Mathilde's track record as a writer has barely started, but there was is basically nothing to seriously suggested that she is a bad one.
Could be that her foible for romance novels lends itself more to writing about the heroic adventures of a noble elf rather than methodological dissertations.
One thing she
should write is a report on anything important for the Empire/College to handed to the appropriate (Grey Wizard) authority later on. Would mostly consist of a status report on the Skaven threat (and evolving countermeasures), anything substantial of the Gold Wizards attempts to investigate Warpstone Technology (especially stuff he wouldn't admit) and possibly Mathilde's take on Belegar and how he will likely affect the larger political and cultural landscape (I.e. tentative approval of wizardkind, being innovative and open to new things, intercultural exchange etc).
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I have been thinking about potential favours and
not reading the ever controversial thingy a bit:
Favours first:
1) While a bit of a commemorative gift-giving is appropriate, I fear that immediately trying to "cash in" most of the favours will make us (and those we represent) seem more like greedy quasi-mercenaries rather than long-term allies who help each other. Not an issue with a hero doing one awesome thing and then being rewarded. However, Mathilde is not just here as herself, but also as a representative of two political entities, the Empire and the Colleges. Not saying we should be
stingy with the favours, but I suggest keeping some in case we need the later.
2) While Mathilde The Adventurer could always use some new fancy equipment, what would be an appropriate commemorative gift for the Colleges? I think their main issue is how comparatively new and unreliable human magics are, with far too many people killing themselves or their allies. Given Mathilde's Belt, I'm fairly sure Kragg agrees. Ideas:
- Earthing Rod: The dwarves have never had need of this, so I'm curious what their take on the concept would be. They already have Runes to Ward against enemy magics (and burn the spells from their minds), so I'm sure something like this could be done. Basically, instead of detecting enemy spells, they might be triggered by something directly directing (part of) the Winds at the object. Another possibility would be basing it on the Anti-Dhar effect. I'm not sure if there is a reason this couldn't work to some degree on the other Winds. Basically, burn the magics around the caster (and grant fire resistance).
- General insights in how dwarves believe magic works. There has already been some discussion about this, mostly regarding Mathilde being taught. In any case, the dwarves have worked with magic for longer than the colleges have existed, so they might have some applicable insights in making it blow up less.
The dreaded book:
If Mathilde wanted to do the proper thing and submit it to the authorities, she would have to answer several questions: Why did she not do so immediately? How can she convince the Grey College not to kill her for fear of her having read it? Is the Empire even a safe place for it? (She does have personal experience of the Grey College being infiltrated enough to blackmail Magisters into compliance and the one province she worked in had been
ripe with deep corruption just before. With how dangerous the book is, can she even trust the Empire to look keep it secret and safe long-term? Also, wouldn't this be a severe violation of the trust Van Hel showed when he made her the keeper? His family kept the book secret for
centuries, even from the Empire. There must have been reasons for this!
I've thought of one possible solution that I find quite neat: What if she specifically kept it secret out of fear of the book not being protected well enough? Directly after his death, Mathilde went to the College. This could be framed as: a) Contemplating how to best keep it safe, especially considering the observed fallibility of the College b) Not wanting to bring it to the authorities immediately out of fear of someone connecting the dots if someone notices she is involved in retrieving "something big" shortly after Van Hel's death. c) Wanting to stay near the authority she trusts most anyway, so that she can give it to them immediately once she deems it safe.
In any case, that was when the optimal course of action struck her: Dwarves are
the best at keeping stuff safe long term, even powerful artifacts. Just as importantly, unlike humans, they would not be tempted by the book
in the least, making them the best suited for caring for it. Now she just needed to ingratiate herself to them enough for them to agree… which is where Belegar's campaign comes in. This would require spending a lot of favour on the books. Options include, but are not limited to: Constructing a better / additional box to house it; Runic Metal Book-bindings that violently react to Dhar; Adding the book to their Vaults and only unsealing it in case the Empire is in danger; Agreeing to construct a custom vault in Empire territory.
tl;dr: Mathilde
totally dedicated several years of her life to making sure the book is as safe as is possible. She was just earning enough favour to have some Dwarven Runesmiths make sure no necromancer/chaos cultist can ever take or use the book.
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Any of that sound reasonable?