yes indeedy, all those reunions are most def happening! Thank you Nonnie *hugs*
(i guess that some people are still confused as to how I am gonna sort that bagginshield reunion, BUT IT IS HAPPENING. In fact, all the pieces have now been laid in place!)
Bilbo and Thorin’s seemingly mutually unrequited pining is getting ridiculous and driving everyone nuts, so the Company decides to stage an intervention. For the sake of their friends, and for the sake of the sanity of Erebor.
Woo I can finally officially say this was mine^^ (as if my ever so sly promo wasn’t just me screaming “look this is mine but I can’t announce it yet”)
Anyway, hope you like this fic and hope you like my banner that I made in like five minutes but I really wanted one lmao
–and are super excited to meet a new relative (this one didn’t even kill any other elves!). celebrimbor is very very confused. the noldor are very welcoming to tauriel, and really interested in getting to know her. tauriel is completely oblivious, and thinks the noldor are just weirdly helpful.
Nonnie, yes you are right – that is not happening in Sansukh, sorry for disappointment… but why the heck does that mean it won’t exist?? Go write it! This is a great premise and I love the idea and I would read the heck out of it! GO WRITE YOUR IDEA INTO THE WORLD, MAKE IT INTO A THING! Love it and name it and dive, dive, dive into it!!
loves, I am working as fast as my stubby lil fingers will allow me to get this next chapter happening. It’s at 3.5K now, and I hope to have the bare bones of it sorted by this afternoon.
I know it might be a bit… uh, famine-then-feast, but I really want to show my appreciation to everyone for their kindness, non-pressuring understanding, and patience during a rough time.
So, anyways. Have a snippet of the draft of 48!
(*gif is totally unrelated to the chapter – I’ve been watching #GBBO lately and saw this and thought it was hilarious SORRY my sense of humour is borked as per usual)
…
“Show me,” were Dís’
first words after Frerin had finished his halting description of the pool of Gimlîn-zâram
and its purpose. Frerin flinched, sinking deeper into his chair by Thráin’s
hearth.
Dáin pursed his
lips. His current pig oinked disapprovingly from its place by his feet (Thorin
had long since stopped trying to tell them apart). “Warning you now: The first
time is a shocker,” he said.
“You went in too
soon,” Thorin said to him. Dáin shrugged.
“Probably, but
there’s no good time to see what you left behind you. It would have hurt either
way.”
“My whole life has
been a litany of ‘too soon’,” Dís said, her eyes hard as she raised them to her
family. “I am not afraid of loss. Show me.”
Frerin winced, but
took her hand anyway. “Seems to be my usual job,” he said apologetically.
“I’ll come get you
in a couple of hours,” Frís offered, and Dís nodded absently. She towered over
her brother as she followed him from the room. Víli’s worried gaze followed
her.
“You all right?”
Thorin murmured to him, and he glanced back, startled.
“I’m…” he began,
but broke off with a conflicted look and a huff.
“Aye,” said Thráin,
as though he knew exactly what Víli was trying to say. “She’ll be back in a few
hours, lad. She won’t disappear in a puff of smoke the moment you turn your
back!”
“I know,” Víli
said, and his head bent, ever so slightly.
“Dad,” Fíli said,
softly. Víli nodded, wordless, before he reached out with both hands and gave
both Thorin and Fíli a rough, affectionate pat on the arm.
“I’m all right.
It’s just – well,” he said, and then he stood. His smile was wry. “I don’t need
to say it, do I? I’m off to see Lóni and Frár, I guess. I want to see if Frár’s
working on anything new. Busy hands and busy mind and all that.”
“Good idea,” Thráin
said.
“I’ll go with you,”
said Fíli, still looking a little worried. “Uncle?”
Thorin shook his
head. “I want to stop in on Gimli. I won’t disturb your mother and little
uncle. I haven’t heard any report on the journey since the departure, and that
was some weeks ago.”
“They’re well into
Mirkwood by now then,” said Thráin.
“Greenwood,” said Kíli, looking faintly
injured.
“I’ll go pop in on
my lad, and then I’ll stop in on that trio of idiots going East,” said Dáin,
giving his pig a scratch beneath its bristly chin. It gave him a limpid-eyed
look of bliss.
“You just want to
coo at the babies again,” accused Víli. “Not foolin’ anyone.”
Dáin shrugged
again, grinning freely. “Who can blame me?”
“Nobody,” Thráin
laughed, and pushed Dáin’s shoulder a little. “Nobody at all. Get on with you,
then. Stop hogging all the heat from my fire.”
“Want company?”
Kíli offered as Thorin stood and stretched a little.
“It will likely be
very dull,” he warned Kíli, but he nevertheless fell into step at his side as
they left Thráin’s rooms. Custard was stretched out before the hearth, boneless
and loose with her tongue slightly protruding. She didn’t even stir at the
sound of so many booted feet passing at once.
“I can do dull,”
Kíli said, affronted. Thorin sent him a sidelong look as they began the walk, and
the lad gave an offended little grunt. “I can!”
“If you wish to
come along, then I’m glad to have you. My usual companion is busy,” Thorin
said, and didn’t allow a hint of a smile to cross his lips. “Your little uncle
is doing a far more important task right now.”
“And I’m not going
to get underfoot either, no matter how much I want to,” Kíli said, and his jaw
firmed. “He and Mum are fine. So let’s go see Gimmers and tease him a bit.”
“Unkind, nidoyel.”
“Pfft, he’s a grown
lad now, he can take it,” Kíli dismissed.
“He’s one hundred
and forty, nearly twice your age,” Thorin said, amused.
“My age when I died,” protested Kili. “I’m still
older than him!”
“Keep telling yourself that,” Thorin said, and the shining
door of the Chamber of Sansukhûl rose before them as they turned the corner. Dís,
Frerin and Frís were already crowded around the far end, their eyes glowing in
the radiance of the pool.
“Well, don’t you
still consider yourself older than Dáin and Mum?” Kíli challenged, and Thorin
paused in the act of taking his bench.
“Right. Fair point. Let’s not speak of it again,” he said, and threw himself into
Middle-Earth as quickly as he was able.
I started dying at Tauriel calling Thorin ‘my guy’ and haven’t stopped
Heeeeeeey my guy, looking good, looking… a lot less dead-ish. All right? *finger guns* heeeeeey uh, yeah, cool beans… so um, if you could just refrain from making with the stabbity, could you point me in the direction of… what. what – is there something on my face? What?!? WHAT the HELL IS SO FUNNY.
Hey so I knooooow it has been ages since I updated. I’ve been having a real pencil-scribble of a brain time lately. I’ve either got tons of energy (for anything that isn’t writing!) or I am very listless and tired. I’m ok, it’s just a bit hard to get a grip atm! Dumb pencil-scribble brain, gaaaah
anyway!
Here is my wordcount update on ch47: 5K
And here is a lil sneak peek. Hope you enjoy!
“So. You have answered my summons at last, daughter of the
forest.”
Hröa. New hröa.
She had died, she had stormed the dark fortress, and…
“And far sooner than I had anticpated.”
She blinked her eyes, feeling the breath rush in and out of
her lungs, the expansion and contraction of her ribs, as she had never noticed
it before. Her toes scraped against the ground as she slowly stood up. Her skin
felt unbearably sensitive, as though rough cloth were being pressed against it,
though it was no more than the whisper of air around her limbs.
It was too bright, but she could just make out that her
hands were as she remembered them. This flesh was identical to the old, just as all the tales had promised.
Then she took in the gigantic figure stooping over her, and
her newly-beating heart nearly stopped yet again. “My Lord… Mandos?”
“Námo, if you please. Mandos is the name of my realm.”
The Vala was neither young, nor old. His skin was deep bronze, and the piercing
glow of the moon came from his eyes, etching the edges of the room in stark white and grey. His hair and body were swathed in scarves of many colours,
covered in fantastical designs so intricate and dizzying that they defied the eye. They wafted around him, blurring his silhouette, drifting about like ghostly tendrils.
She shrank back.
“I did not expect to see you for several centuries yet,” he
continued, and straightened up. The scarves floated in the air about him, as
though an unseen wind were toying with them. Half-hidden in this cloud of
complexity, he moved back politely to allow her some space in which to recover.
“Those who refuse my summons and my halls do not tend to change their minds as
readily as you have.”
“I did not change my mind,” she said, bravely lifting her
face to that moonglow. “I do not know why I have come, nor why I have been
given this new form. I would have stayed in my trees, entombed beneath the stones. There is nothing for me
here.”
“Hmm.” The Vala waved a hand (or was it a scarf?) at a table
which had suddenly appeared. “You are the daughter of that wood indeed:
stubborn, thorny and hard. There are clothes for you here, at least. Choose which pleases
you best.”
“It is my home,” she said, and as hurriedly as she was able
she dragged on a pair of green hose and a brown tunic. Her colours. “It is
where I would have my body remain.”
“You are an Elf, child,” said Námo quietly. “You cannot be elsewhere. Your very
essence is tied to the world. You may refuse the summons, but it only prolongs
the inevitable: this was always meant to happen. Your re-embodiment is the fate
of all Elves. Most find it a relief.”
“I am not most Elves,” she growled, shoving her feet into a
sturdy pair of boots. “I want to go back.”
“Why?”
That stopped her for a moment, but she firmed her jaw
nevertheless. “I left great evil behind me, roosting in the branches of my
home,” she said. “I will return and destroy it, now that I am whole once more.”
“Ah! Rejoice, then, daughter of the trees! For the evil has
been destroyed as you drifted beyond all hope of news.” Námo smiled,
and she was momentarily dazzled by the flash of his teeth. “The enemy has been
thrown down and can never be reborn, for his greatest and chiefest weapon was
in the end, the instrument of his destruction. No shadows will crawl from Dol
Guldur in the days and decades to come. It is destroyed, and not a stone remains.”
She stared up at him, overwhelmed by the glow and the myriad
patterns of his scarves and scarcely believing it. “Dead? Sauron is dead?”
“He is. I have turned him away, and he shall lie trapped in
the void until the Sun and the Moon both perish. This I swear to you.”
“And is that prophecy?” She sat down heavily, and stared at
her fingers. The lines and creases of her palms were exactly as before – the
stark harsh light painted them in black and grey upon her skin.
“It is truth.”
“How did this happen?” She looked up again. It was difficult
to say whether the movement was scarves or arms as the Vala drew closer once
more.
“Through trial and terror, bravery and fellowship,” he
said, and his smile pierced her again. “And love, of course. It is a tale long in the telling.
Therefore we must find a time long enough, and begin. As for you, I may hazard
a guess. Though the mightiest of the Elves yet in Middle-Earth were the ones
responsible for the fall of Dol Guldur, it was Aiwendil that sowed the earth in
the aftermath. He was a pupil of Yavanna before his journey, and it was his
task to protect the Olvar and Kelvar of Middle Earth. He has fulfilled his
task.”
“I do not understand.”
He considered her. “You stayed to protect your forest, did
you not? You gave the last of your strength, even unto your last breath, to rid it of evil.”
She nodded dumbly.
“Thanks to the Wizard, it is no longer in need of protection.
It is cleansed. It is free.”
She blinked. The knowledge sank heavily into her, as though
it was a stone and she a still woodland pool.
Then she said, “what do I do now? Where shall I go?”
The Vala’s expression was shrewd. “I, famously, have little
in the way of pity. I suggest you seek out a new purpose, Elfling.”
She sat motionless for another moment. Then her head whipped
up, an impossible hope flaring in her breast. “You see all those who die, do
you not?”
“That is my purpose.”
He sounded stern now, as though he anticipated her next question. “I see them,
yes. They are my charge. But only those of Elven blood may pass through my
borders. The Men and Hobbits and Orcs go on, to a place even I cannot see. Only
Eru Illuvatar knows their destination.”
She took a huge breath. “And Dwarves?”
He drew back, his scarves flaring in shock. “What?”
She scrambled to her feet. “What of the Dwarves? Where do they go? Do they also move beyond, to a
place you cannot see? Or do they stay as the Elves do?”
Stiffly, he answered, “They stay. But not under my care.”
Her heart began pounding with a new challenge. “Where? Under
whose care?”
But Námo was silent.
She spun on her heel, and all at once there was a door where
there had been none before. “Is that the way out? To Aman and beyond?”
“It is.”
“I will find where the Dwarves go,” she promised him, and
raced for the door. “I will!”
“Unusual girl,” he murmured as she disappeared into the
fields. “Perhaps I should warn
Aulë… or then again, perhaps not.”
After all, he was owed a surprise after that nonsense with Irmo, the Dwarf, the Hobbit, and the Olórë Mallë.
hröa
– body
(fëa was the name for Spirit. Elven spirits are tied to the world, even after death. This is the reason that they are re-embodied by Mandos after death. They are meant to exist as long as Arda does.)
Olórë Mallë – the path of dreams. Mortals can see Valinor in their dreams – the only way they can visit (apart from a handful of exceptions who could take the straight path). This is how Bilbo has been visiting Thorin in his sleep. Irmo (Lorien) is in charge of it. And Irmo is
Námo’s brother.
Mandos – He is usually known by this name. But his true, and less common name, is
Námo. I just really like the idea that EVERYBODY calls him Mandos no matter how many times he has corrected them over the eons.
Aiwendil – Radagast. He was indeed a Maia of Yavanna.
The Dizzying Scarves –
Námo’s wife is Vairë, the weaver. :)))
The Doom of Men (and Hobbits) – they are not re-embodied, as the Elves are, because they are not eternally tied to the world. When they die, they go to a place that even Mandos does not know.
YEAH HABAN AND NARVI ❤ huffy impatient genius and her bestie, the savvy, shrewd businesswoman ftw.
Oooooh dang – well, Narvi’s family exist, but they are Sir Not-Appearing-In-This-Fic. However, the awesome @christmashippo has given Narvi a whole family, including siblings! And they are brilliant, so you should go check out Hippo’s Narvi tag 🙂
The Kili and Narvi Elf Appreciation Club and Drinking Society is so, SO definitely a thing. Damn, now I wanna write a one-shot about that!
It’s just the two of them, drinking and saying ‘EARS, RIGHT?’ and ‘LEGS. FOR. DAYS.’ and ‘did yours do the thing with the staring and no-blinking too?’ and sighing a lot. There is most definitely also bitching, lots of bitching.
They routinely bicker over who is president of the Society. According to Narvi, she was appreciating Elves first. According to Kili, the Club was his idea.
(Azaghal is an honourary member for life death. Gimli has been added in-absentia, also )