dirth: (i saw you in my mind)
the most fucked up wifeguy furry in thedas. ([personal profile] dirth) wrote in [community profile] faderift2018-06-27 10:20 pm
Entry tags:

she is all the colours in one.

WHO: Solas and Galadriel
WHAT: Solas had a Bad Field Trip and is sad.
WHEN: On his return from the Temple of Falon'din
WHERE: In Solas' room
NOTES: References to terrible Temple things (suicide, blood, death)


The Temple had been nothing that Solas had anticipated.

He had expected the old elven architecture and the artefacts; those were things that were easy to guess and imagine, especially in something as old as a Temple to one of the evanuris. He had even imagined, perhaps, a handful of spirits or guardians, something to test them, to judge them, to push them one way or another. He imagined that it would be something familiar, easy to figure out, easy to encourage his fellows into following his lead. Who else would know as much about this type of place than him, after all? He had lived it, breathed it, shouldered it.

He had not expected it to break his heart the way it had done. Reminders of the pain he had caused written in clear lettering. Bodies of dead elves that would never wake from their long sleep. Spirits calling for him, damning him, wearing the guise of someone he had cherished and adored. Each step, each pathway, had split his heart open and left him feeling broken and unsure, his hands shaking and his mind numbing and the burden of it pressing down on his shoulders, carrying that weight from the escape across the river of blood all the way back to Kirkwall itself. It's something that Solas cannot shrug off, no matter what attempts he might make.

There's not much time nor space for Solas to sleep as he might usually and when he gets back to his room he spends a long space of time considering his options now. The Temple had opened his eyes to a great deal of things, that is true, and the weight of that is bearing down on him all the more. He doesn't feel as though he can do anything right now, in this moment, and he knows that it's the weight of uncertainty and guilt pressing down on him; a few days, a reminder of his cause, his mistakes, his duty, then he will be fine. He'll return to what he was before, determined and powerful.

Until then... He does very little, at least until there's a gentle knocking at his door. There are very few people that might come to seek him out and few still that he would consider speaking to, so he is wary when he comes to the door to open it, only relaxing when he sees a familiar face.

"Galadriel. Please, come in."
laurenande: (pic#9662097)

[personal profile] laurenande 2018-06-29 01:02 am (UTC)(link)
"Very well," she agrees and leans forward until her forehead rests against his. Solas is solid and near and wanting for stories and distraction. She will give him all she can.

"Have I told you that I am very fond of dwarves?" Galadriel asks quietly into the space between them. "Once, I was invited to travel through the great halls of a dwarven king, below the most treacherous stretch of mountains. In his halls we walked deep below the earth, past glimmering pools of water so deep that it defied examination. We walked past smith who wound metal through their forges as a seamstress winds thread upon a spool.

"The dwarves, then, delighted in our company and the look of us as we traveled toward the laurenande, they called us friend and sang and laughed as our smiths watched them in awe. For all our years, there are no better smiths on whole than the dwarves, and they were well aware of it.

"The doors that sealed the way through those mines, through the great soaring halls, were inscribed with mithril and enchanted by the hands of our people. Upon them a simple instruction, but so many see it as a riddle.

"Speak friend and enter, they say, for all elves were welcomed there and those doors, enchanted to keep the darkness from passing them, would part and permit our kin asylum, should we want for it.

"My borders were the same, ere I left them, but no dwarf ever came to the edges of the golden wood seeking refuge, not for all the thousands of years I was steward. It was a pity, I think, because I would have loved to see them climb high into the trees and watch the sunrise across the golden leaves of Lothlorien."
laurenande: (pic#9662066)

[personal profile] laurenande 2018-07-03 06:58 pm (UTC)(link)
"Friends is...perhaps...overgenerous," Galadriel admits. The term Children of the Stone is new to her and apt, but she makes no comment on it. Instead, she lets her hands settle against him and, where they rest, her fingers shift softly, in idle movements of comfort.

"Their realm was never our own, they were always apart from us, and they betrayed a great king once in ages long passed. It was a betrayal not easily forgotten but, in time, holding the grudge became a strange exercise. These were the descendants of the folk who stole from Thingol, a hundred generations thence, and even the tale of those deeds had passed out of mind among them.

"They knew not why we were angered, so to dwell upon it was foolishness." Galadriel hums and a small, almost dry laugh leaves her. "Some still do, of course, but most try to avoid such sentiments."

She moves, tilts her head and brushes her lips against his forehead.

"Would you like to hear of Lorien, melda nin?"
laurenande: (pic#9662080)

[personal profile] laurenande 2018-07-08 06:37 pm (UTC)(link)
Galadriel hums in agreement, she knows too well the draw of sentiment, but she doesn't speak it aloud. Instead, she rests her cheek against his forehead and considers how to begin the next tale. Certainly he has seen enough to disturb him, she need not tell him about her homeland...at least, not in great detail.

"A very, very long time ago, I was born in a land called Aman. It was a time before many things and Aman was an evergreen country, unfading in the face of time." That is enough of a preface, she expects, and so the topic shifts.

"When I came Arda, I came so that I might have the chance to govern, to lead, and I did, but Arda was not evergreen. Arda was...is the land of mortals and it pained me, it pains me still, the slow passing of time. When the lands of Lorien became mine to steward, they were beautiful, but not glorious for there is little glory in mortality.

"I was given a great gift, then--trees from my homeland, trees that grew nowhere else in all the world, and I planted them. In Lorien they took root and before two centuries had passed, they were as large as any that I had ever seen before.

"Mallorn they are called. White trunks rise high into the clouds, so thick around that ten elves might not be able to encircle one. Their leaves are silver and green, their flowers a delicate spindle of spun gold petals that sparkle in the sunlight and bloom in time with the eldest calendars.

"We built a city among those trees, platforms grand and expansive, high and low, stretching above grand gardens and the streams that cut across the naith. It was a beautiful place and there, finally, I was able to halt the passing of time. It became the elvenhome, the sanctuary from the darkness of Arda, and I loved it more dearly than my life.

"I hope, perhaps, that those seeds will take root in Thedas, but I dare not plant any in Kirkwall for fear they might. One day, however, I should like to try it again, r to see that which we have already planted. I would love to show them to you."