http://wingaaardium.livejournal.com/ (
wingaaardium.livejournal.com) wrote in
multiversallogs2011-12-03 04:51 pm
(no subject)
Who: Hermione Granger, OPEN
What: Hermione goes book-hunting, and runs into ~fellow citizens of Baedal~.
Where: The Library of the Blessed St Brian.
When: A few days after her arrival, before this.
Notes: If you want your character to interact with Hermione but doubt they'd be in the library, feel free to have them somewhere else and she can stumble across them; she's likely going to do some exploring elsewhere.
Warnings: none.
Libraries are sanctuaries, and that, right now, is just what Hermione wants, along with as many cold hard facts as she can find. Rumours are hardly trustworthy, anecdotes are just rumours in seed form, and the only thing the propaganda has done is made her wary and worried. She doesn’t trust herself to go into any bookshops just yet, not on limited funds, and she’s always preferred libraries anyway- from the architecture and the smell, to the fact that these are books passed from person to person, books with history, to the (admittedly mundane and worldly, but still relevant) lack of cost involved in frequenting them.
This, therefore, would be why she’s prowling through the shelves with her eyes wide, seeking out facts and figures and records. There’s an expression of intense, slightly hungry concentration on her face.
There are also three books floating beside her, which she feels a little nervous about. They’re too heavy to carry, and from what she’s seen magic isn’t taboo in Baedal- but she’s so used to keeping it hidden when not in explicitly wizarding society that it feels as if she’s doing something illicit. She keeps glancing at them, and then around, the furrow between her brows getting progressively deeper every minute.

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Which is why she recognizes it by feel, like touch-taste-smell-hear-see; how could she not?
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It's not really surprising that Hermione's eyebrows go right up.
All the same, she's become accustomed to the idea that in Baedal one might encounter just about anything and anyone, and so she's more surprised than disbelieving. After all, it might explain why Ilde seems a little off- but Hermione is very wary of simply blaming that on species. It doesn't quite feel fair. "I've never come across a faerie before," she says, and then realises how silly that sounds. "--good grief, listen to me. I don't mean that I plan on gawking, just that it's interesting, the...diversity of the city's population. Sort of amazing, too, when you think about the sheer scope of whoever or whatever brought us here."
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After her particular experiences of the supposed superiority of the human race, a certain disinclination to play ball with pretense is probably to be expected, though few in Baedal have got past the initial impression to peg the hurts that drive it. It's been less than a year since she was broken out of the facility.
"There are other fae here," she says, shrugging one shoulder, "but none of my particular species. And I was raised among humans," with a flicker of black humour; Hermione's honest and more or less respectful startlement isn't the kind to raise her guard, "so it was a bit of a surprise to me, too, at first."
They're two separate thoughts, but she has a tendency to tangent and to run things together that aren't connected; linear conversation is a bonus with this one, not a guarantee.
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As for raised amongst humans, the first thing she thinks of is her own upbringing. "Gosh, I can imagine," she says. "I-" No. 'I was brought up amongst non-magical people?' Why not just broadcast it? She swiftly changes what she was going to say. "I suppose it's rather something to suddenly- realise? Be told? Find out? Sorry, I don't mean to ask personal questions- I'm just...curious."
no subject
They were the ones torturing children.
"After the storm it'd have been difficult not to notice." She lets her illusion thin, illustratively, and shrugs.