Talk:The Drawing of the Dark/@comment-1536224-20121215223810/@comment-5815946-20121216024536

To the person above me - but I don't think it's that simple, either; I don't think Kara was "bad" either, or that she murders without caring. I see her more as representative of what decades of persecution and cruelty toward people with magic had turned her people into. If you're coming from the life she had lived, she had seen her people treated brutally and had no reason to really believe anything will change. I'm not saying that murder is "justifiable," but ratherthat I can't really say anyone else might have acted differently in her position. I don't think Mordred is so much *blind* as he is torn between the two perspectives (Camelot's versus Kara's), both of which he can understand. This is really the beauty of this plot, I think: both sides make sense.