[When she finds the photo, balanced on the cactus' needles like some sort of cheery trending decoration, she wonders if Lavellan's been collecting other people's belongings as he putters in the garden—maybe old remnants of the station, from a quainter people. People who still printed photographs on paper, for example.
But there's something about it—or, at least, something familiar about its subjects. So rather than hand it over to the greenhouse-desert's keeper, she slips it into her pocket, taking it out every so often throughout the day to wonder. It's not until the third time she takes it out that it hits her like a lightning bolt, so much so that she chides herself for not realizing immediately. Add thirty years, and enough scars to tell a hell of a story...
Still gaping at the picture (and her own lack of immediate awareness), she pulls up 76's-- or, Jack's, as it turned out--contact address, and shoots a short text.]
Did you lose a photograph recently?
But there's something about it—or, at least, something familiar about its subjects. So rather than hand it over to the greenhouse-desert's keeper, she slips it into her pocket, taking it out every so often throughout the day to wonder. It's not until the third time she takes it out that it hits her like a lightning bolt, so much so that she chides herself for not realizing immediately. Add thirty years, and enough scars to tell a hell of a story...
Still gaping at the picture (and her own lack of immediate awareness), she pulls up 76's-- or, Jack's, as it turned out--contact address, and shoots a short text.]
Did you lose a photograph recently?
Just found it today, but it's not a new photo.
You're a lot younger.
So is Ana.
I don't recognize the third person.
You're a lot younger.
So is Ana.
I don't recognize the third person.
On my way.
[True to her word as ever, Shepard takes no time in traipsing over to Sector Chemistry. It's barely ten minutes before she's rapping politely on the former laboratory's door. Even invited, she's not going to bust in. It's someone else's living space, after all.
The photo is carefully pressed between two slim, connected panels of fabricated industrial plastic, serving as a careful card-esque photo frame.]
[True to her word as ever, Shepard takes no time in traipsing over to Sector Chemistry. It's barely ten minutes before she's rapping politely on the former laboratory's door. Even invited, she's not going to bust in. It's someone else's living space, after all.
The photo is carefully pressed between two slim, connected panels of fabricated industrial plastic, serving as a careful card-esque photo frame.]
[She slips in, holding out the nondescript plastic as an offering as she does. Jack is surprisingly... casual, and she's almost amused at how much it suits him. It's easy to see him off-duty, lounging as much as he was feasibly able, swirling a drink and considering how best to evacuate every person in the bar should an emergency arise.]
Here. Not sure how it ended up on the cactus, but maybe whoever found it first thought its owner would find it better that way.
How'd you lose it?
Here. Not sure how it ended up on the cactus, but maybe whoever found it first thought its owner would find it better that way.
How'd you lose it?
[For all his airy words, his own body language gives him away as soon as the picture's in his hands. As his eyes drag over the faces in the frame, she catches the twitch of a smile, the warmth towards the image, the nostalgic distance between.]
Just glad I could get it back into the hands of the right person.
[Gesturing to the photo, she raises a careful eyebrow.]
So, who's your friend? I imagine you go back quite a ways.
Just glad I could get it back into the hands of the right person.
[Gesturing to the photo, she raises a careful eyebrow.]
So, who's your friend? I imagine you go back quite a ways.
[The facefall is subtle, but on Jack's face, it's practically an airhorn. She watches him, in the silence, staying silent herself when he finally answers, clipped and to the point.
It's a respectful moment before she asks her next question, eyes drifting across the photo to match his own line of sight.]
How did he pass?
[Somehow, Shepard highly doubted it was of natural causes.]
It's a respectful moment before she asks her next question, eyes drifting across the photo to match his own line of sight.]
How did he pass?
[Somehow, Shepard highly doubted it was of natural causes.]
[Her eyes flit up, drag across his face with quiet interest. The scars are reminiscent of shrapnel wounds—something she'd had personal experience with, before and after the rebuild—but the jury's out on what kind of explosive.]
I'm sorry for your loss. Never gets any easier.
[Worse, if you were there. Never shaking the feeling that you could have stopped the bullet.
Or the explosive, in this case.]
Were you on a mission together at the time?
I'm sorry for your loss. Never gets any easier.
[Worse, if you were there. Never shaking the feeling that you could have stopped the bullet.
Or the explosive, in this case.]
Were you on a mission together at the time?
[A single courteous nod is the only answer she gives, weighted with understanding, before letting the space spread out between them. It's a lot to ask someone—to detail the passing of a friend, of a commander—especially to someone outside of the situation itself. Still, each answer brings with it another question—and she hadn't been shut down yet.]
No leads, or too many?
No leads, or too many?
[Dead ends were still trails at a point—though he doesn't elucidate further. Instead, it paints across his face, not reaching his voice. Not ready to be spoken. Like someone who knows enough of the answer to guess at it, but knows the consequences for getting it wrong are larger stakes than guessing out of desperation.
Eyes flitting back to the photo, her lips thin briefly. But how long had he been looking?]
You've got several allies here. They don't know any more than you did, I guess?
Eyes flitting back to the photo, her lips thin briefly. But how long had he been looking?]
You've got several allies here. They don't know any more than you did, I guess?
That including Ana?
[More of the between-the-lines conversation. How long was "a few years"? Why hadn't they been "in touch"? The way he says it is casual, offhanded almost—but from day one, Jack had struck her as a career soldier. Had he severed the ties?
Or had they been severed for him?]
What knocked you out of touch?
[She plays the question like a card, raising an eyebrow, eyes half-lidded. She wouldn't press if he left the table, so to speak, but while he was answering, she'd keep raising.]
[More of the between-the-lines conversation. How long was "a few years"? Why hadn't they been "in touch"? The way he says it is casual, offhanded almost—but from day one, Jack had struck her as a career soldier. Had he severed the ties?
Or had they been severed for him?]
What knocked you out of touch?
[She plays the question like a card, raising an eyebrow, eyes half-lidded. She wouldn't press if he left the table, so to speak, but while he was answering, she'd keep raising.]
I think I get the picture.
[So to speak.
Shrugging out of her stance, she gestures to the photograph again.]
Must've been a shock, then. When you both showed up on the Moira, then Thisavrou.
[So to speak.
Shrugging out of her stance, she gestures to the photograph again.]
Must've been a shock, then. When you both showed up on the Moira, then Thisavrou.
Page 20 of 22