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Amy Dallon, Herald of Andraste

Chapter 18 New
Author's Note: As I've said before, if you find yourself confused about any of the elements of the Dragon Age setting that have come up, or with questions about Thedas as you've seen, please, ask. The intent has always been that familiarity with Dragon Age is not required, but I'm hardly perfect. In some cases, the confusion might be because the reader (and Amy) have not been provided some vital information, but in some cases, I might have just explained less well than I thought.



Miraculous ability to 'cure' the Darkspawn Taint or not, the rifts closed for no one but Amy. So after another few minutes sitting with Cassandra, they set out for the next rift.

Amy spent that silent time they sat there trying to process what Cassandra had said, about being proud to know her. It...

She's not saying she's proud of me... but...

It was the closest thing Amy had heard from anyone not named Victoria Dallon. Carol had never said it to her, but then, she'd never said it to Vicky either.

She looked over at Cassandra as they sat, chest feeling tight. Was -

No. Cassandra was... she was just trying to help Amy. It wasn't - Cassandra wasn't lying she didn't think it was that, but -

I'm just - I'm just pathetic and reading too much into it. Cassandra was just saying Amy was doing the right thing. Which she was... not that it changed much in the long term. She was only doing it because not doing it would feel worse. And because the Darkspawn Taint terrified her and -

"We should join the others and seek the next rift," Cassandra said, standing, extending a hand to help Amy to her feet. Amy took it, trying to push her thoughts to the back of her mind, to focus on - focus on what was happening now, what was important. She could...

She could worry about what Cassandra had said later. Or never. Never sounded good. Because it didn't mean much. It was just - it was nice to hear, but - it wasn't -

God, I'm so fucking pathetic.

Shaking her head, Amy tried to focus on what was happening, and when that failed, she forced her thoughts back to the Darkspawn Taint, and Cassandra's desire for her to keep it secret. That was... safer ground.

As they moved further along the ravine, and towards the cave the rift was supposed to be in, Amy weighed keeping this extra secret about something she could 'cure' or... save someone from. And thinking about the taint itself. She couldn't affect it directly, but... could she do something that...

Could she vaccinate someone or something against it? The problem would be testing it, and that would mean keeping some of that noxious shit on hand and - no. Bad idea. And once they closed the Breach, Amy was going to figure out how to get home anyway.

She was.

So...

I mean, I'm the only one who can do anything to the Darkspawn Taint...

Shaking her head, Amy tried to ignore the knot of guilt that was forming at the thought of just... leaving Thedas without doing something (what? What could she do?) about the Darkspawn Taint and focused instead on the question of keeping it secret.

Cassandra was going to tell Cullen, Leliana and Josephine. They could all keep secrets, presumably, and know who, if anyone it was a good idea to tell. The scouts worked for Leliana and Amy had to assume the spymaster wouldn't pick someone who couldn't keep a secret to work for her. Solas probably already had a thousand and one secrets, and she really needed to ask Cassandra about him.

I'm sure they didn't just trust that this very convenient mage shows up right as it all goes down, so they had to look into him and they obviously didn't find any sign he was up to anything bad...

Amy pushed that question aside - she would have to ask that later - and focused on the other two people who presently knew what she could do to the Darkspawn Taint. Katerina would obey the order, Amy was pretty sure. If nothing else, Katerina looked up to Cassandra too much to disobey the order.

Varric... well, Varric was the question. He was a storyteller and turned the story of his friend Hawke into a book, but he had kept certain facts back - and yet been totally cool with including others. He claimed to be, seemed to be on the same page as everyone else that the Breach was a big deal, the thing everyone needed to be focused on, but...

He was also playing at being the 'rogue with a heart of gold', and those didn't exist in reality. So if it was ever to his benefit, he might try to reveal it. Plus, he reveled in tweaking Cassandra - and everyone else, frankly.

Amy didn't think it was likely he'd spill the beans, at least, not any time soon, but... if anyone who currently knew would, it was him.

Finally, they reached the cave. Though, it was less a cave and more... something Amy didn't know the proper term for. Those hexagonal black rock column-things made up the walls of it, and there were several holes in the ceiling that brought in sunlight and water, leaving the cave full of greenery, including a few trees, and plenty of bushes.

There were no living giant spiders (though they did find a body - the thing was huge, easily bigger than a dog, like... the size of a pony? The demons infesting the cave had killed it, and Amy held back as a series of wraith and shades attacked them before they got close to the rift. Once they found the rift further back, Amy stayed back as well.

In addition to more shades and wraiths, the rift was 'defended' by two rage demons and another terror demon. After having been near several now, Amy was... well, she wasn't curling up into a ball and trying to run away, but she still felt icy fear claw at her, making her blood run cold and her body freeze up.

Every time she'd been hit with it before, she was sent back to that moment, that awful moment of terror when Vicky had been dying, right before she'd triggered and - the fear of losing her, losing her sister...

But this time, she was faced with something else. Something that had never happened and...

Amy gripped tight onto her staff as her mind was assaulted with images of the Darkspawn Taint, consuming, converting, overwhelming all life around it... consuming her family.

Aunt Sarah. Uncle Neil. Crystal. Eric. Carol. Mark.

Vicky.

She couldn't do anything, couldn't reach them, couldn't help them, could do nothing but watch as the red-black nightmare substance slowly consumed their cells, ate their bodies, turned them all, turned her sister into twisted, bloated, mindless monstrosities, barely resembling themselves...

The images vanished from her mind as if someone had flicked a switch once the second terror demon was defeated, and then the rage demon was felled a few seconds later. Amy took several shuddering breaths, feeling cold, clammy sweat on her neck, under her armor - but she didn't let that stop her from approaching the rift and holding her hand out, feeling that stabbing sensation again as it closed.

The act was almost an autopilot one now - not really, but she'd done it enough times that it was becoming rote.

Except for the pain. It seemed impossible to get used to that.

Why... why did the terror demon make me see -

Was it just that the Darkspawn Taint was fresh in her mind? It did scare her, Amy had to admit. It scared her and she hated it, hated it. She'd never hated a disease, because why bother? She could cure it.

She couldn't do that to this one. And she couldn't even really read it - just read it enough to feel she should be able to do more to it, but she couldn't because it - because it was weird magical bullshit that turned other things into weird magical bullshit.

She hadn't been this scared of demons, when she realized they didn't even read as alive to her power - but they were basically projections and... they couldn't turn people into more of them. The abomination had been horrifying, but she could still use her power on it.

The Darkspawn Taint? She couldn't really read it, couldn't use her power on it, and it made more like into more of itself. She was... she was still reasonably confident her power's sort of... automatic protection against disease she had would protect her from the Darkspawn Taint, but...

Did it really scare her that much? Amy wrapped her arms around her waist as she waited for the others to finish exploring the cave. Was it just that it was the first thing here in Thedas that truly, deeply terrified her? That it was fresh in her mind?

"I believe I have found something of interest." Solas's voice cut through her anxious fixations and Amy looked around for him, following the sound of his voice. The bald elf was crouched by a little niche carved into the cave wall. Inside there was a glowing green object, the shape and size of a globe (and even on what looked like a little stand), but with a bunch of extra bits on opposite ends, making it almost look like some weird, mutant telescope? There were cracks in it, and that's where the green light was coming from.

"Okay, it's shiny and obviously magic, but what is it, Chuckles?" Varric asked Solas. "Don't keep us in suspense."

"I believe," Solas said in his usual unflappable tone, "That this is an ancient elven ward, of sorts, used for interacting with the Veil."

Amy was not her sister, and as her shitty, usually barely passing grades at Arcadia proved, she wasn't even all that smart (as if she didn't know that already). But she also wasn't a complete idiot. She could retain information sometimes and eventually add two and two to get four. The Veil was the... barrier, thing between the Fade and reality. The Breach and the rifts were holes in it.

"So this is the reason there's so many rifts in the Storm Coast, and why the demons are ranging further from them than normal?"

"That would be my supposition, yes." Solas confirmed, nodding. He gestured to the thing, "In the heart of the device is a piece of crystal that reacts to the Fade. I believe it was used to strengthen or weaken the Veil in a given area. And right now, it is weakening the Veil."

"Will it close any rifts?" Cassandra asked.

"I don't think so. But if I switch it to strengthening the Veil instead, it should make sure no new rifts open, and make the demons left stay closer to the rifts that brought them here."

"Why would they even make something that could strengthen or weaken the Veil?" Amy demanded.

"Experimenting with it, I assume." Solas answered. "Seeing what impact a weaker Veil had on an area, or perhaps to work magics that needed more power than could be easily obtained any other way." He stood up, "Or conversely, strengthening the veil when a given area had a naturally weak veil for some other reason - mass death, for instance. Or some other magical disaster."

Ask a stupid question... Amy nodded. "I guess that makes sense. In a 'let's meddle with forces beyond our comprehension because we're idiots' sort of way," Amy sighed. "You're sure it will be safe and make the Veil stronger?"

"As certain as I can be without trying it,"

"Then do it." Cassandra nodded. Solas crouched back down by the device and reached his hand out, closing his eyes and murmuring a quiet spell before the device glowed a brighter green, a sort of sphere forming around it.

"There. It should be set."

"Good. We should find a spot to make camp for the night, and then set out to close the remaining rifts tomorrow."

"While we look for that spot, Panpan, I think you owe me a story about that 'Garden of Eden'?"

Amy groaned and dropped her head into her hands. She had promised him she'd tell him about that.

"Okay, fine. Once we're out of the cave, I'll start." Amy started organizing what little she actually knew about the story offhand into something that sounded coherent in her head. Once they were out, she took a breath. "This is a - this is a myth or story or whatever that a bunch of people back home believe in. I don't. But... okay, so you guys all believe in the Maker, or most of you anyway." Solas probably didn't, and Varric didn't seem a religious type.

"The big all-powerful being who created everything and all that? Back home, the people who believe in that sort of thing just call him 'God'. One story is that when God created the first man and the first woman, he put them in this... magical wonderful paradise called the Garden of Eden. Where no one could get hurt or sick, and everything was innocent and wonderful and food was plentiful on all the trees and bushes and God even allowed them - Adam and Eve were their names - to eat the fruit of the tree of life. That meant that they would never get old. And because everything was innocent their minds were like children, or something like that,"

"There's a tree that has fruit that makes people live forever on your world and you're just mentioning this now?" Katerina asked, blinking.

"No! I said it's a story! It's - magic doesn't exist back on Earth-Bet, remember? And - if you let me finish the story you'll get why even if it was a thing - and it wasn't - the tree of life isn't a thing anymore!"

"If it was, I hope you'd give it a better name than 'Tree of Life," Varric mused. "A little on the nose."

"Can I finish?" Amy gritted her teeth. Varric gestured for her to continue.

"So God tells Adam and Eve they can do whatever they want in the Garden, eat anything they want, except for the fruit of this one tree. It's a special tree. The Tree of Knowledge."

Varric snorted, "Did he want them to eat from the tree?" Katerina chuckled as well.

"When I was six, my grandfather told me not to pick apples from his favorite tree. So of course I went and tried to," Katerina agreed.

"I don't know what he wanted. But yeah, It - it was pretty stupid to just say it like that." It wasn't like Vicky hadn't gotten up to a million and one antics when they were younger. And then Amy would be right behind her, unable to say no, always trying to at least hold her sister back from the worst of her 'great ideas'...

Amy blinked repeatedly, feeling wetness, but didn't try to stop the soft smile that formed as she remembered... better times, for a moment. Then she exhaled slowly.

"So yeah, you can see where this is going. There's a snake, it can talk, the snake might actually have been the Devil - which is like, God, but evil and not as powerful - I don't remember." She held up a hand, "If you ask me about the Devil, we'll be here all fucking day." Varric didn't look like he was that bothered by the prospect, but he at least didn't say anything.

"Anyway, this snake convinces Eve to eat from the Tree of Knowledge, to know all the things God knows or... something like that. I don't know the details. But she does and then convinces or tricks Adam into doing it. Or convinces Adam and then Adam later says she tricked him." There was a whole lot of 'women bad and evil' baked into the story too, really.

"They eat from it and they understand, like, good and evil and aren't innocent and pure anymore and all that. God figures out they know this now, and so he punished them by expelling them from the Garden of Eden, into the rest of the world where there's deprivation and shortage and people have to actually work to grow enough food and all that. They call it Original Sin and it's why the world isn't paradise anymore and why people die."

Amy knew for sure she was forgetting some details, or maybe hadn't ever picked up on them. Wasn't there something about the snake - if it wasn't the Devil - getting punished? And she was pretty sure the reason childbirth sucked so much was a punishment on Eve or... maybe that was just something people said later.

"Sounds like a shitty move, really." Varric mused.

"The three great sins of mankind against the Maker were worshiping his firstborn children - the spirits that became the Old Gods - before him, entering the Golden City to try and usurp him and burning his Bride rather than listening to her message." Cassandra commented. "It took all three for the Maker to turn from us completely. It seems... harsh of this 'God' to act so cruelly."

"You're telling me," Amy agreed, a little surprised by Cassandra's words, though... she did have a point. The Maker gave humanity more chances than God did, sort of? Maybe not, honestly. Amy didn't really know.

Either way, Varric wasn't wrong. What little else Amy knew about the Old Testament - the flood and Abraham's son and a few errant bits of trivia about like, Moses and stuff - told her God was a fucking dick. She was sure believers had their answers to that argument, but she didn't care and hadn't really argued that point with anyone.

"The Dalish elves tell many stories about the past to explain the state of the world, or to impart lessons. Often both." Solas chimed in. "It would sound as though this 'Garden of Eden' story is another such one. Though the lesson it teaches of unquestioning obedience and a glorification of ignorance is... troubling."

"The Chantry says that when the Chant of Light is heard in all four corners of the world, the Maker will return and make the world a paradise." Katerina mused, uncharacteristically thoughtful. "Is there anything like that for God?"

"I don't think so? Just going to Heaven when you die to be by his side, if you're good and believe in him and eat all your vegetables and stuff." Amy shook her head. "There's a book kind of like the Chant of Light, called the Bible. I've never read it, so I don't know all the details."

"What about the Second Coming? Didn't you say the return of God's son was supposed to save everyone, according to the believers?" Cassandra asked, curious.

"God's son? Your Maker has a kid?"

Thanks a lot Cassandra, Amy thought sourly as Varric reacted to the latest revelation.

"The Second Coming is supposed to bring all the good people to Heaven, not have paradise on Earth. I think." Amy furrowed her brow. "Don't quote me on that." Amy pressed her hands to her temples. Then she looked over at Varric. "Now, as to what you just said, he's not my Maker, I don't worship God or believe in any of that stuff. As for the whole him having a son thing..." She sighed and set to repeating the story she gave to Cassandra a while back.



Another day to close the last three rifts, and then they headed back to Haven. The trip took way, way, waaay too long, and with long days on the road and only firelight to read by, Amy didn't get as much reading done as she'd have liked. That, and Varric kept poking her for more stories about Earth-Bet, like he always did. Amy didn't have much more in the way of stories about 'God' to share, but she did tell the story of Noah and the Flood, which had Varric and Katerina again comment that God sounded like a dick. She also shared more of Vicky's exploits - her sister would love knowing that stories of her heroism were now spreading beyond Earth-Bet.

But she did get to read some, and 'Her Hidden Dedication' was a good book.

She was only about halfway through, but the story was engaging and compelling. The two leads were an Orlesian noblewoman, and one of the knights in service to the noblewoman's father. The knight was of a low nobility, her parents commoners who had bought minor titles, and the knight - not even the first born- had risen as far as she was likely to in Orlesian society of the hundred or so years ago when the story was set.

The knight loved her lord's daughter, and unbeknownst to her, the noblewoman loved the knight, but the two of them pined for one another in silence. It was heartbreaking and beautiful. The knight didn't say anything because she was too lowborn, and didn't believe the noblewoman would return her affections. The noblewoman didn't say anything for fear of driving her one real friend among her father's household away.

Adding to the whole mess was that while being gay wasn't seen as immoral or wrong, nobles were expected to get married and have kids, and that meant... well, the noblewoman would have to marry some nobleman that her father approved of. Of course, as the other friends of both main characters pointed out, political marriages between nobles in Orlais weren't exactly expected to stay faithful.

Which, gross, but it was a romance story, so it wasn't the same thing as it happening in real life. Amy was eating the pining up with a spoon, the knight watching the object of her affections from a distance, and the noblewoman imagined the knight kissing her and more 'indecorous fantasies' - and that was the phrasing she used to describe her thoughts.

And finally, now, at the halfway point she had reached the night before as they rode into Haven now, late in the morning, they had finally kissed. The knight and the noblewoman (among others) had been going to visit another noble nearby, they were attacked by bandits on the road as a sudden rainstorm struck, and the knight had gotten seriously injured - while both had gotten away, they were now taking refuge in a cave, completely lost, and the noblewoman had confessed her feelings, the knight had done the same, and they'd kissed.

Amy itched to just go to her cabin and get back to the book immediately, but she knew there was stuff that needed to be done. Iron Bull and his Chargers were a few days behind, but on their way to Haven nonetheless.

The tents by the walls of the village had been turned into a mix of tents and wooden shelters, probably thrown together quickly, though to Amy's eye, they seemed at least a little sturdy. The whole space was larger now, more soldiers coming to join the Inquisition, Amy assumed. The training grounds were expanded, with more archery targets and mannequins for hitting with weapons set up than before too. The gates of the village were open as carts moved in, loaded with crates and barrels and sacks of supplies. Amy wondered if potatoes or tomatoes were among them, and if not, how hard would it be to get them.

Coffee is probably expensive to get all the way here, I can't just... I can't just demand more stuff. But if it wasn't too hard, or if they were already in the supplies...

A taste of home would be nice.

Once they were inside the gates, Solas and Varric split off. Amy called out to Solas before he was out of earshot. "Solas - I have a question for you, later." She still hadn't talked to him about the whole 'Qunari had dragon DNA in them'. He was the only magic expert she knew, and she had no idea how anyone else would react to the news.

Solas seemed pretty detached from most things apart from 'slavery bad' and 'the elves suffer at the hands of humans', so he probably wouldn't react badly, but she wanted to talk to him about that in private. Same with asking Cassandra or Leliana about Solas - do that somewhere private.

"I shall come by your cabin later, then?"

"Or I'll go find you, once we both have time." Amy nodded, and then she followed Cassandra and Katerina towards the Chantry, presumably to fill Josephine and Cullen and Leliana on everything. As they approached the Chantry, she saw Leliana speaking to a tall, brown-haired man wearing a breastplate over some kind of padded armor. As they drew closer, she got a look at the profile of the man, and he had a beard, the kind that probably took years to develop and very carefully maintain, coming down to two sort of spikey bits.

Leliana caught sight of them and with a gesture, beckoned them over. Or at least beckoned Cassandra, and Amy followed along, with Katerina behind her.

"Cassandra, Amy, Katerina - this is Blackwall, a Grey Warden. Warden Blackwall, this is Seeker Cassandra Pentaghast, Amy Dallon, and Katerina, one of our soldiers."

A Warden?

"Charmed," Blackwall held out a hand - gloved, of course, it was kind of chilly here in Haven and by now Amy had gotten used to the idea that people who used swords and stuff wore gloves a lot, and Blackwall had a sword at his belt, a shield propped up against a crate nearby.

The shield was probably his because it had the bird emblem - griffin? eagle? - that was on his breastplate. Its wings were spread? No, it was two birds, back to back, each lifting one wing. Weird.

Cassandra shook his hand, and then Amy took his as well, itching to grab his arm and pull him closer and touch his bare skin. How were Grey Wardens immune to the Darkspawn Taint? Could she replicate it? Did they have some sort of cure-vaccination thing? Did they take Darkspawn Taint into themselves? If they did, could she drive it out of him quickly, kill it with fire? Because seriously, that shit needed to - it didn't matter, that stuff was - it was nightmarish and if he had it in his body then he needed to -

Amy closed her eyes quickly, taking a breath and pulling her hand back from the handshake quickly, probably looking like she was snatching her hand back from a hot stove or something.

Goddamnit Amy, yes, this stuff scares you but what the fuck is wrong with you? Before she could start making a list, Blackwall - had to be some kind of fake name, or a pseudonym, right? Who had Blackwall as their first name? Or maybe it was his last name? - interrupted her thoughts by asking a question:

"Amy Dallon. As in the Herald of Andraste?" Blackwall said, after shaking Katerina's hand, sounding surprised. "You're - younger than I expected."

"I am not anyone's Herald," Amy tried to say it in as level a tone as she could, her teeth clenched and jaw tight.

"Though many believe Andraste played a role in ensuring Amy was here to be able to close the rifts and, given time, the Breach," Leliana said smoothly, "The Inquisition makes no official claim as to that."

It sounded like something Josephine might have written for everyone to say if it came up.

"I see," Blackwall said. "Still - you can't be older than nineteen."

"Seventeen." Amy answered.

"So you did find a Warden, Leliana." Cassandra observed.

"I did." Leliana nodded. She looked over at Amy, "Since before the Conclave, there have been reports of Grey Wardens abandoning their bases all over Ferelden, Orlais and the Free Marches. I've been looking into it, and Blackwall was the first one I've been able to find."

"I've no knowledge where they all went, but we don't really stay very visible between Blights," Blackwall said. "I've been alone, looking for prospective recruits for a few years now."

"And the other Grey Wardens never recalled you?"

"Maybe a runner got waylaid, or couldn't find me?" Blackwall offered in response to Cassandra's question, sounding like he was just tossing it out there. "I don't know where the Wardens have gone, but Grey Wardens are about service, becoming better than you were to protect others. We might be most concerned with Blights, but failing that... after one of Sister Leliana's agents found me, I volunteered to be of use."

Doesn't sound like the whole 'the Blights are the most important thing, hurt innocent people if it stops them' mindset Cassandra mentioned... but then, this wasn't a Blight?

"Blackwall was helping villagers in the Hinterlands fight back against bandits." Leliana explained. "Given that, it seemed like he might be of great use helping hammer some of the new recruits into shape and get them fighting as a unit."

"That seems reasonable," Cassandra nodded. She "As long as you are here with the Inquisition, our greatest priority is the Breach. I understand that as a Grey Warden, yours are the Blights, and Darkspawn - if you find those priorities conflicting, then it would be best to part ways with the Inquisition."

Leliana's expression looked strange for a moment, but only for that split second before it returned to normal. Blackwall didn't notice.

"I can't see how it would cause any problems, unless we run into Darkspawn, and it's not as if the Inquisition would just leave them be to attack innocent people?"

"No." Cassandra allowed.

"If we'd had you on the Storm Coast, I would have felt more confident if we'd actually run into those Darkspawn ourselves. But the Chargers - a group of mercenaries helping us secure the region so Amy could close the rifts - found them first." Katerina offered. "I've never actually met a Grey Warden."

"They're - there's not a lot of us these days," Blackwall shrugged. "If you hear about more Darkspawn where you'll be operating, I'm more than willing to be of service." He nodded to them, "I only arrived in Haven a few hours ago. I should go get a feel for the recruits I'll be helping with."

"Of course." Cassandra nodded. Blackwall nodded back to all of them and moved off, back towards the training grounds. Cassandra looked over at Katerina. "You are dismissed for the time being. I will take Amy back to her cabin when we're done."

Katerina nodded and saluted, pressing her fist to her chest, "Let me know when you're done with 'Her Hidden Dedication'," She said to Amy while leaning in towards her. Without waiting for a response though, she headed off.

"You sent word ahead that Iron Bull and the Chargers were hired. I assume they're on their way?"

"They should be, yes." Cassandra nodded. "But there's other matters to discuss. And we have the matter of the mages and Templars as well. Did Lord Seeker Lucius send word yet?"

"Not yet. Given the location of Therinfal Redoubt is, it's possible his men haven't even reached it yet, though they should be drawing close. On the other hand, the mages under Grand Enchanter Fiona have already invited Amy to come speak with her. I see no reason why we shouldn't take them up on and resolve this matter as quickly as possible."

Seems like the simplest option. Amy knew Cassandra wanted to go with both sides, if she could, and Amy could see the logic. But it was also about closing the Breach as quickly as possible.

"We'll need a few days before we set out anyway, to prepare for the negotiations." Cassandra pointed out. "There is another matter that needs to be discussed, however, and it would be best to do it privately."

Leliana looked Cassandra over carefully, then nodded, "Very well. I'll send word to Josephine and Cullen to join us in the back room in half an hour?"

"Very good."



"...I didn't include mention in the note in case it was intercepted." Leliana explained. "No reason to risk letting everyone know the Qunari have a spy in our ranks."

"How do we even know Iron Bull will be the only one?!" Cullen demanded. "The Qunari aren't exactly our enemy right now, but they're not our friends either, and they can become enemies in a heartbeat, without any reason."

"Strictly speaking, everything the Qunari do is with a reason... that reason is just often opaque to outsiders," Josephine said. Amy supposed it made sense for a diplomat to have that sort of mindset, but it was also kind of... not the point. "And we can hardly ensure there won't ever be any more Ben-Hassrath spies in the Inquisition, but it's also a matter of trust. Leliana is hardly going to be lax in her security. If the Qunari try to plant more spies on the Inquisition, we'll know they're not interested in cooperation, and can act accordingly."

"Give them enough rope to hang themselves?"

Josephine looked over at Amy, then nodded, "I've never heard it put that way before, but if I'm following your meaning correctly, yes. If the Qunari are willing to work with us then they won't assign any more spies. And we can make sure we don't let Iron Bull or his Chargers know about anything we don't want the Qunari to know."

"We can make it harder for him to find out, but the only way three can keep a secret is if two are dead," Leliana offered. "It's a risk, but a calculated one. The last thing Thedas needs is the Qunari deciding to attack first and ask questions later."

"The Qunari attacked first and asked questions never in Kirkwall," Cullen grumbled. "But I suppose only one of the damn giants is more manageable than the few hundred the Arishok had to work with."

Amy blinked, "Okay, Iron Bull mentioned Kirkwall too. What the hell happened there involving the Qunari?"

"You haven't gotten that far in Varric's damned-" Cullen started, then shook his head, cutting himself off. "Obiously not, if you wouldn't be asking. It's... a long story, and I don't know the truth about most of it. But three years before Knight-Commander Meredith tried to purge the Kirkwall Circle, a group of Qunari soldiers tried to take over the city and killed the Viscount, before Hawke stepped in."

"I thought you guys hadn't been at war with them for a while? Just them and Tevinter?!" Hawke too? Did everything come back to Kirkwall and her?

Well, no, I - the Kirkwall Qunari thing doesn't seem super connected to this, it just kind of came up.

"The Qunari disavowed those involved. It was something of a... embarrassment to them," Josephine clarified. "But we're getting off-topic. I can fill you in on more of the details later, Amy, or you can get them from 'Tale of the Champion'. It's quite accurate to the material facts, on this matter."

I... I suppose I should get back to that eventually. When she ran out of other things to read, maybe.

"Right now, we should discuss our options regarding the Breach. I understand that this is an urgent-"

"No, there is another matter that must be discussed," Cassandra cut in. "I suspect it will take us some time to decide on how to move forward with either the rebel mages or the Templars, but while we were on the Storm Coast, Darkspawn were active there..."

Cassandra outlined the story - the Chargers took them out, or so it seemed, and they found the dead Darkspawn and the dying ram, and Amy's insistence on trying to heal it. Leliana's expression was unreadable, Josephine looked skeptical for a moment, and Cullen did as well, though for longer, until Cassandra explained what Amy had done.

"...if word got out that you could do this, there is no way we could convince anyone you weren't either sent by Andraste and the Maker, or a false prophet sent to damn us all," Josephine murmured, looking at Amy with a combination of concern and... was that awe?

Fuck. I think that's just a little awe. Or reverence. It was something Amy was way, way too used to seeing back home, and she saw it from too many people who called her the Herald here and now Josephine - one of the few people she liked in Thedas - had it too. Goddamnit.

Please don't keep feeling that.

"If she can cure the Taint... perhaps she was sent by the Maker..." Cullen trailed off in a soft murmur. "Not to her knowledge, but -"

"One, I can't fucking cure the Darkspawn Taint," Amy said, saying that part very slowly and carefully so maybe everyone would get it. "Two, if your Maker is the reason I am here, then he's -" Amy managed to bite back the tide of insults she wanted to say - of which 'a fucking asshole' would be the start -at the last minute. Everyone else in the room believed in the Maker and Andraste, "If he's the reason I'm here, then I'm really - really - angry with him." Christians were allowed to be angry at God, right? That was a thing she saw in movies or TV shows, right? It was probably safe to say that.

"But he's not, and I don't really see why this is the thing that is getting you to think that, Cullen, or - please - don't look at me like that Josephine. I - I'm the same Amy. I'm still not heaven-sent. Why is this - why is this the one that has you acting like this?" Even Leliana's expression seemed softer than usual. Cassandra at least wasn't looking at her any differently. She hadn't when Amy had saved the Ram either. Concerned, but that was normal.

At least she's not getting all reverent. If that happened Amy might just have to give up entirely... or spend more time with Varric.

"I... Amy, I appreciate you're neither from Thedas nor Andrastian, so it doesn't surprise me that you don't quite understand the situation." Josephine said carefully, setting her little paper-holder with a candle on it down on the table and folding her hands in front of her, holding them by her waist. "And perhaps more importantly, how people will understand it as well. The Chant of Light tells us that the source of the Taint, of the Blights themselves, is the sin the Magisters Sidereal brought to the Golden City, turning it black, and unleashing the Darkspawn on the world upon their return. It is, in essence, a curse of divine origin. And you can save people from it. With a touch, you can undo what many people see as, in some form, the Maker's judgement."

Amy bit her lip, screwing her eyes shut, hands closed into fists by her sides. What Josephine said made sense, when she put it like that. If the Darkspawn Taint was some curse from the Maker, and she could cure it, then what did that say about her?

It said nothing, but - she could imagine how other people wouldn't see things that way.

"The Maker did not inflict the Taint upon us, the Magisters did." Leliana disagreed. "Its origins are still divine - the holiness of the Golden City tainted by mortal sin, corrupted into the Taint and the Blights. To be able to save someone from it, expel it from their body - It is no small thing to be able to do what no other effort has. It is hard to fathom someone who was not touched by the Maker-"

"And who decided the Maker got to pluck me from my home and drop me here, away from my family and - I didn't ask for this?!"

"The Maker never asks for more from us than we can give," Cassandra said calmly. "That said... you have been quite insistent that your ability to heal isn't from the Maker."

"Because it isn't!" Unless he's been the one giving everyone powers on Earth, and I - I really don't see why he'd give some of the worst monsters I've ever heard of powers." Amy's heart was beating quickly in her chest and she closed her eyes again, trying to take another deep breath. "If it's biological, I can use my power on it. The Darkspawn Taint is... well, I don't know about the Black City stuff, but it's like - it's like that Abomination. It's - It's biology kept trying to react to what I was doing to it. But the Taint was even worse - I couldn't get a lock on it. I couldn't read it enough to deal with it."

Amy groped for the right words, "Demons don't read as anything to my power. They're not biological. The Abomination was this... insane amalgamation. The Taint was like that too, but worse. It's physically present, but it's..." goddamnit, what's the word I want... I - "mutable. The Fade is mutable, that's how magic works, right? Bringing the Fade into reality and working your will through it?" Amy did catch on eventually.

Cullen and Cassandra nodded slowly, and Amy went on.

"The Taint kept changing, so I couldn't... pin it down to actually do anything to it. So I just - I just seized control of the ram's entire system and set it to physically forcing the Taint out... like guards ejecting an intruder from a castle." Maybe that analogy would work for them.

She exhaled, "The point - it's just the same power you all knew I already had. It's not - it's not some extra thing I can do because of the Maker!"

"You're asking us to believe a lot that seems impossible." Cullen told her, a cautioning tone in his voice.

"I don't - I don't care if you believe the Maker is behind this, not... much." Amy lied, then "But it's bad enough people keep acting like I'm holy out there. I don't need that from any of you! So please, fucking don't!"

"It is easier to remind ourselves you don't believe you have any special connection to the divine when you act your age," Leliana said with a small smirk. Amy rolled her eyes, but...

I suppose that makes sense. Divine savior can't be a petulant, whiny brat and all that.

"That said, the problem of people 'acting like you are holy', as you call it, will only get worse when word gets out that you can save people from the Taint," Leliana cautioned.

We're not doing that yet though!

"We are not letting word get out." Cassandra said firmly.

"You can't be serious, we can't hide something like this, Cassandra!" Cullen brought a hand down quickly - he didn't slam it down onto the table, slowing his hand a few moments before actually connecting with the table, but the gesture was much the same.

"Why not?" Josephine had picked up her board. Cullen and Leliana looked over at her, the Commander looking confused. "Haven is quite remote, so it's not as if people suffering from the Taint are especially likely to be able to live long enough to make it here. And we can hardly afford to have Amy going to every single person who might be suffering from it." Amy wasn't sure how she felt about Josephine's cold logic, but... she wasn't - she wasn't wrong.

"Think of what this could do for the Inquisition, Josephine. There's many still detractors and fence-sitters in the Chantry and the nobility. A few well placed-" Leliana started, but Josephine shook her head.

"The Inquisition is well-situated for now," the ambassador wove her words quickly, but clearly, before Leliana could start up again. "And I'm less concerned about what it could do for the Inquisition as what it could do to Amy."

What?

"You are not interested in being an object of reverence. There is only so much we can do about that at this point, given what you are, what you represent and what you can do." Josephine explained, looking at her. "But we can make this less difficult for you by not giving people even more of a reason to see you as sent by the Maker."

Amy let out a breath. "Thank you." Her gut churned, knowing it was just Josephine pitying her but - she couldn't help the swell of gratitude she felt towards the ambassador.

"...You do have a point about the limitations," Cullen sighed. "Haven is a poor place to serve as a base for anything, but the Breach is here, so there's not much we can do." He brought one hand up to the right side of his head and rubbed at his temple, his shoulders slumping. For a moment, his eyes closed, he looked like Amy felt after a night out at the hospital, completely and utterly spent, sleepwalking awake. He took a breath and opened his eyes again. "And while it would generate support for the Inquisition, and for Amy as the Herald, among those determined to hate us, and her - it would only give them more ammunition to argue she's a false prophet."

Amy blinked, not understanding how that worked at all, but she also didn't want to question it now that Cullen was coming around. Part of Amy didn't want to hide this, but seeing even Josephine have that moment of awed reverence...

Cold as it is, if people affected by it can't get here and I can't get to them, what does it even matter? If she saw someone suffering from the Darkspawn Taint in front of her, she wasn't going to do nothing. There was no getting away from that. But...

Amy swallowed.

"There is another possible concern." Cassandra added. She looked over at Leliana. "When you travelled with the Hero of Ferelden, did you learn the specifics of how one becomes a Grey Warden?"

Leliana looked at her a moment, then to Amy. Then back to Cassandra. A thoughtful expression on her face.

"I didn't know the Seekers knew. I can see how it might be a concern." She exhaled slowly. "None of the Grey Wardens I knew would be a problem, but... Kaliaus and Alistair are hardly normal in that respect. I'm not sure the risk to Amy is as great as you imagine, but..."

"As far as I'm aware, the Seekers don't know, it was merely one of several theories." Cassandra corrected. "But it would seem that theory is correct. And as for the risk, any additional risk to Amy is too much, under the circumstances.

Cullen looked from Leliana to Cassandra, "What in Andraste's name are you on about? I would think Grey Wardens would appreciate anything that could be of any harm to the Taint."

"Many might, but there are certain details about the Joining, the ceremony by which one becomes a Grey Warden, that are kept secret for a reason." Leliana said. "Kalaius and Alistair told myself and those they travelled with, but swore us to secrecy... under the circumstances, I think they would both forgive me for providing the full details now. But it must be kept secret - there will no doubt be more Blights in the future, but if word about it got out, the consequences for the Grey Wardens could be dire."

"What could be so concerning? There are many rumors about the Joining, I remember hearing many when the Fifth Blight began and in the aftermath, but they're usually quite salacious, and all scurrilous," Josephine sounded delightfully scandalized as she referenced a few, "Orgies, sex with beasts... ritual sacrifice." She laughed, "All nonsense." The humor left her voice. "But what could-"

"Blood magic."

"Blood magic?" Cullen's hands closed into fists.

"Blood magic?!" Cassandra grimaced.

"Blood magic!?" Amy blinked, "What the fuck does Blood Magic have to do with this? The Grey Wardens kill people to -" That wasn't - that wasn't okay. No matter how terrifying the Darkspawn or their Taint were

"No," Leliana interrupted. "One might not survive the Joining, and the Grey Wardens kill to protect their secret. Kalaius saw Duncan - the Warden who recruited him - kill a man who knew what the Joining was, and tried to back out. He tried to stop Duncan, but it happened too quickly."

Well, fuck. Cassandra had said Wardens would place everything else below their cause.

"If the secret is blood magic, I can certainly see why they'd keep it that way. What do they do?"

"Drink darkspawn blood," Leliana said blandly in response to Josephine's question.

If Amy had been drinking Coffee, her robes would be covered in hot brown liquid as she sputtered. Everyone else looked shocked, but-

"Are they insane? What the - That-" Amy jabbered incoherently for a minute, swearing at the absolute, complete, total and indeed infinite stupidity inherent in doing something like that. If anyone else was reacting to that, Amy

"They don't drink it directly from the vein, or unaltered," Leliana finally interrupted Amy, raising her voice a touch to be heard. "I do not know what they add to it, beyond knowing it involves lyrium. The concoction can be lethal to those who drink it."

"Well, yeah, because that shit is vile and toxic. It will eat you from the inside out! What - when Cassandra said there was a theory about Grey Wardens having the Taint I thought - I thought it was like... vaccines, or some magical exposure therapy or something, not fucking drinking Darkspawn blood!" She didn't know what Darkspawn blood would have looked like to her power, but she had to imagine it was even more full of the Taint cells.

"It isn't a slow death like the Taint. It is instantaneous, according to Kalaius, or close enough. Those who survive are immune to further corruption by the Taint, until it claims them decades on, and can sense nearby Darkspawn... and most importantly, are able to kill the Archdemon."

"How does drinking darkspawn Blood make it possible for someone to kill the Archdemon? It's a giant dragon, it's hard to kill but -" Cullen cut himself off. "I thought Grey Wardens knew some secret technique or... strange magic of the Blight that let them kill the Archdemons, not -"

"I do not know the how. Only that the final blow to an Archdemon must be laid by a Grey Warden, or the Archdemon will be reborn in short order." Leliana answered flatly.

Cassandra, Josephine and Cullen all piped up with questions or exclamations, but Amy tuned them out for a moment, trying to work out what she'd just been told.

Okay, so - how did someone discover how to do that safely without dying? In a world where magic was a thing, and blood magic was a thing, Amy could begin to see how someone might figure the key to fighting darkspawn, or the ever-respawning Archdemon, was in the blood. But... drinking it?

They had to have tried other things, first?

How did they stop it from consuming them? The whole thing about Grey Wardens going into the Deep Roads when they've Wardens for long enough to go down fighting fit into this - whatever they added to the darkspawn blood must have delayed it but...

If I could figure out how they delay it, maybe I could figure out how to...

Amy's hands itched again, and she wanted to go and find Blackwall, grab him, get a look at his biology. How close was he to that deadline? Would he need to go underground soon? Was it a set number, or did it vary? How did they know? Could she get any of those answers from him? If she revealed what she knew, would he try to kill her?

I mean... he might... Amy bit her lower lip, swallowing. Even if she had Katerina or Cassandra or someone else with her when she talked to him, if Blackwall was as fanatical as Cassandra implied Grey Wardens could be, he might be willing to go down fighting.

Start by getting a look at his biology. And don't try to expel the Darkspawn Taint from him and then burn it.

Of course, she couldn't just grab him and touch his bare skin like some weirdo freak. Amy's hands twitched. She needed to find out how it worked, but - how - how could she -

"-off topic. This is a terrifying revelation that I think we all might want to revisit later, though I can certainly see why the Grey Wardens keep it so secret even if... I might abhor their willingness to resort to murder to keep it. But I'm not quite sure why that relates to keeping the knowledge of Amy's ability to expel the Taint from someone a secret. How is it a risk to her?" Josephine asked.

"Because not every Grey Warden is a willing one, and even some of the willing ones might like the chance to get out of that eventual death sentence in the Deep Roads," Cassandra supplied. "And if that is a possibility we can imagine, then it is one the more senior, more dedicated Wardens can imagine."

"We already have people trying to kill Amy, and probably just as many people wanting to abduct her." Cullen sighed, looking and sounding bone-tired again, shoulders slumping, looking down at the floor, rubbing at his temples. "We hardly need to add disgruntled Grey Wardens, or paranoid Warden officers to either list."

"Five active plots to kill her, just two to abduct her, that I'm aware of at the moment. More than a dozen groups are contemplating killing her." Leliana's hands were behind her back as she supplied that information, as casually as if she was ordering dinner.

"Jesus Christ, I didn't need to know that!" Amy protested. Five active plots to kill me?

"None of them have any people here in Haven." Leliana promised, as if that was any reassurance. "They've all resolved to do it, but have not left the planning and preparation stage. I am, as you put it, giving them enough rope to hang themselves with."

"And the guy who sent the assassin on the boat? You knew about him?"

"Not enough to know how close he was to acting, or that he'd be foolish enough to act the way he did." Leliana admitted. "But Sera's arrival in Haven has already provided my people some useful information regarding the Inquisition's enemies. I suspect the Ben-Hassrath reports Iron Bull will fill things out even further. I take your safety quite seriously, Amy."

Amy bit back a petulant 'someone still got within inches of killing me' because... she believed Leliana was doing her best. Whatever else - and she really didn't trust Leliana, though she could hardly say why for sure - she believed Leliana was sincere about closing the Breach. And that meant keeping her alive.

"That's why you have a bodyguard." Cassandra pointed out. "Katerina did catch the man out."

"Yeah," Amy exhaled slowly. "She did." She rubbed at her own temples now. "So we've talked about Iron Bull being a spy, what I can do about the Darkspawn Taint and why we need to keep that a secret...?"

"There's merely the matter of deciding when we send Amy to Redcliffe-"

"We have hardly all agreed that Amy is going to Redcliffe, Leliana!" Cullen cut in. "Lord Seeker Lucius hasn't even had a chance to send word to Haven yet."

"You read the same reports my agents sent, you read the message Cassandra sent about what the Lord Seeker said. He's hardly suitable for an alliance."

"And the rebel mages who don't trust the Inquisition because it's too close to the Chantry are?" Cullen snapped back. "And there's still no certainty that more mages wouldn't just make the problem worse."

"It's a problem of magic, one way or another mages will be the only viable solution-"

"Do I need to be here for this?" Amy raised her voice over the two before they could go further. "I'll go wherever you decide we should go." All things being equal, she'd rather the mages - but Lucius had been the first one to make the offer, and his creepy main character syndrome aside, he had been very earnest to help.

Grand Enchanter Fionia's letter had been polite, and said all the right things but... noncommittal.

And of course, both groups wanted Amy to come to them, where they had power. Which totally didn't read 'possible trap'.

Sure, it's possible it's just a power play thing or whatever, like Carol making people come meet her in her office. But it could totally be a trap.

Not that they had much choice, did they? They had to go to one of them. Mages seemed like the better people but...

Whoever agrees to help first right? Both would be nice, sure, but - how could they do both?

"It will likely be a long discussion," Cassandra allowed. "I'll take you back to your cabin, and then I'll return here, and we can... resume the debate." She looked at the others, grimacing.

"A short recess to prepare would do us all some good," Josephine agreed.

The others all agreed to that, and Amy let out a sigh. They all left, and Amy paused by Josephine, waiting for Cassandra to get out.

"I - Thanks." Amy said after a moment, "For... for agreeing on the whole... not - not giving people more reason to look at me with awe, thing."

"You've made very few requests, despite your vital position, Amy. Your desire to not be the center of attention is quite evident, and I see no reason to subject you to that without very good reason. Like the confrontation in Val Royeaux... or the eventual meeting with either Grand Enchanter Fiona or Lord Seeker Lucius." Josephine reached out and put a hand on Amy's shoulder gently. "You're bearing up under quite a lot of pressure you're not used to, Amy. It's impressive that you have, but I don't want to make it worse for you."

Amy swallowed. Her chest felt tight all of a sudden, and she blinked repeatedly.

"Thanks," she said again.

"You are quite welcome." She looked back at the room they'd just left - Leliana and Cassandra just now stepping out, Cullen behind them. "I suspect this discussion will take quite a long while, perhaps into the evening. But perhaps we could have lunch together tomorrow? I did miss our discussions."

You did? Amy stared at Josephine, feeling like an idiot and then, "Yeah-yeah, of course." Amy swallowed. "I like talking with you too."

"I'm glad to hear it." Josephine said with a smile. Cassandra approached, and the ambassador nodded, stepping aside.

"I had a few questions I wanted to ask Solas. So we can just go over to... wherever he is?" SHe blinked, realizing she didn't actually know where in the village Solas was staying.

"We can." Cassandra nodded. "I must return here afterwards,-"

"I can - I can get to my cabin myself." Amy said. "I should be pretty safe in Haven now, by this point?'

"It's less your safety and more that you will be asked by people to give some sort of blessing you do not believe yourself capable of giving, if you travel unescorted." Cassandra cautioned.

"...right." Amy inhaled. She could have protested that she could handle those people on her own, but she didn't want to handle them on her own, and... that just -

"I'll have someone send word to Katerina," Cassandra offered.

Amy nodded. "We should... we should also see if anyone in Haven needs healing or - there's more people here now and it's been a while since I was last here, if anyone's gotten hurt or sick... I should heal them, since I'm here."

Cassandra looked her over for a moment, then, "Something can be arranged, but only if you agree to stagger the healing out. If there's too many, do not force yourself to do them all at once."

"Fine, fine, fine," Amy agreed after a moment.

"I'll hold you to that, Amy," Cassandra said almost sternly, but... somehow not? It was like, stern but concerned and warm but - also expectant, but expectant in the sense that she expected Amy to actually do what she promised and -

Amy swallowed, a tightness suddenly in her throat. She nodded.



Amy wasn't sure where Solas actually stayed or slept in Haven, since Cassandra didn't take her to a specific house or tent or anything. Instead there was a little hill next to the village where Solas stood. There was a small table and a chair set up on the hill, but he wasn't sitting at the moment, instead leaning on his staff as he looked out over the village.

"Has a verdict been reached about the Inquisition's next steps?" Solas asked, turning to look at them.

"Not yet," Cassandra answered tersely. "I... do not have much hope we will come to an agreement quickly."

"The Breach remains quiescent for the moment, at least, so we do still have time." Solas assured her.

"That doesn't mean we should waste time as we are," Cassandra sighed. "Amy wanted to speak with you, so I'll leave you both to it." She turned and moved down the hill.

"It is unfortunate that the Inquisition is stalled out, unable to pick a direction." Solas mused. "It has momentum, but it cannot afford to lose it now."

"What do you think we should do? Go to Redcliffe?"

"I am not personally affiliated with the rebel mages, but I am sympathetic to their desires. Locking mages up and limiting their freedoms is not an effective solution, nor a moral one. But," Solas shrugged slightly, "I am not the person that gets to decide."

"I... I agree with you, but... not up to me either." Amy sighed, "Anyway. That's not what I came to talk to you about."

"Have a seat," Solas gestured to the single chair.

"There's only the one chair."

"It occurs to me that it would be good to check on the wards on your mark again, and it would be easier to do that if you're seated. We can discuss what you wanted to while I do that."

It has been... right before we went to Jader the first time, I think? Her hand hadn't gotten any worse, but she'd rather he touch the wards up rather than let them fail first. She sat down and let Solas take her left hand in one of his, while he held the other hand over it, glowing a little, doing whatever... magical examination he did on the mark.

"So - I've been wanting to find a moment to talk to you about this since the Storm Coast. I think - I think one of Iron Bull's ancestors, like, a lot of generations back, somehow like... crossed their biology with dragons."

Solas's glowing hand stilled in its movements. "...come again?"

Wow. Something genuinely surprised him.

"When I got a look at Iron Bull's biology, it was - it was fucking crazy. It was like it was stitched together from a bunch of parts that shouldn't really work, but did. Or parts of it was like that, anyway. Other parts were more okay. But he also had these weird... vestigial organs that I couldn't figure out what they were for, and some of his biology - it felt... reptilian." Amy explained.

"Vestigial?"

"Useless. It's a thing. Most living creatures have them, some sort of... leftover thing, they don't use anymore. Like - does Thedas have ostriches? Or emus?" Amy gestured with her free hand, above her head. "Big, tall, flightless birds? Long necks, really long legs...?"

"I believe there are creatures of that sort in Western Orlais, among other places," Solas nodded.

"They have wings, but they can't fly. Vestigial wings. They don't do anything, they're just... there. That's what Iron Bull had. - Not wings, just - useless organs that were just... there. I couldn't figure out what they were ever for, until I touched that dragonling, and got a look at how it breathed fire."

"Given the Qunari's rather boastful nature, it seems he'd have mentioned if he could breathe fire." Solas's glowing hand resumed its movements, and Solas pressed the thumb of his other hand into the back of Amy's hand, digging into it. Amy grimaced a moment, and Solas stopped.

"Apologies." He stopped pressing the thumb, but still poked at her hand as Amy let out a sigh, then explained.

"No, he can't... but one of his ancestors could have, maybe. I don't know how it's possible, but... at some point, someone mixed the ancestors of the modern Qunari - which were at least close to human, even if the Qunari have pointed ears - with dragons." Amy gesticulated wildly with her free hand. "It's fucking crazy. I wish I could put how batshit Iron Bull's biology was into words. It was - it worked, it produced a fully functional, living person that is healthy- but it was two things that would never have naturally ever been able to combine... but they did. And the result is just...I mean, there's Tinkers back home that might have been able to make something like that," You could do it, with a bit of experimentation.

Amy swallowed and tried to ignore that thought, screaming the obvious at her as it had every now and then since realizing what was going on with Iron Bull's biology. It would have taken a lot of experimentation before, but now that she knew what it looked like...

"Tinkers are those who can make objects that do impossible things, like the... Bakuda, whose device brought you here?"

"Yeah. And there's some Tinkers that can do that with biology. But - you guys don't have parahumans here, as far as I can tell." She'd hardly touched enough people to get a sample size, but... magic wasn't a power in the parahuman sense, no one had even a dormant corona polentia, and the really damning thing to Amy's mind was that as far as she could tell, no one flew. Flight was one of the most common, really visible powers. If there were parahumans (or paraelves or paradwarves and so on) here, people flying should be a thing, at least a little.

"And you couldn't have had them however many generations - at least five hundred, six hundred years? More? - ago. So... I mean, it had to be magic, right? Can magic do that?"

Solas didn't stop examining her hand, and said nothing for a long moment. Amy was about to speak again, wondering if he'd gotten distracted, when he finally spoke up.

"It is possible. Through magic, much is possible, and the Fade holds many memories of magics that should never have been practiced. I have seen echoes of memories of old magics, Tevinter and Elven alike. Using magic to create new life or changing existing life is possible. But it would take rare power for it to be something capable of reproduction, and lasting hundreds of years forward."

"Most things would be sterile?" From what little she knew about Blasto, his creations were sterile, but when Vicky had mentioned that, she'd said it was probably so he didn't get a kill order. But maybe with the way magic worked, it was a lot harder to make them... stable?

"What I saw of Magisters with more cruelty than sense when they set to create strange hybrids, as much to see if they could as anything else... many of their creations were misshapen, broken things. Pitiful creatures that couldn't last for more than a few days, in most cases. Even those successes that lasted seemed to be unlikely to be able to survive to reproduce." Solas shook his head, letting go of her hand. "I've touched up the wards around your mark again. They continue to hold well."

Amy looked at her left hand. These days, she almost didn't notice the dull ache - almost - that was her constant companion. She wasn't getting any more used to the feeling she got when she closed the rifts though.

"Thank you."

"And some of the memories I have seen in the Fade... echoes that suggest that the elves of Ancient Arlathan did much the same, though their creations were more stable. It is said in the oldest stories, long-forgotten by the modern Dalish, that Ghilan'nain, the patron of guides and navigation to the Dalish today, once created many monstrous and twisted beasts, in the ancient days. So great were her creations and so terrible were they in their awfulness that the Evanuris - those known as the elven gods today - offered her membership among them, if she would destroy her monstrosities and put her skill in creation of life to more productive use."

Amy blinked. "Someone who wasn't a god could become one? That seems... odd?"

"If the Evanuris were indeed gods, then perhaps, but that raises the question of what defines a being as a God." Solas looked down at her, hands clasped behind his back, his staff sticking upright in the ground.

Great. Philosophizing.

"I... I don't know. Being really powerful?" She blinked, changing tack as she registered the meaning of something else he'd just said, "You don't worship the elven gods?"

"Sorry to disappoint."

"I'm not disappointed, I just... I kind of assumed you did, since you obviously weren't Andrastian."

"I have a great deal of respect for Andraste, what she preached and what she achieved. There is much to like about the Maker, if he exists, though his followers... less so." Solas explained, speaking slowly, with as much care as he usually did. The man probably carefully chose every word he'd ever said in his life.

If he had a power, he'd be a Thinker. And he'd be smug about it too. But he wasn't a Thinker, and while Amy would hardly say she liked or trusted Solas, she was at least pretty sure they were on the same side right now...

"I believe that the Evanuris were beings of great power - mages, perhaps, or spirits, that there is some truth behind the legends. If great power is enough to be considered a god, then perhaps they were such. I wouldn't agree."

"Okay..." Amy was surprised to learn Solas was basically an atheist - didn't really seem like the kind of world where that was a thing - but it wasn't an issue. She just... didn't know what to do with it. "Are any of the things this... Ghilan'nain," Amy stumbled over the word, mispronouncing it despite her best efforts.

"Ghilan'nain," Solas corrected.

"Ghilan'nain," Amy tried again, and Solas shrugged a little, as if to say 'good enough'. "Is anything she created once she was Evanuris still around?"

"Ghilan'nain is known as the mother of the halla, and the halla are still used to this day by the Dalish to pull their aravel - carts, essentially.." Solas supplied.

"And are halla monstrous?"

"No. They're quite beautiful in appearance, actually. They look much like deer, but their fur is the purest white, are larger, and have many more horns. In the days before the Dales were overrun, the border guards of the Dales rode halla into battle, much like human knights ride horses. The Dalish revere the halla, considering them members of the clan."

"Huh." Amy felt that itch again, to touch something. Were the halla like elves, in the whole 'not even having the right proteins' thing then? If elves were made from scratch by magic and that was why their biology was so wrong, then if halla had the same thing, then it would be a sign they were also made from scratch by magic, or close enough?

Or had they been made from deer, and so might look more like the Qunari?

"As for the Qunari themselves, I admit... I know little about them. Nothing about their past before they arrived here in Thedas in the Steel Age. I imagine if I could travel to wherever they came from, the Fade there might have memories of their past, including possibly the merging of the essence of a dragon into their form."

"How could they have done it? I mean... how did the Tevinter Magisters, or Ghilan'nain make their things?" What other weird animal and plant life did Thedas have? It was weird, and... upsetting, the way she was reacting to this. It was like when her power was new and fresh and she didn't realize all the horrible stuff she could make, but she did realize now. So even with this weird biology, she shouldn't be so eager to...

I'd ask what the fuck is wrong with me, but I know what the answer is. Amy swallowed.

"There are a number of general possibilities. Few that should ever be replicated." Solas brought one hand to his chin for a moment, then turned away to look at the village below. "Tell me, your abilities... they could allow you to do this? Combine dragon and Qunari to create the hybrid being that Iron Bull's forebears might have been?"

Amy stiffened, heart pounding in her chest, breath catching. Amy started at his back, light-headed a moment before she managed to force herself to breath. "I'm a healer. I heal. That's what my power does. What - what makes you think it could do that?"

"I didn't suspect until you said you manipulated the ram's body to expel the Taint." Solas explained. "That implied a far greater level of control than mere healing. And then your revelation about the Qunari... I don't claim to understand your power, but given everything... it seemed odd that you might be able to read all that, but not... recreate it. And your... poor denial rather solidifies it. You are indeed capable of creating all manner of hybrids and even monstrosities, no?"
 
Chapter 19 New
Amy Dallon, Herald of Andraste

By Kylia

Chapter 19​

You are indeed capable of creating all manner of hybrids and even monstrosities, no?

Amy stared at Solas as his words echoed in her mind, bouncing around it like a rubber ball off a wall.

Two years of hiding the full range of what she could do. Even Vicky didn't really know - or at least, didn't really seem to have registered - the full range of what Amy could do. The sheer range of awful things she could make, the changes she could wreak on any living thing she touched.

Two years, and this bald elf who didn't know powers existed just a few months ago had figured her out?! If he did, who else could?

Amy closed her eyes, inhaling in fast, shallow breaths, heart beating fast in her chest. She had to she had - she had to -

She braced, ready to stand, to run, to -

Why... why am I... why am so-

Why was she getting ready to run? This - this wasn't Earth-Bet. This wasn't the Bay. This wasn't - Solas wasn't Carol. There was no PRT here. No one could compare her to Blasto or Bonesaw or Nilbog here. And she wasn't - him knowing didn't change what she would or wouldn't do -

He knew what she could do but... even if Solas told people... would it even matter? Would people actually care? People who hated her already would still hate her and the people who revered her because they thought she was sent by the Maker...

Amy closed her hands into fists and tried to take a deep breath. That failed, but she tried again, and it failed again, but less.

"Capable, yes. But I won't. I never will!" Amy said firmly, raising her voice, then flushing as she realized she was nearly shouting. "I didn't ask for this power, or to be able to do all these things that I can do." She looked down, a pit in her stomach opening up as she contemplated the things she could do, the things she'd never do. She tried to take another deep breath, and this one worked, mostly. "I don't want to make anything... no hybrids, no monstrosities, no... nothing. I just heal. That's all I want to use my power to do." All she was allowed to want to do. She had to stick with that. She had to.

She had to.

She had to.

Solas said nothing for a moment, then, "Admirable."

Amy blinked, looking up at him, blinking again. "Huh?"

"You have the ability to make new life, Amy. I imagine that given sufficient time and material, you could create an entire army of creatures subordinate to your will."

I could, couldn't I? Once she made something, it was it's own thing, she couldn't control it, she had no direct ability to influence it but - she could program something she made to respond to something only she had? Pheromones, or maybe she could make some sort of specialized -

Amy bit the inside of her cheek and sent that train of thought veering off its tracks into a chasm, to explode in a fireball of death and destruction and never doing that so she could stop contemplating it!

The pit in her stomach expanded and grew deeper and she wanted to tumble into it and go splat just for thinking of that.

"...I could." Amy nodded slowly, swallowing.

"And yet, you have no desire to do it, no desire to use your powers for anything other than healing, helping people. In my experience, rare is the person who would have the potential that exists at your fingertips and not seek to use it for their own aggrandizement."

"I..." Amy trailed off.

"Your abilities don't even require large amounts of lyrium or blood magic to operate." Solas added. "You merely require living material?"

"...yeah." It was kind of annoying how easily Solas was putting it all together, but... "I'd really - don't tell people about this?" She said, trying to make her voice as firm as she could manage. It wasn't very, her voice shaking a little to make it even less intimidating. "Please?" She felt light-headed, swaying a little where she sat. She tried to take another deep breath, but it still didn't really work.

It wasn't like she could do anything to Solas to shut him up. And - and would someone care? They wouldn't. She already established that. And yet.

She couldn't let people know. She couldn't. Because what if she was wrong? What if they decided she was a monster, if they found out she could make beings?

Or worse - or worse...

Amy's breath caught again and she felt herself go lightheaded again, breathing shallow, fast...

Or worse... they'd try to worship her even more. She could literally 'create life'.

Not really, but - the people of Thedas wouldn't get the distinction. Most of them anyway.

"I see no reason to, all things being equal. Your secret is safe with me," Solas promised. He tilted his head to the side. "A question, if you'll allow it?"

"Go ahead?"

"Have you considered using your abilities to improve existing creatures? Make a cow more resistant to disease, or a chicken that lays more eggs? You could feed a great many that way, if you make such changes hereditary."

"I've thought about it," Amy admitted. There was no point in lying and it was almost... liberating to admit it to someone. Well, admit it when she wasn't crying and breaking down, like she had when she'd told Cassandra more about the full range of what she could do. "But it's not that simple. Life has... trade offs. If I make a chicken lay more eggs, it has to eat more, or sacrifice something else in the body, and I don't - I don't know how that would end up in the wild. Life changes over time, would the change I made stay, or get worse or-" Amy trailed off.

"And making something disease resistant - it's a nice idea, but it's - it's not that simple either." She blinked, wondering how she could explain it. How did you encapsulate the entire concept of evolution to people that didn't have it? Especially when it related to like, drug resistant bacteria and supergerms and -

She put her hands over her face and pulled them down. "A living body's ability to resist disease is this... really carefully tuned thing. Diseases are usually caused by viruses, or bacteria - literal tiny, too small to see forms of life. But not all bacteria are harmful - some are essential. Humans have tons of bacteria in their guts to help with digestion." She blinked and looked as Solas, thinking back to when she'd looked at elven biology and when Solas had been holding her hand and checking on her mark she'd had a look and she'd been too busy talking to really pay attention but now that she thought about it...

"I don't think elves do though..." she added, trailing off. Another thing that didn't make sense about elves. Didn't... like... every living thing have gut bacteria? Every animal that had a gut, anyway? Most of them anyway? That sounded right. Amy didn't remember offhand any animal she'd touched that didn't...

She shook her head, "Not the point. But - making a cow better able to resist the bad stuff without making it too good that it hurts the good stuff too? Easier said than done. And then there's the fact that... viruses and bacteria change, adapt, over time."

"Doesn't every living thing?" Solas asked. If he was following any of what she was saying, he didn't show it, but he also didn't show he wasn't. He had that same impassive expression on his face he always did.

"Well, yes, but for viruses and bacteria, it's really fast. Back home we - we use a lot of medicines. Fancy, powerful medicines that can do all kinds of stuff. But sometimes we use a certain medicine so much, so often that a bacteria will... adapt to it, and suddenly, the medicine doesn't work on it, won't cure people." Her power made short work of drug-resistant bacteria without a problem, but...

"These... viruses and bacteria adapt to become better at spreading?" Solas surmised, and Amy nodded.

"If I just... put a cow that can resist disease out there... short time, it's great? Long term..." Amy shook her head. "There's a million reasons why it's risky and a bad idea or at least - it's not that simple. And..."

And she couldn't use her power for anything creative like that anyway. She just couldn't. She had the rule. She had to set that hard line and stick to it.

"It is unfortunate, I suppose, but it is also better to consider the long-term ramifications of your actions, when you have the luxury." Solas said after a moment. He looked past her, down the hill. "I would continue our discussion, but it would seem we are about to have company." He nodded and Amy turned to look down the hill and saw Vivienne approaching.

She wasn't wearing the same elaborate dress she'd worn at the gala back in Val Royeaux, or any sort of mask, but she was wearing a dress, white and black in a similar pattern, and way, way too fancy to be walking around a dirty village in and -

Was she wearing heels? What the absolute -

If she falls and breaks her neck because she's wearing heels while walking on snowy grass like this I am not healing her!

"Amy, dear, I've been looking for you since I heard you were back in Haven." Vivienne said as she crested the top of the hill, her tone sweet on the surface, but steely underneath, reminding her of Aunt Sarah when she was making sure some PR flack didn't screw up the photo op or merchandise announcement. "I was wondering if I might borrow you for a moment, if you're done with your conversation?"

Amy looked over at Solas. She had talked to Solas about what she'd wanted to talk about and then he'd ambushed her by revealing he understood so much more about her power than she'd thought.

"Please, don't let me detain you," Solas gestured for her to join Vivienne. "Our discussion has given me much to think about. As I said, you have my discretion."

Amy bit her lip, then nodded. "Thanks."

"I gather you are Solas?" Vivienne asked as Amy stood up from the chair. "An apostate?"

"With the dissolution of the circles, are not all mages apostates, even loyalists like yourself?" Solas offered. "But yes, I am called Solas, Madame de Fer." He inclined his head.

"I was quite surprised to learn not only were former circle mages already here in the Inquisition when I arrived, but that one such as yourself, who was never part of a circle, was a member. I should quite like to discuss your reasoning in joining the Inquisition some time, Solas." Vivienne offered, her tone not changing at all. It was sweet and friendly and oh so polite but that steel underneath was unflinching.

"My reasoning is quite simple: I am able to be of assistance, and so I am," Solas's tone wasn't the same as hers, but it definitely was matching it in terms of energy. Somehow, Amy imagined that if they were both flinging spells at each other, they'd sound exactly the same.

Just listening to them talk for a minute and I'm already exhausted. Why be polite if you didn't need to be? What was the point? Vivienne was a few steps short of some sugary-sweet tone that was so obviously fake it would fool no one.

"Fascinating. But I would like to have words with Amy here, so perhaps another time."

"Another time, Madame de Fer," Solas agreed. Vivienne turned and Amy followed her down the hill.

"So... what did you want to talk about?" Amy asked.

"Quite a few things, but chief among them, you." Vivienne answered as they reached the bottom of the hill. "Or rather, your behavior. Tell me, is it true you spend most of your time, when you are in Haven, shut up in your cabin?"

"...kinda?" Amy admitted. "Cassandra has me jogging and I'm sure I'll have to pick up staff practice again some more because she likes whacking me with wooden objects and I usually have lunch with Josephine most days, when I'm here. But... when I'm not doing anything else, like healing people, I'm inside."

"Well, that won't do at all, Amy. You're the Herald of Andraste, the centerpiece of the entire Inquisition. You need to be out, visible. You're far less useful to the Inquisition hiding away like a recluse."

I like hiding away like a recluse, damnit.

"If anyone needs me, they know where to find me." Amy answered.

"This isn't about your abilities as a healer, or the way you close the Breach, dear girl, this is about being seen, being visible, and being there for those who have flocked to your banner." Vivienne explained. She gestured around them as they walked, and Amy looked to see people pausing whatever they were doing, where they were going to stare at her, some murmuring to each other. Not everyone was, but a lot of people were.

Faces she recognized as having been in Haven the longest were the least likely to stare. But the new people...

"It's not my banner!" Amy protested. Where was Vivienne walking? Where was she supposed to be going with her? "There's no reason for me to just... walk around randomly?"

"It shouldn't be random, no," Vivienne turned and Amy realized they were walking towards her cabin. "I think we should continue this discussion in private, however," She added.

"Amy!" Katerina's voice called out and Amy turned, seeing the redhead jogging towards her. "There you are! Cassandra told me you were talking with Solas but when I went to find you and escort you back to your cabin you were gone."

"My apologies, I absconded with Amy to have a word with her." Vivienne said. "She's quite safe with me, I assure you."

"I don't think you're a threat to her, but escorting Amy around so people don't bother her needlessly is still part of my duties." Katerina explained. "Not saying you're doing that." She added quickly. "Just -"

"It's fine," Amy waved her hand. "I forgot you were coming to get me." She didn't want to keep talking with Vivienne, she could tell the other woman was going to try to pressure her to... go out? Do... local PR stuff, basically? Shake hands and kiss babies. And...

But Vivienne was also important and connected and Josephine wouldn't appreciate it if Amy snapped at the woman and told her to go away. The ambassador wouldn't like... be upset with Amy much, didn't really seem like her thing, but it could make her life a little harder and Amy didn't want to do that to Josephine.

"We can talk, but I've got a lot to think about and deal with, so... not for too long?" Amy told Vivienne, approaching the door of her cabin.

"There is a great deal that should be discussed, but I will try not to impose on you too much," Vivienne promised. Amy opened the door and let her in. Katerina raised an eyebrow at her and Amy shrugged helplessly.

Vivienne looked around the cabin. "Given the conditions in Haven, this is quite suitable."

"Glad you approve," Amy muttered. She sat down on her bed, and gestured to the chair. "You can sit, if you want."

Vivienne sat down gently, primy. "Sarcasm is the lowest form of wit, Amy, and hardly befitting someone in your position."

"My position?" Amy rubbed at her temples. "And just what is my position? Herald? I'm nobody's Herald, and I'm not going to pretend that I am. I'm Amy Dallon, Panacea, and that's it."

"Whether or not you see yourself as the Herald of Andraste is quite immaterial to whether or not others do, Amy." Vivienne said, echoing something she'd heard from damn near everyone.

"And I need to cater to their delusions?" Amy snapped, raising her voice. "I didn't ask for any of this! I just want to close the Breach and go home. If people want to think I'm sent by Andraste or the Maker then they can, but I'm not going to do anything to reinforce that!" Amy threw her hands up. "They just see this stupid mark on my hand and think that means I'm holy because they can't think of any explanation for things happening that isn't just 'Maker did it!'"

Vivienne raised an eyebrow as Amy let out a breath, casting her eyes down at the floor.

"Are you done with your little temper tantrum, child?"

"Temper tantrum?!" Amy glared at her, "What the fuck are you talking about?"

"Language, Amy," Vivienne chided. "There can be a time and a place for foul words, I must admit, but one must be judicious in using them if you want to be taken seriously."

"I don't want to be taken seriously!" Amy said, then flushed as she realized what she was actually saying. "I don't want to be taken seriously in the way you're trying to get me to be," she corrected, speaking quickly.

"And what exactly is 'the way I'm trying to get you to be'?" Vivienne asked. "I've hardly had the chance to explain anything."

"You want me to go out and pretend I'm actually the Herald of Andraste and be nice and diplomatic and play politics and care about all the nobles and rich idiots and cater to their whims and probably start doing healing on demand for them too!" Amy snapped.

Vivienne chuckled, and Amy flushed again, feeling like she was being mocked. "Amy, dear child, you'd have a much easier time in your life if you stopped presuming on what others were thinking, especially when you are so far off the mark."

"Fine. What exactly do you want? What is this about?"

"I can see I have much work ahead of me. Tell me, Amy Dallon, I have heard that you tell stories of your family back home - Master Tethras especially has apparently regaled everyone in the tavern with tales of your sister, Victoria. Are they true?"

"If Varric's sharing them, I'm sure he's exaggerated, but everything I've said about my family and sister is true." Amy sighed, dropping her head into her hands and then groaned. She should have realized Varric was going to start spreading stories of her sister. Probably jazzing them up with extra details too, since Amy wasn't actually much of a dynamic storyteller but -

I suppose it's not the end of the world for more people to know how amazing Vicky is though...

"And your entire family has these sorts of abilities?"

Amy wondered if she should just write this all down and then have printed copies made - they had printing presses here, was one in the village? That way she could just hand everyone a 'frequently asked questions about the Herald' cheat sheet.

  1. No, she's nobody's Herald and she has no special connection to the Maker
  2. Her ability to heal isn't the result of the Maker's blessing, she had it before she came to Thedas and before she ever heard of the Maker
  3. No she can't give you a blessing
  4. Yes her family also has special powers. Yes her sister and cousins and Aunt can fly.
  5. No you can't call her Panacea
  6. Or Panpan. This means you Varric Tethras

"Yeah, they do." Amy wondered just where Vivienne was trying to go with this. She looked at the woman, but her expression was hard to read, beyond 'confident' and 'controlled'. "Where are you going with this?"

"Patience is another skill you need to learn, Amy." Vivienne chided. "One last question: Your family operates under nom de guerres to combat criminals and malcontents, complete with elaborate costumes, correct?"

Amy had no idea what a 'nom de guerre' was, but it sounded like 'nom de plume', which Amy knew meant, like, a pen-name or something, so it had to be similar. A reference to cape names, clearly.

"Yeah. All capes have special names. Most do it to hide their identity, but New Wave doesn't hide. We're about being accountable, setting an example to other capes and showing people that hiding behind masks isn't how we do things." Amy parrotted stuff she'd heard Sarah say without much conviction. She... she believed in it, she did, but she just... couldn't bring herself to be as concerned about it as Aunt Sarah, or Carol...

"Then you should understand that appearances matter a great deal, Amy. Your sister dons a costume - white and gold, a crown, even-"

"A tiara." Amy corrected, almost automatically. "Not a crown. She's not - it's not about doing some sort of... princess thing, like everyone always says." Amy had gotten into fights with people on PHO about this, when people made fun of Vicky's costume. "It's a reference to a statue back home - a famous one, sort of a... symbol for the country we're from. And the statue has these... it's sort of meant to look like the rays of the sun coming up behind the head, and so it looks like the statue has a tiara, and Vicky's tiara looks like that." Amy got off the bed and moved over to the desk, where her phone still rested. The battery, solar-rechargeable as it could be, was charged up again, but Amy couldn't really do much with it, and not wanting it to be damaged, she hadn't taken it when she left Haven.

She turned it on. "This is a thing that holds images. Like paintings, but... not." Amy explained. Her lockscreen was of them both not in costume, but she had plenty of pictures of Victoria in her costume. She pulled the first suitable one she found up, showing it to Vivienne. "See, it's not even that crownlike."

The picture in question was one of Victoria at a PR event, since it gave a clear view of her whole costume, posing back to back with Crystal, both their hands hands raised in fingerguns like characters on a TV show poster or something.

"That's my cousin Crystal with her," Amy explained.

"Interesting. Though irrelevant to the point at hand. Your family uses these costumes, and assumed names to present a clear image of what you are, what you stand for, no?" Amy nodded, because... that was sort of why they still used the names. That and pretending there was a divide, between cape life and not cape life, even though there wasn't. Not wearing costumes didn't stop people asking Vicky for autographs when they recognized her, or squeeing over Eric or pestering Amy with requests for healing...

"Then your family understands that perception is a form of power all its own. Appearances are not everything, but they are quite important. Being seen to act is often as important as acting, and the masses are often fickle. Your performance in Val Royeaux has rebounded in your favor, and of course the people here in Haven are largely your greatest supporters, but it is not something to take for granted. And yet, even though it's clear none of this is foreign to you, you insist on spending much of your time shut up in here, or otherwise alone, away from the people. Even using your bodyguard to 'keep people from bothering you'.

Yeah, she's giving me major Aunt Sarah vibes. Amy considered as she parsed Vivienne's words. Vivienne was saying it differently than her Aunt would, but it was basically a lot of 'PR is vital' type stuff. How they needed to be representing New Wave all the time, especially when people approached them.

"And how is this different than telling me I should play nice and diplomatic?" Amy demanded, sitting back down on the bed, holding her phone.

"Because I don't especially care if you 'play nice', as you put it. By all means, be rude and biting, speak your mind as bluntly as you wish, and if you do not wish to provide your healing on demand, don't. There's many ways to use that quite effectively. But I do insist that you do it where all can see, and where you can remind people who you are, what you represent, and you can advance the Inquisition's position."

Amy blinked. That was... nothing like her Aunt. "How is being rude and being blunt going to help the Inquisition? That's not how public relations works?"

"Public relations?" Vivienne laughed, "An interesting way to describe it. But this is not about relations, Amy. It's about the Game. It's about controlling the way you are seen, the way people talk about you. The first step, of course, is ensuring that you are spoken of. You have that well in hand simply by being the entire reason for the Inquisition's existence-"

"I'm not the reason for the Inquisition's existence!" Amy protested.

"Amy, dear, without your ability to close the rifts, without the fact that so many people see you as sent by the Maker to save us all in this time of desperate need, the Inquisition would not have achieved even a tenth of what it has so far, let alone what it will. The courage to act when the rest of the world continued to dither and debate in the face of this chaos might carry it far given time, but the people flocking to your banner, the resources increasingly at the Inquisition's command are there, and are doing so because they believe the Inquisition has a strong chance of success. People do ever so love to be on the winning side."

Amy swallowed as she realized Vivienne actually had a point. Maybe. She didn't think Vivienne was giving Cassandra and the others enough credit. Josephine could still have done her diplomatic magic, and Cassandra would have still wanted to restore order in the Hinterlands and could have done a lot of that without her, but...

I mean, I can close the rifts. No one else has even the slightest idea how closing the Breach would go, as far as I know. And they didn't know how to stop it from growing...

"And by stopping the growth of the Breach, and then continuing to prove your prowess closing rifts in the Hinterlands and your showing in Val Royeaux, you have convinced many that the Inquisition is the winning side."

"Then why do I need to go out?"

"Because power is a currency that must be used - used carefully, but used. If you have a large pile of gold that you hold in a vault and do nothing with, you are not rich, you are a miser. A rich woman lets her gold be of use. And a powerful woman, a powerful organization, puts that power to use. You are the foundation of the Inquisition's power. And so, you must put that to use by being seen. You cannot be a recluse amongst your followers."

"They're not my followers! I'm not in charge of anything!" Amy protested. "And I - I don't want to be seen. I hate people's eyes being on me!" Amy looked down at the ground. "I like being a recluse, damnit!"

"The world is on the brink of chaos, and the Inquisition - and you - are all that stands in the way of things collapsing entirely. Does what you want really matter when set against that?"

Amy blinked, swallowing. No. I guess it really doesn't matter. She didn't want to be here. She didn't want to fight demons, or wear armor or go jogging or traipse all over this stupid world and close rifts. She didn't want her power, she didn't want to heal, she did because it was the right thing to do. Working to close the rifts and the Breach was the right thing to do.

But...

I - I can't - what exactly would going out accomplish? If it was that important, Josephine would have urged her to do it, right? Or Cassandra?

Or maybe they're too pitying and too worried I'll break... Amy swallowed again.

"You keep saying I need to go out and 'be seen', but... I - what do you actually want me to do?"

"I want you to play the Game, before the Game plays you, Amy Dallon." Vivienne answered, as if that meant something. It sounded like fake-profound nonsense to her. "I believe the Inquisition is our best chance for restoring order, and having joined it, I will not be content to see it fail because the Inquisition decided it was above the Game, and because you decided to hide in this cabin."

"This isn't a Game!"

"That's exactly the sort of mindset that will undermine the Inquisition in Orlais. Refusing to play the Game is a losing strategy," Vivienne said, leaning forward a touch. "You are in a position of power, and now you need to act like it. You need to stand out, you need to be noticed, and you need to remind people of your authority and power. And the first step towards that is to be out and about. Be rude, if you wish. Be blunt and direct, if you must. But be."

"...that's the opposite of helpful," Amy muttered. "You're just telling me to go outside and just... talk to people? Just that simple?"

"The most important things often are quite simple." Vivienne countered. "Simple doesn't mean unimportant, or easy."

"And what am I supposed to do when people ask for blessings? Fine, maybe the locals know not to, but anyone new? I'm not going to pretend that I have some sort of connection to the Maker."

"Then don't. Tell people you can't." Vivienne said. "If you are quite insistent on refusing to play the role of Herald, then you need to communicate that to people. If you want people to not ask for blessings, to believe you when you say you have no connection to the Maker, that you weren't sent here by him, you need to tell people that. And then tell them again. And again. Hiding away only cedes control of your narrative, Amy." Vivienne stood. "There is more I would like to discuss with you, but I can see that you're perhaps at your limit. Consider my advice, and act on it. Speak to Josephine if you wish, she'll certainly agree with me that being visible is better than not. I'm rather shocked she hasn't been pushing for you to be out more already."

Because she's too busy pitying me... Amy tried to push back at that thought. It wasn't pity, right? It was - Josephine was a good person, and nice, and respecting that Amy just... didn't want to be at the center of attention.

But if it would make Josephine's life a little easier? Improve the position of the Inquisition...

"I'll consider it." Amy said... wishing she was lying, but knowing she wasn't. "...Thanks. I guess. For offering advice. You're trying to help."

"I am helping, my dear. The question now is if you'll help yourself. Until later then," Vivienne inclined her head lightly and then left the cabin, walking in a purposeful, almost but not quite sedate stroll out, closing the door behind her - or almost, anyway. Katerina grabbed onto the door before it closed and stepped inside, letting it swing shut as she came in.

"You okay?" Katerina asked. "Madame de Fer didn't give you a tongue lashing that flayed your skin off?" She paused, "Metaphorically, anyway."

"I'm fine," Amy muttered. Was Vivienne right? Did she have to...

She had to, didn't she?

"So that's a lie," Katerina said with a snort. She looked Amy over and her eyes came to rest on the phone in Amy's hand. The screen was still on, still bright, still displaying the picture of Vicky and Crystal. "What's that?" She took a step closer, tilting her head to the side a little to get a better look at it.

"A phone. It's... a... device for communicating over long distances." How the fuck did she explain a phone? "And it also holds pictures... like, paintings, but not."

Katerina raised an eyebrow, smirking. "Ah, another one of those 'it's an impossible device that isn't magical, I swear!'?"

"It's not magic," Amy muttered without heat. "But yeah, another one, like cars or movies." Amy sighed and held the phone up, giving Katerina a better look at the picture.

After a long moment of staring at the picture, Katerina spoke up again. "The one on the left, in the white and gold. That's your sister Victoria, right?"

"Yeah. The other one is my cousin Crystal. They were posing for a... photoshoot for... It doesn't matter. But Vicky started doing the fingerguns - that's the hand gesture they're doing - and Aunt Sarah got annoyed and then Crystal started doing them and the photographer thought it looked good so he had them do it... Aunt Sarah was pissed, but Vicky was laughing the rest of the day." As she always did when talking about her sister now, she felt herself perk up a little... and she also felt that ache in her chest she always did when talking or thinking about Victoria now.

She missed her sister.

"...I barely understood half of that." Katerina shook her head, "Nevermind though. Crystal is the one who flies and shoots fire from her hands?" Amy wondered if Katerina had questions about the phone she wasn't asking because she knew Amy wouldn't have answers, or if she didn't care, or if it was just so out there for her she didn't even know what to ask?

"She is. Well, she does, but so do Aunt Sarah and my other cousin."

"That one is Eric, right?" Amy nodded in response to Katerina's question. "You said pictures. Plural. You have more?"

"Yeah." Amy turned the phone back to her and flipped through several before finding a good one - it was a picture she'd taken of her sister as she'd been standing outside the hospital waiting for Vicky to pick her up. It was right as Vicky came in for a landing, swooping down. It was a really good picture of her sister, detailed and got a good look at all of her, especially her face. Amy showed Katerina that one.

"You know, you talk about your sister a lot but you've never mentioned how pretty she is. Really, she's downright gorgeous." Katerina commented, smiling.

"I know." Amy looked away. Her own gross crush aside, Amy was no stranger to people, even other girls, thinking her sister was hot. PHO even had a thread called "Gay for Glory Girl" full of lesbians and bi girls who talked about how hot she was. It was just barely within the PHO rules, the one time Amy had looked at the thread (and just felt worse about herself afterwards).

"I know that tone of voice," Katerina sat down in the chair Vivienne had just vacated minutes before. "That's the 'my sister is so pretty I feel ugly by comparison, tone. You're not, by the way."

Amy lowered the phone into her lap slowly, not really conscious of the movement as she stared at Katerina, her brain feeling like it had stalled out completely. It wasn't so much the comment that Amy wasn't ugly - Amy knew she wasn't ugly, just plain, Glory Girl's mousey, unremarkable sister, with the freckles and the frizzy brown, boring hair and the -

No, what was making Amy's brain grind to a halt and slowly start up like a car that had engine troubles was that Katerina had somehow gotten it into her head that... what? Amy resented her sister being pretty? Or... felt overshadowed? Or -

I don't resent Vicky or anyone else in my family for being objectively attractive. Why resent basic facts? She was plain, they were all photogenic and conventionally attractive and - and she wasn't. But she didn't resent them. Didn't feel overshadowed, didn't yearn to be pretty like them - even when she'd been younger and tried to use makeup to cover her freckles or that time she'd tried to bleach her hair blonde, it had been out of a desire to fit in, to look like she'd belonged, not a desire to be pretty.

Because I'd thought Carol would love me if I looked more like a Dallon.

Besides, it was a good thing Amy wasn't pretty like the rest of her family. If she had been, Aunt Sarah would have tried to rope her into more PR events, or worse, tried to make her wear a more 'flattering' costume. Something more like the bodysuits everyone but Vicky and she did. Or even something like what Vicky wore.

I'd look ridiculous in Vicky's costume.

Either fate felt like one worse than death, really.

Once more misunderstanding Amy's reaction, Katerina spoke up again: "Don't look so surprised. Those robes don't do you any favors - not like your sister and cousin's outfits do - but we did share a tent and stuff. I've seen you without them. You're pretty, Amy."

Amy flushed, cheeks feeling hot and she felt it going all the way down to her neck. Katerina's tone was appreciative (which was obviously an affectation as part of her lie. Amy wasn't pretty), but it didn't come off as like... gross? Or that Katerina had perved on her in their shared tent or rooms. Just like she'd seen Amy without robes and (pretended to have) liked what she saw. It wasn't as if Amy hadn't noticed that Katerina was attractive. The redhead had a pretty face (nothing compared to Victoria) and had a nice body under her armor (again, nothing compared to Victoria, but then, at the end of the day, to Amy, nobody in two worlds held a candle to Vicky).

"You don't need to lie." Amy said firmly, wishing she could just sort of melt into a puddle and escape the situation. Why would - why was Katerina even lying? What possible gain could she have to pretend that Amy was pretty? Amy knew she was plain, she was fine with that she -

Maybe... maybe she's worried she'll lose the bodyguard job? Katerina did enjoy being Amy's bodyguard. That much was established. But there was Iron Bull now and he'd offered, and sure he'd backed down when Katerina had tried to like... stake a claim to the job but -

"I'm not going to replace you with Iron Bull or anything," Amy said quickly. "So you don't need to butter me up or... whatever this is." She was starting to get used to Katerina, and as long as they focused on stories and books and stuff, she liked talking to her. "Even if he beats you in the spar he offered back when we met him." She imagined that was still on, once Iron Bull actually got to Haven.

Katerina snorted again, "Oh, in a spar, Iron Bull will knock me on my ass." Her tone was bland, unbothered. "He's got like... two and a half feet on me? He's stronger, and has to have at least a decade more combat experience than I do. My only question is how long I last in that first bout."

"So, what, if a Qunari decided to try to kill me I should just accept death because you're going to be useless then?" Amy latched onto the topic change and the chance to turn things around onto Katerina like a liferaft. Even as she said it, she knew she was being unfair, but... right now, she didn't care.

Unfazed, Katerina shook her head, "In a real fight, I'd raise my chances a little. Qunari don't wear armor on their torsos, and in a spar, you have to hold back." She leaned back in her hair, spreading her arms a little. "Iron Bull would still probably win, but he's also taller than most Qunari according to Varric, at least compared to the ones Varric saw in Kirkwall, and I'm sure there's plenty of Qunari with less experience in combat than me, or just not as much as Iron Bull."

With a shrug, Katerina concluded: "More importantly, in a real fight, I'd last long enough to give you a head start in running away." She leaned forward, expression earnest, smiling, "Anyway, I wasn't lying. I never lie when it comes to pretty girls."

"Stop it! Stop - just stop!" Amy protested, feeling even redder than she'd already been.

"Of course, of course, sorry," Katerina held her hands up to shoulder level, palms out in a gesture of surrender, concession. "I wasn't making any advances or anything, just stating facts. Not trying to make you uncomfortable either." She leaned back in her chair again. "To change the subject entirely then: what did Madame de Fer want?"

Amy blinked, feeling absolute whiplash at not only the topic change itself, but the choice of topic to change to. She stared at the floor, taking a deep breath and taking a long moment to collect herself and her thoughts, trying to will her flush to go away.

"She wanted me to learn how to play the Game, before the Game played me," Amy summarized.

Katerina scoffed, "Sounds suitably Orlesian. Also absolutely meaningless."

"It did sound like one of those things that sounds profound but means nothing at all, yeah," Amy agreed, managing a small smile. Then she sighed, "She thinks I'm hurting the Inquisition by staying all shut in the cabin most of the time, and... I think she's right."

"Make, don't tell her that or she'll lord it over you forever," Katerina gasped exaggeratedly in mock horror.

Yeah, I could see that. The way Vivienne had seemed to be mocking her or talking down to her... though Amy was guessing Katerina was basing that more on not liking Orlesians than anything else.

"You really don't like Orlesians." It wasn't a question.

"Well, they're awful. The nobles anyway." Katerina said it as if she was saying the sky was blue and water was wet. "Not that most Nevarran nobles are much better, I suppose, but... the Orlesian nobility is just that extra level of convinced their shit doesn't stink." Katerina chuckled, "It's always a competition with them, and they always change the rules until they win, and they think they're just so much better than anyone just because they're Orlesian..." she shook her head. "Fucking Templar Order was lousy with the 3rd and 4th born sons and daughters of Orlesian noble families. Find a place for the useless shits and then look what happened."

"Hm." Amy didn't really know what to say to that. Katerina's judgement of the Templars was... well, biased. Every time they came up, even Amy could feel the disdain rolling off the other woman. Amy didn't like the Templars either, based on what she knew, what she'd heard, and just... logic, but Katerina was just... obsessed with hating them.

Sure, nobles probably sucked, rich people were shitty everywhere, but was nobility the reason the Templars sucked? Or was it just because the Templars sucked?

Amy exhaled. "I have a lot to think about... and I want to read some more."

"You need to finish 'Her Hidden Dedication', yeah," Katerina agreed. "It looked like you were about halfway through last I saw. Did you get to -"

"I got to the first kiss," Amy answered, and Katerina grinned.

"That was so good, wasn't it. Fucking finally right?" Katerina let out a long, exasperated sigh, throwing her hands up for a moment. "I spent the eight chapters leading up to that scene resisting the urge to scream at the book, to scream for them to just fucking kiss already! The pining got so old, so fast."

"...I liked the pining," Amy admitted. "It was painful, sure, but also beautiful..." she smiled and let out a breath. "That said, it was pretty cathartic when they finally admitted how they felt and kissed and... yeah. That was a really nice scene."

"You liked the pining? The two idiots refusing to admit how they felt to the other for ages?" Katerina raised her voice, mouth gaping open, absolutely stunned. "What the fuck is wrong with you?!"

The ensuing 'argument' - more good natured ribbing and impassioned debate - about the pining in the book and in romance stories in general lasted for nearly an hour, driving all other thoughts from Amy's mind as she tried to convince the infuriating redhead that she was right. Eventually though, Katerina got hungry and left to get food. Amy stayed in the cabin, and unsurprisingly, food was brought to her a little later.

It was being brought food by a servant - because Amy kind of had servants... which she really should have reacted to and registered sooner, because what the absolute fuck?! - that really made her reflect on what Vivienne said, on what it meant, and what she could or should do about it...

She wasn't in Haven that much, really, compared to how much time had passed since she'd arrived in Thedas. But in all the time that she'd been here, apart from the day she'd woken up and had lunch in the tavern, Amy's food had been brought to her by a servant. Either here in the cabin, or during lunch with Josephine. People did Amy's laundry for her and someone cleaned the cabin for her and brought buckets for her to use to wash up and...

Fuck it's like I'm Dean or something...

It wasn't that she could wash her clothes herself - Thedas didn't have a washing machine and she didn't know how people washed clothes in the middle ages, or how they'd managed to keep the white in her robes from fading. And... at least when she was having lunch with Josephine... Josephine probably ate in her office anyway because she was busy and stuff. Amy didn't actually have anything to do when she was in the cabin. Just... sitting there.

When she was doing nothing then, she really should go get her own food. Especially since I don't even know the name of the person who brings me the food. It was the same person every time - presumably someone that was trusted to not poison her and that's why it was the same person every time.

Amy hoped the person at least had other stuff to do - whoever cleaned Amy's clothes probably did laundry for a lot of people, all the soldiers and stuff? - but Amy should still know the woman's name. Should say hi. She did thank her... usually, and had this time but...

She really should go out. Go to the tavern, get food. Take it back to the cabin maybe (though it would get cold by then), but... It would get her out of the cabin, make her more visible, and then she could try to tell people that she couldn't give blessings, didn't have some sort of link to the maker.

Vivienne had talked about controlling her narrative, basically. The sort of thing Aunt Sarah would say. The sort of thing Sarah had said. If she said it enough times to enough people, said it herself, rather than relying on other people to say it for her...

Maybe people would start to believe her? Or at least stop asking her about it. Enough times saying no had eventually made people stop asking Panacea for requests. It had taken too long, way too long, but...

Vivienne's probably right that staying in here all the time isn't good. It might not hurt the Inquisition that much - Cassandra or Josephine would have said something if it was like... crippling the organization, but...

She didn't want to make either woman's life harder, and if she could make it a little easier by being out in the open a bit and... being seen...

Resolved to start tomorrow, Amy ate and then spent the rest of the evening, and indeed, well into the night, reading. She burned a candle down to a tiny nub as she finished 'Her Hidden Dedication'. She'd meant to just read a few chapters, or read until it really started to get dark, but instead, she'd been gripped, and she just kept going, unable to put the book down, squinting as it got darker and darker and all she had was the one candle as she pulled the blankets of the bed up over her and kept reading.

But the story. The story! The knight and the noblewoman knew how the other felt, but the social pressures hadn't left, the noblewoman's father had settled on a marriage match - a much older man that was as personally repugnant as he was brutish, reminding Amy of Beauty and the Beast's Gaston - and an old rival of the knight's had arrived into the story, determined to ruin the knight's life one way or the other... and when he learned of the feelings between knight and noblewoman, he decided to try and kill her.

Which had led to a gripping, epic swordfight.

All of those plot threads, and a subplot involving two neighboring lords in a border skirmish made everything so engrossing that she had to keep reading, had to keep going. It was an eagerness to finish reading that she'd thought she'd lost, even as she'd slowly recovered her love of books the last few weeks but... it was back, and she couldn't, wouldn't stop, even if it strained her eyes to read by the candlelight.

She had to get to the end.

And she did.

Fuck, it was - it was so good.

The rival was defeated and disgraced. The noblewoman did have to get married, but she found a much better option than the one her father had picked - one of the two lords competing in that subplot was gay and unmarried - or 'exclusively preferred the touch of men', as the book described it - and the noblewoman was able to convince him to make an offer for her hand. His pedigree was more than good enough for her father, and he was wealthy and connected - and not only did he get a marriage (hen like the noblewoman had social pressures to get married too) he got an ally in his border skirmish in the form of the noblewoman's father.

The two would have to try to have kids at some point, but they both could in clear conscience focus on their own lovers - the gay nobleman had one in the form of a poet he patronized, and the knight moved with the noblewoman to her new husband's household, and the story had culminated in them pledging their love to one another in the closest they could come to a marriage... followed by them making love for the first time.

That final scene wasn't enough to awaken Amy's long dead and atrophied libido, but it was the closest she'd been to turned on in ages. She'd been too engrossed in the story as well to feel bad about being almost turned on as well, too.

Once the book was done, she blew out the almost dead candle and laid back, managing to fall asleep surprisingly quickly...



She didn't remember her dreams when she woke up, but she did, as she felt awareness slip into her like water being poured into a cup, feel like she'd had dreams, and good ones at that.

Her good mood - she'd literally woken up smiling - was ruined somewhat when she'd realized she'd slept later than she'd meant to and breakfast had already been brought in while she'd slept. Not off to a great start on the 'getting her own food' front, but...

Still. She had the whole day. Lunch was with Josephione, but she could do her own dinner, and she was going to leave the cabin of her own accord today! And just... walk around the village.

So she ate, and made and drank a cup of coffee, banishing the grogginess. She got dressed, pulled on her robes and... didn't pull her hood up over her face. Not that it would hide who she was - her robes were distinctive - but...

Wearing her hood seemed to run counter to the 'be seen' thing.

She stood in front of the door to her cabin, hand on the handle, closing her eyes, inhaling, trying to psych herself up.

It's just... going outside. It's just for a bit. You don't have to do it for long. Just walk around a bit, don't bite people's heads off if they try to approach you. Maybe see if anyone needs any healing? If there was anything urgent, someone would have said something yesterday when they got back, but since she was here, she could check in to see if there were any injuries or illnesses that she could heal. With all the new soldiers arriving and being trained and stuff there had to be injuries there, at least?

Maybe I'll head for the training grounds then? That seemed like a good start, yeah. She could sort of meander in that direction, right?

I can maybe see if I can get a look at Blackwall's biology too, right?

The whole point was to go outside and be seen, but that - that didn't mean she couldn't also do something else at the same time, right? Two birds, one stone.

She could do this. She took another breath, opened her eyes and turned the handle, stepping outside.

The guard out front of her door wasn't Katerina, but another soldier she recognized, but didn't know the name of. Well, no time like the present to start with the...

She nodded to the guard as she stepped fully outside.

"Good morning?" She didn't mean it to sound like a question, but she sort of stumbled over the words and it ended up coming out like one.

The guard blinked, clearing his throat, eyes wide, surprised she was talking to him, probably, then pressed his closed fist to his chest in a Thedosian salute. "Herald."

"Please don't call me that," Amy said, trying to force herself to keep a calm, measured tone... "My name is Amy." She paused, "What's yours? I - I've seen you guarding my cabin before, when Katerina's not on duty, but I don't know your name."

"Uh - I - my name is Aylward, Her- uh -" He cleared his throat. "My name is Aylward, Amy."

"I'll - I'll try to remember that. Uhm... I guess since I'm leaving the cabin you don't need to stand guard? Do you need to follow me around?" Amy really hoped he didn't need to. If she had the guard right with her, then people might decide to stay back and she was supposed to want people to approach her...

"Seeker Pentaghast didn't instruct me to follow you... but I don't think she expected you to leave the cabin before Katerina came to relieve me..." he trailed off. "I should probably go with you..."

"Is there really any chance someone is going to try to kill me here?" Amy pointed out.

"...maybe not, but all it takes is one madman with a knife..." he pointed out.

"Look, I'm just going to the training ground and back. I want to see if any of the recruits need healing or anything, and talk to the Warden, Blackwall." Amy insisted. "I don't - I'll be fine. Go - go have breakfast or something."

"I already ate a few hours ago," Aylward answered. "Her- Amy, I - I really think I should go with you, if you're not going to just wait for Katerina to come and relieve me."

"And I think I'm fine." Aylward was about her height, so he didn't have the longer legs Katerina did that let the redhead outpace her so easily. Which meant if she moved quickly, maybe she could get far enough ahead of him...

"If you go with me, people will avoid me, and I'd - I'd like to try not having that this time," Amy added. "Besides, if you go, when Katerina gets here, she won't know where I am." she added, hoping one of those two explanations would work on him. She took a breath and before he could respond, she turned, hurrying towards the village gate, breaking into a jog quickly.

"Wait!" Aylward called after her, but Amy didn't slow down or look back. She turned and moved quickly down the stone steps to the lower half of the village, drawing eyes and attention and Amy swallowed, breathing catching as she noticed people stopping to stare at her - because she was running through the village like a woman on a mission as much as anything else, probably - and she slowed down without meaning too, coming to a complete halt - and doing so quickly that she stumbled and nearly fell over, flat on her face. She caught herself at the last moment on a pile of crates stacked up outside a house - the crate she grabbed slid and nearly toppled off the pile, but not quite.

Amy straightened up, flushing.

No one approached her just yet, and Amy swallowed, and looked to see if Aylward was behind her or anything, but it seemed like he'd decided to stay by her cabin, or maybe he'd gone to find Cassandra or something.

"Herald, please, a moment of your time," someone said as Amy started moving towards the village gate again. Amy turned at the sound of the Orlesian-accented voice. Thankfully they weren't wearing one of those stupid masks, but his clothes were kind of fancy-looking, underneath the warm-looking cloak that Amy felt a little jealous of.

Her Panacea robes were not very thick or warm. The clothes she had on under them were warm, but also kinda scratchy and uncomfortable.

"Don't call me 'Herald'," Amy said quickly, curtly, then she flushed again, clearing her throat. "That is," she added, trying to have a more normal tone. She tried to channel Josephine a little, likely to no avail, but... "I don't have any special connection to Andraste, or the Maker or - I'm not a Herald of anyone, and my name is Amy Dallon."

"But you are the one everyone calls the Herald, Mademoiselle Dallon?" The man pressed. "I have an urgent matter for the consideration of the Inquisition, and my master instructed me to deliver it to the Herald personally." He reached into his cloak and pulled out a sealed letter. "Count Guiscard du Perelle wishes the Inquisition's assistance with a matter involving Lord-"

Amy held up a hand. "I'm not in charge of anything!" She flinched a little as she realized she was raising her voice, and "Sorry." She muttered, looking away. "I - I don't make decisions. I just close rifts and hopefully soon, the Breach, and heal people. I - I can pass the letter on to Josephine Montilyet?" She offered, since that seemed like the think Josephine would want her to do, rather than just tell a Count's messenger to fuck off.

"I... I am - you do seem to be younger than I expected, Mademoiselle," the messenger said. "My master was under the impression you could make decisions on behalf of the Inquisition."

"I can't. And I wouldn't know anything about whoever the Count needs help with or - unless he's got a rift on his property that needs to be closed, there's nothing I can do." People were watching the conversation, though hardly everyone. Out of the corner of her eye, she saw two people murmuring to each other, but she didn't catch what they were saying.

"I... yes, please, take the letter to Lady Montilyet. The Count did instruct me to ensure the letter reached your hands personally." Amy reached out and took the letter. "Who - who will be making the decision on the Count's request, so I know what to tell him?"

Hell if I know. But I guess the same people who make all the decisions? "...Lady Josephine and Sister Leliana and Commander Cullen and Seeker Cassandra, I guess? They run the show together?" Amy put the letter into a pocket. "I promise I'll hand it to Josephine, but I have something else I need to do first. Uhm... should I tell her your name?"

"I am Onfroi. You may tell Lady Montilyet I can be found at the tavern, waiting for an answer." He gave her a quick, shallow bow, and departed, striding away from her.

Amy swallowed. Not quite the interaction with someone she'd been expecting, or wanting, but... it was something?

Unfortunately for her attempt to get to the training grounds, that sort of seemed to be the floodgates opening. She got approached by three more people before she could get there. The first one had come from a village a few days away and said her daughter - who she had taken with her - was sickly, prone to being bedridden for days at a time, and she'd come to beg for Amy to heal her.

"I don't do special requests for healing," Amy said quickly, almost on autopilot. Before the woman, whose lip was quavering and she looked to be on the verge of crying or yelling, Amy added, almost as quickly: "The alchemists and healers in the village have set up a place over near the Chantry, over that way," Amy half-turned and gestured, "For people that need my help to go. I'll - I'll be there later today. Is - is she sick right this second?"

The daughter wasn't doing great, but it wasn't urgent, and Amy promised to heal her when she went to heal for the day.

The next one was another person who seemed like a new arrival, asking Amy about the Maker's will for them or - something, she didn't really follow, he quoted something (probably the Chant of Light). Amy explained, trying to stay calm and level and taking deep breaths and closing her hands into tight fists and digging her fingernails into her palms, that she didn't have any connection the Maker and didn't know his will or anything. She moved on before he could answer - Vivienne said she could be rude, and this guy deserved that.

The third didn't so much want anything from Amy so much as to like, talk her ear off thanking her (and more importantly, the Maker) for stopping the Breach from growing and then finally asking when they would close it. Amy had answered 'soon, hopefully' and brushed past him.

The training grounds were a flat, open space surrounded by tents a few minutes walk from the village, and she caught sight of Cullen talking to a woman in Templar armor off to one side, his furry shoulder-things pretty hard to miss. On one side of the training grounds a bunch of people were doing some sort of spear training, maybe? Repetitive motions and stuff. Archers were firing bows at targets, and a bunch of wood and straw dummies had been set up and she saw Blackwall walking up and down the line of them as he gave instruction to the people there, an assortment, some not even in armor yet, who were holding shields in one hand and swords in the other, instructing them how to swing at the dummy, pausing at one point to grab one of the recruits (that's what they had to be) and manually readjust his feet and arms.

Amy felt that itch to grab him and get a look at how his biology was working and how he was able to not die from the Darkspawn Taint (yet) and then she could maybe work backwards from there and figure out how to innoculate -

But then she'd have to expose people to the Darkspawn Taint to test it and that seemed like a terrible idea and she couldn't just like... keep samples of that shit around to test with and -

If she was going to offer to heal the trainees, should she go straight to Blackwall, since he was overseeing some, or start with Cullen, since they were his people?

I feel like Cullen makes more sense? She wasn't sure, but...

She approached the Commander. The woman he was talking to spotted her, and pointed towards her and Cullen turned.

"Amy?" Cullen blinked, staring at her a moment. Then he rubbed at his forehead, that same sort of completely exhausted vibe she'd picked up from him yesterday. Amy didn't really like that she related to the man at all, but... that was a look she'd seen in the mirror, returning from the hospital all the time. Run down, spent, exhausted, wrung out. "I wouldn't have expected to see you here."

"I'm... trying out being more visible. Out and about and - noticed."

She didn't like Cullen. He was a Templar more and for longer than Katerina was, and so he'd had to have turned a blind eye (at a minimum) to so much more than her bodyguard. He also defended the Templars and had made an excuse for their rebellion.

But she was the guy in charge of the soldiers and that was what mattered here.

"Anyway, I - I decided I wanted to see if any of the recruits or soldiers needed healing. Even something minor. Training probably gets you bruised a lot, right?"

"All the time," the woman with Cullen said before Cullen could.

"Lysette is correct, it's very common," Cullen agreed. "But anything serious would have been dealt with by the healers here, or called to your attention already, now that you're here. Minor bruises are part of the learning process anyway. You don't learn to fight without a bit of pain. Helps prevent you from making the sort of mistakes that get you killed."

That was a pretty cold mindset, though Amy had heard similar ideas from people before. She'd once healed a kid of their early-stage cancer, but her mother had refused to let her heal the boy's 1st degree burn on his hand, because the kid had touched a hot stove and the mom had wanted her son to learn his lesson about why that was bad.

The kid had been fucking four. She'd actually tried to report the mother to CPS for that, but it hadn't gone anywhere.

"Still... these people are basically expected to die stopping demons from killing me, if they're around a rift when I'm there trying to close it." She inhaled. "Really not comfortable with that part, by the way." She added, muttering.

"If you die, all hope of closing the Breach dies too." Cullen pointed out. "I wouldn't say the lives of any of our soldiers is expendable, but you don't become a soldier without knowing there's a risk of dying for a cause you've decided is worth it. And protecting you would be worth it, under the circumstances." He let out a breath, rubbing at the side of his head again. Did he have headaches? Migraines?

"I know. Doesn't mean I'm happy about it. But my point is, if they're supposed to die for me - I - feel like healing them if they're hurt is the least I can do. Even if it's just a little hurt." She wasn't lying about hating the idea of people dying for her - she wasn't worth that, except that she was because she really was the only one who could close the Breach, at least at the moment. And she wasn't lying about it being the least she could do for them.

But she wanted to check on and heal the trainees so she could have the excuse to check on Blackwall's biology. See how the Wardens actually made a body immune to the Darkspawn Taint. Or... mostly immune. She really hoped there was a biological explanation, something she could actually pick up on, actually detect. The Darkspawn Taint was from the Fade, so maybe the 'cure' was too, but...

Magical in origin or not, the Darkspawn Taint did have biological impact. It existed physically and biologically and she could sort of detect it with her powers. 'Magic' had like... real effects. It produced fire that burned like normal fire (and then created burns that were healable like normal burns) and so... she could hope whatever Grey Wardens did showed up in Blackwall's biology.

It made sense that it would, anyway.

Cullen looked at her a moment, then nodded, "Alright." He raised his voice, shouting, "All trainees, stand down and form up, parade rest!"

It took a minute for everyone who was training or practicing or drilling to sort of... stop what they were doing and lower spears or swords or bows and then longer for them to organize themselves into rows of people standing on the flat area of the training ground, standing at attention - not quite stiff, salute level attention, and they weren't all standing at attention very well - but they were sort of trying to.

"Clearly we need to work on this a bit more," Cullen said. "I expect faster response times from the Inquisition's soldiers. But for the moment, we'll be doing something different. By now, many of you will have heard of Amy Dallon's healing abilities. They are real, and they are not magic. As soldiers of the Inquisition, if you are injured in the line of duty and she can get to you, she will heal you. Are any of you injured, even a little?"

About a third the soldiers raised their hands, some a little more hesitantly than others - Amy noticed at least one who only raised his hand because he saw others doing the same.

"Not just bruises from training or whatever," Amy added. "Minor sickness, or any sort of long-term issue, even aches you've gotten used to, could be a sign of something more serious.." A couple more people tentatively raised their hands. Then more. After a minute, it was at least half the soldiers. Maybe even two-thirds. She took a breath, and added one more thing. "One more thing: I know a lot of people think I was sent by the Maker or Andraste or... something like that. I'm nobody's Herald, okay? So don't - don't fucking call me that. My name is Amy Dallon."

Cullen looked like he was about to say something, shoulders lifting as he opened his mouth, and then he closed it, letting out a breath, as if thinking better of whatever he was going to say.

Vivienne said control the narrative. I just need to keep repeating it. Over and over again.

"I'll go down the rows and check on everyone who's raised their hand." Amy said. What she wanted to do was sink into the earth. She could feel all those eyes on her, and raising her voice like that and addressing so many people -

It wasn't as bad as talking to the Grand Clerics had been, trying to insist on getting her speech right even after the interruptions and stuff, but -

There weren't any serious issues. She had a lot of small bruises and muscle strains to heal, and a bunch of microfractures in bones - stuff that people probably thought was just a minor ache or something. She got a few who had pulled muscles that caused consistent minor issues that they'd powered through, or other stupid things. Some minor infections. One person had what Amy was pretty sure was a variant or relative of gonorrhea. Amy almost didn't heal her, but after a moment, she did.

Gross.

In the end, she healed twenty-one people, and that took over a half an hour. Most of them really were quick, minor healings she could practically do in her sleep, and the rest were still pretty simple. Gonorrhea Lady was the longest to handle.

When she was done, Amy let out a breath. As she'd finished with each person, Cullen dismissed them, and the people who hadn't needed any healing, having them return to training. Blackwall hadn't formed up, and he hadn't volunteered needing any healing, so she bit her lower lip, and stood there, trying to figure out what to do, how to get him to just -

Just let her touch him already!

Finally, Amy approached him, "Blackwall?"

"Aye?" He turned away from the trainees he was overseeing. "How can I be of service, Messere Dallon?"

Amy blinked. "Messere?" What the hell did that mean? He said it the way someone else might say 'Miss' or something? Maybe? Kind of felt like that, anyway...

"I'm sorry, I'm used to the Free Marches way of address," Blackwall admitted. "Years in Orlais and it still sticks. Messere is a term of respect, an address for someone of importance. You said you don't want to be called Herald, but an organization relies on a proper chain of authority, so I shouldn't be calling you by your first name." Blackwall didn't sound stiff, or formal as he said it, more just... matter of fact.

"...I'm fine with being called Amy. I'm not in charge of anything."

"If you gave an order, really gave it, most people in Haven would follow it," Blackwall told her, and Amy looked down at the ground, biting her lip. "You might not be in charge, but you are the one who can close the rifts. That puts you above me - right now, I'm just here to help train the recruits. If you need me in the field, I'm happy to be of service that way as well."

"Just - call me Amy, please. That's my name." Amy bit her lip again, looking away, taking a breath and rubbing at her forehead. "Anyway, that's not - my offer to heal extended to you too. You're here helping the Inquisition, so if you get sick or injured or something, if I'm around, I'll handle it. I'm faster than a potion and I can do most things easier than magic can."

"That's a very kind offer, and I'll be glad to take you up on it if I'm ever injured or sick," Blackwall said."

Goddamnit man, just fucking let me get a look at your biology.

"You said you were out in remote places for a long time on your own, right? Maybe you picked something up?" Amy offered. "I'd be happy to check. Old injuries too."

Blackwall considered her words a moment, "I took an arrow to the shoulder a few years ago, right where it meets the arm." He gestured on his left shoulder where he meant. Basically right at the point of the joint. She could imagine that might have scraped at bone or something. "Didn't do anything permanent to mobility, thankfully, but it sometimes still feels sore. Nothing serious, but by the time I could get a potion it was too late and -"

"Happy to take care of it." Amy said quickly "I need to touch bare skin to heal you though," she nodded to his gloved hands. Blackwall tugged the glove off his left hand and held it out. Amy grabbed it, finally getting a look at his biology and...

He was just a guy?

A human guy.

He had slightly better than average teeth by Thedas's standards, but that was at best 'barely acceptable' by Brockton Bay's standards thanks to modern dentistry. He definitely had an accumulation of minor scars and build ups of smaller injuries here and there that hadn't one hundred percent healed, and it seemed like he'd gotten stabbed in the torso at least once by a spear or something. Healing magic or a potion had probably gotten to it but it left a trace inside his body.

Blackwall had callouses on his hands, not just from swords too - some reminded her of a carpenter she'd healed once, so he probably did woodworking.

Normally Amy didn't pay that close attention to biology but as she looked him over and healed some of the minor injury build up - it seemed fair since she was just using him to satisfy her weird fucking obsession with understanding the Darkspawn Taint - she couldn't fucking find the Darkspawn Taint.

Where the fuck - where the absolute fuck was it?

If they drank the blood and it ended up killing them eventually, even if thirty years later, then it should be there, even if it was somehow dormant, held back by.... Something.

But it wasn't there.

It fucking wasn't there!?

"Where the fuck is it?" Amy muttered.

"Mess- Amy?" Blackwall asked, and Amy realized she'd said that out loud, letting out a small 'oh' as he startled her back to paying attention to her surroundings.

Don't tell the Grey Wardens that you can do anything with the Darkspawn Taint, so I shouldn't mention I'm looking for it and -

Was he even a Grey Warden?

Maybe? Maybe it's some stupid magic shit and it's there and -

Amy's instincts were telling that couldn't be it. That the Taint would have to leave some kind of physical trace that it was in him, right? That shit was a nightmare, an abomination, a goddamn sin against reality (what the fuck? Why was she thinking about it in those terms?) and - and she couldn't accept that it wouldn't leave a trace.

"Sorry, I'm just trying to find what the arrow did to your shoulder so I can heal it. It was taking a minute to figure out." Amy looked at his shoulder, finding a nick in the bone around the joint. "Hey - while I'm - something's been bugging me since I met you. Is Blackwall a nickname?"

"It's my surname," Blackwall explained. Amy noticed his brain light up a little and that was -

Is that?

Amy was not a foolproof lie detector. But she wasn't half-bad at it either, and that looked like a lie to her power. Maybe.

"My name is Gordon Blackwall," he said, and that sure seemed like another lie, "But after years as a Warden, I got used to going just by Blackwall - Maker, it's what I call myself in my own head sometimes. Never really liked going by Gordon."

Okay, that's weird because that one sort of feels like it was true.

"How about if you keep calling me Amy, I'll keep calling you Blackwall, rather than Gordon?" Amy offered, trying to slap a fake smile on as she let go of his hand. "Your shoulder should be healed. I dealt with a few other minor leftover bits of injuries that didn't completely heal."

'Blackwall' moved his left shoulder experimentally. "I do feel better than I have in a few years." He inclined his head. "I appreciate it, Amy."

He's lying about something. I'm sure of it. Where the fuck is the Darkspawn Taint? It should be there! It should fucking be there, magic disease bullshit or not! There should be a trace of it! There was nothing. And his name wasn't Gordon Blackwall. Which made no sense.

"Amy!" Katerina's voice ringing out made Amy turn back towards the village and she saw the redhead stalking towards them. "What - what are you doing just leaving your cabin and wandering around!?"

"I wasn't in any danger!" Amy pointed out. "The worst I had was some people trying to talk my ear off when I came out towards here. Stupid people thinking I have a connection to the Maker."

"That's why you don't go wandering around without me, so I keep people away from you, which I thought you wanted." Katerina pointed out. "And Haven is safe, but you don't stay alive by taking stupid risks, Amy! Stupid risks like not having a guard with you at all times! Are you even wearing your armor under your robes!? I thought we were done with you avoiding being guarded after that idiot tried to stab you at the Crossroads!"

"No! I'm not!" Amy shouted back. "I'm not going to wear armor all the damn time!" Amy flushed - she'd actually forgotten about that idiot who'd tried to attack her at the Crossroads, but now she did remember him, and Katerina berating her for sending her away after that too. But still. She wasn't - she -

You weren't supposed to wear armor all the time anyway, right?

"I'm not saying wear it all the time, but if you're really going to try ditching having a guard, wear it! I do not want to find out you got stabbed somewhere important!" She grinned, "I'd get my hide ripped off by Commander Cullen and Lady Pentaghast for one, and there goes my interesting job protecting you."

"...that doesn't seem like the right reason to not want your charge to be hurt." 'Blackwall' chided.

"Warden, with all due respect, you don't know Amy," Katerina offered. "And what I said was mostly a joke. Obviously I don't want her to get hurt for a lot of reasons."

"She saved my life from an assassin on the way to Val Royeaux," Amy said. "And I'd rather she make comments like that then call me 'Herald'."

"Alright." 'Blackwall' paused awkwardly, "I - I guess that's what you want then. But should you be arguing so loudly in the open like this?" Amy looked around and noticed people were staring. Cullen was staring, the trainees were staring, passing other people were staring. Not everyone, one trainee was intently focused on whacking his sword at his dummy to the point it seemed like he didn't know what was happening around him, but -

"...no." Amy flushed, pulling her hood over her face, bowing her head and shrinking in on herself.

Fucking fuck fuck. Now I just look like a petulant whiny brat.

"What were you even doing?"

"I came to see if any of the trainees needed any healing, and then I did the same for Warden Blackwall here." Amy said quickly. "And to tell them all not to call me Herald."

"...that last one sounds like you at least," Katerina muttered. "Looks like you're done with all that. Are you going anywhere else next?"

"Are you going to stick to me like a limpet?"

"That's my job."

"Then don't keep everyone from approaching me. I need to actually tell people I don't have a direct line to the Maker or Andraste or anything like that if I want to make it sink in." Amy said. "And right now, I need to talk to Leliana."

Leliana was the one who knew about the drinking Darkspawn blood thing. She was the one who recruited Blackwall. She needed to know this guy was lying about his name and was probably not a fucking Grey Warden.

He can't be. I just - I just know it! The Darkspawn Taint has to be there! I refuse to accept anything else! Biology was biology, even if magic was messing around with things. And he was fucking lying about his name, she was sure of it.

Even if he is a Grey Warden, he's lying about his name and I feel like Leliana would want to know that. How did she not pick it up? She's a spymaster? Isn't that shit her job?!
 

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