points the faith in higher things,
WHO: Herian Amsel & open.
WHAT: the party don't start 'til she walks in. (Introducing Herian & her recruitment to the Inquisiton.)
WHEN: mid-July & onwards.
WHERE: Halamshiral & surrounds, maybe some Skyhold later?
NOTES: Prose/brackets are both fine!
Open starters in the main post (more to be added), closed starters in the comments, if we've discussed any plans feel free to barge in with a wildcard or prod me via pm or pp @karmacharging and I'll whip something up. If you'd like some information on this problem child, here is her info post.
WARNINGS: Herian's background includes themes of violence, torture and death, as well as discrimination and her own post traumatic stress disorder. While she will not in general be vocal about some of her own prejudices (against apostates, Dalish and nobles as some examples) it is very likely to come up in narrative and could come up in dialogue depending on interactions. Here is an opt out post if you'd rather certain things be avoided, or if you'd like to opt out of interactions with her in general.
WHAT: the party don't start 'til she walks in. (Introducing Herian & her recruitment to the Inquisiton.)
WHEN: mid-July & onwards.
WHERE: Halamshiral & surrounds, maybe some Skyhold later?
NOTES: Prose/brackets are both fine!
Open starters in the main post (more to be added), closed starters in the comments, if we've discussed any plans feel free to barge in with a wildcard or prod me via pm or pp @karmacharging and I'll whip something up. If you'd like some information on this problem child, here is her info post.
WARNINGS: Herian's background includes themes of violence, torture and death, as well as discrimination and her own post traumatic stress disorder. While she will not in general be vocal about some of her own prejudices (against apostates, Dalish and nobles as some examples) it is very likely to come up in narrative and could come up in dialogue depending on interactions. Here is an opt out post if you'd rather certain things be avoided, or if you'd like to opt out of interactions with her in general.
Arriving with the Inquisition ( open. )
Herian Amsel exists in shades of winter, even when the world around her is dusty from heat. Her hair is dark, the black of a tree stripped of leaves and colour and grasping at a grey, unsympathetic sky, her eyes a pale, blue that people might foolishly attribute to ice in a fit of romanticism. For all that she appears to carry winter with her, summer has rolled relentlessly through a country already bearing the scorchmarks of war, making the people and the landscape seem to blur together. It is the dirt, she expects, the clouds of dust that have rolled over them on their journey. Even the grass feels dry and brittle. The closer they have drawn to the estate of Duc Hugues Pelletier, the more she has wondered just what difference there will be between the state of the gardens and the grass the common folk can wander on outside. It seems comical, if not downright insane that she be leading a group of elven refugees to the estate of an Orlesian noble for sanctuary, but she promised them she would bring them to the Inquisiton, and if the Inquisition is in Halamshiral then the group will have access to better food and medicine and more protection than she can afford them if she were to escort them to Skyhold as their sole guard.
Option A.
Herian is on foot, leading a palomino stallion with an elven woman on his back, pregnant and exhausted. Mage as she might be, Herian carries no staff. Instead a sword hangs by her side, and something like twenty refugees follow behind her.
"Inquisition," she starts, and her accent is defiantly and perhaps unexpectedly Starkhaven. "These refugees seek sanctuary amongst your number, and to lend their hands to your cause. To where shall I lead them?"
Option B.
Still on foot, Herian accompanies a smaller number of elves, now, heading towards the makeshift Medical Tents. The pregnant woman from before is with her, Herian leading her so that the woman can rest a hand on her forearm, Herian move slowly and patiently.
"This way. The mages here work under the Inquisiton banner, so if your need is dire then they are well qualified to bring you aid. You need not spend any time in the presence of those that set you ill at ease." Her voice is soft, and she has not yet looked up to the person standing nearby. "Can I have the names of your elven healers, for my friends?"
Other Increasingly Ridiculous Prompts ( open. )
Option C.
There is something singularly satisfying about the burn of muscles after exertion. Usually it comes in the form of training, practicing forms over and over for hours on end. Today, though, Herian is chopping wood, ensuring that those she accompanied who are still tired or injured need not worry should they have need, or perhaps so she can be useful to the Inquisition in some form.
Largely she does it because she likes to work, and the steady routine of grabbing up the heavy slabs of wood and breaking them apart with an axe is steadying. Not quite the meditation technique that she was taught in the Spire, but it sets her in the right frame of mind all the same. Her breath, her mind, and the regular thud and splinter make her feel better. Sweat rolls down her back, the thin material of her shirt sticks to her skin, and the tangled mess of her hair seems wilder even than before.
.... Although it is after noon and she's doing it non-stop for a long time in the summer sun, so perhaps an intervention would be wise.
Wildcard me, bro.
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Stop making jokes no one will get, Cosima.
"Are you heading to Skyhold?"
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Looking in the direction of the Keep, Herian considers it. "I was not yet fully set upon my course." It would be sensible, though, to walk through camp if not any other reason. "I could aid you with your collection, though, if you've need."
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She shrugs, then adds, "I've probably gotten lazy. Where I come from, there's a way to carry images easily, so I can consult them, with greater fidelity than a black and white sketch and an accompanying description."
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Part of it is self-serving curiosity, admittedly, moreso than anything like the knightly desire to help; there are a number of things Herian is not prepared to simply agree with, not even if it is Councilor LeBlanc who spoke them. That the Dalish are here rankles her, that all mages are apostates is something she refuses, because apostasy was forced on them and she does not think that should define them. Rifters being worthy of trust, of consideration? That she can consider with a little more is.
It probably helps her willingness to offer chances that Cosima is very pretty, but let's not actually acknowledge that, or let it colour their interaction at all, because Herian is quietly throttling the part of her brain that volunteered that information. It is irrelevant.
Her head tilts to the side, curious. "Easier than navigating a book?" She sounds far from incredulous— Herian did not learn to read until she was sent to the Circle. Books are well and good, but less than helpful for those raised as lowly as she. "That must be a wondrous invention indeed. There are many in towns here that suffer for the lack of knowledge available to them. Not all can carry the knowledge of a herbalist in their mind." And, with a note of almost-humour, if gently exaggerated pensiveness can be easily interpreted as such: "Rashvine is friend to no man."
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"Yeah, that device was... useful." Cosima sounds rueful. She could write a blog post when she gets back aimed at the people elegiacally describing a time before the Internet. Something pointed to do with identifying poison oak.
"I'd even settle for a way to take better notes. I was lucky to live in a place where paper and ink were cheap. I'm having to reorganize how I approach things here."
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"Perhaps until an appropriate substitute is devised," she offers, carefully, "I can aid in the acquisition of paper. Councillor LeBlanc was a teacher of mine in the White Spire. If she can still threaten me with essays, it may be I can still make requests for ink and paper." Not a promise, but an offer, at least. She can try.
Annnnd excuse her, she is just going to grab a stick, spear a particular leaf, and nudge it away from the others. "Not noxious," she clarifies, "but if you get the sap on your hands it will take days entire to wash away."
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She isn't sure why she's telling Herian all this. Probably just because the other woman seems genuinely interested.
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She rests her forearms on her knees, for a moment, trying to think what it could possibly be that Cosima does, before quickly coming to the conclusion that perhaps the reason it wouldn't work here is because there is no comparison. Huh.
Thankfully, knights do not say anything so ineloquent as huh, so she is spared that slight indignity.
"What is it you do? I confess myself intrigued." A beat, and she adds, "and mayhaps a mite bewildered." It did not seem so terrible an admission to make.
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"Of course. Those who study dragons are especially famed amongst academics." A slight face, before she admits, "in some cases because they are sometimes consumed by the subjects of their studies, if you will forgive the my lack of delicacy." There wasn't really a tactful way to talk about people being eaten by dragons, was there? "I am no academic, my... knowledge is not so detailed as some might offer you, but academics study a good many things. There are those dedicated to the study of spirits and magics and the Fade, as well. Some areas of study are more scandalous than others."
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It's simplified, necessarily, but not inaccurate.
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"So, then." A pause, as she tries to deduce if the comparison is foolish, before offering it anyway. "Your field of study might consider how dragons and lizards might be connected, then?"
Something troubles at her, though. "There was an academic at the White Spire, Enchanter Vauquelin." Her expression flickers for a moment, gaze dropping. "He has - had - an interest in the bloodlines of elves and humans and their mixing. Would that be part of it, as well?"
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Instead, she says, "I don't want to influence; I want to understand. A problem I'd work on is, um. You'd think a lizard and a snake are more alike the a lizard and a dragon, right? Size is a more important factor than number of limbs. But using tools I have at home, I can compare how they develop. A lizard may be more like a small dragon than it is like a snake with legs, once you have more information."
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"Our world possesses cautionary tales of its own," she finally replies, and though there's no smile to speak of, no shadow of one, Herian's expression is a little gentler. More understanding, at least.
It isn't so much that Herian was tense, but that there was a certain element of caution in her, fascination and faint edges of concern mixed together. That concern eases away when Cosima says, outright, that she has no desire to influence. Just as the tension was a subtle thing so too is its easing, though not imperceptible.
"I think I understand. It sounds fascinating. Complex," she admits, "but fascinating. How do you better grasp their development? Observation?"
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"Observation a lot, yeah. We have very powerful ways to magnify things, so we can observer stuff we wouldn't otherwise be able to see. A lot of it has to do with genes, which are sort of the blueprints for a new organism that come from your parents. Some things about you are there before you're even born, but lots of them come from your environment and your experiences. It's sometimes hard to tell which is which just by looking. And sometimes it's a mix, like... how tall you are comes partly from genes, but also has to do with how well-fed you are in childhood."
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Herian muses on that, for a moment. She had not necessarily considered, but it seemed a reasonable enough conclusion to draw, when presented so. "I am taller than a good many from alienages. I presumed that such stemmed from being an elf-blooded human, rather than fully elven, but... by your reasoning, then, being taken from the alienage and fed better food was just as like a factor."
She cants her head slightly to the side, trying to remember just how tall the elven mages in the Spire had been, if she had been surprised when first she encountered those from outside the Spire after so many years removed from the alienage.
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She considers Herian's example, and nods. "But yeah. I mean, it's very possibly both? Say you and someone with different parents were fed the same diet - they may never be able to get as tall as you. But if you went hungry a lot as a kid, you might not reach your full potential height, either."
Cosima shrugs a little. "So my field - one of its practical uses - is trying to pinpoint what causes people who are born sick to be that way, so maybe we can develop ways to help them."
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Herian's mouth twinges a little, the slight edge of a smile. "So you are a healer, then. Of a fashion. You help them better their craft." She rubs her knuckles along her jaw ruefully, two slow, hard swipes as she thinks. "It sounds very complicated."
Far beyond her own understanding. Herian's own healing skills were limited to elfroot is useful and following whatever strict instructions the healers gave her, and bits and pieces of memories that she'd almost sooner forget. Her nose wrinkles as she inhales the scent of another herb before dropping it - unpleasant memories tied to that one.
"Your work is to be admired, I think."
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Or... any before coming to Thedas.
"But yeah, I just... don't know what to do with myself here. My work there was based on a foundation you guys don't have and tools that don't exist. Thus the clumsy attempt at plants."
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For a moment Herian turns her gaze to the sky, pensive.
"We are all clumsy in our beginning attempts. Is it the healing element that most concerns you? I'm sure there are ma t fields where you skills would be greatly valued."
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Which is significantly less noble, but at least has the distinction of being honest.
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Herian hesitates, frowns, and considers. "Mayhaps understanding your world will help give some understanding to ours. And studying Rifts and magic, even from the perspective of one without ties to it, could be more rewarding a thing for one so curious than plants."
Finally there is a smile. Or, a not-smile, but less on the former and more on the latter than previously witnessed. "This world is more wondrous than it is terrible. You need not resign yourself to something hastily, Lady Cosima."
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And maybe a way home, one day, if she can figure out how.
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Ah, she grabs up a blue and white flower, considering it before admitting, "I've no notion what this might do."
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