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milliways_bar2007-11-29 07:08 pm
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There's a young girl sitting in Milliways with a steaming mug of tea in her hands. With summer wearing on in Emelan, Milliways is a bit chilly by comparison. Enough to make her glad of the extra layers of black cambric she's wearing this evening, and even of the black veil covering her hair.
Sandry has spent the day visiting her great uncle at his citadel in Summersea. It's for this reason that she's wearing her fine mourning instead of a more comfortable dress. Duke Vedris is not the sort of man to fuss at her over her clothes, but Sandry knows that he appreciates his niece being turned out properly.
It had been a very nice visit, and Sandry looks happier than a child clad all in black should rightly look.
Sandry has spent the day visiting her great uncle at his citadel in Summersea. It's for this reason that she's wearing her fine mourning instead of a more comfortable dress. Duke Vedris is not the sort of man to fuss at her over her clothes, but Sandry knows that he appreciates his niece being turned out properly.
It had been a very nice visit, and Sandry looks happier than a child clad all in black should rightly look.
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He falls silent, staring intently down at his cup of tea. He'd lost both his parents that way, and it still hurts. It takes him a few moments to gather his thoughts again, and when he speaks, it is more quietly.
"Being with someone so different from herself, so full of life and feeling, brought her back from the edge of death. Just being together. They saved each other, and then they saved us all."
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"It sounds like an odd sort of disease," she says. Fever, pox, pain--those things were signs of sickness. Not dreaming.
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In a way he's almost glad he's not a healer anymore. It felt a bit like lying to people.
"What are diseases like in your world? Is there sickness, and injury?"
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Breathe deep. Hold for a moment. Breathe out.
"Of course," she says. "People get hurt--cut, bruised, break bones. And sickness, yes. Fevers, poisoned blood, lung sickness, poxes."
Breathe deep. Hold for a moment. Breathe out.
"Smallpox was very bad last fall."
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"I am sorry to hear that, and I'm sorry if I reminded you of something unpleasant. I hope your people are doing better now?"
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"Well, being ill or hurt is never really pleasant, is it?"
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"What did you have?"
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A pause.
"Well, clumsy. Everything's heavier here than it is at home. But I can walk and I don't drop things as much anymore."
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Sandry's world has magic aplenty. But variations in gravity are quite another matter.
"People here are very kind though. Most of them seem willing to help if you have a problem."
"And you don't seem at all clumsy to me," she adds, reassuringly.
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"I haven't met anyone named Nancy. Who is she?"
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"I think that is quite admirable," she says with a very noble nod.
She wants to do things to help people as well. Possibly with her magic. As soon as she figures out what that might be.
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It's never easy, when the job you thought you'd spend the rest of your life at no longer exists. But he's determined to find something.
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Sandry herself was born to nobility. Good for naught but to be waited on and to marry. That was what she had heard someone say once.
She doesn't quite know what she is to spend the rest of her life doing, but she is determined that there will be more to it than that.
"Do you want to be a healer again?"
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And maybe, just maybe, if he tries very hard, he'll be able to develop proper healing powers. It's not likely, with how his other powers have been fading, but if he can only find the answer... he still has hope.
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"I certainly never expected to have thread magic."
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He takes a bite of cake.
"Were you going to do something different, before you discovered your magic?"
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Sandry fiddles idly with the end of the silk thread, which has wrapped itself around her forefinger.
"I never really thought about it before," she admits. "My parents were nobles. I suppose I always just thought I would...be a noble."
Not a grand aspiration when put like that, but it was all that Sandry had been raised to know.
"I never thought I would be a mage. People who have magic generally show signs of it when they're much younger than I am."
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"What do nobles do? I don't think we have any."
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Sandry pauses, looking stumped. Royalty and nobility are the normal order of things in her world. She's never thought in terms of how to explain the system to someone.
"Well," she ventures. "In my world, countries are ruled by families--and rule is handed down through the families. That's the highest form of nobility. Dukes and duchesses, kings and queens, emperors and empresses."
"And the countries are divided up among lesser nobles who are responsible to the ruler, and responsible for the people and the lands that they govern."
"I'm probably not explaining it very well," she says, looking a bit chagrined.
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"Who chooses the families? Are they gifted at leading people, are they particularly wise? We have city-masters, but they are chosen, and it doesn't run in families."
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"I suppose that at some point in history they were just the families who had the power to lead. Many people say that ruling families hold their power at the will and pleasure of the gods."
"My great-uncle is the ruler of Emelan. He's very wise. And kind."
Granted, Sandry is a bit biased, but Duke Vedris is well respected as a ruler by people other than his young niece.
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People are pretty much equal, in his world, but it doesn't seem to be the case in most other worlds he's heard about. Still, as long as the people have a voice...
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