(Elvenking)—❧ Thranduil Oropherion (
firith) wrote in
eachdraidh2014-11-18 05:18 pm
❧ VIDEO; 05 (both courts)
A murder of crows erupt overhead to rasp their way into the overcast sky, vanishing from sight in the ashen hub of the clouds once disturbed by the Enemy's forces below. The lines drawn across the rotten waste of the Dagorlad are vast and near endless, even to the far-seeing eyes of Elves. For the Men under Elendil's command, no retreat is in sight even if they wish for it.
To get to the Morannon, the Black Gate of Mordor, first the Last Alliance must battle their way through what looks like a seething ocean of darkness.
The forces of Taur-nu-Fuin are lightly armed, having come directly from the forests where they have made their home for centuries, thrice-ousted from any temporary homes and reliable forges they could have otherwise created in memory of the one within Amon Lanc, now the dark fortress of Dol Guldur. Spears and swords are carried, with all the Sindar and Silvan combined each carrying a bow. The Elvenking is a fine sight, golden hair streaming over his shining armour and his raiment in rich emeralds as he stalks the front line before his stoic warriors. Thranduil stands by and watches him, ill at ease with his father's manner. The slurs against the Noldor forces near the middle-ground of the battlefield are many and unrestrained, carrying on the hot breeze to ears not far away enough for the Elvenprince's liking.
Gil-galad will hear, he thinks anxiously, wishing it were at all possible to get Oropher to quieten once enraged against the slayers of their first home. He knows better. Father's hatred for them will lose us allies. A stupid thought, but he is afraid and he longs to ride down into the howling pits at Oropher's side sooner than later; Thranduil needs his father close, yet Oropher is in a fury and impassioned in his anger, blind to anything but his pride.
The only foes that count are the orcs of Mordor tramping the mud and baying tauntingly below, closer to the Green-Elves' contingent than any other. A cheap tactic, trying to goad forth a reaction from the worst-placed segment of the Alliance on the flank, their lightly armoured troops having been relegated there within minutes after arriving. Nearby, Oropher bridles and begins to build a war-charge cry, raising enough astonishment in his son that Thranduil finds his feet moving too late, lips parting on a yell for his father to desist.
'Sire! Sire, the High-King —'
'Curse them,' snaps Oropher, sword glinting in the murky half-light like a silver ribbon. 'I have not fought off this Enemy time and again to have them lay insult to us thus! We will slay these foul creatures without the help of the Noldorin lords, my son.'
'The ground is not firm enough, we have the marshes on our eastern flank.'
'What would you have me do? Amdir is of a like-mind, we will not languish here to be toyed with!'
'Adar, you should not do this. It is folly not to listen to Gil-galad, even Lord Elrond — even Elendil, the Men, Adar! — they are working with him. Tarry a little longer,' begs Thranduil, drawing close, 'it will not be long now.'
Perhaps if the army of Taur-nu-Fuin had been integrated into the main host, if the perceived insult wasn't so great in Oropher's mind, he might have remained in place and seen sense, obeyed his head and not his heart. Thranduil can see the wisdom in putting the best archers on the edge of the battlefield where Mirkwood can pick off the orcs as they please, partly-shielded by the marshes and with a good vantage point to see down the line. Perhaps, perhaps, perhaps.
But Oropher snarls.
'We do not answer to the Houses of those who slaughtered our kin in Menegroth! No. Have them pay witness here, today, what we are capable of! We are not here at their behest, to be bandied about like we are not their equals, but to fight because we wish it!'
Thranduil hears his heartbeat pounding in his ears as his shifting forces uncertainly make ready to charge, and he storms back to the front line. He snarls at them to 'Hold!' and they do, thank the Valar. Yet it seems like the second he turns his back to keep them in order that the rest — two-thirds of Oropher's forces behind the Elvenking who has marched to the centre of the ranks — unsheath their weapons simultaneously with the efficiency of their kindred, every move sleekly honed like gleaming blades.
They are not worth less than the Noldor, merely ill-prepared for battle. No one could have foreseen the sheer scale of destruction howling below.
Everything is happening so quickly.
( This is madness. )
'Lord Gil-galad has not ordered us to move,' Thranduil half-yells, half-pleads. Things are getting entirely out of hand. The orcs down the valley howl deafeningly. 'Sire, he will not know of your intent. Father, listen to me!'
'Herio!' bays Oropher, and a tidal wave of cold summer steel rushes down the shale hillside to Thranduil's astonished horror. Hundreds of Elves follow his father in loyal abandon as a dozen protests rise and die on Thranduil's tongue in an instant. He cannot stop the main charge but he does snarl at his third-set quotient to remain exactly where they are, glancing furtively down the lines to where Gil-galad in blue and gold is striding forward in shock and outrage to watch the outcome of Oropher's charge into the eaves of the marshes with Amdir and the Galadhrim pouring down to join in. It seems Elves and Men alike are transfixed by the sight and the whole world at Thranduil's back stirs with murmurs and cries of alarm, holding their breath. Perhaps Oropher will win, he thinks recklessly, allowing himself to hope. Perhaps all will be well, for the old Sinda is the bravest at heart that Thranduil has ever known. Is this not proof enough?
( For a single moment, he thinks, We will go home. )
The clash of metal is louder than all the crows of Middle-Earth combined as green is swallowed up under a surging, endless tide of black thunder; red spatters the ground as limbs are ripped from their sockets, bones are dashed and brains stamped across the dirt. The orcs know their land well and use it to their advantage.
Thranduil watches through the chaos as a blade swings too close; his own knees buckle.
'Adar —!'
Oropher's head arcs from his stumbling body as it flies free, hair shaved short by the beheading blow. Even from such a distance, Thranduil can see grey eyes rolled up in shock.
He becomes deaf to all of it.
The world is pale and silent, a ringing in his ears as Elvish screams dominate the field. All light dims and Thranduil watches his father's murder with thousands of others, unable to even attempt to save Oropher's life. He cannot feel his knees or joints, gagging on stale air tinged with iron, watching as his father (the Elf who would raise him up in a soaring twirl when merely an Elfling, who taught him how to ride and fight, to laugh freely) is gutted by the fanged mouths of fell beasts that rip through his intestines and tear sinew from bone inside mere seconds of the charge failing.
'Hold!' booms Gil-galad and Thranduil realises he has been stumbling forward, freezing up when he hears the command.
( What do I do? My father is dead. Adar? Adar, do not leave me. )
Gil-Galad's cries are furious and directed at him. So strange, when Thranduil is not the Elvenking. 'Hold there!'
Was not.
Barely thirty seconds have passed since the stampede, since his father lived and breathed. Thranduil's hands tremble at his sides, bile rising to the back of his throat. His reaction to the Dagorlad is a violent one from that moment onward, every second inwardly excruciating as he buries his fears so as to try not to let anyone see him falter. Oropher was always a beacon of strength, indomitable. People followed him like leaves caught in a gale, no matter which way he turned. Even into the jaws of death. But Thranduil ... he cannot charge down there to avenge his father — common-sense overrules his emotions so that he does not break down then and there, logic is his scaffolding where he would otherwise collapse into madness. The remaining Sindar and Silvan host must stay with the Noldor, as planned. More than ever, yes, near-annihilated by Oropher's hatred for the High-King's command overruling his own.
His father's sword is trampled from view and he calls hoarsely to his aghast warriors, their overwhelming grief palpable in the air, shrieking their protests and shifting in horror.
'Darth!' Thranduil roars, terrified and rooted to the spot as he repeats Gil-Galad's instruction. Not yet an Elvenking, just an Elf whose father has been slain, he clamours inwardly for anyone to follow while trying to appear brave. (Be brave, ion nin, Adar is here.)
He takes a deep breath and turns on a heel, barely a thousand eyes seeking him out.
'Dîn!' The ranks quieten in the wake of his bellowing shout. 'Av-'osto, natha daged dhaer!'
( I do not wish to be king. The sentiment burns a brand into his chest right across his aching heart. I am so afraid. )
Thranduil unsheathes his sword.
'Aphado nin, mellyn nín, avaro naeth ae Adar i aran nín i gwanwen — av-'osto, Laegil, ortheritham hain! Nedin dagor hen ú-'erir ortheri! Le nallon sí di-nguruthos: tûl acharn! Gurth an Glamhoth, a chyth vîn, farad vaer!'
In later years, he will have trouble looking south at all, even from half a world away. For now, the Elven host of Taur-nu-Fuin hold their ranks and act only when he commands them to, following the High-King's lead; he can see Lord Elrond not too far away, his face a blank mask even across the vast reach of the battle-lines just like Círdan's, and Gil-galad beyond like a beacon of light. Elendil is like an oak, his sons Isildur and Anárion likewise. Thranduil makes himself appear just as brave, just as certain.
No longer can he tell which parts on the battlefield were Oropher. Looking down at the hilt of his sword, he finds he cannot stop his hand upon it from shaking.
*
[ The illusion wipes from the locket like mist, replaced with the scene of Thranduil in the golden rooms he calls his own in Caer Glaem. There's a slice of steel through flesh and bone, and a wet thunk as a dog's snarl is cut short by a beheading blade. An oil lamp is smashed over the twitching body, followed by a heavy metal stand of candles that set the monster on fire in a roaring whoosh of flames. His arm looks like deep claws have wrenched their way down it, the delicate silver robe bloodied and dark. An Elven blade hadn't done much to put up a fight ... but chop the head off of anything, burn its corpse, and it will always have trouble getting back up. Case in point.
There's some colourful cursing in Sindarin, for any who can normally understand 'Firo, ulunndû!' and then the locket is hastily, firmly snapped shut. ]
( ooc: hover over elvish for translations, feel free to understand what he's saying since this is his own terror-attack from the dogs! a full-scale illusion that takes over everything in his room, including his locket, because his life is awful. c: )
To get to the Morannon, the Black Gate of Mordor, first the Last Alliance must battle their way through what looks like a seething ocean of darkness.
The forces of Taur-nu-Fuin are lightly armed, having come directly from the forests where they have made their home for centuries, thrice-ousted from any temporary homes and reliable forges they could have otherwise created in memory of the one within Amon Lanc, now the dark fortress of Dol Guldur. Spears and swords are carried, with all the Sindar and Silvan combined each carrying a bow. The Elvenking is a fine sight, golden hair streaming over his shining armour and his raiment in rich emeralds as he stalks the front line before his stoic warriors. Thranduil stands by and watches him, ill at ease with his father's manner. The slurs against the Noldor forces near the middle-ground of the battlefield are many and unrestrained, carrying on the hot breeze to ears not far away enough for the Elvenprince's liking.
Gil-galad will hear, he thinks anxiously, wishing it were at all possible to get Oropher to quieten once enraged against the slayers of their first home. He knows better. Father's hatred for them will lose us allies. A stupid thought, but he is afraid and he longs to ride down into the howling pits at Oropher's side sooner than later; Thranduil needs his father close, yet Oropher is in a fury and impassioned in his anger, blind to anything but his pride.
The only foes that count are the orcs of Mordor tramping the mud and baying tauntingly below, closer to the Green-Elves' contingent than any other. A cheap tactic, trying to goad forth a reaction from the worst-placed segment of the Alliance on the flank, their lightly armoured troops having been relegated there within minutes after arriving. Nearby, Oropher bridles and begins to build a war-charge cry, raising enough astonishment in his son that Thranduil finds his feet moving too late, lips parting on a yell for his father to desist.
'Sire! Sire, the High-King —'
'Curse them,' snaps Oropher, sword glinting in the murky half-light like a silver ribbon. 'I have not fought off this Enemy time and again to have them lay insult to us thus! We will slay these foul creatures without the help of the Noldorin lords, my son.'
'The ground is not firm enough, we have the marshes on our eastern flank.'
'What would you have me do? Amdir is of a like-mind, we will not languish here to be toyed with!'
'Adar, you should not do this. It is folly not to listen to Gil-galad, even Lord Elrond — even Elendil, the Men, Adar! — they are working with him. Tarry a little longer,' begs Thranduil, drawing close, 'it will not be long now.'
Perhaps if the army of Taur-nu-Fuin had been integrated into the main host, if the perceived insult wasn't so great in Oropher's mind, he might have remained in place and seen sense, obeyed his head and not his heart. Thranduil can see the wisdom in putting the best archers on the edge of the battlefield where Mirkwood can pick off the orcs as they please, partly-shielded by the marshes and with a good vantage point to see down the line. Perhaps, perhaps, perhaps.
But Oropher snarls.
'We do not answer to the Houses of those who slaughtered our kin in Menegroth! No. Have them pay witness here, today, what we are capable of! We are not here at their behest, to be bandied about like we are not their equals, but to fight because we wish it!'
Thranduil hears his heartbeat pounding in his ears as his shifting forces uncertainly make ready to charge, and he storms back to the front line. He snarls at them to 'Hold!' and they do, thank the Valar. Yet it seems like the second he turns his back to keep them in order that the rest — two-thirds of Oropher's forces behind the Elvenking who has marched to the centre of the ranks — unsheath their weapons simultaneously with the efficiency of their kindred, every move sleekly honed like gleaming blades.
They are not worth less than the Noldor, merely ill-prepared for battle. No one could have foreseen the sheer scale of destruction howling below.
Everything is happening so quickly.
( This is madness. )
'Lord Gil-galad has not ordered us to move,' Thranduil half-yells, half-pleads. Things are getting entirely out of hand. The orcs down the valley howl deafeningly. 'Sire, he will not know of your intent. Father, listen to me!'
'Herio!' bays Oropher, and a tidal wave of cold summer steel rushes down the shale hillside to Thranduil's astonished horror. Hundreds of Elves follow his father in loyal abandon as a dozen protests rise and die on Thranduil's tongue in an instant. He cannot stop the main charge but he does snarl at his third-set quotient to remain exactly where they are, glancing furtively down the lines to where Gil-galad in blue and gold is striding forward in shock and outrage to watch the outcome of Oropher's charge into the eaves of the marshes with Amdir and the Galadhrim pouring down to join in. It seems Elves and Men alike are transfixed by the sight and the whole world at Thranduil's back stirs with murmurs and cries of alarm, holding their breath. Perhaps Oropher will win, he thinks recklessly, allowing himself to hope. Perhaps all will be well, for the old Sinda is the bravest at heart that Thranduil has ever known. Is this not proof enough?
( For a single moment, he thinks, We will go home. )
The clash of metal is louder than all the crows of Middle-Earth combined as green is swallowed up under a surging, endless tide of black thunder; red spatters the ground as limbs are ripped from their sockets, bones are dashed and brains stamped across the dirt. The orcs know their land well and use it to their advantage.
Thranduil watches through the chaos as a blade swings too close; his own knees buckle.
'Adar —!'
Oropher's head arcs from his stumbling body as it flies free, hair shaved short by the beheading blow. Even from such a distance, Thranduil can see grey eyes rolled up in shock.
He becomes deaf to all of it.
The world is pale and silent, a ringing in his ears as Elvish screams dominate the field. All light dims and Thranduil watches his father's murder with thousands of others, unable to even attempt to save Oropher's life. He cannot feel his knees or joints, gagging on stale air tinged with iron, watching as his father (the Elf who would raise him up in a soaring twirl when merely an Elfling, who taught him how to ride and fight, to laugh freely) is gutted by the fanged mouths of fell beasts that rip through his intestines and tear sinew from bone inside mere seconds of the charge failing.
'Hold!' booms Gil-galad and Thranduil realises he has been stumbling forward, freezing up when he hears the command.
( What do I do? My father is dead. Adar? Adar, do not leave me. )
Gil-Galad's cries are furious and directed at him. So strange, when Thranduil is not the Elvenking. 'Hold there!'
Was not.
Barely thirty seconds have passed since the stampede, since his father lived and breathed. Thranduil's hands tremble at his sides, bile rising to the back of his throat. His reaction to the Dagorlad is a violent one from that moment onward, every second inwardly excruciating as he buries his fears so as to try not to let anyone see him falter. Oropher was always a beacon of strength, indomitable. People followed him like leaves caught in a gale, no matter which way he turned. Even into the jaws of death. But Thranduil ... he cannot charge down there to avenge his father — common-sense overrules his emotions so that he does not break down then and there, logic is his scaffolding where he would otherwise collapse into madness. The remaining Sindar and Silvan host must stay with the Noldor, as planned. More than ever, yes, near-annihilated by Oropher's hatred for the High-King's command overruling his own.
His father's sword is trampled from view and he calls hoarsely to his aghast warriors, their overwhelming grief palpable in the air, shrieking their protests and shifting in horror.
'Darth!' Thranduil roars, terrified and rooted to the spot as he repeats Gil-Galad's instruction. Not yet an Elvenking, just an Elf whose father has been slain, he clamours inwardly for anyone to follow while trying to appear brave. (Be brave, ion nin, Adar is here.)
He takes a deep breath and turns on a heel, barely a thousand eyes seeking him out.
'Dîn!' The ranks quieten in the wake of his bellowing shout. 'Av-'osto, natha daged dhaer!'
( I do not wish to be king. The sentiment burns a brand into his chest right across his aching heart. I am so afraid. )
Thranduil unsheathes his sword.
'Aphado nin, mellyn nín, avaro naeth ae Adar i aran nín i gwanwen — av-'osto, Laegil, ortheritham hain! Nedin dagor hen ú-'erir ortheri! Le nallon sí di-nguruthos: tûl acharn! Gurth an Glamhoth, a chyth vîn, farad vaer!'
In later years, he will have trouble looking south at all, even from half a world away. For now, the Elven host of Taur-nu-Fuin hold their ranks and act only when he commands them to, following the High-King's lead; he can see Lord Elrond not too far away, his face a blank mask even across the vast reach of the battle-lines just like Círdan's, and Gil-galad beyond like a beacon of light. Elendil is like an oak, his sons Isildur and Anárion likewise. Thranduil makes himself appear just as brave, just as certain.
No longer can he tell which parts on the battlefield were Oropher. Looking down at the hilt of his sword, he finds he cannot stop his hand upon it from shaking.
[ The illusion wipes from the locket like mist, replaced with the scene of Thranduil in the golden rooms he calls his own in Caer Glaem. There's a slice of steel through flesh and bone, and a wet thunk as a dog's snarl is cut short by a beheading blade. An oil lamp is smashed over the twitching body, followed by a heavy metal stand of candles that set the monster on fire in a roaring whoosh of flames. His arm looks like deep claws have wrenched their way down it, the delicate silver robe bloodied and dark. An Elven blade hadn't done much to put up a fight ... but chop the head off of anything, burn its corpse, and it will always have trouble getting back up. Case in point.
There's some colourful cursing in Sindarin, for any who can normally understand 'Firo, ulunndû!' and then the locket is hastily, firmly snapped shut. ]
( ooc: hover over elvish for translations, feel free to understand what he's saying since this is his own terror-attack from the dogs! a full-scale illusion that takes over everything in his room, including his locket, because his life is awful. c: )

private. video.
thank Valar for no voicemail), and for as long as their conversation will last (whether it's only a handful of minutes, or hours, or the entire night and day). And should there be need for it, Legolas will turn back without a second thought and rush as swift as his steed would carry him, leaving behind everyone and everything for this one purpose.And all the while as he waits, his memories take him back to their first month in Drabwurld and how terribly it had gone; the flashbacks chill his blood and settle unpleasantly on his stomach, a very physical sickness even if elves are incapable of such. It seems nothing has been done at Caer Glaem since then and various creatures can and still do so very easily sneak past whatever defences there ever are. And stronghold it calls it self! All the more reason for them to build their own fortress, and fast. All the more reason for him to reach this tribe, warriors they are, and the fortress they build will need to be defended well, with his father's will and with swords and bows and the powerful arms that hold them.
He waits and his heart hammers away at his ribcage as powerful as what he ever imagined Dwarven hammers to strike their anvils. It hurts, his worry eats at him, the fear - and it does not even need one of those ghastly dogs around to surface with the intensity of a hurricane - rises and nearly sweeps him off his feet. It is fear for Thranduil's well being, physical indeed, but also... in everything else. That he had to witness that himself alone is plenty enough, that it was shown to all those who would be watching is so, so much more humiliating? Upsetting? Those cursed dogs have dragged such memories to the surface, when he is away and too far to offer aid or comfort. He had always known, of course he had, the day, the place, the manner in which his grandfather had been killed.
He had always known too that Thranduil was right there to witness it.
Knuckles bone white, so harsh he holds the little device in his hand, but Legolas does his best to smooth out his expression, soften the lines of his face so the concern is not so blatant, so it's not so overwhelming. Thranduil is strong, though he calls him strong, but he is proud too and Legolas has enough mind not to trample all over that pride. So when eventually the locket flickers, when it reaches the one it was supposed to reach, Legolas offers the same smile he knows his father loves, though it's not devoid of all those emotions that simmer just beneath the surface. The concern, the fear, the anger, and of course all the love.
Every so often, after all, he should be the one offering strength. ]
Why must I play nurse each time I set out to the Great Greenwood and return?
[ And so he tries for teasing, playful and light, (who would wish to relive time and again the same thing? Already once was too many times) yet this attempt falls a little... flat, his tone wavering until he can confirm that Thranduil is well. ]
Is it ploy to keep me from leaving ever again?
private. video.
But the ebbing tide of that anger was quick to subside, and when he answers his son (ai, child, don't look at your grandfather) it is on his way to the infirmary. Thranduil may be thoroughly aggrieved, but he isn't going to languish in his misery when his arm needs stitching. ]
Certainly it is. Have you tripped over all that hair, yet? I fear for your ankles lest they break whenever you go frittering through the forest, these days.
[ I am fine, ion nin. Spattered with blood, hair rustled and a crown left off, but well enough to banter back with him in their own version of saving face; king and prince, father and son. ]
A scratch is hardly enough of a reason to call home.
[ 'Home' being him, and the Other Reason being far more painful than torn muscles to bring up. ]
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It's no different now, though leagues apart as they are Legolas cannot exactly climb Thranduil's lap with sweet and savoury pastries pilfered from the kitchens, often still too warm to be eaten, trailing leaves and twigs in his hair, mud on his boots, and the anguished yelling of maids capture to find him. So instead he offers what he can, and what Thranduil already responds well to. Proud and cheerful, he retorts easy: ]
Then put your fears to rest, ada, for I have at last learned to braid it so that it will not fly as light-footed as I do!
[ Though it still gathers all the leaves and twigs as his hair once did in his youth; if either of them those years long behind them, well, they will return in full swing now. ]
A scratch is not, aye, but days we have been apart and I thought you must miss my voice.
[ And face, and company, and... all that Legolas can offer, really, childish as those ways of his may be, yet for him to simply sit by and watch and do nothing at all, he would truly need to be mad. ]
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Did I then imagine the entire year you spent with the Fellowship? I must have, for I do not recall agreeing to it before you were quite suddenly not at Imladris anymore.
[
Remember when Legolas was supposed to represent Mirkwood and then he rePRESENTED MIRKWOOD.Yes, let's talk about that and not the pain in Thranduil's arm, arguably a much better topic and one he snatches up without delay. It's easy to tease him about the whole business, considering it's a point of pride in his son and not contention (but, hey, he's still not sending Legolas to any more councils without the Elvenking himself for a longass time). ]no subject
Alas, no!
[ Chipper like a tit, and almost chirping like one too. ]
But that my presence is so desired that a mere year seems to become so apparent... I think I should take pride in that!
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[ He should flick Legolas on the ear when he next sees him. He probably will. ]
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I think... some traits of yours could make anyone wonder!
[ Or rather Legolas's own traits, like his love of trees- some could really wonder. ]