Susan Pevensie (
gentlearcher) wrote in
eachdraidh2014-08-15 06:28 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
.001 Action | Video [ Open to All ]
[ ACTION ]
[It was a long walk to Caer Glaem. Fortunately, Susan was close enough that that the road to it was fairly safe. She would feel better about this whole thing if her brothers and sister were here, or if she had her bow, or even her horn. Instead she was wearing her school clothes, and they were none too clean at this point. Still, Susan was hoping for a better explanation, and from what the friendly fairies and townspeople had to say the castle was the place to get it.
She was hungry. Fruit trees and handouts didn't do much in the way of assuaging hunger when one was walking all day. She hoped there would at least be food in the castle; it was looming large in her vision now and she hoped to get there within the end of the day. It was a good thing, too. She'd bathed in a stream that morning, but--
"Lawkamercyme!" cried a high pitched voice, and Susan turned her head just in time to see a small, green-tinted fairy fall into a faint. A dark shadow globbed its way towards the fairy, Susan was sure it had foul intent. Dark shadows with gleam of teeth almost always did. She wished for her bow more than ever, but didn't hesitate to pick up a large stone at her feet. She was frightened - how did one fight a shadow? Oh, she hated to fight - but she wasn't about to just stand there and watch. She shouted, "You! There! Get away from that fairy!"
The shadow did not seem much impressed. And so Susan threw the stone with impressive aim, clipping the beast right in the mouth. It hissed and abandoned the fairy, heading towards her instead. She bent to pick up another rock.]
[ VIDEO ]
[For a long moment, the locket shows a beautiful face with a furrowed brow, staring intently at its own reflection. Susan has never seen anything like this before. She is at the castle now, clean and clothed and fed, so her image doesn't look quite as dire as it had earlier that day, and her dark hair is swept back neatly in a braid.] Ah - so it does work! At least, I assume it does, and this is a message going out all over the lockets and not just some sort of fancy mirror.
[In either case, she's beginning to feel a little self-conscious. She reaches for easily remembered dignity.] I don't mean to intrude, but I have heard that this is something which happens often. And I wonder, is there anyone from England here? [She misses her family; two weeks of walking among strangers in a strange land was more than enough alone time for now, thanks.] Or even [marked hesitation] Narnia?
[It was a long walk to Caer Glaem. Fortunately, Susan was close enough that that the road to it was fairly safe. She would feel better about this whole thing if her brothers and sister were here, or if she had her bow, or even her horn. Instead she was wearing her school clothes, and they were none too clean at this point. Still, Susan was hoping for a better explanation, and from what the friendly fairies and townspeople had to say the castle was the place to get it.
She was hungry. Fruit trees and handouts didn't do much in the way of assuaging hunger when one was walking all day. She hoped there would at least be food in the castle; it was looming large in her vision now and she hoped to get there within the end of the day. It was a good thing, too. She'd bathed in a stream that morning, but--
"Lawkamercyme!" cried a high pitched voice, and Susan turned her head just in time to see a small, green-tinted fairy fall into a faint. A dark shadow globbed its way towards the fairy, Susan was sure it had foul intent. Dark shadows with gleam of teeth almost always did. She wished for her bow more than ever, but didn't hesitate to pick up a large stone at her feet. She was frightened - how did one fight a shadow? Oh, she hated to fight - but she wasn't about to just stand there and watch. She shouted, "You! There! Get away from that fairy!"
The shadow did not seem much impressed. And so Susan threw the stone with impressive aim, clipping the beast right in the mouth. It hissed and abandoned the fairy, heading towards her instead. She bent to pick up another rock.]
[ VIDEO ]
[For a long moment, the locket shows a beautiful face with a furrowed brow, staring intently at its own reflection. Susan has never seen anything like this before. She is at the castle now, clean and clothed and fed, so her image doesn't look quite as dire as it had earlier that day, and her dark hair is swept back neatly in a braid.] Ah - so it does work! At least, I assume it does, and this is a message going out all over the lockets and not just some sort of fancy mirror.
[In either case, she's beginning to feel a little self-conscious. She reaches for easily remembered dignity.] I don't mean to intrude, but I have heard that this is something which happens often. And I wonder, is there anyone from England here? [She misses her family; two weeks of walking among strangers in a strange land was more than enough alone time for now, thanks.] Or even [marked hesitation] Narnia?
no subject
his eyes look really freaky in that icon >>
And sure enough, they were. She smiled politely and asked for soup and a sandwich and a cup of tea.
wow that's just rude!
"So how long have you been queen?"
She seemed young, after all. He couldn't imagine it had been long.
excuse the vagueness; Su would be more specific but I haven't done all the research yet
"Oh, hundreds of years, apparently," she answered truthfully, absently. It was all so very odd, so very strange and it was still very real in her mind. Though then she realized what she was saying and shook her head. "We reigned in Narnia for years and years. It's all a bit confusing when you ask it like that. On the one hand, we first entered Narnia a year ago. We lived there, and when we fell back through to England, no time had passed and we were years and years younger. But while just one year passed in England, hundreds and hundreds of years passed in Narnia - without us. It sounds impossible, I know."
no subject
"You could have just told me it wasn't my business to know." Better she refuse an answer than give him one like this.
no subject
She shrugged a little. "I told you it was hard to believe. But it might help if I started at the beginning."
And suddenly she grasped onto some of his assumptions - at least, she thought she did, "I wasn't born royalty, you know."
no subject
no subject
This was not the time to talk about her suitors from long ago, or the pang she still felt when she thought of Caspian. And very well, if he wasn't going to let her tell it from the beginning, she might as well at least get to the point of it.
"We were appointed kings and queens of Narnia, my brothers, my sister, and I. We were awarded our thrones by the highest of all high kings after winning a terrible battle."
no subject
As it was, Gendry had blood from all four of them. The Kings and Queens of Westeros...
"So you married one of your brothers then," he continued, concluding the story easily for her. That was the Targaryen way and he showed no particular surprise or shame that he assumed the same for her.
no subject
She said it a little too loudly and just at the wrong moment. Several curious heads inclined in their direction and Susan lowered her voice.
"I understand that such things are not necessarily entirely uncommon in some royal lines, but certainly not such a close relation and - no."
no subject
"So who was in charge?"
no subject
Oh, a proper cup of tea. It had been so long. Susan picked it up and cradled it in her hands, waiting for it to seep. "In the beginning we talked about what the best way to do things were a lot, tried to figure it out as best we could as we went along, but in the end we had divided up our responsibilities. We conferred on matters of law and when we held court together, but we would honor the other's word if it was ever given individually."
Peter would often be off fighting, securing the borders, while she held the court - at least as it was required. Towards the end, the armies of Narnia, the prowess of Peter and Edmund had been uncontested. Those had been golden days, when the four of them had been able to truly enjoy their lives and the prosperity they had helped bring to the country.
no subject
"So is that why you was exiled?"
no subject
"If you don't believe me about how we ruled, I don't see why you should believe me about that," Susan said. She was interrupted, then, by the arrival of the food. Susan thanked their servers graciously and proceeded to dig in to the soup.
no subject
"People get run out of their homes all the time. I was run out of mine. But I ain't ever heard of brothers and sisters sharing power. My two uncles near went to war for the throne. Only reason they didn't was on account of one of them being murdered. It makes one easier to believe than another."
no subject
Which was only a good thing, since she couldn't help but notice that even though Gendry disavowed calling himself a prince, he called these two princes 'uncles.' And she couldn't help but notice the casual way he said he was run out of his home, that it happened all the time. And if these two uncles of his were going at it for the throne that then that meant at the very least a civil war with no one to rule the people or see to their benefit, and that made for very poor administration indeed.
She took another hurried sip of her soup, and then another, and then set down her spoon to address Gendry.
"But don't you see, we didn't need the throne. There were four of them. We were children when we became kings and queens; we needed each other in order to do a good job."
He was speaking to her very practically and frankly, and she could meet him in that. "Even if for some reason we had wanted to rule on our own, the people would have never stood for it. We ruled because of a prophecy - four thrones needed to be filled. They were there, waiting for us, long before we got to Narnia. We had to work together, our reign was given to us so we could work together. And Aslan - the one who entrusted Narnia to us - I am certain that would have brought him again from over the Eastern Sea, and he would not have been pleased."
no subject
"So why leave? Seems you had a decent way of it."
no subject
no subject
no subject
Soup finished, she stared at the empty bowl for a moment. How this hurt to tell.
no subject
no subject
Susan could anticipate his next question. After all, she was fifteen now. She glanced back up at him.
"Time worked differently, you see, in Narnia. We were there for fifteen years, but hardly a minute had gone by in England. And when we stepped through the wardrobe again, we were no longer the kings and queens we had been, but children again. It was... rather disorienting."
no subject
"So you've grown up twice. Seems that would be trouble. This one time 'round has been hard enough for me."
no subject
She gave him a smile, because it was nice to feel that he at least understood that part of it, and rather troublesome to have explained all this, but she was coming to appreciate Gendry's practical nature. She wondered, if she'd bothered to tell anyone else, if they'd have cut to the heart of it so quickly.
And now the sandwich demanded some attention, and she took a bite. Food is so excellent when you are hungry.
no subject
"So why not go back?"
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)