Two was enough for at least a couple days, and I kind of got the biggest threat back off our doorstep before I was brought here. We can -- they can rebuild. By the time I get back...if I get back...they'll have rebuilt the third.
It's all really old, and the person who understood it best is...she's dead now. What kind of machines?
Can they promote one of your colleagues in your absence?
[Climbing the Mystical Career Ladder in Thedas was something more like the way Strange had risen in his medical career.]
About knee high, like a globe set on top of a pedestal. The emit a hum that reinforces the harmonic frequency the Veil operates on. They're old. They seem to date back to the Elvhenan Empire. Which fell millennia ago. Sorry, common knowledge.
Oh, yeah. That's not a problem. I mean, I'm pretty sure it's a problem to be a man down, period, especially if they're trying to look for me at the same time as everything else, but I only just got assigned to the New York sanctum, like, the day before I got brought here. It's...more of a problem that Earth doesn't have a Sorcerer Supreme now. Don't -- if you talk to Billy at all, don't tell Billy that part. I'm supposed to be the Sorcerer Supreme in his world and if that's gonna happen in my world, it hasn't happened yet.
[Maybe he shouldn't have embarked on this conversation. It feels good to talk, though, even if later he'll regret this level of over-sharing.]
There's something that might be kind of like that in Kamar-Taj. I never saw the mechanisms in the sanctums, they're kind of...buildings. The buildings might be the mechanisms.
[But lying to his traveling companion if Billy expected knowledge, wisdom, or the skill associated with that title wasn't something Dorian was going to do.]
Architectural magic?
[Dorian is very eager to hear more about that.]
We have something similar. Buildings laid out as glyphs. The time and effort required are incredible. So naturally they tend to be the work of either the Elvhenan Empire or the Tevinter Imperium. Some say the entirety of Kirkwall is one big spell that uses the alleys and buildings to channel power. It might explain some things about Kirkwall in general if that's true.
[Stephen doesn't much like the sound of that halfway promise, but he's successfully distracted by the bit about the buildings.]
That's my guess, yeah, without having done my reading yet. When Kaecilius and his zealots were trying to take down the sanctums they were destroying the buildings themselves. What about Kirkwall would that explain?
Kirkwall's Circle has a long history of madness and death. Even the soporati who should be immune to such effects frequently report feeling as if someone is watching over their shoulder. The Knight-Commander of the Templars of the Kirkwall Circle appears to have been a bit hrm, overzealous even before she got her hands on a cursed object. Southern Templars can repel magic.
If the city itself is a glyph channeling magic, it would keep the area unsettled. And I don't just mean rumors. There are verifiable patterns that far more mages go bad and far more murders happen in Kirkwall than is normal.
I asked their new Viscount about that. His answer involved a lengthy diatribe about my ancestry, port tariffs, and a paean to the pride of his people and their melting pot.
I am in full, if hypocritical, agreement. To his credit, Varric did agree with me when I said it was a shithole. But then he's a dwarf and they're immune to magic. And mostly immune to lyrium an occasionally immune to not being stubborn assholes who need to find new places to live.
A dwarf? So it's elves and dwarves, you've got the whole subset of fantasy races. Not fantasy, obviously, same as I'm not a comic book -- I've been thinking a lot about interdimensional reverberations and their apparent effects on works of fiction in neighboring universes.
Elves, dwarves, Qunari, and humans make up the intelligent races of Thedas. Humans and Qunari came from somewhere else. There must be other worlds out there because we came from somewhere.
Do you mean the reverberations of people crossing from one world or... Alright, I don't usually mention this. But when I was in the crossroads, there was a book. Varric had been working on another of his serials, Hard in Hightown. There was a chapter there, one Varric claimed he hadn't written. It included a character who sounded a great deal like someone we lost in battle two years before.
[Sorry, Dorian, full, unfiltered honest over here.]
Could be people crossing over, but I don't think it is. I think our universes echo into each other. There are people here who I know aren't real in my world, and people here who know me as someone from a -- it's a kind of book. With pictures.
Well, that's- hrm. Perhaps if there are as many potential iterations of the world as some have posted, then a world where your life is coincidentally the subject of fiction seems not entirely unreasonable. Or some people have insights into other worlds without recognizing what they are doing.
Or perhaps any story is reflected somewhere because we follow similar patterns. You are not so different from mages I have met in my own world. In terms of personality and so forth.
In an infinite multiverse, infinite things are possible. Of course, that presumes that the multiverse is actually infinite, which we'd have a hard time proving. Or disproving. Or testing at all, frankly. So sure, it could just be that when you have enough monkeys banging on typewriters they'll eventually write my life story. And illustrate it. I've thought it's probably that middle possibility, but if you're going to claim that there's anyone out there like me other than me, we might have to go with patterns of life. Or maybe mages are just all handsome, talented people because that's what it takes, I'm not going to discount that possibility.
Alas, I have met mages who are less than talented or handsome and not merely in comparison with myself.
Though I do agree with the impossibility of testing how many universes there are. Perhaps the people who've passed through this place represent all the worlds there are. I doubt it but until others come, it's the data we have.
There was someone a great deal like me here. Same name, same perfect teeth and hair.
The first Dorian, yeah. Died before I came here, only ever saw him as a name on the obituary. That's...most people who have had other versions of themselves here before them don't like to talk about it. Then again a lot people are sensitive about anything I put on the census.
Well, I'm not exactly happy a version of me kicked the bucket here. But it does open up some fascinating lines of inquiry, does it not?
I find that most people are sensitive about things that matter or would provide better insight. After all, they might provide better insight into them as well.
[So many reasons Dorian decided working with Spirits was preferable to working with humans.]
Sure. Going off the data, so far whenever someone dies and is replaced by a second version, the first version hasn't come back even if the second dies. Don't know if that means anything, but it struck me as interesting. We don't even know if we're even really talking about two versions of the same person, or one person who's lost their memories. People gainmemories while they're dead sometimes; there's nothing to say they couldn't lose them as well.
In most cases we may not know but I am certainly not the man who was here before. In my world there was a cataclysm recently.
[Dorian's tone turns brittle but he doesn't seem to notice.]
Someone blew a hole in the physical world. In my version of events, the woman who closed the hole and saved the world was Inquisitor Malika Cadash. According to what I've found on the network, the previous version of me was here with an Inquisitor Lavellan. His relationship appears to have been quite similar to mine with Inquisitor Cadash. Her relationship with one of our mutual friends, Commander Cullen, is quite different.
All three of them can be found among the dead in this place.
...Now that's one I haven't heard before. The...everything you just said. I don't think most of the people with doubles do that kind of researcher; you're probably alone in actually wanting to know about the other guy.
What kind of hole? Like a hole into the Fade?
[Excuse him, he's incapable of staying on topic. Or displaying tact.]
I can't imagine how you must suffer thinking about it. Except I can because it's occurring to me that if I die, Billy's Doctor Strange might show up in my place.
Creepy.
Seeing another similarity between your story and mine.
Dorian is torn between laughing and trying not to think too hard about the horror of their existence.]
Yes, we do seem to share quite a bit of common ground.
But we were discussing magic, I think, as enjoyable as this digression into my uniqueness has been. What do you think the chances are that whatever is under Norfinbury is related to time magic?
[He'd meant to bring up that idea more smoothly but oh well.]
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It's all really old, and the person who understood it best is...she's dead now. What kind of machines?
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[Climbing the Mystical Career Ladder in Thedas was something more like the way Strange had risen in his medical career.]
About knee high, like a globe set on top of a pedestal. The emit a hum that reinforces the harmonic frequency the Veil operates on. They're old. They seem to date back to the Elvhenan Empire. Which fell millennia ago. Sorry, common knowledge.
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[Maybe he shouldn't have embarked on this conversation. It feels good to talk, though, even if later he'll regret this level of over-sharing.]
There's something that might be kind of like that in Kamar-Taj. I never saw the mechanisms in the sanctums, they're kind of...buildings. The buildings might be the mechanisms.
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[But lying to his traveling companion if Billy expected knowledge, wisdom, or the skill associated with that title wasn't something Dorian was going to do.]
Architectural magic?
[Dorian is very eager to hear more about that.]
We have something similar. Buildings laid out as glyphs. The time and effort required are incredible. So naturally they tend to be the work of either the Elvhenan Empire or the Tevinter Imperium. Some say the entirety of Kirkwall is one big spell that uses the alleys and buildings to channel power. It might explain some things about Kirkwall in general if that's true.
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That's my guess, yeah, without having done my reading yet. When Kaecilius and his zealots were trying to take down the sanctums they were destroying the buildings themselves. What about Kirkwall would that explain?
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If the city itself is a glyph channeling magic, it would keep the area unsettled. And I don't just mean rumors. There are verifiable patterns that far more mages go bad and far more murders happen in Kirkwall than is normal.
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Elves, dwarves, Qunari, and humans make up the intelligent races of Thedas. Humans and Qunari came from somewhere else. There must be other worlds out there because we came from somewhere.
Do you mean the reverberations of people crossing from one world or... Alright, I don't usually mention this. But when I was in the crossroads, there was a book. Varric had been working on another of his serials, Hard in Hightown. There was a chapter there, one Varric claimed he hadn't written. It included a character who sounded a great deal like someone we lost in battle two years before.
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[Sorry, Dorian, full, unfiltered honest over here.]
Could be people crossing over, but I don't think it is. I think our universes echo into each other. There are people here who I know aren't real in my world, and people here who know me as someone from a -- it's a kind of book. With pictures.
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Well, that's- hrm. Perhaps if there are as many potential iterations of the world as some have posted, then a world where your life is coincidentally the subject of fiction seems not entirely unreasonable. Or some people have insights into other worlds without recognizing what they are doing.
Or perhaps any story is reflected somewhere because we follow similar patterns. You are not so different from mages I have met in my own world. In terms of personality and so forth.
[Dorian speaks slowly, processing as he talks.]
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Though I do agree with the impossibility of testing how many universes there are. Perhaps the people who've passed through this place represent all the worlds there are. I doubt it but until others come, it's the data we have.
There was someone a great deal like me here. Same name, same perfect teeth and hair.
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I find that most people are sensitive about things that matter or would provide better insight. After all, they might provide better insight into them as well.
[So many reasons Dorian decided working with Spirits was preferable to working with humans.]
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[Dorian's tone turns brittle but he doesn't seem to notice.]
Someone blew a hole in the physical world. In my version of events, the woman who closed the hole and saved the world was Inquisitor Malika Cadash. According to what I've found on the network, the previous version of me was here with an Inquisitor Lavellan. His relationship appears to have been quite similar to mine with Inquisitor Cadash. Her relationship with one of our mutual friends, Commander Cullen, is quite different.
All three of them can be found among the dead in this place.
[He meant the other Dorian, Ellana, and Cullen.]
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What kind of hole? Like a hole into the Fade?
[Excuse him, he's incapable of staying on topic. Or displaying tact.]
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[Dorian would prefer to have at least some idea of what people might have learned and which ones might know more.]
Yes, precisely. A hole between our world and the Fade. Very unhealthy for a number of reasons.
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Creepy.
Seeing another similarity between your story and mine.
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Yes, we do seem to share quite a bit of common ground.
But we were discussing magic, I think, as enjoyable as this digression into my uniqueness has been. What do you think the chances are that whatever is under Norfinbury is related to time magic?
[He'd meant to bring up that idea more smoothly but oh well.]
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[He's honestly surprised by the question. For once he hesitates, though it only lasts the briefest of moments.]
Not very high, if I'm honest. There's not a lot you can do without the Eye of -- the infinity stone, the time stone --
[His efforts to head himself off from naming the artifact backfire, leading instead to tighter clarification.]
-- which is definitely not in a library in Kathmandu inviting some kind of invasion if anyone finds out it's there -- oh, for --
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