firith: (daucus ·)
(Elvenking)—❧ Thranduil Oropherion ([personal profile] firith) wrote in [community profile] eachdraidh2014-11-12 12:17 pm

❧ VIDEO; 04 (both courts)

[ Thranduil hasn't vanished off the face of the Drabwurld again, contrary to popular belief, despite keeping his head down since Samhain. Ensconced in the Caer Glaem library pulling up certificates, maps, and all the other ridiculous paraphernalia required for a legalised contact to take place, he flicks on the locket from his desk in a corner of the vast halls, surrounded by stacks. There he sits sipping a goblet of the last keg of leftover Dorwinion which is currently under strict guard in the cellars (looking at you Samhain revellers). On the table are scrolls and books, all of which have been tidied, while in front of him lies a black leather-bound folder, ostensibly containing the point of the broadcast. ]

The High-King and I have come to an arrangement. In exchange for fair recompense, I have bought the rights to the woodlands south of the forest river and west of the Hidden Falls, within a crux of the mountain-range, to be easily identified on any common map. [ It's not quite as simple as that, of course, but he'll save everyone the pointless politicking. That, and he doesn't want to bring up Celegorm's shard in public; it would be bad taste. ] Aelfen and Elven tribes alike will be travelling to Caer Glaem over the next week or so to replenish their supplies, tools and gold, well within their rights to do so, before continuing on to their new homeland. Please show these former refugees every kindness.

[ As dapper as he looks, he clearly doesn't intend to faff about chatting idly about inanities; someone wants a nice long sleep. ]

If you have business in what will be renamed the Maechenibryth, come the turn of the winter season, or have done in the past which you wish to pursue in the future, you may bring the matter to myself, Thranduil, or to my son, Legolas, who will pass it on accordingly. There is much yet to do and I have little enough time to spare.

[ Sipping his wine, he shuts off the locket. ]




( ooc: if you'd like to continue anything from samhain just pop me a pm and i'll get on it, otherwise i'll take this opportunity to declare tag amnesty on that front as it broke my inbox and burned me out, sobs. tagging will generally be slow until after the weekend because of work. ty for waiting! )
kingsdaughter: (Does it whisper "Start again?")

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[personal profile] kingsdaughter 2014-11-20 11:11 pm (UTC)(link)
'Cos his death didn't belong to Clarisse. Or me.

[She lets out a breath.]

I'm going to tell you what happened, just...don't say it wasn't my fault. A lot of people say it wasn't and it's only because they're not thinking, or they think I'm just some innocent little girl who's too tender-hearted and blaming herself needlessly because she can't bear what's happened, or something. That's not the case. I've thought about it a lot and I know it was my fault.

So...when Celegorm was marching his army to Caer Glaem, the first to know about it were the birds. They came and they told me. And I panicked. I was afraid and I didn't sit and think what to do. I told Lord Stark because I knew he'd tell me what to do, and he did. He told me to tell Clarisse and some others, and I didn't know them, let alone trust them, but I thought if Lord Stark trusted them, that was enough. It wasn't. So I told Clarisse and I didn't even know her. And I knew that Celegorm wanted. I knew everything, and I let it all fly to the four winds instead of being sensible. That's why there was a battle, and that's why so many people died. A lot of deaths that didn't belong to me, but I got them anyway, and telling Clarisse to give away the shard was the only little thing I could do to try to make something right out of all the wrong I'd made.
kingsdaughter: (I'm just saying it's up to you)

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[personal profile] kingsdaughter 2014-11-20 11:30 pm (UTC)(link)
I know.

[She is very solemn--not emotional, but not casual at all. She has born this burden for a while, and she has adjusted to it somewhat.]

I was a very stupid spy. I should have kept it to myself and stole the Silmaril. Then I'd tell Sansa about the army and ride to Celegorm and give him what he wanted. Information is more powerful than I knew, and I guess I didn't think it mattered very much who had it, so long as they couldn't surprise us. I learned a few days later that he wasn't trying to surprise us, just draw us out. If I'd kept my head, we wouldn't've done the thing he wanted us to do.
kingsdaughter: (Daa Tilda's stickin forks in the toaster)

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[personal profile] kingsdaughter 2014-11-21 12:23 am (UTC)(link)
[His warning shakes her just a bit. Knowing for sure what she should have done was her one anchor to peace in all this, and now that's in doubt. She blinks, then gropes for the anchor again.]

Is that what happened to Clarisse? She fell under its spell? Would that've...why would it happen if I didn't want it?
kingsdaughter: (I am a king's daughter)

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[personal profile] kingsdaughter 2014-11-21 01:49 am (UTC)(link)
The coasts were different?

[See, this sounds like a much more interesting course for this conversation to take.]

Tell me the story of the Silmarils. Please.
kingsdaughter: (Bain stop turning your face inside out)

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[personal profile] kingsdaughter 2014-11-21 06:24 pm (UTC)(link)
Sacked? Was it Morgoth looking for the jewel? [She has already equated Morgoth with Smaug in her mind, and that's where it takes her. Moreover, she can't imagine there being any great political separation between the elf-kindreds, and is imagining them being all in one kingdom.]
Edited 2014-11-21 18:28 (UTC)
kingsdaughter: (Does it whisper "Start again?")

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[personal profile] kingsdaughter 2014-11-21 07:59 pm (UTC)(link)
[She goes quiet and somewhat pale as his story rolls on.

Elves ruined his home.

Elves attacked Elves.

She remembers, vaguely, Maglor speaking of the horrible misdeeds, and only now recalls to mind some of the words he used. She remembers, more clearly, how badly she wished to beg his forgiveness when she saw him lose his brother. Celegorm, who destroyed a beautiful kingdom and drove out its innocent inhabitants, then returned to torture the son of one of its survivors. And into the fray he fell once more, leading an army to Caer Glaem as if to prove he would do it all over again without hesitation. Had not Nerdanel said something about being separated from her sons? How they had wrought their own destiny so? Maglor's crippling grief had been doubled, she realizes, by knowing it was their own fault that they suffered.

And here is one survivor, a pauper risen up as a king, and he has somehow managed not to make war on these people. All this time, she has been feeling sorry for the wrong people, and she feels cheated. No. Manipulated. Misled. That act of grief that recalled to her the face of her sister was not at all what it had seemed. Who had opened their locket to show it, and besmirch the Seelie by showing some imagined injustice? All these months of self-torture over a merciless beast?

It's no longer Morgoth who reminds her of Smaug. Smaug! Would someone villainize her father for killing the beast who destroyed their village?

Her jaw sets and her eyes flash hard, but her voice is quiet.]


Then maybe his death belongs to you. Maybe I don't know so much what I thought I knew, about what would've been right to do.

[She releases a long breath, then starts muttering in the tongue of Dale under her breath. It does not sound like polite language.]

Fá-tœkr móðir Nerdanel, [she finishes more sympathetically.]
kingsdaughter: (When the world turns to sleep)

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[personal profile] kingsdaughter 2014-11-21 08:24 pm (UTC)(link)
That's what she said. Some rubbish about seeing the light. But she seemed very saddened by her sons, and now I understand why she forgave me. She said they wrought their own fate, and they did. And the fates of all those people they took into battle with them. Maybe I handled my information stupidly, but I don't think I'm sad he's dead anymore. And I don't feel much pity for Maglor anymore, if he helped drag his little brother into this. I'd die before I'd let Tilda do such a thing.

[Which is Duty, with a capital D. Not a virtue, merely a statement of fact, a part of her body that controls what she does with regards to her siblings. It isn't a righteous statement. It's a statement of how unnatural Maglor's actions really are.]
Edited 2014-11-21 20:25 (UTC)
kingsdaughter: (I'm just saying it's up to you)

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[personal profile] kingsdaughter 2014-11-21 08:54 pm (UTC)(link)
That is arrogant. That whole kind is arrogant. What you call crimes, Maglor called woes. Way I see it, they're a folk who came where they had no business being and bullied your people around and now they're complaining now everything's not gone their way. I knew you and Galadriel were different, and that must be why. They're like Smaug.
kingsdaughter: (There's a guy with a guitar for you Bain)

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[personal profile] kingsdaughter 2014-11-21 09:05 pm (UTC)(link)
Why? Why aren't they evil? Aren't they more evil if they know how wrong it is and they still do it?
kingsdaughter: (That was way too surreal stop)

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[personal profile] kingsdaughter 2014-11-21 09:23 pm (UTC)(link)
[She looks at Thranduil quietly for a long, long time. Whatever internal dialogue she may be having is kept to herself.

The truth is that there is no internal dialogue, just one long, high-pitched tone in her head.]


Nobody told me he came back to life.

[When it's spoken, she sounds a touch embarrassed--far less embarrassed than she feels for being so ignorant.]
kingsdaughter: (When the world turns to sleep)

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[personal profile] kingsdaughter 2014-11-21 09:41 pm (UTC)(link)
Out of everybody who died in that battle, why was it him who got to come back?