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Post by Lightice on Jul 18, 2012 1:24:55 GMT
She was friends with them, but not anymore. It was hinted that she's not really too fond of them anymore or at least not Muut. Not since the night she helped Surma pass over all by herself. She chats with Ketrak in friendly enough manner. She's no longer unreserved and happy with them, but she doesn't seem hostile, either. She ofcourse doesn't meet them that often any more, now that she lives in a place where people don't die at almost daily basis.
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cass
Junior Member
Posts: 58
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Post by cass on Jul 18, 2012 11:05:06 GMT
+1 for sage advice. If you're going to fight, swing, don't taunt. Then again, something tells me she's going to need more than a wicked right cross to knock a god on his ass. And if you're going to swing, aim for the other side of their head. Though, as you say, quite how that would relate to Coyote....
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Post by bluerose on Jul 18, 2012 13:02:47 GMT
GAAAAAH! It's like an infinite plane of existence consisting of Coyote's supernaturally sharp teeth! On a related note, does anyone else mentally read Coyote's lines in Mark Hamill's joker voice? Ha! I just commented on this in another thread. For me it's John de Lancie ;D
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Post by Per on Jul 18, 2012 14:21:18 GMT
Ysegrin was using his rage as a cover to plant some seeds to the Court floor, which presumably would have grown into some kind of magical spy plants, or something. He wasn't mad with rage as he pretended, but calculated every move. If trying to kill a Court student was a cold expediency on Ysengrin's part, then my view of him is totally off, I can say. Tangentially, have there been any indications the seeds were advertently dropped except for Jones's assumption?
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Post by Lightice on Jul 18, 2012 14:46:46 GMT
If trying to kill a Court student was a cold expediency on Ysengrin's part, then my view of him is totally off, I can say. I don't think that his intent was to kill Annie. He knew that he was surrounded by powerful people who would shield her from harm, and that he and Coyote are powerful enough to take any reprisal without fear. He probably didn't expect to be smacked by Coyote himself, though. Well, she's yet to be wrong about anything else, and it seems unlikely that the seeds would have just accidentally dropped, under the circumstances. Ysegrin's sense of justice seems to be of the "eye for an eye"-variety, as he thought that the presumed falling death of someone from the Court would smooth things out over the death of one glass-eyed man from the Forest. It makes sense then that for planting invasive machinery to theForest, as he thought, the right punishment would be to plant invasive plantlife to the Court.
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