Galadriel (
laurenande) wrote in
faderift2016-04-19 12:06 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
[OPEN] - Conversations and Company
WHO: Galadriel and anyone!
WHAT: Galadriel has finally been released from jail and is (relatively) free to go about her business.
WHEN: Just slightly backdated. Set before the Illness event (so before 4/16-18), late Drakonis to early Cloudreach?
WHERE: Various - Skyhold
NOTES: No warnings just yet, but I will update accordingly.
(Relevant links, mostly for my personal reference, but hey, why not share? In loose chronological order...and probably only about half of the total relevant threads: Cassandra and Galadriel's Interrogation Fiasco, Galadriel in Jail, Gavin Fails To Save The Day But We Still Love Him, Obi-Wan Kenobi's 'This Is Not How You Do Law Enforcement' Network Post, and Thranduil and Legolas Arrive To Actually Save The Day. And Also: Faderift Civil War OOC Planning Post. )
WHAT: Galadriel has finally been released from jail and is (relatively) free to go about her business.
WHEN: Just slightly backdated. Set before the Illness event (so before 4/16-18), late Drakonis to early Cloudreach?
WHERE: Various - Skyhold
NOTES: No warnings just yet, but I will update accordingly.
(Relevant links, mostly for my personal reference, but hey, why not share? In loose chronological order...and probably only about half of the total relevant threads: Cassandra and Galadriel's Interrogation Fiasco, Galadriel in Jail, Gavin Fails To Save The Day But We Still Love Him, Obi-Wan Kenobi's 'This Is Not How You Do Law Enforcement' Network Post, and Thranduil and Legolas Arrive To Actually Save The Day. And Also: Faderift Civil War OOC Planning Post. )
1. Indoors, Open
Once she had been released, (for that was what it had been; she was not so naive that she would mistake it for being freed, not while the eyes of the Inquisition watched her so keenly,) Galadriel found the fortress far less hospitable than it had been. The stones themselves were not aware enough to influence the world about them, but the rumors that had spread while she was indisposed were, apparently, many and malicious. Where the men that worked and bustled through the keep had, previously, been content to stare at her and shuffle on, now they lingered in her periphery and, rather than pass her by, expended great effort to grant her a wide berth.
Galadriel was less troubled by this behavior than one might expect, she had considerable practice ignoring the slights and follies of mortal men. No, what truly taxed her patience were the guard who trailed after her every step. They were unsubtle in their duty, clad in full branded plate as they were, and their every rattle and footfall was a reminder of the slight Cassandra had paid her. The templars kept some distance from her, lingering in the threshold of rooms or the landing of stairs, but they were ever in sight.
She could not say what purpose they were meant to serve, stalking about in her wake, but whatever it was, they did so clumsily and without foresight. So, as she went to locate her belongings, she attempted to ignore the templars that watched her.
Her possessions, few as they were, had been disturbed from their resting place in the rotunda. Her notes, pages upon pages of tight tengwar script and scattered Theodosian letters, were missing from the table in the corner. Her cloak remained, as did the crimson jerkin and the thread she'd spun to embroider it, but the phial and her staff had yet to reappear alongside them. The books she had borrowed, somehow, had not been moved and beneath them, the most current page of her notes still rested. She had been interrupted from this task and, as she looked at the page, the boldfaced clatter of plate armor disturbed the stillness of the tower.
Had she any less restraint she might've sighed. As it was, she simply cast the human guard a long look and then took a seat at the table in the corner. Resuming her work was a simple thing and, if she refrained from wandering about she would not be forced to endure the noisy gait of her attendants.
(Feel free to have your character run into Galadriel (and company) as she transcribes historical texts into tengwar, as she returns her borrowed (and long overdue) books to the library, or as she sits at a desk and stares, dispassionately, at the awkward pair of templars in the corner.)
2. Outdoors, Open
It was early spring in Thedas and, while she had only been kept from the sunlight for a short time, she had longed to breath the bright spring air and stand beneath the vast blue sky. Galadriel relished the spring and, as she lingered in the garden she could nearly forget where she was. There was a certain ease that came over her in the crisp air of spring, some joy that made her lighter and, indeed, brighter for know it; it alarmed her minders but she paid them little attention as she strolled through the beds of the garden.
She supposed the scene might've been amusing, were it not so grievously offensive to her.
Galadriel seated herself on a bench in the sunshine, confident that she was removed from the comings and goings of those who worked in the gardens, and the pair of templars crowded behind her. They scowled into the sunshine and their expressions maintained as she settled the crimson jerkin in her lap and began embroidering. They regarded her work as one might regard a knife being sharpened and, to her intense amusement, were either unable to detect or too distracted to note the quiet enchantment she stitched into the swath of crimson silk.
(It's spring! It's also probably sometime close to the literal crack of dawn. Please join Galadriel as she embroiders while being closely watched.)
3. Shopping, Open
The merchants that frequented Skyhold had been, until recently, an understanding and agreeable sort. She had never had conflict with any one of them. They had always been gracious helpful in all her dealings, scattered as they were, but it seemed the rumors regarding her arrest had found their way to all corners of the Keep.
She was polite as she spoke to them but, one by one, they declined to trade with her. While nothing she offered or sought was particularly suspect, none of them, it seemed, wished to risk the conflict.
(What does an elf have to do to buy some wool around here? Apparently they have to manifest a friend to help them buy it. Or someone to tell her to move along. Feel free to join Galadriel as she attempts/fails to shop!)
4. Wildcard
(If none of the above appeal and you would still like to do something, please have at! Galadriel will be in Skyhold, here and there. If you have any questions, please hit me up
Individual Starters:
(Proofreading the lot of them at the moment, I will ping relevant parties as I update!.)
no subject
While his brows did rise at her words, it was not so much with disbelief as it was in a mixture of awe and curiosity. He made no snorts of derision, as if she might be telling false tales, merely leaned in slightly as she spoke and seemed to drink in every word. Nothing she said seemed out of the realm of possibility, not by far, and he wondered at meeting the whole of her people, of seeing her trees and her city. A small part in the back of his mind said there was ever likelihood that her world would be protected and off limits by the Prime Directive, but here and now he could wonder and glean what he might with the greed of a child eating their holiday sweets.
"It sounds beautiful," he said when he was sure she had finished. "If ever I got the chance I would love to come and see your home. Do you never come down from your trees? Or do you spend your whole lives in their boughs?" Hungry and greedy this one is, Galadriel, but there is no malice or ill intent in his questions. Just the avid curiosity of one who simply wishes to know and understand.
Blue eyes glittered at the idea of learning new knowledge, and he tilted his head to her in a small show of thanks. "I would be honored, my lady," he glanced upward, though of course with the sun out no stars would be visible. "If you like, in return I can at least try to explain how my people measure distance between and by stars. The tools we use for it simply don't exist here."
no subject
"No, we do not live all our lives in the trees," Galadriel told him, laughter lacing her voice. "Though, I admit, we have been accused of such things by our woodland and valley kin. We are even called galadhrim which, in our tongue, means 'they of the trees'."
It was an old joke, traded in jest among the elves, and one that had become reality as time passed onward. Now, it was both a title of some grandeur and a quiet insult that wary mortal travelers whispered as they crossed beneath Lórien's boughs.
"But, for all that the mellyrn define Lórien, I was the one who planted those trees. There was a time before them and a time when they would hardly have borne the weight of a sparrow, let alone an elf. We live in them now because there is safety in it, because they are strong and tall and beautiful, but not because we must. There are few forces who could assail our city from above...or at all, for that matter. The trees are...a comfort more than anything."
no subject
Absurd to her perhaps, but the idea that a culture might spend their whole lives in a city up high was anything but far fetched to Kirk. It was an easy possibility to consider, and he thought would have been the more fascinating, though she was plenty fascinating on her own. Even so there might have been a slight touch of pink at his cheeks, sensing her amusement, though he knew he had nothing to be ashamed of with his questions or thinking. Spock would have found them perfectly logical, he was sure.
"I'm sure that must be satisfying, seeing something you planted grow strong," he said, again not blinking at the idea Galadriel might live far longer than humans. Many races had longer life spans than humans, and there were many more who yet might that they had yet to come across. Of course he had no idea how long trees took to grow on her world, but he suspected it meant Galadriel was not precisely youthful in terms of age in her world.
"Is mellyrn your word for tree?" He inquired, trying to pronounce the word as she had. He thought he came close, but not perfectly. "And Lórien is the name for your people?"
no subject
"No, it is a kind of tree," Galadriel explained. "Mallorn they are called, or mellyrn when there are many. They grew in my homeland and, surprisingly, in the lands I last dwelt. Lórien, I call those woods, but Lothlorien is their name."
"In the common speak, Lórien is...perhaps a dream? A place of dreaming. Lóte is the old word for blossom--los is better suited, I suppose, but the two of them came together well enough for a name."
Though she had intended to finish her embroidery she was rapidly finding that this human was capable of consuming all her attention. She was charmed and, as such, slowed her stitching to properly converse with him.
"My people...that is perhaps a longer explanation, but we are commonly called the Eldar, the first born. Your people call us elves and, it seems, that holds in Thedas as well.
"Have you never met an elf before?"
no subject
His lips move as he silently mouths the words she pronounces, as if to better help commit them to memory though a few words did not a language make, much less an understand of the syntax and sentence structure. But they were lovely words, her language, and he found he liked them on his tongue.
At her question, he shook his head. "Where I am from, while we do have the word 'elf', it is a mythological creature. They are from stories and movies, nothing more. Oddly enough, though, there is a race we met across the stars that shares a remarkable resemblance to yourself - Vulcans. Your ears have nearly the same pointed anatomy as they do, though so far you are proving to be far easier to converse with than them." His mouth twitched into a smile and he chuckled, though there was a touch of longing in those last words, missing his close friend.
no subject
"Vulcans must truly be a cryptic and lyrical people if they have surpassed me so easily," she added in jest. "Tell me, though, I am curious what tales your people have of elves?"
Even in Middle-earth, the Eldar were more legend than fact, and Galadriel more than most. She had watched, with a macabre sort of fascination, as history became myth, as records warped and were forgotten, as ruins were lost to the eddies of time. Seeing history in Thedas was a novelty for her; she had not been present for any of this world's glories or failures and learning them from this direction was...new. Hearing Kirk's tales? Well, the promise of another world of lost elven lore, even if it was fictional, that was too grand to pass up.
no subject
"No, hardly lyrical. Vulcans love logic, above all else," he said when he could speak again. "They are very much about fact and reason." They could be cryptic when they so desired, but he had yet to come across much of that with Spock or any other Vulcan he had met.
The second request has him thinking though, sucking on his bottom lip as he considered. "The problem is that there are many types of elf," he explained to her. "The idea of them shifts depending on whatever the author or the legend calls for. Generally, though, they tend to keep to being ethereal, beautiful, long-lived, and usually very in tune with nature and magic in some shape or form."
no subject
"You are quite certain they are fiction in your lands? For that describes most every elf I have ever known."
She glanced aside at the gardens around them and her smile fell a bit as she did.
"Most. Unfortunately my kin in these lands are far more...mortal than I would have guessed, but they are still quite similar to your tales. Perhaps your elves have simply kept their secrets very well."
no subject
He could see her smile fall ever so slightly, but he did not think it a thing to press much on. He merely kept his own smile in place and chuckled.
"If only that were true. It would make Earth a far more interesting place. But no, I assure you, elves do not exist on Earth. Nor do dragons. Or magic - at least, not in the way it is represented here."