Fade Rift Mods (
faderifting) wrote in
faderift2016-02-23 01:43 am
OPEN: turn off the lights and I'll glow
WHO: New rifters & characters in Emprise du Lion
WHAT: More people falling on ice than usual, this time with demons, templars, and bonus nighttime
WHEN: Guardian 23
WHERE: Emprise du Lion
NOTES: This month, the arrival log is open to all.
WHAT: More people falling on ice than usual, this time with demons, templars, and bonus nighttime
WHEN: Guardian 23
WHERE: Emprise du Lion
NOTES: This month, the arrival log is open to all.
You were asleep--deeply or fitfully, for the last time or just resting your eyes for a moment-- and then you were not. And wherever you were was not, anymore, replaced by nothing but the sensation of falling, tumbling into endless, bottomless nothing. If this were still a dream, you would wake before you hit the ground. You can't die in a dream, they say. In some worlds.
But there's no waking here, just a flare of green-white light and a jarring impact onto freezing stone or ice that is twice as cold and just as hard. When your breath returns and the light's after-image fades from your eyes you will find yourself beneath a dark sky, a full moon straining to be seen through intermittent clouds, and a second moon low on the horizon. Its light reflects off snow to add an eerie ambient glow to the darkness, made stranger by the sickly green tint added by the fluttery menacing shape of the rift hanging in mid-air. Be careful getting up: you are at the edge of a cliff, what was once a waterfall now frozen solid in a massive curling sheet of icicles. The drop to the bottom is several stories, surely a deadly fall even without the huge humps and spikes of ice and snow that litter the ground where splash and spray were petrified.
You are also not as you were: in the palm of your left hand there glows a narrow splinter of light the same sickly green as whatever brought you here. It aches, a bone-deep pain that gnaws even through all the distractions. Like the fact that you're being attacked by monsters--some tall, spindly stick-things with too many eyes, some hunched and hooded with no eyes at all. Some are entirely different but perhaps more monstrous for it: men and women in heavy, gleaming armor, all of them with chunks of red crystal protruding out in a way you soon realize indicates it is actually growing out of their skin. Their eyes are a dull red, hollow and empty, and they attack with a single-minded determination.
Luckily, you are not on your own. Around you others are waking up, equally confused, with the same green lights flaring from their hands. There is stuff scattered about, like the contents of someone's life exploded through the rift with them: a picnic table and benches upended, metal camp furniture flung about, clothes and utensils, bits of wood and canvas and mattress littering the ground. Even better, you are not far from a path leading toward an Inquisition camp, and noise travels far in this terrain, echoing up canyons and off cliffsides, carried by the chill night wind. Help is on its way; just last until it arrives.
But there's no waking here, just a flare of green-white light and a jarring impact onto freezing stone or ice that is twice as cold and just as hard. When your breath returns and the light's after-image fades from your eyes you will find yourself beneath a dark sky, a full moon straining to be seen through intermittent clouds, and a second moon low on the horizon. Its light reflects off snow to add an eerie ambient glow to the darkness, made stranger by the sickly green tint added by the fluttery menacing shape of the rift hanging in mid-air. Be careful getting up: you are at the edge of a cliff, what was once a waterfall now frozen solid in a massive curling sheet of icicles. The drop to the bottom is several stories, surely a deadly fall even without the huge humps and spikes of ice and snow that litter the ground where splash and spray were petrified.
You are also not as you were: in the palm of your left hand there glows a narrow splinter of light the same sickly green as whatever brought you here. It aches, a bone-deep pain that gnaws even through all the distractions. Like the fact that you're being attacked by monsters--some tall, spindly stick-things with too many eyes, some hunched and hooded with no eyes at all. Some are entirely different but perhaps more monstrous for it: men and women in heavy, gleaming armor, all of them with chunks of red crystal protruding out in a way you soon realize indicates it is actually growing out of their skin. Their eyes are a dull red, hollow and empty, and they attack with a single-minded determination.
Luckily, you are not on your own. Around you others are waking up, equally confused, with the same green lights flaring from their hands. There is stuff scattered about, like the contents of someone's life exploded through the rift with them: a picnic table and benches upended, metal camp furniture flung about, clothes and utensils, bits of wood and canvas and mattress littering the ground. Even better, you are not far from a path leading toward an Inquisition camp, and noise travels far in this terrain, echoing up canyons and off cliffsides, carried by the chill night wind. Help is on its way; just last until it arrives.

no subject
"Here, it'll help with healing. And...how is all this yours?!? What the hell happened, did the rift yank in the entire campsite? That would be a first; rifters usually just have what they can carry."
no subject
Eyes widening, she drops the dress and searches about her person, soon finding the relatively small bag that's now little more than half-beaded rags. Oh. She'd liked that bag.
"The Extension Charm... it must have caused an explosion of some-.... But why now? I haven't put anything in this bag since the war ended. I've been taking things out, if anything." Especially her books. Heaven help her if she finds that any of her books had been destroyed.
no subject
"So, not only do rifts spew demons and people from other worlds, it can destroy enchantments. Wonderful. There's no way all this can be carried back to camp, but tell me what you actually need from this mess and I'll be an extra pair of hands." If there's trouble on the way, that extra pair of hands will need to set those aside in terms of weapons, but she'll do what she can not to ruin anything in the process.
no subject
Hermione had enough of camping, to be perfectly honest. That was why all this camping gear had been in her bag and she'd been forced to place a not-strictly-legal Extension Charm on her bag to carry it all around. But that didn't need to be said, since it was growing progressively clearer that there were much larger matters at stake.
"I don't even know what all was in there! I'd unpacked these things weeks - months - ago! Have you seen any books about? I'd hate to leave any of my books lying around when Muggles might just randomly pass by and see them."
no subject
And yes, camp. It goes like this; there's the physical world and the Fade, land of demons, spirits and the souls of the dead or sleeping. Not too long ago, an ancient magister asshole punched a hole in the Fade, creating the Breach. Imagine that rift you came out of, only a thousand times bigger. It spawned countless rifts, causing demons to pour out...and later, people like you. Every one of you has that mark, too, a mark which can seal rifts when you learn how to use it properly.
Anyway, the Inquisition is a group dedicated to finding the asshole responsible and restoring order, and we have a camp nearby. Are you with me so far?" As Korrin talked, she headed over to gather those books, handing them back over to Hermione. She glanced around again, hoping to find a backpack or or something to hold them in.
no subject
"People who can't do magic," she answered absently. She was listening, really she was, but she was also trying to avoid to temptation to use her magic to try and repair the book. Given the way her magic had been acting lately, she'd be more likely to set it on fire than to fix it.
She didn't seem particularly bothered to be handed the books and have nothing with which to carry them; if anything, the slim girl carrying an armful of books seemed strangely natural. Standing up, she looked around, trying to figure out if it was worth gathering everything together when she wouldn't be able to carry it all.
While she understood the logical progression of what she was being told, it wouldn't be Hermione if she didn't have a plethora of questions. "What do you mean, people like me? Just... random people throughout space and time who happen to be asleep? What kind of magic can just pluck people from their beds and deposit them in a completely different part of the world? It makes absolutely no sense, especially given that I would have heard of something like this by now."
no subject
"No, you probably wouldn't have; nothing against you personally, but the Breach and rifts and whatnot is relatively new even to this world. It's hasn't been very long, only months, and there's a lot we can't answer about it yet because we're still figuring it out. All we know is that the Veil -what separates the Fade and the physical- has been torn to shreds, hence all the demons. And yes, rifters are people like you, drawn in here through the rifts, all bearing the mark of our late Herald. Some of our native people have it, too."
She tilts her head, regarding Hermione curiously. "And your muggles don't know about magic? Odd. Here, it's well-known, though well-loved is another story. Mages are often suspicion for several reasons, some of them valid, a lot of them bullshit. But no one in the Inquisition is going to give you hell for abilities, especially the only one that has any effect on the rifts."
no subject
Frowning a little as she listens and moves to pick up a jumper from the ground, she replies, "This all sounds very... metaphysical. You wouldn't happen to have a book on all of this, would you? Perhaps if I review it a few times, it will make more sense, but as it stands...."
As it stands, she realizes that the jumper she'd picked up off the ground isn't hers, but Ron's. She had packed several changes of clothes for the three of them on their journey, and apparently, dreaming about the small bag had brought along everything that had been inside of it.
... everything.
Turning to the woman speaking to her, she tries not to look as worried as she actually is. "Magic is a secret. You only know about it if you can use it or if you're very close to someone who can, usually family or a spouse. But... if the people here know about it and don't like it...."
Scanning the area once again, she explains, "Some of the items in that bag may have been magical in nature. Some stronger than others. If you see any small vials, or a cloak, or, um.... a thousand-year-old, ruby-encrusted sword, I'd appreciate it if you could bring those back to me."
The vials were more than likely, and would definitely prove useful. But the cloak and the sword are mysteriously nowhere to be found, if they'd even made it through the Fade with her to begin with.
no subject
She'll check around for the cloak, just because that sounds like a practical item to have in the frozen landscape that is Emprise du Lion. Any scarves and the like will be passed back as well, though with such bright colors, they'd be easily spotted against the pale snow. "As for magic, right now it's more about what you do with it. You'll be fine if you're healing people or defending yourself; say you're with me, with us, and people will leave you alone because this area is in dire straights. They need all the help they can get, and they're not going to focus on one mage when there are far more pressing issues to deal with.
By the way, see those red spikes in the distance? Don't touch them. They're highly toxic and we've had problems with people not taking their threat seriously enough. I can go into more detail somewhere warm, but for the moment, please just trust me. It's not worth it."
Finding a few uncracked vials, Korrin hands them over. "I know, all this is overwhelming. There are plenty of books about it, in fact, back in the library at Skyhold. That's our fortress, to the east of here. Supplies come and go from there all the time, so taking new people over is not a problem."
no subject
Of course, she also hopes this whole thing is only an extremely vivid dream and so she won't have to worry about any of it, but that's besides the point.
She's about to explain that she isn't with them, she isn't with anybody, and so it feels bad lying about an affiliation just to protect herself. But then she remembers how badly her magic had acted up, and if she's forced to defend herself against people who don't like these "mages," she can't be absolutely certain she wouldn't just end up causing more trouble for herself.
She doesn't understand why anyone would touch red spikes growing out of the earth when they're warned against it, but before she can say anything about that or ask for specifics despite the cold, she hears the magic word. "A library? That sounds convenient!" Pocketing the vials she'd been given, she almost smiles, picturing Hogwarts' huge library and imagining that it must be similar, given the open use of magic here.
"If it wouldn't be too much trouble, then, that does sound like the best way to answer all my questions, especially since I'm not exactly cut out to defend myself against any more green holes in the sky that might crop up."
no subject
Korrin still worries about anyone with a shard, but at least the girl's shard is in her hand, as is normal. She would hate to encounter anyone with a shard in their chest, like Sina. Trying to push her frail Dalish friend out of her mind for now, she crosses her arms and nods. "Alright, just follow me back to camp then. We can get you on the next supply run back to Skyhold. Which isn't to say that I won't answer questions as I can, though, and the rifts are relatively new, so you won't be finding books about them yet."
What she will find are extremely dry books about the Chant of Light and all that contains. And if she remembers right, also some passive-aggressive notes scribbled in the margins when it comes to the history of the Dales. "I'm Korrin Ataash, by the way, member of the Inquisition Council of Magi."
no subject
The frown doesn't exactly go away when she's told there wouldn't be an books available on the rifts. "What about publications? You have to have newspapers or something along those lines, don't you?"
She pauses for a moment after that introduction, considering the fact that the only "Inquisition" she'd ever heard of in her world hadn't exactly been accommodating to anyone who would call themselves a mage or anything similar. "Hermione Granger," she replies. "It's nice to meet you. During the fight, I met someone who told me I should speak to a mage to find out more about how things work here."
After another brief pause, she reluctantly adds, "There was another one there; tall, with, um...." At that, she gestures to her temples and then at Korrin, indicating the horns. She doesn't want to risk offending her by calling them the wrong thing, and given how intimidating Iron Bull had been, she hadn't wanted to directly bring up the whole what are you? query. Korrin at least seems a little more approachable, given that she isn't swinging an axe around. "I've never seen anyone like you before today. I've heard of goblins and house-elves and giants and trolls, but somehow, I don't think you fit into the same classification as anyone I've ever seen or read about."
no subject
Her expression is apologetic, but she really can't risk Hermione calling Kas a Qunari or Iron Bull a Tal-Vashoth. Neither scenario would end well. "You must mean either Kas or the Iron Bull, then. Kas is young, with small horns and a bow. The Iron Bull...well, the name is apt." There's evident fondness when she speaks of Kas that is distinctly absent when speaking about Bull. But Korrin won't drag Hermione into that, not when they just met and there's so much else to discuss.
"As for interacting, I'm not sure how else to explain it; but when you hold that particular hand up to a rift, both glow and if the rift is weak enough, it's sealed. Usually, that's only possible if we kill enough demons first, since otherwise their presence just keeps it open." She shrugs, wishing she could describe it better, but there are other people for that. "You should talk to Adelaide when you can; she's a Spirit Healer and knows a great deal more about the Fade and its inhabitants than I do, though she doesn't have a mark like yours."
Reaching into her armor, Korrin draws out a crystal hanging on a thin chain around her neck. "There's the bulltin board at Skyhold, but the fastest way to pass on information is through one of these. It's a sending crystal, and when you talk at it, it...well, sends your voice. Joining up with the Inquisition will allow you to get one of your own, and with it you'll be able to talk to anyone also part of the organization."
no subject
She doesn't exactly have to think about it long to remember who she'd been speaking to. "The Iron Bull, then. Are there really so few of you, or are those just the only ones out here at the moment?"
One day, she'll apologize for all her questions. But today definitely won't be that day. "What do you mean by a Spirit Healer? We have Healers, and Muggles have therapists to try and heal the metaphorical spirit, but... you're not talking about an actual soul, are you? No one can really repair that."
Eyeing the crystal just a little skeptically, she resists the urge to call it a mobile, instead admitting, "I've never seen anything like that before. It just records your voice and allows others to hear it? Can they can reply to you directly?"
no subject
Tucking her crystal back, she proceeds to answer as many questions as she can recall, while checking to see if there's anything else practical she can help carry before they head off. "A Spirit Healer is a person who's bonded with a spirit in the Fade -a benevolent sort, not a demon- and that bond allows them access to incredible feats of healing that no mage can do without it. It's not for me, so I don't know the details, but we have a few of them around.
As for my kind, no, there aren't too many in the south or the Inquisition. I'm familiar with...four others, at the moment? Humans tend to be the most numerous, big surprise, then elves and dwarves. As for Tal-Vashoth, it means 'true grey ones' the Tal part meaning 'true'. I don't really know why they use that term or why there isn't one for the race as a whole, but whatever. It is what it is." Sorry her people are needlessly complicated, Hermione.
no subject
The idea of a Spirit Healer doesn't really get much easier to understand, at least not from Hermione's ultra-logical perspective "You mean... a ghost? People can use ghosts to help them with healing?" The only time she'd ever seen anyone use any kind of magic that had to do with souls, it had involved Voldemort ripping his own soul to shreds in the search for immortality; it hadn't really had much to do with healing.
She can't help smiling a little at the mention of elves (though she has no way of knowing that the elves here are much different from the ones she knows back home), but the smile goes away when she's left attempting to study the etymology of a language she'd never heard of. "Well, I assume that Qunari are called such because they follow this Qun religion, which in their minds is the right path. A Vashoth is someone who'd never had the Qun in their lives, right? Which wouldn't necessarily make them bad, but they aren't on the right path. They fall into a grey area not of their own making. A Tal-Vashoth, though, are those who make the conscious choice to break away from this path; which again, doesn't make them good nor bad, but this time, they chose to enter that grey area of their own free will, which might account for what makes them 'true grey ones'."
Realizing she's rambling to someone about a culture she's not the least bit familiar with, she remarks, "Sorry, I'm just trying to make it make sense in my own head. I don't mean to tell you what your own culture believes. That wouldn't be right of me."
no subject
And she is, sympathetic to anyone ripped from their world to land in her mess of a one. "No, not a ghost. A spirit. Spirits and demons are a completely different category; they were never human or other mortal races, but always part of the Fade. Spirits tend to embody different virtues; the Spirit Healer friend that I mentioned has Compassion working through her to provide healing. That is a subject you'll find in the library, though a lot of sources are Chantry-based and therefore biased against them. It's better to use those as a starting-off point to learning, not an end-result."
She glances around as she speaks, doing her best to remain alert but after the rift demons, the wildlife seems to want to stay well away from the area. Good enough for her. "There ought to be a pamphlet, yes, as we haven't had a lot of mistakes like the ones you describe. That's all back at camp or Skyhold, though. Is there anything else from all this that you want with you before we go?"
Now's the time, before other people, beasts, or elements claim them at some point. She'd offer to make multiple trips, but rerouting Red Templars is a slightly more pressing duty for the day.
no subject
She listens carefully as Korrin tries to explain spirits, but she’s just as happy to find that she could read up on the subject. “I might enjoy reading,” she tells her with a small smile, “but I’m perfectly capable of formulating my own opinions through extended research and experience rather than take a book for face value.” After all, she’d made the embarrassing mistake of believing in Gilderoy Lockhart’s invented adventure stories, and she doesn’t intend to be taken in by propaganda again.
Looking around at the things still littering the ground and hoping that Harry’s cloak and Gryffindor’s sword simply never made it through with her rather than risk them falling into the wrong hands, she shook her head. “Just a few changes of clothes, I suppose, since I wouldn’t want to inconvenience anyone for anything like that.” She went to pick up her dress, smiling a little ruefully. “I don’t suppose I’ll be needing this here, but I can probably find some use for it if I can’t mend it properly.”
no subject
The rest of what's said is met with a nod of approval from Korrin, who finds herself liking the young mage the more they speak. Bravery and consideration are traits she always values, and Hermione seems to have plenty of both. "And that's good to hear. Not all of that library ought to be trite propaganda, anyway. Dorian -a fellow mage who critiques the library all the time- would have a fit if they didn't include some decent tomes for his perusal." If those two don't become good friends, Korrin will be much surprised.
"Well, you're already showing better manners than a lot of people native to this world. I think we'll get along just fine." She flashes a warm smile, which fades a little as her gaze falls to the shard embedded in Hermione's hand. "That pain ought to fade in a few hours. Please let someone know if it doesn't, as that's something we definitely need to know."
no subject
Smiling a little at the mention of another "mage" who spent time in the library, Hermione mentions, "Well, at least I won't be alone there. I'll have to ask him for some recommendations."
She'd been plucking up a few articles of clothing, less discerning about the tops, given that she's not so fashion-conscious that she wouldn't wear Harry or Ron's jumpers when in a pinch. As for the rest, though, she's clearly careful to make sure she's grabbing specific clothes, since that would be a bit more awkward. The mention of her hand, though, makes her clench her fist a bit, frowning down at it. "Is it dangerous? In the long-term, I mean?"
no subject
Thinking back to that awful night, Korrin sighs and tears her gaze away. "Those with echoes of her mark don't seem to have the stability problems she had, but it'd be foolish of me to promise that it will always be that way. Believe me, I'd love nothing more than to guarantee safety."
no subject
"Is there anyone who can make any guarantees, one way or the other?" she asks, having gathered everything she intends to gather and looking back at Korrin. "A healer, perhaps? Or at least someone with a viable theory? I can lend myself to research, especially if I'm not the only one affected."
no subject
Surely Adelaide would appreciate someone with intelligence and zeal, which Hermione seems to possess in spades. "As to your earlier question, no, you won't need to worry about anything diplomatic unless you want to go in that area. My girlfriend's undergoing training as a bard, for instance, and that's their area of expertise. But I won't keep us here when you have to be getting colder by the minute. We can warm up at camp and see about sending scouts back this way to collect anything else...within reason." Anything both portable and useful stands a good chance, but that picnic table is just going to remain where it is, sorry.
no subject
Hermione doesn't really notice the cold until Korrin points it out. Because right, it's snowy and she'd just fought demons on the ice and she's under-dressed and on top of that she generally feels naked without her magic, so now that she does notice it, she shivers a bit.
"I'd appreciate that, too. The fire, I mean. And coming back to look for things, though the only things that are important are the cloak and the sword, and they don't seem to be here." She pauses, frowning at the various camping memorabilia. "And I would have preferred getting the tent back to Mr. Weasley in one piece, but it doesn't look like that's possible."
no subject
She'll take one last, lingering glance to be sure that nothing's going to pursue them, but all she spots are some snoufleurs waddling in the distance. They're hardly a threat. Taking point, she has her staff out again just in case there's trouble between here and the Inquisition area of influence.
(no subject)