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#ambroos baas
agena87 · 7 days
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I was meant to make some models for my future cc releases, instead I created some new OCs.
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I present to you, some of the Winderburgese elite (plus an old rock star). Countess Hendrika and Grand Duke Meint are engaged. Don't think for one minute that they love each other, 'cause their (future) union is just politics and money. The Grand Duke needs a wife after his father stepped down from the throne, and Hendrika, while "only" a countess, is the only heir to the richest family in Windenburg, but as a female, she can't inherit her family lands and fortune, and needs a (legitimate) male heir; hence the engagement. Of course, in public, they appear as the perfect couple, seemingly happy and deeply in love. But behind the closed doors of the various palaces and mansions they find themselves inhabiting at any given time, things are quite different. See, Meint couldn't care less about his fiancée; he didn't even want one to begin with (he was perfectly OK with one of his cousins inheriting the throne after him). As for Hendrika, well, she has needs (lots of). And a very specific taste for older, dominative, men. So, she starts an affair with the Prime Minister; a short and unassuming man who, it turns out, is into pet play (him, being the master of said pet), which is right up Hendrika's alley. But it's not enough for the countess, so she turns toward her future father-in-law, and former monarch and general, Ambroos, who had been widowed for more than a decade, and used to be quite the lady's man during his youth and rumoured to be on the violent side in the bedroom (he is). Finally (?), Hendrika meets Kobus Baas, the former singer of a glam/hard rock band, a known political opponent to the tyrannical Windenburgese regime and "degenerate" (as in he's openly pan, which is not something that is accepted, or even quite legal, in the Grand Duchy). The sense of "danger" of being caught consorting with such an individual (and the sexiness of the guy in question, 'cause look at him!) pushes the countess to "jump" into his bed nearly as soon as they meet.
THE END (for now).
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emjenenla · 5 years
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Chapters: 1/1 Fandom: Six of Crows Series - Leigh Bardugo Rating: Teen And Up Audiences Warnings: Graphic Depictions Of Violence Relationships: Kaz Brekker/Inej Ghafa, Jesper Fahey/Wylan Van Eck, Kaz Brekker & Original Character(s), Wylan Van Eck & Original Character(s), Jesper Fahey & Original Character(s), Original Character(s) & Original Character(s) Characters: Kaz Brekker, Inej Ghafa, Wylan Van Eck, Jesper Fahey, Original Characters, Ambroos Baas (OC), Kees Van Dijk (OC), Minna (OC), Espen (OC), Mentions of - Character, Jan Van Eck, Maxim Vasilyev (OC), Roeder (Six of Crows) Additional Tags: Post-Book 2: Crooked Kingdom, Unreliable Narrator, Manipulated Narrator, Religious Fanaticism, Wylan is Not Impressed, Neither is Jesper, Kaz Perfects his Ghoul Impression, Kaz Thinks Baas is Hilarious, Baas Does Not Mean to be Hilarious, Kaz Has Managed to Become an Urban Legend, Meanwhile the Merchant Council Schemes, There's some Kanej at the end, Ableist Language, Cross-Posted on FanFiction.Net Series: Part 7 of That's what we do. We never stop fighting. Summary:
Ambroos Baas came to Ketterdam to reform it. He may not realize it yet, but he’s in way over his head.
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emjenenla · 5 years
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Kanej and 84.
84. “Going somewhere?”
Thank you for the request!
I actually have a couple other requests which were submitted before this one, but I kept waffling about those so I decided to write this one to buy myself more time to decide what I want those other two fics to be about.
This fic is set after the burning building one I wrote last week, but it should (fingers crossed) make sense alone. Either way it got way too long on me. These are supposed to be short!
Inej planted herself in front of Jesper and Wylan’s front door and crossed her arms. “Going somewhere?”
Kaz gave a look like he couldn’t believe she was trying to stop him. He was leaning heavily on his cane and holding the metal box he had rescued from the fire earlier that day. “I’m going back to the Slat,” he said. “I have things to do.”
“It’s midnight,” Inej pointed out, not even trying to contain her exasperation. This was far from the first time she and Kaz had had a conversation like this, and it would also be far from the last. “You promised Nina that you would rest here for the night.”
“If I hadn’t she would have called a medik,” Kaz protested. Inej couldn’t tell if he noticed how much he was starting to sound like a petulant teenager. He probably didn’t. As far as Inej knew she was the only person who was able to make him petulant and as a result he never believed her when she pointed it out.
“She still should have called a medik,” she said. “You sound like you’re still having trouble breathing.” She was right: he was still wheezing, just a little. The instant she mentioned it he started to try to even his breathing out.
She sighed. You’re not making it easier for me not to worry about you while I’m away at sea. She didn’t say that, though. There were things Kaz needed to be in a special mood or especially cornered to be maneuvered to into talking frankly about, and his health or lack thereof was one of them. “Come back upstairs,” she said. “I know you were lying when you told us that box was business records for the Dregs.”
For a minute Kaz just looked at her, then he sighed and turned back down the hall, heading for the front staircase. “Fine.”
Neither of them spoke again until they were closed in the room Jesper and Wylan kept cleaned and furnished especially for Kaz; Inej’s was across the hall. Kaz immediately sunk into an armchair. Inej would have liked him to lie down, but she also knew she probably wasn’t going to win that argument so she didn’t push it.
“How did you know I was lying?” Kaz asked, fingering the latches on the metal box.
“I can tell when you’re lying, Kaz,” Inej said, fondly as she perched herself on one of the armrests of the other armchair. “And I know that building had one of your personal safe houses in it. And I know that you only keep records to make Anika and the rests’ lives easier: anything you don’t have memorized isn’t important enough to risk going into a burning building for.”
Kaz gave her a little nod, conceding. “Right on both counts,” he paused a bit longer, obviously contemplating what to say next. “This is some stuff for my side project for you,” he said after a minute. “I was hanging on to it to show you because the exact wording matters and my memory for words is not as flawless as it is for numbers.”
Inej smiled just a little sadly. Kaz had been helping her catch slavers for six years and he still wasn’t comfortable enough with the possibility of his own goodness to refer to his “side project” as what it actually was. She slid down onto the seat of her armchair. “Can I see?”
Kaz opened the box and handed her some of papers inside. She scanned them quickly. They seemed to just be ordinary letters about inane things. “Is this in code?”
“Yes,” Kaz said.
Inej waited for him to tell her what they said. Kaz was good with codes. Codes were basically puzzles and he loved puzzles. He was the one who had created the code they used in their letters. That code was so complicated Inej had risked carrying the key around for months, studying it in her spare moments, until she finally felt confident enough to burn it. However, tonight the minutes went by and slowly she realized that Kaz wasn’t about to spout out the answer.
“You don’t know what they actually say,” she realized.
“Not yet,” Kaz said, slowly. It was obvious it took a lot for him to admit it. “The way codes of this type normally work is that there’s some way to tell which words are important and which aren’t. That doesn’t work here. Or at least, it doesn’t work alone. I think there might be some level of anagram or substitution at work here as well. It’s also possible that you’re only supposed to use certain letters. I’ll crack it: it’s just taking me a bit longer than usual.”
“You’ll get it,” Inej assured him. “Do you know who the letters are from?”
“Did you get the information I sent you that Nina and I stole Barend Meijer?” he asked and Inej nodded. “These are letters between some of Meijer’s superiors and a man named Maxim Vasilyev who’s been making moves into Ketterdam of late.”
“He’s a slaver?” Inej asked.
“Amongst other things,” Kaz said, pinching the bridge of his nose. “All I really know about him is that his family’s Ravkan but that he grew up in the Southern Colonies. He owns a fair amount of land there under his own name and there’s some implication he owns a lot more under various pseudonyms. He has a lot of followers which most likely could be considered a gang.”
“And you know this about him because?” Inej prompted.
Kaz opened his mouth, then closed it. Inej watched him contemplate what to say.
“I strongly suspect he’s after my position,” he finally said.
“Your position in the Dregs?” Inej asked.
“My position in Ketterdam,” Kaz corrected. “Of course, I won’t know for sure until I crack the code in these letters. If I’m right then you and Nina may have come back just in time to get caught in the middle of a gang war.”
“Do you really think it will come to that?” Inej asked, mostly just for something to say. She knew he was serious.
“If I could just have him killed and end this I would have done it months ago,” he said. “And that’s not our only problem. Have you heard of Ambroos Baas?”
“Isn’t he that man from south Kerch who goes around talking about how the Kerch are offending Ghezen with their corrupt ways and should repent before they are punished?” she asked.
“The very same,” Kaz said. “He’s coming to Ketterdam. According to Wylan, he’s promised the Merchant Council that he can clean up the Barrel before winter. I don’t think he could actually manage it and I’ve told Wylan not to worry, but regardless of the ultimate outcome Baas could still stir the merchers into a frenzy for a couple months and get a lot of us Barrel rats thrown in prison right when I most need numbers.”
“Couldn’t you sic him on Vasilyev?” Inej asked. She knew that was well within the realm of Kaz’s abilities.
“I would, except that a very large portion of Baas’s trip here is being financed by Councilman van Dijk,” Kaz’s lips twisted sardonically, “and guess who’s lining van Dijk’s pockets?”
“Vasilyev,” Inej wasn’t even surprised. Of all the merchers in Ketterdam Kees van Dijk was one of the most involved in the slave trade; she and Kaz been trying to shut him down for years without success. “Does Baas know his mission of renewal is being funded by a slaver? Does he care?”
“Hard to tell at this point,” Kaz said. “Most of what I’ve heard suggests that Baas is actually very naive. He may not realize that the merchers of Ketterdam are as crooked as the Barrel rats. Either way, he arrives in Ketterdam at the end of the week and then I’ll be able to tell you for certain once I meet him.”
“You plan to meet him?” Inej asked. “That would be extremely dangerous. You’re on the top of every To Arrest list in Ketterdam.”
Kaz grinned, it was a wild, reckless expression. “I’m not going to meet him in a place where he has the upperhand, my dearest Inej. If I play it right I might be able to scare him right out of the city and back to where he belongs. Which is good,” he sobered, “especially considering that given the connection between van Dijk and Vasilyev we have to consider that van Dijk funding Baas might be Vasilyev’s attempt at splitting my focus.”
His expression didn’t change much from his neutral one, but Inej knew him well enough to tell that regardless of anything he might say, he was really worried about all of this. Inej was worried too. She’d been at sea for most of the last six years, but she still knew how Ketterdam worked. If Vasilyev managed to take over the Barrel, the first thing he would do was kill Kaz. No one who managed to outmaneuver Kaz would let him live the way Kaz had for Per Haskell.
“It probably goes without saying at this point,” she said instead of voicing any of that. Saying it made it real, a possibility, and Kaz didn’t like admitted he was, in fact, merely human and could be defeated, “but I’m with you. Whatever you need done; I’ll do it.”
“Look into the fire from this afternoon?” Kaz asked. “The fact that it started in the building where I was keeping the Vasilyev letters seems like a bit too much of a coincidence for me. I thought no one knew I had these,” he gestured at the letters spread out across their laps. “If someone does know, I need to know as soon as possible. Plus, I need to know how many of my personal safe houses are compromised so I can replace them before things go bad.”
“I can do that,” Inej said. “What are you going to do?”
“Crack this code,” Kaz replied, without a smile. “There’s only so much I can do without knowing what Vasilyev’s plan is.”
Neither of them voiced all the things that could possibly go wrong.
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emjenenla · 5 years
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Chapters: 1/1 Fandom: Six of Crows Series - Leigh Bardugo Rating: Mature Warnings: Graphic Depictions Of Violence Characters: Kaz Brekker, Maxim Vasilyev (OC), Nina Zenik, Inej Ghafa, Wylan Van Eck, Jesper Fahey, Aart (OC), Various other Dregs, Kees Van Dijk (OC), Ambroos Baas (OC), Hanne Brum, Nikolai Lantsov, Original Characters Additional Tags: Post-Book 2: Crooked Kingdom, Experimental Style, Child Murder, Torture, Vandalism, Skeletons, The M-rated stuff is mostly discussed, but it's still pretty dark in places, Kaz has an epiphany, This is my first time writing Vasilyev, And I think he came out the way I was hoping he would, Cross-Posted on FanFiction.Net Series: Part 9 of That's what we do. We never stop fighting. Summary:
Kees Van Dijk killed a child to get Kaz Brekker's attention. Kaz Brekker will not stand for it.
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emjenenla · 5 years
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So I’m working on a fic in the POV of Ambroos Baas, one of the SoC OCs I mentioned in an fanfic I wrote a couple weeks ago, and I’m surprised by how much I’m enjoying it. Baas comes to Ketterdam because he’s convinced it’s his sacred duty to convince the inhabitants of the city that they are offending Ghezen by practicing corruption in their industry. He’s really naive and believes everything the Merchant Council tells him even though I’m hoping it will be obvious that they’re trying to manipulate him in the hopes that he’ll managed to take the gangs (especially Kaz and the Dregs) out for them. The weird thing is that he’s actually a lot of fun to write, don’t ask me why that is.
Plus this fic has Wylan not taking anyone’s shit and Kaz lurking like a ghoul in a dark hotel room, and those are both fun too
Basically, I’m having a good time with this fic.
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