Legolas (
of_mirkwood) wrote in
all_inclusive2014-02-03 08:37 pm
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It called to him now. Never before standing upon the decks of an ancient ship had the sea called to Legolas the way it called him now and there was little he could do but heed it. The armies of Gondor and Rohan camped now along the great field called Pelennor, preparing for a final stand against Sauron, and while his head should have been in strategy, instead it was lost at sea. This was madness.
Legolas understood now why the Elves had flocked from Middle Earth in droves. No longer were they tethered to this land and concerned with the perils of it. No longer did the matters of Men and Dwarves and Halflings cross their minds on a regular basis. Instead, it was Valinor and her white ships that called them and they answered it, marching without cease into the west.
Legolas knew there were many things left to be done before he could join them. He had made a pact with the company of the Ring and intended to keep it, intended to see Aragorn, son of Arathorn, installed as king of all Men. Sauron's grip in the east was too strong yet to give in to temptation and he tried to use that to guard his mind and serve as focus for the days to come. Still, as it had never been difficult before now, it was a strange shift in the way he thought and it almost seemed he was dreaming awake.
He pushed open the flap of his tent, intending to take in the night air on this eve of battle. Elves did not need to sleep in the traditional sense of Men and Dwarves and Legolas had already had his fill of rest this evening. Tonight, he sought the stars and their company and thought to commune with those long past. But as he stepped through the opening in the tent, a curious thing happened - there were no stars above him.
Instead, he was in a hall of some sort, closed in and carpeted without view of the night sky. There was a doorway there too, plain and unassuming, and Legolas wondered how this was possible. Was this some Elven magic or was it something older, something of wizards who trod the earth long before Elves came to prominence. Was this something of Numenor, now twisted to do Sauron's will? He knew not.
With a hand at the hilt of his knife, he turned his head a bit, listening for any signs of danger. Hearing nothing obvious, he pressed on, trying to make sense of this mad, new world.
[[Find an Elf wandering the halls at night!]]
Legolas understood now why the Elves had flocked from Middle Earth in droves. No longer were they tethered to this land and concerned with the perils of it. No longer did the matters of Men and Dwarves and Halflings cross their minds on a regular basis. Instead, it was Valinor and her white ships that called them and they answered it, marching without cease into the west.
Legolas knew there were many things left to be done before he could join them. He had made a pact with the company of the Ring and intended to keep it, intended to see Aragorn, son of Arathorn, installed as king of all Men. Sauron's grip in the east was too strong yet to give in to temptation and he tried to use that to guard his mind and serve as focus for the days to come. Still, as it had never been difficult before now, it was a strange shift in the way he thought and it almost seemed he was dreaming awake.
He pushed open the flap of his tent, intending to take in the night air on this eve of battle. Elves did not need to sleep in the traditional sense of Men and Dwarves and Legolas had already had his fill of rest this evening. Tonight, he sought the stars and their company and thought to commune with those long past. But as he stepped through the opening in the tent, a curious thing happened - there were no stars above him.
Instead, he was in a hall of some sort, closed in and carpeted without view of the night sky. There was a doorway there too, plain and unassuming, and Legolas wondered how this was possible. Was this some Elven magic or was it something older, something of wizards who trod the earth long before Elves came to prominence. Was this something of Numenor, now twisted to do Sauron's will? He knew not.
With a hand at the hilt of his knife, he turned his head a bit, listening for any signs of danger. Hearing nothing obvious, he pressed on, trying to make sense of this mad, new world.
[[Find an Elf wandering the halls at night!]]
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"Forgive me, my lady Elsa, but is there somewhere I could rest for a moment? I do not need sleep, exactly, but I do need somewhere quiet to organize my thoughts."
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"Follow me but...watch your step." As she turns down the hall, her footprints leave a faint trail of ice.
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Legolas found the ice to be strange but made no comment. Perhaps it was something that would become more evident in time and, as it was, there was no harm committed. He walked carefully behind her and took note of the rooms and doors they passed along the way. It would be important to note this path in case he needed to retread it soon.
"I cannot thank you enough for your help. You are very kind and I owe you a boon."
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There's a lounge not far off, blessedly empty despite being near a set of elevators and Elsa gestures. "Have a seat."
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Legolas chose a chair and eased into it, allowing himself a moment's respite after the confusing events of the last several hours. It would not take long to acclimate, he did not think, but for the time being he was still a little out of sorts.
"I think you are more helpful than you believe yourself to be, Elsa. Truly."
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But Elsa stays mum on those thoughts as she settles carefully into a seat.
"I know it can be hard, when you first show up."
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"Experiencing a new place and new people is always difficult," Legolas agreed. "Especially when one prefers one's own company. I have never disliked being on my own."
It was difficult to be alone in Middle-Earth - the stars, the moon, even the trees and blades of grass were company in and of themselves.
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"You get used to it."
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"Perhaps," Legolas said gently. "But perhaps we aren't meant to grow too used to it. Among Elves, while solitude is occasionally sought out, it isn't how one is meant to spend the entire span of his years. I am sorry you grew up alone, though. May I ask what happened? Forgive me if the question is rude. I mean no offense."
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Then he asks the question and she breathes out, uncertain. "I have...abilities with ice. It makes me dangerous."
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"An Elf," Legolas confirmed, tapping one of his ears. It was pointed, subtly so, but enough that those in Middle Earth knew he was Sindarin and not human.
"My people were the first to walk Middle Earth and to speak to the forests and hear them back in return. How does ice make you dangerous? Ice is beautiful, especially when it coats the trees and rimes the glass."
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"I think it is a disservice to deny the beauty of something solely because it has some danger in it. Ice is elegant. Snow is beautiful and makes the whole wide world seem soft and clean. There is good in it, I think."
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Legolas would not deny that it was harsh, at times, but ice could be stunningly beautiful. "The moon and stars glinting off a field of snow...it's beautiful."
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"Anything I've been able to imagine, I can make."
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Legolas touched the ice lightly, tracing the curves of the sculpture. "This is true talent," he said, somewhat awed by the display.
"This is not something to hide away. Great skill and artistry went into this."
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"I just wish I knew how to make it stop when I needed to."
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"Sometimes the answers you seek will come to you in time with or without you pursuing them. I know this is not much of a comfort."
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"So you suppressed it entirely?" he asked, curious as to how successful she'd been with that particular endeavor. It seemed foreign to him to try and suppress something that was a part of him but she was human. Perhaps that was normal among their kind.
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And then it had all burst forth, creating that intense and unrelenting winter, even as she'd fought to keep herself from feeling.
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"I just wish I had a teacher."
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If anyone knew how to channel the dangerous aspects of an element, it would be a wizard. The white wizard knew subtle arts that eluded even the wisest of the Elves, arts given to him by Eru himself.
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