Grainne nic Cormaic (
neverarightstep) wrote2015-08-23 10:23 pm
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[Grainne has a... phone, but she lacks the understanding to use most of the features. Most messages send to her will go unanswered What on earth is that incessant chiming??? but she has a physical spot for letters outside her room in Perdita's wing.]
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Something to eat would be nice. Do you mind if I add a little spice to it? I... keep a little bottle with me all the time for that.
[Why ask something like that? Well, mostly because the kind of 'spice' she needed was blistering.]
I see you've been busy. Any progress?
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[Grainne steps over to the kitchen, taking an obviously home made loaf of bread and slicing off a hunk, and gathering a few other things before serving up a plate.]
Progress? [A pause as she figures out what Sam means.] Well, yes. I feel comfortable with all the elements now. Fire had given me some trouble, but it is making sense. I'm thinking of replacing that brazier with a proper hearth soon.
[Returning, Grainne holds out a plate of meat, cheese, bread and a sliced apple. Simple stuff.]
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And I don't know. A brazier's not a terrible thing until winter. [She took a bit of meat and cheese, rolling it up between her fingers and chewing on it thoughtfully, nodding in thanks. Gotta love carnivores.]
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How did you learn you are tied to spirit?
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[She nodded, munching while the two talked.] And you're right. There's at least a little similarity here. It's helpful at times in learning how to do this.
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I can help you with spirit, yes. It isn't easy, even if it's your talent. But I can help with it.
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[She sighs and settles back on her cushions.]
Anyway, your note said that Peter was gone. Did you wish to talk about it?
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And I'm not quite sure I'd say more powerful... but it is kind of in everything a little.
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That makes sense. Some of the theory behind Amare seems to have similarities with magic in Eire, and there are a couple words I find familiar from other lands.
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Spirit, ether, the Void, that one is always tricky because it doesn't have substance, not really. It's like a binding agent between all things, in all things, but itself separate.
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[Like the Dark One and Oisin's poor mother.]
Did I tell you of my terror for druids when I was wee?
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But no... you didn't. What about them?
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[She shakes her head, and then gives a nervous laugh.]
When I was small, the druids always seemed to important, and they knew so much and of course there were the stories of what the dark ones had done before. Someone with that much power and knowledge is terrifying to a young one. I am a bit wary of ones I do not know still, but it is more a healthy respect for them.
Though, I would happily string Diorruing up a tree for a few hundred years for what he did.
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But I guess that makes sense. It's like being afraid of someone with a gun. The first time you hear it go off, it's terrifying, and seeing what it can do even more so. If you don't know as much about it, and Druids keep their secrets close, it can be scary.
...and like you said, a kid with a gun's a scary thing on its own.
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[Grainne's not entirely clear on the whole gun concept in the first place, but coming from a place where children had been routinely taught how to use weapons from the age of seven, she'd probably not think it too strange.]
Some druids keep their secrets close. Others, like the healers, try to spread the knowledge as far as it will go, and then there are the law makers and advisers, and the bards are their own class entirely. I've not been afraid of the healers as much. I suppose it all comes down to power and knowledge. I always wanted to go to the... the, ah, bibliotecha. Biblioteque? Library. The Library, where the sum of human knowledge rests.
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...
The Great Library? [She sighed wistfully.] I heard it burned, long before I was ever born, though they made many after it. There's one or more in almost every town now where I live.
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[She had qualms about her own children, but they had to start that young to gain the skills they needed as full warriors, and not to mention the requirements of the Fianna were very strenuous. She'd seen not a few youths fail at it.]
Yes, the one of Al-icks- you know I never managed to say that right. It burned? [Grainne seems distressed, even upset.] Oh, I had hoped, someday, I could take a journey there, even if I were a bit old. The ones here in Eros are marvelous, but the description I have heard from traveling bards would put Greta's to shame. Does anyone know how big it was, in your time? Did it really hold all of the knowledge of the world?
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If I were to guess, though, no it didn't. It probably held most of the knowledge of the part of the world our people were part of. The isles and the mainland are what they call Europe. They and north Africa across the sea to the south were most of what the Egyptians had contact with. I doubt there was much from Asia and nothing from South Africa or the Americas.
They seemed to know that they existed, but theirs were worlds apart. The Earth is much larger than you know, Grainne.
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You would not say that if you had ever been to a Samhain thrown by Aengus Og himself.
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Aengus sounds like a much better host than that sort, trust me.
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