Mellow Soulmate AU. The reunion of a husband and wife parted for two ages of the world. Quenya names used (Maglor = Makalaurë, Laurë for short). This is, of course, related to many other stories but "Waiting" is its companion piece. "Pauses", "Memorial" and "Done" are among other closely related pieces, as well as anything in the Morals Arc. Basically, though, this is meant to be something sort of fluffy and cute. Because I felt like it today. Takes place (probably) where Lindon used to be in the early Third Age.
Disclaimer: I don't own the Silmarillion, but Vardamírë (Mírë for short) is mine
Pairings: Maglor x Vardamírë
Characters: Maglor, Vardamírë (mentions the Valar, Ulmo and Varda in particular)
Warning: non-canon compliant, return-to-ME trope, OFC warning, hugging and fluff to soothe away the angst at the beginning
Song: The Call
Words: 1,184
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breathe (verb): to draw air into and expel it from the lungs: respire; to inhale and exhale freely; live; to pause and rest before continuing
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/breathe
There were days when he believed with every fiber of his being that he would never see her face again. The most beloved face that constantly weighed upon his heavy heart.
Long, long years passed at a crawl, filled with the sound of the ocean pounding an endless rhythm upon the shores, hissing up the sprawling white of the sand to nip at the toes of his boots. And Makalaurë had long since grown accustomed to the song of the water, its slow and deep breathing washing salt and mist across his face, tangling damp fingers through his hair and whipping it back from his eyes.
In some ways, he almost felt it had become part of his body. Or, perhaps, he had become part of it. The oxygen--sweet and pure beneath the cold light of the stars blinking down from the vastness of the sky above the churning waters--seemed to be swallowed into those depths, dragged away into the endless blackness below. And he stood, breathless and frozen, a fixed statue of flesh and bone, pearl and shadow, pale and dark entwined and left upon the beach to stand forever in the cold.
He waited. And he held his breath.
Held his breath as whispers came and went through the threads of time and space. The call of the sea pulled and pushed upon his mind, drew his feet upon the shores to the north where the tides were chilly and dark. And Makalaurë followed to whatever end, for what end had he in sight but to follow that song until the end of days?
Yet, perhaps, the Valar were more merciful than he had expected--than he had ever dared hope.
Well did he remember the feeling, the overpowering ice surrounding his heart and mind as he stepped across the damp sand in the ethereal evening light. It was there that he saw her.
Her.
Her slender form draped in deep blue and silver, the hem of her gown soaked with the writhing waves washing up onto the pale sands, slipping around her bare ankles. Her white skin laced through with silver beneath the light of Isil, so fragile and so pure. Her hair spun of moonbeams, drawn as a curtain back from her face by those same hands of mist, salt and water.
She was exactly as he remembered.
Blue eyes gazing out from a ring of pale lashes, infinite in mystery and yet so terribly, achingly familiar that the back of his throat drew tight. Her nose was small and upturned in that cute fashion that had always made his heart flutter, and her lips were drawn into the gentle smile that made his bones melt into jelly.
A mirage, he thought at first, an evanescent manifestation of nostalgia and tragic loss. Silently, he drew closer. Until they stood but an arm's length apart from one another.
"Mírë?"
Barely a single ringing note in his voice rising over the howl of the open water breaking upon the shore. And yet she heard, her hand rising in answer to his sighed call. Her fingers brushing against his cold cheek in a fluttering caress. "I think the stars are shining down upon us, Laurë."
The laugh that bubbled up in his throat sounded more like a sob. Her touch felt real. But she could not be. She could not be.
"I think they might be," he replied brokenly, wistfully, to this creature woven of starlight.
They pulled one another into an embrace, her arms about his neck and his curled tight and desperate about her willowy waist. Makalaurë could barely summon thought as their forms tangled, as her brow was pressed against his, as he took in every fleck and shade of her dazzling eyes in the moonlight. Just standing here, feeling her warmth...
"I missed you," she whispered.
He did not even dare speak back. Not a second time. Surely, this moment--this strange warmth and this perfect silent togetherness--would shatter back into chaotic reality. Her form would fall apart beneath his eyes, a figment of imagination conjured from wisps of mist upon the pearly sands. Surely, he could not be so lucky as to feel her once more against him, sinking into him and consuming his spirit.
Surely, this was a dream. But a sweet one. A cruel one.
But please, Ulmo, let her be true. Let her be real.
Against his cheeks, he felt her hands cup and hold gently but firmly, fingertips tracing little patterns over the scar that cut across his left temple and over the wrinkles that lined the corners of his eyes and the deep-set lines burrowed into the skin around his lips. "Laurë?"
"I love you." He could not help the whisper, and beheld her face as one stares into the eyes of Varda Elentári, reverent and awed beyond all poetic words.
If he never saw her again, let him hold this image forever in his thoughts.
If he blinked now, he was certain that she would vanish beneath his hands. The tangle of her curls around his fingers would dissolve into heavy, salty air and the curve of her waist beneath his scarred palm would slip away into emptiness. But he did not care.
It was enough. His eyes closed. It was enough for forever.
"Makalaurë, look at me."
And, when his lashes parted, she was still there. Still solid. Still warm.
Still breathing. He could feel the air hot against his lips, and the knot in the back of his throat unraveled and left him gasping. The tight ache of his lungs ceased, soothing heat filling his chest when the air swirled in and filled and filled.
It was like breathing out a thousand years of icy water, coughing the chill and thick soup of despair and foamy regrets from his ragged spirit. The tightness that he had forgotten, agonizing and stretching and screaming, was suddenly all at once gone. Light and floating, it all drained away and nearly left him dizzy and giddy.
He was looking at her, and she was real.
"I missed you, too."
It had been many years since he had smiled. So many that he had lost count of the centuries weaving in and out of each other, filled with the deep song of the ocean beating upon the shores, with only the touch of the waves upon his feet and the wind upon his flesh to keep him company in regret.
But her laughter drew a helpless grin up upon his lips. Brought him back from the drowning waves. And the air had never tasted so sweet and so clear as it did when her voice rang as bells across the land and resonated through the fabric of the world. It was too real to be a mirage. Too tangible and perfect to be a dream.
The waiting and wandering was done. Finally.
They were breathing.
Breathing.
For the Love of Writing Prompts
Because I need a break from writing lab reports and theology papers...
Sunday, February 2, 2014
Sunday, January 26, 2014
Irresistible
I really feel like this will be an every other day thing until I get over my obsession. Reading like crazy. Can't stop. Blame fucking Mycroft Holmes. It's all his fault.
Thursday, January 23, 2014
Hand of Fate
Mellow Soulmate AU. Of naivety and disillusionment. This is most closely related to “Cheat”, “Overflow”
and “Decadent”, but is technically related to everything and anything with the
pairing Amrod/Thranduil as well as anything Amrod-related that takes place
post-Second Kinslaying. However, I like
to think of this as the Thranduil POV of Overflow in a weird sort of way. Takes place in Mirkwood, though there is a
flashback to Menegroth.
Disclaimer: I don’t own
the Silmarillion or The Hobbit
Pairings: past one-sided
Amrod x Thranduil
Characters: Thranduil
(mentions Amrod, Valthoron (OMC), Legolas, Morgoth, Sauron (the Necromancer),
Thranduil’s mother, Thingol, Eru and other random elves)
Warning: non-canon
compliant, slash, soul-mate trope, implied m!preg and past (non-graphic)
non-con (heavily implied), violence and blood, character death, depression,
pure angst, mass murder
Song: Revelation
Words: 1,665
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fate (noun): the
will or principle or determining cause by which things in general are believed
to come to be as they are or events to happen as they do: destiny; an
inevitable and often adverse outcome, condition or end; final outcome
It was a romantic notion
that not many ascribed to, the idea of a fated One.
Thranduil had believed
it wholeheartedly when he was young and full of naïve hope. With barely a century to his name, he had
wistfully dreamed of meeting his One, the person he was created to spend the rest of forever with. Two halves of a perfect whole. Two pieces that created a complete image.
Two souls that would
seamlessly weave together into one. In
wholeness. In togetherness. In happiness.
Foolishness.
How could they not fit together perfectly? That he
would ask himself. How could they not be meant to be?
How could such a meeting—such a partnership, such a connection—not
bring forth the greatest of happiness?
Of course, he had
imagined meeting a lovely young maiden in the twilight of the forest gardens. A nice, sweet girl with bell-like laughter
and rosy cheeks; a girl of his own people, the gray-elves, who would bear him
children and spend forever at his side in the great hallowed halls of
Menegroth. Or, perhaps, it would be a
man. He would not have been repulsed at
the idea of a handsome warrior with a strong bow-arm, someone brave but with a
kind side buried underneath a stern façade at which he could flirt and blush.
They were just sweet
little daydreams that he kept privately locked up in his head. Never would he have spoken of them aloud—he was
too prideful and too stubborn and admittedly too arrogant to reveal such a
vulnerable part of himself—but it had been a part of him nonetheless.
Foolishness indeed.
Dreams were lovely
things. Delusions created to retain
bare-boned scraps of joy in a world consumed by war. Young and full of naïve hope had he been
without a doubt. The war had boiled on
longer than he had been alive, had wrecked distant lands outside the borders of
Doriath beyond all repair and ravaged all that was green and good into barren
wastelands of bones and twisted metal and sorrow. But it had never reached deep within their
borders, to the city with walls carved and painted by the finest hands and
furnished with tapestries woven by the most talented fingers. Jewels and finery and parties and wine dominated
the world of the court of Thingol, not blood and death and dirty, ugly realism.
All romanticism and
beauty and pristine ignorance. All
everything the world was not.
---
Until the day came when they invaded.
The sons of Fëanor, the
golodh Kinslayer’s devil-spawn children from the West, filled with violent lust
for blood and greed to reclaim their pretty glowing rocks. Until that day, those flame-haired monsters
from across the Great Sea had been but a fleeting and ghostly nightmare, merely
a bedtime story whispered insidiously to scare mischievous children into
staying in bed at night. But that was
all they had been. Nightmares to counter
the daydreams.
That was all they had
been. All they had been until fate
decided otherwise. And it had changed everything. Perhaps, he would later think, it was meant to.
But then Thranduil
thought none of that. He had thought of
nothing but fear, but the terror that forced his throbbing heart to climb up
the back of his throat until he wanted to be sick. He had thought of nothing but fleeing and
hiding, running away from the advancing flash of swords down the corridor,
chasing the unarmed inhabitants of a city that had never seen war knock upon
its gates.
He had thought of
nothing but keeping his family alive when he heard the piercing shriek of his
mother. Of her death. It had drawn him
forth like nothing else, pulling him from the safety of his locked chambers
without a second thought—without even bothering to grab a dagger or a bow to
protect himself. And when the door had opened…
he had seen him.
His One. Covered in blood. Standing over the prone body of his mother. Sword aloft in a vicious, cruel arc.
His One.
It was like a flash—all
at once a shattering revelation that left his legs quivering beneath his weight. Thranduil had not known how he knew, just that he knew
and could not deny it. All it took was
that one glance for his heart to break.
Handsome face splashed
with crimson, splattered across the high cheekbones lined with snarls and down
the front of a tunic embroidered with a damning seven-pointed star.
Son of Fëanor.
Green eyes, he
remembered vividly from that frozen moment of epiphany. Very green eyes with pupils blown wide-open
like empty windows gaping into the vastness of the Void beyond. They seemed to dominate the too-pale face,
clashing sharply with the too-bright blood on blanched white skin and the
too-red hair slicked to a sweaty forehead.
Red and green and white.
And pain.
Because he had been a
foolish and naïve child then. Happiness
would come with this moment, the moment he met the One he was destined to spend
forever with. Nothing could get in the
way of that bliss, he had believed. No
matter what it took, if he was with his One they could overcome any obstacle that stood in their way of
togetherness—of happiness.
But not this. Not this.
Not the empty insanity
that stared back at him. Not the sword
that flashed in the light of torches, red and dripping with his mother’s blood. Not the green, green, green eyes that were filled with lust beyond want for spilled
blood.
Not the way a gloved
hand wrapped around his upper arm and dragged him closer without gentleness or
care.
Not the way lips crashed
down over his screaming mouth and sucked out his spirit.
Not the way he couldn’t pull away from that grasp no matter
how hard he tried to squirm away—
He was dragged, kicking
and screaming amongst the chaos of the dying and the dead and the murderous and
the murderers, into his own room from whence he had come out of hiding at his
mother’s agonized screams. And the door
shut behind them.
There was fear and
horror. Dread that crawled over his
skin, chilling.
But none of it compared
to the disillusioned despair.
Cruel was the hand of
fate, to have dealt him these cards through the alignment of the heavens and
the gifts of the Music. He had a One—some
never found their fated mate, and it
was always so celebrated, so joyous—but this was no blessing. There was no happiness. There were no moonlight kisses to be snuck. No giggling together and blushing at
half-censored lewd jokes. No courting or
flirting beneath the boughs of familiar trees and under the shade of vibrant
gardens. No engagement and marriage and
no endless days of bliss winding off into the horizon of eternity.
There was blood and pain
and hopelessness.
There was red and green and
white.
And then there was only
black. Only black. His fate.
---
Sometimes dreams were
lovely little things. They brought forth
what little joy could be found among a world dying as it was choked to death in
the maws of the northern shadows and the greed of the West and the lies that
closed in from every corner. But dreams
had to end. And Thranduil’s dream had
ended that day.
Just once, though, he
wished he could have had his little dream.
Even looking back upon
it—millennia later, from his position of power upon his throne when the shadows
once again closed in around him with salivating fangs ready to tear him open
and eat him alive—he wished he could have had just this one dream.
He wished his fate could
have been different. That his naivety
could have, for once, proven to be true.
That that giggling maiden or stern-faced warrior lingering in the back
of his mind was more than a crafted illusion.
That everything would have turned out for the best in the end because
surely Eru, who wrote the grand ballad that shaped the world, would want to
weave a happy ending for all who held goodness and rightness to their breasts and
not torment His Children ceaselessly without cause.
Maybe, then, he would
have had something to smile about when destiny-turned-reality and the cold light
of the stars wove their strings about his fragile life and wrapped him in webs
of discord. When they found Thranduil
once again damned and alone and wanting.
All he had wanted was to
find his One. And he had. But, looking back, he wished desperately—forlornly
and bleakly and foolishly—that he had not.
Not like that. Never like that.
He would have missed
Valthoron. And he would have missed
Legolas. Or, if he had married a sweet
maiden or a beautiful warrior and lived out his days in peace, he might have
had them both anyway. And maybe they,
too, would have been unburdened by the cruelties and sin of the past that could
not be changed.
Maybe, then, there would
be more than the vortex of black sucking him down.
Maybe… Maybe…
Yet, as he sat upon his
throne and stared blankly into the distance, Thranduil always had to wonder…
Had it all been laid out in the stars? Was it all meant to be? When the Music gave
him Amrod, had it truly been a warped mistake, a note of discord in the great
harmonies that led to this torment?
Was there ever really any hope?
Or, perhaps, he had been destined to suffer from the very start…
Perhaps he had been beneath the cruel hand of fate from the very
beginning.
Tuesday, January 21, 2014
Kisses
Canon-compliant
AU. Of the kisses of Celebrían daughter
of Galadriel. This ended up being way longer than intended, and I left
some parts out that I thought of later.
But I’m satisfied with the flow of this so I’ll leave it. Definitely related to “Fading Away” and “Awareness”,
but also serving as a counterpoint to “Goodbyes”, which is from Elrond’s
POV. Sort of a life-story-like
piece. Takes place (at first) in Lothlórien,
and then in Rivendell, and then in the Undying Lands.
Disclaimer:
I don’t own The Lord of the Rings or any other works of Tolkien’s
Pairings:
Elrond x Celebrían
Characters:
Celebrían, Galadriel, Celeborn, Elrond, Elladan, Elrohir, Arwen (mentions other
random elves)
Warning:
canon-compliant AU, heavily implied sex, kissing (one would hope), sexual
undertones, mentions of childbirth, pregnancy, implied torture and non-con,
implied war/violence
Song: ...And Then I Kissed Him
Words:
2,194
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kiss (noun):
a caress with the lips; a gentle touch or contact; an expression of affection
Her first
kisses were from her nana and her ada.
Celebrían
remembered them even when she was fully grow, pleasant little dreams
half-hidden in the haze of memory that followed her into her years of adulthood. They were always gentle things, those little
gifts. Sitting in her nana’s lap,
feeling tender lips brush over the tip of her nose as she giggled into soft
white lace. Being lifted up by her ada
into the air and twirled, squealing in delight at the feeling of his chapped
lips on her rosy cheeks.
Feeling
hands cradle her face as goodnights were whispered in her ear and a tiny kiss
was pressed to her brow. In that spot,
she would feel the love of her parents spread outwards until she drifted off in
the rocking embrace of that pure sensation.
They were
lovely things, those little gifts.
Always did they bring warmth and love upon her heart, and their memory
always soothed away the worry and sorrow in her spirit when the days darkened
with shadow and her parents’ eyes grew saddened and cold.
They
always allowed her to smile. Just a
little bit.
Even when
there was nothing left to smile for. She
remembered.
---
But those
little kisses were nothing like his kisses.
Her nana’s
kisses were like a moth’s wings in the twilight, full of delicate sweetness and
underlying affection that could not be spoken in mere words. Her ada’s kisses were all warmth and sunshine
streaming through the forest trees, playful and teasing and bringing forth
laughter.
But his kisses…
The first
time was a shock. Standing beneath the
boughs of lantern-speckled trees, a clearing breaking overhead into the
heavenly dome, they had been together. And
his eyes had sparkled with each and every star, reflecting down at her,
enchanting her and holding her hostage.
Celebrían
remembered the first touch of his lips.
Elrond’s lips.
They had
been hesitant, barely a touch at all.
But it had felt like nothing she had ever known. Like fire igniting beneath the tingling flesh
of her parted, shocked lips. She
remembered how her breath had caught and held.
How she had struggled to gain her next breath in the wake of such a tiny,
vastly powerful gesture.
“Would
you allow me to court you, my Lady?” he had asked.
Somehow,
she had found the air to say “Yes”.
And he
had kissed her again.
---
Those
kisses only became deeper. More
wild. Harder to control. Harder to stop.
Before
him—with his strangely aged beauty akin to the finest of ancient wines upon the
blissful tongue—Celebrían could not understand what it was that drew together a
man and a woman in the way of lovers.
Her handmaidens had tittered and whispered about it behind demure hands,
their eyelashes fluttering as they beheld the guardians walking past in packs,
backs straight and eyes glued in forward position looking so composed and so
handsome. There had been so much
blushing and giggling. So much sighing
with dreamy eyes.
Celebrían
had seen beauty in men. But she had not seen this heat. Had not felt this passion scorch across her
skin and fill her cheeks with blood.
Nor fill
her belly with molten fire.
That was
what those kisses did. They started as a tiny searching brush, a
teasing caress to part her mouth, to share her air. Teeth gently scraped the too-tender skin of
her lips to her punctuated gasp. And then
he would tilt her head and they would connect.
And she
could feel them come together. Could
feel his tongue everywhere inside her mouth.
Could taste his heady flavor on every inch of her overwhelmed palate.
Her hands
would thread through the dark hair at his nape, pulling him closer…
And then
he would pull away. Cut the strings of
their wholeness and leave her hanging, panting softly in the scant few centimeters
that lay between their flushed and impassioned faces. So close and so far away.
“Not yet,”
he murmured. “Not yet.”
But soon…
Soon they would be married. Man and
wife. Soon he would be her husband. And then they would not need to stop when the
flames grew high in the intimate darkness and began to consume their waking
thoughts with a red glow. Then they could
clash like thunderstorms over the plains, and they would come together
entirely.
---
In a kiss
far more intimate.
Together
in their marriage bed.
Celebrían
had never imagined.
She had
never imagined…
---
The first
time she held her sons in her arms, Celebrían had been sweaty and exhausted
from the birthing of twins, long and arduous as it had been. The bed upon which her marriage had been
consummated was the bed upon which she gave birth to her husband’s heirs.
And they
were beautiful.
She held
them, cradled them close and stared down into their red, slightly wrinkled
newborn faces. Identical, but she could
tell them apart already, for they felt so different when they resonated with
her heart. Each with ten tiny fingers
and ten tiny toes and big milky blue eyes.
They
would be gray in the end, she imagined.
Like his.
Beyond
words, she lifted them close and ignored her fatigue. She pushed aside her discomfort and the
dripping black at the corners of her vision.
She
pressed their first kisses against their tiny foreheads.
“Elladan
and Elrohir,” she whispered. And pressed
their second kisses in the same spot again, taking in their softness and
breathing in their sweet baby-scent. She
wanted to remember this moment forever. “My
sons.”
---
Celebrían
often wondered if her sons remembered her kisses the way she remembered her
nana’s kisses.
How often
she loved to kiss their chubby little cheeks!
How often did she shower with adoration their cute button noses! How she loved to hear their squeals when she
pressed her lips to their ticklish little bellies!
It was
different giving the kisses away. But
she loved it just as much.
The sound
of childish laughter filled the afternoon all around her, and in bliss she
leaned back to soak in the sunshine and the autumn cool of the valley dyed all
orange and red and gold with the Fading.
Everything was so peaceful… so perfect…
Until she
heard the crying.
Like any
mother, she was up as soon as the wail sliced through her paradise. They were only across the courtyard, her two
babies, but they were just out of sight and her heart was fluttering hard in
the back of her throat with worry as her shoes clicked over stone and…
And
Elrohir was on the ground sobbing, tears and snot on his reddened face. Big puffy eyes looked up at her pathetically.
He had
scraped his knee. Poor thing.
With a
sigh, she scooped him upwards and set him upon one of the ornate benches,
kneeling before his sniffling form as she crooned. Elladan was at her side looking worried,
clutching at her skirts with fidgeting hands.
“Ah, don’t
cry, ion-nín,” she murmured as she stroked the tears from Elrohir’s cheeks. “Let
me see you knee, my darling.”
“Hurts,”
the child whined.
Carefully
did her fingers explore the scrape, using the edge of her dress to wipe away
the sparse amount of blood and dirt to reveal a tiny scrape beneath. For, indeed, that was all it was. Just a scuff from the rough stone upon soft
skin. Already, Elrohir’s cries were
nearly quieted as he watched her wide-eyed.
“Let nana
kiss your scratch better, darling.”
“Kiss it
better?”
Celebrían
nodded. “Like magic,” she replied, pressing her lips in a breathy caress across
the angry red mark twice as once her own mother had done for her. “See. Does it feel better now?”
Her
youngest son wiped his nose on his sleeve and sniffled again. But he also nodded, looking satisfied now
that he was not bleeding all down his leg.
More fright than pain, Celebrían realized. And such an easy affliction to fix.
“Good.”
She added a kiss to his forehead and lifted him from the bench, setting him
once again upon his spindly legs. “Now go and play. But be careful this time, ion-nín!”
Like
nothing had happened, they were off romping again, laughing in the afternoon
sunshine.
Little
kisses. That was all it took.
If only
the world stayed so simple forever.
---
When her daughter
was conceived unexpectedly, Celebrían looked forward to the birth with great
excitement. To having a girl-child in a
house full of men. To having a
companion, an heiress to teach her sewing and weaving arts, to dress up in
pretty gowns and spoil with gentle baths and evenings of hair-brushing and
braiding.
But, as
with her sons, the beauty of her newborn daughter in her arms for the first
time had caught her unawares.
Arwen was
perfect. A perfect baby, quiet and
contemplative as she yawned up at her mother and blinked those huge blue
eyes. Again, Celebrían knew—perhaps as
only a mother would—that they would fade to her husband’s gray.
To
Lúthien’s gray.
Such a
beauty her little lady would be. And
Celebrían could not help but press butterfly kisses to that precious face.
Somehow,
she knew… knew that Arwen needed all of the kisses she could gather and give…
Somehow,
she just knew…
---
Knew
that, many years later, she would give no more kisses.
No more
could she stand to feel the kisses of her grown sons upon her cheeks—
Once she had loved them and cherished each one, for grown
boys so rarely desired the attentions of their mother and so rarely allowed
their persona of adult gravitas to fall so that she might give the gesture back
in return—
And no
more could she give her daughter kisses upon the brow—
As she often did if only to wish the young girl luck and
send with her beloved little one eternal love and guidance. If only to let her youngest child know that
she would always be there—
No more
could she even bear to be touched by her husband.
She could
not bear to receive his kisses. Not upon
her hands. Not upon her brow. Not upon her cheeks.
Not upon
her lips.
Touch
made her hollow heart quiver in terror, left her hovering as a shadow of a
ghost holding on to life by the thinnest of spider’s threads. Each brush of fingers brought remembrance of
searing pain. Each brush of lips left
her remembering only the horror and the violation.
She
wished she could tell Elrond it was okay, that she would get better. She wished she could see his eyes light up in
hope. She wished she could feel the
warmth that once suffused her being when his kisses rained upon her skin.
But
wishing did not change reality.
Wishing
would not make the kisses warm.
Wishing
would not heal her open, rotting wound.
---
Time
helped.
In the
Undying Lands she had all the time in the world. Here, seasons never changed. Here, there was no evil shadow. Here, the days were peaceful and the nights
were tranquil.
Here,
there was no need to be afraid. She
could allow the divine Light to seep back into her flesh and warm again her
bones with easy slowness. To burn away
the nightmares and memories hidden in the cobwebs strung from the darkest
corners of her mind.
Here, she
came to be almost at peace.
Almost.
But
something had been missing. It took her
many years to see it. To feel it.
The absence
of kisses.
Her nana
and ada were across the Sea. Her husband
and sons and daughter were across the Sea.
Her heart and soul and life were
across the Sea.
And she
missed them. Missed their kisses. Missed their voices. Missed their love.
More than
anything.
And she
knew that she could not be healed. Not
yet.
Not yet.
---
Not until
she saw him again. Elrond.
All of
her body screamed to be near him, to take hold of him and never let go
again. Peace these shores may have
offered, but they did not offer the love and companionship she remembered.
They did
not offer the beautiful feeling of warmth that slid through her aching body
when she slung her arms about his neck and embraced him tight.
They did
not offer the shocking wonder of feeling his arms—his actual arms, corporeal
and tangible and real—squeezing around
her tautly in return.
They did
not offer the all-consuming feeling of rightness
when their lips came together again and again and again. Frantic and breathless and full of awe.
Until
they came apart and stood together on the docks, sharing their breaths. Each staring into the other’s eyes. And Celebrían could do not but reach upwards
and cup that beloved face in her hands as she wept tears too sweet to be sad.
“I’m
here,” he murmured, lost in her.
And she
kissed him again. Equally lost. Equally found.
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