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#hawke has slept with anders who has slept with isabela who has slept with surana who has slept with amell
vigilskeep · 2 years
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Isabela announcing to Hawke that they slept with the Hero of Ferelden and then Leandra tells them the Hero of Ferelden is their second cousin, like, that's got to be super awkward.
AGHDJJSJDKJ i forgot that was a thing... fun date to bring to a family reunion
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rosexknight · 3 years
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Random DA2 headcanons:
The moment Karl was turned Tranquil was the moment it all started to go down hill for Anders and Justice. He could feel Justice change into Vengeance, but was able to keep the good parts up. Once Karl was lost, and after he saw the true horrors of Kirkwall, he wasn’t.
Fenris drinks so much because alcoholism but also because it’s not something he often gets to do. Not good stuff at least. He actually has a VERY refined palette and likes sweeter things. As the years with the Kirkwall gang go on, he gets over the drinking to drown his sorrows and starts to really enjoy becoming an alcohol connoisseur.
Fenris REALLY likes romance novels. They’re easy reads and often have happy endings. Hawke and Isabela are the only ones who know. Isabela shares his stash with him often.
Merrill can actually hold her liquor surprisingly well. She gets drunk more on the atmosphere. She’s just so happy being with her friends?? It’s great.
Sebastian is also bi. That’s not really a headcanon at this point but thought I’d throw that out there.
Varric and Hawke absolutely drunk made-out one night. Possibly because one of them lost a bet with the other. They both decided that, with their track records of romance, they would never speak of it again.
Aveline goes to Isabela to help her get dolled up for dates with Donnic. If Isabela is not available, then Merrill. The three regularly have girl nights. Bethany is included in this if she is available.
Bethany frequently sneaks away from the Circle or GreyWardens. It doesn’t matter which, she’s just good at it. Everyone knows and no one in charge says a thing.
Not one of mine but I love it anyway. Carver is a favorite among the mages of the Greywardens because of how used to fighting with mages he already is from his siblings.
Carver all grown up likely slept with Merrill or Isabela. I like Merrill better because I ship them. Either way, neither of them can take Greywarden stamina.
Hawke is the only one that can take Greywarden stamina. And even some days it’s pushing it.
Varric and Isabela have co-authored at least one book.
If you let that one slaver go so that Isabela can get his ship, he is mysteriously never seen again. A body is eventually found of someone who looks very similar. Isabela denies ever knowing what happened to him.
Hawke never goes to the Foundry District ever again unless ABSOLUTELY necessary. Varric is always with them.
Sebastian is the best gambler out of all of them. They never gamble with him. Not because they always lose, but because they get tired of Chantry puns.
Merrill attempts to wear shoes exactly once. She cannot walk in them. It’s like a dog with socks. Isabela keeps a pair of boots with no soles on them for her in case she needs to keep up appearances.
Merrill is actually REALLY respected and looked up to in the alienage. She begins sharing Dalish culture with them, and she only cries a little bit when the first kid says she’s their Keeper.
Hawke goes with Bran every year they can to pay respects to Seamus and Marlowe. Hawke also pays respect in their own way to the Arishok.
Either Cullen always knew Hawke was a mage and/or Hawke had apostate friends and kept the templars off their trail, or Cullen never knew this, and his cluelessness still kept the templars off their trail. No in-between.
(If the HoF was an Amell or Surana) Every new recruit always asks Cullen about the Hero of Fereldan. Cullen answers in good faith and often has embarrassing stories. Only one person ever dared ask about what happened at the Fereldan Circle. Cullen got a dark look in his eyes. No one ever asked again.
Ander’s Clinic, Fenris’s Mansion, the Hanged Man, and other places that the Kirkwall gang hung out became havens for stray cats. Someone may or may not be paying a group to guard them.
The Hero of Fereldan visited Kirkwall exactly once, probably with Leliana or Alistair. They liked it because no one recognized them. They didn’t like it because Kirkwall is just the worst.
Templar Carver is actually kind of the worst Templar ever. He’s untouchable because he’s kind of the worst Templar ever. No one knows how the hell that works out.
Circle Bethany is quiet and keeps her head down. She adores studying. She makes a few friends. She sneaks out regularly to the Hanged Man. She is also untouchable, and no one quite knows why.
Donnic and Aveline are the sweetest most adorable couple in Kirkwall. They give everyone cavities. They also make everyone jealous.
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Chapters: 22/32 Fandom: Dragon Age - All Media Types, Dragon Age: Origins - Awakening, Dragon Age II Rating: Mature Warnings: Graphic Depictions Of Violence Relationships: Female Amell/Female Surana Characters: Female Amell, Female Surana, Anders, Velanna, Nathaniel Howe, Oghren (Dragon Age), Justice (Dragon Age), Sigrun (Dragon Age), Varric Tethras, Isabela (Dragon Age), Male Hawke (Dragon Age) Additional Tags: Established Relationship, Alcohol Abuse/Alcoholism, Self-Harm, Blood Magic, Prostitution, Drowning, Wilderness Survival Series: Part 2 of void and light, blood and spirit Summary: Amell and Surana are out of the Circle, and are now free to build a life together. But when the prison doors fly open, what do you have in common with the one shackled next to you, save for the chains that bound you both? 
Loriel’s routine was by this point quite well-developed.
She woke at dawn, with the sun. Usually the light was enough to rouse her, but in case it wasn’t, she had a timed rune of frost under her bed set to go off half an hour after sunrise. On the rare occasions that she was inclined to laze in bed, it was enough to get her out of it.
Breakfast would be waiting for her, and it was never late. Loriel did not micromanage. Things in her Keep were done correctly the first time, or they were done by somebody else. Her breakfast varied little. One egg, hard-boiled; porridge, salty,  never sweet; fruit, whichever seasonal. She could draw some energy from the Fade, but repeated use of blood magic attenuated her connection to the Fade enough that she still needed to eat. Someday she would look into eliminating that need entirely, once her other obligations were met. She would eat on a balcony as the sun rose, less out of a desire to see the day begin, and more out of a removed knowledge that some sun was necessary for her health. Someday she would fix that flaw as well, but for now, if she had to waste time eating, she could at least get that out of the way while she was at it.
Within a quarter of an hour she would be at her desk. A stack of letters would be waiting there. She would skim them; few really required a personal response. The ones from Avernus, she put aside to deal with later.
When she finished with that, she would indicate for her seneschal to enter. Her name was Brigit; she was bright-eyed and fervent, relentlessly competent, utterly indispensable. She was most of the reason the Keep still functioned at all. She would be waiting outside the door, a cup of tea in hand. The tea—bitter, biting, oversteeped—was Loriel’s one indulgence. She would drink it and listen to the daily report. Brigit respected Loriel’s time, and began with what Loriel cared about—first, had there been any sign of the Architect? Second, had any Wardens begun to hear the Calling?  And third, had any been killed?
There was never any sign of the Architect. Most of the Wardens at Vigil’s Keep were far too new for the Calling. But every once in a while, there would be deaths. Loriel would ask for their names. She forgot them as soon as she heard them, but it was important she hear them.
The rest of the half-hour was an abbreviated exchange of questions and instructions. If there was anything that absolutely needed Loriel’s personal attention, Brigit would ask for it—but few things did. People needed or wanted the entity known as the Commander of the Grey, or the Arlessa of Amaranthine, or the Hero of Ferelden. Loriel held those titles by an accident of history; she had no personal characteristic that suited her for them.
Then Loriel would hand off any letters that needed replying to. Brigit could mimic her hand and her signature easily enough, and Loriel received far too much correspondence to deal with it all herself.
With the business of rulership out of the way, Loriel would descend to her underground chambers. She would work for ten or twelve or fifteen hours. If she tired early, she would sit and read. She avoided falling asleep underground—it was too disorienting. Each day she ascended, changed into the clothes left for her freshly laundered well in advance, cleaned her teeth, and slept. Once a week, she would bathe, whether she needed it or not—the alternative was to forget to bathe entirely. She did not bother to fall asleep naturally—there was a simple spell for that, and she saw no reason not to use it.
Her research went slowly. But it went.
And so the clockwork of her life ticked on.
tck
The work itself was going better than it had. 
Her methodology was much like her daily routine—plodding, relentless, as bland as it was efficient. She followed procedure, did what needed to be done, even if she had no appetite to do it. Her reams of close-written notes were meticulous to the point of exhaustion. She lived and breathed rigor. Almost everything she tried failed, and each failure was a step closer to success.
Eventually—something would work. 
A dim awareness fluttered in her mind that the bright scalpel of her mind was now little more than a crude cudgel, but what did it matter that she wasn’t brilliant? The work still got done. 
Her underground lab had grown from a single rough chamber to a warren of interconnected tunnels and specialized chambers. The Underkeep stretched nearly as far as the Keep above. In one room, the vastly expanded lab space, tables of glass devices and cabinets of reagents. In another, her library, swollen with tomes both common and rare, with her own notes and manuscripts and diagrams. Another room stood lined with cages holding dozens of creatures subject to her experiments—rats, it turned out, reacted very much like elves and humans to the Blight, and they bred fast. Lines of entropy enchantments lined their cages, keeping them in stasis until it was time for them to be of use. An underground stream provided water, wrested from the depths of the earth and channeled through pipes of stone. All of it climate controlled with her elegant runes. It was never too hot or too cold, never too wet or dry; no mold, no pests, no sunlight, save that which she made herself. 
And below that, another tunnel, deeper than the other, longer, and layered with more protections; it lead to the Deep Roads. She ventured there; sometimes for some purpose—to collect a sample, to check for deliveries from her friends beneath the earth—but most often simply to sit in the dark, to feel the miles of stone pressing down on her, and be empty of thought and of feeling and being. 
tck
One of the few reliable reasons that Loriel ever left her Keep was when she went to see Avernus. Letters passed between them frequently, almost entirely of a technical nature—what reagent could be used to evoke such and such reaction? What were the best ways to keep blighted flesh preserved for study? Where were the most promising leads to follow up on to search for lost Tevinter literature on the subject?—But often letters weren’t enough. So once or twice a year, Loriel would gear up and make the journey to Soldier’s Peak. She would stay there for a handful of weeks, making aggressive collaborative progress with Avernus until both their tolerances for other people dried up and Loriel returned to her Underkeep.
“I see you are still being unreasonable about human subjects,” Avernus sniffed on one such occasion, while they both watched a cauldron boil in silence. 
This was a frequent subject of complaints in his letters. “I see no reason in deliberately poisoning a well. Do you imagine the work would go faster if I was driven from my fortress with torches and pitchforks?
“Torches and pitchforks, hmph! As though peasants with torches and pitchforks are any threat to you.”
“Peasants, no. A Chantry army of Templars? A new Exalted March?”
“Do not tell me you still fear Templars. If that were truly your chief concern, you would not have let so many join your Order. ”
He was baiting her, and it wasn’t going to work. “I do not need to fear them to understand what is prudent, what is necessary, and what is not. The work will continue as it has.”
“And in the meanwhile, your Wardens will continue to die, because of what amounts to self-interest, hm? Because you fear the consequences of a little risk? Because you do not like to think of yourself the way you think of me?”
Bait. This was bait. She was too good to fall for bait. But Maker, Avernus could be really irritating in person. 
“I am working with you to cure the Calling,” Loriel said evenly. “To save my wardens from a terrible fate. What sense would it make to sacrifice their lives in order to save them?” 
Avernus snorted. “Very well, child, suit yourself. At your age I felt much the same.”
Something in the way he said child— not a word he often used for her, a word he clearly used now because he knew it would enrage her—sounded so much like Irving that she nearly lost control of herself. Who in the void did he think he was? If not for her grace, his desiccated corpse would be enriching the soil by now. She could have killed him when they’d first met. She could kill him now, if she wanted.
The old bastard watched her with a defiant, mocking eye, daring her to try. She could, couldn’t she? She was younger, faster, and yes, stronger. For all his experience, she had the more raw power to throw around. They had both seen battle, but his battles were a century old while hers were fresh and bleeding—and she’d bested him before. Granted, she hadn’t been alone then...but she was stronger now. Yes, she could kill him—
But the old blood mage was all she had.
“My title,” she said crisply, turning her eyes back to the slowly boiling cauldron, “is Commander.”
He rolled his eyes at her, and asked how her experiments with draconic gall had gone, and they spoke no more of it that day.
Avernus wasn’t all bad. He could be a cantankerous, amoral, belittling bastard, but he was clever, and not the worst to talk to. Sometimes he would be taken aback by her original ideas, rendered silent and thoughtful by her insights. Sometimes she would make a remark that seemed to her perfectly obvious, but which would send him consulting his notes and tomes, muttering under his breath. Each such instance left her smug and glowing for hours. Avernus never rendered praise—which she preferred—but this was better.
Pathetic, that she cared what he thought of her. And she did care. Commander or not, intellectual equal or not, she was his pupil. Avernus had plumbed depths of magic yet unknown to her, and his mind held secrets it would take her years to extract. And whatever his faults, he never lied, not about anything.
How badly she had wanted to please First Enchanter Irving as a child. How much she had lived for his praise, for his assurance that she was so bright, so special, so different from the other children. How pathetic he had looked when she had saved him from the Fade, how much she had hated his mealy-mouthed supplications to his Templar master. Each time she remembered it, she coated the memory with a fresh layer of poison.
Loriel was no fool, and she had no love for self-deception. She knew exactly what Avernus was, and what he was to her. But he, at least, was honest.
tck
Before she’d found Brigit, Loriel had managed intelligence of her keep with a network of enchanted crystals. Padding invisibly around her own Keep like a thief in te night would never have served for long. The crystals studded the halls of the Keep in unassuming braziers and in decorative sconces, transmitting everything that they saw and heard to a circle of polished silver in a dedicated chamber in the Underkeep. Crystals had special properties of resonance and purity that made them excellent for conveying sound. The real challenge had been getting crystals in a size and index that suited her. They didn’t occur naturally often enough to be worth harvesting, so she had had to figure out how to make them herself, with heated water and powdered minerals and careful spells of entropy to control their growth. It was finicky business; large enough to work, small enough to not be noticed, of just the right purity. The key was blood—her blood, connecting the network to the mirror and to herself. 
The next problem was how to limit the flow of information. The Keep was just too busy to monitor all at once. She’d had the thought to fix it by keying the crystal network to particular activation words, to keep from picking up on discussion of that evening’s dinner—but even then, it was too much. Loriel had lost hours to the mirror, hypnotized by every irrelevant word and image it sent. On bad days, it was all she did.
Three chief things Loriel learned from her mirror:
First: The kitchen girl she’d so thoughtlessly forced to forget her on the first day of her new life was never quite the same afterward. She often cried for no reason, couldn’t remember whole weeks of her life, and she didn’t know why. Her dearest friend—a scullery maid—would comfort her, let her weep into her shoulder, assure her that no, she wasn’t mad, that she needn’t give herself over to the mercy of the Chantry, that surely the Maker would send relief soon. 
Loriel regretted making her forget. She would not have done it, had she known it would break her mind. But neither did she indulge her guilt and shame. What a waste that would have been. Of course Loriel had hurt her—was that not entirely expected?
She knew perfectly well what she was. 
Second: Nearly everyone in the Keep she ruled feared her. Some hated her, some revered her, some loved her, but everyone feared her. 
That Loriel was a maleficar was not exactly an open secret. The new recruits didn’t know, and the old recruits weren’t sure or bold enough to tell them outright.
But oh, there were rumors.
Some seemed convinced that she had died long ago—that her seneschal had killed her, usurped her position, and only pretended to take her directives (after all, how long had it been since anyone had seen her? On these occasions Loriel occasionally made a point to appear briefly in the great hall). Others asserted that Loriel was the usurper, that the old commander had grown too popular and beloved and had planned to betray her, and so Loriel had betrayed and killed her first. Another version had it that Loriel kept the old commander imprisoned somewhere in the depths, chained up and tormented with blood magic. And that was well related to—
Third:   People still spoke of the old commander. Anytime something went wrong— the old commander never would have allowed this. The old commander would never have allowed the patrol schedule to change so inconveniently. The old commander never would have stood for substandard breakfast offerings. The old commander wouldn’t have tolerated this. The old commander would have kept us safe. The old commander cared. Many in the Keep were very confident on what exactly the old commander thought and felt about any subject on the sun you could care to name.
The first of Vigil’s Keep wardens were the worst about it. They gathered together some nights to play cards and drink, just the three of them, and the old commander would come up. Anytime the three of them met, Loriel would be there, too, invisible, intangible, unwanted. It was almost an addiction. Oghren would tell embarrassing stories from back during the Blight, and insist that he’d taught her everything she knew about fighting. Velanna always looked vaguely angry when this happened, but she listened anyway, and even asked questions, and many times Loriel caught her suppressing a genuine laugh. They’d wonder where she was, what she was doing. Sigrun would crack a forced smile and say, probably having a great time without us. They’d laugh. They’d miss her.
Loriel had never heard anything so insulting in her life.
In the end, the crystals turned out to be a mistake. It had been a fun project, but a wasteful one. One day she shattered the viewing mirror. If she really needed it, she could always make a new one, but for now, she was done. 
You couldn’t spend your life entranced by what you couldn’t have. You just couldn’t.
Anyway—she'd found Brigit by then. Brigit ran things better than Loriel could ever hope to. If Brigit made a popular decision, the Wardens all agreed that perhaps they were on the right track after all, with the Hero of Ferelden at the helm and all. If Brigit made an unpopular decision, the Wardens muttered that the old commander would never have stood for it, and if the Hero of Ferelden knew what was happening she would surely put an end to it.
Loriel herself rarely thought of the old commander. She had too much work to do.
tck
The first to go was Oghren. It had been for his own good. The Wardens had only ever been an escape for him, an excuse to wallow in his own refuse and avoid the wife and child he had been too weak to face. Well, no more. Loriel waited until he was sober, or as close as he ever came to it, to break the news.
“Go home, Oghren,” she’d told him. “Or don’t. Lay down in the gutter and finally drink yourself to death, if that’s what you really want. You can go wherever you want, but you can’t stay here.”
He’d sputtered, protested. Demanded to know why, and why now . Weren’t the Wardens supposed to take any old sod? Didn’t she have any respect for their long friendship? He’d kept an eye on her since she was naive little mageling fresh out of the Circle (now that was a funny joke) and now she was really just going to get rid of him? Just like that?
"Just like that," she confirmed, unmoved. “You don’t belong here. You have a family.”
He swore at her, so luridly that she was almost impressed. And then he calmed down. He called her a sodding waste of space, but his heart wasn’t in it. 
She made arrangements to have him taken care of. Supplies, escorts, whatever he needed. She wasn't a monster. She tried to be good to her people, when she could. She hoped he really did go back to his wife and child, though both their names escaped her at the moment. Of course she hoped for the best for him.
But she never did end up following up, and whatever became of Oghren Kondrat, Loriel never learned it.
tck
What was really surprising was how long Sigrun stuck around.
Loriel had assumed for years that Sigrun’s presence in her life was just on the verge of ending. They hadn’t been on good terms since the Dragonbone Wastes, and these days Loriel was not on good terms with anyone at all.
And even if Sigrun was too loyal and true to simply desert, she was foolhardy. She fought like she didn’t care if she died, because she didn’t. Each morning when Brigit recited the names of the dead, Loriel waited and waited to hear Sigrun’s name. That she’d died saving a fellow Warden, or charging a group of darkspawn to give the rest of her squad time, or that she’d simply not returned.
But Sigrun was still here.
How fitting for a dead woman to haunt her Keep, one who continued not to die. If Loriel didn’t know any better, she might have even thought that Sigrun missed Oghren, though Maker only knew why. If Loriel didn’t know any better, she might have even thought that Sigrun missed her, in some strange way. Of the original Wardens of the Keep, Sigrun was the only one who occasionally knocked on Loriel’s chamber doors, tentatively calling out her name and even waiting a few minutes before giving up. 
As though Loriel would tolerate her pity.
She hated to think of her. Hated to remember that she was still there at all, accusing Loriel of wrongdoing just by existing, even though she had no right at all to judge her. Hated to remember how much of herself she saw in the dwarf when she first saw sunlight.
Finally Loriel could take it no longer, and had Sigrun transferred to the Warden fortress in Orlais. Sigrun made only a cursory attempt to say goodbye, and within a blessed month, she was gone. 
tck
Velanna was the last to go.
Velanna was not her friend. She had never liked her, and tolerated her solely because Loriel represented something that Velanna wanted—justification for what had happened to her sister. But she had understood her, in her own way. For that reason alone Loriel half-expected her loyalty.
Even so, it was not altogether surprising when it happened.
Unlike the last time, Velanna did not succeed in barging through the door. The weave of enchantments on the door was far stronger than before. And Brigit was there to intercept her.
“I said, let me through. I know for a fact that she’s in there—you were just about to go in yourself. You go in there every day, I’ve noticed.”
“I am sorry, Warden, but the Commander expressly forbids visitors who have not been cleared beforehand. If you like, I can make your request today during my daily report.”
“I don’t think so.” A burst of unfamiliar magic rattled the door. Loriel was mildly impressed. It wasn’t anywhere near enough to get the job done, but that she had managed to affect it at all was impressive.
“Alright, fine. You don’t need to let me in but I know that you can hear me, so you are going to listen, whether there is a door in the way or not.” A furious inhale. “Has some demon taken your mind and driven you mad? You are not the woman I agreed to follow.” False. Velanna had never agreed to follow her at all.
“For what purpose do you exile your friends and surround yourself with enemies? Are you ignorant or foolhardy that this Keep is now full of Chantry fools and their attack dogs?” True, but flawed. Yes, the Vigil had a great deal more Chantry-faithful, as well as former Templars, in its employ, than before. But all Ferelden was full of Chantry fools and their attack dogs. All Loriel did was permit them the opportunity to die in the name of some higher calling.
“You aren’t doing any of this for us. You care nothing for us, if you ever did. Are you even trying to cure the Blight? Perhaps you are not!”
False. Loriel was trying. Of course she was trying.
“And if I am wrong—if a lick of what I have said is not true—then open this door and call me a liar to my face, you wretched cowardly betrayef." A beat.“Well?”
It sounded like Velanna really expected her to respond to any of that.
Loriel heard a final frustrated slam against the door, hammering footsteps, and then silence.
After a time, Brigit entered, trembling and hiding it. She alone had the enchanted, invisible ring which allowed the wearer to enter.
“I apologise deeply, Commander,” she whispered. “She overpowered me with magic. I was paralyzed.”
“I’m very sorry you had to experience that, Brigit,” Loriel said flatly, not looking up from the letter she was reading. “No lasting harm done, I trust?”
Brigit collected herself and inclined her head. “No harm done.”
“Good. Then, if you might proceed with your morning report…”
Velanna disappeared that day, and didn’t return. When no one had seen her in days and it became obvious that she had deserted, Brigit pressed the issue during the morning briefing. “Do you wish her hunted down and brought to justice?”
By the ever-so-delicate crease between her eyes, Loriel guessed that this was certainly what Brigit wished.
“No. It won’t be necessary.” She paused, considering. "But if she ever tries to return, do not let her."
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rosexknight · 3 years
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#5
Random DA2 headcanons:
The moment Karl was turned Tranquil was the moment it all started to go down hill for Anders and Justice. He could feel Justice change into Vengeance, but was able to keep the good parts up. Once Karl was lost, and after he saw the true horrors of Kirkwall, he wasn’t.
Fenris drinks so much because alcoholism but also because it’s not something he often gets to do. Not good stuff at least. He actually has a VERY refined palette and likes sweeter things. As the years with the Kirkwall gang go on, he gets over the drinking to drown his sorrows and starts to really enjoy becoming an alcohol connoisseur.
Fenris REALLY likes romance novels. They’re easy reads and often have happy endings. Hawke and Isabela are the only ones who know. Isabela shares his stash with him often.
Merrill can actually hold her liquor surprisingly well. She gets drunk more on the atmosphere. She’s just so happy being with her friends?? It’s great.
Sebastian is also bi. That’s not really a headcanon at this point but thought I’d throw that out there.
Varric and Hawke absolutely drunk made-out one night. Possibly because one of them lost a bet with the other. They both decided that, with their track records of romance, they would never speak of it again.
Aveline goes to Isabela to help her get dolled up for dates with Donnic. If Isabela is not available, then Merrill. The three regularly have girl nights. Bethany is included in this if she is available.
Bethany frequently sneaks away from the Circle or GreyWardens. It doesn’t matter which, she’s just good at it. Everyone knows and no one in charge says a thing.
Not one of mine but I love it anyway. Carver is a favorite among the mages of the Greywardens because of how used to fighting with mages he already is from his siblings.
Carver all grown up likely slept with Merrill or Isabela. I like Merrill better because I ship them. Either way, neither of them can take Greywarden stamina.
Hawke is the only one that can take Greywarden stamina. And even some days it’s pushing it.
Varric and Isabela have co-authored at least one book.
If you let that one slaver go so that Isabela can get his ship, he is mysteriously never seen again. A body is eventually found of someone who looks very similar. Isabela denies ever knowing what happened to him.
Hawke never goes to the Foundry District ever again unless ABSOLUTELY necessary. Varric is always with them.
Sebastian is the best gambler out of all of them. They never gamble with him. Not because they always lose, but because they get tired of Chantry puns.
Merrill attempts to wear shoes exactly once. She cannot walk in them. It’s like a dog with socks. Isabela keeps a pair of boots with no soles on them for her in case she needs to keep up appearances.
Merrill is actually REALLY respected and looked up to in the alienage. She begins sharing Dalish culture with them, and she only cries a little bit when the first kid says she’s their Keeper.
Hawke goes with Bran every year they can to pay respects to Seamus and Marlowe. Hawke also pays respect in their own way to the Arishok.
Either Cullen always knew Hawke was a mage and/or Hawke had apostate friends and kept the templars off their trail, or Cullen never knew this, and his cluelessness still kept the templars off their trail. No in-between.
(If the HoF was an Amell or Surana) Every new recruit always asks Cullen about the Hero of Fereldan. Cullen answers in good faith and often has embarrassing stories. Only one person ever dared ask about what happened at the Fereldan Circle. Cullen got a dark look in his eyes. No one ever asked again.
Ander’s Clinic, Fenris’s Mansion, the Hanged Man, and other places that the Kirkwall gang hung out became havens for stray cats. Someone may or may not be paying a group to guard them.
The Hero of Fereldan visited Kirkwall exactly once, probably with Leliana or Alistair. They liked it because no one recognized them. They didn’t like it because Kirkwall is just the worst.
Templar Carver is actually kind of the worst Templar ever. He’s untouchable because he’s kind of the worst Templar ever. No one knows how the hell that works out.
Circle Bethany is quiet and keeps her head down. She adores studying. She makes a few friends. She sneaks out regularly to the Hanged Man. She is also untouchable, and no one quite knows why.
Donnic and Aveline are the sweetest most adorable couple in Kirkwall. They give everyone cavities. They also make everyone jealous.
31 notes • Posted 2021-06-28 19:37:02 GMT
#4
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Pirate Week for @bluebrush09arts. Reef deserves all of the happiness in the world and I love him. Thank you for streaming with me, Blue <3
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39 notes • Posted 2021-09-23 01:31:50 GMT
#3
Can we talk about how, when the Inquisitor tells Cullen that she loves him, he says “I love you too.” But it’s in like a higher tone and there’s a faint pause before he says it, almost like he wasn’t expecting the Inquisitor to tell him that? Like it just never crossed his mind that she could love him?
Or how, in Tresspasser, if you’re a Levellan and marry him with Dalish vows the Inquisitor goes “now you” after the vows and he says “Oh. Right.” and clears his throat before reciting his? Almost like he was so enamored with the elven Inquisitor speaking her native tongue on their wedding day that he just forgot where he was?
Guys I love him so much.
43 notes • Posted 2021-05-13 17:45:00 GMT
#2
Headcanon: The narrative that Anders started the Mage-Templar war with Kirkwall is Chantry propaganda to put blame on mages and distract from the fact that they had a cure for Tranquility and kept it secret.
In Inquisition, it is explicitly stated by Cassandra that what started the Mage-Templar war was the fact that the Seekers had the cure for Tranquility and it was kept a secret while Tranquility was being used as a punishment for mages. But the general narrative that most characters (*cough* and the fandom *cough*) seem to have is that Anders blowing up the chantry in Kirkwall caused it, when it reality it just perpetuated the unrest in the mages and gave them Hawke’s name to rally behind. I think this is because the Chantry is blaming Anders for it. After all, what looks better for them? The fact that they have been using a horrible punishment for mages that strips them of emotions and give them no chance to come back from it? Or the fact that an apostate blew up a chantry and killed a hundred people? What will the masses find more believable? The fact that the Chantry has been lying to them for forever, or the fact that magic and apostates are just as dangerous as they’ve always been told?
Like, this makes perfect sense to me.
61 notes • Posted 2021-12-13 18:09:26 GMT
#1
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That moment when you find a perfect dice set for a character and spend way too much on them.
Anyway these are Eilonwy’s dice.
77 notes • Posted 2021-04-27 21:32:56 GMT
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