Throwback to the time my poor German teacher had to explain the concept of formal and informal pronouns to a class full of Australians and everyone was scandalised and loudly complained “why can’t I treat everyone the same?” “I don’t want to be a Sie!” “but being friendly is respectful!” “wouldn’t using ‘du’ just show I like them?” until one guy conceded “I suppose maybe I’d use Sie with someone like the prime minister, if he weren’t such a cunt” and my teacher ended up with her head in her hands saying “you are all banned from using du until I can trust you”
God help Japanese teachers in Australia.
if this isnt an accurate representation of australia idk what is
Writer says: So I had this crazy idea one day and I just had to work on it. Here ya go!
Writer means: So I had this crazy idea either right before getting in the shower or right before falling asleep so I grabbed my fucking laptop and shat all over it to create the steaming pile of crap that I now lay before you. I don’t even know if it’s good anymore. I haven’t slept in two days.
Writer says: Wow, real life’s getting busy! Sorry on the slow updates.
Writer means: My life is a literal storm of shit at the moment. Why did I decide to do this. Why am I still doing this. Everything around me is spinning out of control and I am staying up ‘til 5:30 in the morning every night to create a piece of work that will only get two comments and 12 demands for quicker updates. I hope no one’s mad at me, all I wanted to do was write.
Writer says: Wow! Would you look at that! I updated on time! Please enjoy!
Writer means: WOOOOOOHOOOOOO BITCHES LOOK AT THIS PRODUCTIVE ASSHOLE GO YEEEEEHAAAAWWWW TAKE THAT YOU NASTY REVIEWERS ALWAYS DEMANDING ME TO BE FASTER! I GOT THIS SHIT I GOT THIS SHIT
Writer says: This chapter was a toughie. Glad it’s finally done!
Writer means: I don’t know if this is good or not. I honestly don’t fucking know. I’ve read the same words over and over and over again and I just couldn’t look at it anymore. My beta said it was ok but I’m not confident but HOLY SHIT I JUST NEED TO STOP WRITING THIS FUCKIGN CHAPTER.
Writer says: Thanks for reading!
Writer means: Please, oh please oh please oh please leave me a review. A comment. Anything. Please tell me you’re out there. Please tell me someone is reading this.
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Writer means: FUCK. YOU. Who the fuck do you think you are, demanding shit from me?! You don’t know my life! I have a very busy life! I create shit for free, you entitled son of a pig-fucker! STOP LEAVING ME COMMENTS TELLING ME TO UPDATE SOON OR I SWEAR TO GOD I’LL PUKE ALL OVER MY COMPUTER
Writer means: I have no fucking clue what the next chapter is going to look like. What’s my plot? I don’t know. I feel no emotion.
Writer says: Please leave a comment! It helps me write!
Writer means: I am begging you to leave me a comment because I swear it’s the only thing that’s keeping me motivated right now, I hate the work I put out and I need reassurance that people are actually enjoying this.
Writer says: I hope you enjoyed that chapter, big things are coming up! 😉
Writer means: Buckle up bitches, someone’s gonna die.
Writer says: I know I’ve missed a few updates, but I swear I plan on finishing this story!
Writer means: *high pitched eternal screeching*
Writer says: Here we are at long last! This has been one wild ride. I want to thank you all so much for your support and love, I adore each and every one of you. I am so happy to say that this story has come to a wonderful close.
Writer means: My body is numb. Voices call out to me from the void, but I can no longer hear them over the beating of my racing heart. I am stressed to the point where I feel no relief. The story is done. It’s fucking DONE. I loved it, I hated it, it was a fucking storm of horror and pain. I can no longer see color. Now I can at last relax and…wait……wait a second………..holy shit I just thought of the best idea for a one-shot that’s totally gonna turn into a 50 chapter slow burn AU fic leT’S FUCKING DO THIS
Gimli startled at the unexpected intrusion, turning. Legolas hovered beneath the archway, looking uncertain; certainly, he was twisting the signet-ring at his finger, again and again. In truth, Gimli had not expected to see him until morning, at least—Legolas had disappeared with Haldir, that marchwarden, and Gimli understood the longing for one’s kin and kind. (However dear the Fellowship, they were not dwarves, the tongue they spoke among themselves was not Khuzdul, and the Mountain bore no meaning to them. Gimli would not exchange their company for any other’s, but he did oft wish for his cousins, his forge-brothers, those who knew, who understood without question or explanation. He would not begrudge Legolas that same longing.)
“Isn’t it—beautiful?” Legolas repeated, stepping forward into the dim twilight falling over the Golden Wood. “It is said that Lorien lives in the light of Ilúvatar, more than any other place in Middle Earth. Here, we come as close to our creation as we—might, I suppose.”
“It is indeed beautiful,” Gimli conceded, turning back to look at the wooded glade, the shards of starlight disguised as lamps that flickered into being as dusk settled over the valley. “It is not…well. It is very beautiful, only a blind creature could deny as much.”
He felt the pang of uncertainty as Legolas came to stand beside him. He had changed from his livery, Gimli realized dimly—the Lady Galadriel had offered all the Fellowship fresh clothing, but it was of a fit for Men and Elves, not dwarves or hobbits; somewhere he suspected Pippin was still rolling up those long sleeves, Merry inelegantly tucking his jerkin into his trousers.
Legolas, though, looked very fine in green picked with white-gold thread, leaves embroidered along the collar; the very incarnation of the Dream-wood itself. Gimli was too aware of his own rough hands, a smith’s hands, how tightly the fine fabric sat over his broad shoulders—he was a creature of Mahal, not Iluvatar, and this place was not for him. It was not for him.
“You do not like it,” Legolas said, and the disappointment in his voice was too much to bear, however truthful. Gimli could not meet his eye, staring at the thicket of silver-gold mallorn until it blurred beneath his gaze.
“No, no,” Gimli assured him. “It is beautiful. It is—Eru’s light, you have that correctly. And evident is the great power of the lady who rules such undiluted light. But standing here and beholding such beauty…I am reminded that your creation is not mine. For dwarves are that creation within creation, beneath and below; we are not Ilúvatar’s children, but Mahal’s—Aulë, in your tongue. And so however beautiful, this is not for me. It is not mine.”
Legolas was quiet. “I—surely, though, it is from the same wellspring,” he said thickly, at last, and Gimli still did not trust himself to look. “For Aulë was himself a creature of Ilúvatar, and any creation made in his image is likewise made in the image of his creator.”
“That is a pretty thought—”
“Do you think you are not of Eru’s beauty?” Legolas asked, stumbling over himself, and Gimli could not resist looking to him then. Legolas’ expression was a stone mask overlaid his features, but he was still twisting that signet ring at his knuckle. There was the faintest of lines, etched between his brows.
He was fair as the lamps of Lorien, and wearing the green of its trees against his skin. Gimli had no trouble at all imagining this was what the Father of All had imagined, when he decided to birth life unto Middle Earth; something, someone, like this, tall and fair as a sapling, grave and haughty and bright as starlight.
“I have always been taught that it was the Firstborn who inherited Eru’s beauty,” Gimli said at last. “The brightness of the stars—”
Legolas gave a full-body shudder, and Gimli’s throat tightened around whatever he had planned to speak next. For the life of him, he could not recall it. But it was caught in his throat, beating like his pulse, like the wings of birds.
“Is—ah, I think that your mountain must be very beautiful as well,” Legolas said, clearing his throat uncertainly. “Perhaps, though, it is Aulë’s beauty.”
“Aulë’s beauty?” Gimli repeated dimly.
Legolas was still twisting the ring at his finger, and Gimli had the unmistakable sense that he would blush, were such indignity allowable to the beautiful Firstborn. “Well, yes,” Legolas said. “I am not—I was not so distracted in the flight through Moria that I could not see what dwarven hands have wrought.”
“Ah,” Gimli said wisely.
“It is not…the beauty of Lorien,” Legolas said, with a strange twitch of his hand, half-gesturing to the dusk filtering through the golden leaves. “But not lesser. Stronger, I think. Enduring and thriving—a gate of mithril can be remade, if there are willing hands for the building. A mallorn tree once cut down is gone forever, so much wood for the fire. That is…there is beauty in the work of one’s hands, the lasting of it.”
“I think you are right,” Gimli breathed, and he saw a taut smile pull at the corner of Legolas’ mouth. “But I also think that—we have need of this too. There is room enough in the world for trees and gates both, yes?”
“I have seen—” Legolas swallowed, and Gimli watched his throat bob, his hands flutter. He offered the next sally casually, as though his eyes were not glittering and fixed on Gimli: “I have seen trees grow together with the work of hands, before. A—a growing thing has freedom, to wind itself through a made thing.”
Gimli smiled. “And so the reverse. Whole great edifices are built around a living thing…We have carved many a hall cradled in the powerful roots of a great oak.”
“Yes!” Legolas laughed, and Gimli could not help a laugh of his own. They smiled at one another, too warm, over-close. (When had they come so close? Gimli was near enough to reach out and fist his hand in the fabric of Legolas’ green-gold tunic.) “Yes, that is…that is exactly right.”
“I agree,” Gimli said. Dusk had fallen, and the lamp nearest them was flickering slowly into starlight, mirrored by the emergence of the bright-cold stars above them both. “Yes, you are correct.”
“Yes,” Legolas echoed, his grey eyes the color of starlight.
There’s really not a nicer way to describe her, a bow-legged cross between a terrier and a feral sewer rat, mostly the color of dishwater. And she doesn’t really clean up—it becomes more embarrassing after he’s married Sybil, whose pygmy hippo daemon can go from placid river god to defensive bellowing ferocity in seconds flat, and might as well have stepped from the Morpork coat of arms. But even freshly cleaned and trussed in a gold ducal collar, his daemon looks like it was dragged backwards through a nasty bit of the Ankh.
she’s a patient tracker, though, and a rat-worrier and a sheep-herder and a snarling, protective beast—there must be some wolf in that mongrel of yours, Wolfgang tells him on that snowy plain, and Vimes figures it’s pretty likely, he’s got a wolf in him too.
Vetinari has a golden orb-weaver, who only occasional deigns to make an appearance—usually resting on the back of Vetinari’s hand, as if to make a point. (There are heads of guilds with enormous bull daemons who shiver in fear of that little spider, on that pale hand.)
Carrot has a frankly impressive lioness, whose presence made the whole watch-house fall silent the first time Carrot walked in. Vimes had been a little taken aback at the sight of her, gold and somehow not of their world, standing in their grubby and undistinguished midst.
(No one has ever asked Carrot about her, not even Angua, who has her own lovely wolfdog daemon.)
Moist has a mockingbird who perches on his shoulder, the same color as dust and utterly forgettable. (In his old glory days, he would sometimes bring a turtle or mouse with him, hiding her under his hat—sorry, wrong daemon is not an ironclad alibi, but it’s enough of a distraction to run away.) She gets along well with Spike’s terrifying peregrine, though she’s a little too excited by the feeling of being snatched out of the air in Moist’s opinion.
William de Worde has a hedgehog, who immediately curled up in a ball when faced with Sacharissa Cripslock’s ermine. (It took a while to get him to relax.)
Witches tend toward cats—or women with cat daemons turn out to be witches, they never quite decided that one. Granny Weatherwax has pure grey cat, utterly unremarkable in every way but that. (She has always been privately disappointed in him, for it. She would have preferred something a little more imposing, more obviously witchy—which, of course, is ridiculous, it is choosing that makes a witch, not her nature. But still.)
Nanny has a fat piebald cat whose amorous adventures with other daemons rival Greebo’s—he’s been known to slip off for days, only returning when Nanny is called out. Magrat has a cream shorthair who looks very handsome beside Verence’s—slightly excitable, a little graceless—hare. Even Susan, though technically not a witch, has a cat daemon, a sleek black thing that likes to play with the Death of Rats when he’s bored.
Tiffany is among the few witches who doesn’t have a cat daemon—hers doesn’t settle until she faces the hiver, until she ushers it through the black door to its death. Afterwards, Tiffany Aching knows herself to be a witch, and walks the downs with her sheepdog daemon at her side, her hat full of sky.
Sgt Colin has a mild, pleasant brown toad, a sit-and-see kind of predator. Something with the patience to outlast storms, and droughts, and long frosts. Something with a set territory and a bottomless stomach, something that can launch itself sudden, startling blur to become the last thing the unwary insect ever sees.
Nobby Nobbs, well— no one actually knows what his daemon is. She’s as matted and filthy and scrofulous as the rest of him, a dark, oil-iridescent clot of fur— or are those bristles? or matted feathers?— nestled in between the collar of his breastplate and the dirt-stiff rim of his shirt. Rat? Pigeon? Spider? No one wants to ask. No one wants an answer. Sometimes she will extend one scaly, brittle claw out into the open air, and he will deposit into it a sugar cube, or a coin, or a bright little shard of glass, and she— whatever she is whatever she’s named— will retreat into the comfortable hollow of his armor, purring and pleased.
She can scream like hell though, and frequently will.
Dorfl, of course, has a phoenix— when he opened his mouth to speak his first word, there she was, a scrap of flame, on his tongue.
I love roachpatrol’s thoughts. The image of Dorfl’s daemon being born is beautiful.
I think witches would have birds, like in HDM. I see Granny with a goose; Nanny with a robin-red-breast and Magrat with a corn crake. Agnes has a nightingale and Tiffany a curlew.
Through the piping lines of the Unseen University, there are bees.
No one knows where they come from. No one knows what they eat or where they keep their hive; they buzz softly but in a way that it sounds like many mechanical things clicking together, and when they rise all at once, it sounds like the beginning of a voice.
And always, they cluster near the parts of Hex; the tubing that runs through the University like a hermit crab in a shell just right for it, and a careful eye notes that their buzzing matches perfectly to Hex’s eternal noise; the clicking of the clockwork, the tapping of the keys, the steps of the ants.
The students swear they have never seen the bees more than a short distance away from Hex, and always around the senior wizards or the High Energy facility, and they move around Ponder Stibbons like a particularly noisy halo so he looks like an apiary angel.
Mr Stibbons tells the truth when he says there were never any bees until they turned on Hex. And one day, in the moving of the machinery, there arose but just one single perfect bee.
No one knows when the swarm came. Just like no one knows when Hex became something more than the sum of parts.
But when the bees fly and Hex is working, buzz and machinery a duet, it sounds like the voice of a soul.
The undead still have souls, which is why they’re allowed in the Watch, and by extension integrated into human-dominated society. Reg Shoe’s parrot is a transparent, repetitive thing with a small tinny voice, like the echo of a kitten at the bottom of a tin bath. But that’s just Reg Shoe.
Of course dwarves have souls; strange ones, but theologically undeniable. There have always been mutters that dwarves steal the souls, or that the strangely-silent animals are actually trained pets; but they do seem satisfyingly dwarvish, the sombre badgers and mole rats and burrowing owls, and they generally don’t cause trouble, and one must trade after all.
But Cheery’s pink fairy armadillo is instantly recognizable as a daemon, and a nicely dwarvish one to human sensibilities, a very small burrowing animal. Though to the dwarves, the fussy little thing with its delicate pink armor and pristine white fur is a slightly embarrassing thing to have on public display. Not only that, but the daemon speaks in public – allowing his high, breathy, querulous voice to be commonly read as male, implying that Cheery is by extension female.
At her interview for the position at the Watch, she gathers her courage in both hands and introduces the daemon to Vimes as
Roz’querkluftertz
, her heart hammering at the wrongness and intimacy of it. (Vimes helpfully points out the location of the spittoon) and she says “No, it’s, er, a kind of pink, er, rock,” and Vimes’s face goes all hollow and he sort of stares off into the distance, and she can practically hear the rusty machinery of his brain trying to process this new information on How Not To Be A Racist Prick To The New Diversity Hire into something he can make sense of.
”Is it,” Vimes says finally, the last mental gear clunking into place, where it appears to stick.
“It’s a very pretty sort of rock,” Cheery says humbly, trying to help. “But quite rare and I’m sure it hasn’t come up in conversation before.”
”Not like gold,” Vimes says sourly.
”Probably not,” Cheery says carefully, trying to avoid the pitfall trap that is talking about gold among dwarves.
Her daemon himself pipes up suddenly in his high, scholarly little voice, and Vimes looks at him in surprise: “Roz’querkluftertz is not considered valuable to dwarves at all, in the sense that gold is inherently valuable; it is,” – and here Roz’querkluftertz gives his fussy little academic cough, “considered hr’azdkha, which is to say, valuable because of its work or properties; namely, in the case of this mineral, being useful to alchemical research, as well as being beautiful, in the homely comfortable sort of way that is rarely reflected in songs. And, of course, pink.”
”Never heard a dwarf’s daemon talk before,” Vimes’s terrier says. Her voice is beautiful, deep and hoarse and husky, like a smoke-broken bar singer.
”We’re a bit odd,” Cheery says.
”You’ll do,” the terrier says.
”I’ve always liked, er, pink,” says Vimes, pitching himself courageously along the conversation, and Cheery’s heart sort of goes out to him a bit, because you can see that somewhere behind that casually hurtful sneer, in that dark and ill-kempt machine of his brain, the man is trying to be Good with a capital G, and most people don’t care that much.
”Me too,” she says, her hand curling around the little tube of Violently Pink Like The Blood Of Thine Enemies lipstick she’d bought in the market that morning. “I’ve always liked pink.”
Someone just liked this post from a million years ago and it reminded me that “Roz’querkluftertz” was actually some kind of Pune, or Play On Words, and I FORGOT WHAT IT WAS, so I had to back-google it,
and it’s a mashup of the German word Rosenquarz (rose quartz) and the Saxon term “querkluftertz” (cross-vein-ore).
THAT’S NOT EVEN FUNNY ELODIE WHY DO YOU MAKE SO MUCH WORK FOR YOURSELF???
It IS funny, and witty, and clever. If the peculiar titles and quotations of Mr Nutt’s Überwaldean philosophy texts (in ”Unseen Academicals”) are anything to go by, that sort of mashup would have been right up Terry’s street (Rührwörtergasse 7a).
This whole sequence is pleasing in many different ways.
If I may:
Trolls, it is commonly believed, don’t have daemons. It’s one of the salient points in the ongoing dwarves vs. dwarves debate, not to mention one of the reasons why humans generally find trolls to be rather unsettling.
Among the trolls, however, it is well known that your soul is something you make, or something given to you, or something you keep on you. It might be your grandfather’s club or a favorite boulder but it’s something that’s intrinsically yours.
Detritus’ soul is a special helmet which cools his brain down so that he can think more quickly in the Ankh-Morpork heat. It was made for him by a dwarf, which many trolls feel isn’t really *proper* for a troll’s soul, but no one is going to fight him on it. Cuddy’s daemon had put extra special care into helping creating it before they vanished into a cloud of golden Dust.
Rincewind’s daemon is an opossum – a strange little creature that doesn’t mesh well with the rest of the world, and would rather run or play dead than fight, but is mean as hell when backed into a corner.
Archancellor Ridcully’s daemon is a bull moose. Wizards are the sort of fellows who tend to have same-gender daemons as often as they have different-gender daemons. (Because women and wizard magic just don’t naturally mix, of course.) The moose is huge, gets in the way pretty much constantly, and really can’t be brought down by anything short of the world ending.
Ponder Stibbons has a crow, one of those dangerously intelligent corvids that know how to use tools and can count. She has a sharp wit and often says what Ponder is thinking but would never actually say aloud. It’s a rather annoying habit, as far as Ponder is concerned.
No one knows what the Librarian’s daemon was before he became ape-shaped, or if she changed at all between then and now. She is, of course, a female orangutan who only says “Ook!” and becomes just as angry as the Librarian when someone uses the m-word.
Young Sam’s daemon has a habit of mimicking his father’s daemon, except quite less scruffy. Sybil has sometimes walked into the nursery and caught all four of them sound asleep, Young Sam on Vimes’s chest and a big-pawed, fluffy golden retriever puppy curled up with the mud-colored mutt.
They took the idea of parents being proud of their child and wanting to have lots of memories of him growing up and tried to twist it into something bad.
this is such bullshit.
i have a 2-year old. You bet your fucking arse I have taken a zillion pictures of her. I love her, she is a constant source of amazement and wonder and joy. She will never be this small ever again, she is full of new things and new words and new experiences right now and the rest of her family live in another fucking state, how the hell else are they meant to see them? Telepathy???
i loved seeing pics of myself and my siblings when we were little. Pictures of me and my sister, our chubby baby faces playing dress-ups, at the park, learning to paint, patting a kangaroo at a zoo, clomping around in our mum’s shoes, first time with our hair tied up. I can see shades of the me I am now in that little person. I can see the steps I took to get here.
I want that for my little one. I want the grown-up to have that connection to her past. I want her to have that security, the line between then and now. I want her to know in her bones that she is so so loved, and has always been so –so– loved.
And do you know? SHE ENJOYS IT. She loves having her picture taken. She grins and poses, dances and shouts at the camera, pulls funny faces, laughs madly and falls over and kicks up her legs and has a total blast of a time, and then she demands to see it afterwards. She asks me to take pictures at the most random times – “pichure! Mummy, Pichure!”- eating dinner, cuddles with daddy, her favourite toy (”Pichure Bunny!”), her bowl of cut-up fruit, drawing chalks, getting into the car, whenever. She wants me to take them, and she wants to see them. I’ve printed some of the nice ones for our walls, and she points at them CONSTANTLY. She points out her friends, her parents, her grandparents, herself, in her new words. We give her even more new words to describe the links between us all – cousin, auntie, uncle, poppy, grandad, grandma. The only reason she knows her cousins at all IS BECAUSE OF SKYPE AND PHOTOS. She has met them in person twice in her whole life. But she knows their faces, and she loves them.
I have only two pictures of my own mother as a little girl. She changed a lot as she grew: she looks very different as an adult. I have NONE of my dad as a child. If we used the photographic record as evidence, it might even appear that they sprang fully-formed out of nowhere, ready-made parents, the second my older sis was born.
I treasure those photos of my mum as a little girl. And do you know something else? Sometimes, when my child turns her head just right, or when she holds her chin a certain way – in those snaps, she looks like my mum.
Something i never would have known without my photos.
So, to the artist who made this glib, trite, woe-for-the-young piece of ‘social commentary’? I am sending your proctologist all my best wishes.
They’re going to need all the luck in the world finding your fucking head.