Unofficial Tales of Thedas

For those chumblrs who entered the Dragon Age: Asunder writing contest, we offer a home on Tumblr for your stories!

Moderator: Freckles04

Any more contest entries out there?

We’ve had quite a few submissions, but definitely open for more! If you entered the Dragon Age Asunder Writing Contest and would like to include your story on this blog, please submit it or send an ask. I’ll also reblog if you’ve already posted it; just give me a head’s-up.

Cheers!

Contest Entries on Fanfiction.net

Sandtigress has created a community over on Fanfiction.net for entries from the Dragon Age writing contest. If you post over on FF.net, give her a shout and she’ll include your entry.

Vows

Name: OuyangDan

Synopsis: Tristan made a decision years ago that is sure to haunt him and challenge his resolve. The discipline of his templar training gave him direction,purpose, and plenty of time to contemplate the ramifications of the path he is on. While hunting apostates, he is faced with his vows in ways for which he was not sure he was prepared. 

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As We Are

barbeauxbot:

A/N: Here is my entry for the Dragon Age: Asunder fanfiction contest! The title is from an Anais Nin quote “We don’t see things as they are. We see them as we are.” There are no warnings for this story. Congratulations to all the winners. Frankly I’m more than a little astounded to be in the august company of the top twenty. I hope that my contribution lives up to it!

Synopsis: Ser Thrask lost his daughter, Olivia, twice. Once to the Gallows,  and once to the demons. As the situation in Kirkwall worsens, he forges  an unlikely friendship with the erstwhile apostate, Grace. One quiet  evening on the Wounded Coast, he tells her of his past.

As We Are

Thrask sat by the fire, gazing into the coals, his mind not far away but years in the past. He didn’t notice when Grace sat next to him, cross-legged on the sand. Too far gone in his thoughts to hear her until she spoke.

“I don’t think they will find us,” she said, touching his arm to alert him to her presence. “We are very well concealed.”

“Hm? Oh!” He blinked, returning to the present. “Oh, I agree. And I have my men on a watch rotation. We should have ample warning, don’t worry.”

Grace tilted her head at him, eyes curious but keeping silent.

He smiled. “I was simply thinking of my daughter. She would have been… twenty-one? Twenty-two?” He frowned. “Has it really been that long?”

“That long since what?” Grace asked, a note of sympathy in her tone.

Thrask blinked at her. “Oh. Forgive me. You didn’t arrive at the Gallows until after… Well. My daughter, Olivia. She was a mage.”

Grace eyed him, her face half in the firelight, half in shadow. “That must have been awkward for a man in your position.”

“I didn’t join the Templars until she went to the Circle. She was five years old and had set the bedclothes on fire because of a bad dream. I was twenty-four.”

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My Maker

Author: shutterbones

BSN Username: tysandri

Abstract: Mahiel the Devourer. My master, and my maker. Though he was known for his cruelty, the mage - the man I knew - was not always so full of hate. I knew he wanted happiness - I could see such desires in his weary gaze. He wanted something that had been robbed from him long ago. If anything, I would provide him comfort and sanctuary where his troubled spirit could not find elsewhere. I did not always belong to him, though. The day I met him was the milestone of my beginning: a well-remembered poison that still sears my blood.

Read it Here.

Weaving Fate

Author: IonsFolly

BSN Name: Wylla

Summary: An eleven mage has escaped the smoking ruins of Kirkwall and reflects on what to do next. 

Read it here

Broken Bonds

Author: Impressioniste

BSN name: Leah.C

Summary: Asher and Norris grow up together in the Denerim Chantry and become best friends. They dream of becoming templars together… until Asher manifests magic, and the two are separated. Norris honors their former friendship by becoming a templar, but the inevitability of their respective situations doesn’t truly strike him until he is assigned to oversee his former friend’s Harrowing.

Read it here.

Sounds and Silence

Author: Magesmagesmages

BSN Name: Miri1984

Synopsis: A templar must watch over all aspects of mage life — and must be trained to deal with every eventuality. Some believe their duty is to care and protect, others believe it is to watch and wait. Yet however any one templar might define her duty, the order dictates that a mage is always unknown. Always.

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Through Fire

Title: Through Fire

BSN username: Andretha (stxena)

BSN Summary: “Through Fire” is about Mira, a mage at Kirkwall’s Circle. After the Chantry is destroyed, Mira must decide whether she will stay and fight or make her escape.

Her life was engulfed in flames once more. She had always been followed by fire, from hearth to war to cooking to disaster. It was fire that first outed her as a mage, as child too young to even use matches.

Mira had learned to control her internal burning, not just the magic blasts, but her heart, her dreams as well. Kirkwall defined life within grey stone and slave statues, and so her life had become one of greyness and slavery. As the Templars grew in – power isn’t the word, exactly, ferocity, perhaps – it seemed best to keep quiet and avoid notice. Mira saw no reason to wait, exactly, yet she saw no reason not to. And so she did as she was told, speaking little, hoping for nothing.

Disaster was a harbinger of fire – those poor refugees fleeing a blighted land, and then a battle with the Qunari. And now Kirkwall was alight once more. As always, information was quick to move but slow to contain the truth. The Chantry wasn’t really destroyed, was it? Yet Mira, like the others, had felt the very ground shake, could see the burning embers rain upon the city.

Thought a mage, Mira wasn’t anyone particularly important – not a senior enchanter, not an apprentice, not Tranquil, not a master at anything, just a woman who could generate fireballs. No one rushed to her for information or counsel. She did as always did when fire threatened: gathered what was most important to her (a few letters, a small toy horse) and then melted into the background.

Mira stood at a window in the mage’s quarters, looking across the Gallows and then beyond into the city. What new threat raged? Would – would her sister be okay? Mira had not seen her family in years, indeed her parents had recoiled from her like those who have burned a hand on the stove. But her sister wrote her vibrant letters, of flowers and cooking dinner and shopping. The Mage Underground saw to it that Mira got them. Oh, the Templars allowed mages to correspond with the outside world, but they censored the letters so heavily it was pointless.

Petra was a few years younger than Mira. Mira wasn’t sure why her sister was so open-minded, but she was grateful for it. Petra lived in Lowtown, usually working at the Hanged Man. Mira couldn’t imagine what a bar/inn was like, nor did she want to try. Even so, she relished Petra’s descriptions of brawls and hook ups. The best letters, the ones she sometimes read to fellow mages, included stories of the Champion.

The Champion’s sister was a mage, and a popular one at the Circle. Popular in that she was heavily scrutinized by the Templars, and popular in that she was generally a kind, calming presence, beloved by all. Mira sometimes shared Petra’s letters with Bethany.

Bethany wasn’t here now, though, nor was Orsino. The Templars watched in silence as the mages debated about what to do. Some wanted to barricade themselves in their rooms, others wanted to flee. A few, like Mira, waited patiently.

She could see boats crossing the harbor. Figures began to emerge, casting long shadows. She placed her hands on the windowsill, hoping for a better look. It was Orsino and the other mages who’d left with him to confront Knight Commander Meredith. Though – though she could not see Bethany returning.

Mira followed the others downstairs to meet Orsino; clearly he had important news to share.

“I’m afraid it’s over,” he was saying as she arrived. “I had hoped to try again to reach a compromise or understanding with Meredith and Elthina. However, as you may know by now, the Chantry was destroyed. Even though the explosion was the work of one man, Meredith ordered the Rite of Annulment.”

Even Mira gasped at this news. It was thing to keep her own passions at bay, it was her choice. But to be forced? A servant to the Chantry forever?

“Tonight, we will have to fight. The Champion of Kirkwall is on our side and will be here soon. Gather what you can and prepare… .” Mira had fled before Orsino could finish speaking.

She leaned against a stone wall, quickly debating her options. She could stay and fight but she was not particularly powerful. She was, at best, an average mage. How could she survive against the Templars? But could she hide? Surely she’d be found. There was only one answer: Escape.

Mira looked to the burning sky. She set fire to her own heart, disturbing the ashes there. She would need love and anger to give her strength and fuel her escape. She would have to care to survive. To live, she would have to live.

Hugging her bag close, she assessed her options. The only way out was by water. Right now, she would be easily noticed; indeed, she’d probably run into Meredith’s forces. But the Champion’s arrival would probably cause enough confusion that she could make it out. She had never sailed a boat, but she’d read a book about it once.

The moon peeked out from behind the clouds but briefly. “Who destroyed the Chantry?” she wondered. Probably someone with the Underground. Probably an apostate. Mira was glad she had waited for this, whatever the outcome, was worth waiting for.

She heard shouts across the courtyard – mages and Templars gathering, standing off.

“Now we fight!” rang across the shadows, echoed against the stones. The Champion. Bethany. And several other people Mira didn’t know. But it no matter; her opportunity had arrived.

Hugging the wall, she stayed low to the ground, stepping lightly. Years of silence, of stillness had taught her how to go unnoticed, and even know she wound across the battlefield undetected. Occasionally, a burst of light would illuminate her path; she feared being struck by an errant fireball. But she could dodge, and soon she was at the steps.

Mira jumped into the smallest boat she could find. She thrust an oar into the water, but realized she wasn’t strong enough to paddle. She closed her eyes and took a deep breath. Would it work? Her expertise, such as it was, was fire, but maybe water… . . She dropped her right hand into the harbor, her left gripping her bag. She generated a small blast of water, propelling the boat forward. In fits and starts, then, she made it across the harbor and into Kirkwall itself.

The city echoed the fight in the Gallows; bodies lay everywhere. Mira didn’t know where to go, what to do. She had escaped, but to what? She thought about the letters in her bag, how often Petra had described the streets. The Hanged Man. It might not be standing anymore, but it was the only tangible piece Mira had.

She still remained in the shadows, worried Templars might find her, or bandits or some other lowlifes. She deftly avoided rubble and said a little prayer for each body she found. And soon, before her, unbelievably, the unmistakable sign of The Hanged Man. She tried the door and it opened.

To her surprise, it was bustling, patrons happily drinking, chatting, and playing games. It looked as she imagined, the few times she’d allowed herself such luxury. She walked to the bar and asked softly, “Is Petra here tonight?” The barman jerked his head to the left, indicating a woman with a tray of pitchers and glasses.

Once again, Mira was unsure what to do. How to introduce herself to a long last sister as the city burned around them?

Petra set down her tray, smiling as she joked with the men at the table. She turned, to move back to the bar and then she caught sight of Mira. The two women stared at one another. Despite the years and distance, they were unmistakable – the same bright amber eyes, the same dark hair.

Mira bit her lip. “It’s burning, it’s all burning.”

Petra nodded. “I know. The Hanged Man will always be here, though. I… .I’ve always been here.”

Mira crossed the distance to her sister. “I’m sorry I’m late.”

Petra smiled. “I’m sorry that now wasn’t sooner.”

The women embraced. This was what Mira had been waiting for. Not escape, not a destroyed Chantry, not freedom, but a sister, a friend, contact, love. Everything she had been denied and denied herself burst through her heart at once, as a lava flow.

Petra took Mira’s arm, leading her to a back room.

“Petra, I can’t stay. The Templars…something is happening at the Gallows. The Champion is there!”

Petra nodded. “I was afraid of that. One of the Champion’s friends had been acting strangely and I wondered… . Anyway. You can lay low here for now. In a few days, when things are calmer –and they will be calmer – we can… we can figure out what’s next. I have a bit saved up. We’ll find somewhere.”

Mira nodded. “Okay.” She looked down at her bag. “I didn’t take much when I left. I saved your letters.”

Petra smiled. “I have treasured the letters I received from you.” She looked up with a start. “I better get back to work, or they’ll wonder! I’ll check on you soon.”

Mira leaned against the wall. Her life had ended in fire when she entered the Circle. And now through fire it would begin again.

Anonymous asked: Could you use some tags so we can tell from the dash what characters are involved in the story, or if it's Origins or DA2?

Seeing as these are all original stories, and not necessarily set in Origins or DA2, and that the stories can incorporate original characters that are not The Warden from game or any canons…I don’t see how this will help.

Short answer, no, sorry, I’m not going to try to figure out tags for these. I’ve asked folks who are submitting stories to provide their synopsis, so folks can read that if they want a head’s up about the content.