arcaneadvisor (
arcaneadvisor) wrote in
faderift2018-08-15 10:41 am
Entry tags:
Alas, so long as the music plays, we dance
WHO: Morrigan, Alistair, Gwenaëlle, Thranduil
WHAT: The hunt for Flemeth moves into the final stage when Kieran is taken from Sundermount in the small hours with only one possible suspect, leading to a desperate race for one place Morrigan knows they might find her mother
WHEN: August
WHERE: Altar of Mythal
NOTES: stage i + stage ii
WHAT: The hunt for Flemeth moves into the final stage when Kieran is taken from Sundermount in the small hours with only one possible suspect, leading to a desperate race for one place Morrigan knows they might find her mother
WHEN: August
WHERE: Altar of Mythal
NOTES: stage i + stage ii

From Sundermount to the Arbor Wilds isn't nearly so far as to the Tirashan, but their small party - roused by a Morrigan in what might only have been described as a blind panic - doesn't fly as the dragon does, cutting clear across the sky from one to the next. Instead the journey is longer, across the Waking Sea, through the Dales, and then to the place Morrigan had described to them. Morrigan, silent and snapping by turns (only Thranduil knows after all) until they at last come upon a place that carries with it the weight of memory.
Too bright and too beautiful compared to near all other elven ruins but then this is older still, is it not? A statue that even beheaded is familiar to those who've seen it before as life blooms about it, as the dread coils in Morrigan's belly to force her to a halt.
For there is no dragon here.
There is a woman Morrigan knows. A woman Alistair knows. A boy all four of them know. The woman kneels before the boy until the intrusion is realised, standing with her gauntleted hand upon his shoulder, a familiar smile and greeting upon her lips.
"Well, well, well, what have we here?"

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"Thranduil, well, they have called me Flemeth. Witch of the Wilds. Mother of Vengeance. Asha'bellanar." This time she will be leaving off the old hag, being around all her family as she is, they must know that one very well. "But it is, in fact, all very necessary, you see--"
And she would say more if Morrigan didn't step forward, anger getting the better of her as her finger points in accusation. "You have forgotten one in your old age." The hand and her voice are trembling, the rage coiled in her a pit of vipers primed to strike. "You are Mythal, how long you have pretended--"
Alistair, maybe even Thranduil might expect the laugh because that's what something that's never fitted inside the skin should do in this situation. To laugh. Morrigan's hand hangs in the air. She wasn't quite ready for it to be shrugged aside when admitting it to herself came at such a cost in the dark.
"Pretended, my daughter says? Oh, unnecessary this hardfaced girl says, and the Warden agrees. How little any of you know." Well, Elvenking if he might be that (and oh, he might, she can hold his gaze a long time but then it's to the girl, to Alistair, the unknown who might squirm and to see if a churlish boy has grown into himself at all) perhaps has the benefit that others do not but her mouth hardens. "How long have you pretended that he is but a normal boy?"
"I-- he is my son…" But it's faint, it rings hollow in Morrigan's own ears as Flemeth (if it's Flemeth alone) turns on Alistair next.
"And how rude of me, to miss you out of of the family reunion, Warden."
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Morrigan surges forward and Gwenaëlle follows her only a step behind, bow dropped to her side. “She's kept him safe,” she says, a furious little thing, puffed up in defense, the jerk of her braid behind her like an angry tail's lash. That is what mothers are supposed to do, that is what Flemyth or Mythal or whoever she is should have done, that's what Anne and Guenievre couldn't do—
Morrigan is the best of mothers and who is this old woman to lecture her?
(But this is what family reunions always are.)
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It’s Morrigan he’s staring at, with a mix of surprise and concern and mild offense at not being told, when Warden gets his attention again.
“Wait,” he says, a little too quickly—wait, don’t. There are better ways to tell Kieran, including never telling him at all. But Alistair transitions from that moment of panic to a more laconic drawl, quickly but not entirely seamlessly, like a man stumbling over a root and poorly hiding it by pretending he’s decided to start jogging. “Was I not invited? Well that’s embarrassing. Morrigan’s invitation wasn’t very specific, though. Next time you should write it down instead of kidnapping her child. Just an idea. Your...” hesitating, questioning, and somewhere on the tiny stretch of border between mockery and please don’t eat us, because he’s talented that way, “... reverence?”
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It gives Morrigan time to be grateful that a girl peeked about her door years ago, here and brave and speaking up for something Morrigan isn't always so sure of herself because if it were true, Kieran wouldn't be here. He'd be out of Flemeth's clutches, and she has invited her, brought her here, and now she knows because of course she does. Her magic allowed us out of the swamp. There was the reason she sent me. She knows. There was only two of them and she knows his face.
"What do you know of safe, girl? All that Morrigan knows, I have taught her." A smile, a pause-- and no argument from Morrigan because she can't. She still has those damned grimoires, one of which was there mocking her the whole time, the symbol etched upon it that she clawed at when Thranduil came in the dark.
Morrigan looks to Alistair again later and far from here and where to even begin. (Who enjoys airing their family linens to anyone, not even she does outside correcting particular stories.)
"Ah, but here you are, remembering your manners. If Morrigan invited you, well, you are welcome. There are reasons that all of you are here but the lad is in no danger. So now you know that no demon or spirit came to me but Mythal, and I would have vengeance for her. After all, how far are they from one another? Justice, vengeance?"
"And what I found in the Tirashan? Geldauran's Claim of what a god is?" Morrigan almost laughs, hears it crack open, a hollow sound of the eggshell splitting as the yolk spills out about her feet. "A thing that people made through tales and worship."
Gwenaëlle who cut to the heart of it, because that's what Gwenaëlle understands. Knows stories and the shape of them and she wants to scream and claw at her mother as much as to grab Kieran and crumple to the ground with him. But she does neither.
"This is why I need the boy, or rather, what the two of you gave the boy."
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“No,” he says—and if it comes to a choice between protecting Kieran and letting an ancient being of unknowable origin and power run off with an Archdemon’s soul in her pocket then yes, fine, Flemeth or whatever her name is can have Urthemiel. But at the moment, to Alistair, that doesn’t look like the choice. Souls don’t just come out of bodies, in his experience. And even if they do, a Grey Warden doesn’t just hand an Old God over to a mysterious witch to do whatever she pleases with... twice.
The first time was different.
He says, “Morrigan,” in a rising way, like a warning, she can’t have it, except with a little bit of a questioning twist at the end, so it’s more like: she can’t have it, right?
And then he looks at Gwenaëlle and her giant Elvenking, who presumably aren’t looking back at him, because he’s the least interesting thing here—and there’s no telling what Thranduil knows or will think about anything, but Gwenaëlle is Thedosian. She’ll know what it means. He doesn’t know what she’ll think. Not about him, never mind him. But Kieran cares about her so much. If she’s horrified—
Wait, no, that’s stupid. It’s Gwenaëlle. She’ll probably shrug it off and have something clever to say.
So back to glaring at Flemeth like she’s trying to sell him moldy bread she claims was made by fairies.
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Or, at least, he thinks so. Morrigan would go by the rules of the Chasind, would she not? He is drawing upon the old Mannish laws, the sort of the thing that brought forth such things as blood price for reparations and then the old, old ones, the bones of which are elven law, written in their souls as this is not right.
They have so much in common before this, why not these old things too? If he is to make his case before justice herself, this is what he will rely on.
Steady hands, steady gaze. He does not look back to either of them, nor Gwenaëlle.
"You cannot take what is not freely given."
There, the oldest law, and he knows it to be true here too, if only in the margins, if one cares to look. Demons cannot possess without consent.
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But then this was Flemeth's plan. This was always Flemeth's plan, and Morrigan might have escaped it, slipped through the eye of the needle for years but Flemeth has lived a long time patient as she is, and clearly she will take all that she believes is her due.
(She can hardly look at Kieran now that he knows.)
"Neither can she nor can it be given." Ah, and here is where an old woman's face softens with the weight of all her years to become mother and grandmother she never was at least to this woman. "You were never in danger from me - is a soul ever forced upon the unwilling?"
She kneels, settles by Kieran to make the point and her sigh is a sigh that carries echoes of the lives she has lived.
"Mythal came to me when I was alone in the dark, that much they remembered. I cried out for one who would listen. Oh and you, you speak of a father's claim what bearing does that have here and now? Long have I known the hearts of men, there is a reason Mythal chose me."
"Kieran comes with me." Morrigan steps forward, hand outstretched. "He will never go with you, your corruption--"
There is blue light, blinding. But no screaming, no cries of pain or contortions. But the light is very blue, very bright, and she pulls it from Kieran's chest as Morrigan shouts--