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#you know someday i gotta write him digging her out of the wreckage after she kills the archdemon
shivunin · 6 months
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A Good Fight
(Arianwen Tabris/Zevran Arainai | 2,440 Words | AO3 Link | CW: Mild sexual references/sexual tension)
Summary: Things that annoy Tabris: frivolous conversation and being the butt of a joke. Why, then, can she not get the insufferable Crow out of her mind?
“May I rest my head on your bosom?” the Crow asked somewhere behind Tabris. “I might cry.”
Tabris grimaced, casting a look at Alistair. He echoed her glance, nose wrinkled. It galled her to agree with him, but plainly they were in accord when it came to this.
“You can cry well away from my bosom, I’m certain,” the mage said severely. 
“Reconsidering keeping him around yet?” Alistair asked in a low voice, bending closer. 
Wen pressed her lips together, eyes narrowed, and glanced behind her at the other two. Zevran gazed at Wynne soulfully, one hand pressed to his chest. Wynne was grimacing, staff thumping into the dust of the road as they climbed the hill. 
“Did I tell you I was an orphan?” the former Crow went on, his voice sorrowful. “I never knew my mother.”
“Egad,” Wynne said, disgust as plain in her voice as it was in the lines of her body. “I give up.” 
She sped up, outstripping Zevran and both Wardens. Arianwen watched the mage go, shaking her head, and glanced behind her again. 
Zevran caught her eyes at once and winked. Wen stared back, lips still pressed into a tight line. 
“Maybe I am,” she told Alistair, and turned away again. 
Before them, the harried mage left small clouds of dust above the road. The late afternoon light diffused there, giving the road an odd sort of dreamlike quality. 
“Could still give killing him a shot,” Alistair muttered. 
“What was that? I could not hear you over the sound of all that armor,” Zevran said, abruptly behind them. Arianwen took a large step to the left and carried on. 
“Oh, nothing,” Alistair said. Wen could feel him looking at her, but she ignored the desperate glance. “We, ah…thought your conversation was interesting. That’s all.”
“Ah—so I suppose you also have an opinion about murder, then?” 
There was something under the words. Some sort of…double meaning, hidden undercurrent. Ugh. Wen hated plenty of things, but trying to understand what someone meant when it wasn’t what they actually said ranked highly on the list. 
“Let’s not,” she said. 
“Not what? I am afraid I do not understand you.”
If he started talking about her bosom, she’d just stab him, Wen decided. When she sped up, the assassin matched her. 
“Talk.”
“Pardon? I did not catch what you said.”
“I, ah—wouldn’t push your luck, there,” Alistair said, jogging for several steps until he drew even with the pair of them. “She’s got a short temper.”
“Yes, I had determined as much,” Zevran said. “And how lovely she looks when she is thinking of death.”
Wen stepped directly into his path and stopped moving, forcing the assassin to stop in his tracks or dodge to the side. He chose the former, still smiling broadly, though he stopped only an inch or two away. Arianwen met his eyes squarely, thinking. 
She didn’t think she wanted to kill him. The man was decent enough at what he did. Fighting him had been the best part of fighting any of the Crows. Actually, he’d been her favorite person to fight since they’d left Ostagar. There was something fluid about the way he moved that—well. Fascinated her, actually. She liked watching him. 
No—no, she didn’t want to kill him. What would be the point now? It certainly wasn’t as if she cared that Wynne, of all people, was annoyed. Actually, she should be thanking him. For once, the mage hadn’t been hovering over her shoulder and asking questions. 
“I don’t think so,” she said, to the dust in the air as much as she was speaking to either man, and turned to continue up the hill without any additional elaboration. 
“Yes, I see what you mean,” Zevran said behind her. 
“We aren’t friends, assassin,” Alistair said stiffly, but added in a quieter voice: “Best to avoid prodding at her when she’s already tired.”
“Mmm,” Zevran allowed. Wen gritted her teeth, irritated again, but he went on a moment later. “I shall take your advice very seriously, Warden.” 
Wen glanced behind her one more time, expecting the same cocky grin or perhaps another wink. Instead, she found a flash of something she didn’t expect: 
Exhaustion. Hiding in the corner of his eyes, in the subtle roll of his shoulders.
Ah. That was harder to ignore. 
Wen closed her eyes, willing herself to keep walking. It would be easy. It would be better. He was so annoying; maybe he’d stop talking if he was too tired to manage. 
As soon as she reached the top of the hill, she swung her pack from her shoulder and sat back against a fence. 
Not for him. Obviously not. 
But—maybe it was time for a break. That was all. Redcliffe was almost in sight and they’d probably be busy as soon as they got there. Best they sit and rest now before they no longer had the choice. 
She certainly, pointedly did not breathe easier when the Crow sat to her left with an audible sigh of relief. 
|
“Are you quite certain you are ready for this?” the assassin asked. 
Wen, who’d deposited the last of her armor to the side of the clearing, nodded curtly. She’d have to be a fool to think he had nothing to teach her. Whenever possible, she did try not to be a fool.
“I need to know all I can. Show me, if you want to.”
The outskirts of the Brecilian rose around them, trees already towering higher than she’d ever seen them before. This place was odd and old, breaking the monotony of carefully planted fields and abandoned villages. She didn’t feel like herself here. It was as if she’d slipped off her skin and found it ill-fitting upon its return. Or—perhaps something hung watching in the air here. Something that saw her, that waited and knew. 
She couldn’t say she liked it. 
“If I want to?” Zevran flipped the knife in his hand once, neatly. “And here you have been asking so politely, Warden. How could I say no?”
“You’ve just said it,” Wen replied, taking a slow, smooth step to the side. “Obviously you know how.” 
“Tch,” he began to circle with her—taking her measure, she thought. Some of the glossy humor fell away, baring the steel beneath. “So literal.”
Wen huffed, refusing to be dragged into a conversation. She’d get distracted by talking and then he’d strike. She knew exactly how this worked. 
“First and foremost,” he said, “I have seen you fight. You are very skilled, yes? But you are not careful.”
Wen felt her eyebrows climb. Zevran feinted, she sidestepped, and they resumed pacing each other. 
“Are you suggesting I get thicker armor?” she asked. 
He laughed, a deeper thing than his usual chuckle. Wen narrowed her eyes. 
“You have been spending too much time with Alistair. No—I am suggesting you learn to be quieter,” he said, and moved—it was like his body had become liquid for a moment, flowing so close that she was forced onto her back foot. A blow in the right spot and she was stumbling back, struggling to halt her momentum enough to guard herself. 
To her surprise, he did not press his advantage. He took a step back instead, watching her with an odd look on his face. Wen scowled and rolled her shoulders, loosening the muscles that had gone taut. 
“I’m plenty quiet.”
“Not quiet enough to be an assassin—and that is what you asked me to teach you, yes?”
Wen pursed her lips. She had asked him. She’d wanted to know how he moved the way he did, but she certainly couldn’t ask him for that. It had been plenty easy to imagine what he’d say in response. 
“Fight me, then,” she said, and dropped her knife. It sank into the soft earth point-down, which meant she’d have to be very thorough when she cleaned and oiled it later. At the moment, she didn’t really care. 
Zevran cocked an eyebrow at her, but stepped back to set his knife aside. 
“Are you quite certain? Surely you would like some sort of explanation first.”
“No,” she told him. “I’m too literal for that.”
Zevran tipped his head back and laughed. 
As soon as his eyes were closed, she struck. It ought to have been a glancing blow, only a soft slap to his shoulder to get his attention. The strike never landed. Instead, he flowed away from her and spun, planting a hand on her back and pushing. Wen was ready for it this time. Her weight shifted hard to her back foot, but she did not waver.  
“Good,” he said from behind her, but when she reached back to grasp his arm Zevran was already gone. 
Arianwen spun slowly, listening. He must have gone up; there was nothing closer than the branches to hide behind. Her heart thudded in her ears, distracting her. Where was he? That rustle in the bushes had the rhythm of a squirrel, the scratching at the bark to her right was certainly a bird, and the crunch in the leaves behind her—
Zevran dropped from above and locked her into his arms before she had a chance to strike back. 
“As I was saying,” he told her. “Not very careful.”
Arianwen tried to kick him to little avail. Zevran laughed into her ear, his mouth briefly brushing against the point of it. An odd tingling sensation spread from that point to her cheeks, burning as it went. What was this? Some sort of poison?
Arianwen planted her feet, gripped his arms where they wrapped around her, and flipped Zevran over her head. His eyes were wide when she straddled his chest, a knife already pressed against the hollow of his throat. She could feel his pulse against her knuckles, could feel his breath whenever his ribs expanded between her thighs, and—what was this? 
“What did you just do?” she snarled. Zevran’s brows lifted. 
“I caught you,” he said. 
“Not that. You—” 
She pressed her lips together all at once, her face hot, and climbed off of him. If there had been some way for Arianwen to scratch the sensation from her skin with bared nails, she would have done it immediately. It lived somewhere deeper than her skin, entirely beyond the reach of fingertips or knives. 
Had he ever touched her skin to skin before? She could not think. 
“Well? Teach me,” she demanded, taking several steps away from him. The distance, such as it was, did not help.
Zevran rose more slowly, dusting himself off. She didn’t like the way he was looking at her. It was—speculative. Like he was weighing her against something in his mind. 
“Or was that it?” she asked. 
“No, no—I was merely thinking how best to show you what I mean,” he said. There was some hidden meaning to his words. She could feel it. 
Wen frowned at him, eyes narrowing. What was he actually saying? 
“Let us begin again,” he said, spreading his arms. Wen took a deep breath, wishing away the odd burning at the back of her neck and the tips of her ears. 
“Let’s,” she gritted out, her heart beating curiously fast, and raised her fists.
|
“Are you awake yet?” Zevran murmured. 
“No,” Wen told him, hand skimming over his loose, night-rumpled hair. Zevran grunted and pressed his face more firmly against her bare chest. 
“It should not surprise me when you make jokes,” he said. His lips pressed against the skin over her heart. “And yet…”
“Oh, ha ha,” Wen said, rolling her eyes. “If you’re going to be a pest, you can get off.”
“Oh?” he angled his head until he could look at her, morning light glinting across one golden eye. “Can I?” 
“Andraste’s tits,” she muttered, squirming without any real effort to dislodge him. 
“Yours are finer by far, I assure you,” he informed her solemnly, pressing a kiss to the nearest of them. 
Arianwen rolled her eyes, but threaded her hand through his hair again. Some of the tangles smoothed under her touch, but not enough. He’d still need to comb it when he rose for the day. 
She tried very, very hard to pretend that she couldn’t hear the army moving outside their tent. 
“Zevran,” she began, her voice soft, and he lifted his head to look at her. 
What could she tell him? That there were even odds she would die today? That she was grateful? What more could she possibly tell him now? 
“It will be a very good fight, yes?” he said, as if he knew what she was thinking. “Your favorite thing.”
Tabris pressed her mouth closed, searching his face for meaning. She found none. There was only the warmth of his eyes, the comfort of his body pressed to hers. The clamor of steel rose beyond their flimsy canvas walls. Time was almost up. It would be a good fight, yes. If there was anything she loved, it was a good fight. 
Arianwen loved Zevran more.
She’d planned to leave him behind, where the fighting was less heavy, but she already knew she wouldn’t be able to bear it. How could she fight through the city, never knowing if he’d been struck by a stray arrow or felled by an ogre? She could not protect him and seek the archdemon both. At least if they were together—at least they would both know. At least neither of them would have to wonder.
Until the end, then, and perhaps whatever came next. At least she knew she wouldn’t be alone. 
“Yes,” she said, passing her fingers through his hair one last time. Her hand fell to a stop at his cheek, thumb tracing the bottom point of his tattoo. 
“You will remember what I taught you, yes?” 
He lifted himself onto an elbow and leaned forward to kiss her. It had been meant as a glancing thing, she thought. It ran deeper than that in the end, desperate hands on shoulders and teeth and tongues and heat. She didn’t want to lose him. She raged at the world, for giving them to each other right on the doorstep of ruin. 
“Always,” Wen told Zevran, and clutched him to her when he would have risen to go. He endured this for several moments longer, his breathing uneven, before he pressed a kiss to her cheek and moved away. 
When she pushed the blankets aside to stand, his was the hand that pulled her to her feet.
(For Zevwarden Week Day 6: Favorite Things and Pet Peeves. Thanks again @zevraholics!)
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