Hermione Granger (
bookish_lioness) wrote in
faderift2016-03-02 10:13 pm
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Our aspirations are wrapped up in books
WHO: Hermione Granger and Open!
WHAT: There's a newwitch mage wandering around Skyhold. Come say hello?
WHEN: Backdated to her arrival near the end of Guardian and onward throughout Drakonis.
WHERE:The library. All over Skyhold. But mostly its library.
NOTES: Feel free to run into her pretty much anywhere, or have her run into you. And be prepared for all the questions about your character and Thedas/their homeworld and everything in between.
WHAT: There's a new
WHEN: Backdated to her arrival near the end of Guardian and onward throughout Drakonis.
WHERE:
NOTES: Feel free to run into her pretty much anywhere, or have her run into you. And be prepared for all the questions about your character and Thedas/their homeworld and everything in between.
If not for the fact that Hermione had spent so many of her formative years in Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, Skyhold might have been overwhelming
As it was, the sprawling fortress was a little hard to get used to, since the academic environment that had given Hogwarts some sense of structure amidst the chaos wasn't present here. There was a library, thankfully, and she spent much of her time there, though it was so small that she was certain she'd end up reading every book in there in two weeks' time if she didn't actually go out and explore the rest of her surroundings.
And so every so often, she pried herself away from the cold little corner she'd set aside for herself and wander the rest of the area, though granted, she more often than not was carrying at least one book with her. Usually it was one of the books that had survived the trip through the Fade; anyone who might spot her in the garden or tavern or a safe distance away from the sparring going on in the training grounds might notice her engrossed in such unfamiliar titles as Hogwarts, A History or occasionally digging through Spellman's Syllabary in the vain hope of finding recognizable runes on various inscriptions throughout Skyhold.
After all, just because she was endlessly fascinated by all the new people and cultures and history and magic, it didn't mean she didn't occasionally need a bittersweet reminder of home. Especially when her other major reminder was her wand, which - despite the fact that she'd taken to finding the most solitary places she could find and practicing with it harder than she ever had the night before an exam - still wasn't behaving properly at all. Apologies to those of you who end up slipping on some wayward ice or getting sprayed with pebbles from a spell gone wrong.
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"I've... heard, yes. I'm sure most of the people telling me about them had been... biased. At best. Given that they were mages. But they still sounded dreadful for any mage who had to live in one."
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Mia pauses the game for a moment, both hands resting in her lap as she regards the young witch across from her. "I know perfectly well that mages are like anyone else. There are those with good intentions who wish to live honestly, and those who would abuse power if given the chance."
Her head shakes.
"Kinloch Hold was the Circle of Magi in Ferelden. During the chaos of the Blight just outside its walls, blood mages took the tower. Demons and abominations roamed the halls, torturing and killing any who crossed their path. If they'd been allowed to escape, the damage they could have wrought would have been unimaginable. But the templars there held them within those walls until the threat could be dealt with...at the cost of a great many lives."
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Absently scratching at her arm, Hermione looks away and asks, "Do you mean blood mages broke in and took over, or that the mages within the Circle became blood mages?" Because she has several very important questions that vary, depending upon the answer.
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"And no, the mages within the tower were the ones that turned. At least as I heard it told. My...source was not very forthcoming, after what he endured there," she replies after a moment, before reaching to continue the game, taking a pawn in the process.
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"But they hadn't always been blood mages, I assume? There... there may have been a reason they'd resorted to such measures. Not any justifiable reason according to the average person, of course, but... I'd heard that some mages had been badly mistreated in Circles. Perhaps they thought it was their only way to end such mistreatment?" Having forgotten about the game for the moment, she looks back up at Mia. "If a mage is possessed by a demon, is there no way to get rid of the demon and bring the mage back?"
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There's a sympathetic furrow to her brow as she watches Hermione struggle with the idea. No one wanted to believe someone was beyond saving. That much she understood.
"It's a very circular argument, had often and at length. The danger blood magic poses needs to be guarded against, and restrictions are set in place to prevent it. Someone will invariably break the rules and prove the need for them, and so on and so on. So long as there are those who seek power and are willing to sacrifice others to feed that hunger? Where can it end?"
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"But where does it begin?" She's trying to keep her voice neutral, especially since Mia isn't a mage and her brother had been a Templar. "It's not always power. It can also be desperation. That's why the Circles no longer exist, isn't it? Someone got desperate. I'm not justifying it, not by any means; I'll never justify any sort of Dark magic. It's just... maybe if the mages had been treated differently, they wouldn't have seen a need to resort to blood magic." Or maybe they would have. No one can say, of course, what drives a person to do certain things, but Hermione's seen her best friend use an Unforgivable Curse because the circumstances had required it.
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A good many people might still be alive. Homes unburnt, families whole. But they are where they are, and she can see Hermione wrestling with the very same notions that mages and non-mages past must have. She's questioned herself, when it was Cullen in the midst of that chaos.
"But whether out of desperation, hunger for power, or whatever else might have motivated them, blood mages are a terrible danger to everyone around them. Kirkwall was thick with them not so long ago, and it grew so terrible that the Knight-Commander in charge ordered the entire Circle annulled."
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She knows better than to try and impose her own world's way of doing things on Thedas, especially when she's never seen a government get anything totally right, but she can't really be blamed for letting her experiences color her expectations at least a little.
"What do you mean by annulled? Broken up and dispersed?"
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But then there's that second question, and Mia's face falls. She really does have no idea, and how horrifying must it sound to anyone who doesn't know what things are like here? "No, my dear. That's not what I mean."
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When Mia doesn't answer her question, Hermione simply looks at her expectantly for a moment. When no answer comes immediately, she tries to rationalize it by parsing out the semantics. "Annul means invalidate, doesn't it? To legally void the existence of a particular law or act?" She's never heard of trying to annul actual people, and so any such thought is far from her mind.
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Which brings them around to her second, considerably less pleasant topic. There's a long pause as she considers how best to explain it, though being a mage? It's not going to be pretty for her, either way. "The Right of Annulment is a last, desperate act, when a Circle is proven to be beyond saving. The templars...the templars purge the inhabitants, to prevent any chance of a possessed or corrupted mage from escaping and wrecking havoc."
Her lips tighten together. "And it is every bit as horrifying as it sounds."
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She has to stop, to remind herself that, as Mia said, she's still new to this place. It wouldn't do to offend people left and right, especially not when it comes to as fiery a topic as religion or politics.
And speaking of fiery topics....
Hermione stares at Mia, still refusing to make the right connections and jump to such a grisly conclusion as genocide. "What-... what do you mean by purge?" she asks uncertainly, hoping it's not what she thinks it is. "D- do you mean some sort of ritual?"
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Mia's hands fell to her lap, her expression grim.
"Kirkwall was in a terrible state when it happened. Cullen would tell me little, but you would hear stories. Rebel mages within the city turning to blood magic, terrorizing the citizens, abominations roaming the streets. I don't think kindly of the Knight-Commander at the time, but after one of the mages blew up the Chantry and killed the Grand Cleric, it seemed inevitable that their fear would get the better of them."
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"What of the children?"
Her voice is low in her horror, remembering that she'd been told that magic manifests during childhood and that young mages are taken away from their families to join a Circle. Surely, that means each Circle had its fair share of children, doesn't it? And Cullen-....
"When your brother had been a templar, he'd... he'd do these things? Even if there had been no proof that a specific mage within a Circle posed any real threat?"
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"Honestly, after what happened in Kirkwall, this rebellion seemed inevitable. Now, people appear to be putting their personal bias aside to work together for the greater good. Once this business with the Inquisition is done...it's difficult to say. Though I'm sure most can agree that we can't simply go back to the way things were before."
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"Can't your political leaders and a few representatives of each race participate in a sort of conference to agree on the best way to handle things? After all, mages should have a say in what happens to them, and if they're represented by well-spoken people of their own, it would guarantee less of a bias in whatever the outcome might be. Circles don't sound like they were meant to be terrible, but corruption on both sides have made at least a complete overhaul necessary."