"A prayer for you?" "For those we have lost, and those I am afraid to lose."
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"A prayer for you?" "For those we have lost, and those I am afraid to lose."
Yet another point on Cullen's emotional intelligence:
I love that he has the awareness, perceptiveness, and sense to know the Inquisitor needs rest, even if that's one area he struggles in himself.
He invites her to go to Ferelden with him, and officially, he's already going there himself on business. He wants to spend more time with her, but he specifically finds an opportunity that takes work (and the weight of it) off her shoulders.
We don't know how many they traveled with, though they likely weren't entirely alone. Even still, the implication is that she will simply ride along, get away from all the meetings and battles and paperwork and danger for a while. Ferelden is beautiful: she can take in the fresh air on the journey with no real goal, and unless they get completely surprised by something, there's nothing she will have to do or be expected to do.
Specifically, he takes her specifically to a beautiful, peaceful lake that he used to escape to in his youth.
"You walk into danger every day. I wanted to take you away from that, if only for a moment."
He has deliberately created a refuge for her. It's one that's also very personal to him: a piece of his past he's choosing to share with her. He has given her time to breathe, and a safe space to do so.
He has given her quiet. He does not mindlessly ramble or fill the silence with chatter: it's only when she prompts him to further conversation he speaks again at all. He leans up against a post, and breathes too.
He is content to just be present with her, and that she is finally getting a much-needed, well-deserved break.
In a world that demands so much of her, Cullen never sees her as anything other than a person. Perhaps she's a symbol, but she's human (or elf). He's aware of her needs, even when she doesn't voice them.
He can't carry the burden of being the Herald of Andraste for her—no one can. But he can make sure she's not walking that path alone and that she knows she isn't.
Cullen can't close rifts, but he can offer her a safe place to rest in or return to. He, by extension, is a safe place for her.
He can offer her rest.
He can offer her quiet.
And I think that's extremely telling of the kind of man and partner he is: one who's very in tune with what she doesn't even have to voice, simply because he is emotionally intelligent and pays attention.
Cassandra at Cullen when Varric's next romance novel inevitably features some particularly spicy scenes between the two leads who are Totally-Not-The-Inquisitor and Totally-Not-Cullen:
"I need to borrow you." "By all means..."
"It seems luck favored you today." "So it has."
Cullen Rutherford + Looking at Her ♥️
"It seems luck favored you today." "So it has."