Your Tauriel ficlet basically killed me. OMG what a thing to wake up to. I always wondered, what would Dis have made of Tauriel? Would it have helped or hurt (more like Bilbo seemed to) to have known her? Or what would Tauriel have made of Dis (I think she’d have liked her)? And will we ever find out? I’m all about the Bagginshield and Gigolas, don’t get me wrong… but I’m rooting for Tauriel and Kili to get a happy ending in Sansukh, too.

*does the Will Smith Pose at the Happy Ending tag* *winks and taps nose*

idk, I mean, I adore Dis forever and ever. I adore Tauriel forever and ever. Sometimes a shared grief is a good thing. Sometimes it only makes it worse. I just dunno. There’s a lot of ways that could play.

Heh, um. Yes. My starlight child brings out some serious PAIN in me, it appears. Uh, oopsies?

The tags on the Tauriel ficlet are currently my favourite thing, mwahahahaha:

What did happen to Tauriel in Sansukh?

She fought her grief. 

Oh she fought it. With everything she was, she fought it, even as the years slipped and slid away. Her memory remained perfect, crystalline in its clarity – and therein lay the great cruelty of it. Only a few short days to know him, a few short and terrible days – but she was doomed to remember them as though they had happened only moments ago. 

All her efforts were defeated by the perfect, pitiless precision of Elven memory.

(She told herself, I will not be one of those tragic Elf-maids, wasting away to nothing all for lost love.) 

(She told herself, I am a warrior and a Captain and a guard, I am a Silvan Elf of the Greenwood.)

(She told herself, I will fight. I will fight.) 

(She told herself, when did I allow my pain to become greater than myself?)

(She told herself, I should like to see a Fire-moon.)

She fought her grief. Oh she fought it. She took her knives and her bow, and sought out evil and struck it down. Even as her grief ate away at her (a worm in the core of an apple) she cleaned whole swathes of the Forest of the spiders. She opened up the trees to the starlight, took down the webs of shadow. 

She took her bow and her knives and crossed into the plains south of the great forest, and there she made slow stealthy war upon the Orcs’ outposts. She fought them, and she fought her grief, and she fought them, and she fought her grief. 

(She told herself, I will fight.) 

(She did not say, until I cannot.)

She rarely returned to the Elvenking’s Halls over the years. 

Legolas watched her with worried eyes. Thranduil’s eyes were far too knowing – and sad.

She grew spare and pinched, her eyes dulled. Not even the stars sang in her ears now, and their light could be seen through her flesh.  

She took her knives and her bow, and strapped a sword to her back.  Evil still stood untouched in the south. She had felt it, seeping cold and foul, cloaked in shadows once more. She could not stand by. This was her fight.

(Her grief was now a chain around her neck, around her arms and chest, strangling her tight, trapping her entirely – but oh how she fought it.)

(This was her fight.)

She crept away, as was her custom. Legolas watched her steal away with worried eyes. In the spaces between her steps, he knew and became aware of what she meant to do. And he took her hand and wept.

“I will go with you,” he said.

She smiled at him, gently, gently. “No. Your fight will come.”

He wept as she kissed his brow, and wept still as she melted away into the trees for the final time: an ephemera under moon and bough.

She fought, oh how she fought. Within and without she waged her war. Fought the dragging of her steps, fought her perfect memory, fought the distance and the shadows and the sluggish beating of her heart. 

Her sword still fitted smoothly in her palm, and there was evil before her. The citadel was reeking, it glowed with malice. She charged, and it scattered before her blade. The darkness itself quailed before her: blood-child, star-child, dying Elf with righteous battle in her heart and grief in her veins and a stone in her hand.

The Hill of Sorcery wrapped itself around her, like the chain of her sorrow. And with her sword in hand, she struck a last blow at the foot of the tower with all her fading strength. This was her fight. 

She would never see a fire-moon. 

The tower was black at the core, rotted through. Orcs and worse screamed in terror as she brought the northern tower down upon them. She could not move fast enough, not anymore. 

The great slabs fell, one by one, and pinned her under the dark earth. Her hand held a sword. Her hand held a stone. There was no song of starlight, no whisper of wind or tree. Her chains tightened.

(She told herself, I know what it means, now.)

(She told herself, it is memory, precious and pure.)

(She told herself, I promise.)

(And then she told no more.)

HEADCANONPALOOZA PART 14!!!!

(tbh? I have a feeling that Frerinith isn’t going to care all that much about having an Elf of his own. And that particular one keeps smooshing faces with Gimli, anyway. Gimizh’s Elf is far far easier to boss around.)

I NEED SPICY SOUP COMPETITIONS BETWEEN DAIN AND GENILD YESTERDAY. YESTERDAY.

Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6, Part 7, Part 8, Part 9, Part 10, Part 11, Part 12, Part 13

Sansukh worldbuilding question. Do “regular” people know if they’re the reincarnated version of someone who died very young? Obviously Durin (and possibly the other 6 progenitors if they get reincarnated) know that they’re /them/ … eventually. But for your average Joe, who doesn’t have any prophesy or signs or whatnot, do they know that this is their second time on the merry-go-round?

Hey Nonnie!

Nah, I don’t think they do. They’re as whole a person now as anybody else. Their previous ‘possibility’ is not more important than their current reality. YMMV, though, this probably holds true for most, but not all Dwarves. It’s a tricky and sort of vague area!

Tbh, when The Letter arrives, Gimizh is extremely worried for both his grandpa and his da what with all the shouting and the uncontrollable laughter. Can either of them breath? Are faces supposed to get that color, Ma? Ma? (okay, he’ll just take the opportunity of no one paying any attention to him to make some mischief and work on his welcome home gift for Uncle Gimli and also go hide over with the Dwalinuls)

psst nonnie, don’t forget Laerophen! 😉

So I just found out that Tolkien wrote the hobbits as people of color and now I’m just imagining all the possibilities. Like dark skinned hobbits with brightly colored eyes or hair. So cool.

YES! I know, right!!! One of my fave things. That’s why I go out of my way to mention the ‘brown’ face or ‘brown’ hands (BROWN HOBBITS). 

Also, Aragorn is explicitly and constantly referred to as ‘dark’, so make of that what you will (MY MIND’S ARAGORN IS A POC)

I’ve been meaning to ask you this for ages but how do you think Thorin Stonehelm got the name “Stonehelm”? I’ve got two headcanons and I don’t know which I like better. One is that he got it in battle, and the other is that Dáin accidentally dropped him on his head when he was a child but nothing bad happened because of the thick head of the Durin line, and that made Dáin call him his lil Stonehelm. (ps you can totally publish this)

HI HI HI ERINA *smishes*

oh my gosh, yeah, I’ve blabbed on this idea before, and my first thought was that perhaps he gained the epithet in battle

but then 

I thought: ‘what if he headbutted a battle-ram when he was a little kid…

..and the ram ran away bleating.’

And everyone in Erebor thinks it’s totally a battle-earned epithet. But EVERYONE from the Iron Hills of a certain age knows that it is a nickname that Dain gave his son.

because WHAT A HEAD, WHAT A HEADBUTT

POW baa baa baaaa

There are a few elf dolls running around in Erebor after the events of the Ring War. Legolas is obviously a decent seller. Laerophen and Merilin do decently, since they were in Erebor and people remember what they did. Galadriel sells some (Galadriel hair fixing anyone?), as does Elrond. Glorfindel has actually been a quiet regular for some time. Guy killed a Balrog – dwarves figure they can overlook the whole elf thing for that. Frerin actually had a Glorfindel doll before Smaug.

pfffffffft okay! I’m not too sold on the idea of Dwarves making Elf dolls before the Ring War, but totally afterwards, that would def be a thing!

(to consider: My Little Shadowfax, anybody?)