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  • Hannah :)
    replied
    I thinK Carl must have witnessed it happening, or has imagined it happening. It must be terrible. *shivers* I mean, the lifeprice is bad, but, you know... The way he reacts...

    It's driving me crazy, I want to know - but I have the feeling we'll know a lot quicker than we'd prefer...

    Hannah [img]/infopop/emoticons/icon_smile.gif[/img]

    'Felis Catus is your taxonomic nomenclature. An endothermic qaudroped, carniverous by nature.'

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  • Em
    replied
    Whatever it is, it must be really bad. Whenever Carl talks about it, he suddenly gets quiet afterword, like he has experienced it himself (which probably isn't possible). With all this talk about foreshadowing, it is very possible that Nita and Kit will learn more about it in the future (Maybe in Wizards at War?) Still, from what we know it could be anything...

    ~Em~

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  • Guest's Avatar
    Guest replied
    I got to thinking that perhaps the highest price woul be giving up wizardry and still having to know, through some fate or spell working, what you lost, that you are helpless to do anything more to help. This would be hard to achieve, since wizards who forgo their furthur wizardry normally lose all memory...but perhaps if one was still willing and was tricked into a position where they knew that keepin their power was only going to lead to a dark path or one of corruption for themselves or someone else, or would possibly cause more death or entropy...a willing loss of wizardry for the sake of others....maybe their memory would remain...their deed being so great that the memory would just be the Lone One's way of revenge on that particular person? Sorry for the rambling.

    Dai-stihó,
    Rhiow-chan.
    http://www.geocities.com/booknightmoon

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  • Hannah :)
    replied
    I always thought it would be something to do with love. The whole ache of "Not old enough to love as yet, but old enough to die indeed" is a pretty poignant message in the book...

    Or maybe it's like (slightly off-topic) that SG-1 episode where someone has to choose between their race and thousands of others...

    You know, I wasn't too bothered about this line until now! Grrrrrr!

    Hannah xx

    http://timeheart.fateback.com

    'Felis Catus is your taxonomic nomenclature. An endothermic qaudroped, carniverous by nature.'

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  • kite
    replied
    I always assumed that it was loss of soul. It's one thing to die and go on to Timeheart/whatever afterlife, quite another to have your soul lost/destroyed/in hell. Sounds like a higher price to me.

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  • Caledonian
    replied
    Rejection by the One, perhaps?

    Though since even the Lone Power was redeemed, I'm not sure this would actually be an issue anyway...

    Logic is a poor servant, but an excellent master.
    -- The Book of Forgotten Things

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  • Bibliomancer
    replied
    This has been driving me absolutly nuts since I first read it, so it's nice to know I'm not the only one. I don't think it could be losing wizardry, though. Carl refers to them seperately, and while he is not particularly reluctant to tell Nita what will happen if she loses her powers, he does not seem to want to talk about whatever the fate worse than death is.

    Leisure without literature is death, or rather the burial of a living man

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  • EWizard11
    replied
    Hmmmmmmmm
    This sounds like one of those things where people get threatened with 'a fate worse than death' with is never explained.
    Does anyone think that the price, with losing your wizardry, (which is bad enough) is knowing that the universe will die faster without you, and not being able to do anything about it?
    Ella [img]/infopop/emoticons/icon_biggrin.gif[/img]

    EWizard11

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  • Caledonian
    replied
    I always interpreted that comment to be an oblique reference to sacrificing your life for another.

    Paying your debt with your life is costly, but paying someone else's death is even more so.

    Logic is a poor servant, but an excellent master.
    -- The Book of Forgotten Things

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  • WizardGirl1
    replied
    What if the higher price is losing your soul. I mean what if your body is still there but you are still walking around. Like what dementors do to you (Harry Potter 3) when they give you the worst kind of death.. Sorry if I just wrote that to someone who hasn't read Harry Potter.

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  • Kaatje
    replied
    Good thoughts--I hadn't thought of the "mass destruction" option. I never thought, though, that it had to do with giving up or losing wizardry, because Carl seemed quite willing to talk about that with Nita. I definitely got the sense that he was not going to talk about whatever the "higher than lifeprice" payment was, so it must be something worse than what he did talk about (i.e. losing wizardry).

    Hmmm. Maybe losing your soul? Or your place in Timeheart? Those both seem pretty catastrophic to me..

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  • Ferrica
    replied
    Hi Elizabeth [img]/infopop/emoticons/icon_wink.gif[/img]
    No fear, I think you could get rid of one of the post by clicking on the little pencil notebook icon thingy. And then hit Delete Message.

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  • Ferrica
    replied
    I always thought that the higher price would be the end of the world. Atlantis all over again.

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  • Elizabeth
    replied
    *kicks comp*

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  • Elizabeth
    replied
    First of all, the Carl and Nita scene is one one of my favorites in _Deep_. I just start sniffling every time I read over it again.

    What's the higher price? Ohhhhh. Good question. I interpret it as a loss of your wizardry. Possibly in one huge, necessary wizardry that uses it all up. Or, on the flip side, possibly in chosing to give it up because it's too difficult. Both would constitute a heavy price for a wizard. In that same scene, Carl talks about what it's like for a former wizard to live without wizardy...it does not sound the least bit fun.


    Elizabeth

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