clearly he’s an idiot or humoring you or both, so…
[ It’s only now that he realizes he just, in this very conversation, brought up inbred droolers. ]
[ Bastien’s cocky smile lingers, but his cheeks turn faintly pink, the traitors. When he realizes that they have, he rubs his thumb and fingers over them, like he can wipe it off, and averts his eyes to nod. ]
I trust you.
[ He could argue about most handsome, except of course it’s subjective. All he could ever want is for Byerly to think so.
He leans in and up to By’s ear. Whispering is silly, but it’s easier. ]
With all my heart, for all my life.
[ Sealed with a peck on the cheek.
Then he needs another scrap of bread immediately, to replenish his strength after the Herculean feat of saying that sober and fully-dressed and in the daylight, and he needs to keep moving along. ]
It was only a metaphor, though. I’m not worried about—it is just, not everyone sees it the way you do. They say someone like your Calenhad, he came from common stock, alright, but he became a king because there was something special about him, and all his children after him, and now that we are not all barbarians we have found all of these special people with their special blood and elevated them to where they belong.
[ With all my heart. For all my life. These are things he can gather and save, like coins for a miser. Never to spend, only to hold, to take out and admire when the echoes in his head sound too unkind. ]
One might argue we're still barbarians.
[ Not because that's a counterargument; just to amuse Bastien with his wit. ]
But anyone who thinks that...I've known men of the nobility who do live that word, nobility, but I've known many more who are vain, base, stupid, greedy. And I've known a mix of the same amongst commoners. Anyone who really thinks there's a difference, a meaningful difference, is a fool. Which only goes so far, of course - because a man can be a fool and still have power, you can still be at the mercy of fools - but they're a fool all the same.
[ The wit gets a laugh, the rest of it pleased attention while Bastien chews.
He doesn’t always feel the same. In Orlais even the commoners’ beloved hero was Lord Remi Vascal, Bastien’s own namesake a duke. The nobles in Val Royeaux were untouchable and unknowable. He didn’t see a nobleman’s bare face until he was eighteen, and then only in the dark. The admiration and envy and fear and mystery all fed each other, and even when he had proof that they bled like anyone else dotting his sleeves, they felt like something separate.
But it’s been years. He’s learned better. There are crevices of resentment and hunger that the learning hasn’t reached, but with the better parts of him, he thinks Byerly is right. ]
Maybe we do not wait for slaughter, then, in Byerlia—Byerland. Byerland is much better. We are calling it Byerland, and maybe we do not need to kill all of the nobles before some commoners can come to your Landsmeet.
I've never managed to hit on something that offends all of the nobility before. No matter what, there've always been a few who've thought, that's not that bad. But this -
[ Pronounced with the sort of relish usually reserved for dirty talk: ]
Paroxysms.
[ He drapes his arm around Byerly’s shoulders in a way that would pass for platonic camaraderie, if someone who knew nothing else about them caught a glimpse. ]
And before they have had time to recover—what next?
[ It is a mark of truest love and devotion that Bastien does not wipe his cheek dry. ]
Yes. [ Starry-eyed. ] Maybe you could do something with taxes to give everyone an incentive to make sure the children they are responsible for can read.
Or Byerly the Perverted in the Very Best and Most Admirable Ways. Were every man so innovative in bed, there would be no more wars. Everyone would be too happy all of the time.
And the Sinister... No, I cannot make that one work.
[ Bastien has to sit on one of his knees, to be close enough to Byerly's height to hug him one-armed into his chest and shoulder, so that's what he does. ]
Anyway, they will mostly call you Byerly the Dramatic but Gentle. They will tell their children: every day when his advisors began bickering, he would look at them and ask, Do I need to hire an executioner? Is that what it takes to get things done around here? But he never did hire one, the softie.
Mmhm, [ with lazy, comfortable pride—not pride in his terrible impression, pride in Byerly and his soft, sweet heart.
And his dramatics. Bastien likes them. ]
But I will call you King By the Goatherd, or the Soggy Chicken, or the Most Cherished, or… Can I call you mine?
[ A serious question, not really about some hypothetical royal future. He still sounds comfortable and pleased, not shy and tentative like he might have some months ago, except for the inherent shyness of feeling the need to ask first. ]
When we are alone, you know, and we can know between us that I don’t mean only mine.
[ Without hesitation. He's still nuzzling against the crook of Bastien's neck, because there's a bit of shyness to him, too, in saying this. But there's no doubt, from the aching sincerity of his voice, that he means it. ]
I am yours. If my soul were drawn from my body, dearest Bastien, it would find its way to you and wrap around your ankles like a purring cat. There is no part of me that is not wholly in your mercy.
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[ He needn't have been afraid. Byerly's answer is unhesitating, as certain as he would be if he were commenting on the salinity of the sea. ]
The only true difference - aside from the education afforded to nobles, of course - is that bloodlines come with certain reputations. And power comes from belief. If people believe you can lead, they follow. But those sorts of tales don't belong to nobles alone - King Calenhad himself came from common stock. Do you think there's a difference between them?
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Although, ] I think I used to. Not directly, but more like—you know how sometimes you will think someone is better looking than you—
Theoretically. [ He taps Byerly on his chin. ] If you can imagine yourself in the shoes of someone who is not the most beautiful man in Thedas. Then you might think someone is better looking than you, deep down, but on the surface you think, please, he is nothing special. His nose is crooked. And look there, I think that is a boil. And if he says to you he is better-looking, that is worse, but if he says you are better-looking, that is also worse, because clearly he’s an idiot or humoring you or both, so…
[ It’s only now that he realizes he just, in this very conversation, brought up inbred droolers. ]
Maybe sometimes I still do that.
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[ By runs his fingertips along Bastien's cheekbone. ]
Do you trust me when I say you're better-looking?
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Say it, [ he teases, fishing as shamelessly as if By'd never complimented him before, ] and I'll let you know.
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[ Byerly's gaze on him is deeply, intensely loving. ]
Beloved, wonderful in every way.
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I trust you.
[ He could argue about most handsome, except of course it’s subjective. All he could ever want is for Byerly to think so.
He leans in and up to By’s ear. Whispering is silly, but it’s easier. ]
With all my heart, for all my life.
[ Sealed with a peck on the cheek.
Then he needs another scrap of bread immediately, to replenish his strength after the Herculean feat of saying that sober and fully-dressed and in the daylight, and he needs to keep moving along. ]
It was only a metaphor, though. I’m not worried about—it is just, not everyone sees it the way you do. They say someone like your Calenhad, he came from common stock, alright, but he became a king because there was something special about him, and all his children after him, and now that we are not all barbarians we have found all of these special people with their special blood and elevated them to where they belong.
no subject
One might argue we're still barbarians.
[ Not because that's a counterargument; just to amuse Bastien with his wit. ]
But anyone who thinks that...I've known men of the nobility who do live that word, nobility, but I've known many more who are vain, base, stupid, greedy. And I've known a mix of the same amongst commoners. Anyone who really thinks there's a difference, a meaningful difference, is a fool. Which only goes so far, of course - because a man can be a fool and still have power, you can still be at the mercy of fools - but they're a fool all the same.
no subject
He doesn’t always feel the same. In Orlais even the commoners’ beloved hero was Lord Remi Vascal, Bastien’s own namesake a duke. The nobles in Val Royeaux were untouchable and unknowable. He didn’t see a nobleman’s bare face until he was eighteen, and then only in the dark. The admiration and envy and fear and mystery all fed each other, and even when he had proof that they bled like anyone else dotting his sleeves, they felt like something separate.
But it’s been years. He’s learned better. There are crevices of resentment and hunger that the learning hasn’t reached, but with the better parts of him, he thinks Byerly is right. ]
Maybe we do not wait for slaughter, then, in Byerlia—Byerland. Byerland is much better. We are calling it Byerland, and maybe we do not need to kill all of the nobles before some commoners can come to your Landsmeet.
no subject
A little slaughter? I really do know a lot of people who deserve it.
[ He takes a piece of bread and nibbles at it like a mouse, all front teeth. ]
But if you insist. We shall upend the social order altogether in Byerland. The sharing of power without the doing of violence first. Unheard of!
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[ (c:) ]
And it will be an enormous scandal in Orlais. Their king did what without what?
Reason enough even if it weren’t the right thing.
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[ He gives a theatrical shiver of pleasure. ]
I've never managed to hit on something that offends all of the nobility before. No matter what, there've always been a few who've thought, that's not that bad. But this -
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Paroxysms.
[ He drapes his arm around Byerly’s shoulders in a way that would pass for platonic camaraderie, if someone who knew nothing else about them caught a glimpse. ]
And before they have had time to recover—what next?
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[ The fingers circling Bastien's kneecap are decidedly unplatonic. ]
Seems a place to start.
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Are you trying to butter me up, Your Majesty? You should know, I am already buttered.
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That's true. Very buttery.
[ Then, less cute: ]
It seems a fine way to make way for other things we'd want to happen, no?
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Yes. [ Starry-eyed. ] Maybe you could do something with taxes to give everyone an incentive to make sure the children they are responsible for can read.
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But I wanted to do the beatings.
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You would never, anyway. Come the next age they will call you King Byerly the Dramatic but Gentle.
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[ He looks rather wistfully pleased by the thought. ]
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Or Byerly the Perverted in the Very Best and Most Admirable Ways. Were every man so innovative in bed, there would be no more wars. Everyone would be too happy all of the time.
And the Sinister... No, I cannot make that one work.
[ Bastien has to sit on one of his knees, to be close enough to Byerly's height to hug him one-armed into his chest and shoulder, so that's what he does. ]
Anyway, they will mostly call you Byerly the Dramatic but Gentle. They will tell their children: every day when his advisors began bickering, he would look at them and ask, Do I need to hire an executioner? Is that what it takes to get things done around here? But he never did hire one, the softie.
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That does sound a bit like me.
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And his dramatics. Bastien likes them. ]
But I will call you King By the Goatherd, or the Soggy Chicken, or the Most Cherished, or… Can I call you mine?
[ A serious question, not really about some hypothetical royal future. He still sounds comfortable and pleased, not shy and tentative like he might have some months ago, except for the inherent shyness of feeling the need to ask first. ]
When we are alone, you know, and we can know between us that I don’t mean only mine.
no subject
[ Without hesitation. He's still nuzzling against the crook of Bastien's neck, because there's a bit of shyness to him, too, in saying this. But there's no doubt, from the aching sincerity of his voice, that he means it. ]
I am yours. If my soul were drawn from my body, dearest Bastien, it would find its way to you and wrap around your ankles like a purring cat. There is no part of me that is not wholly in your mercy.
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