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cycas replied to your post : Prompted by @cycas: Fingolfin and Hador … Hador is…
😀 Fingolfin making Fingon drink it instead of him, tut Fingolfin!
Prerogative as a father ;p And hey, he knows this sort of thing will help Hador and Fingon bond.
Plus, well, horror stories about Finrod and his brothers versus Bëorian malt whisky. The Valiant can take that bullet instead.
Fingolfin for the meme
No lie, at first I thought this was for the ‘I Can Write Non-Angst Fluff’ prompts, and I was wailing “But I just wrote y’all Fingolfin fluff”~
OTP: Anaírë
BrOTP: Lalwendë, Finarfin, Findis, his mom Indis, Aglar’s cousin because he’s a Jon Snow to Fingolfin’s Stannis
OT3: eh… Fingolfin/Anaíre/Duty and Power
NOTP: him and Fëanor, or any other incest ships. Non-shippy but I hate when AUs that make him the second of Míriel’s sons. You don’t see fans making Fëanor as Indis’s biological kid. Wonder why. 😡
Give me a character and I will give you my OTP, BrOTP, OT3, and NoTP for them
Because I’m boooooooored!!
Prompted by @cycas: Fingolfin and Hador
…
Hador is drinking from a goblet Fingolfin remembers gifting the Edain ruler for his last birthday, and when Fingolfin plops into the chair besides Hador and stretches out his long legs under the table, the mortal man smiles and gestures to the full pitcher on the table. Exhausted but content, Fingolfin reaches for the pitcher and an empty cup. He recalls the fiascos with mortal alcohol, that there had been unanticipated differences between mortal liquor and what an elf considered mildly intoxicating mead or wine, and eyes the liquid with suspicion. It is pure opaque white; he does not immediately recognize it. “Forgive me, Hador. From your enthusiasm this is a refreshing drink, but what is it?”
“Milk,” Hador answers.
“Milk?” Fingolfin frowns. “Milk of what?”
“From a cow,” Hador says, and laughs.
Fingolfin halts his face from displaying any aghast reaction – he hopes. “Directly from the animal? You do not ferment it, or let it cure?”
Hador makes the disgusted face Fingolfin stopped himself from making. “Elves drink soured milk? You are stranger than we thought.”
“No,” Fingolfin explains. “As my nephew explained, we kept and farmed cattle as well, even if we did not bring the animals with us when we came to Beleriand to war against Morgoth. It was not the prevue of the Noldor; most herds were tended by my mother’s kin, the Vanyar. They were raised for more than just meat – cheeses and yougurts we had aplenty. My wife’s family worked closely with Vanyar; I am familiar with their dishes. But the pure milk from the animal? I do not understand. One makes cheese from the milk, once it has set into whey and curds, as one makes bread and pottage from flour. But you would not eat unground grains or straight flour.”
Hador laughs harder at this. “We eat cheese, too. But the milk alone is also very good to drink, if it is fresh, and especially if it has been chilled.”
Hesitantly Fingolfin calculates how insulted his friend would be if he does not attempt a glass, but is saved by the fortunous arrival of his son. Fingon makes a face to see his father sitting slouched next to the mortal, but Fingolfin calls him over. “Fingon! Come join us and try this new mortal drink!”
Fingon fidgets and mutters that he is not his cousin Finrod. Fingolfin knows his son doesn’t understand the fuss and appeal of the mortals and is uncomfortable around them.
“A dare!” Hador says, smiling, and Fingolfin beams and would almost dare to kiss the mortal, if he was completely certain the mortal would not misunderstand for some strange cultural taboo or something. The two people were still learning of another. But Fingon’s competitive and bold nature meant a dare to his courage was the surest way to compel him.
Grinning broadly, Fingon pours the white liquid into a cup and gulps it down in one swift movement.
Fingolfin scrutinizes his son’s expression after he lowered the empty cup.
“Verdict?”
Fingon shrugs.
For @crocordile, the piece of the next chapter of “Of Ingwë Ingweron” I mentioned. Off-screen war to capture Melkor, here is Uinen’s cameo. Finwë won the honor.
…
It was not a tremor of the earth or a distant boom of thunder or earth that woke Finwë, but a change in the scent of the lake, a stronger concentration of salt and the perfume of unfamiliar plants, and as he walked to the shoreline, noticing how the waters had receded to uncover more of the rich mud and pale shells than normal, he wondered at the cause. Vaguely he recognized the absence of bird calls, but that silence had been common ever since the distant sounds of upheaval to the north had begun. As the mists parted, Finwë found why.
A figure rose from the surface of Cuiviénen, phosphorus and reflective as wet scales, standing as tall and still as a tree. Long green and brown hair flowed from her head into the waves of the salt lake, partly shrouding her like a fine cloak. Like the roots of a mangrove tree the water rippled around her thighs, hiding her feet. Small crabs scuttled between the fronds of her hair, and starlight picked out the mussels and sea stars that hung like precious beads in her tresses. Her arms were raised in a warding motion, and as Finwë approached, she turned her head back to meet his eyes over her salt-crusted shoulder. Her eyes were green as well in the faint light, strangely glassy as fish eyes were wont to be, but welcoming and gentle. The strong smell of salt and sea almond floated to him like sweet music.
“You are one of the Powers?” Finwë called to the woman.
“Ui-nend,” she answered, as a pale crayfish skittered across her brow. “Return to your home, little one. I shall keep the waters still. Fear not.”
“Why would I fear?” Finwë called, and wondered at the calm dreaminess of his feelings.
“Waters were moved because of the war,” said the Power cloaked in seaweed and the growing life of the salt marshes, “And because of that, this valley would have flooded, had we not sent Curumo and others to shore up the stone beneath the waterfall and diverted some of the other rivers that feed into this place. Rather we allow this lake to evaporate into a salt flat than allow the violence of a great flood to drown the Children.”
Images and words accompanied her speech that Finwë could not comprehend, but the gist of her message he could understand. “The lake will disappear?”
“Not soon,” Uinen answered. “But eventually, yes. This is not the only place that is changing. My lord’s seas are deepening, and new shorelines are forming. Not all changes shall be dreadful, but we cannot stop them. Not if we wish to stop him,” she said, turning back to the north. “Go back to your bed, clever Phinwê,” she called over her shoulder. “Olos will send you more pleasant dreams.”
I’m blaming the inherent story/setting of the Silmarillion for why the overwhelming majority of my fics have angsty elements. Do I have almost no self-awareness that someone would rightfully tag me as a dark fic writer? yes.
So, prompt me a character or scenario and I will endeavor to write a 100% fuffy no angst short story (And try to beat back the dramatic foreshadowing of later unhappy fates if possible)
Over in AO3, should I take the Young Bucks of Cuivienen and separate the individual stories on their own, or leave as is? I’ve gotten more comfortable posting shorter words on their own over there. Opinions?
morning query reblog
Over in AO3, should I take the Young Bucks of Cuivienen and separate the individual stories on their own, or leave as is? I’ve gotten more comfortable posting shorter words on their own over there. Opinions?
11, 12, 15
15: Do you know your characters’ MBTI personalities?
Uggh. As useful as the general concept of introvert/extrovert and all that is, honestly I find MBTI lists sit somewhere between Zodiac signs and Hogwarts House Sorting. And absolutely none of that was anything I had more than a cursory interest in. As a useful tool to start thinking about general personality concepts, sure. But do I bother to actually sit down and feel out a questionnaire-type outline of any character’s personality? *snort of laughter* Are there characters I can point to and say, this one feels like an introvert more, or is going to want to be nurturing, or prefers things regimented and orderly? Yeah, some.
Heledir is an introvert (in that he needs recharging after heavy social situations), ace, very invested in the gossipy romances of people around him, doesn’t mind chaos, so he appears to be more sensing and intuition. Edrahil and Finrod will have to be a foil. But to have this defined and adhere to that – nope.
11: Which character do you have the most in common with?
Confession – I also hate these ‘do you relate to your characters or not’ questions. Uh, off the top of my head, eldest daughter with mild emotional trauma who stays home instead of leaving her family far behind, who is if not ace then probably somewhere on the grey spectrum, who would prefer to stay in her library and listen to small concerts and write hundreds of popular children’s stories and romance novels – yeah, there’s both projection and wish fulfillment with Findis.
12: Which character do you have the least in common with?
Well, I’m often writing from the POV of male elves, ones that have fought wars and died and led armies and countries. One of those.