Ingwë of Cuiviénen, (8/?)

Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6, Part 7

And with “Of Sheep” finally finished, the long awaited interlude chapter. This one has a fun structure, as it’s five interludes from the POV of our main three during the War of the Valar. You could say they’re “Of Big Brotherly Protection, Of Copper-smithing and Friendship, of Sheep, Of Dogs, and of Uinen and Why You Can’t Return to Eden”

Primitive elvish names and terms still left mostly untranslated, but context clues should explain them. More world-building in my mode from Klingon-Promotion-Vanyar and young bucks of Cuiviénen.

The elves living in the safety along the shores of Cuiviénen knew not of the dreadful war waged on their behalf, except in general of its existence due to undeniable evidence in the far distance. A war between Ainur in their full power was felt across the entire world and thus could not be completely hidden from them, for the very contours of Arda were being reformed in those titanic battles.

Fires burned in the north, illuminating the crests of the hills and reflecting off the clouds. Long before either Laurelin or the Sun, night was pushed back by ruddy light. They were the flames of dreadful conflict as servants of Melkor battled their un-fallen brethren for dominion of Arda. This was long before the dragons entered Melkor’s black thoughts, but the devastation equalled any rampage of Glaurung. Winds brought heavy ash to fall over the valley of Cuiviénen until a more powerful wind smelling of burning frankincense pushed in from the west, clearing the air of ash.

Distant fires and the smoke and ash that they produced were not the only troubles to scare the elves. The ground would tremor violently, and people feared for their houses. After the sweet-smelling west wind, the tremors were never as savage, but it became common to feel the earth tremble beneath their feet.

It was the crashing thunder and lightning, and the bellowing sound that accompanied no lightning yet still echoed from every hill, that most frightened the Kwendî, for that continued even after the earth-tremors lessened. It was not normal lightning. Elwë described it as if a hammer was being taken to the roof of the black sky itself, trying to shatter it into a thousand pieces.

In his family hut, comforted by the familiar smell of smoke and wood ash, Elwë held his younger brothers close, one tucked under each arm, listening to their even breaths as they finally fell asleep, exhausted from worry over the terrible lightning and evidence of distant battles that they still knew little to nothing about. He cradled his brothers and thought back to when they were young and small, thankful that even now with all three into adulthood he was still much larger than either Olwë or Elmo. As children they had come to him for comfort during thunderstorms, wishing to be held by him instead of their parents. Now that they were all adults and the world beyond the borders of what any elf knew were being reshaped, still Elwë’s brothers turned to him for comfort. Elwe could not give them answers to those terrible lights and sounds, but in the privacy of their parents’ house, he could be the bulwark that he had always been for his younger brothers. He sat with his back against the wall of the hut as they clung to him, heads tucked into his lap and at the crux of his shoulder. They had been able to squeeze all three onto the sleeping shelf, and Elwë had draped his favorite blanket over his brothers and lap, covering their feet. Unmindful of the patch of drool or the sharp elbows digging into his side, Elwë held them tightly and stared out the doorway. Through the opening he could see the reflections of the lightning and fire against the waters of the lake. “Sleep,” he whispered to his brothers. “I will guard us.”

Until the final peal of unnatural thunder faded away, Elwë stared down the night and the flashes of odd-colored light.

In his time before returning to report to the other Valar in the Mánahaxar, Oromë taught the elves how to craft and use the bow and arrow. The young man of Elwë’s village currently called Belekô, though of his later names that of Strongbow would be most renowned, found the greatest aptitude with this new invention. Soon he devised tricks and games to better test his aptitude and accuracy, and with the repeated splitting of a lofted feather, he found no more challengers willing to partake in his contests. Most of the spear-hurlers among the Minyar did not switch to these new tools, so it was the third tribe who most eagerly embraced the weapon. Even if none of the other Nelyar possessed Belekô’s burgeoning skill, the bow and arrow became a point of tribal pride.

Oromë also showed the elves how to smelt and work with copper ore, being a soft and easy metal to locate and work with. Another metal that the Vala remembered from conferences with Aulë was iron, and that it was stronger but more brittle and difficult to work with. The red of its rust made it easy for the elves to find. “Aside from copper and iron, there is another metal you can pull from stone using your kiln fires, a silvery one but is not silver, that the Mbartanô says when mixed in with copper will make an alloy, a new metal stronger than either starting substance. But such knowledge is not of the songs I devised to sing, so I know not the metal or correct proportion.” Nevertheless, the knowledge of copper smelting was eagerly appreciated and embraced, none more than by Mahtan, a Tatyar man of Finwë’s village.

Finwë came over and watched Mahtan work with the revolutionary new substance. The Unbegotten man was in the process of hammering copper wire when Finwë interrupted. “The latest earth-shake has ruined the wall of my kiln, and I am still too wroth to rebuild,” Finwë explained his presence. “Until I am calm, may I observe you?”

Mahtan sighed. “Pick up that stick dipped in pine resin and light both ends, then hold the lamp up for me. I need more light to see.”

Finwë did as commanded. Mahtan would periodically nudge the young man to switch angles as the nascent smith carefully hammered a soft length of copper into a progressively longer and thinner piece. Eventually Mahtan would have his fine wire, and with enough pieces he could twist the copper into fantastic shapes and jewelry. Mindful of how disruptive upon one’s concentration it could be with another hovering over a shoulder while one worked, Finwë was uncharacteristically quiet.

Mahtan’s spouse was not in the village at present, or she would be the one assisting him. Since he had the unexpected good fortune in an eager assistant, Mahtan decided to continue with his copper-working projects. He set down the wire and began to smelt down a large bowl of green copper ores. First he needed to raise the temperature of his kiln, a task that Finwë was quick to help with, as it was familiar to him. As Mahtan melted the copper ore, he directed his impromptu assistant once more. “I am making fine small rings. Fetch the stone mold. In that stack, under the buffing cloths. Gray stone. The one without white flecks.”

Eagerly Finwë complied.

The piece that he grabbed was only as wide as his palm but as long as his arm. The stone had a shallow mold for multiple rings carved into the surface, like a strange plant, perhaps a stylized fern frond. The pattern was beautiful and had taken the painstaking work of many hours to create. Yet it was but a tool for the creation of truly beautiful objects.

Mahtan would not allow Finwë to handle the crucible of molten copper, but he allowed the young man to watch as he carefully poured a small amount of the metal into the channel in the stone mold and observe how the metal flowed down the carving into the ring indentions. “Once this cools, I shall pull it from the mold and cut the rings free from the branches, then sand off imperfections.”

“Have you tried other mold shapes yet? I’ve made some with impressions of shells in clay for small vessels.”

“No, and don’t distract me. I cannot allow pour to overflow the grooves and ruin my rings.”

“Who will they be for? This is a gift, yes?”

“Tata,” Mahtan said.

“Chief Tata? Not Rumilô, or Chief of Chieftains Imin?”

Mahtan grumbled. At Finwë’s chirp of confusion, he repeated himself louder and clearer. “I am still Tatyar. We count the Second as our leader, and I cannot or desire to pretend that he does not exist. Rumilô and I and the others disagreed with Tata’s choices, but not all, and our disagreements change not that we are his people. We are not his village, but still in some ways he speaks for us. And we cannot have his anger at us. If we stop giving him gifts and respect, he will call us back to his village, have us all under his watch as Imin does the Minyar. And Sarnê’s kin would not have easy access to salt, or Rumilô his walking distance to the other tribes, or me my ores. In our speech we would have to use all of Tatiê’s words and Tata’s methods for making tools, regardless if there is another way that we prefer. Tata wants us to follow his example, but our deference to him in other ways will suffice. So a fine gift it is. And with this copper necklace, Tata can brag to Imin that he has a prize that Imin does not.”

Finwë pulled a face, so Mahtan was prompted in exasperation to explain further.

“Tata envies that Imin awoke before him, and thus is eldest and leader before him.”

“But I thought the Three were friends?” Finwë asked.

Mahtan laughed long and derisively. “The first three- friends? Ha! No, little Phinwê. They are jealous and competitive. Above all, Tata fears that his people will join Imin or Enel, call themselves Minyar or Nelyar. He does not understand how we can live away from him, not follow his ways, and still desire to think of ourselves as his people and not theirs.”

Finwë sat on his heels and thought about what he had learned, of leaders and friends, envy and loyalty. Of his thoughts, the only that he vocalized was meekly said and too quiet for Mahtan to hear. “I liked it better when I thought they were friends.”

Ingwë counted sheep.

The animals were mostly juveniles, three of them male, and they were various shades of brown with lighter bellies and rumps. They roamed the paddock area that the Minyar enclosed for the sheep, nibbling at grasses and a few much-besieged bushes. There was not enough fodder inside the paddock to keep the animals fully fed, so food and water needed to be brought to them. Ingwë had covered baskets with dried grass and various seeds for the sheep to eat. One of his tasks was ensuring those baskets remained untouched by other animals or gluttonous sheep. And penned as they were, the animals would be targeted by predators or could break free of the fencing and escape if not guarded. The sheep were not yet truly tamed that a shepherd -a job that the Kwendî were in the slow process of inventing- could take the animals out to forage around the lakeshore and not lose them. So, the young man that would be Ingwë Ingweron guarded sheep.

Ingwë’s reasons were selfish.

He did not adore the sheep. His concern for their safety was not tied to any deep empathy that he felt for the animals, but that he was the one currently chosen for watch duty, and the penning of these particular animals had been his suggestion, giving him a layer of ownership. If he did not protect and tend the herd to a high standard, his tribe could censure him. Thus his pride was intertwined with the success of the animals, and any failure attached to them would give others ammunition to hurt him, especially if the herd came to harm or did not flourish during his watchguard shifts. The task of watching over the sheep and singing to keep them calm and associate the Minyar camp with safety and food was necessary, for the animals were valuable tribal resource. A ready source of meat and fur guaranteed surety of life. Still, Ingwë felt a greater proprietary fondness for his traplines and cloak than these bleating creatures, even if the balance of value was weighed heavily in their favor.

Over the course of the Great Journey, the Vanyar would replace their sheep with goats and cattle. The more intelligent goats, in particular, could withstand the scarcity and variability of food and climb the two mountain ranges that would lay in their path. Ingwë Ingweron’s biases may have also been a guiding hand in the Vanyar’s conversion from sheep to cattle.

With another sigh against his feelings of undue imposition, he raised a bone flute to his lips and began to play the soft tune that combined with a touch of oswarë to blanket the animals’ thoughts with a sense of docile calm. So engrossed in his task, he did not hear the other elf’s approach. Ravennë walked with arm’s reach of the fence posts before Ingwë noticed her presence. His song faltered for a moment as his fingers slipped from one of the flute holes, but he recovered and pretended that her arrival had not startled him. He offered her no greeting, and Imin’s daughter gave him none. Instead she leaned against the paddock fence and observed the sheep. Discreetly, the man that would be Ingwë evaluated her appearance, searching for clues for why she had walked out beyond the village palisade to the sheep enclosure. His guard shift would not finish soon, and he knew Handë was the one who would come to replace him. Ravennë carried no weapons, though she wore a pair of leather leg-wraps that tied into a loincloth instead of a wrapped skirt, and her thick yellow hair was braided and tied away from her face. This suggested a non-sedentary task, and she had a pouch tied to her waist that he could not deduce the purpose of, for he did not recognize it. The cover flap was the entire paw of a leopard stitched to the leather, and pieces of spotted fur trimmed and decorated the cuffs and lining of her garments. The overall effect was showy, Ingwë privately admitted, but he was most curious at what Ravennë had in that pouch, and why she had gone through the obvious effort of dressing in one of her finer ensembles. Perhaps she meant to visit one of the other villages, especially since the earth tremors had lessened recently. Ingwë wished to visit his friends soon. Ravennë had a healing gash across her lower left ribs, the skin paler and more shiny in the torchlight. Though he had not seen the injury, he could reasonably guess at its cause, for duels happened frequently these days. The duels were for preference order to ride the limited number of horses, Imin having given away one of the silver Nahar bridles each to both Tata and Enel. Almost every member of Ingwë’s tribe wanted a chance to learn to ride the new horses, and there was not yet enough animals for everyone. A competition had formed over riding privileges. This was expected behavior for the Minyar. Perhaps that was where Ravennë was off to, though the fenced enclosures for the horses was in the opposite direction, closer to the lakeshore.

Finally, Ravennë broke her silence. “You are very gentle,” she asserted. “Not just with the mâmâ. With your parents, the disfigured ones. And your baby sister. You are an accomplished caretaker. This is a good role for you, which you excel at. Very soft, very patient.” Ravennë nodded at her proclamations, never once turning to actually face Ingwë as she described her observations of him.

The young man, whom Ravennë had only ever addressed as Ûkwendô and seemed to have ignored all their lives, dropped the flute from his lips and stared at her. Her words infuriated him, and he could feel the swell of outrage pouring into his mouth from his diaphragm and from the root of his tongue, flooding up to press against his lips. If he opened his mouth, he knew he would scream at her. Seemingly oblivious to his feelings, Ravennë leaned over the fence and stretched out a hand to attempt to caress one of the sheep. “Katwânîbesê said that the animals were unsettled earlier with the lightning, though at first they grazed and seemed not to notice. Then a large sound, and one of the little bucks nearly somersaulted. One of the horses did the same, spooked and kicked out and nearly lamed itself, but that was discovered to be caused by a lion prowling too close and not the northern fires. I think Katwâ was just unskilled at this task. She cares for herself and does not look outside her face.”

Ravennë pulled out some of the dried broken grasses and rolled seed from the covered basket and tossed them over the fence to draw the sheep’s attention and lure them close to her. One of the young ewes bleated and trotted over to the food, and Ravennë could reach down to stroke the animal’s back. She pulled up a loosen tuff of wool and played with it between her fingers, twisting the fibers.

Still as if she were addressing the sheep instead of Ingwë, she spoke. “Nurwê Enelion will marry soon. He has chosen as spouse Eleniel, the most beautiful daughter of the third tribe. According to them. His father Enel has demanded animals from my father as a gift, so that his son may have resources to establish his own village, as the Nelyar are so wont to do, splitting and budding new villages like willow trees. I must say I do like this new idea of wedding celebrations and offering gifts. Enel almost bequeathed his son the village of your friend Elwê, because their leaders had died and their son is unmarried. They do not like this, a leader alone. They awoke in paired sets, and the lack of match still unsettles them, my parents and the other chieftains. Enel wished to give the Estirinôrê village to Nurwê, but Father and Tata talked him out of that scheme. They were impressed with your tall friend. So Nurwê and Eleniel must build their own homes from scratch and convince their own friends and companions to join them. I do not know where they shall choose. One of the little islands out on the lake for all I know. Father will send Mother and Brother to confer with Enel over which animals to send, if to give them more of our horses or some of these sheep. If I were making the decisions, I would give Nurwê two or three of the ewes and a spare ram. The more intractable animals. Let him and his companions capture their own beasts if they wish more. The Nelyar have surplus plant food.” Ravennë rolled some of the shredded hay through her fingers, tossing the pieces out for the sheep. “That reasoning is most sound; don’t you agree with me, Kwendê?”

At first he was befuddled at her intentions in telling him these facts, but then Ingwë’s feelings progressed through incensed relief on behalf of Elwë and then more confusion. Though her last words were a question, she gave no sign that she expected an answer from him, treating him as a sympathetic but silent ear, same as the sheep. Ravennë pulled away from the soft muzzle she had been petting and stretched. “The sheep like your tuning and gentle songs. You should play more often. Don’t be so silent.” With that parting remark, Ravennë left him.

Wolves lingered on the outskirts of the elven villages. So did other small canids eager to dig through the refuse piles for scraps to eat. Fire and aggressive words would scare them off. Once the initial fear wore off, the elves thought little of the lingering canids. Compared to wild hogs, leopards, or snakes, a few foxes and shy wolves were of small concern when the palisades deterred them.

There was also a clever wolf pack that would follow the Minyar hunters for the express purpose of waiting to scavenge the remains of the elven hunters’ kills, as the ravens and other carrion birds would in turn do to the pack. This wolf pack did not try to chase away the elves from kills as some of the other predators did, perhaps because they were consignate of the danger of attempting so or of hunting the elves as prey. There were lion pelts hanging in the villages for a reason. The wolf pack was treated cautiously, but over time the fear had lessened and nearly vanished. This particular pack was beginning to take the proffered but conditional tolerance of the elven hunters a step forward to work almost in tandem with the Minyar hunting parties. It was almost a friendly competition when they or the elven hunters began to scatter a herd to pick off individuals – and with two groups, if not truly coordinated for the wolves could not understand elven hand signals and the Vanyar mindtouch only brushed the faintest of intentions and emotions, the process of winnowing a prize from the herds was easier for all. Helpfully, the two groups tried not to go after the same beast, for this level of communication of intentions was possible. It was a stray thought common to many elven hunters after a successful spear throw to bring down their kill that perhaps one day they might not lunge a second spear or stone at a horse or deer to leave it for the wolf pack to finish off. It would be a goodwill gesture of thanksgiving and camaraderie. If nothing else, having their own successful kill to tear into would deter the wolves from eyeing the elves’ prizes. Pups from this pack had grown into maturity with a lessened fear of the bipedal strangers, associating them not as prey or danger but opportunities for extra food if treated with deference and caution. Then bored hunters, he that would be Ingwë among them, began to toss objects to the wolves for the animals to play with: stray tufts of fur, sticks, even bits of bone – a willingness to play games instead of trying repel the creatures.

With the threat of Melkor’s Dark Hunters gone, the press for food was not so overwhelming that nothing could be spared for the wolves. With joy and reunion the Minyar hunters sang to the pack that they already thought of with the stirrings of fond ownership.

Thus even before the arrival of Oromë, the elves had begun the process of domesticating dogs.

Ironically it was members of the Second Tribe, Sarnê and his sons, who found a litter of wolf cubs near a dead mother. Without a fear of the tiny creatures and bolstered by tales of the fledgling camaraderie with the nearby wolves, they took the pups back to the village. That action caused an uproar in Finwë’s village which only the inherent cuteness of the puppies quelled. Then both Sarnê and his eldest son, Morisû, disappeared, taken by the agents of Melkor, and Sarnê’s remaining children would not entertain the slightest suggestion of giving up the young wolves that they had adopted as family. The second eldest of Sarnê’s sons had been pestering Finwë to break the edict and travel to the Nelyar village to bargain for precious meat, fish being the only reliable source of protein and the Nelyar villages the only ones with surplus with the Dark Hunters about, when Belekô arrived to interrupt with his alarming message about Elwë’s intentions. Now with Oromë’s intervention and the restoration of hunting parties, meat was easily obtainable for Sarnê’s mostly-tamed wolves.

The preliminary plans to corral ungulate herd animals for easier gathering of resources and horses to ride prompted the Minyar to turn to Sarnê’s wolves. “If we can create a partnership with them as there is between Arâmê and Nahar, to raise more wolves to see themselves as packmates with us …why it should be easy to accomplish! The bond exists, and Arâmê confirms of his own servants many are hunters that he calls chasers.” Soon the Kwendî created their own word, khugan or hound, to distinguish wolf from the animal that saw elves as family and slept inside their villages. Keeping the more traceable and affectionate of each subsequent litter, coupled with training, soon developed dogs suited for hunting with the Minyar sprinters or for guarding the penned sheep from lions and other wolves. The excitable protective instincts, with their proclivity to bark and sing at the slightest intrusion, endeared the canines to the elves who were still nervous and fearful of evil intent abroad. Therefore most elven villages soon had many dogs roaming inside their palisades, of various sizes and new coat patterns.

It were the hounds outside the village walls that needled Elwë’s attention.

They looked like wolves, if not for muzzles too short and ears too large and rounded for their skulls – and that their stature dwarfed the height and length of any creature that prowled the outskirts of the villages. These wolves that looked more like khugan never alarmed the territorial and protective attention of the elves’ rudimentarily domesticated hounds, and that alone was deeply suspicious. The giants would pace between the tree shadows in silence, and should have been mistaken for phantasms if not for the real paw tracks left in the mud, each larger than Elwë’s outstretched hand. Yet show the imprint to one of the khugan so eager to sniff and chase, and the dog would ignore the track. Elwë wished that Oromë had not left, so that he could question the Vala about these giant wolves with pale blue, green, and gray eyes that never vocalized or seemed enticed by a chance for food. He was certain these hound-shapes were servants of Oromë patrolling the perimeter of the Cuiviénen settlements, the recounted chasers of the Lord of Hunt.

Worried yet grateful at their presence, and certain of his hunch, Elwë instructed his brother and others of his village to catch a large fish, then with a simple yet solemn ceremony, Elwë carried the bounty to the outskirts of his village, waiting for a pair of pale green eyes to return. As the giant hound trotted up to towards the palisade of Elwë’s village, its puzzlement of Elwë’s action clear despite lack of words, Elwë lowered the fish and bowed his head. “We are grateful for the guard that Arâmê has left to ensure our safety. We leave this token as appreciation of your efforts.”

The giant hound did not reply, but Elwë was not expecting it to speak. It did not touch the offering, but the fish was left outside the palisade, and when next inspected, that corner of the land cleared around Elwë’s village was devoid of a single scale or fish bone. The elves took this as a sign that their offering was appreciated.

Millennia would pass before Elwë, now Eu Thingol King of Beleriand, would slouch on the floor of his palace in Menegroth and reach a hand to pet the ears of the Hound of Oromë, valiant Huan. Quiet and subdued, Elu would murmur words of thanks to Huan’s kin.

“Where you there, loyal friend of my daughter and her love?” he would ask in a wine-slurred voice, speaking of those days back in Cuiviénen. “What did you and your people think of us and our simple villages?”

In answer, Huan licked his face.

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 great tree. Long green and brown hair flowed from her head into the waves of the salt lake, partly shrouding her like a fine cloak. She wore no garments, but with her long tresses she could not be thought of as naked. 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 I am called,” she said, 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,” answered 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.”

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.”

squirrelwrangler:

heget’s Silmarillion Sigil Set

your daily dose, (4/?)

Disclaimer: Here is a blend of Original Tolkien creations (aka my best efforts at recreating the author’s drawing), modifications on the original, and designs completely from cloth.

Please credit if use.

In order:

Finwë, Fëanor, Findis, Fingolfin, Lalwen, Finarfin 01, Finarfin 02

Previous Entries:

  • HERE is the master-list.

Notes:

Okay, I decided some House of Finwë today. I’ll save more non-canon Minyar sigils for tomorrow.

Keep reading

Ingwë Of Cuiviénen (5/?)

Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4

Considered this the rough draft to what goes up tomorrow or in the next few days on AO3. As this really is the direct continuation of last chapter’s ‘Oromë Recounts the various Valar and the History of the Beginning of Days’ there isn’t a ton of plot advancement. But this necessary section had to be done and I wasn’t going to gloss over it like I originally planned. Next chapter will eb the naming of Indis and hyper-focus on the Minyar.

Primitive elvish names and terms still left mostly untranslated, but context clues should explain them. More world-building in my mode from Klingon-Promotion-Vanyar and young bucks of Cuiviénen.

Of the fellow Powers like himself did these gathered elves of the Nelyar village who now called themselves the followers of Elwë question of Oromë, wanting to know of the Powers what were their numbers and their strengths and where the Valar lived and what all they looked like. The total number of Powers who came into this world from the Timeless Halls, a hand gesturing to the dark sky but obviously pointing to some indescribable void beyond it, Oromë could not answer, though he explained that of his kindred, fourteen were accounted the strongest, the appointed leaders. Fourteen, the man that would be Ingwë noticed smugly, was the first number of the Minyar after Imin and Iminyë found a cluster of golden-haired elves sleeping and claimed them as their people, back in the beginning when the elves were awaking and searching for one another. Evenly divided by seven were the Valar, but as Oromë explained, not an even seven couples. Thanks to the query from a woman of Elwë’s tribe, the gathered elves learned that Oromë’s people had kinship bonds that the second generation of elves possessed but not the first, for the Unbegotten were sibling-less. A strange dissimilarity, thought the followers of Elwë, for all that the Powers had emerged from the thought of Ilúvatar just as the first of the elves had awoken in the clay.

“We haves bonds to one another,” said Oromë, “many different types of which I search for your words to describe. Some were a part of us at our creation by the One who made all. Some we found among each other, that we saw a likeness in our songs and what we loved. Friendship and that internal qualities by which you divide yourselves into tribes would be the parallel. Then there is one of whom the bond between us was set at her inception, whom I love I would say the way you, Elwê, love these two before you that you call brothers.” Oromë pointed to Olwë and Elmo. “The way the two who raced up to see you returned safe, that is very familiar. When I return to my home, my sister who is swiftest of all us shall race up to me and demand an accounting of my journeys. She shall be cross if I have come to harm, delight in anything that pleased me or my victories, and then shall still scold me for leaving in the first place, while understanding why I must go. Is that not the bond of siblings? Then the deer that surround her wherever she goes shall nibble at my hair, and I will have to shoo them away.”

He pointed back to the questioner, a heavily pregnant Lindar woman with her dark braided hair twined with duck feathers and whose hands gripped those of Elwë’s youngest brother. “The one you would say I am husband to, that I love as Elmo loves you, she is very dear to me, and shall be the second to greet me. Her song is the fairest of anything I have heard, since long before I entered Arda. That is how we found one another, the bonds between us, in the place that had no place or time. We would at first sing alone, or with those the One had said we shared a bond, but as we sang and listened to others sing, we found those that we preferred to sing with, or those who singing we liked most to listen to and they to listen to us. It is that way with my wife. Beauty itself would be her name, Banâ, and not be sufficient enough to encompass her. Her songs are ever those of new life, of the creation of newness and beauty, of the young things. She is the seeds that will make new trees, of the nursing animals and act to make them, the new leaves that unfurl pale and green. Always she is newness and youth and love.” Oromë’s voice sang with love to describe his wife, and even without the mind-sight of the Minyar, all the elves present could feel the tender joy and see without sight the image of a woman none had met. It was not a clear picture, just a pair of soft hands cupping a caterpillar and allowing the fuzzy creature to crawl up her fingers, but there was a golden light that infused the image.

“Not all of us have bonds of that you would call siblings or spouse. The one that delights most in the song of water, be it the smallest of rivers or the oceans that make this lake seem small, has neither. Ulumô is what his name would be, before you interrupt to ask.” Oromë gave a teasing glance to Finwë, and that the Power could joke with such easy and gentle humor dissipated the villagers’ lingering worry. “But he does have companions who also delight most in the songs of water, river, lake, and ocean.”

The wife of Elmo smiled and placed a hand over her bulging body, her other hand holding her husband. “I am most glad to hear that, Good Hunter. That the powers that made this world are like us. Or that it is the other way around, that we are like you? I would like most to meet your spouse the Everyoung.”

Oromë smiled to the wife of Elmo, Linkwînen of the reed cloak and duck feathers twined in her hair. “There is the echo of her song in you, Linkwînen.”

“What of children?”

To this question Oromë grew still. “That we do not have, nor can.” His solemn face returned to the bright smile, “but of the weaker Powers that follow me and my wife, our tribe perhaps you would call them, there are a few small and foolish ones that despite my love I would say I am in constant exasperation trying to tend and parent them. One of my hunters, for example! Oh, he is very strong and determined, very skilled, but he has no head for directions or time, constantly distracted and forgetting his duties. Hopelessly in love, the poor sod, so I forgive him always if he errors. But I worry, for the Enemy may take advantage of him. The reason I was riding in this direction was to find him, for he has not checked in with me in a year. The explanation could be as innocent as he found something silver and stopped to admire it. Or it could be ill.”

“The Enemy steals your people as he does ours?” Elwë asked.

The likeness between Oromë and Elwë grown more pronounced than ever, grave did the Power answer, “Sometimes. Or Mailikô convinces them to join his side, through persuasion or by overpowering them. Many of his number are such, Gothombauk and the other horrible ones, ñgwalaraukô if I were to use your words. And then there are the willing traitors like he that was chief servant of Aulë. Ah, there is a story I must tell.”

Once more the Vala regaled his listeners of how he and his brethren fought against their Enemy in the vast expanses outside the world, the emptiness on the far side of the stars, and then in Arda itself, back before anything grew in the soil or in the water, not even the algae and tiniest particles that the minnows and shrimp fed on. How the very stone raged as molten fire so there was no firm land to find purchase, and Aulë was sorely pressed. He told of how Mailikô used the extremes of temperature to turn Ulumô’s waters to steam or ice, then pausing to explain what ice was, as the land surrounding Cuiviénen received no cold snow. Fortunately for the need of example there were mountains in the distance tall enough to see that their crests were paler than the rock below. The concept of snow kindled a new wanderlust in the breast of the man that would be Ingwë Ingweron. Before Oromë, the elf had not pondered the possibilities that the distant mountains may hold.

Continuing on, Oromë told of how their battles were long and inconclusive until help arrived in the form of a newcomer. Uninvited, unexpected, but gratefully needed and welcomed, Tulkatho defeated all the Enemy’s followers and scared Mailikô away from Arda. Oromê described Tulkatho running into battle with laughter and a ruddy smiling face, carrying no weapons and using little in the way of strategies to fight but so strong as to not matter, and of his good humor and golden hair. Collectively everyone turned to look over at the only member of the first tribe that these elves had any regular contact with. Appraising Elwë’s friend, together the Lindar shook their heads and decided there was no resemblance.

Oromë described the time of peace and bliss that existed for a while, of their first home in Arda on a green island in the center of a lake. Two tall pillars topped with bonfires Aulë crafted, one to the south and the other to the north, and together much of the entire world was bathed in light. Here the Powers rested and made long celebration of their victory against their Enemy, though their chieftain mourned the brother who had turned against the One. He hoped that having been driven from the confines of Arda perhaps Mailikô would return to Iluvatar and repent the folly of his destructive avarice. The Enemy did not choose that wise and goodly course, alas. But with Tulkatho’s overwhelming strength, none saw a way in which the Enemy could hope to assault the peace of Arda, and in this false confidence, unaware of treachery’s threat, the Powers celebrated their victory on the verdant island in the center of the world where the light of the two great fires met and mingled. Wearied by his long labours, Aulë the shaper and tamer of the stones of the earth rested upon a bed of soft grass that his spouse, she that created all living things, grew for him. As he rested, so did the mighty warrior Tulkatho, who had lent his strength to all the Powers without reservation. As the warrior rested and received the congratulations of others, the sister of Oromë proclaimed her love for he with golden hair and a laughing spirit. As this, the weary warrior sprung from the grass with a glad shout brighter than any he had in battle and proclaimed his equal admiration of the lithe-limbed and deer-swift sister of Oromë. Nessa she was, the Dancer, the Bride, and Oromë smiled to describe her. It was decided to have a wedding to celebrate their love and choice to espouse another, and so many of the Ainur, from the fourteen great Valar to their least servants, attended. Only in hindsight did the absence of many servants who should have attended or the swift departure of those like Mairon, the highest of Aulë’s attendants, once the initial vows were made and the dancing begun, reveal that Mailikô’s departure from the confines of Arda had been only temporary.

The concept of a wedding, to make a large celebration involving the entire community out of the decision between two people, was unknown to the Kwendî. The union of two tribe members would affect the tribe as a whole through the changes in the social network, this was true, yet it was not occasion to hold a tribal event on par with the raising of a new communal building. The true motive of this particular wedding, as the listeners could readily perceive, was to have an excuse for joy after a long and terrible period of conflict. For what could be more contrary to such a violent division between those that should have been complementary in thought and efforts than the celebration of a new union?

Oromë listed unfamiliar names and described fantastic forms of the gathered Powers: of the lord of clouds with wrens and warblers nesting in his hair and on his shoulders, his lofty lady wife who made the stars and whose eyes were as bright as her creations, the spouses who fashioned the earth and then filled it with the living growing things, of Oromë’s wife with pale yellow and pink flowers floating from her feet to coat her hands as she braided the bride’s hair, and himself, the nervous older brother. Of the three siblings whose duties were not the material world but those of spirit Oromë noted as having been in attendance: a sister who wept for all and thus encompassed both grief and wisdom, her brother who resided over judgement and would have in his custody the spirits of those departed, and the youngest of the three who dealt with dreams and unlike his elder siblings was actually pleasant to share company. More Powers he described, attending the wedding with their host of servants and followers, of the lady of repose and healing with her soft pale robes and hands as light as lake mist and the lady who recorded all that had come to pass, each who had as spouse one of the lords of spirit, of the lord of waters standing uncomfortable in the gathered crowd but smiling as the butterflies that followed Banâ sipped at the water that dripped off his scales, and last of all the bridegroom and bride. Oromë described the procession on the soft grass as bride and groom approached each other to the resounding cheers and songs of the gathered, of the lord of clouds standing in witness for Ilúvatar as Tulkatho and Nessa spoke vows to another. The bright purple eyes of his sister had glowed with joy to announce the golden warrior as her husband, and she only released her grip on his hands as to make a dance of celebration at the completion of their vows.

Oromë grew silent as he conceded that in even the language of the Valar there were no words adequate to describe the Dance of Nessa.

No celebration would last unended, and it was as the newlyweds slept, and all the attending guests in likewise slumber and stupor, that the betrayal came. Servants of the Powers who had switched their allegiance in secret to Mailikô hastened to the north and south to destroy the pillars that upheld the lanterns of Aulë. While Tulkatho snored and Oromë admitted he too had been lost in hazy remembrance of his own first union with his lovely spouse, and none of their loyal warriors were stationed with alert eyes facing outside the island where the wedding had been held, no one noticed these traitors approach. Former servants of the Star-kindler cloaked themselves in shadows and the blue wolf that once hunted beside Oromë stilled any warning cry. Ossai, rebellious servant of Ulumô, generated terrible storms to pound at the great stone pillars with lashing winds and drown the light with onslaughts of water, yet it was the chief servant of Aulë who caused the most harm. Once a figure most admired, chief of those admirers being himself, this Abhorred One knew the fissures and stress points in the pillars that held the world’s illumination, and it was his hands that showed Mailikô and his terrible followers where to strike. With blows to the wide base of each stone pillar, cracks that reached through the centers to spider out on the far side, the grinding of loose and liquified rock, down the columns fell with a roar greater than any peal of thunder. Long shadows fell over the earth before the twin lights guttered out, and in darkness the broken pillars smashed into the earth. Continents broke. The two fallen lamps pushed out the very oceans, causing tidal waves and earthquakes as the once perfect symmetry of the world was irrevocably shattered. The Powers awoke to darkness and the despoilment of the world they had long laboured to create. Fires raged where the land had once been green. In shock did they behold the seabeds emptied and dry, trees uprooted, gentle hills flattened, and over everything immense clouds of dust. Of the multitude of species of both plant and animal Aulë’s spouse had devised, only a handful survived this cataclysm.

Oromë bowed his head. “If my sister’s dance is the expression of joy indescribable, then the song of grief from Nienna was the expression of sorrow no words of mine can recount. Not even the poetry of my king can match the articulation of feeling.”

War resumed, and the Powers retreated to the far west. At the edge of the world there was a large landmass that had survived mostly intact from the cataclysmic collapse of the two pillars, and it was here that the Valar gathered examples of all of the surviving lifeforms. Then they rose a great palisade of mountains, the highest to ever be. Behind the wall of these mountains the Powers built their houses and tended their crafts, creating ever newer and more beautiful things. “And in the center is our city, our home village, and there is a green mound blessed by my spouse’s elder sister, where she has poured all her thought and song of the green things that grow from the earth that is her domain. The Weeper watered this green mound with her cool tears, and from this mound grew two trees. As they grew their flowers emitted a dew that gave forth a light more pure and bright than the lamps that had been destroyed.” The Great Hunter paused and pulled two items from his brown tunic, the leather of the fabric briefly shifting to the texture of bark before parting before his fingers. The effect was deeply unsettling, and Oromë winced in apology. A small pouch grew from his belt like a budding fruit until it transformed, hanging off the braided cord around his waist like an exact match for the bag tied to Nöwë’s belt. Oromë unfurled his fingers. “Here are two leaves from the Trees.” He used his other hand to pull them apart and unfold the leaves until they draped across his lap. “This one, narrow and dark with the silver underside, belongs to the elder. The one underneath, pale green like a beech, is a leaf off the younger.” The leaves were larger than any the elves had seen before and shimmered in the firelight. “The light from the elder tree’s flowers is silver and cool, whereas the younger is a fierce golden brightness. They alternate their lights as to not overwhelm, and thus our time is divided into days organized by this cycle of light.”

Oromë encouraged the audience to reach out and feel the texture of the leaves. They had an aroma that was faint but pleasant, and completely foreign. Once curiosity was satisfied, Oromë methodically refolded the leaves into small intricate star-like shapes and tucked them into his newly-formed belt-pouch.

“The Star-kindler collects the dew of their flowers to make many lights to illuminate all corners of our homeland, vats and jars and small glass vials full of silver and golden light, and has used them to create the brighter stars you see in the sky. I did not bring any of these lamps with me, but I find it a comfort to bring a piece of the Trees with me wherever I travel.”

Such familiar behavior, to carry a physical piece of home while on long journeys away, comforted the listeners and reduced the alienness of Oromë. Then the Vala stood, towering over the elves, and spoke several sharp words in his native language, the syllables stinging their ears. Nahar pulled away from one of the huts where the giant horse had been nibbling at the thatched roof. Ears pinned back in a strange expression of guilt, the horse snorted and bowed its head, then trotted off to the shoreline to sulk and splash his hocks in the lake water. Oromë’s language shifted back to that of the Kwendî, his sounds no longer piercing and painful. “We are guests, Næchærra, and there are plenty other plants for you to eat that shall not inconvenience the Children.” The stallion turned to face away from Oromë, tail swishing back and forth, and waded deeper into the lake, kicking and splashing with his front legs. “Cover yourself in mud if you wish, but know we must leave soon to visit the other villages as we have promised.”

“Shall you leave soon?” Nôwê asked.

Oromë turned to look at the three who had discovered him. “I have promised to travel with them to the village of your leader, the first chieftain who is senior above all other villages. It would be improper of me otherwise. I cannot making binding promises on behalf of my king, but I can convey messages. To the three chieftains in order, as I have been made to understand, shall I visit, and to as many of the other groups as Kwendê and his friends can guide me. As it is my duty to hunt the creatures of Mailikô, it is the first village of the hunters that shall point me in the proper direction.” The Great Hunter smiled. “I look forward to that.”

14 Minyar goes from the counting tale, but i keep it ambiguous if that’s the final starting first gen for the Minyar. There’s studies done for the aboriginal population of Australia that prove there needs to be a certain starting pop number as to have a lasting society.

Yes, same Linkwinen that has a nasty final fate in Wall the Heart.

Recounting large chunks of Chapter 3 from The Silmarillion, this passage especially: 

“Now it came to pass that while the Valar rested from their labours, and watched the growth and unfolding of the things that they had devised and begun, Manwë ordained a great feast; and the Valar and an their host came at his bidding. But Aulë and Tulkas were weary; for the craft of Aulë and the strength of Tulkas had been at the service of an without ceasing fax the days of their labour.  And Melkor knew of an that was done, for even then he had secret friends and spies among the Maiar whom he had converted to his cause; and far off in the darkness he was filled with hatred, being jealous of the work of his peers, whom he desired to make subject to himself. Therefore he gathered to himself spirits out of the halls of Eä that he had perverted to his service, and he deemed himself strong. And seeing now his time he drew near again to Arda, and looked down upon it, and the beauty of the Earth in its Spring filled him the more with hate. Now therefore the Valar were gathered upon Almaren, fearing no evil, and because of the light of Illuin they did not perceive the shadow in the north that was cast from afar by Melkor; for he was grown dark as the Night of the Void. And it is sung that in that feast of the Spring of Arda Tulkas espoused Nessa the sister of Oromë, and she danced before the Valar upon the green grass of Almaren. Then Tulkas slept, being weary and content, and Melkor deemed that his hour had come. And he passed therefore over the Walls of the Night with his host, and came to Middle-earth far in the north; and the Valar were not aware of him.” 

Making Friends

Crossing-posting this from AO3, the unofficial chapter from Of Ingwë Ingweron staring Elwë wherein I get extremely self indulgent with world-building for prehistoric elves. If you ever wanted a version detailing the first meeting of Elwë and FInwë that describes various pottery decorating methods and has co-staring roles for Elwë’s parents and a giant dead fish, this is the fic for you.

  ⭒🐟⭒  ⭒🐟⭒   ⭒🐟⭒  

Elwê stood taller than either of his parents, which still amazed everyone in their village and made them wonder at first if all children would grow such, each new generation of elves bigger than the last. The first generation of his village, the Unbegotten, woke fully-formed on the shore of the lake, farther west near the waterfall where Enel and Enelyê had their houses, and did not grow or outwardly change, except for hair atop their heads if cut. But Elwê was born, the fourth or fifth so in the reckoning of the Kwendî and the first in his settlement, back when babies were still a new concept to the elves. By the time Olwê was born, the other couples of Elwê’s village began to have their own children and did not fumble with changes or remark with astonishment at every new accomplishment, be it opening of eyes or talking or standing upright and toddling around, as they collectively did to Elwê. And as Olwê stopped growing upward once he was as tall as Elwê’s mother and father, everyone decided that Elwê’s great height was his own quirk. Hwindiê for example was shorter than either parent, and she was a little older than Olwê. Still each new child was observed with interest.

Tall Elwê, the darling first-born child of his village, was now considered a grown adult, and as he was old enough to be entrusted with the same responsibilities as the Unbegotten adults, he would be joining his parents on his first long excursion outside the village. The purpose of the trip would be to barter supplies his village could not easily provide on their own. The village needed more storage containers, more pots to hold water and the gathered herbs and seeds. His parents wanted good Tatyar pots made of hardened clay. Reeds woven into baskets could be made near watertight with coats of resin, but the pottery of the Wise Elves was best. Eredêhâno’s parents wanted more hides to make new clothes for what their young daughter had outgrew. Cloth of a sort could be woven from the water-weeds and reeds of the shore, and one of the other Nelyar villages had discovered a narrow plant that grew in the rich soil of the shore whose pale innards made a soft and light thread that was better than that of the nettle and less painful to harvest. The inner bark of some trees when pounded flat and soaked could be glued together in strips for clothing, but the material was thin and fragile. Animal hides with their soft warm fur was still the most desired option, though, and leather would not tear as quickly. Nor did water weaken and damage leg protectors made of hide, which was best for the fishermen and reed gatherers of his village, who needed to wade into the lake and through the marshes and wet meadows surrounding their homes. The final item on their list was salt, for one of the other Lindar had discovered that adding the white rock-like substance to fish before smoking it made it better and last longer. The first and last items could be bartered from the Second Tribe, and possibly the hides as well, for though the Tatyar did not hunt and skin animals with the same proficiency and regularity as the Minyar, they bartered for those hides with their stone tools and pottery. Therefore just one trip to the nearest Tatyar village, Elwê’s parents decided, was needed to trade fresh-caught sturgeon for the necessary goods.

There were two settlements of the Tatyar, the second tribe known for their skilled hands and clever minds. The first was older and larger, the village where Tata and his wife Tatiê lived with their children. That was to the northwest, across the lake. The second village was founded when the first Tatyar village grew too crowded, though supposedly the true reason for the division was because the new location was near some materials the craftsmen liked, or because they had gotten into one argument too many with the other Tatyar. It was known that the elves of the second tribe were distinct from the rest of the Speakers by their common temperament, an overpowering desire to use the voices unique to the Kwendî as instruments to fight and shout at one another, united by their disunity. Elwê had no preference to which opinion was correct. His parents had moved away from the village of their leaders because they disliked the loudness of the waterfall and preferred the quiet and song-like melody of the stream. But no Kwendî spread rumors that there was division born of dislike among the third tribe or would be believed if so gossiped.

The second Tatyar village was in easy walking distance from Elwê’s village, the right-handed path. The left-handed direction, towards drier land, led to the Minyar village. Eventually Elwê wanted to see the first Kwendî village.

The sturgeon his parents were bringing to trade, aside from a basket of other small fish and some gathered clams, was the largest fish his village had caught in a star-pass. Elwê’s parents expected a great trade for it. As long as Elwê from pointed mouth to tail, the fish was wrapped in two mats and tied at each end to a pole to make it easier to carry by the young man and his father, though as it was heavier than a similar-sized tree trunk, the prospect of lugging the fish all the way to the Tatyar village would be unpleasantly tiring. This task did not diminish the excitement of visiting a new place, though it did stymie Olwê’s envy.

Elwê and his father hefted the pole onto their shoulders and took several practice steps to sync. Such sharing of heavy loads Elwê was rarely asked to join, as his greater height would unbalance everything.

The heavy giant sturgeon in its reed bundle swayed with their steps.

Belekô laughed and fetched two of the reed hats. “In case of rain,” he said, and asked if they wanted him to knot the long ties around their necks so each hat hung down their backs or to tie them to the pole.

“They are not heavy,” Elwê’s father said, “and if we wear them, the hats will beat against our shoulder blades as we walk and become uncomfortable. Tie them around the center so they hang on either side, where we have also hung the waterskin.”

Belekô did as asked.

One of the hats Belekô grabbed was Elwê’s favorite, he was pleased to see, the one with white and green duck feathers inserted into the basket weave to create a spiral pattern on top. The other hat was plain but wide and funnel-shaped, tightly woven, a refinement of the basic design by Eredêhâno.

Thus prepared and with the rest of the village sending them off with farewell songs, Elwê and his father lined up behind his mother to begin the journey. Elwê’s mother balanced the tall basket of clams and smaller fish on her head and dipped the torch into the last of the village bonfires next to the gate of the palisade. The palisade was sickle-shaped, a wall of spikes and thorn-bushes meant to discourage the larger animals from the forest from entering the village, and there was talk among the elders to extend the spikes and stakes all the way to the shoreline and enclose all the village huts. There was one opening in the palisade facing the forest, and to the left and right of this opening were two fire pits surrounded and protected by stones. Only the great bonfire in the center of the village was more important, so someone’s task was to watch and feed the fires at all times. Right now it was Nôwê’s turn to keep lit the bonfires, and he waved to Elwê. Shifting the pole on his shoulder, Elwê waved back.

When Elwê’s parents first awoke on the lake-shore, there had been no fire and no villages. A scary thought, Elwê thought, as his mother held out the burning torch from her body to illuminate the path before them. He knew every step of the silty clay beds and canebrake around the village, with the branching stream before them singing the soft and familiar tune, and the paths that led to the forests with its tall pines and firs. Unless he traveled deep into the forest the stars would show his surroundings, and he would only need to look up to find his bearings. Bright Aklara-inkwa shone halfway above the horizon. But even if he got lost, the fires of the village were a beacon visible from miles away, and fire frightened away all but the boldest beasts. Fire meant safety and home and the presence of people.

“Follow my steps, Elwê,” his father cautioned. Carrying the unwieldy sturgeon made what should have been a light and easy passage slow and awkward, the weight sinking their feet in the mud up to their calves.

“Heavy,” Elwê hissed.

His father snorted. “Worse than pulling it ashore. And it will only be heavier before we make it to the other village.”

“First you need to carry over the stream,” his mother called, waving the torch and pointing to the fording spot. “Be careful,” she stressed.

“This is the deepest of the channels,” Elwê’s father said. He gripped the pole with both hands and turned his head back to ensure Elwê did the same. Already across to the other shore, Elwê’s mother had divested her basket of fish and clams to hoist the torch to shine where the ford stones were. This spot was the shallowest crossing of the small river, but then Elwê’s parents had the clever idea when they first settled the village to drag two nearby flat stones and place them at the fording to creating a bridge. The idea came from a path of stones across the river that fed the waterfall next to Enel and Enelyê’s village. Neither bridge stone was large enough for both Elwê and his father to stand on at the same time, but the steady and dry platform to rest their feet as they crossed the stream helped. With careful navigation and coordination they got across with their heavy parcel. Elwê’s mother balanced the basket back on her head and returned to leading the way to the Tatyar village. The music of the stream burbling pass the bridge rocks faded away as they traveled on.

Elwê’s shoulders ached with a pain greater than he could have imagined by the time the distant light clarified to the outline of a wooden fence and the thatches of many huts behind it, ringed with tall standing torches. “Here, finally,” he panted out and laughed for his father said the same words in the same weary but relieved tone of voice with him. There was still a furlong to walk to reach the village itself, which sat on a low hillock away from the shore.

As they approached, Elwê’s mother began to whistle the return tune, a song that swooped up in sharp and loud notes to signal to any watchers at the gate. “El! Ele! El!,” she trilled, “‘Lo, we come!” At her whistles and calls, a cry came from the village, and an elf jogged out from the opening in the palisade to greet them. He carried a torch whose waving light made shadows dance across the well-worn path into the village, illuminating the thick moss growing on either side where the constant tread of feet had not disturbed its growth.

“Rúmilô!” his mother cried, waving a hand to the approaching elf.

“Etsiriwen! Etsiriwêg!” the man called, and Elwê smirked to himself after he puzzled it out that the man was addressing his parents by the name of their village. “You brought another with you!”

“Our son!” Elwê’s father shouted.

“We brought food to trade as well,” said Elwê’s mother.

Gesticulating eagerly for them to follow into the village, the stranger began to question them about the journey and what they had brought, what Elwê’s name was and how many star cycles he had seen, if more Kwendî had joined their village, and if they had recently visited with Denwego, another leader of the Nelyar whose people were constantly travelling between the various villages to trade and explore. Elwê remembered Denwego, for he had visited Elwê’s village not long ago with news of a new-found stand of trees that could be harvested for their inner bark to make clothing. Denwego had been very excited about the discovery. Elwê and his brother had been more excited to hear Denwego’s descriptions of a giant beast spotted in the forest, a long-snouted creature tall as a hut and half as wide with enormous tusks. Elwê’s parents did their best to answer each question from the Tatyar man, though they did not mention the beast Denwego had seen, and they beseeched Rúmilô to repeat some of his many questions. This unconstrained curiosity of the Tatyar was well-expected but still a handful to manage.

Elwê’s first look at a Tatyar village was not as exotic as he imagined.

Built of the same materials as the Nelyar houses, Elwê could readily tell that the design of the huts of the second tribe came from an unfamiliar mind. The thatch of their huts reached nearly to the ground, with the two sides of the roof leaning against each other in long sharp-angled shapes instead of circular. This created larger buildings but amusingly presenting an untidy and doltish impression of the craftsmen. There was more space between the houses and more small structures of stacked rocks and clay bricks to shelter fires. The towering bonfire at the center of the village was the same, though it was ringed by fire pits. No drying lines of fish and the air smelled different, but these were small things that Elwê noticed only because he was searching for all disparities.

The elves of the Tatyar village, he was surprised to see, looked barely different from those of his village. Their skin was perhaps a little paler, but their hair was dark brown and black, braided back or hanging loose. Elwê knew they would not have his silver and gray, which he shared with his brothers and parents, for only two other families in his home village had light hair, the starlight hair Elwê was named for. The Tatyar did wear more braids and in ways Elwê had never seen before, in loops and various sizes and some that weaved in and out or fanned out from one into several many little braids. He liked that style best, for it reminded him of one of the rivers as it entered the lake, branching out into a web of streams and rivulets. They also wore strings of beads of many colors and sizes roped around their necks and limbs, some of stones and others of clay and a few the shiny glass that caught the torch light. Some of the Tatyar combined the strings of beads with their loops of braids, and so rattled everywhere they moved. Hwindiê’s necklace of white shells, which was the maiden’s prized possession, looked drab and small to these decorations. The hierarchy based off the amount of beaded strings was easy to decipher. Rúmilô, festooned with rattling beads, must have garnered great respect among his peers.

Now that Elwê’s mother had worn her short capelet of duck feathers and her best leather apron for this venture made sense. Appearance of material possessions was important to the Tatyar, the foundation of their pride.

Elwê’s people had their own pride.

At the center of the village where the central bonfire gave the best illumination was where his parents halted and began to mark a spot in the packed clay with their feet. Here Elwê’s mother deposited her basket of clams and small smoked fish, pulling out a few of the choice selections to place on the ground where onlookers could see their size and color. Her eyes did not glance up to the Tatyar, fixated on her goods, but the slow manner in which she twisted the fish so their scales glittered in the light and the way she hefted the clams to smile at how large the shells were against the palm of her hand was all artifice for her audience. Relieved at the removal of the heavy burden from his shoulder, Elwê danced back as his parents began to hum, mindful of the growing number of watchers. Almost he laughed. The hummed tune transformed into a shout matched by their audience, as with dramatic flair Elwê’s parents unrolled the giant sturgeon, stepping back so their shadows did not fall across it. The gasps of alarm and astonishment at the size of the fish swelled and grew as more Tatyar pushed to join the crowd, some kneeling to peer closer at the pointed upturned snout and the barbels. Some onlookers began to clap.

Rúmilô made a noise of alarm. “That fish is larger than the body of a Speaker, my friends. How did you capture just a beast?”

“Not alone,” replied Elwê’s father with a laugh.

“And with much effort,” said Elwê’s mother.

“The entire village can feast off this bounty,” Rúmilô said, and the Tatyar around him nodded. “No mouth shall go hungry for many meals. But such a prize, the value of it we have no gift that would equal such a windfall.”

“Fine pots to hold our own food shall benefit our village,” replied Elwê’s father.

“And salt,” said his mother, “the usual agreement for twice the weight of the clams.”

One of the Tatyar men whose braided hair shone light reddish brown as a fox pelt in the firelight conferred with Rúmilô about the payment for such a generous offering. Another Tatyar, who introduced himself as Sarnê, brought over a white pot with two handles like curving vines and a lid which he uncovered to reveal chunks of white and clear rock salt. A younger man, whom he addressed as Morisû and from the resemblance of their faces was likely his son, brought over a scale made from two small clay dishes hanging from a pole. He weighed the salt against the clams, conferring with his father over each piece, picking out which would be best for brine and drying food. As Elwê’s parents haggled with Sarnê and his son over salt price, Rúmilô commanded one of the girls to fetch a skin from a longhouse. “It is a fine pelt,” he said to Elwê and his parents, “a gift from the Minyar. They hunted wisent recently. Horns they kept, and the hides of the largest kills, but those were great beasts with enough meat to share with all the villages.”

“I remember,” said Elwê’s mother. “The meat was good, even dried.”

“The forefront of the beasts is very shaggy, unlike the auroch or deer. The Minyar kept most pelts, but the smallest cowhide they gave us. I have not used it for anything, aside from treating the hide so it shan’t rot. Please, my friends, accept it as part of payment.”

“We need leathers,” Elwê’s father admitted. “The horse-skin like last trade would suffice.”

Rúmilô pursed his lips. “The wisent, and two full buckskin. You are giving my village all parts of this monstrous fish, and I will see you receive its value.”

“And the pots.”

“For this,” said Rúmilô, staring down at the giant sturgeon, “only our best.”

Satisfied with the deal, Elwê’s parents focused on carving the fish into manageable portions for the Tatyar. As for Elwê, they tasked him to fetch the pottery their village needed. Morisû pointed out which hut belonged to the best potter. His gray eyes only briefly met Elwê’s, his attention drawn to observing how Elwê’s parents butchered the giant sturgeon as to carve the best cuts of meat, removing bone and carefully skinning the fish for the Tatyar to turn into leather. “Save some as a gift for Imin. The chief of chieftains will be impressed with the pattern,” Elwê’s mother said, pointing to the line of pale diamond scutes along the side of the fish. Elwê’s father hummed as he began to scoop out the swim bladder and other organs.

“If you are wise,” remarked Sarnê to Rúmilô in a low sidewise voice, “you would send a piece of the treated hide, enough for a belt or boots, to our chieftain as well. Then Tata and Tatiê might soften their hearts to you.”

Rúmilô snorted. “And next I should expect nectar from stone.”

“Worth the attempt.”

“No, Sarnê. Wiser to court favor with the Minyar. Imin is chief above Tata. And,” a conspiratorial nod to Elwê’s parents, “once his approval is won, he is steady with it. We need the Minyar.”

Elwê’s mother turned to glare at her son, finally noticing that he had lingered to listen to this discussion of intertribal politics. The young man huffed off, his father’s laughter at his heels.

To Elwê’s surprise, the craftsman responsible for the clay vessels was a young man, a boy really, who by Elwê’s rough guess was somewhere around Olwê’s age, maybe younger. Similar in appearance to Morisû and his father, he was pale-skinned and black-haired with pale colorless eyes. The string of beads the Tatyar boy wore around his neck had many pieces made of glass, and braided with the leather belt around his hips was another string of colorful clay beads. A skillful craftsman despite his young age, or a clever bargainer, to determine by the finery. The boy smiled up at Elwê, cheeks turning fat and dimpled. There was a manic glint to his gray eyes. “The Nelya! You’ve come for my pieces; Rúmilô told me. I am to ensure you leave with the best. Which sizes do you need, and what designs?”

Elwê recited the list of his mother, splaying his hands wide to indicate girth of the desired pottery and other hand gestures for height. He needed a large egg-shaped container with its narrow neck and double handles for holding water, two large lidded vessels for holding seeds, at least one cooking pot, and as many serving plates as the boy had. The Tatyar boy nodded and scrambled back into his hut, pulling out finished pieces from the stacks of plates and jars. He called the pots by unfamiliar individual terms, pointing out each vessel. “Water vessel you have to carry back, but you’re tall so that shall be no trouble. And not near as heavy as that fish! Empty that is. Would not desire to carry it full, but don’t be deceived, I am stronger than I look! I have to carry all my clay myself and that’s as heavy as it is messy. So this water vessel, best one in the village! Mine will never leak!” The boy tugged on Elwê’s arm. ”Here, you want this one, on the left. All my stripes are painted straight. If you turn the other one next to it over, you’ll notice I errorred on the pattern and the lines aren’t as even. You don’t want that one.” The boy had a running commentary for each selection. “What of the storage vases? What pattern? Smooth finish? I think it better to smooth out the finish, even it takes more time, especially with different pieces of bark and leather to get the smoothest feel. Or if you had a coat of colored slip -that’s was I call the water clay mix I use as glue and coating. But I have to cook it twice. Mahtân says I should do that for all my pieces, but he also likes the color of the regular pieces. This one I wrapped a rope around before firing it, so the indent of the cord spirals around. I didn’t have enough to do the whole vessel, only the bottom for a handspan. I was so angry with myself for misjudging the length I needed. I twisted the cord myself. That drinking cup over there I used the same rope-coil method. I didn’t invent that, of course. But I did add salt to the kiln as I fired it – that’s when we heat the vessel in the fire-pits so it turns hard. Like making charcoal. Nelyar use charcoal instead of just firewood?” Elwê recognized the question addressed to him in the midst of this rapid patter and chose to ignore the implied condescension. “See how it has that shiny texture? Almost like glass, and no water soaks into it, but I had to melt a lot of salt, and Sarnê only trades me enough for small pieces. That drinking vessel! You’ll want that one. I inscribed a pattern that looks like fish scales.” The boy held up the cup so Elwê could see the pattern in the firelight. “You have to take it. And what other designs do you like?” Though his parents gave no limitation on design, Elwê admitted that he personally preferred the green and blue pieces, as he had not seen so many pieces of that color. He told the potter that was amazing. The Tatyar boy smiled eagerly, pointing to the plates that closely matched. He began to describe the clay he used for each piece, the places he had dug for the clay and how long the journey back to the village had been for each trip, and that he discovered that mixing various clay together meant less pieces breaking, though not everyone had believed him. The other potters thought not staying pure to one source was folly until the boy prove it by tallying all his pieces and theirs, and then how many they had to discard because the pottery cracked during firing, and then Rúmilô had recorded the results. So now they were testing to see which combinations were best and how many color variations they could create, and he was in the lead. The boy grabbed one of the shallow dishes and began to indent a series of lines along the rim, describing the proportions of its construction and plotting out the color he would try to create. Even while in the middle of crafting, the torrent of words from his mouth did not abate.

“Wait, you are still here?” the Tatya boy paused in his tirade, staring at Elwê in open astonishment that unsettled the older young man.

“Yes,” Elwê answered, more than a little bemused.

“Nobody stays to listen to me when I go into detail,” the Tatya said. “They wander off or tell me to shut up.”

Elwê thought that sounded rude. Sure, the craftsman’s prattle was continuous and full of information that Elwê could not decipher, and it made no difference to him where the other had found the clay he was molding or how thin to make the coils or just what wood shavings were best to line the fire pit to bake the vessels. Well, the last part sounded vaguely interesting, that it was a mystery how the smoke would pattern the clay. And Elwê did notice how shiny the boy’s pottery was, and how the newest fire-hardened piece which he was holding up for Elwê to inspect had a wave pattern of smooth and rough, which came from rubbing the clay when it was still leather-like and half-dry.

The boy gave a smile less steady than its predecessors, yet one more honest, as Elwê crouched down so he was no longer looming over the much shorter elf. Elwê smiled back. “I like listening to you. My name is Elwê of the Lindar, named for the stars and my silver hair.”

“Phinwê,” replied the Tatyar boy. He laughed. “Our names are the same, named for hair.”

Elwê reached for the other boy’s hands and gripped them tight. “A sign that we were meant to be friends,” he said, finally identifying the hungry look in Phinwê’s eyes as loneliness.

Smiling and shifting so he sat comfortably on his heels, Elwê watched as Phinwê used the wedge of a stylus to mark a pattern of ray bursts around the plate. There was a dark blush to the face turned to focus on the act of crafting from the discomfort at being addressed with warmth so quickly and openly. Yet there was a happiness in Phinwê’s movements, and he did not flinch his body away from Elwê. In fact he seemed to lean towards the older boy as if he was a fire to provide warmth. Phinwê’s hands were steady and quick as they completed the design. Elwê found it mesmerizing to watch, like observing the movement of the shore against the sand. The Tatyar craftsman murmured as he worked, a soft narration of his movements, counting the stars and their points as he inscribed each one. It was not a song, had not the same music as the flow of water or wind through the trees, but there was a quality of delight in listening to the sound. Phinwê held up the leather-hard disk for inspection. “Stars, for your name.”

“Thank you, my friend.” Elwê pitched his voice low and soothing, trying to hide his self-satisfied smile at the deepening blush his words caused. The trip was worth the pain of carrying that heavy fish, he thought.

Phinwê twitched his now empty hands, shocked into silence. The corners of his mouth flexed as the uncertain smile waited to emerge.

Elwê considered the necessity of balancing the values of each trade. His new friend had offered almost all the words for their conversation, and now that he had finally paused for breath, it was Elwê’s turn. “Have you any siblings yet, Phinwê? I have a brother a few star rotations younger than me. He was not allowed to come with us, or to swim unattended too far out into the lake, though he is very skilled and can hold his breath longer than anyone, even Nôwê, who used to be the best swimmer in our village.”

Phinwê shrunk in a manner than was not physical. “I have no- my parents -they disappeared- there was some accident …no one has the story for me. I was alone as an infant; Tata and Tatiê assigned others to nurse and watch over me if they had time, and Rúmilô offered a place with his village when he and the others left. Everyone has been kind to me. Everyone in the village is my family.”

Poor trade.

“As a village is,” said Elwê, hoping his words suggested comfort and not offense, for there was a prickly challenge in Phinwê’s too-bright eyes. He cast his thoughts desperately for new words like a freshly repaired net. “Denwego saw a beast in the forest when he was searching for linden. Did he speak of it when he visited your village?” Elwê took the encouragement from Phinwê’s headshake to continue the topic. “It was like the long-nosed behemoths the Minyar spot when they hunt far into the grasslands , as tall as a hut, but much longer than it was tall. It had tusks like those beasts, a pair that curved out from its mouth and were as long as you are tall, not just curved and small like boar.” Elwê copied the sketch Denwego made of the creature in the dirt at his feet, borrowing Phinwê’s stylus to outline the trunk-like legs and long head and nose. He gave special attention to the tusks. “Denwego saw it eating pine needles. I wonder if such a beast could be hunted. It might feed everyone in all the villages, enough for all to have a bite. And the tusks! Imagine crafting something from so large a tooth. You would carve it like a beech mast, make the center pole of a most magnificent hut.” Phinwê joined in with Elwê’s enthusiasm, speaking of house he would have if he could make it of any fantastic material.

“A roof made of clay tiles. Ñalatiê is making one, a small hut, but if I had time, I would want a house as big as the tool-making hall and the roof glazed blue. And bright patterned mats on the floor so my feet are never dirty or cold. And light – I want many oil lamps, even some hanging from the ceiling, from a fat that does not have smoke or a strong and terrible smell.”

“And I will come and visit you,” said Elwê. “And when you visit me, the hangings on the walls of my house shall be of blue, green, and white feathers, soft to the touch and woven in patterns like the surface of the lake.”

“Like your hat? I love how colorful it is,” Phinwê interjected.

“Exactly so,” said Elwê. “The posts shall be carved to look like beech trees. And it shall smell like the sweetest forest glen, so that if you closed your eyes you would not know you were inside.”

The boys laughed over their dreams, wavering their wishes between earnest goals and the ridiculous. When you visit me, though, were the words woven throughout their conversation that mattered.

A high call came from the center of the village, Elwê’s parents calling for him, and the boys ended their discussion of fantasy.

Phinwê helped Elwê carry the vessels back to where his parents had finished butchering the sturgeon and transferring the allotments of salt for clam and fish. The three hides were tightly rolled and tied with cords, stacked beside the pile of salt. Elwê’s father was fanning himself with his hat. Together they loaded the salt into one of the storage jars, securing rope around the jars so they could hang off the carrying pole along with the hides and placed the eating plates and drinking bowls in Elwê’s mother’s basket, lining them with soft grasses so they would not break. As they worked, Elwê introduced his new friend to his parents, a hand resting on Phinwê’s head as the boy blushed and waved his arms in gestures of greeting. Tall Elwê often rested hand or arms around his little brother Olwê, so the fraternal gesture came unthinkingly to him. Phinwê did not pull away. “This is good that you have made a fine friend,” Elwê’s parents said. “Your work is as beautiful as it is needed by our village. And Rúmilô says you are clever, which is high praise from a Tatyar. It is good to have a clever friend, my son.”

“See, they approve,” whispered Elwê, leaning down to speak into Phinwê’s ear.

Many of the Tatyar villagers watched Elwê and his parents hoist the bartered goods for the journey home, russet-haired Mahtân and a few others stepping forward to help lift the carrying pole and the jar of salt. Phinwê fussed over the knots tying the water vessel and second storage jar to the pole, worried that they might swing wildly during the walk back and smash.

“Leave be; they shall not break,” Morisû chided. Beside him a small boy with a slightly less polished and handsome version of his face, a younger brother, smiled apologetically to Phinwê. The sight induced a pain of longing in Elwê, the desire to tell Olwê the details of this trip and hear the answering thoughts of his younger brother. He wondered if Olwê was waiting by the gate fires that Nôwê was tending, hoping to catch the silhouettes of Elwê and their parents emerging from the canebrake, or if his younger brother was reveling in their absence and playing in the lake. Knowing Olwê, the likelihood of his brother enjoying the freedom to venture where he usually would not be allowed unattended was high, and Elwê hoped his best fishing line was untouched. A forlorn hope. He regretted the lost opportunity to make a bet out of the possibility of Olwê snapping or tangling Elwê’s fishing lines and net with Belekô. Such a dare would be a clever way to trick his friend into guarding his possessions from his little brother -not that he suspected Olwê of malice, but a baby brother was the spring of ever-flowing trouble, or so did Elwê reckon. Such observations were important to the growing collective knowledge of the elves. Elwê resolved to ask Eredêhâno if a younger sister was less tiresome.

Elwê’s mother dipped her torch into the fire-pit beside the opening in the Tatyar village palisade, bowing her head to the black-haired woman would tended to the flames. Behind them the villages of the Second Tribe stood much as the villagers of Elwê’s home had crowded around them at the start of this journey. For all the familiarity, the lack of the river-song or the rustle of reeds in the wind only intensified the home-longing. That same longing was reflected back in his parents’ faces. Elwê’s father tugged on the pole carrying their new belongings, and Elwê winced at the pull against the flesh of his shoulder.

As they departed for home, Elwê turned to wave farewell to his new friend. “Soon you must come visit my village, or I return to yours!”

Elwê’s father laughed. “Yes, you must come! You must learn to swim like a Lindar, and how to pull fish from the river. Rúmilô does not accept my offer.”

“Because Rúmilô is too busy,” say the Tatyar village leader. His expression and tone was wry, but he patted Phinwê’s back encouragingly. “Little one, you should visit when you have none of your pots and plates in the fire pits. It is good to learn new skills and see new things. Find me new names for these things and experiences.”

“I am good with new words,” remarked Phinwê.

Morisû’s little brother looked up towards the older boy, head tilted at an angle and forehead furrowed. Whatever the remark he made Elwê could not hear, too far away from the village gate, but it make Phinwê squawk and shove at the boy.

Shadows stretched long before them, Elwê and his parents walked down the path lined with moss that would eventually lead to their home. Soon the path flattened away into the stretch of ferns and small bushes between their two villages. To the left the lake sloshed softly against the nearby shore. A patch of darker black in the distance was the nearby forest. Somewhere in those trees was Denwego’s creature and the outcropping where Phinwê found the best clay.

Before they reached the crossing stones of the stream outside their village, Elwê’s mother stopped and bade them lower what they were carrying. She had already placed her burden on the ground. The salt could wait. There was something of great importance she wished to tell them and wished it said where the rest of the village was not around to interrupt. She did not stand and speak as one afraid, as if her words would cause fear and alarm if spoken to the village, but Elwê was worried and cast his mind back on their journey to decipher what his mother wished to tell. Their barter had been successful, and he could not think of any item they had forgotten or that the village needed that the Tatyar could have provided. Nor was there an incoming storm to which they needed to find quick shelter.

Elwê’s father had a look to his face that said he had expected this and could reasonably guess the news Elwê’s mother wished to impart, and his calm demeanor prevented Elwê from panic. Elwê’s mother smiled, noticing her son’s semi-suppressed alarm and the smugness of her spouse. “It is good news, Elwê.”

“Speak it,” said Elwê’s father, and there was a smile on his face as wide as Phinwê’s had been when Elwê had first called him friend.

“We shall have another child,” Elwê’s mother said. “I can feel him growing.”

Elwê’s father lept forward. “You are certain, and certain it is a son?”

She nodded. “I felt a second presence once more. It is not just memories,” she said, her hands lowering to cover her abdomen. “I wondered how it might change if the child were a daughter, but there is the sense when I sleep at night of holding a son in my arms, and it is a boy like Elwê and Olwê, yet not their faces, so I know it is the one I now carry.”

“I too have dreams at night of a child I did not recognize, but who felt, looked, and sounded like my family.”

“Ah! Did you hear clearly his voice or an image of his face? My dreams have not yet shown me, but I remember when I was heavy with our second a dream of Olwê laughing as he took his first steps as the tide rolled in.”

Elwê’s parents spoke often of their memories before Elwê’s birth, of how strange the unknown sensations of their growing son had been, and how they had nervously begged Enel and Enelyê for explanation. Dreams of the future had been new concepts to the elves as well.

“This is good,” said Elwê. He did not know if his thoughts weighed this news good or not, but his parents’ smiles said this was to be celebratory news. Elwê already had a younger brother, and he could think of no one who had two siblings, though he supposed it had happened in other villages. He thought of Olwê having to deal with worries of a younger brother taking his belongings and widened the smile. He thought of the problems two brothers could bring instead of one. Elwê knew his expression was no longer fooling his parents. He thought of how small his house would seem and how busy they would be to prepare what would be needed. Idly, Elwê wondered if Phinwê felt terribly lonely in that Tatyar village and if that small hut was enough for two to live together.

No, he could not withstand living away from his people and the comfort of customs he understood, the familiar patch of lakeshore and sounds of home. But if this new brother cried as an infant piercingly loud and persistent the same way Elwê recalled Olwê had during his first star-pass of life, then Elwê would be making many journeys to visit his newest friend. Elwê remembered the noises and smells his brother produced before he learned to walk and speak. Those were not fond memories.

“How soon until my new brother is born?” he asked.

His mother laughed. “Not for a great time, my son. A child grows slow, and a sapling shall be tall before your brother is ready to be held in our arms.” A pensive look came to her face. “Your brother will need your wisdom, Elwê. You have experienced this change to our family, and he has not. You are a good brother, even when he upsets you, and Olwê needs your guidance and example. And we may need to build a larger hut. That would be an opportunity to invite your new friend; a roof crowning is the best reason to have many companions around, and we shall have drinking and celebration.”

“Between the construction and the catching of fish, either way we will be very sore before the celebration,” said Elwê’s father. Even with his sour words, his face was giddy with excitement.

“Mother is right; that sounds fun.”

Still Elwê’s mother stared at her son, grey eyes appraising him while her lips were drawn tight. He fidgeted under her stare. With a soft word to herself, Elwê’s mother pushed the lit torch into the earth, packing the dirt around it so it did not fall over and extinguish. Then she walked over to her son and directed him to stand back-to-back with his father, chin and spines straight. Using her hands to measure the difference between the tops of her husband and son’s heads, she stepped back and shouted in triumph. “I knew it! You have grown taller, Elwê!”

“He is still growing?” Elwê’s father asked. He stepped away to look at his son, then made a cry of mock dismay. Throwing his arms up and slapping his forehead with the back of his hand, his overblown antics dislodged his hat, causing it to roll away. Rather than acknowledge his father, Elwê lunged for the hat, dodging around the exaggerated prancing and wails. He landed behind the water vessel, fingers digging into the brim. Behind him Elwê could hear his father telling him to be careful not to crash into their new pottery, but when he stood up, his father faced his mother with a ridiculous look, one that she was matching.

“I gave birth to a tree,” Elwë’s mother moaned, but her eyes were bright with amusement, so Elwê did not take their teasing to heart. “A son that never stops growing. As tall as a fir. No, taller!”

Fanning himself with the hat, Elwê bit his lip to keep from laughing. His father knelt down in front of his mother and encircled her torso with his arms. Melodramatically he addressed her lower abdomen, pitching his voice so that Elwê standing a few feet away now pretending to be deaf and blind could hear the remarks. “New child of mine, listen to your father. You must not be like your eldest brother. You must not grow beyond a reasonable height.”

⭒🐟⭒ 

I’d be here all day with footnotes for the various researched facts, be it the importance of salt in all human societies to pottery techniques, bast cloth made from the linden/lime tree, papyrus and nettle cloth, the beautiful skilled basket-weaving of the Native Americans of the Pacific Northwest, sturgeons as the perfectly ancient and dramatically large unique fish, mammoths, auroch, and wisents.

Followers have read numerous posts where I researched or bemoaned how off-track these were leading me. 

 
The village set-up and separation of the first three elves (Imin, Tata, and Enel) and their wives from Ingwë, Finwë, and Elwë is the same as in the parent story. Other inspirations from the Cuivienyarna include how the Nelyar were found next to a waterfall, thus the location of the first Lindar village. Since roughly half of the Tatyar decided to follow Finwë to Aman, I divided them into two villages, with the majority of the Noldor who would follow Finwë living in his village – Rúmil, Mahtan, and most of the parents of his followers. It was important to me that Finwë, unlike his best friend, have no experience with siblings or parents, which feeds into his desire to have a large family and his mistakes. Rúmil’s invention of the sarati occurs in Aman, as Daeron’s invention of runes is an example of multiple discovery/simultaneous invention, though the concept of pictographs before the use of symbols for phonetic sounds during the early settlements around Cuiviénen shouldn’t infringe on canon.

There is a word in Primitive Elvish (Proto-Quenya) for elephant = andambundâ “long-snouted”. Thus the discussions of mammoths and mastodons is perfectly acceptable, and sadly have less

contradiction to canon than the presence and usage of flowering trees and plants. 

The unborn child is (obviously) Elmo.

 

Notes for the name translations, as I’m using the spelling and terms for Primitive Elvish.

(General note: names ending in ê = ë)

Kwendî = Quendi/Elves
Minyar = First Tribe/Vanyar
Tatyar = Second Tribe/Noldor
Nelyar = Third Tribe/Teleri. Also called Lindar
Elwê = Elwë/Elu Thingol (el star + ending )
Olwê = Olwë
Hwindiê = Hwindië (hwind eddy, whirlpool ) – Olwë’s wife, mother of Eärwen (technically an OC)
Belekô = Beleg Strongbow
Eredêhâno = Eredhon (OC)
Nôwê = Nowë/Círdan the Shipwright
Aklara-inkwa = Alcarinquë (the planet Jupiter)
Rúmilô = Rúmil – sage of Tirion, author of the Ainulindalë, creator of the first writing system and basis for the tengwar
Etsiriwen/ Etsiriwêg = etsiri river mouth + feminine/masculine name endings
Denwego = Lenwë/Dan – eventual leader of the Nandor
Sarnê = Sarnë (sarnâ of stone) – (OC) grandfather of Aglar from “The Band of the Red Hand”
Morisû = mori black (OC)
Phinwê = Finwë
Mahtân = Mahtan
Ñalatiê = ñalatâ radiance, glittering reflection (from jewels, glass, polished metals or water) – (OC) the mother of Míriel Serindë

Ingwë of Cuiviénen (4/?)

Part 1, Part 2, Part 3

What?! An actual update to this fic? Yes. Consider this the second-to-last draft. I’ll post the official chapter over at AO3 and SWG tomorrow or so, but this should be it. I make a String Theory joke (if it could be called that), go into Valarin and Primitive Elvish names of the Valar, slowly start to call our main character solely by his name, and admit that the horse kept trying to steal screen-time. And indulged more in my love of prehistoric mammalian mega-fauna.

Primitive elvish names and terms still left mostly untranslated, but context clues should explain them. More world-building in my mode from Klingon-Promotion-Vanyar and young bucks of Cuiviénen.

Now it was accounted in various manners and places of the Vala Oromë and his first meeting among the elves. Knowledge he shared and lasting friendship, the names of creation and the one whom had created, new skills with which to enrich the lives of the elves, and most precious to the three that had discovered him, the perpetrator and motives behind the Dark Hunters that had so plagued their villages.

The three elves watched the figure dismount from the giant silver horse, landing softly in the loam of the forest floor with a hunting cat’s grace. His form looked like that of the Kwendî, standing tall and upright on two legs, and the empty hands he held out in front of his body with open gestures signalling unarmed and wishing no harm were no different from those of any elf. In the shadows of the forest it was hard to discern details, but as the Vala knelt to the ground, numerous fireflies floated up from the underbrush, and the greenish tint of the light that the insects emitted brightened everyone in the glen. In their light the figure was clearly a man in shades of brown from his hair and skin to his tunic and leggings that tucked into a pair of soft fur boots. Only his eyes, bright green and shining like the fireflies, and the white of his smiling teeth, were different. The stranger unclasped the cloak, which when he first entered had seemed to be a mass of budding branches flowing behind him but was in the glow of the fireflies only an ordinary length of green and brown felt, and folded it underneath his body to give a comfortable and dry seat. That was a signal on its own, for felt, especially so soft and richly dyed, was for the garments of the Minyar leaders and carefully treated. He sat as a storyteller might, as one of the first to awaken eager to explain a new skill or discovery to the rest of the tribe. As Oromë quietly waited for the elves to move, the fireflies settled onto his hair and shoulders, casting strange shadows on his face, but his gentle smile was easy to see.

Ingwë knew this was no Dark Hunter, that this rider would never harm him or his friends, and so he undid his own cloak and sat on the ground, folding his arms and legs in the position one took when ready to listen to a long song of many deeds and a lengthy hunt. More fireflies floated over and settled in his golden hair, twinkling like netted stars. Elwë and Finwë cautiously followed their friend’s example and lowered their spears and knelt before the strange figure.

“Greetings,” said Oromë. “We have questions to answer.”

Ingwë laughed.

With that unexpected and rare sound, his friends relaxed. If wise and solemn Kwendë was unafraid, then his example they would follow. Finwë cupped two of the fireflies in his hands gently, and Elwë repeated their most pressing concern, for like his Minyar friend, he could feel in the sight of mind that the figure kneeling before him was no elf, no matter how closely his appearance matched that of the Kwendî.

The Vala could easily answer his own question of who the three elves were, that they were the long foretold and eagerly awaited Children of Ilúvatar, the second melody of the design for creation that had been Sung into being. Who Oromë was, and what, could be answered by the titles of ‘Hunter’ and ‘Lord of the Forest’, though to explain in words everything that those simple titles encompassed and that of the Powers, the Valar, was harder. That there was a One responsible for the planning of the universe and its creation, from every grain of sand to the bright stars to the passage of time to the world itself was not a difficult concept to grasp, for the vastness of such a thought matched the vastness of Ilúvatar itself. Eä was fitting, the three elves thought, for the very first of the Kwendî to awake had been Imin, and he awoke with the cry of Ele! It was a cry to behold the world in either case. And that there was many people under Ilúvatar that worked as a tribe did to carry out the needed tasks, each appointed by personal aptitude and interests, made sense. What Finwë found incredulous was that Ilúvatar, and beings such as Oromë before him, had created the world and everything vast or minute in it through singing.

“You mean if you wanted a clay jar you could just sing a tune and -elâ!- a pot appears in your hand?” Finwë questioned, a skeptical look on his face as his calloused potter’s hands mimicked a fire sparking to life or a solid object needing several hours worth of labor poofing into existence like smoke.

“Not I,” said Oromë. “I am no craftsman, creator of tools from the earth and stone. For that song you would want the one more powerful than me who is skilled with his hands, a most creative mind, whose delight and domain is the rock behind our feet.” The eldest of the three elves felt the faint pressure against his mind while Oromë paused, brushing against their thoughts like a cool breeze for more words the elves could understand. “Mbartanô perhaps would be the name you would call him, the World-Artificer. His are the plates of stone upon which everything rests, and his hammer makes the mountains and valleys.”

“Must be a large hammer,” Finwë jested.

“He has many hammers,” the Vala corrected, “and some are hammers and some are ideas one uses like a hammer. His works can be small objects as well, not only the mountains. The stone axes you knap into useful shapes, that is him.”

“Aulë,” said Ingwë.

“Yes,” replied the Vala gravely, “the Inventor. And in our own language, if we did not desire to sing the full extent of his name, the shortened form would sound aloud similar to that.”

“Your own language?” Finwë questioned. Elwë shoved him with a half-exasperated grin.

The Vala opened his mouth to speak, and strange syllables poured out, harsh as breaking rocks and logs popping in bonfires layered over the cries and roars of animals and the crashing waterfall. The creature behind them that looked like a tall horse with a coat as silver as Elwë’s long hair flicked its ears and snapped its tail against its flanks. Elwë and Finwë winced, and the man that would be Ingwë Ingweron wondered why he could not discern the meaning of any word. He felt that if he but listened long enough he could have.

Elwë, raised in a tribe of singers, had no difficulty believing songs’ power. He had watched new shoots rise from the river mud to the encouraging voice of his brother’s wife and how Nowë never had a net unravel if he sang over it, and how Finwë and the other Noldor sang to track the time for the kilns so the leather-soft pots came out hard and shining with green and brown glaze. Therefore he had found Finwë’s question about singing a jar into existence silly, for from one angle that was exactly what the potter did. A song could describe an object or place never seen, or bring out any emotion in the listener, or strengthen or change what was already made. It was the Void that confused Elwë, that song alone drew out from nothing the creation of everything. He wondered if an elf could learn those powerful songs, the songs the Powers had used, and hearing the harsh and layered language of the Valar, he believed.

When the three asked the Vala his name, Oromë sighed like the wind through dense leaves. “If I were to describe my name…the sound of horns,” he said and hefted a white object from his belt that none remembered being there. In his hands was the horn of a large auroch capped with rims of gold, and he brought the object to his lips and blew softly through the narrow end.

“The sound we heard,” Elwë said with soft wonder. “Arâmê.”

Elwë’s new word closely matched the sound the horn had made, which was richer than the reed flutes of the Nelyar. As gentle as the sound had been, it still recalled the brightness of lightning. The Vala smiled and nodded. “Arâmê you may call me. And what may I address the three of you as?” he asked in polite formality.

“Elwê, for the stars,” answered the tall and silver-haired Elwë.

“Phinwê,” said his friend. “And it is the same ending as Elwê; don’t listen to them if they tease otherwise. Phin is like the sound we use for a tress of hair, but I do not know if my parents named me for anything, hair or otherwise. It is not remarkable; the color is very common in both my tribe and in the third tribe from which Elwê comes from, not like his silver color or Mahtân, who has hair like a fox pelt.”

“Might it be you were born with a lot of hair on your head already?” teased Elwë. “My brother was born with very little, but his good friend entered the world with a full thatch of hair atop his head.”

The Vala turned to face the last of the companions.

“My friends address me as Kwendê,” he said.

The Vala laughed. “How appropriate, for you were first I heard to speak.”

Again there was that feeling of another mind, no more invasive than the sensation of meeting another person’s eyes squarely. ‘Your name is Ingwë,’ the voice that was not spoken words said.

‘Yes,’ Ingwë thought.

‘But if it the other name you wish to be spoken aloud, I shall, if I am accounted a friend.’

Ingwë could not help the smile that spread across his face. The joy from sharing his name, the secret that had sustained him during the lonely and dark years, almost prompted him to foolishness. Aloud he spoke, “We know you are not one of the Dark Hunters, for all that you are a Power and no elf and that you perch atop a horse as it runs.”

“Riding,” Oromë corrected. “When Næchærra grants me, for his speed is greater than my own, and together we can outrun and catch the monsters we hunt.” His hand motioned to the silver horse behind him. The animal raised its head from where it had been grazing at the ferns, and from the light of its eyes it was obviously no more a mere horse than Oromë an elf. “But it is the name of the Dark Hunters you want, the ones who have taken forms in mockery of me as to hurt the Children of Ilúvatar and undoubtedly blame me for it.”

“Yes,” Elwë hissed.

Oromë’s face grew dark, as if thunderclouds covered what should have been the bright lightning of his eyes. “Mailikô,” he said in a voice with no less venom than Elwë’s, “the Greedy One. He was one of us, in some ways the greatest and most powerful. The brother of my leader. But he rebelled against the One, jealous and hateful of the world Ilúvatar bade us create and protect, and he has sought ever since his first rebellion to destroy or maim to his own purpose all that we hold dear.“

Of Melkor and his misdeeds the Vala Oromë had many words and none were kind. In return the three elves told of Dark Hunters and how many from all three tribes had been abducted, until the chieftains forbade their people from leaving the safety of the village bonfires. Of this Oromë had divined from their thoughts, but the confirmation of how dire the problem and how many had already been taken troubled him. His self-appointed task was to hunt Melkor’s foul creatures and prevent tragedies such as these from happening, and his grief at his failure was palpable. “We had refrained from war against Mailikô in fear that our struggles would have inadvertently harmed your people still sleeping. Never did we imagine that you would wake and our enemy find you first. It is our failing that you were harmed, your parents taken.”

Elwë refused this guilt. “You did not know. Did not know where we were or that we were here awake or that this Mailikô was here and preying on us. I would not blame Tata for the fish my brother did not catch. And you are an enemy of Mailikô and his Dark Hunters and have vowed now to help.”

Politely no mention was made of the undercurrent to Elwë’s words, that resentment would return threefold and caustic if promises were not kept, vengeance not rendered.

“More than just I,” said Oromë. “But first I request you take me to your villages, let me see the rest of the Children and speak to your leaders. And point me in the direction of where you best guess these villains of Mailikô ride in imitation of me and steal your kin. That,” Oromë hissed, “they shall do no more.”

Nahar behind him raised his silver head from grazing and flattened his ears, then gave off a high-pitched scream that Ingwë recognized from following the horse herds on the open plains. The head stallion’s warning call to approaching predators that was, and Nahar’s golden hooves suddenly looked much sharper and heavier.

The three elves agreed to lead Oromë back to Elwë’s village and from then onto the other villages, especially those of Imin, Tata, and Enel. Finwë in particular was nervous to take the Vala to someone with authority who could ask and approve the right questions. Elwë was worried for his brothers and the rest of his people, wishing to reassure them, and the young man that even now thought of himself as Ingwë Ingweron thought of his mother and sister.

As the three elves guided Oromë and Nahar through the pine forest back to Elwë’s village, Finwë tentatively seeing if he could rest a hand on Nahar’s flanks and pet the giant horse as they walked and Elwë introducing the notable trees to the Lord of the Forest, the man that would be Ingwë observed the Vala. Something about the Power unsettled him, though his great soul shone out clear as lightning and as pure as freshly unfurled leaves. Finally the Minyar youth identified the cause of his hunter’s instincts prickling all the hairs across his neck and arms to stand alert.  

The form of Oromë, that seemed to be a brown-haired Kwendi in soft leathers and the finest bow and hunting horn, was not steady. The flesh around his eyes was shifting, pulling in the most miniscule ways to change the shape of the eyes. Those green eyes, imbued with divine light, did not change, but the manner in which the lashes lengthened and eyelids folded transformed his eyes into unfamiliar forms. The nostrils of his nose were flaring, not in the act of taking breath, but because his nose was another feature of his face shifting to a new appearance. Oromë’s face twisted subtlely not as one did under the sway of emotions but through shifts of bone and muscle, his cheekbones rising and falling, chin lengthening to mimic Elwë, then broadening to be as square as Finwë, then shifting again. As the man that would be Ingwë watched, the facial features finally settled into a slightly aquiline nose and wide eyes, with oddly familiar broad lips. “Have you chosen a face to your full satisfaction now?” the elf said to Oromë, teasing.

Solemnly the Vala nodded. “We did not remember clearly what forms the Children would have, in all the minute details and proportions. This is an excellent form, well-balanced and agile and strong. And many pelt variations, more than what I see here, if your friend Phinwê is to be understood.”

The description made the man that would become Ingwë Ingweron smile. “We are of all three tribes, my friends and I, and it was these small differences in appearance that the first awoken used to divide themselves, as well as temperament and which of the three first couples they liked best.”  

“How appropriate,” said Oromë. “Yes,I have decided since I shall walk among the Children, I shall share your shape, and thus corrected my appearance. Odd though, for both Aulë and I recalled that your lower faces would also have hair. I rather liked that, those beards.” Oromë rubbed at his chin.

“So what shape would it be, if you were not among us?” the elf asked, his mind groping for understanding. “If you were to visit horses, would you look like Na-” here Ingwë stumbled over the strange name, finally settling on the abbreviated ‘Nahar’. “Or would you shape yourself to another form?”

Oromë smiled. “Nahar? So be it. And yes, I could if I wish take the same of a horse, though to run on four hooves I prefer the great elk. The wolf, the panther, the elephant, or the weasel, those shapes I find pleasing. And,” the Vala winked, “if I was feeling particularly lazy, I would take the form of a sloth.”

The other two elves turned to listen to this discussion, though of the three, only the older two had seen the giant lumbering creature Oromë spoke of, the giant sloth with its clawed front paws. Slow and strong, ponderously heavy with fat and muscle, the ground sloths would easily feed two or three villages, if spears could evade the claws and pierce the thick and armored skin. The Minyar hunters chose other prey, knowing there were faster animals but safer and easier to hunt.

“So what do you really look like? Your true form?”

Oromë laughed, for even Ingwë perceived that such a question had as answer that which Finwë would not understand, at least not after only one conversation. Had Finwë the skill to see phaja as well, the other boy would not expect spirits could be easily described like concrete objects. The Vala attempted anyway. “Vibrations.”

“What?”

“So much of this world is but vibrations of essence. Light and song. They are vibrations. I am no different.” The white teeth and green eyes on that shifting face smiled.”I am Arâmê, and I look exactly how I choose to look. That is my true form.”

Light discussion among the three elves on which animal they would choose to be if they could like Oromë shift their physical forms preoccupied the remainder of the walk back to Elwë’s village, until they were close enough to see the palisade illuminated by firelight. A great outcry there was in the village at the return of Elwë and his companions, greater still for the three were accompanied by an unfamiliar man and a horse that shone bright white in the firelight and did not shy or run from people. Unlike the wolves, horses were flighty creatures and rarely seen so close by the fishermen and reed-weavers. Oromë and Nahar held back from entering through the village gate until the crest of fear dissolved away. He that thought of himself as Ingwë waited beside them as Finwë smiled and shouted appeasing words and Elwë’s firm and repeated proclamations calmed the crowd. “He is the Good Hunter,” Elwë explained to his village, and it was the stern glare of their new leader that quieted the uproar more than the goodly light from Oromë’s eyes. “He is not of the ones that harmed us, but he that hunts them. He has come to help us.”

Convinced so, the Nelyar raised their voices to the songs of welcome, and lit more torches and sentry fires so the light could reveal the details of the new arrivals. Delight and excitement rose out of their withdrawn alarm. Olwë and Elmo pulled away from embracing their elder brother and stroking his face in relief at his return to bellow out that a path be opened in the crowd so this Good Hunter could enter.

Arched neck and hooves prancing, Nahar trotted through the gate to gasps from the elves, basking in their wondering admiration. “Smug insufferable servant,” the Vala murmured. Ingwë swallowed another laugh, for there had been no threat in that tone. Oromë followed the stallion into the village, smiling in wonder at the circular huts and the lines of salted fish hanging from wooden frames, at the bright torches and the hands that held them, and most of all to the faces of the elves that stared up at him. “Greetings, Children. I am Arâmê,” and with an indulgent sigh, “and he is Nahar.”