elsecall: (014.)

[personal profile] elsecall 2026-02-11 09:00 pm (UTC)(link)
A sharp bark of laughter. In her element — holding the better cards, both literally and figuratively — she doesn't see fit to argue with his chulldung of an excuse. Nor does she draw out his defeat, clinching the last pair of maneuvers for her armies and snapping up the last of his cards. Third round, to her.

The fool will — when losing — seek to flip the board and scatter the pieces. The proverb tickles lightly at the back of her mind but she doesn't say it either.

"Fair enough," she gathers her cards and tidies the battlefield — fingers delicately reclaiming each army from the rug. "Towers isn't for everyone. But you did better your first game than I did in mine."
elsecall: (034.)

[personal profile] elsecall 2026-02-11 09:24 pm (UTC)(link)
"I over-committed my Shardbearer," she admits.

Jasnah takes tilts forward — safehand pressed into the rug to stabilize her balance as she leans across the gulf between them — and claims his cars with (yes) a brief brush of contact between their hands. And if the corner of her mouth twitches when it happens, then that's nobody's business but hers. Hard to say if it's caused by the small touch or the upward flicker in his mood.

"Went too hard and too fast in the opening game — got pincered by cavalry. And got a very sobering reminder that these games are meant to mimic real warfare."

Not long after, she was a Shardbearer on a battlefield — tempted again to over-commit.

"It's quite humbling to be soundly beaten at a strategy game by your rake of a cousin. But he was raised to lead soldiers. I'm quite new to it. It takes a different kind of cleverness."
Edited 2026-02-11 21:25 (UTC)
elsecall: (022.)

[personal profile] elsecall 2026-02-12 12:20 am (UTC)(link)
He's right, of course. She did catch on quickly. But while she proved herself against him in their match tonight, she still struggles to win more than one of rounds against Adolin or Dalinar. But as she already alluded, they'd been playing for years — decades, in Dalinar's case.

But she's not all that interested in stolen valor, so she lets his compliment roll off her like water on a chicken's back. A slight shake of her head as she ties the ribbon fast around the deck.

However, his question snags her attention quickly and effortlessly. From her seat on the floor, she cranes her neck to consider her shelves. Oh, she's got at least one book on Towers — but she doesn't know how helpful he'll find it. With a hum, she climbs back to her feet.

"There's also always casual matches happening down in the Breakaway," she suggests — in case he wants to practice with someone else. "But those old card yu-nerigs are far, far tougher to beat than me."

She steps past him to browse a shelf, looking for a specific title.
elsecall: (188)

[personal profile] elsecall 2026-02-12 12:39 am (UTC)(link)
Jasnah chooses not to interrogate the minor thrill felt for being so singled out. The assertion that he isn't simply prioritizing playing with her or learning the game with her but learning how to beat her — and understanding that it's a different objective than beating some anyone-else.

Appropriately, she pulls on the spine for which she's been searching and, turning on a heel, faces him directly where he leans.

"Well, then," she tells him as she holds out a slim book, "The first rule of warfare is to know your enemy. If you can guess what he will do, then you have already won. Or she, in this case."

Because of course she has Zenaz's Proverbs for Towers and War memorized.
Edited 2026-02-12 00:40 (UTC)
elsecall: (183)

[personal profile] elsecall 2026-02-12 01:00 am (UTC)(link)
Oh, the supreme well of willpower it takes to defy the fate he writes for her. It cascades over her expression — a blink that's a little too forceful, a press of her lips, a certain way she turns her head away to look for another book.

When she finds that second resource, she doesn't so much hand it to him as press it firmly against his chest with a slight shove.

"Here," Jasnah bites back on a smirk, "this should help decipher the glyphs."
elsecall: (95.)

[personal profile] elsecall 2026-02-12 01:16 am (UTC)(link)
Freezeframe on the moment, as she pins the book in place just a beat longer than necessary. A beat beyond when he assumes the responsibility of holding it all on his own. The idea that she'll be alone, in her study, going through those waltzing motions is laughable. But she tries, tries, tries to take it as seriously as she expects him to take his homework.

"Don't dismiss those proverbs," she nods to the first, other book before letting her hand drop. "I'll expect you to come prepared, next time, to explain the relevance of at least one or two in our next match."

Look, he's the one who called it homework — so she assigns some properly.
elsecall: (063.)

[personal profile] elsecall 2026-02-12 01:36 am (UTC)(link)
He'd only stayed this long because she'd interceded on his last exit — feeling some small spike of shame, Jasnah manages to contain any inclination to stop him again. She can't (she shouldn't) monopolize his nighttime hours. She can't (she shouldn't) ask him to be her musical accompaniment until she passes out at her desk. She can't (she shouldn't) follow him back to steal his bed yet again.

So — exercising some of that impressive willpower — she nods her way through his segue.

"Of course. Far be it from me to stand in the way of your scholarship."
elsecall: (111.)

[personal profile] elsecall 2026-02-12 02:45 am (UTC)(link)
( continued here )