Tag: fenris

inktober – “bottle” I remembered fenris who loves few things- brooding, throwing bottles at wall and Hawke ❤
“Brooding, throwing bottles at wall and Hawke.” YES. EXACTLY.

DA2 companions
the Merry Band of Misfits™ whom I love for all their many relatable flaws
Fenris/f!Hawke feels: Standing Still
In which Hawke duels the Arishok, and Fenris finally gets his head out of his ass… but the timing is less than ideal.
A longer one, again (~6600 words). Here is a clumsy link to the AO3 post, since I don’t want the fancy new Tumblr anti-porn-bot algorithm to hide this post from tag searches: tinyurl.com/fenhawke
**************
Fenris did not consider himself a particularly fast learner.
Hawke would heartily disagree, and he supposed she was right when it came to some things. Fenris was a skilled combatant, and he could master a weapon in the space of a few sessions. And Hawke had said he’d learned to read even faster than she’d thought possible.
Even so, when it came to life-changing realizations – things that shifted his way of thinking like an earthquake, tilting the ground beneath his feet and forcing him out of the confines of his own beliefs – Fenris was unforgivably slow on the uptake.
Revelations. They always seemed to bash him in the face with the devastating force of a Qunari warhammer. Escaping Danarius had been like that; it wasn’t until Fenris had looked upon the aftermath of his own horrific mass murder that he realized that he couldn’t live under the yoke of Danarius’s control anymore.
And it wasn’t until he was clutching Hawke’s crumpled body on the ground outside the Viscount’s Keep that he realized he couldn’t live without her.
*****************
A few hours earlier…
“Should’ve stopped by the Hanged Man and grabbed a bottle of whiskey,” Hawke panted as they ran up the steps to the Viscount’s Keep. “I could use a drink right about now. A little liquid courage never went amiss, wouldn’t you say?”
“It’s probably best we didn’t,” Fenris replied. “Falling over drunk is not a defensive strategy I’d recommend.”
“But we could have offered some to the Arishok!” she said. “Friendly drink to loosen him up, persuade him to change his mind about converting or killing everyone… It’s a classic negotiating strategy, right?”
“I think we’re a little past the talking-over-drinks stage by now,” Varric called breathlessly from behind them.
Hawke paused at the doors to the Keep and threw Varric a rueful grin. “And that, my friend, is what’s really wrong with politics. Hardened enemies become fast friends with the power of a drink.” She pointed playfully at him. “You can quote me on that for that damned novel of yours.”
Fenris smirked and shook his head, but beneath his amusement, he was worried about her. She’d been cracking jokes nonstop since they’d found Isabela’s farewell note on Wall-Eyed Sam’s body. To Fenris’s eyes, her incessant humour was a clear indication of how upset she was about her best friend’s abrupt disappearance.
Hawke took a deep breath, then raised her eyebrows at their little group. The whole crew had insisted on coming this time, despite the obvious danger. “All right, kids,” she said. “Last chance to go home and hide under your beds. Anyone having second thoughts?”
There was a general murmur of negations and readiness, and Hawke grinned at them all. “Oh good. Then you lot can go on in for me, because I’m definitely going home to hide under my bed.”
Aveline shot her a desperate look. “Hawke, we have to hurry-”
Hawke laughed brightly, then shoved open the doors to the Viscount’s Keep.
They were instantly set upon by a small contingent of Qunari warriors. Fenris immediately phased through the nearest one, materializing inside of him and blowing his innards apart in a shower of blood.
The next few minutes were a blur of clashing weapons and explosive magical attacks, of battle roars and shrieks of pain. Once their final enemy was felled, Fenris straightened and looked around the room.
It was a scene of blood and disarray, but his gaze skipped carelessly over it all until he spotted Hawke, upright and hale at the top of the stairs. Her face was as serious as it always was in battle, but when she met his eyes, she smiled and blew him a kiss.
He shook his head in mock exasperation, then jogged up the stairs with the others to join her. Panicked screams were emanating from the grand hall, and Hawke jerked her head in the direction of the ruckus. “Let’s join the party, shall we?”
They all ran toward the grand hall, and Hawke didn’t hesitate this time before pushing open the doors.
They stepped into the room, and a familiar face stared up at them from the base of the stairs – a face that was separated from the rest of its body: the Viscount’s decapitated head.
Merrill gasped.
“Maker save us,” Sebastian breathed.
“Shit,” Varric muttered, and Hawke huffed. “You can say that again,” she whispered.
Fenris merely twisted his lips in rueful acknowledgement of the Viscount’s death. Frankly, he was unsurprised. It was only logical for the Qunari to dispense of the existing authority before imposing their own.
“Shanedan, Hawke. I expected you,” the Arishok rumbled. He slowly made his way down the stairs, ignoring all of them except for the dark-haired mage. “Maraas toh ebra-shok. You alone are basalit-an.” He opened his arms expansively and glared at the assembly of terrified hostages. “This is what respect looks like, bas,” he announced. “Some of you will never earn it.”
Then he returned his austere gaze to Hawke. “You know I am denied Par Vollen until the Tome of Koslun is found. How will you see this conflict resolved without it?”
Hawke offered the Arishok a sickly sort of smile, and Fenris suppressed a wince. He could practically see the quip gathering itself at the tip of her tongue, but he had to agree with Aveline: this was not the time for jokes.
Before Hawke could speak, a sardonic voice called out from the door. “I believe I can answer that.”
Hawke’s face slackened in surprise for a split second before lighting up with joy. “Bels!” she exclaimed.
Isabela sauntered over to Hawke’s side with an enormous tome in her arms, and Fenris watched her approach with no small amount of surprise himself. He’d been just as shocked as Hawke at Isabela’s abandonment, given how close she and Hawke were, but he was even more surprised at her return. Isabela had many fine traits, but it was clear from her antics with this blasted relic that loyalty was not among them.
After a moment’s hesitation, Isabela handed the huge book to the Arishok. “I’m sure you’ll find it mostly undamaged,” she said.
The Arishok took the book reverently, and Isabela shot Hawke a small sideways look and rubbed the back of her neck. “It took me a while to get back, what with all the fighting everywhere,” she said with a shrug. “You know how it is.”
“You fucking tart,” Hawke said happily. “Showing up at the eleventh hour. You trying to steal my place as the heroine of Varric’s book?”
Isabela folded her arms. “This is your damned influence, Hawke. I was halfway to Ostwick before I knew I had to turn around. It’s pathetic.”
“Yes, coming back to help your dearest and most attractive friend in the whole wide world,” Hawke retorted. “How very pathetic.”
Isabela tutted and rolled her eyes, and Hawke beamed at her until the Arishok spoke again. “The relic is reclaimed. I am now free to return to Par Vollen.” He turned his stare to Isabela. “With the thief.”
Hawke stiffened, and Isabela instantly dropped her confident stance. “What?”
Fenris couldn’t help himself. “You thought you could strand them here for four years without consequence?” he drawled.
Isabela glared at him over Hawke’s shoulder. “Hey. Whose side are you on, anyway?”
The Arishok ignored them and addressed Hawke. “She stole the Tome of Koslun. She must return with us.”
Hawke folded her arms, her face and posture now utterly serious. “Sounds like you have something very specific in mind,” she said cautiously.
“She will submit to the Qun and the Ben-Hassrath,” the Arishok said. “More than that, I will not say.”
Hawke narrowed her eyes. “Well, I don’t like the sound of that, whatever that means,” she retorted. “You have your relic. Isabela stays with us.”
“Then you leave me no choice.” The Arishok lifted his chin, then proclaimed, “I challenge you, Hawke. You and I will battle to the death, with her as the prize.”
“No!” Isabela blurted. “If you’re going to duel anyone, duel me!”
The Arishok finally deigned to look at her – a very quick dismissive glance. “You are not basalit-an,” he said. “You are unworthy.”
Isabela opened her mouth to protest, but Hawke held up one hand. “I accept your challenge,” she said.
“Oh no!” Merrill squeaked, and Aveline took a concerned step forward. “Hawke, wait-”
Fenris stepped away from Hawke’s side and gestured for them to back away. “Don’t interfere,” he said, primarily to Aveline; the Guard-Captain looked ready to pounce on the Arishok herself. “It will be fine.”
He took his place among the other spectators that lined the walls, and Anders stormed over to him. “How are you all right with this?” he hissed. “She’ll be killed! You would just stand back and watch her face off against that – that beast?”
Fenris didn’t bother to look at him. “She will be fine,” he repeated firmly. “Hawke is strong. Unlike some mages I know,” he added waspishly. He folded his arms. “Besides, it is her choice. She wishes to resolve this with as little bloodshed as possible, then I am happy to stand here and watch.”
“I can’t believe this,” Anders snapped. “You argue with her at every turn, yell at her for every other decision she makes, and now that she decides to face off against a two-meter tall horned warrior with battleaxes in both hands, now is when you just stand back and watch?” He leaned away from Fenris in disgust. “Why do you even follow her? Do you even care about her at all?”
“Shut your mouth,” Fenris snarled. “You know nothing of this kind of respect. You are unworthy to follow her, not me.” He stared venomously at the scowling mage. “Don’t speak to me again unless you wish to have your heart torn out of your chest,” he spat, then stalked away from Anders to stand beside Sebastian instead.
And then Hawke’s battle with the Arishok began.
Fenris had been fighting at her side for years now, but as he watched her fingers tapping slowly on the smooth handle of her staff, he realized that he’d never really had a chance to watch her in combat before. He was always at the forefront of a fight, while Hawke threw up barriers and rained fire and lightning on their foes from behind.
This was different from any other fight Fenris had seen her in. A single foe in close quarters, one who wouldn’t be tricked by some of her more discombobulating magical attacks: it was a duel in the truest sense of the word, and despite his confidence in her skill, Fenris was curious how she would adjust.
Her posture was tense and nervous, but her first dodge was perfectly timed when the Arishok lunged at her, and the fireball she threw at his back was swift and unerring. Fenris relaxed slightly as Hawke played to her strengths, maintaining a careful distance and striking from behind when the Arishok couldn’t deflect.
And then she didn’t dodge quickly enough, and the Arishok ploughed into her with a powerful lunge.
Fenris flinched as Hawke slammed back against a pillar with a sickening thud. She slumped to the ground and sat frozen for a second, then drew in a gasping breath and clenched her fist.
A glow of green healing magic shivered over her skin, and she was on her feet a second later, rolling clumsily away from the Arishok’s swinging battleaxe.
Fenris released his breath, then continued to watch her intently, feeling a bit more nervous than before. The battle went on for minutes that seemed to stretch like hours, and Fenris tried to quell his growing anxiety as she took a number of strikes from the Arishok, recovering each time with the help of her own healing spells.
She struck the Arishok multiple times as well, and soon he was limping from a bleeding wound to the thigh. But Hawke was slowing down. Her dodges and evasions were becoming less timely. She didn’t have a warrior’s stamina, and if Fenris could see her fatigue, then the Arishok certainly could.
That’s when the Arishok grabbed her by the neck and hauled her off her feet.
Fenris’s entire body went tense. Everything was frozen: his lungs, his heart, his tongue pressed against the roof of his mouth – he couldn’t move, couldn’t breathe as he watched Hawke kicking her feet ineffectually, scrabbling to grab hold of the Arishok’s armoured wrists, then his bare forearms –
Smoke began to rise from the Arishok’s skin where Hawke grabbed it. Finally he snarled with pain and released her, and she dropped to the ground like a rag doll.
Fenris moved – a slight step forward, he knew he shouldn’t but he couldn’t stop himself – but someone was holding his hand and keeping him in place.
It was Isabela. She looked just as horrified as he felt, and her fingers were clutching his own in a death grip.
Hawke drew in a desperate scraping of air, and Fenris whipped his head around to look at her. She was on her feet again, the glow of her healing spell fading already and her lips drawn in a snarl.
She twisted her left hand in a vicious gesture, and the Arishok was encased in a cage of pure magic.
The huge Qunari warrior tried to slam his way out of the cage, but the snapping bars of light threw him back. Hawke heaved a huge exhausted sigh and ran a hand through her hair. “Friendly drinks would have been the way to go,” she said, her voice rough with fatigue. Then she slammed her staff on the ground.
A crackling pattern of ice appeared on the Arishok’s belly, crawling and thickening across his abdomen, and Fenris held his breath, knowing what was coming next –
Hawke jabbed her staff in the Arishok’s direction, and his frozen organs exploded along with the magical cage, scattering grey-and-red chunks of frozen flesh and viscera across the floor.
The Arishok fell to his knees. He lifted his eyes to Hawke’s face. “One day, we shall return,” he rasped. Then he collapsed on the ground with a limp finality.
For once, Hawke didn’t instantly reply with a clever quip. She bent over, hands on her knees and her long hair falling forward to hide her face.
In silence, the remaining Qunari began to file out of the room. Fenris pulled away from Isabela’s grip and strode toward Hawke, but she was standing upright again already before he could reach her side.
She smiled tiredly at him. “Remind me to bake them a cake if they do return,” she said to him. “A chocolate one. With icing. Everyone likes chocolate.”
Fenris gripped her arm and peered at her face. “Are you all right?” he demanded. She certainly looked fine; tired, of course, but there wasn’t even a hint of bruising on her neck, thanks to her healing magic.
She nodded. “I’m fine. Really, I’m fine,” she repeated hastily as the others all hurried over with worried faces. “Let’s just get out of here before-”
“Is it over?” A ringing, authoritative voice cut her off, and Hawke pulled a little face. “Too late,” she muttered.
Meredith strode into the room with a handful of Templars at her back, and Hawke squared her shoulders before turning to face them. “It’s over,” she replied. She gestured at the Arishok’s half-frozen body. “One chilled Qunari, as ordered.”
Her irreverent words seemed to break the tension in the room; someone laughed, and then the noble hostages were cheering and applauding.
Hawke cringed slightly, and Meredith narrowed her eyes. “It seems Kirkwall has a new champion,” she said.
“Oh Maker’s balls, please don’t call me that,” Hawke begged. “‘Champion’ is such a heavy word, it carries so much responsibility…”
But it was too late: the nobles were already calling her name, calling her the Champion, and Hawke rubbed her face and shot Meredith a half-hearted smile. “Thanks for that,” she said.
“I look forward to seeing how you will serve your city with this new… title,” Meredith replied, her tone positively dripping with subtext.
“I’ll be serving myself a drink or three first, if you don’t mind,” Hawke quipped. “Now if you’ll excuse us…” She edged around Meredith cautiously and headed for the door at a brisk pace.
Fenris and the rest of the group followed at her heels. Once they’d stepped out of the clamour of the grand hall, Varric chuckled. “The refugee mage from Lothering defeats the Qunari chief in single-handed combat,” he said, with much relish. “Oh, this is good. Nobody will believe it. That’s what will make it so compelling.”
Hawke groaned. “Please, Varric, give me one single day without having to make…” She trailed off and rubbed her face. “…without making editorial comments,” she finished faintly, then headed for the stairs.
“Hawke?” Anders’s voice was sharp as he called her name from the back of the group.
She didn’t reply, reaching instead for Isabela’s arm as they approached the stairs. “Now you,” she said pointedly. “I can’t decide whether to punch you or hug you. I knew you’d come back, you know. I knew you wouldn’t really leave.”
Isabela rolled her eyes. “You’re reading way too much into this.”
“Wrong,” Hawke said as she tottered down the stairs. “I know exactly why you came back. You know you love me, you tart. You wouldn’t really-”
She stumbled on the bottom step, and Fenris and Aveline grabbed her arms. “Kaffas,” Fenris swore. “Hawke, are you-”
“I’m fine, I promise I’m fine! I just need some air, let’s – we’re nearly…” She seemed to run out of breath, and her feet were dragging as she tried to keep on walking.
“You’re not fine!” Aveline exclaimed, her voice tense with worry. “Are you hurt? Where are you hurt?”
“I’m not,” Hawke insisted. “I’m just… need some air.” She tried feebly to twist away from Fenris and Aveline’s hands, finally wresting one arm away from Aveline to push open the door to the Keep.
Fenris kept a steady hand on her arm, and it was a good thing; as soon as she took two steps into the smoke-scented nighttime air, she seemed to lose control of her legs, and Fenris caught her before she could hit the ground.
“Venhedis,” he hissed. Her eyelids were at half-mast and her eyes were unfocused as they drifted vaguely across his face.
“Fenris,” she murmured, “you’re so… Have I ever… told you…?”
Her smile was lazy, and he glared at her. “Hawke, what’s wrong?” he demanded. “Where are you hurt?”
“I’m not,” she mumbled. “I’m…” She trailed off into silence, her body going limp in his arms.
Fenris stared at her stupidly, struck dumb by her sudden stillness. She couldn’t be – no, it was impossible. Hawke was never seriously hurt. She was too lively, too full of vitality and optimism. She couldn’t be…
A yawning terror suddenly opened inside Fenris’s belly, a pit of sucking fear the likes of which he’d never felt before, and he fought to breathe as he stared at her precious face. Wake up, he thought with rising desperation. Wake up, or nothing will ever be right again.
The words sat frozen in his brain. He was unable to speak. He was paralyzed by this new and petrifying terror. Then suddenly Anders was there.
“Move, you idiot,” he hissed, then shoved Fenris roughly until he shifted aside. Anders hovered his hands near Hawke’s temples and closed his eyes, muttering under his breath as a cool green glow emanated from his palms.
“She’s overextended,” Merrill whispered tremulously.
“What does that mean?” Isabela demanded.
“She pushed herself too hard without help,” Merrill explained. “No lyrium, no blood magic to supplement -”
“Her mana is almost depleted,” Anders interrupted brusquely, his hands still glowing with restorative energy. “Please, be quiet while I…” He trailed off, and the rest of the group fell into a tense silence as he worked.
Fenris was completely still. He could barely breathe, and he couldn’t tear his eyes away from Hawke. Her magic force was almost depleted – that force that he hated on principle, but which Hawke controlled so well and which was such an integral part of who she was. Of course Fenris didn’t hate that part of her, because it was her, it was Hawke, and he didn’t hate Hawke. He hated nothing about her, not a single thing, not her constant flirting or her pro-mage tendencies or her teasing the Templars or her inability to take most things seriously – he didn’t hate anything about her, of course he didn’t, because he loved her.
Andraste save him, he loved her. He fucking loved her, and if she died…
An interminable eon later, Anders leaned back opened his eyes. “She’s stable now,” he said, and Fenris’s heart thudded with a painful squeeze of relief. “She needs to rest. And she needs lyrium supplements, carefully controlled. But she’ll be all right.” He looked at Aveline, his manner brisk and clinical. “Aveline, will you-?”
“Of course,” Aveline said, and she carefully lifted Hawke into her arms.
They made their way to Hawke’s mansion as quickly as they could, ignoring the disastrous mess that the evening’s battle had made of the city. Fenris ran at Aveline’s side, oblivious to everything except the knowledge that Hawke would be all right.
She would be all right. The world wasn’t a complete ruin.
Sebastian banged on the door to Hawke’s mansion, and Fenris wasn’t sure if it actually took longer than usual for Bodahn to come to the door or if it just felt like it, but by the time he opened the door, the entire party was so impatient that they poured inside like an unstoppable tide.
“Guard-Captain Vallen? Brother Vael? I – what has – Serrah Hawke! Is she – what’s happened? The Qunari, did they-?” Bodahn was completely flustered, and Fenris was vaguely aware of Sebastian pulling him aside to explain the situation while the rest of them followed Anders and Aveline up to Hawke’s bedroom.
Aveline laid Hawke tenderly on the bed, and Anders immediately began issuing orders, sending Merrill to fetch some lyrium and Varric to get some cloths and a basin of water before resuming his treatment.
Fenris prowled restlessly at the foot of the bed, his eyes scanning Hawke’s face and body almost compulsively. She was so limp, her breathing so slow and her face so pale, and he couldn’t stop staring at her as though the force of his gaze alone would revive her.
Anders said she’ll be fine, he reminded himself firmly. He didn’t trust Anders’s ethics or motivations or his companionship, but he did trust the man’s healing skills.
“Would you stand bloody still?” Anders snapped at him. “You’re distracting. Stay still or get out.”
Fenris narrowed his eyes, his temper rising instinctively at Anders’s tone, but he forced himself to comply. If standing still helped Anders to help Hawke, then he would do it. He would do anything.
Merrill eventually returned with an armful of bottles from Hawke’s medicine cabinet, and Varric came back with the basin and the cloths, and Anders continued to tend to her, giving calm and quiet directions to Merrill and Varric as needed. Aveline, Sebastian, and Isabela stood at the sides of the room, waiting and watching as Anders worked. Orana drifted in and out, bringing extra chairs and glasses of water as they all settled into their sickbed vigil.
Finally Anders sat back on his heels with a tired but satisfied sigh. “All right,” he said. “I’ve done everything I can for tonight. The best thing for her now is rest, so I’d suggest you all go home.”
“Are you staying?” Merrill asked shrewdly.
Anders frowned. “Yes,” he said. “I have to monitor her, check on her every hour. But you should all go.”
Merrill folded her arms obstinately, and Varric chuckled. “I think you’ll be finding yourself on the losing side with that order, Blondie,” he drawled. “No one’s going anywhere.”
Anders scowled more deeply. “Well… You all need to leave this room, then,” he said severely. “Give her some space.”
There was a general grumble of protest, but eventually everyone drifted out one by one, with Bodahn’s fervent promises to set up accommodations for them in the other rooms of the mansion.
But Fenris refused to move. He remained at the foot of the bed where he’d stood for the past hour.
Anders frowned. “Go on, get out of here,” he said. “You’re not helping anyone by standing there.”
“No,” Fenris said simply.
Anders gave him a hard look, but Fenris calmly returned his stare. “I am not leaving,” Fenris said quietly. He shifted his weight awkwardly from one foot to the other before speaking again. “You should get some rest. You… worked hard tonight.” He broke off and swallowed hard. This was the closest he could get to expressing his appreciation for Anders, and he hoped that the mage would accept it for what it was worth. “I can rouse you if she seems unwell. But you deserve the rest.”
Anders stared at him for a moment longer. “Fine,” he finally said, then rose to his feet. “If she spikes a fever, or stops breathing, or does anything at all except for sleep peacefully or wake up peacefully, then you fetch me immediately. Do you understand?”
Fenris nodded, and Anders gave him one last suspicious look before heading for the door.
“Thank you,” Fenris said, to his own surprise.
Anders frowned. “I’m not here for you,” he retorted, but with a little less heat than usual. Then he left the room.
Fenris returned his gaze to Hawke’s sleeping form. She looked peaceful and comfortable now, less like an unconscious invalid and more like her usual sleeping self. For the first time in hours, Fenris felt his muscles starting to relax.
Slowly and cautiously, he approached the bed and pulled up a chair, then sat close to her head. He’d been in this exact position a mere week ago, sitting at Hawke’s side after her mother had died. How strange and terrible for them to be here again so soon, and under such dire circumstances.
He gazed at her tenderly. Anders and Merrill had removed her armour and cleaned her face and neck of the majority of the night’s dirt and sweat, but her long dark hair was in disarray, a mass of sweat-dampened waves that smelled of acrid smoke. As Fenris studied her, his eyes tracing the delicate lines of her cheekbones and her lips, he realized he wasn’t alone.
He turned toward the door and found Isabela standing there, looking deeply uncomfortable.
She caught his eye, and they stared at each other in silence for a moment.
“Would you really have given me over to the Qunari?” she asked suddenly. Her tone was belligerent, but she was holding herself very still, like a rat in a cage.
Fenris frowned. “No.” He turned his eyes back to Hawke.
“But you said… that thing you said,” Isabela muttered.
“I don’t think you should have gone with the Qunari,” Fenris said. “But maybe you should act with some forethought on occasion.”
Isabela scoffed and took one step into the room. “Oh, like you should be giving advice.”
Fenris tore his eyes away from Hawke to scowl at her. “What are you on about?”
“Fenris, look at you!” Isabela exclaimed. She waved an exasperated hand at Hawke’s sleeping form. “You’re in love with Hawke,” she said bluntly. “Everyone knows it. You’re the only one who won’t admit it. Just do something about it already, won’t you? It was kind of cute two years ago. It’s not anymore.”
He didn’t bother to reply, because she was right. Silence settled over the room again as he watched the comforting rise and fall of Hawke’s ribcage.
After a long, quiet moment, he spoke. “You’re leaving, aren’t you?”
He raised his eyes to Isabela’s face, and she glared at him. “Don’t look at me like that,” she snapped. “I know you almost left after you dumped her.”
Fenris flinched at her scathing words, then calmly replied. “I was not judging you. I was just… asking.”
Isabela looked at him for a long moment, the defensiveness melting from her expression until she dropped her gaze to her fidgeting hands. “You’ll look after her, won’t you?” she muttered.
Fenris nodded. “I will be here,” he said. There was nowhere else he could imagine being than by Hawke’s side. It was a truth he’d been fighting for years, but the possibility of losing the chance – of losing her…
Fenris was a slow learner, but he’d learned this much: his life would mean nothing without Hawke in it.
Isabela lifted her eyes back to his face. Then she gave him a small smile. “I won’t be gone forever,” she said. “Just until this all… you know… blows over.”
Fenris nodded a silent acknowledgement. Isabela took a tentative step closer, then leaned over and pecked him on the cheek. “You two had better be fucking again by the time I come back,” she said playfully.
He studied a lingering smudge of dirt on Hawke’s cheek. Isabela was waiting for a lighthearted response, he knew, but his heart felt so damned heavy, weighed down by the night’s revelations, and he didn’t quite have it in him to dig up the expected reply.
Isabela sighed. “Oh, Fenris. Someday you’ll get that pretty head out of your ass and then you’ll be happy, I’m sure of it.” She shifted, then made her awkward way toward the door. “I’ll… I’ll see you, all right?”
“Safe travels, Isabela,” he replied. Then he smirked. “I hope you do not die.”
She scoffed at his use of the Qunari farewell, then threw one last regretful look at Hawke’s slumbering body before leaving the room.
Fenris returned his attention to Hawke. Her hair really was a mess, and it was sure to get even more tangled if she moved around in her sleep.
He wanted to stroke it. Run his fingers through the dark mass of waves and rinse it clean of the sweat and smell of battle.
No, that was the least of what he wanted. What he really wanted was the reassurance of her heated and hedonistic body in his arms. He wanted the privilege of crawling into this bed and curling around her like he had when her mother had died, when his unconscious body had deigned so boldly to hold her when they’d both been asleep.
Fenris dragged his fingers through his own sweat-matted hair. Did he dare to admit, finally, that he wanted something? To tempt the cruelty of his life into taking something more away from him?
But this felt like so much more than wanting. This – her, the woman in this bed, Rynne Hawke – she was what he needed. He needed her as badly as he needed to be free of Danarius. Hawke had torn a hole in the fabric of his life, patching the tear with levity and humour and trust, and worst of all, with hope – with blasted, poisonous, fucking hope.
The realization was blinding: bright and bruising, brilliant and difficult to look at directly. Acknowledging that he loved Hawke – he, Fenris, loved someone: it was like tearing away a blindfold he’d always worn, like breaking the shackles he’d always maintained around his heart. It was another kind of freedom: freedom to want her, to need her, to… to feel something other than anger and hate and resentment.
But Fenris had never been particularly good at making the most of the freedom he already had. He’d run away from Danarius only to trap himself in the limbo of the present. For years he’d sat in a precarious kind of balance, with Hawke on one shoulder and his unknown past on the other. He’d refused to take any risks, refused to tip the uncomfortable but familiar balance of his stagnant life by launching himself wholeheartedly into either his past or his future, and thus he’d simply… stood still.
For the second time in his life, Fenris was free. And for the second time in his life, he didn’t quite know what to do with this freedom.
Suddenly Hawke inhaled, a deep draw of breath through her nose, and Fenris snapped out of his roiling reverie to look at her. Her eyelids were fluttering, and as he watched, breathless with anticipation, she lifted one limp hand and rubbed her cheek.
Finally she opened her eyes, her gaze roving slowly over the canopy of the bed as she slowly came awake. Then she turned her head and met his gaze.
She blinked at him with those beloved bronze eyes, then smiled slowly. “Fancy seeing you here. Yet again.”
She was cheeky as always, with a smile on her face as always, and Fenris thought his heart might thump clean out of his chest if it beat any harder.
He released an unsteady breath. “I was thinking the same thing,” he said. “You are devastatingly unlucky.”
She chuckled tiredly, then stretched her arms. “Well, I don’t know about that. I’m alive, aren’t I?”
It was true. She was alive, and Fenris had never been more vehemently grateful for Anders’s healing abilities than he was tonight.
Almost as though she’d heard his thoughts, she suddenly lifted her head and looked toward the door. “Was Anders here? He must’ve looked after me, didn’t he? Is he still here?”
Fenris nodded. “He is. They’re all – well.” He broke off, then decided against telling her for now that Isabela was gone. “The others are sleeping here tonight,” he said carefully. Then he hesitated before going on. “Do you want Anders? Should I fetch him…?” Fenris didn’t want anyone else to interrupt this time with her, but he would if it’s what she wanted.
Hawke shook her head, then rolled onto her side to face him. “No. Let him rest. He’s probably almost as exhausted as I was. I…” She grimaced. “Damn, Fenris. I was not prepared for that fight. The bloody Arishok, for fuck’s sake?” She shook her head in wonderment, then smiled at him and tucked her hands under her cheek. “See, this is testament to how lucky I am.”
He returned her smile, his throat throbbing with a potent combination of fondness and retroactive fear and incredulity. She’d almost died multiple times tonight, and her mother had died a mere week ago, and she called herself lucky…
Of course she did. That was Hawke. Her pain was inked on her back in twisting black lines so she could maintain that beautiful smile.
Fenris swallowed hard. He had no idea it could hurt to love someone this much. “Yes, well,” he said gruffly. “Anders said no more adventures for at least a week, so your luck can have some time to recover.”
She groaned. “Bedrest? Not having to run from Lowtown to Sundermount to save everyone? What a pity. Shall I gnash my teeth and wail in despair?” She yawned deeply, covering her mouth with her hand to hide the yawn.
Fenris smirked. “Go back to sleep, Hawke. You need it.”
She smiled again. Her eyes were drifting closed already. “Bossy,” she slurred. “You can use that bossy tone with me anytime.”
He huffed with amusement, but the smile was already slipping from her face, her cheeks relaxing back into the easy rest of slumber. Moments later, she was asleep again.
Fenris quietly studied her sleeping face, that residual smear of dirt on her cheek, the tangled ropes of her hair that coiled around her head and neck. A few minutes later, when he was sure she was deeply asleep, he reached toward her.
With this thumb, he carefully wiped the dirt from her cheekbone.
He hesitated. Then, very carefully, he lifted a lock of hair away from her neck. Gently, so gently, he ran the edge of his thumb along the delicate line of her jaw, then reluctantly lifted his hand away.
Fenris had to be with her. There was no question about it. But that meant that he had to act.
There was no excuse anymore for the suspended state in which he’d lived his life. If he wanted to be with Hawke, he had to know everything about his past. He had to make sure he hadn’t left any skeletons behind – figurative or literal – that would rise up to steal his future. He had to know if he’d once had a family, if he’d once been capable of caring for someone without hurting them constantly the way he’d done to Hawke.
Fenris had to be whole and good and strong, so he could stand beside Hawke and support her the way she supported him.
And there was only one way to find out everything he needed to know.
He had to find his sister.
Fenris/f!Hawke angst: The Book of Love (Part I)
For @dadrunkwriting Friday!
In which Hawke offers Fenris the Book of Shartan, reading lessons, and a piece of her heart, and Fenris just… doesn’t know what to do with all of this. (Angst alert.) Also, Varric is a good friend.
Part II is planned; will appear in the future.
Read on AO3 instead. (It’s a bit long; ~4600 words.)
***************
Fenris sat in the dank study of his mansion, staring resentfully at the rows of moldy books that lined the shelves.
He rarely came into this room, having no use for it. The books might as well be spoiled meat for all the good they were to him, and any other furniture this room had held had long been used for testing his weapons.
He shouldn’t even be here now; staring at the books was only worsening his already-thunderous mood. But Fenris didn’t feel like shaking off his anger today, preferring instead to wallow in it as the late afternoon sun cast its slowly moving shadows across the shelves.
The source of his ire was Anders. Fenris usually just deflected the self-righteous mage’s pointed comments and criticisms; in Fenris’s opinion, Anders was the last person in their little group who should be giving advice on life choices. But for some reason, he just wasn’t able to ignore Anders’s words today.
He’d called Fenris an animal. Accused Fenris of reacting to threats in the thoughtless and instinctive manner of a rabid dog, and then of being no better than a rabid dog for all the lack of changes he’d made during his time in Kirkwall.
“We’ve all been here for years, and you’re just as pissed off as you were when you first stumbled upon us,” Anders railed. “You haven’t tried to make anything of yourself in all this time. All you do is brood in your mansion or complain at Hawke while you follow us around! At least some of us are trying to change things for the better here.”
“Ah, yes. And your so-called ‘spirit companion’ threatening that girl in the Gallows Dungeon really improves the state of affairs in this blasted city,” Fenris snarled.
Predictably, the conversation had devolved into a furious shouting match which Varric had watched with raised eyebrows and folded arms until Hawke had sauntered out of the Chantry and broken it up with a joke. Fenris has promptly taken his leave, unable to stand another second in the miserable maleficar’s company.
In some ways, it was good. The normalcy of Anders’ blind idiocy was almost a comfort. Fenris would have hated it more if Anders was – ugh – sympathetic in the wake of his and Hawke’s… split, or break-up, or whatever one would call it when something promising ended before it had even begun. But Fenris couldn’t seem to rein in his rage as much as he used to when he and Hawke had been… whatever they were before.
The most aggravating part was that Anders’s words held a kernel of truth. Fenris sat in this stagnant mansion night after night, and it felt like he was stagnating along with the abandoned walls around him. Everything in his life seemed stalled somehow: he was stuck looking over his shoulder for the next attack from Danarius’s men, and he was lingering in this odd and aching imitation of friendship with Hawke, and meanwhile Hadriana’s information about his sister sat unused and untouched at the back of his mind. He still wasn’t sure why he hadn’t acted in some way on the information about Varania. Was it mistrust? Caution? Or worse, cowardice?
His rumination was interrupted by a brisk rapping at the door. Fenris rose wearily to his feet and trudged to the main entryway.
It was Hawke, her bronze eyes as bright as her smile. She was holding something rectangular in her hands, and as soon as he opened the door, she thrust it towards him. “Look what I found!” she chirped, then strode into his foyer.
He studied the item. “It’s… a book,” he said blankly.
“You are correct, sir! Ten silvers to the handsome elf in the front row!” She planted her hand on her hip, looking very pleased indeed. “It’s by Shartan! You know, the elf who helped Andraste free the slaves-”
Fenris cut her off. “I know who he is,” he snapped. “What do you take me for?”
Her face fell slightly, and Fenris immediately wanted to punch himself. This was why he shouldn’t be sitting here stewing self-indulgently in his own rage; it was spilling over like soup in an overfilled tureen and burning the one person who deserved it the least.
He took a deep breath. “I know of Shartan,” he said more calmly. “I certainly didn’t learn from books, though. You think they teach slaves to read?”
He was grateful when Hawke ignored the sharpness of his tone this time. “I know you can’t read it,” she said. “But I thought maybe you’d like to learn! I helped my parents to teach Bethany and Carver, so I’m – well, not qualified, but I’m not as stupid as I look, I promise you that.” She tilted her head thoughtfully. “I bet you’ll pick it up much faster than Carver,” she added. “Even when we were kids, he never was the sharpest nail in the box.”
“So that’s what this is? Let’s teach the poor slave to read?” Fenris snapped. The book was heavy in his hands, another reminder of how he was wasting his freedom. For over three years he’d lived in a mansion full of books, and he remained as ignorant of their contents as the day he’d first claimed this blasted house.
Ignorant. Instinct rather than intellect, anger rather than reason, a rabid wolf just waiting for his master to arrive so he could bite him clean through to the bone.
Fenris/f!Hawke angst: The Skin I Live In
In which Hawke’s mother dies, and Fenris finds out the story behind Hawke’s extensive back tattoo. For @dadrunkwriting Friday.
Can someone explain to me why this game is so bleak? Like excuse me what am I supposed to do with all these feelings.
Read on AO3 instead. (~5700 words).
********************
Fenris saw his lyrium tattoos as scars.
It was an odd characterization, perhaps; the marks had been a murderous boon since he’d left Danarius’s side, and he used them so seamlessly now that the ripple of pain that accompanied their activation was second nature to him. But no matter their utility, no matter their use, Fenris still saw them as scars.
They were a terrible and constant reminder of the worst injury he could remember. They seemed to weigh down his skin sometimes, making his body feel heavier than it was, and there was never a day where he completely forgot the marks were there. If that wasn’t the definition of a scar, then Fenris didn’t know what was.
Naturally, Hawke had to put a sunny spin on his suffering. He still remembered the matter-of-fact tone to her voice when she’d told him it was a good way to see his tattoos.
Fenris frowned. “How can you think it’s good to be covered from head to toe in scars?”
She gave a short bark of laughter. “Well, not when you put it like that. But, well, scars heal, right? They’re literal proof that your wounds have healed. They’re not all bad.”
“I’ve known slaves whose scars never stopped hurting,” he said sharply. “Knotted skin that’s stiff from years of whippings. Scars from magical wounds that continue to feel like fire for years after the injury. A scar is proof that the flesh hasn’t healed.”
She twisted her lips ruefully. “All right, you have a point,” she admitted. “But that doesn’t seem to be the case with you. You look quite whole and healthy to me, my friend.” She slid a heated look over his body from head to toe.
Fenris gave her an exasperated look. “I am being serious.”
“So am I!” she defended. Her coppery eyes traced the curving white lines that ran from his chin to the base of his throat, then she returned her gaze to face.
“Only survivors have scars, Fenris,” she said in an unusually serious tone. “So if that’s how you want to see your tattoos, then yes, I’d consider that a good thing.”
He studied her thoughtfully as she sipped from her tumbler of brandy. Her perspective was maddeningly optimistic, as usual. But… Fenris supposed he could see her point.
Fenris had always seen his tattoos as scars, but Hawke had made him consider them in a way that he hadn’t before.
It took him far too long to realize that he’d never asked if she saw her tattoos in the same way.
*********************
“You’ve always made me so proud,” Leandra whispered. Seconds later, she was gone.
The ensuing silence was horrible. It crawled over Fenris’s shoulders like a malicious shadow, competing with the cacophony of the fight that was still pounding in his ears.
He dropped his greatsword, making Isabela jump with the ensuing clang, then slowly approached Hawke and knelt beside her. Leandra was cradled in her arms, as limp and relaxed as a straw-stuffed doll. Hawke was just as still and silent as her mother, her face hidden by the curtain of her long dark hair.
Fenris sadly studied Leandra’s bloodless face. This atrocity was no worse than some of the more nefarious feats he’d seen in the Imperium, but it never got easier to see the remains that such horrendous blood magic left behind. And for the victim to be Hawke’s mother…
Leandra had always been wary of him, but she’d seemed mostly harmless. A gentle and defenseless woman. And Hawke had adored her.
Fenris reached over and gently closed Leandra’s eyelids. “Leandrakost. Ataash varin kata,” he murmured. It wasn’t much, but it was all he could think of to say.
Hawke drew in a slow, tremulous breath, and Fenris leaned toward her slightly. “Hawke?” he said quietly.
Slowly, very slowly, she turned her head to look at him. Her cheeks were pale with shock, almost as pale as her mother’s, and her amber eyes were huge in the pallor of her face.
She looked absolutely haunted. Fenris stared at her wordlessly, paralyzed by a sudden rush of tenderness as he took in her expression.
Fenris/f!Hawke angst: The Skin I Live In
In which Hawke’s mother dies, and Fenris finds out the story behind Hawke’s extensive back tattoo. For @dadrunkwriting Friday.
Can someone explain to me why this game is so bleak? Like excuse me what am I supposed to do with all these feelings.
Read on AO3 instead. (~5700 words).
********************
Fenris saw his lyrium tattoos as scars.
It was an odd characterization, perhaps; the marks had been a murderous boon since he’d left Danarius’s side, and he used them so seamlessly now that the ripple of pain that accompanied their activation was second nature to him. But no matter their utility, no matter their use, Fenris still saw them as scars.
They were a terrible and constant reminder of the worst injury he could remember. They seemed to weigh down his skin sometimes, making his body feel heavier than it was, and there was never a day where he completely forgot the marks were there. If that wasn’t the definition of a scar, then Fenris didn’t know what was.
Naturally, Hawke had to put a sunny spin on his suffering. He still remembered the matter-of-fact tone to her voice when she’d told him it was a good way to see his tattoos.
Fenris frowned. “How can you think it’s good to be covered from head to toe in scars?”
She gave a short bark of laughter. “Well, not when you put it like that. But, well, scars heal, right? They’re literal proof that your wounds have healed. They’re not all bad.”
“I’ve known slaves whose scars never stopped hurting,” he said sharply. “Knotted skin that’s stiff from years of whippings. Scars from magical wounds that continue to feel like fire for years after the injury. A scar is proof that the flesh hasn’t healed.”
She twisted her lips ruefully. “All right, you have a point,” she admitted. “But that doesn’t seem to be the case with you. You look quite whole and healthy to me, my friend.” She slid a heated look over his body from head to toe.
Fenris gave her an exasperated look. “I am being serious.”
“So am I!” she defended. Her coppery eyes traced the curving white lines that ran from his chin to the base of his throat, then she returned her gaze to face.
“Only survivors have scars, Fenris,” she said in an unusually serious tone. “So if that’s how you want to see your tattoos, then yes, I’d consider that a good thing.”
He studied her thoughtfully as she sipped from her tumbler of brandy. Her perspective was maddeningly optimistic, as usual. But… Fenris supposed he could see her point.
Fenris had always seen his tattoos as scars, but Hawke had made him consider them in a way that he hadn’t before.
It took him far too long to realize that he’d never asked if she saw her tattoos in the same way.
*********************
“You’ve always made me so proud,” Leandra whispered. Seconds later, she was gone.
The ensuing silence was horrible. It crawled over Fenris’s shoulders like a malicious shadow, competing with the cacophony of the fight that was still pounding in his ears.
He dropped his greatsword, making Isabela jump with the ensuing clang, then slowly approached Hawke and knelt beside her. Leandra was cradled in her arms, as limp and relaxed as a straw-stuffed doll. Hawke was just as still and silent as her mother, her face hidden by the curtain of her long dark hair.
Fenris sadly studied Leandra’s bloodless face. This atrocity was no worse than some of the more nefarious feats he’d seen in the Imperium, but it never got easier to see the remains that such horrendous blood magic left behind. And for the victim to be Hawke’s mother…
Leandra had always been wary of him, but she’d seemed mostly harmless. A gentle and defenseless woman. And Hawke had adored her.
Fenris reached over and gently closed Leandra’s eyelids. “Leandrakost. Ataash varin kata,” he murmured. It wasn’t much, but it was all he could think of to say.
Hawke drew in a slow, tremulous breath, and Fenris leaned toward her slightly. “Hawke?” he said quietly.
Slowly, very slowly, she turned her head to look at him. Her cheeks were pale with shock, almost as pale as her mother’s, and her amber eyes were huge in the pallor of her face.
She looked absolutely haunted. Fenris stared at her wordlessly, paralyzed by a sudden rush of tenderness as he took in her expression.
Then Aveline was kneeling at Hawke’s side as well. “Hawke, I am… so sorry,” she whispered.
Hawke looked over at Aveline, then returned her gaze to Leandra’s face without speaking.
A painful moment later, Aveline spoke again. “What can we do?”
Sebastian crouched beside them. “We should take her to the Chantry,” he suggested quietly. “Grand Cleric Elthina will bless her. Cleanse her of the corruption of this place.”
“That’s a good idea,” Aveline agreed. “Right, Hawke?” She was stroking the mage’s back gently as she spoke.
Hawke nodded silently, her gaze still on her mother’s face, and Sebastian began to rise to his feet. “I can carry her to the Chantry, with your permission. The sisters can start preparing her for the burial-”
“No,” Hawke said suddenly. Her voice was raspy, and she cleared her throat before speaking again. “No burial. This body isn’t…” She trailed off, and Fenris watched as she swallowed hard before speaking again. “No burial,” she insisted. “Blessings, yes – she’d… she’d want that. But no burial. Cremate her.”
Sebastian nodded graciously. “Of course.” He gestured delicately toward Leandra’s body. “Hawke, may I…?”
Hawke’s arms tightened around her mother’s body for a moment, and then she nodded. Sebastian carefully lifted the body, then gazed down at Hawke.
“I will take good care of her. I promise,” he said, then strode off toward the exit.
Hawke gave a tiny rueful huff and smirked at Fenris. “He’ll do better than I was able to, I’m sure. Should have hired him to guard my house. Sebastian the Holy Sentry: it’s like the makings of a romance serial.”
Her voice was still thick with unshed tears, but her tone was distinctly playful, and Fenris felt a small jolt of trepidation. Most of the time, Hawke’s jokes were just that: jokes. But when she was upset…
That was the thing with Hawke. The jokes didn’t stop when she was upset. If anything, she just joked even more.
The hint of humour seemed to be exactly what Isabela needed to step in, however. “Worst romance serial ever,” she drawled. “What’s a romance story without sex? No thank you.”
Hawke laughed and wiped her nose on her sleeve, and Aveline ignored them. “Come on, Hawke,” she said solicitously. “Let’s get you home.” She helped Hawke to her feet, then looked at Fenris. “Fenris, will you go and fetch the others? Varric and Merrill and Anders, they’ll want to-”
Suddenly Hawke’s hand was on Fenris’s arm, her cold fingers biting into his bicep. “No,” she blurted. “Fenris stays – I mean – I can’t deal with more… company. Not right now. I just want you three.” She looked up at him, her face crumpling slightly as though she was expecting to be rejected. “Unless you…”
A cold bolt of regret kicked him in the belly. He knew he’d been distant with her since their night together, but for her to think he would leave her side at a moment like this…
He shook his head. “I am with you,” he assured her, and her fingers relaxed slightly on his arm. Aveline nodded in acquiescence, and together they headed for the passage that would take them out of the Foundry and back to Lowtown.
The walk from Lowtown to Hawke’s mansion was excruciating. Aveline and Isabela filled any potential awkward silence with a back-and-forth of lewd comments and scolding, and eventually Hawke joined in with their banter. Fenris, in contrast, was silent as he listened to their idle talk. He trailed just behind Hawke, feeling strangely worried that she would collapse at any moment. She wasn’t injured, and she didn’t seem shaky on her feet, but Fenris just had this odd and ominous feeling.
As though the situation wasn’t already terrible enough, Gamlen accosted them the moment they walked through the door. “What happened?” he demanded. “Did you find her?”
Hawke pulled off her boots and tossed them on the mat, then pushed her hair back and faced him. “I’m sorry, Uncle,” she said. “She’s… she’s dead.”
Gamlen’s haggard face crumpled with distress. “Why Leandra? Why did they have to take her?”
Fenris heard Hawke’s quiet but deep inhale. “She… looked like someone. Like the killer’s dead wife. He, um… used Mother to reconstruct his dead wife.” She shivered slightly, and Fenris shifted a step closer to her.
Gamlen exhaled heavily as though he’d been punched in the gut. “What?” he said faintly. Fenris watched with growing unease as his face began to turn red. “What sort of… of nightmarish magic is that?” Gamlen snapped, then began pacing. “Maybe the Templars are right. Lock the mages up! Throw away the key!”
Fenris narrowed his eyes. He didn’t disagree with Gamlen, but even he had the sense not to bring this up now of all times.
Hawke’s hand rose to her forehead, and Isabela folded her arms. “Really? That’s what you have to say about this shitshow?” she complained.
Aveline stepped forward as though to block Hawke from her uncle’s rhetoric. “That’s enough,” she said firmly. “Gamlen-”
“No, it’s all right,” Hawke interrupted. “He has the right to… he has the right.” She dropped her hand and gazed at Gamlen steadily. “The killer was insane, Uncle. If he hadn’t used magic, it would have been a knife. Or a needle. Or a… wet sock, for fuck’s sakes. This was one determined asshole.”
“You said she was… used!” Gamlen shouted. “This goes beyond just murder. It’s… it’s desecration!”
He broke off with a dry sob, his voice ringing through the dark foyer. Then he took a step closer to Hawke, and Fenris tensed.
Gamlen’s eyes darted to Fenris’s face, and whatever he saw there made him stop. He glared at Hawke instead. “I wish you’d never told me what that twisted son of a bitch did to her,” he snarled. “I wish I hadn’t asked.”
“That makes two of us,” Hawke drawled. “This hasn’t been the most pleasant conversation I’ve had today, I can tell you that.”
Gamlen’s lip curled. “I hope you killed him.”
Hawke nodded silently, and Gamlen took a step back. “Good,” he said viciously. “I hope it hurt.” He turned and headed for the door. “Someone will need to tell Carver,” he said. “I’ll… I will deal with it.”
“I appreciate that,” Hawke said faintly, but the door was already closing behind him.
There was a brief silence, then Hawke released a loud sigh. “Well, that could have gone worse,” she said lightly. “He was almost pleasant at the end there.” She turned to Aveline. “Av, I hate to ask, but can you talk to Varric and the others? Tell them…” She shivered again, more violently this time, then folded her arms tightly as though to ward off a chill. “Just let them know what happened. I can’t…”
Aveline squeezed Hawke’s arms. “Say no more, Hawke. I’ll speak to them.” Then she took her leave.
Fenris studied Hawke worriedly. Her whole posture was stiff, almost as though she’d shatter if she was touched.
He opened his mouth to say – something, he wasn’t sure what – but before he could speak, Hawke turned to Isabela. “Bels, can you get the-”
“I’m two steps ahead of you, sweet thing,” Isabela said, then made a beeline for the desk in Hawke’s study.
Fenris frowned. “What is happening?”
Hawke turned to him, and to his mild alarm, she smiled. “You’re in for a treat,” she said. “A late night impromptu art show!” Without another word of explanation, she began to strip.
Fenris gaped at her as she dropped her belt and coat on the floor, then headed for the stairs while untucking her shirt from her trousers. She pulled the shirt over her head, then glanced over her shoulder at him. “Come on, hang out with me.”
He tore his eyes away from the coiling black tattoo that spilled from her left shoulder to her left-side ribs. Her mostly-bared back triggered an instantaneous bloom of uncomfortable longing in his belly, but he followed her up the stairs nonetheless.
Cautiously and slowly, he followed her into her bedroom, and the roiling discomfort in his gut writhed more strongly still when she briskly removed her brassiere and lay facedown on the bed, naked from the waist up.
He stood awkwardly at the door and forced himself not to look at the golden canvas of her back. “Hawke, what-”
“Relax,” she said soothingly. “Isabela will be here in a moment. And no, we’re not having a threesome.” She propped herself up on her elbows and tossed him a cheeky grin over her shoulder. “Keep it in your pants for once, all right?”
Fenris tilted her a chiding look, and she chuckled as she settled back down on her belly and rested her chin on her folded arms. “Come on,” she said. “Come closer, all right? I’m not going to bite.”
He stepped slowly into the room, then prowled uncomfortably at the foot of her bed for a moment. The vibrating worry in his chest was stained now with an inappropriate tint of longing. He didn’t want to stare, but her naked back was like a lure, drawing his attention more surely than a moth was drawn to flame. This room was rife with memories both seductive and agonizing, and Fenris felt sickeningly guilty for even thinking about that night given the current circumstances.
Finally he took the chair from the desk in the corner and pulled it over to the left side of the bed where Hawke lay, then slumped into the chair and folded his arms. There, he thought. She was still naked, still alluring, but now he could focus on her face instead of her back.
She rested her cheek on her arms and gave him a tiny smile. “Hey,” she said softly.
He gazed back at her with a slight frown. Her face was calm and no longer haunted-looking, and it was somehow more worrying than her distress.
He should say something about Leandra. See if Hawke wanted to talk about it. That’s why he was here, was it not? That’s what people did when someone they cared about died?
He swallowed hard. “Hawke-”
“Ready?” Isabela said cheerfully. She strode into the room, then hopped onto the bed and settled herself on her knees beside Hawke’s torso.
Fenris broke off, guiltily relieved at her interruption. Then he was distracted by the armful of items she’d brought with her: a pot of ink, a handful of cloths, a bottle of clear spirits, and an odd item that looked like a slim wooden wand tipped with a needle.
Isabela arranged the items carefully on a large hardcover book that she’d also brought along, and Fenris raised one eyebrow. “What…”
Then he realized what was happening. His gaze slid from Isabela’s odd array to the twisting spikes and lines on Hawke’s back. “You’re having Isabela work on your tattoo?” he asked incredulously.
“That’s rude. You don’t have to sound so disbelieving,” Isabela drawled. She unscrewed the bottle of liquor and wet a cloth with its contents, then tilted her head at Hawke. “Where do you want it?”
“Lower ribs,” Hawke replied. “Just keep on where you left off last time.”
Last time? Fenris wondered, feeling utterly nonplussed. He watched as Isabela straddled Hawke’s hips and seated herself comfortably on the dark-haired mage’s bottom, then wiped Hawke’s back with the alcohol-soaked cloth.
“Fenris, stick this needle in the fire for a few seconds,” Isabela said. She handed him the needle implement.
Still feeling as though he was two steps behind somehow, he rose from his seat and did as he was told, then silently handed the implement back to Isabela. She took it with a nod, then picked up the bottle of spirits.
“Cheers, darlings,” she said, then took a swig and handed the bottle to Hawke.
Hawke lifted herself slightly onto her elbows and drank from the bottle, then hissed through her teeth. “Nasty,” she complained, then offered it to Fenris.
He took a tentative sip and grimaced as the harsh liquor burned its way down his throat. Hawke smirked at him as he placed the bottle on the floor. “You can go get yourself some wine if you like,” she teased.
He shook his head. “And miss out on this… what did you call it? An impromptu art show?”
Isabela smirked as she dipped her needle into the pot of ink. “You just don’t want to miss out on this girl-on-girl action. Admit it,” she said.
He raised one eyebrow at the cheeky pirate. “Oh, yes. Watching one woman repeatedly stabbing another with a needle is my particular fetish. How did you guess?”
Hawke laughed merrily. “Oh, Fenris. Such a dark horse,” she purred.
“Ready?” Isabela said, and Hawke nodded. Isabela placed one hand on Hawke’s side to hold the skin taut, then carefully pressed the needle into her skin.
Hawke closed her eyes and settled her cheek on her arms again, her expression placid as Isabela pressed the ink into her skin with quick, sharp pokes.
Fenris watched in silence as Isabela’s hand traced the outline of another winding black tendril on Hawke’s skin. With a slow-growing sense of shame, he realized that he’d never asked Hawke about this tattoo. It was extensive and detailed, and it seemed somewhat unusual for a woman of her upbringing; she might have been raised in a relatively humble home in Lothering, but her mother was upper-class. There had to be a story behind the art on her back, but he’d never asked.
“When did you first start… cultivating this tattoo?” he asked.
“When my father… Shortly after he died,” she said, without opening her eyes.
Her tone was pleasant and calm, but Fenris frowned. Her answer triggered a strange jolt at the back of his mind, like a hint of light at the crack beneath a door. Something about her answer gave him an odd feeling of foreboding.
He leaned back in the chair and watched Isabela work for a while longer. Then he tilted his head at her. “When did you start working on it?”
“When did it start getting really good, you mean?” Isabela said, and Hawke snorted into her arms. “A few years back. After you lot came back from the Deep Roads.”
After the Deep Roads. After Carver left to join the Templars, Fenris thought. The knowledge was creeping over him, as revealing as sunrise but so much uglier.
“Fenris?” He snapped back to attention at the sound of Hawke’s voice.
Her eyes were open and fixed on his face. “Tell us a story,” she said.
“A story?” he said blankly. He was distracted by the troubling picture that he was piecing together about her tattoo. Only now was he starting to understand how apt the writhing black lines were. He’d always thought the patterns were interesting, chaotic but beautiful like the woman who bore them, but now that he was seeing the darkness that underlay their origins…
“Yes,” Hawke said. “You know, ‘once upon a time, there was a handsome brooding elf with rippling abs and moss-green eyes that shone like the forest,’ that kind of thing.” She closed her eyes and smiled. “Come on, entertain us. We’ve got all night.”
He swallowed hard. Her jokes, her calm tone and her cheeky smile, the constant piercing of Isabela’s needle on her skin…
Fenris had a bad feeling about this.
“Fine,” he said, finally giving in to Hawke’s demand. What else could he do? “Once upon a time, there was a broody elf-”
“Ooh, I like this story already,” Isabela piped up.
He shot her a sardonic look. “… a broody elf minding his own business. Then he met a beautiful mage and a beautiful pirate, and they hounded him relentlessly until he died of aggravation. The end.”
Both women cackled, and Fenris smiled reluctantly. Hawke sighed happily as she nestled her cheek more comfortably into her forearms. “That was the worst story I’ve ever heard,” she informed him.
He shrugged and folded his hands in his lap. “You want a story, you should call on Varric.” He jerked his chin at Isabela. “Or ask this one. She is filled with sordid tales. Remind us again of that time you broke a man’s-”
Isabela burst into laughter. “Oh, that story was the least of it. I’ll do you one better. There was one time when we were raiding this little Antivan ship…”
Isabela’s cheerful voice filled the room, interrupted now and then with Hawke’s crude commentary, and Fenris sank into a pensive silence as their banter washed over him. He was still preoccupied with thoughts of Hawke’s tattoo.
Her mother had just died, and in an undeniably horrific way. And here she lay with a smile on her face and a wisecrack at the tip of her tongue, getting jabbed her over and over in the ribs with a sharp needle.
She’d been jabbed over and over after her father had died, and after Carver had left. Fenris wondered if she’d added to the tattoo after her sister had died. Maybe he could ask Aveline…?
But no. That would be intrusive. Hawke’s past was her own. It wasn’t his place to pry.
She laughed at some crack Isabela had made, and Fenris surreptitiously studied her with an aching heart. Her laughter was bright and sunny and indescribably sad.
The hours slid by in an unhurried flow, and the topic of Leandra’s demise didn’t come up. Fenris forced himself to join in with Hawke and Isabela’s banter, but it felt exactly that: forced. He could practically see Hawke’s facade crumbling with her every quip and snicker. Perhaps he was being overly sensitive, but he could almost feel the tension ratcheting higher in the room as the skin over her ribs grew redder and more inflamed.
Eventually a lull fell over their little trio, and Fenris continued to watch Isabela’s work in silence. Hawke’s forehead was resting on her forearms, her back rising and falling with slow and relaxed breaths as Isabela finalized the outline of another sharp and curling tendril, and Fenris wondered if the dark-haired mage had fallen asleep.
Isabela wiped away the excess ink, then leaned back and inspected her work. “Another one’s done. Should I keep going?”
“Uh, no. You can start filling them in now,” Hawke said, then sniffed.
Fenris stopped breathing. Hawke’s face was buried in her arms, but her voice was distinctly thick with tears.
Isabela’s gaze darted to his face. She looked slightly panicked, and they stared at each other for a long and loaded second.
Fenris nodded silently, and Isabela released a slow breath. She set the needle down, then leaned low over Hawke’s back. “Listen, babe, I’m going to call it quits for tonight,” she murmured. “My hand is cramping up. Don’t want to fuck up my masterpiece.”
“Oh,” Hawke said. Fenris pretended not to notice as she wiped her face hastily on her arms. “Okay. Thanks, Bels. Can you do more tomorrow? Can’t leave this work of art unfinished.”
“You know it,” Isabela said. She slid off of Hawke’s back and moved the tattoo materials from the bed onto Hawke’s desk, then approached the bed and dropped a kiss on Hawke’s temple. “Bye, sweet thing.”
“Bye,” Hawke murmured, and Isabela strode toward the door, but not before jerking her head for Fenris to follow.
He stood from his chair and joined Isabela by the stairs, and she handed him a small pot of salve from her pouch belt. “Embrium. For the tattoo,” she said quietly. “If you think you can handle that.”
“I can apply salve. I’m not a complete fool,” Fenris muttered. Then he frowned. “Why doesn’t she just use a healing spell…?”
The answer hit him before he could fully articulate the question. The pain was part of it. Pain during the process, pain that lingered for days afterward, a punishment and a distraction all at once.
Isabela shrugged unconcernedly. “Different people deal with their shit in different ways,” she said airily. “I like to fuck and fight, you like to smash things, Hawke likes to do this.” She nodded her head toward the bedroom.
I don’t think it has anything to do with liking it, Fenris thought, but he didn’t say so. He simply nodded a silent thanks, then returned to Hawke’s room.
She was curled in a fetal position on the bed, and Fenris slowly crouched at the side of the bed. Her eyes were tightly shut, her expression unequivocally distressed, and now was the time. He should say something. Something… kind and comforting.
His mind was blank. He couldn’t think of a single thing. Should he say he was sorry, like Aveline had done? Make a joke like Isabela was wont to do?
He hesitated for a long, painful moment before speaking. “Hawke, I… don’t know what to say,” he murmured.
She sniffled. “You can say anything. I don’t mind. I just like to hear your voice.” She opened her eyes and smiled weakly.
He gazed back at her seriously. “To be honest, I don’t think there is much point in filling these moments with empty talk.”
Her smile twisted with a hint of humour. “You’re not very good at this, you know.”
“I am well aware,” he said ruefully. He seated himself on the floor and wracked his brain, trying to think of some way to wipe away the growing awkwardness.
Then Hawke spoke. “Do you know she blamed me for Bethany’s death?” she said. “At least, she did at first. But I think she regretted saying it afterwards.”
She was silent for a moment. “She didn’t mean it,” she said quietly, as though to herself. “I know that.”
Fenris frowned slightly. “This…wasn’t your fault either.” He trailed off uncertainly. Hawke wasn’t to blame for her mother’s death, not really, but… Fenris could see only too clearly why she was blaming herself. If they’d wrapped up their errands for the day a bit sooner, and Hawke had caught her mother before she’d left the house… Or if this blasted city wasn’t crawling with apostates and blood mages…
If Hawke had supported the Templars more- The half-formed thought pushed its way up from the most uncompromising corner of his mind, and he shoved it away before it could get anywhere near his mouth.
“I know, I know,” Hawke said lightly. “Nothing is my fault, right? Not this. Not Bethany. Not Carver leaving or… or-”
“Rynne,” Fenris said firmly, and her face instantly crumpled at his use of her first name.
He took a deep breath, then told her the words she’d once said to him. “People die, and they leave, and…terrible things happen. That is life. That is not your fault.”
He watched with a fresh throbbing of sympathy as a rivulet of tears trickled along her face toward her pillow. Then she sniffled hard and smiled at him. “Who told you that? Somebody stupid, I bet.”
He smiled faintly at her, and she laughed wetly and wiped her face. “Maker’s balls, I did say that, didn’t I.”
He nodded. “You did.”
She sighed heavily, a long exhale of breath. “Ah, chaos and randomness,” she said musingly. “My dear old friends. I didn’t imagine they’d bite me in the ass so hard, though.” She laughed again, then buried her face in her hands.
Fenris stared at her shaking body, his heart pounding painfully against his ribs. Finally he rose to his feet and climbed onto the bed beside her. He rolled back his long sleeves, then unscrewed the lid from the pot of salve that Isabela had given him.
He dipped two fingers into the runny salve, then hesitated for a breathless moment before spreading it carefully over her freshly tattooed skin.
She sobbed and curled even more tightly into a ball. “Fenris…” she whimpered.
Her voice was small and broken like the cry of a starving kitten, and it rasped across his heart like sandpaper. Her pain was so close that he could almost feel it, like a malevolent heat emanating from her skin.
His eyes felt like they were burning. Maybe there was menthol in this salve. He blinked hard, then dipped his fingers into the pot and smoothed a bit more of the ointment over Hawke’s tattoo. “I am here,” he said gruffly.
She sobbed again, then pressed her hands more firmly to her face. Fenris continued to spread the ointment over her back, gently rubbing it in with careful circular motions. His fingers traced gently over the fresh black lines, stroking her side as soothingly as he knew how. He continued to work the salve into her skin until her shaking body grew still.
She shivered, and goosebumps rippled over her arms. Fenris shifted away from her slightly and tugged on the blankets. “Come. Get into bed,” he said.
She followed his suggestion silently, pulling the blankets up to her chin, then rolled over in bed so she was facing him. She winced as she settled on her tender left side, then blinked up at him. “You can go,” she said softly. “I’m… I should sleep. I’ll be okay.”
Her face was blotchy and her eyes bloodshot. She was almost unrecognizable in her grief, and so undeniably dear to him that it hurt.
He shook his head. “I will stay a little longer,” he said. “Until you fall asleep.” He settled his back against the headboard and folded his hands comfortably over his belly.
She smiled faintly, just the slightest quirk of her lips. “All right,” she whispered. Then she closed her eyes.
Fenris listened to her soft breathing, the slight shifting as she made herself comfortable, then the deepening of her breaths as she slid into sleep. In the flickering light from the fireplace, he studied her beautiful salt-stained face: she looked serious and peaceful, and temporarily freed from the grief that would surely rise again to maul her in the morning.
He experimentally shifted his position on the bed, and she didn’t wake. This was a good time for him to leave.
He continued to sit on the bed beside her, his eyes tracing along the sharpness of her cheekbones and the darkness of her hair.
Perhaps he would stay just a little bit longer. Just in case.
******************
“Hey, elf.”
Fenris jolted awake, his entire body jumping with tension as he snapped open his eyes. Fasta vass, where is my fucking sword-
“Easy, easy!” Varric hissed. “No one’s trying to mug you, it’s just me. Careful, or you’ll wake her.”
“Wh-what? Varric? What are you…” Fenris was disoriented, unused to being woken by another person unless he was being ambushed, and his brain was scrambling to catch up with the blood that was racing through his veins.
“Stay still, or you’ll wake her,” Varric whispered.
Fenris scowled. What the fuck was Varric talking about? Then, belatedly, he realized where he was.
Hawke’s bedroom. On Hawke’s bed. With growing horror, he realized the position he was in.
He was completely curled around her. His chest was pressed firmly to Hawke’s back, his knees tucked behind her own. His head was pillowed on her fragrant hair, his face an inch from the warm nape of her neck, and his arm was curled tightly around her blanketed form.
Varric was standing beside the bed, and Fenris was impressed at how neutral his expression was, aside from the slightly raised eyebrows. “Morning, sunshine,” Varric drawled softly.
A plethora of curses rattled at the back of Fenris’s tongue, but he bit them back. Slowly and carefully, and with not a little regret, he began to uncoil himself from Hawke’s sleeping body. “I… shouldn’t be here,” he muttered.
Varric lifted one eyebrow slightly higher. “You sure about that?” he asked.
Fenris glared at him. “Yes,” he bit off. “I… she thought I would leave last night. I am not expected here.”
Varric watched in silence as Fenris slowly slid off of the bed. Then he shrugged. “Sure,” he said casually. “Do what you gotta do. I’ll stay with her.”
Fenris inspected Varric’s face suspiciously, but the dwarf’s expression was infuriatingly non-judgmental as he sat in the chair by Hawke’s head.
Fenris shot one last glance at Hawke’s sleeping face, then turned away and left the room. The day was grey and cloudy when he stepped out of her mansion, an uncanny match for his mood as he made his way home.
He couldn’t help but think about Hawke’s tattoo: beautiful twisting lines that were traced by her trauma and filled in with ink. He thought of her smile as the needle pierced her skin in a constant and continuous rhythm, the unfettered rawness of her misery when he spread that soothing salve over her skin.
That’s when Fenris realized that, like his own, Hawke’s tattoo was a scar. An intricate, exquisite, winding scar that bled from her left collarbone across her shoulder blade and down to her ribs.
It represented her wounds. Her father, her sister – her whole family, now: these were her wounds, her losses made physical and printed painfully on her skin in order to heal.
A terrible thought occurred to him. Maybe Fenris was just another wound. Another person who had left her.
He ruthlessly pushed the thought aside. No, he told himself. I left so I wouldn’t do more damage than I’ve already done. Hawke believed that scars were for survivors, and she was one of the most dogged survivors he’d ever met. She would survive her mother’s loss like she’d survived the others, and she would do it more easily without the mixed messages of his constant presence.
Leaving was the right thing to do, he told himself. He didn’t know how to comfort a mourning person, after all. Varric would do far better at that than he.
Better to let Hawke work through this without his distracting presence. It was the right thing to do.
Leaving her was the right thing.
Wasn’t it?
*******************
Qunari phrase translation: Leandrakost. Ataash varin kata = Peace, Leandra. In the end lies glory.

“You can´t tame the Wolf”
I have been drawing in my notebook happy Fenris and I needed this days a stubborn Fenris refusing to fall and fighting, to the misfortune of his enemies.
Had to cut some animation because tumblr. Fast stuff
Don’t stop, tomorrow’s another day
Don’t stop, tomorrow you’ll feel no pain
Just keep moving, oh
Don’t stop the past’ll trip you up
You know, right now’s gotta be enough
Just keep moving
Go, go, go
Figure it out, figure it out, but don’t stop moving
Go, go, go
Figure it out, figure it out, you can do this
So my love, keep on running
You gotta get through today, yeah
There my love, keep on running
Gotta keep those tears at bay, oh
Oh, my love, don’t stop burning
Gonna send them up in flames
In flames


