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Anders: he didn't do it, but HE WILL! (DAO spoilers, may contain DAII spoiles)


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#2126
Avilia

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Miri1984 wrote...

Loved both of these! Perfect Anders characterisations. Avila, have you written any longer Buntie stories? I'm getting a girl crush on her!


Thanks Miri :)  I have started one where's she decided to match make for Nate and Anders.  If I manage to finish it I'll put it up somewhere for you to read.  If you want?

I must admit I love Buntie madly.  She's very easy to write.  Too easy - I'm starting to worry that she's just me in a dwarf body ;-)

Gah...ToP (off to Photbucket with me)

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Modifié par Avilia, 03 septembre 2010 - 11:54 .


#2127
LupusYondergirl

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Seconded! And I love how positively filthy that sounded at first.



(and oooh, good smirk pic)

#2128
Wedger

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Nice picture. I like how Anders is a lookin down a tad

#2129
Avilia

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/sigh another run finished. I hate finishing Awakenings - I miss my boys ;-)

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I think Buntie and Anders must be firmly in the friend zone - you'll notice that for once he's not got his eyes fixed on the pc's rear end ;-)

#2130
jenncgf

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Sarah,  Buntie-er, Avilia:

Great job on your prompt-postings!  I enjoyed both of them quite a lot!

I need to get crackin' on the writing :P

#2131
Galagraphia

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Sarah1281, Avilia excellent job! I enjoyed reading so much! XD

#2132
Wedger

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Avilia & Sarah - interesting stories. Ander's sure likes his good looking Templers  :kissing:

I would like to hear Nate's stories on getting beat up....or maybe not thinking on it twice

Modifié par Wedger, 04 septembre 2010 - 09:17 .


#2133
Wedger

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Not sure if I got the prompt just right.  But here it goes

Counting Templers


The day had gone well, and he hoped the evening went even better. Anders was still free as a bird, and he really really wanted it to stay that way. 
 
Anders had found a tiny unoccupied farmstead, at the edge of a forested section on the Coastlands. The place was dusty, cobwebby, and nest-y (so many mouse and bird nests), but with a windstorm spell and a little elbow grease, he was able to make it habitable. The best thing about the place was the girl down the road. She had offered to bring him something to eat, tonight, and he was looking forward to her visit. He was tingly with the anticipation of a pretty girl, alone, with him. It wasn’t something a mage in the tower got to enjoy. He smirked to himself.
 
Some magpies were chattering outside, and Anders leaned through a window, enjoying the sight. 
 
“One for sorrow, two for joy, three…” he said to himself. No no that’s Magpie Augury. You can’t use that for Templers. It really should go,
 
“One for pie, as it’s so easy to slip this one by.”
“Two for, two for the money. Oh that needs work.”
“Three for tin cans, all in a row. Knock them down like a domino.”
“Four for freeze spells, because that’s just nice, to freeze ‘em all and leave ‘em iced”
“Five for Fireball, as hot as can be. Burn them down and then I flee.”
“Six is hard, and not to be done. Six Templers come, and it’s “snap” for Anders’ fun. In the sun even.”
 
Pleased with his prose ability, Anders preened a tad. And just looky there, thinks he. That young lass is on the road, with a basket under her arm. What a treat.
 
Unfortunately, it was seven Templers later that night.

#2134
Avilia

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That's clever - I love it.

#2135
Wedger

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Avilia wrote...

That's clever - I love it.

thanks.  i need to work on execution tho

#2136
Sarah1281

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Damn overprepared Templars...Posted Image

#2137
LupusYondergirl

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So... I just had a thought.

Why didn't the Templars who died at Vigil's Keep in the darkspawn attack have Anders' phylactery with them?



If they were hunting him you'd think they would, right?

#2138
Sarah1281

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Maybe the Templars only need a little of the blood to hunt them down and so they only took part of it while the rest stayed safe in case something happened to it. Otherwise, think how easy it would be for an apostate to just kill the Templars, destroy their phylactery, and be in the clear.

#2139
SurelyForth

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I'm so unclear on how a phylactery works...it seems like it would be way more efficient to leave them at the Tower since most of the mages with phylacteries would be escaping from there. The way I envision it now, a mage could get a healthy head start just because the templars would have to communicate with Denerim and either have to fetch the phylactery or use it to track the mage and go from there.

Then there's the whole question that Lupus brought up- do they take the whole thing? a drop? do they use it as a remote tracking device? I feel like it would be too dangerous to hand the whole thing over to a templar at any point, so if they do take the blood out and about it seems like it would have to be just a portion.

Now it's possible that one templar stays someplace safe and does the tracking and sends out other templars to do the actual capturing (so that could be why Rylock is the only templar with the king/queen, because she's tracking). That would be one way of keeping the phylactery from being stolen or destroyed during a capture.

Modifié par SurelyForth, 05 septembre 2010 - 12:27 .


#2140
LupusYondergirl

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I was thinking about the phylactery issue for this week's prompt... Decided to do a bit of hand-waving to make up a reason they wouldn't have it.

(edit for formatting ugh)

Worst Capture Ever

Really, if given a choice Anders would have preferred Ser Rylock.  Sure, she had a voice that could shatter glass at a hundred yards when angry, and yes, she was pretty much always angry, but it would still be an improvement over the current situation.

Anders couldn’t deny that her abrasive personality these days was almost entirely his own fault, though.  He had to admit that she had once been perfectly nice, even friendly.  Rare qualities in a Templar.  Her crush on him wasn’t much of a secret, either.  Not many Templars blush and stammer when they slap the manacles on an apostate, or respond to his mindless flirtation with girlish giggles.  Even if Anders wasn’t very good at determining when someone was attracted to him, and he was, it would have been obvious.

Taking advantage of that in the hopes of winning the woman’s trust and convincing her to let him go was, in retrospect, not the most well thought out plan.  If he had more time to think about it he would have used the distraction and cast a sleep spell, a force field, paralysis… anything, just to buy himself a little time to get
away.  Desperation leads to bad decisions, though. 

She hadn’t gone for it, of course.  He should have known better.  That she seemed to hope his… performance would repeat itself on a later escape attempt didn’t exactly thrill him, either.  She wasn’t hideous or anything, but really, a templar?  Anders had his standards, and they did not normally stretch to encompass his jailers. 

When it became very clear that he had no interest in reliving that incident she became, well, mean.  He couldn’t blame her, really.  Rejection is never fun.  Neither were the silent glares occasionally punctured by screams calling him a criminal that replaced her giggling and blushing, though.

But… compared to the present situation, it would still be an improvement.  Glancing over at the templar currently on watch, giving him the evil eye across the fire, Anders made a face. 

Last night he was so upset at being caught- again- that he simply couldn’t sleep.  He finally managed hours after
everyone else.  When he woke later than them as a result their reaction was to kick him in the head.  Really, what kind of person does that?  Maker’s breath, those boots were metal. They also seemed to find it amusing to dispel his attempts to heal the injury.  Anders had been forced to stumble through the day feeling lightheaded and nauseous.  So yes, Ser Rylock screaming would be vastly preferable to these templar’s “good morning” of an armored boot to the skull.

Sadly, it wasn’t even the worst treatment he’d faced on his numerous escapes.  On his fourth trip out, or perhaps it was the fifth, they leveled a smite, marched him until he passed out, and then took turns kicking him in the ribs when he didn’t get up.  After regaining consciousness Anders had almost enjoyed explaining that no, he could not get up and walk since he could not heal himself.  Almost.  The fact that he was coughing up blood at the time really prevented him from getting any actual enjoyment out of the situation.

Gingerly curling up on the single blanket they’d provided him, having trouble finding a comfortable position with his hands bound, Anders vaguely wondered what they would do to him this time.  Last time he got solitary confinement for a year.  He tried to make the best of it.  First he went through every song he knew, remembering which ones seemed to particularly annoy the guards so they could be repeated more frequently.  He talked to the tower cats, wishing they could answer. He even entertained himself by taunting the celibate guards.  Graphically detailing stories of his more explicit exploits with the fairer sex was always fun, especially if he made sound effects.  Providing very specific instructions on how to make a woman very, very happy, with hand gestures, often
caused them to blush and choke.  Their embarrassment was always good for a laugh.  The coughing noises they made were sometimes the only sounds he heard besides his own voice.

But really, even with all that, going a year without having an actual conversation with a another person was enough to drive anyone mad.  Anders didn’t know if he could do it again and come out sane at the end.  Sometimes
he suspected that the grip he had on his sanity after the first year was a fairly near thing.

Of course, that was assuming they wouldn’t simply execute him.  While Anders wasn’t a blood mage, and they damn well knew it, he might simply have used up all his luck.  Nothing he could do but wait and see, though. 

“Hey mage, wake up!” Anders struggled to open his eyes, making a sharp noise of pain after he felt a boot connect with his head. Lovely, apparently this would be the daily pattern.  Yes, Ser Rylock’s screaming was looking better by the second. 

He would say this was quite easily the second worst capture to date, immediately after the blood-coughing incident.  As they screamed at him throughout the day for walking too slowly, occasionally punctuating their complaints with a punch to his kidneys or back of his head, he quickly reevaluated that.  This was the worst capture ever. 

The most frustrating part was that they hadn’t even been hunting him!  He just had the fantastic luck to wander into the same tavern at lunchtime.  Humiliating,really.

Stopping briefly to vomit on the side of the road Anders winced.  He quite clearly had a concussion, and perhaps even a cracked skull at this point. If it wasn’t healed soon, well, the result would be bad.  He pointed this out to the Templars, commenting that someone at the Circle would certainly notice if he returned unable to remember his own name.  “Fine,” one said, drawing his sword.  “Cast the spell.”  With a roll of his eyes Anders did just that, feeling better moments later. He pretended not to notice that every one of the Templars had their weapons trained on him just in case he had the bright idea of attacking a group of large armed men who could counter anything he threw at them. 

“I’m bloody sick of this rain,” one whined. 

“You’re sick of it?” came the reply.  “I had to spend two hours in it watching the mage last night.”  Anders was tempted to point out that he was the one who had to spend the whole night sleeping in the rain, but resisted the
urge.

“Well, Vigil’s Keep’s just a couple miles up.  We can stay there, the Arl will put us up for the night.  Stick his ass in the dungeon.”

“There is no Arl,” another said.  “Arlessa.  We got a notice.  It’s a mage, that Grey Warden person.  Don’t think she’s
there yet, though.”

“Maker’s breath, that’s bloody horrifying, putting someone like that in charge.  A mage.” Anders made a face hearing the disgust that was loaded into the word.  He should be used to it by now, but it didn’t seem to get any easier whenever he was confronted with how much people like him were loathed.

“Aye. Knight-Commander says to leave her alone, too.  Something about some treaty.”

“Well, we’ll just leave early, before she gets there.  Someone there will put us up.  Damn sick of this rain.” 

As a kick to his backside, apparently punishment for eavesdropping,sent him sprawling face-first in the mud, Anders determined this was absolutely, by far, the worst group of templars to ever bring him in.

Modifié par LupusYondergirl, 05 septembre 2010 - 12:30 .


#2141
Avilia

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Is it bad that I'm happy that last group of Templars died? Tragically died I mean ;-)



That was great Lupus :)

#2142
Sarah1281

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I'm so unclear on how a phylactery works...it seems like it would be way more efficient to leave them at the Tower since most of the mages with phylacteries would be escaping from there. The way I envision it now, a mage could get a healthy head start just because the templars would have to communicate with Denerim and either have to fetch the phylactery or use it to track the mage and go from there.

Since only mages who passed the Harrowing (how does the door even know that) can open the door to the phylactery chamber, perhaps they're trying to make them even more secure by moving them since the phylacteries are the ONLY way they have of tracking down these mages. Sure it seems unlikely but freaking JOWAN managed to get his destroyed which you can bet Irving and Greagoir hadn't actually intended when they wanted to catch him in the act. I do have to wonder, other than hiding them, how the phylacteries are protected in Denerim.



@ LupusYondergirl: Aw, poor Anders! You'd never really realize how horrible his life must have been pre-Awakening given how upbeat he generally is. The thought of such mistreatment and punishments for escaping just make me admire his continued attempts more. I do love the thought that he got captured completely by accident. How would they be able to tell he was an apostate? Did they recognize him or did they figure someone who they could sense was a mage (can they sense these things? Surely he wouldn't have been dressed like one although he IS by the time you meet him) and just wandering around had to be up to something? I'm also now morbidly curious about 'the incident.'

#2143
Miri1984

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Ugh. Want to comment but only one hand. All of these are great. Mine is nearly done! Again in ten minute bursts!

#2144
SurelyForth

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I can't do mine until...Tuesday, probably. I have too many distractions at home. I could try to drink more wine tonight to force myself into a zone and crank one out, but I doubt it would be anything more than utter, nonsensical crap.

Shoot. I just got a really excellent idea.:pinched:

Modifié par SurelyForth, 05 septembre 2010 - 12:46 .


#2145
Wedger

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LupusYondergirl, you packed much story into that. Thank you.



And I too am feeling a tad evil thinking good thots that those templers get theirs in the end.

#2146
LupusYondergirl

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@Avilia, Wedger: Thank you! I wanted to make the templars such jerks that their death would seem well-deserved. (especially because of spolier spoiler vague comment how they did die in my fic universe) Although he does mention being kicked in the head every morning. I just kind of went from there.



@Sarah: I figured that they can just tell somehow. Maybe that's the benefit of addicting them to lyrium? It's never really said, but when Nathaniel asked Anders if he always wore robes he made a crack about the "I'm a mage" sign around his neck. I took that to mean they would see it no matter what he did to hide that he's a mage.

I suspect he was wearing robes when they got him, though. I can't imagine they would bring robes, even if they had been hunting him. And if they did bring robes they would probably be the Circle style, not the tevinter ones he has on when you meet him.

#2147
jenncgf

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Wedger, Lupus - Yay! Good stuff!



I'll get cracking on mine as soon as I come up with something interesting. *sigh*

#2148
SurelyForth

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So I cheated a little and used a couple of excised paragraphs from another drabble. Since I used the entire hour (except for about three minutes where I stopped to listen to my boyfriend snark on Mel Gibson), I would estimate the total writing time to be an hour and five minutes.

Also cheating- it's like 50% Alistair. I just found the idea fun.


"Wash our socks, Alistair. Go fetch our equipment, Alistair," Alistair kicked at the ground in front of him as he waited for their contact. "Go stand in the middle of nowhere in the dark and wait for our contact, Alistair."

Words could not convey how much he hated this. Living in the monastery was bad enough and knowing what he was giving up by becoming a templar was a horrible thing. But actually spending time with other templars, out and about and not under the watchful eye of the Knight-Commander or Revered Mother, was an utter nightmare.

Maybe it wouldn't be so bad once he had taken his vows and they saw him as an equal and not some overgrown child playing at being a templar. Somehow he doubted it. He had a tendency to draw negative attention and hold it. He wasn't a small guy, or mean, or particularly anything at all, he was just the sort of guy that people hated for some reason.

"Go find a corner somewhere and die, Alistair."

The contact he was waiting to escort back to the inn wasn't even anyone important. It was just some guy who had sold another templar a few sundry items that he would need once they got into the Tower.

"Alcohol, jewelry...perfume," Baker was by far the friendliest of the crew that Alistair was traveling with. Not that it meant much, considering most of the crew treated him so badly that he might as well be a mage and not on his way to becoming one of them. "Good for trading, mostly. Money doesn't mean much in the tower."

The tower. The idea of it made Alistair a bit queasy and he almost sympathized with the mages trapped there. From what he'd seen, and despite Chantry indoctrination, mages were just normal people trying to live their lives. It sucked that they had to be sequestered because of the potential for demonic possession, or for them to become blood mages. Most of them would never become possessed, or even think about trying blood magic. And yet they were all treated as if they would.

"Alistair, you are the worst templar ever."

~o~

As a child, freedom had never meant much to Anders. He took everything for granted- like grass. Who ever thought of grass ever beyond hey, it's grass? But there was a lot to grass. Like its color, and its smell, and the texture of it between his finger tips and how it felt to run over grass, as opposed to running over dirt or stone.

There were other things he'd taken for granted, like rain and direct sunlight and being able to say what he wanted when he wanted and almost as loudly as he wanted. He also took people for granted, because outside of the tower there were all types of people and they knew different things and thought different ways and wore different clothes. They were free to be who they wanted to be and he got to share in on that through conversation, trading and observation.

Then he got caught, and everything was turned inside out and his perspective made a dramatic shift from this is all alright to none of this is really working for me.

Freedom then became all about not being in that damned tower, where the lure of comfort food and a well-stocked library came with an utter lack of privacy and subtle abuse doled out by grown men hidden behind their facades of steel. He could impress the enchanters all day long and have it undone in one second by a templar catching him as he climbed up to lean out of the high windows in the dining hall.

Couldn't a boy just want some fresh air? The air in the tower was as stale and staid as the Knight-Commander who passed judgment on him time and time again until "Anders" became synonymous withfrustrated sighs and Maker's breath, maybe we should just let him fall out next time.

Eventually, he did fall out...in a way. He started finding weaknesses in the seemingly impenetrable fortress around him. There were supply lines and hidden tunnels and templars who were less tied to duty than they were to not having their secrets spilled by smartass mages who had somehow learned to turn the tables on them.

Every time he escaped he ended up in Lake Calenhad; the surround of freezing water an affirmation of sorts as it simultaneously numbed his limbs and revived his will. Freedom was dragging himself, exhausted, from those waters and lying hidden under the crumbling stone causeway until he trusted his legs enough to carry him away from the settlement near the tower docks.

It just would not do to be discovered twenty yards from the dock, collapsed on the road with a silly muscle cramp.

The fifth time he escaped, the shirt and pants he'd traded from Bran Who Liked To Watch Enchanter Leorah Bathe and the boots he'd bummed off of Carroll the One With The Taste For Higher Quality Lyrium were ditched a few miles from the tower in a tiny shack where he'd hiddenanother outfit the last time he'd gotten out.

That the templars had been waiting for him when he emerged had made it a less than stellar event, but at least they hadn't bothered to see what he was up to in there.

Templars. So single minded in their pursuit and so utterly pointless outside of their incredibly specific skill sets.

With dry, clean(ish) clothes on he took off again. He would run the rest of the night and for most of the day tomorrow. Then he'd meet a man in Tunnelton who would give him a package for a Ser Lowell Who Really Loved Rabbits, who would then help smuggle Anders aboard a boat in Highever that would take him far, far away from Ferelden and his phylactery.

Maybe he'd even meet a pretty pirate on his way and have lots of splintery sex at sea. It seemed like something that could happen.

But before the Rabbit Lover, or the splintery sex, he had to get to Tunnelton. So he ran onwards, the stars streaking overhead while he enjoyed the way the grass felt beneath his feet.

~o~

Alistair was sick of waiting, his hands cold and the wind cutting right through his cloak. He'd been instructed to not wear his armor out and all he had besides armor was a thin linen shirt, wool trousers and a threadbare cloak.

He'd almost just worn the tunic, to be smart. The tunic was the best part of being a templar. Well, that and the overdramatic posturing. He swore sometimes that mages and templars would be able to get along perfectly well if they'd all stop trying to outdo each other with the dresses and the posing.

Or maybe he was just being irreverent again. Maybe that's why nobody liked him.

"Uh, hello?"Alistair jerked to awareness, realizing, of course, that there was a man standing right in front of him. He was tall, slender and incredibly pale. He had long, blond hair that was messily pulled back from a face that was hard to make out in the dark.

There was something else going on with him, but Alistair couldn't quite place it.

"Uh, hello to you," Alistair had no idea how these things worked really. "I suppose it's not coincidence that we're both standing around in the forest. At night. In clothes."

"As opposed to naked?"

"I meant...inappropriate clothing, considering the weather," Alistair didn't like the way the man talked. "Whatever, you know what I mean. You're meeting someone here to take you back to the inn."

"And you're here to meet...me?"

"Unless there's other clandestine meetings scheduled to take place in this random clearing, then yes. I assume so," Alistair frowned. "Uh...so come with me? Sorry, I'm not very good at this. I just want to get this over with, to be honest, and get to bed."

The other man nodded, "I hear that."

~o~

Anders followed the blond man towards the tavern, his eyes searching the darkness around him. There was something off about this contact. Anders had expected someone a bit more jaded. It took a special sort to undermine the Chantry, confident confidence men. Not young, stammering guys who admitted to their inexperience within minutes.

Or maybe this is his game, play dumb and take you by surprise later. Anders was fine with that, respected it even. If that was the case, of course. As the man stumbled over a root and fell face first into a pine tree, Anders decided that was definitely not the case.

"Andraste's ******, are you all right?" He caught up to where his contact was extracting himself from the branches, his cloak covered with needles and his head bleeding from a nasty looking gash above his left eyebrow.

"I'm fine," the man staggered ahead until they were only a few feet away from the inn and then came to a halt, his arms out as if the world may fly out from beneath him.

Anders took in the blood and general unsteadiness and sighed. He couldn't just leave him like that.

"Because you're helping me..." he held up his hand and healed the gash, knowing that the spell would help with the balance issues, too. What he didn't know was that the other man would react with utter panic, eyes going wide.

"You're a mage?"

Anders' heart stopped.

"You didn't know?"

The man shook his head, "No! Oh, Maker."

That didn't help with the heart stoppage. "What's going on?"

What was going on
 became clear a few seconds later when the doors to the inn flew open and three huge men in familiar purple and yellow tunics streamed out. Even without their armor they were able to take Anders down with little trouble. Not that he put up a fight. He was too busy chastising himself for being so stupid.

"Real nice, you bleeding jackass," the other man only blinked as one of the other templars smacked Anders in the back with their shield.

"Hey! He healed me," the man pointed to his forehead with an unsteady finger. "You don't have to hurt him."

"He's a mage," as if that meant he could be treated like an animal. Another templar grabbed the rope they'd circled around Anders' wrists and tugged him towards the inn. "Even though you're just an initiate, you should know that mages who break the rules deserveto be hurt. Chances are they've hurt someone else along the way, or they plan to."

Anders looked back at the man, one last time. He didn't look like he believed what the others were saying. He looked...guilty. And unhappy. And completely out of his depth.

Maybe it had been an accident, and he was just naive and not a jackass at all. Whatever it was, he was definitely the worst templar Anders had ever met.

Which, by default, made him his favorite.

Modifié par SurelyForth, 05 septembre 2010 - 04:04 .


#2149
Avilia

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Loved, loved, loved it. I can see it happening. Thanks Surely - I've got a big smile now :)

#2150
Galagraphia

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@LupusYondergirl, oh, this is terrible! But I suppose it's possible. I'm glad they died. Lol, Anders got his revenge XD



@SurelyForth, I like it, I can imagine a party banter between Anders and Alistair on that Orzammar bridge, Anders tells Alistair that he's not so bad (for a templar) and Ali replies that he's not really a templar, and then Anders says that the fact that Alistair failed to become a real templar is the best part of it.