On the topic of Narvi, and her thoughts on Gimli and Legolas – what about Kíli? Does she ever talk to him, or does he ever seek her out? Does she comfort him, does he comfort her, does he let her know what Mahal has told him about seeing Tauriel again?

She noticed his euphoria several days later (she had a project, it was occupying most of her mind) and by accident.

She hadn’t paid much attention to the younger generation of the Line of Durin. That family was always so replete with earth-shattering drama and gloom, she avoided them as a matter of course.

The current situation in Middle-Earth had drawn her into their web, however, and she had become embroiled in their dour seriousness and urgent plans despite herself. Though she hadn’t any idea what use she would be.

So it was a breath of fresh air when the youngest ones entered a room: smiling and laughing, their bright eyes dancing with good humour. They always had less of that air of injured tragedy about them than the older ones: Thror, with his terrible anger and guilt, Thrain who lost himself, and Thorin – that implacable exterior covering a yawning pit of stormy emotion that threatened to swallow them all.

They were not great minds – any of them. But they were great Dwarves, and that was enough. That could be enough. She would help.

Perhaps her way of looking at the world could be of use to them.

It was upon her return from the waters (the walls of Minas Tirith were ancient and in decay – but sweet blessed Durin there was some good stone there. The Gates needed work, though: her hands itched) that she ran into the youngest of the Line, the one with the impish grin and snarled brown hair. He apologised and yawned full in her face. “Sorry,” he mumbled.

She wrinkled her nose at him. “Should you be entering the star-pool if you are exhausted?”

He grinned hugely, full of some great news. “I could walk on water right now, no matter how tired I am.”

She raised her eyebrows. “Oh?”

He flopped down on a bench and kept smiling at the water. “I will see Tauriel again.”

Tauriel – an elvish name, a female Elvish name – ‘daughter of the forest’ – a woodland name, possibly Silvan, therefore Mirkwood because this dwarrow would not have entered the other dwellings of Silvan Elves, would have had no other opportunity to meet…

Tauriel,” was all she said.

“Mmmhmm,” he managed, and yawned again. “Just spoke to our Maker. He said that the Elves will return after Dagor Dagorath.”

Dagor Dagorath – the end battle, the return of the darkest evil and the final reckoning – the Elves will return – the Elves will return – the Elves…

They will return.

“They will return,” she repeated, wanting to make sure.

“Aye,” he said, and beamed at nothing in particular. “I will see Tauriel again.”

“Tauriel is dead?” she pressed, though her heart was thundering. Her own voice sounded very far away.

“Aye,” he said, blinking, and then his face grew lax as the starlight came to claim him and whirl him into the world of the living.

Narvi did not run to Mahal to demand answers. She did not storm through the Halls. She did not scream aloud in joy and grief.

She walked, stunned and dazed, to her workshop. There she went to a chest that had sat untouched since the moment she awoke in the Halls, and blew dust from the lid.

Unlocking it, she drew out a blanket-wrapped lump, and held it close to her chest. There she sat, still as stone, for a long moment. Then she took a huge shuddering breath – and finally tears began to run down her face.

I will see you again. I will see you again. I will see you again!

Beneath a corner of the blanket came the telltale silvery moonlit glow of ithildin.

If you’re up to it want to talk about Narvi? What her thoughts on Gimli and legolas’ relationship are, and how she prefers her green eggs and ham in sansukh?

Sure, if you like!

Okay, thoughts on Narvi…

(She’ll have her eggs soft-boiled please. Toast cut into ‘soldiers’ for dipping!)

So, I consider her to be a genius of the ‘mind can never ever stop working’ variety. She doodles in the margins of every scrap of paper. She can look at an uncarved, unfinished hunk of rock and know exactly what should be made from it, what is waiting inside it ready to be let out. She glances at a wall and sees the fault in it that will cause it to fall in four centuries’ time.

She’s learned to keep most of her thoughts to herself, simply because there are so many of them. They zip and sparkle and tumble through her head constantly. This lends her a rather impatient air, frankly – she always seems a little terse, but it’s usually because she’s also listening to the stones and the air and the fall of water and the EVERYTHING.

Also, uh… she doesn’t mean to be a snob, really. But everyone else’s work (bar a select few, like Telchar) is. Well. Compared to her own? They’re like a child’s finger-painting. She’s just so far ahead of them. She gets impatient! (and a bit lonely – it can be lonesome at the top when nobody else understands you).

Her opinion on Gimli/Legolas: she is both relieved and pained. Relieved – because she would see the great friendship between Elves and Dwarves restored. She knows what greatness can be found in Elves.

(she is also relieved for Legolas’ and Gimli’s sake – one of the few who is. She knows, better than most, that Elves are not impassive, and they do feel pain. She is glad for them both. And additionally, she’s also glad because GREAT MAHAL they were getting tiresome. All that annoying pining.)

And of course, the Gimli-Legolas relationship can’t help but remind her of her own life: of bright Elven eyes that smiled at her, a quick Elven mind that was as sharp and keen and brilliant as her own, of deft clever Elven fingers that made marvels.

And what happened next.

christmashippo:

Yay, more Narvi! 

This is really just an attempt to decide what some of her tattoos look like (and figure out how to paint darker skin). 
I fell in love with determamfidd’s concept of “mourning-marks”, tattoos honoring dead friends and family, hence why Narvi has the Star of Fëanor on her back. 
I’m not entirely sure about the others (I definitely need to redesign the sun), and I’m sure she has more than the ones I’ve drawn here, but I’ll get to them later.

AUGH NARVI

AUGH MOURNING MARKS

AUGH IT IS SO BEAUTIFULLLL AND SAAAAAAAAD

Wait. Okay. Wait. 1) Arwen may or may not know how to metalwork. 2) HOBBITSHOBBITSHOBBITSHOBBITS 3) Aragorn is so completely over Gigolas. He’s not even impressed anymore. 4) I cried during the scene with Dís and Thorin III. And 5) Mahal MADE DAIN A MITHRIL PEG-LEG. Dets, you wonderful amazing author you. May your beard grow ever long!

jkdfhlajsgflasjdhfaljshfdaksdajshfd THANK YOU SO MUCH

(i may or may not really love the idea of Elves ALSO being craftspeople – bc Noldor etc etc. There’s a reason their swords are so kickass! now if only Elves and Dwarves could bond over their nerdy nerdy crafty abilities… *coughnarvicough*)

Aragorn is pretty damn over it for a guy whose OTP just got together hahaha

Never Again

fae-of-the-rose:

Small ficlet inspired by determamfidd ‘s Narvi and Celebrimbor headcanon posts and therefore also inspired by “Sansukh”. You don’t need to read the fic to understand this, just know that Narvi is female here.

Warning: mentions of torture. Nothing too descriptive, but it is mentioned.

Read More

Oh.

Oh that hurts so good.

Thank you so much, Fae, it is beautiful and thoroughly devastating. I love it!

heeey, I don’t know about about the silm because I haven’t gotten the chance to read it just yet, but in shadow of mordor celebrimbor has a wife and kid. I’m not trying to rain on anyone’s parade or anything, so sorry if it seems that way, but do you know if celebrimbor actually had a family of if it was just something he game made up? thanks!

Hey! I’m guessing that’s a Shadow of Mordor thing alone? 

Tolkien Gateway tends to be fairly accurate, mostly. And it shows its sources for information, which is awesome. There’s no mention of a wife or child there (though it makes mention of the attraction he felt for Galadriel, from Unfinished Tales), and I’ve never come across it in my own reading. I could be wrong though!