King Cailan Theirin (
ohmygodgreywardens) wrote in
exsilium2012-10-06 03:21 am
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Entry tags:
- ashraf salib (original),
- chloe frazer (uncharted),
- gamora (marvel 616),
- nathan drake (uncharted),
- ✝ anora [dragon age],
- ✝ artemis ratcliff (original),
- ✝ barnaby brooks jr [t&b],
- ✝ cailan theirin [dragon age],
- ✝ duncan [dragon age],
- ✝ equius zahhak (homestuck),
- ✝ finnick odair (hunger games),
- ✝ gray fox [metal gear solid],
- ✝ gregor eisenhorn [warhammer 40k],
- ✝ kahlan amnell [sword of truth],
- ✝ kai leng [mass effect],
- ✝ kotetsu kaburagi [tiger & bunny],
- ✝ miles edgeworth [ace attorney],
- ✝ wanda maximoff [marvel 616]
oo2 ♚ video
I preferred the old books better. [This thing is being folded every which way, because they just had to make this thing harder to use.] At least you knew where you stood with them. The old books never changed; they might never have been easy to use, but they you knew what you were supposed to do with them.
[Is he talking about the book, still? Maybe, maybe not.] With all this talk of the Initiative and the United Earth issues, there's been something that's come up several times. Something I would be worried about, and so should others.
Traitors. Those who turned away from the goal right when their colleagues needed them most. Or the ones who never came to help in the first place, though they said they would. Traitors also includes liars. Yes. Liars. The ones who never tell the truth, especially when the truth could be the information you needed the most.
[He's getting exasperated with this new book.] I wonder, how did everyone else treat liars back home? In Ferelden, we had several ways of punishing those that had committed crimes against the crown, or those who'd lied and were caught. Some of them seemed rather harsh, but if someone who steals loses a finger, why not have the liar lose something as well? Something they value, something close to them, so that they can be hurt as much as they have hurt those around them.
So, how should we treat those liars, here? If we find traitors, what do we do with them? A mock execution, whipping, leaving them bound and gagged in a small room? Killing them would just be too merciful for what they've done, wouldn't it? [He pauses.]
Andraste's foul breath, this new book is more difficult then the other! [Okay, he's done with this book thing. With a yell, he throws it across the room.]
[Is he talking about the book, still? Maybe, maybe not.] With all this talk of the Initiative and the United Earth issues, there's been something that's come up several times. Something I would be worried about, and so should others.
Traitors. Those who turned away from the goal right when their colleagues needed them most. Or the ones who never came to help in the first place, though they said they would. Traitors also includes liars. Yes. Liars. The ones who never tell the truth, especially when the truth could be the information you needed the most.
[He's getting exasperated with this new book.] I wonder, how did everyone else treat liars back home? In Ferelden, we had several ways of punishing those that had committed crimes against the crown, or those who'd lied and were caught. Some of them seemed rather harsh, but if someone who steals loses a finger, why not have the liar lose something as well? Something they value, something close to them, so that they can be hurt as much as they have hurt those around them.
So, how should we treat those liars, here? If we find traitors, what do we do with them? A mock execution, whipping, leaving them bound and gagged in a small room? Killing them would just be too merciful for what they've done, wouldn't it? [He pauses.]
Andraste's foul breath, this new book is more difficult then the other! [Okay, he's done with this book thing. With a yell, he throws it across the room.]
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No, I doubt it does. But the clinic has been damaged by the bombing, and I would appreciate any assistance anyone can give in repairs. [ a beat ] I can provide drinks, if that makes it sound any more appealing.
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Drinks and building? [He smiles.] The building already sounded appealing, but I won't say not to drinks and building.
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action?
Hello?
action!
Welcome, your Majesty. [ He plays that off with a calm smile, like it's just any old title, not a king's title. He's a little proud of that one. ] I hope your talk went well?
action!
Not.. as well as I would have hoped. But it was a difficult discussion. [It was terrible. Really terrible.]
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I am sorry to hear it was necessary. But if nothing else, talking is a fine course of action compared to many other possibilities. [ A gesture toward the tarp. ] Come, come in out of the rain.
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Thank you. I think... no. I know that there was no way for it to go better. All the lies she told, everything she never bothered to say... back home, Anora wasn't just my queen. She was my best friend.
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Even best friends are not exempt from the occasional rift. Have you yet resolved it?
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No. No, we haven't. [It's not even really lady troubles...] It's not just what she did, it's what she didn't do. What I had to learn from someone else.
[He frowns.] I do not understand what she was thinking. [And with that, he takes a drink.]
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May I ask what it was she didn't do?
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I'm sorry. [ and a little afraid to ask, but: ] And what else?
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I'm dead.
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At least that explains his wife marrying someone else. ]
Your world is... not kind to you.
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That touch makes him want to cry, and he ducks his head down, body shaking slightly, enough that if he was holding he would feel, rather then see. A sort of trembling.]
I tell my people I am unafraid to die. But I'm not that old, not as old as I should be, and I had so many things to do.
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Do you leave your kingdom in good hands?
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...I thought so, at first. We didn't have any children, however much I wanted them, and... there was talk, of course, of her abilities, and. I did not have an heir, and Anora would be all that there was to be.
But Elissa and Duncan, when they told me I was dead, and how I died, they also said why. And it was because Loghain had betrayed us in battle. Loghain. Anora's father.
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Have you had the full story yet from her?
[ The immediate conclusion isn't always the right one, after all. ]
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I am sure I need not counsel to you do your best to withhold judgment until you have had the full story. In Exsilium you have effectively been given another chance, and I see little reason to cast it aside.
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You might take it further still, if you found yourself ambitious enough.
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