I just found your blog and I am loving it! If you are still doing the ASOIAF! verse, can you do the DAI companions reacting to Ned's death and realizing for the first time that no character is safe?
Cassandra: Of all the events of the first book, the rise and fall of lords and the history that roiled around the main characters, this shakes the Seeker the most. It is a decided victory for the Lannisters - who are certainly evil- and such a blow for the Starks and the North that she is not sure how they could recover. In the books she loves good triumphs and evil falls! She is not happy about this, but more importantly she is suddenly terrified for every character she loves— for their author is without mercy.
Solas: He did not see that coming, and he sees everything coming. The mage had actually assumed the plot of the book would be somewhat predictable, with the loyal and stalwart Edward Stark striking down the treasonous Cersei and saving the day. Another insipid moral victory that is certainly in some way allegorical for the Chantry. But then the king dies, and Ned dies, and suddenly Solas is very much intrigued. This world stretches out suddenly anew, full of possibilities and stories and an ending he cannot possibly define— and he wants more.
Varric: Damn it, he’s a famous author, renowned for his books of daring and adventure, and he never saw this coming. And if the Inquisitor is willing to keep hacking main characters apart without warning then what else are they planning? And have you seen the book sales? His editor is going to have a conniption fit.
Blackwall: He hates it. Ned Stark is a hero, and should win the day. And if he is sick after reading it, too full of memories of his own men who had died equally betrayed....that is no ones business but his own.
Vivienne: Like Solas she is surprised and delighted by the sudden and unusual twist in the plot. Good men are often naive, and there is no faster cause of death or destruction in Orlais than naïveté. And while she does not mourn the dour unimaginative mindset of the former Stark patriarch neither is she a fan of the Lannister queen— and is now more than ever intrigued to see what their dear inquisitor has planned for the rest of his cast.
Dorian: He’s almost homesick, it’s such a familiar song in Tevinter. Change the charges of treason and incest to blood magic and he couldn’t tell you how many ‘righteous’ defenders of the Magisterium had had their own accusations turned back against them— and suffered for them. But aside from the familiar, it has opened a whole range of possibilities for the Seven kingdoms— and he can’t wait for more.
The Iron Bull: Ned Stark was never cut out for politics, and the qunari had seen this coming from the moment he and his wife had heard the news of the former Hand of the King. Robert Baratheon is a weak ruler, and Ned Stark is too good a man to be able to do what is needed to save him. This was inevitable.
But if the Qun doesn’t stop asking him for updates on this book series of all things he’s going to write the next chapter himself just to get them off his horns.
Sera: She hates it! Friggin’ Cersei and her weird brother and their awful little brats and and....this was supposed to be different. This is why she doesn’t like the big people stories— nobles are always killing each other and the little people suffer.
Cole: People are so upset and also happy and scared and curious and it’s not real but it is to them. He doesn’t know what to do with it, so the spirit simply avoids the books as much as possible.