Entry tags:
there was only me and my disgrace
WHO: Solas and Thranduil
WHAT: Something a little like this
WHEN: After Morrigan's report has been handed to Thranduil
WHERE: Solas' rooms
NOTES: Some Trespasser spoilers, if anyone is worried about them!
WHAT: Something a little like this
WHEN: After Morrigan's report has been handed to Thranduil
WHERE: Solas' rooms
NOTES: Some Trespasser spoilers, if anyone is worried about them!
It's rare that anyone comes to Solas' rooms - there are a few people, enough to count on one hand and little more, who might know to seek him out here if he was not in the library, but it is few and far between. Most people, if they seek his council or his wisdom, are content to wait for him to emerge from his sleep with whatever new memories and fond visions he has captured from the Fade, with whatever it is that he's learned that evening.
The knock shakes him from his ready and he frowns, considering for a moment. The very fact that someone has come here without contacting him first - as would be the case for Galadriel or Gwen, for example - makes him think that it might be some kind of emergency, even if he's not entirely sure he wants to deal with those sorts of issues right now. Given the state of Kirkwall... It's hard not to get yourself entangled in it all.
In the end, good intentions - or, rather, bad ones, depending upon the person - win out and Solas moves forward, putting his book down on his desk. It's an easy walk to the door and his surprise is evident once he sees who is waiting there for him, his head tilting and his eyebrow raising just a little. He's surprised but not altogether unhappy to see his friend on his threshold.
"Thranduil. I did not expect you." Slowly, stepping back, Solas motions him to enter the room.

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Rather than groping about in muddled history for the reasons, building their plan from sheer power and handholds in the dark.
He takes up knife and fork; cuts a sliver from the roast chicken and whatever vegetable the kitchen saw fit to cook this night and uses the excuse Solas had of his mouth being full to allow the other elf to answer.
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It's impossible for him not to lean forward in his chair, but he fights back the urge to draw himself completely close, shifting a little. There's a promise here, something more, something that he hadn't expected. Something that might be... Worth investigating.
"What are your plans? I understand if you wish to keep them for yourself," his voice is low, careful. He's not exactly being forthright himself, so he cannot beg the same of Thranduil. "What do you seek, lethallin?"
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He sits forward in his chair, sets down his silverware. "But to do so-- and protect her in her workings-- we must have access to some font of power. The Veil-- it separates our spirit, our fea, from our flesh, our hroa. When we were in the Fade bodily, we felt no such limitations. If reaching past the Veil was beyond us, we had considered obtaining the Orb. What we are capable of, what you have seen her and I do, it is nothing in comparison to our birthright. With that, Galadriel could purge the rot, and from there we might see to restoring the grace of the elvhen."
He hesitates. "From what you have said- from what I have seen- it seems that the elven here did not have the same innate compulsions against kinslaying or rape. Restoring them all at once, if such a thing were even possible, did not seem wise."
He takes a drink, watching Solas very carefully for his reaction. Then: "It is odd of you to bring up Fen'Harel alone, and to be so attentive to the mask, when Adalia was here but a few days ago, and behaving much the same."
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Remove the Blight. Destroy the Veil. Carefully return the elves to their former glory, hand in hand with Galadriel. It's all that Solas wants to do but cannot with his power so limited and his strength sapped from him, and he has to try and restrain himself, to try and limit what he does and says. His excitement bubbles - to have Thranduil and Galadriel on his side, to have their strength fall in line with his own plans and desires... It's more than he could have ever expected. He feels as though this must be some kind of trap, but there's is no way that Thranduil knows the truth about him.
He would have said so otherwise.
"Restoring them immediately would be dangerous. If these old 'Gods' are locked away they could return to Thedas and they would be angry." He leans back, hand touching his jaw as he thinks. He has to generate the illusion of thinking this through, as though he had not been aware of every aspect of this plan from his own side of the story. "The Veil is another matter entirely. It was said that it was created centuries ago and removing it from Thedas will take a great deal of power, perhaps even more than Corypheus himself holds. His Orb may hold the key to that, but we cannot be sure. With the Breach and the Anchors present..."
Solas frowns, shakes his head, turns away, considering. It's obvious that he is not necessarily against anything he has heard here, even if it might put him at odds with the Inquisition proper. If anything... He seems inclined.
"Adalia is curious as well?" He turns back, curious about this as well. "I assume you are keeping this from her as well, then. It is a dangerous thing to tell to the wrong person."
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"Let be kind to one another," he says, all earnestness. "I have never lied to you, Solas, and I would beg the same courtesy. You were there, and to survive what laid waste to all the others... I would wager something of value beyond gold that you knew the world before the Veil. You know your spirit friends so well that you must have known a time where speaking with them would have been as easy as speaking with me," to say nothing of Thranduil's own construction as a Rifter, a sore subject still. "You witnessed the excesses of those elves who dared name themselves Gods, your vitriol is far too personal for anything else, mellon-nin."
Another cake pushed his way, to allow him a moment to think. And the wine, for thirst is a terrible thing.
"I am nearly offended you would ask," he says, all sharp smiles. "I keep counsel with Galadriel, and lately Gwenaelle and Iorveth, but something like this is mine and mine alone. Although she is clever. Beware, or her next question of you-- and mine, in truth-- might be why you flinch at a mask of Fen'Harel but wear a wolf's jawbone over your heart. Again, too personal."
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He has agents - of course he does. But this is different, so different. To have Thranduil, to have Galadriel... What could stop him then, when Corypheus is gone?
"I saw it." Solas' voice is quiet and soft, his eyes and head turned away, as if it's painful to look at Thranduil for even a moment. "The stories the Dalish told... There are a thousand unwritten stories, told in desperation to give credit where it was no longer due. We..." The fear chokes him. Thranduil continues, Thranduil speaks, and he looks down at the wolf bone that hangs around his neck as a glaring beacon. Thranduil will put the pieces together even if Solas denies it, and he begs for truth. He begs for honesty, and Solas cannot truly deny him.
Again, too personal. Solas almost wants to laugh.
"I sought to set my people free from slavery to would-be gods. I broke the chains of all who wished to join me... Is that what you wished to hear, lethallin, mellon-nin, Thranduil? You would win your wager. I saw more than anyone can possibly imagine." It's almost the whole truth and Solas is desperate to admit it, as though his hands are bound and his tongue is not his own. His fingers brush the wolf bone necklace hanging from him, brushing over his heart. Fen'Harel, Solas, one and the same. A name is meaningless - he is but a man, carrying the mantle of a world that should not have been made.
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"This is far from holding yourself and laughing," Thranduil says, gently. "Though I think you have been denied companionship for far too long, and after labors that strained you so. Let us comfort and aid you, Solas."
It is impossible not to feel near limitless sorrow for the other elf. His mind works quick enough; he can fill in some of the gaps of Solas' half-gasped story. The admission is enough for now. But equally impossible is tempering the joy singing through him. What he and Galadriel hope to accomplish is not beyond them-- indeed, they have the impossible gift of an ally in a deeply beloved friend.
"We are here now," he murmurs, once Solas gathers himself enough to look at him. "We are here for a reason. If it is to help a friend-- if it is to right the wrong of elves in chains, even after your sacrifice," anger heating his voice, "I can imagine no greater purpose. We will finish your work-- all of us. I vow," and there is something great and terrible behind his words, something ancient being called to witness, "that I will see the elvhen brought in harmony with the Music. And that you will not be allowed to suffer again, alone and misremembered."
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Thranduil knows. If Thranduil knows then soon, too, will Galadriel, and the tension he feels in his heart will lesson. Slowly, carefully, with all the uncertainty that he feels, he lifts his arms and wraps them around his friend, allows himself the moment of comfort and sanctuary, a moment to feel as though he is not alone. Thranduil knows that he is Fen'Harel, but the depth of his pain, the depth of his secrets... He tilts his head, leaning into the touch of their foreheads, and manages something like a smile. Pained, and small, but present.
"Our plans are aligned," Solas admits, voice low, soft. They both want to destroy the Veil, to free the elves, to allow them to have the future that they seek. Does Thranduil know the cost of that? Does he know what would happen to Thedas? Solas continues to research, continues to discover options, and so far there has been nothing but the destruction of everything that he held dear.
It takes him a long time to manage to lift his head and look at Thranduil. He expects that when he comes to this office next the mask will no longer be in place - that Thranduil will have some idea of why it makes Solas so nauseated to see it, why it frustrated him to view it in the first place. He draws himself together, stitches up the loose parts of himself, and puts his mask on again. It is the only thing he can do in the face of... This.
"You do not yet know all the details. The Dalish misremember much and lay blame where it is due, but also where it is mislaid. They do not understand what they are doing, that their memories are exactly what I wished to save them from in the first place." Lifting his hand, Solas shakes his head, almost touching the jawbone again. "You do not know what it is you vow, Thranduil. I do not do this to clear my name. I do this for the People - for my People, what is left of them in the hearts of the elves."
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As torturous as the truth of his nature here is, it is poetic, in the way that great and terrible workings are poetic. The Music has only so much room for chaos, and this makes sense. There is a price for everything, in blood or tears or sweat, and if the price to pay for the unchaining of this world is a vow from Oropher's son and Thingol's kinsman, his pain, his blood-- he will pay it. He is only one elf, and there are tens of thousands in Thedas, even if they play at their ancestral memories like children in costumes far too large for them.
"Perhaps you should rest a while. Such an admission is a strain on the head and heart. Rest here, where it is safe, and eat something if you can stomach it. I would fetch Galadriel, so that she may hear this from you." Again, the joy in his heart, the relief singing out. She will be well-pleased.
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He wonders what will happen once the Breach is gone and they have found a means of dealing with the Anchors and the shards that lie in people's hands. He's not sure what the solution to that problem is yet - something for him to consider, especially in line with what he has learned. There is so much for them to do still and he knows it like a fresh wound on his skin.
"Here?" He smiles, thin and wry, but nods his head. The urge for another cake is present, but he ignores it for now. It's the mention of Galadriel that catches his attention. "You'll have her brought here now?"
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"Yes," Thranduil says, gesturing to the chair Solas had taken upon arrival. Sit. Be comfortable. (Even while he seems miserable.) "We will speak first, there is no need for you to repeat yourself or venture out into the Gallows." He looks Solas over-- bruised, but not exhausted. Unless he's misjudged? "Would you prefer I refrain?"Yes
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When they arrive back in Thranduil's office, it is Galadriel who throws up the spell to silence the space around them. It is much the same as Thranduil's save for the truly tangible nature of the barrier and how it distorts the spaces just along the walls and beyond the windows. Once it is cast and they are secured, Galadriel moves toward the desk and Solas, her expression hopeful and laced with no small measure of sympathy.
"How full of secrets you are, melda nin," Galadriel says and sounds nothing so much as happy. "I had not imagined that was a trait we shared."
She wants to embrace him but refrains, for he is seated and she is not, and instead looks to Thranduil briefly. If they are to discuss plans, she would know what he has told Solas already.
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She steps through the door, as beautiful as ever, and for a moment Solas is struck silent by looking at her again. She's wonderful, he thinks, truly, and the expression on her face is one of sympathy and gentleness that he knows he doesn't deserve. They don't know the entire story - they don't know what he did to cause the downfall of the People - and he wonders if their opinions of him would change if he said it all.
Perhaps. Perhaps not. Either way, for now he is greeted and welcomed as a friend, as someone special and wanted, and it has been so long that he cannot help but embrace it.
"Some secrets aren't fit to be told to anyone," his voice is low and soft, drawn out as it ever is. He didn't quite tell his secrets - he was found out, and he rises to welcome her. There's no hesitation in his movements; he reaches out and takes both her hands in his own, unable to help himself despite the company. "But here I am, discovered. You are both wiser than Thedas deserves."
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“If you do not wish to speak it aloud,” Thranduil says. “Galadriel’s talents would allow her clear sight of it, as you had.”
The Girdle soothes him, because it was there when he was begot, because it sings to him as Melian’s did. How splendid, to be under it once more, to see it turned to the use of the elven. He savors it for a moment, and then begins. “He knows of our intentions to cleanse the Blight, and your ability to do so. We are all in agreement that it must be done before anything else. He knows of our difficulties with the Veil, and your need for some wellspring of strength to remove rot. He has suggestions.”
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"If you dislike words, think only upon what you would show me, and I shall see it," she says, her voice just a bit hushed, and she squeezes his fingers just so.
I can see many things, her voice resounds between them without words, but reading the hearts of those before me is...something I have abstained from, of late, unless permission is given.
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"I will show you what Thranduil and I discussed. Then you will know." It seems simpler that way. Why mince words when she can see into his heart, with granted permission? He has no reason to hide from her now, not when Thranduil himself has broken down the walls of secrecy and promise and dug out his head, laid it bare upon the table and brought her to view it. Solas isn't angry, per se, not when the burden ahead is one that he no longer has to shoulder alone, but he is cautious and concerned and careful. It is the way he has always been.
Let her see what Thranduil had discovered, Solas thinks. The link between himself and the history of the People, his own desires, the shape of this world. The long years he spent asleep. The hours he had spent mourning what was lost and the things he had done to plan for a future - plans that, it seems, are tied up with hers as well, and Thranduil's. Solas thinks that he ought to be shocked but, at the same time, it makes sense. He has always seen them as being creatures more like himself than the Dalish, the comparisons of Mythal and Galadriel constantly in his mind and on the tip of his tongue. There is no ignoring them.
Watching her, gaze soft and sure, Solas allows her to do what he will. He has no secrets left.
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She hears his heart as clearly as any of them, as bright and loud as if it were singing to her, and it speaks with each shift of memory, with each word and half-truth told. Her brow furrows just slightly as two conversations emerge, one spoken between dear friends, and one unspoken and laced with cold, imminent dread. There is a facade here, one Solas wears even now, and she is certain he knows the very moment she has seen through the whole of it.
There are no games to be had, no misdirection that can twist the heart--in this he is laid bare before her. All his misdeeds, those he has admitted aloud this day and those that linger on the edge of his tongue, weighed down with guilt, are known to her and when she knows, finally knows, her heart breaks for him. Her expression shifts in the silence and her eyes go very sad as she stares at him; she breaks his hold on one of her hands so that she can bring it up to cradle his face.
"Poor wolf, you tried so very hard," she says, aloud, very softly and the intensity of her gaze fades. Too long spent reading his heart will weary her to exhaustion and she cannot allow the girdle to fall, not yet.
"We will undo it, as much as can be undone. You are no longer alone."
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For a moment, he basks in the quiet, the silence, his hands in hers. He does not know how he stumbled into this, into this friendship with two beings that wished the same as him, that discovered the truth and demanded more, but he knows that he is glad to have it. The relief he feels overwhelms him and prickles at him, making him yearn to reach for them both, to hold them close, to tell them just how thankful he is from the depth of his heart. Perhaps Galadriel already knows it.
When she is done he can feel a hand move to touch his face, palm gentle and soft, and all he can do is close his eyes and lean into it. Poor wolf, she says, and Solas wants to break, to shake her hand off and walk away, to turn and flee. The terror he feels at being found out - a wolf caught in a trap, chewing off his own leg to find sanctuary - is enough that he feels as though his stomach is in knots and his hands are shaking even as his own comes up to brush over her fingers. Oh, he thinks, quiet. Oh.
"I am glad to hear it," Solas admits, quiet. He doesn't move away from Galadriel, as if fixed in position under her careful, gentle stare, but he does turn his gaze to look at Thranduil. An equal friend, someone special and important, someone that he respects more than he can say. It makes Solas hesitate even as he nods his head, tongue heavy in his mouth.
"You know all, now. I would ask -" beg, really, but he refuses to stoop to levels he would regret, "- that these words do not leave these rooms. No one else can know of what I was and who I became. It is a secret we three must share. I do not lie to you now and in return I ask for that." And if it is not held to? He will leave. He will flee. It seems a simple enough thing, even if it pains his heart.
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"I will keep your secrets," he says, a brief touch of his fingers to his heart in an elven salute. He pauses, corrects himself after a moment of thought. Solas must have all laid before him if he is to act with confidence. "I spoke with Lady Morrigan regarding uthenera. I believe she has enough to put together the puzzle that one of the elvhen walks among us, but at the moment she is greatly occupied with her son and matters regarding her mother and her eluvian."
What an absolute delight she would find Solas, and how useful they would be to one another.
"Should she display any further interest, I will let you know-- and guide her away from it." He looks from Solas to Galadriel. He has none of her gifts but hardly needs them to communicate. She will put him back together. Thranduil brushes Solas' shoulder as he turns to go, coming to the edge of the Girdle and waiting for Galadriel to allow him leave before he lends them his office.
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"And my silence is yours, for however long you bid me remain so," she promises and her thumb strokes gently over the sharp rise of his cheekbone.
"This, I would guess, is why you recoiled?" Her lip twitches just so, amused that he had likely attempted to prevent her being entangled in a plan she and Thranduil shared. "Unless...perhaps... there was another reason?"
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"You have my sincerest thanks for it." His eyes close, just for a moment; Thranduil is gone and this moment is for them, now. He can bask in her touch, her gentleness, her warmth, his eyes flicking up to look at her. His hesitance is there but it has faded in the wake of her newfound knowledge, something like a laugh slipping from his lip.
"Yes." His fingers wrap around the ones on his face, holding her hand. "I could not allow myself to have... Feelings when I had a goal to focus on. It was not right." But she shares that goal, that plan, and there's a want bubbling through him that makes him want. "It was no fault of yours."
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"And a noble attempt to spare me pain, however unnecessary it ended up being. Tell me, Solas, do you still wish to avoid feelings in the face of our goal?"
She has not stepped back, nor does she appear eager to do so, but before she presses him, in word or to the table, certainty is key. She read much in his heart and expects she knows his answer, but she would hear it from him.
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"I am cautious," he admits. It's not because he fears her learning the truth now - that cowardice has been broken and shattered under her gentle gaze - but because of how long it has been. He does not consider himself worth affection, worth tenderness, not with all that he had done to and for the People, but he wants. He may act as a solitary creature but he misses the company of his fellows more than he can express.
He hesitates, his eyes lifting to look at her, before he manages a soft, gentle smile.
"But not unwilling."
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"You need not worry that I have judged you, Solas," she says. "I have no fondness for gods, nor for those who would claim that mantle...and I have done such...terrible things to prevent the decline of the Eldar from grace.
"Desperation is an enemy we have both known well, but we shall not meet it again afield, not alone."
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He could grow accustomed to this, and it frightens him as much as it soothes him. Wolves are pack animals at heart and Solas has been alone for a terribly long time - but his People, even a fleeting image of them, may return. For as long as the Anchor shards are present, for as long as people are here, for as long as he can reach and try to believe...
You change...
Solas kisses her again.
"I am glad to have you at my side, Galadriel."