Pel (
mythalenaste) wrote in
faderift2017-11-03 01:17 pm
Rifts and the Veil/Elven Artifacts Meeting
WHO: All members of the Rifts and the Veil and Elven Artifacts projects are invited to attend.
WHAT: A joint discussion, trying to solve a puzzle together.
WHEN: Early Firstfall, after Satinalia
WHERE: The Elven Artifacts laboratory in the Gallows.
NOTES: A follow-up to the island elven ruins quest. WTF was that map, anyway? Takes place after this announcement.
WHAT: A joint discussion, trying to solve a puzzle together.
WHEN: Early Firstfall, after Satinalia
WHERE: The Elven Artifacts laboratory in the Gallows.
NOTES: A follow-up to the island elven ruins quest. WTF was that map, anyway? Takes place after this announcement.
Tea and refreshments are offered--nothing elaborate, just something for people to gnaw on in case they get peckish while thinking. The mosaic has been drawn and painted as accurately as possible and hung on a wall for examination. It is a map of Thedas, with most of the south broken away and pieces missing, with green slashes--some straight, some curved oddly, all tapered at the ends and thicker in the middle--cutting across here and there. Where the green lines cross, they are bright red.
"All right," Pel says, pointing to one of the intersections. "Our goal for today is to reckon out what these are, or at the very least, come up with a plan for reckoning it all out. This is obviously a map, but what's it a map of?"

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So she settles, claps her eyes on things as a bird does before it alights upon a branch, head tipped to one side. The sigh could come from deep in her bones
"The eluvians and their true purpose coming to light in such a fashion 'twas not what I intended, let us hope the Inquisition dredges up some discrection from some reserve not yet made public." All this time with the truth sworn to secrecy by the few who did know because of the risks, when they were all comfortably housed in Skyhold of all places--
No longer a simple trip to see it with her own eyes. To step into the mirror, into the Crossroads. To trust the words of others who swear all is well with both. Nodding to the word, she looks to Thranduil as her mouth twists. "The Crossroads, you recall them? The place where we went through to go from my eluvian to Merrill's. That is likely what Corypheus seeks: the ancient elves made it, and though not the Fade? It is close. Close enough for him."
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“I remember it well,” Thranduil confirms. The oddness of that liminal space, compared to the restoration he had known in the Fade. “What is your desire? To secure the remaining Eluvians, or to fortify the Crossroads as best we are able? If they are a hub, as the name suggests, we might well identify what used to be the central places.”
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Attempt to lay a claim to Merrill's and wait for the howling to come no matter how safe it might be with the person who knows them best. Morrigan forged her own.
Who else can say that?
"The remaining eluvians might not be so easily secured: you will recall that I spoke of them requiring a key? There is more. When the elves fell, they sealed the ways behind them. There are paths through the eluvians that shall remain shut for all time, from what Merrill told me of her clan's misfortune with her eluvian at first I do not doubt such a way was found though to encounter the Blight from it..." The Blight, the Old Gods, Magisters and something so old and very definitely elven? A piece doesn't quite fit but here she has it. "The Crossroads shall not last forever. Eventually they will collapse on themselves. 'Twas but a name I gave to them for their true name has been lost to time itself."
As ever that saddens her. How much have they lost in this world? Ground to dust beneath them? All the wonder stripped away to leave but bare dull rock? A world that so many would call better.
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"This... key," Thranduil says, looking at her, head tilted at a slight angle. "It is not a key. Not something one could hold in their hand."
Why would it be? The gates to his Halls needed no keys- they opened by his will, and that alone. The Elvhen would not have been much different. They had been so far similar in enough ways that this was just one more.
"Why would my kin bother with such a thing, when they had the skill at hand," he muses, looking beyond her for a moment, then refocusing.
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His kin, he says, and again she looks at him as she must from time to time for all that they jest, that he's the one her dear Gwenaelle loves he is so impossibly old. Not of this world. Uthenera would be possible for him even now, if there were any who remembered all of it.
"Not all lead back to our world - can you imagine such a thing?" A dare, almost, he can imagine such a thing. Elves able to do it. Of course Thranduil also knows what happened to the elves. He knows the elves that live now, either in the cities, in the Circles, in their clans. "But of course there were the Magisters, the Fall of Arlathan, the Creators locked away from them; a great many things befell the elves and their history is as difficult to piece together as what we speak of now."
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He shakes his head. Two thousand years- a fraction of time, and the Elvhen people were alive and thriving. Nothing, in the grand scope of the whole of the world. No room for could have, should have, may-have-been. Only now, and the scraps they work through.
"We-- you, I should say-- will recover what can be recovered. Perhaps I might be of some assistance, should you think our histories and manner were of like kind." If she needs someone to think as they had. If she needs anything. She, who he would name elf-friend.
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"Would you be of a mind to take a trip to Skyhold again some day? You had so little time before, from one place to the next." If I am ever gone, she thinks, who else might have a chance of understanding them at all enough to be trusted with them. "You might yet be here the day the Crossroads gutters out at last."
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He would like to see Skyhold again. It is true his time there was sparse, but good memories lingered. “If I should witness it,” Thranduil notes. “I felt so queer when we traveled those roads.”
Odd. Out of place, physically and mentally. Tumbling into Kirkwall had almost been a relief. He pauses, briefly turning to where he would normally have a cup resting. There is none, and he would have her comfortable before he continues this line of questioning.
“I fear I have been a poor host,” he says. “May I fetch you something to drink? To make you comfortable, before we speak of uncomfortable things.”
She is hard to grasp, this one, but he intends to fit her into his plans as she may well have accounted for him and his in her own, and—it is only polite.
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Now that's something they never did get the chance to speak on since she was snarling everyone to secrecy. It lasted longer than expected, she can give them a grudging modicum of pride at that. "How so? One cannot remain between forever but I wonder if it is that anchor or you being from elsewhere, or if they're too entwined to know for certain."
She smiles at that, comfortable enough to look at him fondly; she's done well, has Gwenaëlle. "Tea or wine, wine would perhaps be best." And quicker. She's not the sort of mage to go using her magic just to boil up water.
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“Both,” he says. “Or I suspect so. Perhaps you have become accustomed to a silver tongue from me, but the best metaphor I can summon to explain the Quendi and the elvhen is that of horses and ponies, like our dear Bill and Gwenaëlle’s Persistance.”
(Our Bill.)
Wryly: “I assume the image is clearly fixed in your head, and I needn’t elaborate. The elvhen did not consider the needs of the Quendi when they built, just as perhaps the elvhen would struggle with some of our tools. I felt—apart from myself. We are not made to feel fatigued, but yet. There are things that cause elves to Fade, for the thing that binds flesh and spirit together to falter. Perhaps this was like that, but it ended once we were in Kirkwall proper.”
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Spare her dealing with anything like this again.
(Your Bill, she doesn't need a secondhand lawnmower and certainly not one that leaves more mess and requires more upkeep than the grass itself.)
A memory stirs, and who else would think to tell him of a meddling old woman who might at last do some good. "There are few who have not heard of Anders but I knew another who joined with a spirit as he did, though she never allowed herself to become what he has." And Wynne is dead, so we can all prove that a mage can live that way without corrupting what resides in them. "A spirit of faith came to her in death, she said, and then she found herself alive to meddle, to fight the Blight alongside Cousland, Alistair, those of us who were there for it. But there were things that left her-- fatigued. Beyond that of an old woman. A spell in particular that once she used then collapsed."
Funny, the things you recall when someone brings them up as if seeing them for the first time again. They're not talking about the bones of another madwoman though. "Skyhold had magic so ancient that it had seeped into the stones itself, some part of me was surprised so few commented upon it, then I recall what makes up the Inquisition and the surprises vanishes. The Veil is thin here in Kirkwall, it could be that."
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“Overinvested,” Thranduil suggests, for the matter of Anders. Sloppy. No moderating restraint, no grasp of the nature of the spirit he took into himself. His accounting of the man is based thinly upon Tethras’ book and his own shallow knowledge of him, but even-handed is not a word he’d think applicable in the least.
He considers both her explanations, and nods. “We are not meant to be held apart, but the effects do not seem to be worsening. Should I keep free of Templars, I suspect I shall endure.”
For as long as needed.
Curious, he does pause, wine and fingers stilling. “What spell affected her so?”
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The trouble there might have been had he accomplished it.
Anders who came believing she would be one to help teach mages who behave as if born in fields.
"Templars may have had their day, though they cling on, some far more doggedly than others. I kept free of them all my life though I am far from most mages," she says it carefully - how often has she ever called herself a mage after all - "and you have means that most do not. Namely a mind entirely your own, and no lack of wit or ambition, tempered correctly." Always in the balance, too much of one without the other and watch how quickly it goes awry.
There's the anchor though. The Dalish girl dying. That's she's lasted this long…
But speaking of the dead-- "Vessel of the Spirit, she called it. She was a spirit healer prior to her death and possession," like someone else they talked of, "it disoriented those around us, restored both health and mana, but left her stunned after."
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“What a compliment, my lady. I will cherish it forever.” He sets the glass down. “So her own choice, and nothing detrimental, assuming she had one of you at her back and able to mind her. And she was older, and wiser—
I am considering something similar,” he notes, casually. “Doubtless, it will take time to do correctly, but if it strengthens the connection between my—spirit and my flesh, it will be well worth it. And the companionship could not be discounted either.”
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(So easy for him to be lost, who would truly weep?)
"I will say this or Wynne for all that she was the interfering old woman despite insisting that she was no grandmother; she was more than capable of taking care of herself, right to the end. I had word that she finally met her end in Orlais when the Mages and Templars fought, the spirit might not have been enough in the end with such violence…" Morrigan doesn't know the full details, only that word came to her through the Court. Sanitised no doubt.
"Though rare, there is the spirit that taught of the Arcane Warriors from the Brecilian Ruins, that or the tales of Spirit Warriors though they are rarer still, I cannot say I have ever encountered one knowingly. If there is anything I might turn up that would be suitable in the hunt for my mother, you shall have word of it first." Rare as that may be, she'd have Thranduil here, though not if all Flemeth's secrets are dark trickery. Which they are but all the past that's been dredged up this far, what else might she find?
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“Thank you—and perhaps such a thing would be useful aside, for the gathering of knowledge. I would not invite so intimate a connection without being sure of a partner, and I will need an old one, lest I feel—” he gestures. “—unstable. And perhaps it will help with the Eluvians.”
What a boon, to know and to invite home one who remembered Elvhenan, the old ways, the secret Craft and the history that would aid them now in settling everything to rights. He sets the thought aside.
“I am sorry for the loss of Wynne,” he says. “It sounds nearly as if you found her worthy. At the very least, she kept her secrets well.”
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That is the truth though. That many things are rotten, and some far more than any other.
"A pity Merrill is beyond our reach, of the Dalish I have met she had a knowledge beyond compare. What you propose is-" she takes a sip, then another, "I would not want you to fade but it might test or resolve some theories about the reach of things."
Long kept to herself, certainly with Leliana in Skyhold but the idea of the Fade's reach or the Crossroads. Where they might lead. The overlaps. Old notes to check again in the cold dark nights.
"Oh she would have driven everyone mad. She would have acted as your</> grandmother." She appreciates it Thranduil, they could use that sense Morrigan hated in her youth.