everyone loves Aragorn because heâs the only top in middle-earth

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everyone loves Aragorn because heâs the only top in middle-earth

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Weekly Reading Update (06/23/24)
Reviews and thoughts under the cut
Wild Seed by Octavia E. Butler (8/10)
This was my first ever Octavia E. Butler book, and it didn't disappoint! The way this story used Anyanwu and Doro's relationship to comment on power dynamics and issues in the world at large blew my mind; I found the discussion of eugenics particularly interesting. They were both such intensely flawed yet compelling characters. This book skirts the line between fantasy and sci-fi (something I'm looking into for my thesis as a peripheral issue), and it definitely made me wonder about the world. I wasn't aware going in that this was a prequel situation, but even then I do think I was a bit dissatisfied with how things left off. That's just my personal taste though.
Haikyuu!! Vol. 41 and 42 by Haruichi Furudate (10/10)
It usually takes me around half an hour or so to get through a volume of manga, but these took me a couple of hours. Why? Because I had to keep putting it down because I was crying so hard I couldn't breathe. As someone who has read a plethora of books ever since I was young, it takes a lot to get me to cry, especially that hard. I was sobbing. Furudate has created such wonderful characters and then puts them through so many struggles that I can't even be mad about because it's highly realistic that someone pursuing a sport would run into this! Seeing Hinata break down followed instantly by the third years graduating and the Brazil arc had me miserable in the best way possible. I usually never rate manga or graphic novels five stars because they're usually super fast-paced and so much relies on writing style for me when I read novels, but this just broke me.
Better Than the Movies by Lynn Painter (46%)
This is a very cute book so far. I could probably tell you exactly what's going to happen from this point onward, but it's a genre convention for romcoms to be predictable. Liz is a fun protagonist; she's quirky in a way that has a reason and isn't annoying. There's good chemistry between the leads with some great banter, and you really can't ask for more than that. However, I will say the constant song references are starting to irk me, especially with the lyrics included in the writing --I don't know, it just reminds me too strongly of my early fanfiction years.
Moon Rising by Tui T. Sutherland (45%)
If there's one thing about me, I love a mind-reading protagonist. Moonwatcher is probably my favorite perspective of the Wings of Fire series, even if I wish she'd speak up sometimes. Sutherland did a great job making her similar to Starflight, since they're the same tribe, without being a carbon copy, and while mind reading might seem a little too omniscient, her inexperience and general social ineptitude keep it from becoming overpowered. I'm thrilled to see the return of Peril, whose story is left open from the previous arc, and I'm excited to learn more about the other new characters (Winter, Qibli, and I believe Turtle) who have their own interesting introductions.
The Fellowship of the Ring by J. R. R. Tolkien (43%)
Despite my fantasy obsession, this is my first time reading The Lord of the Rings (though I have read The Hobbit). While it is definitely much slower-paced than the average modern fantasy, I'm enjoying myself so much. If you've been following my blog for a while, you'll know I'm a worldbuilding nut, so this is like my dream book. There are so many tangents to tell stories about the history of Middle Earth and all the goings-on of the world, and I keep noticing little details and wishing they'd talk about those too. Tolkien is also a rather funny writer; Bilbo's passive aggression in particular made me giggle. While this a bit of a dense story, it's definitely living up to its reputation so far.
Boys With Sharp Teeth by Jenni Howell (42%)
This is a project for my part-time job, so I'm not sure how much I can actually divulge, but let me just say this: this book is compared to The Raven Boys in its summary, and it's living up to that.
Her Wolves by G. Bailey (7%)
I won't lie, the writing of this book so far does not give me hope. However, it could still be a fun read even if the grammar and syntax aren't the best. Also, funny thing, this book is set in the future on Earth. I did not know this. I thought it was a high fantasy. So imagine my surprise to see a landmass labeled "America Court" on the map. My misunderstanding was cleared up soon, but it still made me laugh.
winter bird
Maedhros faces a slow recovery.Â
Explicit: Graphic depcitions of violence. Rape/non-con.Â
cw: ptsd, torture, trauma, past rape, past sexual assault, disassociation, self harm, indirect/assumed form incest, indirect/assumed form murder, implied forced cannibalism, depression, insects, hallucinations, disreality, time loss.
Nine
The ice is too thin to walk on.
Maedhros stands, hand pressed to the bark of a birch tree. Itâs smooth and cold. The ice is fragmented, clear and white, crossed with lines. Maedhros feels his breath inside of him, warm, cold, burning hot. The sun skips across the sky.
âYouâre staring too long,â Fingon says. He takes Maedhrosâs arm. Heâs never afraid to hold it, even with his missing hand. He holds his arm, circles his hand around his wrist.
Maedhros is waiting for it to freeze. He wants the whole ice to freeze. He doesnât know why. Itâs too thin.
Fingon brushes Maedhrosâs hair. Itâs growing back, jagged because Maedhros wonât let anyone cut it. He wonât let anyone but Fingon touch it.
âWe donât do this now,â Fingon says. âWe go inside now. We can move now. We donât have to stare.â
Maedhros twists his mouth, but doesnât speak. Heâs forgotten how to again. He follows Fingon inside because he doesnât want to be scolded again. Because Fingon will chide softly, say âwe arenât there any longerâ as if heâs speaking to a child, as if there was a âwe.â
Fingonâs hair is braided with gold. He sits by a fire and has Maedhros sit beside him. The gold in his braids glints. His eyes are soft. They hold the firelight.
He says, âMaedhros,â with such perfect sincerity.
Maedhros stares at the fire. It was cold and hot all at once. Then. Now. Time loops and knits together and there is no past, no future, only now, and now holds everything. It holds the perfect warmth of the fire, the blistering burn of the coals, the stark cold, the naked cold that lasts so long it becomes hot and burns.
âWe eat the soup,â Fingon says, and Maglor laughs.
âHeâs not a child.â Maglorâs voice is bitter, twisted like his mouth. âWhy the fuck do you think heâs a child?â
Fingon blows on a spoonful of soup. He holds it out to Maedhrosâs lips.
âHere. For you.â
Maglor walks in short circles, hands over his face. He cries, and Maedhros wants to reach out and hold him still. He wants to tell him softly, gently, âDonât be afraid, little brother. Iâm here now, little brother.â But he doesnât know how to move or how to speak. All he knows is to stare, and he stares straight ahead, eyes heavy.
The spoon touches his lips, and the warm broth is tilted into his mouth.
âThere,â Fingon says. âThatâs how we eat the soup.â
âHeâs not a child, Fingon,â Maglor says. âHeâs not coming back.â
Maglor sinks onto the rug beside the fire. His hair is a mess. It falls over his shoulders, over his face. Maglor is never this messy, this thin. He isnât this wild. He never screamed and gasped before, bent over, sobs shaking his body, wailing, âWhy wonât he talk? Why wonât he look at us?â
Maedhros feels the soup run over his lips and fall down his chin. Fingon dabs at it. He offers another spoonful. âAnd now we close our mouth.â He shuts Maedhrosâs lips with his fingers. âAnd we swallow.â
âHeâs not there!â Maglor says.
Maglor says this a lot. He says it and cries. He says it and throws his hands down. He says it and collapses to the floor and shakes like a dog.
At other times he asks Maedhros if he is there. He asks it, face pressed against his, holding his one hand between both of his. He begs him to be there. âPlease, please, please, come back.â He cries. He rubs his hand. âIf youâre there, let us know. Please, say something. Nod. Blink.â
Maedhros stares.
Maglor breaks down into tears again.
That happens again and again. Maedhros doesnât know why he canât blink. Just blink. How hard is it to blink.
But he doesnât. And Maglor cries.
âThere we are,â Fingon says. He is offering another spoonful of soup. Itâs warm and salty, and Maedhros wants to eat it, but heâs too used to being empty.
âHeâs dead,â Maglor says.
Fingon doesnât answer.
Maedhros wonders if he is dead. He thinks he might be dead, but he seems to be breathing still. Itâs hot and cold and hurts each time. But maybe this is what being dead is. Maybe you keep breathing. Maybe it hurts constantly and your vision becomes blurred and the world becomes disconnected colours. Maybe there is nothing more than this. And youâre trapped forever until they burn you or bury you.
Maybe they should let him go.
âGood,â Fingon says again. Heâs gotten another spoonful of soup into Maedhrosâs mouth. Maedhros feels it run down his throat. He coughs.
Fingon smiles. âGood.â
Maglor kneels in front of Maedhros. âAre you there? Brother?â He strokes his cheek. âPlease⌠Please do something?â
Maedhros wants to stroke his cheek. He wants to say, âIâm here now.â He wants to manage to cough again, or blink, but his eyes are fast open, and his lips are frozen.
âItâs like watching a corpse.â
âBut he walks and he breathes!â
Maglor turns away. âYou donât know what itâs like to watch your brother...â He leaves.
Fingon turns back to Maedhros. âAnd now we eat the soup.â He smiles. âItâs good.â
Eight
The sun hasnât risen in days. Maedhros waits by the window, watching dark clouds move over the stars.
He has forgotten what the sun is. He has forgotten the moon.
He sits in his chair, and he watches himself in the mirror. He lies on his bed, and he watches the clouds quiver and fold, quiver and fly.
Fingon washes him. Maedhros feels like heâs floating when heâs in the bath. He sits in the tub, and his arms rise up. His legs are weightless in the water. Fingon whispers, âGood, good.â Fingon wets a wash cloth.
Maedhros can blink now. He blinks slowly, and his eyes feel weighted. He forgets how to open his lids again.
Once he almost said yes.
His stomach was hurting, and it felt like it was shrinking again. (Like every part of him had shrunk before.) Maglor asked if he wanted food, and heâd opened his mouth, and heâd almost said yes. Maglor gave him broth, and that was good.
âAre we warm enough?â Fingon asks and drapes a blanket around Maedhrosâs shoulders.âWhat are we thinking about?â
Maedhros is thinking about hanging. How the pain went and then came back again. And each time it was worse than he remembered.
Even now he waits for the pain to come back, To come and settle on each nerve. To flood his fingers, to burrow into his scalp â each hair on his body a new fire. He waits, and it doesnât happen, and he wonders if heâs finally free.
Maglor tells him heâs free. He kneels in front of him and holds his hands and says, âYouâre free now. Please, come back to us.â
Maedhros hasnât gone anywhere. He is there with them at all times. Or maybe he never is.
How can he be free? How can he be there? How can he be anywhere else?
It didnât even hurt when Fingon cut off his hand.
It was fast. The blade was sharp enough. He didnât scream. He collapsed forward into Fingonâs arms and didnât breathe.
He didnât breathe.
Now he feels his hand where it isnât, and he canât be sure of anything. He flexes fingers that arenât there. He reaches for the fire, and his arms are stiff at his sides.
Life is nothing more than a series of moments. Each comes and goes, and he canât tell when or why. He drinks broth and wine and water. He sleeps a half sleep smothered by nightmares. He is bathed when he is brought to the bath. He urinates when he is told. And each day slides into the next, and he canât escape the laughter.
âWhat are you afraid of?â Maglor asks, with quivering lips, eyes shot, eyes wide.
Maedhros is afraid of the laughter. He was supposed to be a king, and he was tortured, to laughter. And he was strung up, to laughter. And he was left, and they were laughing at him.
He is afraid of being in that much pain.
He blinks at Maglor, and Maglor wraps him in his thin arms and praises him for being alive. It is hard, isnât it? Being alive.
Sometimes he wants to close his eyes and let his soul slip away, but he cannot do that. He cannot leave his vow. And that is why he has never died. And that is why he cannot die, even now, when death would be so peaceful.
âWhat are you thinking?â Maglor asks.
He is thinking about death. He is thinking about the pain in his lungs when he draws a breath in, the pain when he lets it out. He is never going to be free.
Free of pain.
âWhat do you want?â Maglor asks.
He wants to be someone else. He wants to be wrapped in a blanket warm in a house that has never seen blood. He wants to cradle a child. He wants to breathe free. He wants to sculpt with both hands.
But he is no one but himself. And he is alive here, breathing in and out, in and out, in and out. Watching clouds that billow over the sky. Watching his hair grow in. Itâs dark and tangled on his head now. He trashes at night, and it tangles, and what can be done?
He blinks when Maglor touches his arm, and Maglor gets him water. He drinks thirstily.
The clouds keep running. He cannot leave. He cannot stay. He is a spirit hovering in purgatory.
The clouds fold and unfold. The clouds fade away. The stars are stitched tightly in the night sky, more beautiful than any jewel. Maedhros stares. The stars are fluttering. He isnât supposed to be here. He wets his lip with his tongue. Two tears, one on each cheek, slide down his face.
Seven
Maedhros awakes from another dream too far away to remember. Maglor is in the bed beside him. He lies beneath the quilts and furs, one arm over Maedhros. Maedhros often wakes to Maglor in the bed with him.
In other days, too long ago to recall, he would have wrapped his arms around him and put one hand in his hair and the other on his back. Now it is hard to move his one hand towards him, but he does, until the side of his hand rests against Maglorâs open hand. He can turn it slowly until their palms rest together. He canât close his fingers on Maglorâs so that their hands are clasped, but for now, this seems to be enough.
It is autumn. The last time Maedhros remembers was winter. Heâs passed through the spring and the summer with no memory of them. There may have been birds and soft, green leaves. Fingon might have taken him out to sit on the warm grass and breathe in the warm air. But he cannot remember. His mind feels heavy.
âYouâre awake.â And Maglor is smiling at him. Maglor is happier now, he thinks, though he canât be sure. Maglor laces their fingers together. He kisses Maedhros gently.
âYes,â Maedhros says. The word is hard to force out, and it sounds unnatural.
Maglor smiles again and rewards him with another kiss. Maedhros wants to shut his eyes and sleep again. The dream was bad, and he is so tired. Maybe the next one will be better. Maybe he will have sleep without a dream. But Fingon has come in and Fingon has breakfast, and he wonât let Maedhros sleep.
Maedhros sits up with Fingonâs help and drinks the warm broth and the bits of bread that Fingon tears and soaks in the broth on the silver spoon. Fingon wonât let him sleep, and Fingon wonât let him die. This is his love.
Maedhros drinks the whole bowl, drinks down the bread with it, and the tea with honey. He gets up after and follows Fingon outside. Maglor comes with them.
They walk slowly, but itâs faster than Maedhros remembers. He has memories of this path, but he canât say when they were. He doesnât know how many years heâs been free.
There are many leaves on the path, and they are many colours, and frosted. Puddles on the path have become silver discs of ice. Fingon helps him over them. His eyes are so dark and kind that Maedhros can hardly believe that heâs smiling for him. He feels evil inside and out. He canât scrub the evil away.
At the end of the path is the lake. Thatâs where they stop. Maedhros knows this although he cannot say how. And they do stop. And Maedhros leans against a white tree and watches the water as it ripples along the brown grass and cold shore.
Fingon stays beside him, holding onto him. He rests his head against Maedhrosâs arm.
Maedhros wants to say something to him, but he doesnât know what it is or how to say it if he did.
He says, âFingon,â very softly, and the sounds crumble in his throat.
Maglor screams. He jumps. He puts his hands to his mouth. He does all of this very quickly, but to Maedhros it looks long and drawn out, each act completely separate from the other. It takes another long while for the words theyâre saying to register as sounds to him and by that time theyâre done speaking.
âFingonâ is the first word Maedhros has said besides yes. He remembers who Fingon is. They have hope. Maedhros wants to smile for them, but he canât remember how. There is so much he cannot remember. But he does remember them. Heâs glad they know.
Maglor cradles Maedhrosâs face between his hands and pulls his face down to kiss him. Heâs smiling and crying. Fingon presses his face to Maedhrosâs chest.
âI love you,â he says. âI love you.â
The night is a different night than that morning, but Maedhros doesnât know where the missing time has gone. But Fingon and Maglor arenât as happy any more, and he thinks maybe he hasnât said or done anything for a long time. It is dark outside, and all the leaves have fallen.
Maedhros watches the fire. He watches the ceiling. He watches Maglor talk, but he canât hear him. He watches Fingon pace the room. He watches Maglor cry on the floor.
This night must be a long time from this morning. It might even be a night before this morning. He cannot keep track of time or seasons. He doesnât know. He canât know. He wonders if this makes him broken. Maglor cries, and Maedhros sleeps again.
This is a good dream. Maedhros has both hands, and he is holding a basket of apples. He eats one, and it is the sweetest, cleanest taste. Fingon is lying on the grass, and his hair is scattered around him. He laughs, and his laugh is the only sound. It sweeps Maedhros away into the forest and holds him in the air. He is weightless, flying.
Now it is a bad dream. There is a knife in his back. His tormentors are laughing as he twists away from the pain. He is strung on the cliff. He reaches up to claw at his hand. He is trying to get free. He leaves marks on his wrist. He scrapes away skin. There is blood and flesh under his nails, but he canât cut through the bond, and he canât cut through the wrist. He lifts his hand to his mouth and eats the bits of blood and flesh. He scratches again. If he can break his hand maybe he can get it through the binding. Maybe he can scale down the cliff. Maybe he can drag himself wounded and starving through these evil lands. He cries and he drinks the tears.
He wakes tired.
Six
Maedhros wakes. The air is warm, and his father is holding him. Maedhros smiles, for itâs always nice when his father holds him; he has such strong arms and such a gentle smile. His father runs his hand over Maedhrosâs face and bends to kiss his forehead.
âFather,â Maedhros says, and he can say the word.
His father has dark brown hair. He has kind eyes. He speaks softly. He holds Maedhros like he weighs nothing more than a child.
âDoes he know who you are?â Maglor asks. Maglor flits about the room, clutching his hands together up to his chest. Sunlight streams over his black hair. His eyes flash a wild blue. âDoes he know? Does he know that FĂŤanorâŚ.â
Maedhros knows that FĂŤanor is dead. He saw it. He can never forget. Maedhros knows that the one who holds him isnât FĂŤanor. But Maedhros knows him, although he does not know his name or how they are related. It doesnât matter. His mind is heavy, and he loves him.
âUncle?â Maglor asks.
So that is their relation. This is his uncle. His fatherâs brother. The one he hated. The one who lifted Maedhros off the floor and danced with him in the golden haze of Valinor. The one who taught Maedhros to dive. The one with the small child wrapped in blue with gold braided into dark hair. Fingonâs father. Not his.
His now.
âI donât know,â his father says. âMaitimo...â
âI know,â Maedhros says. âHeâs dead.â
FĂŤanor is dead, but Maedhros saw him afterwards when Morgoth used his form to torment him. He used his uncleâs too. His brothersâ faces. His motherâs smile.
Maedhros sucks in his lip. Itâs not broken, and that startles him. He touches his uncleâs hands. He remembers them holding him, choking him, forcing him down as he thrust into him. He should be scared of him, but he isnât. He isnât scared of FĂŤanor either. (FĂŤanor, who is dead.)
He doesnât think heâs scared of anything now.
They pushed him too far. He stopped caring. He could take anything that happened, and he could take it again. He closes his eyes. He wants to sleep. He always wants to sleep. He is that tired.
âMy sweet boy,â his father says.
Maedhros smiles, and his lips donât split. He smiles, and Maglor laughs and kisses his hands.
Maedhros isnât afraid. He isnât afraid of whips and fire and deep cuts, of long pains. He isnât afraid of brands and knives and squirming things. He isnât afraid of flesh peeling and slow poisons, the deepness of rape and the likeness of his brother cut to pieces in front of his eyes, though he once was.
When they started, he could not believe it. It was too horrible. Too cruel. They did things to him he had never dreamed possible. Things that had never crossed his mind, even when he thought hard of the worst things that could be done. He was so innocent then, even with blood on his hands and an oath terrible.
They cut him many times. They fed him warm, raw flesh. They found every spot on his body where he had been touched gently, and they ruined every memory. And they did it until he went numb. Until he lay still, watching his hand and nothing else when they raped him. Until he lay down on the rack without being told. Until he smiled gentle when he was cut because he was that used to it. Until he held his arms out to their image of Fingon and cut his throat willingly and watched him die in his arms because it had happened that many times. Until he gasped and said his fatherâs name because it had happened that many times. Until he welcomed pain because he was that used to it.
Then they bound him alone, for loneliness was the worst pain, one you could not get used to.
Maedhros ducks his head, for he cannot look at anyone. He is afraid they will read the fear in his eyes, for there are still some things that he fears.
He fears the darkness that holds to his mind. The feeling of Morgoth ever there, reaching through his body, wrapping long, burnt fingers around his lungs, sliding them down into his stomach. His words filling and grasping Maedhrosâs mind. He is afraid of succumbing to the stillness and rage that lies in his mind. Of sliding over into a place that he cannot leave. Of being too broken to ever get up again. He is afraid of being someone else. He is afraid of shattering.
(He cannot tell them this.)
He is afraid of the parts of his mind he has locked away. He is afraid of mistaking Maglor for Mairon and killing him before he realises. He is afraid of looking down at the body of Curufin, dead in his arms, and realising it is not an image, not another nightmare. He is afraid of slitting Fingonâs throat and laughing. He is afraid of losing them.
He is afraid that Mairon was right.
Maedhros watches the leaves out the window. They are young and green. Three years, Fingon has told him. Heâs been cut down for three years. Fingon says heâs there sometimes and not there sometimes. Sometimes he speaks. Sometimes heâs silent for a month. But he can walk and run and eat and bathe.
Three years.
He is three years old, for he is not NelyafinwĂŤ, Maitimo son of FĂŤanĂĄro (sweet Russandol).
Five
Caranthir sits besides Maedhros. His head is bent and his curls bound back with a black ribbon. Maedhros holds his hand. The window is open. The trees outside have red buds.
Curufin is on the other side of Maedhros, holding his right arm, head on his shoulder. Maedhros breathes slowly. It is raining. The rain is soft, almost a mist.
Maedhros shifts and Curufin shifts with him. This could be years ago.
The window is open. He can taste the rain in the air, feel its coolness. His hair brushes against his skin. It keeps growing. It keeps growing, so he knows he really is alive. He isnât dead. (Unburied.)
He feels the warmth of Caranthirâs leg against his. Maglor sits by the window, knees drawn up, and he sings low. Celegorm lies on the floor near Huan.
Maedhros looks down at his left hand. His fingers are laced with Caranthirâs. He looks down at his right hand. It is gone.
The window is open. Birds sing. The rain is touched by sunlight.
He bends his head and kisses Curufinâs hair.
âLittle one.â
The air smells of dirt. The earth is is soft and alive, and he is not buried in it.
The twins are not there. Not the dead one, nor the one yet still alive. Fingon is not there either. Maedhros wishes he was. He always wants him.
He leans forward, wanting to feel the wetness of the rain on his skin. He stands, and Curufin lies down where he has been lying. Maedhros rests his hand on Maglor and leans out the window. He lets the rain fall on him.
The evening comes with the rain clouds breaking and a green sky. The evening belongs to the morning. The time is staring to be right, follow a line.
Maedhros sits by the window. He drinks wine and watches the stars as they are threaded into the sky.
Fingon comes behind him and puts his arms around his shoulders. Maedhros puts his hand on Fingonâs hands where they are clasped together.
They donât talk about anything they are thinking of.
The green sky turns darker, teal blue, and the clouds on it are black. Fingon leans forward and his cheek is cold against Maedhrosâs, and that means he is Fingon, for they were always burning, and he smells like the real world and life and earth and everything Maedhros needs. And he smells cold, that sharp cold of spring when ice breaks on the rivers and bright shoots of leaves push up from the earth through dead grass. He holds Maedhros tightly and they donât speak and they donât speak and they donât speak.
The sky darkens, and the clouds seem to melt into it, black on black. The moon rises round and hazy over the lake. Its light trembles in the dark water.
This is real. Maedhros touches his face. He is real too. He is real, and Fingon is real, and the moon and the stars and the new spring are all here, and they cannot be taken. (Not now. Not yet.)
The forest with its tall trees, the rain when it comes, flowers in bloom: all of it he can have again. He can live. He can be strong again.
Maedhros takes Fingonâs hand.
âThank you,â he says. âThank you.â
Four
âI need you to tell me something,â Maedhros says in the deep blue of some unnumbered spring evening while Fingon lies beside him, shirt ridden up, hand on his stomach, hair spread out on the pillow. âHow many of me are there?â
Fingon tilts his head. He doesnât understand the question. His lips part.
âThereâs only you.â
âBut,â says Maedhros. âThere areâŚâ
There are too many gaps in his memory. He is too strong. He touches the muscles on his arms. He was dying a week ago, wasnât he? When did he develop this strength? He stands, and he does not falter. He walks, and his legs are fast and strong. When? When did he become strong again?
He paces the floor. He is balanced. He is elegant. Fingon watches him.
When? Maedhros wants to scream. When did this happen? How long has it been now? Itâs spring. What spring?
(When did he give Fingolfin the crown?)
He touches his arm. Itâs strong. His legs are tight with muscle. His hair brushes against his arms. It swings when he turns his head.
âI donât know where you go,â Fingon says. âBack there, I suppose.â
âNo,â Maedhros says. âI never go back.â (If he says it it might be true.) He scratches at his arm. How is he this strong? He says, âI donât think Iâm the one you usually talk to.â
Fingon watches him. He doesnât understand. His eyes are soft, and his lips close again. Maedhros sits beside him and touches his face. He tries, for a moment, to cradle his face with both hands, but the one is still missing. Fingon stares at him. His hair is braided tightly.
âI want to understand,â Maedhros says. âPlease, help me. Who am I? Where am I?â
He looks out at the sky. The clouds are faint over the dark sky. They are touched silver by the moon. The night looks like Fingolfin.
âWhere am I?â Maedhros whispers again, even though he knows. He doesnât, really, because to understand where he is he has to understand who he is, and he doesnât. He canât. He is bleeding out somewhere else. He is trapped on the floor. He is held down and slowly mutilated. âWhere am I?â His heart starts to race, because Fingon is a lie. He touches the walls. These are a lie too. The sky is an illusion.
There is no moon.
He sucks his breath in sharply, and the only real thing in the world is the sound of it.
Fingon places his hands on Maedhros. One on his face. One on his arm.
âIâm here,â he says.
Maedhros wants to be better than this. He hates himself for this weakness. Morgoth is there, in his mind. He is always there. Always.
He is here now in their solitude, watching from the fresh leaves. He is inside Maedhros, twisting his mind. He is in Fingonâs beautiful eyes, laughing. (Always laughing.)
Maedhros turns away.
He was there, laughing, when Maedhros fell to his knees in front of Fingolfin. When he pressed his head to Fingolfinâs feet and kissed them. When he gave Fingolfin all of his pride.
His brothers couldnât watch.
(But Morgoth did.)
Maedhros shakes his head, and his hair jumps across his face. He needs to be better than this. He needs to be stronger. Healers tell him it will take years to recover (if he recovers), but he does not have time. He has to be strong now.
This is Fingon. The world is real. That is the moon. That is the silver moon. Maedhros lifts his right hand to his mouth. His hand is gone. He draws his breath in again. Fingonâs hand is still on his arm. He has to be better than this. He drags his fĂŤa back to his body.
Thatâs what he wants, isnât it? To fade? Thatâs what they thought when they brought him back and he lay and stared. He was dead. He was dead. He was dead. But he cannot leave. He is bound. He wonât rest. He wonât be weak. His body is already strong, though he cannot remember training it. (He will remember.) He doesnât have time.
Fingon touches his hair.
Maedhros turns to him, and kisses him, and he holds him with his one hand and with the stump of his right arm, and he kisses him, and the moon is so silver it looks like a coin flipped into the sky.
He kisses him and breathes in the scent of his warm skin, and he draws him closer, and he closes his eyes, and he opens them again, and he says, âI can never make it up to you.â
Fingon shakes his head.
Maedhros kisses him so that he wonât speak, because he doesnât want to hear it. He doesnât want to hear Fingon say anything about him deserving life or that he couldnât live with himself if he left him because heâs already heard them and Fingonâs wrong on both counts. He deserved to die. And Fingon should not have risked his life for him. He was a coward. He should have struck his father down and brought the ships back himself. He should have.
He should have.
He was a coward and a fool. Morgoth knew it, but it doesnât matter that he did. Because he can be those things again, but he wonât be. And Morgoth knew NelyafinwĂŤ. And Morgoth killed NelyafinwĂŤ. He is someone else. He has long nails and strong, sharp teeth. Even if he has nothing else, he has those.
And he has other strengths too. He has his brothers. He has his sword. (He has an army.)
He kisses Fingon, and the air is hot, and he is not afraid of it. He can walk through fire. He can cut himself open easily. He can break himself a million times and piece himself together as many times (and more.)
He kisses Fingon, and the sky is blue, and the moon grows smaller as it rises higher, and he could pull it from the sky if that is what it would take to crush Morgoth.
He kisses Fingon, and Fingon is soft in his arms in a way that Maedhros will never be again. He is strong. He will always be strong, and no one, no one can kill him.
He is strong, and he is not afraid of death, for it cannot keep him. And he is not afraid of cold, for it cannot hold him. And he is not afraid of fire, for his spirit burns inside of him, white hot and indestructible.
He will never cower.
Three
Maedhros brushes his hair in the evening. The sunlight is gold. It folds into his hair, making the red brighter. His hair tickles across the back of his neck, and Maedhros touches it with his hand (his only hand).
Amras lies on the very edge of his bed, hands resting on his ribs, face turned to watch Maedhros.
Maedhros can see him if he looks back. Maedhros can see him in the mirror.
He is dressed in green. His red hair tumbles over the side of the bed when he shifts. Maedhros sits beside him and draws his legs over his lap. Amrasâs tunic slides up when Maedhros lifts his legs. His legs and feet are bare. He looks small there. Small and quiet with those bright hazel eyes like a sunlit forest.
Maedhros hesitates before he moves him. He lifts him gently from the mattress and shifts him over towards the centre of the bed. He brushes his fingers over the freckles on his shin.
Amras lifts his hand and strokes Maedhrosâs cheek with his knuckles. He has a soft look in his eyes, like he trusts Maedhros with the world. Like heâs always trusted him, more than he trusted Father.
Maedhros takes his hand and kisses it. He kisses the back of it and the palm of it, and he kisses each finger.
âLittle brother,â he whispers.
The air is soft. He feels warm. The sunlight plays at alchemy against his skin.
Amras traces the freckles on Maedhrosâs arm.
He says, âIn another life, we would be happy.â
âMaybe in this one too,â says Maedhros.
Amras closes his eyes, and Maedhros lies beside him and rests his head on his chest. Amrasâs heartbeat is slow. Maedhros holds Amrasâs hand over his ribs as he breathes.
It would be easy to kill him. He always thinks of such things now. How and when to kill and how fast it would be done and how much it would hurt. He doesnât want to, but he does. He does and he keeps records of them in his memory.
âI love you,â Amras whispers.
Maedhros kisses his lips and dark red lashes. He stops himself from kissing each freckle, suffocating Amras with his love. This possession is a weakness. He knows this. He draws his breath in, stills himself. Not even Amras can know how he aches to own. He gave that up. Never a king again.
He watches the way Amras breathes, so heâll never forget it.
âYou know I love you,â Maedhros says, and Amras hesitates. He studies Maedhros, and he touches his face, and the rays of the sun slip, and they fall.
In the morning, Maedhros meets Caranthir by the lake, and they stand together, watching the sun rise, watching it turn from red to yellow.
Maedhros shields his face with his prosthetic hand. Itâs copper. He lowers his arm, and it rests against his dark red cloak.
âItâs a mess,â Caranthir said. âI thought it would be⌠nobler, than all this.â
Maedhros shrugs.
âMe too.â
Caranthir rests his hand on Maedhrosâs shoulder. Maedhros could throw him down, and Caranthir would hit his head on the rocks they stand on. It would be easy to win after that.
âDonât,â Caranthir says.
Maedhros looks at him. But Caranthir just smiles and turns away.
âI donât know what I mean,â Caranthir says finally. âI donât think that exists anywhere. That⌠that vision we had in our heads. All easy and clean andâŚâ
âWe didnât know anything,â Maedhros says.
Caranthir scoffs, which means he agrees.
âBut youâre back,â he says. âAnd youâre really alive.â
Maedhros smiles. The sun rises higher.
âAnd that vision we had,â says Caranthir. âItâs gone now. Been replaced with a new dream.â
âIs it a good dream?â asks Maedhros.
âNo.â Caranthir shakes his head. âItâs not good, but it doesnât have to be bad either.â
Beneath the sun, the lake turns gold and blue.
Two
âYou shouldnât have done it,â Celegorm says.
Celegorm sits on the tall granite rock beside Maedhros, shirt off and spread out underneath him. Huan searches the woods nearby for sticks or hares.
The wind is soft, and the sunlight pale.
Celegorm shifts impatiently, pushing at his silver hair, silver hair that Father loved, treasured, braided, and cut. Father took the braid and locked it away. Father always kept pieces of them, in case he lost them.
âNot this again, Turko,â Maedhros says.
âThis again,â Celegorm says.
âItâs done,â Maedhros says. Celegormâs hair flashes silver over his face. âItâs done, and I cannot undo it.â
Celegorm grabs a red rock and hurls it down the drop before them.
âYour actions have consequences,â he says, voice changed to mock FinwĂŤ. FinwĂŤ who always said that when they did something stupid, FinwĂŤ who should have listened to himself, but never did.
âDonât,â Maedhros says sharply.
Celegorm slouches back. He picks at a scab on his arm until it bleeds again.
âDamn,â he says.
Huan comes back and lies beside them. Maedhros turns to run his hand through Huanâs thick fur. The lake far below them glitters in the low sun.
âDo you hate heights now?â Celegorm asks.
âNo.â
Celegorm frowns. He has a sharp, diagonal scar running onto his lip that leaves a line across the lip devoid of colour. Itâs the most noticeable scar on his face, and he got it playing. He fell off a wall, split his lip, had it stitched. He has scars from hunting, from fighting, a burn on his temple, but none stand out the way this one does. And he got it on such a peaceful day, just being careless for a moment.
âYou donât,â Maedhros says.
Celegorm shrugs. âI wasnât tortured.â
Maedhros shrugs in turn. He casts a rock down in front of him, and watches it ricochet off the jagged granite.
âI did not lose my mind,â he says.
Celegormâs lip curls.
âNo,â Maedhros says. âYou donât get to disagree.â
Celegorm closes his eyes. His hair whips over his bare back.
âFuck, Nelyo,â he says. âItâs forever.â
âThen cry,â Maedhros answers. âItâs done. I would not change it if I could.â
Celegorm turns away and slides his shirt on. It ripples about him.
âFine,â he says and stands. Huan follows him down the slope of granite into the pine forest.
The wind presses to Maedhros. The sun is almost silver.
Maedhros stands and lifts his sword with his left hand. He tests his balance on the ridge of the rock.
One
Maedhros stares into the mirror. He has not done this for a long time. His body is different than the body he remembers, the one he carries in his mind, in his dreams. He does not want to count out the differences. He is naked, and he hates that, so he dresses, and that doesnât feel much better, but itâs something.
He goes out into the night and runs up and down the hill until his feet bled. Heâs every definition of sane now, isnât he? They canât say he isnât now.
There is starlight on the snow. Itâs winter.
Itâs winter. Itâs going to be cold for a long time.
Fingon hates the winter. He hates ice and snow. He creeps around the yard, and the cold is everywhere. It bites and mocks.
Fingolfin should hate it, but he doesnât. His sword is like ice, and his eyes are like ice, and his hands are like ice, too, when he takes Maedhrosâs hands and says, âwhat now?â
Maedhros doesnât know what now. He hits the stone wall until his hand aches because he doesnât want to grow soft and unused to pain. He cannot ever be unprepared again. This is smart. This is rational. This is the sane thing to do.
He shakes his hand out after, and his skin is broken. He cries because the broken skin is weak, and he cannot make it stronger, even if he makes every muscle stronger. This is a flaw in him he cannot fix. He can wear armour, but underneath it, he is still soft flesh and soft skin, where he is not scarred.
The moon rises, and its light is blue on the clean stretch of new snow, coaxing out diamonds.
Maedhros kneels and presses his hand into the snow. The blood seeps into the snow. It is a deep red in the moonlight.
Fingolfin is like ice, and FĂŤanor was like fire, and Maedhros is a fire too, maybe, for his spirit burns inside of him, but it doesnât feel like FĂŤanorâs. FĂŤanor was wild and breaking open with life, rushing, roaring, like a furnace opened and the fire coming out to destroy.
Maedhros bends his head. His hair falls around him. It brushes his arms. He wants to destroy too, but not in the way FĂŤanor did. FĂŤanor broke trust and bonds and drew up grievances because he hurt and the whole world had to hurt too.
Maedhros screams. He stifles himself with his bleeding hand. He spits the blood back out.
What now.
They have to fight Morgoth. Maybe somehow they can defeat him. He has to think of a way. Heâs seen inside Angband. No one else will find a way.
He cannot shrink. He cannot run. He cannot hide. He must face the cold of the winter for as long as it takes. He must learn to be ice. He must learn to control fire. He must find a way. He is the only one who can. The only one.
He touches his neck where a line runs from the time they said they would bleed him. They didnât. They just marked the skin.
âYou should have killed me,â he whispers. âMorgoth.â
Maedhros raises his head and looks to the North. Morgoth made a mistake. Got too greedy. Wanted to hurt them too much. Played a hand too cruel.
He forgot how stupid you can be for love.
âYou should have killed me, Morgoth,â Maedhros says. âYou should have killed me. Itâs too late now.â
Zero
Maedhros is brave, and heâs sane, and heâs the only one who can stop Morgoth, but heâs on the floor again. And maybe this time he canât get up. He claws at his palms with his nails that he hasnât cut in too long because if he has them, he has another weapon.
He screams into the heel of his palm so that no one will come because he doesnât want anyone to see him on the floor again. He pulls at his hair so that there is a new pain. He bites at his hand. He bites each finger along the soft part between knuckle and joint, just above his palm. He bites just beneath his thumb. He leaves teeth marks on his skin, grey and indented.
He feels the pain of Morgoth not leaving him. It never leaves him. Heâs going to be sick.
He is sick, and by the time he has washed, Fingolfin has come. He brings wine and food, and he sits beside Maedhros on his bed, and watches out the window with him.
The stars fall tonight, and everyone watches.
âWill I be sick forever?â Maedhros asks Fingolfin as he drinks water mixed with wine and watches the stars fall. âI canât get it out of me⌠this. It wonât leave, and I canât cut it out of me.â
Fingolfin rests his hand on Maedhrosâs back and watches the stars. They shoot across the sky and disappear, one after the other, or at the same time. They come out of nothing and disappear into nothing. Fingolfin stroked Maedhrosâs hair.
âI try to be strong,â Maedhros says. âBut the pain is etched inside of me.â
âThat doesnât make you weak,â Fingolfin says. His hand is warm over Maedhrosâs hand, but his blue eyes are still ice. They are gentle, but there is a pain inside of them that will not leave. Maybe he too cannot be rid of it.
Maedhros leans forward and kisses his cheek.
âI love you, Uncle.â
Fingolfin puts his arm around Maedhrosâs shoulders. Maedhros rests his head against Fingolfinâs head.
âI wish I wasnât cold,â Fingolfin says. He takes Maedhrosâs cup and drinks from it. He eats off Maedhrosâs plate. Itâs the only way Maedhros will eat or drink. Someone has to share his plate and his cup so that he knows it isnât a trap.
Fingolfin rubs Maedhrosâs hand with his fingertips, pressing softly down on his skin, massaging his knuckles and the bend of his wrist. Itâs a circle that slides again and again over Maedhrosâs hand. Itâs how you might comfort a child in the midst of a storm.
âI love it when the stars break,â Maedhros says. âTheyâre so fast and so beautiful. If I could touch them, I would.â
Fingolfin rubs his hand. Maedhros cries. He cries, and Fingolfin rubs out the bite marks on his hand, until all that is left of the indentions is faint pink marks. Fingolfin lifts his hand to his lips and kisses it.
âI donât want to,â Maedhros says.
He doesnât want to live like this. He doesnât want to face each day fighting pain that builds and claws through his whole body. Itâs like having an ocean trapped inside of him, and the waves are fraught always, and they cannot escape.
He doesnât want to cry every night and fall to the floor because he cannot find the strength to stand. He is strong, but he is weeping, and still the stars fall.
Fingolfin stands. He unlatches the window and pushes it open. The air is cold, but now they can see the stars better.
Maedhros stands too, holding his blanket around him. Itâs from home. Itâs orange and copper woven together and stitched with gold and silver, blue stars. He plays with the fringe, where the fabrics jump together, glinting in the candlelight. Itâs been darned in two places, but he cannot find them.
He wants to draw a metaphor between him and the falling stars. He wants to be mended like a blanket worn through and darned together again. He wants to be poetic and beautiful, but all he can do is cry.
And the stars flash, and theyâre beautiful, and then gone. And the blanket is warm, and that is its purpose, and it would still be warm even if it wasnât beautiful. And he wants to make some point. He wants to call himself brilliant and gone too fast, but his life doesnât line up with the falling stars, for he didnât die when he begged Fingon to kill him, and he didnât die when he begged Morgoth to kill him, and he didnât die, and he didnât die, and he didnât die.
FĂŤanor was a falling star. FĂŤanor was fire and love and life and starlight, coming out of nowhere and then gone again, burnt up.
Maedhros shakes. Fingolfin wraps his arms around him.
âI miss him,â Maedhros whispers, voice trembling. âI miss him so much it could stop my very heart.â
Fingolfin holds him tighter.
Negative One
This is winter. This is winter always. It is cold in Himring. Itâs cold when youâve moved across the world and youâre alone and youâre a kinslayer.
Itâs cold when itâs winter, and itâs cold when itâs summer, and itâs cold when the sun shines on you, but you could never be warm.
You could never be warm. You could never be cold. You could never be anything but a soldier. Who told you this? (Does it even matter when itâs true?)
Maedhros stands with his back straight. The river lies dark before him. Ice crusts along the edge of the bank, glinting white in the starlight.
He likes the way the water ripples in the night. It becomes black and then white as it freezes. He could watch the whole river freeze. He could walk across it and break through the ice and go crashing down, swallowed whole by cold and water.
The water would plunge into his mouth, tear it open. The water would press against his eyes, punch them in. The water would flood into his lungs, and he would breathe cold in as it froze him.
His body would freeze. His blood turn to crystals. Water would scrape the flesh from his bones and leave his skeleton white, white beneath the surface of the river, white carried to the sea, white beneath the stars. His bones, like bleached driftwood, would dash against rocks, and no one would ever find him whole.
The water laps against the riverbank. The ice cracks and forms again. He could not die in water. (Where could he die?)
He looks up again at the stars, and they give him no answer, for he is cursed. The curse lies heavy on him, pressing him down. He drinks in the cold air. The stars are all blistering.
Maedhros lies awake on a hard bed that cuts his back. His wounds scab over in the night as he hangs, from his bed, by his hand.
The clouds laugh in the sky. Smoke chokes them. They die laughing. Just like Father? If only he could remember.
The cliff is a lullaby. The cliff is a bed. The bed is alone in a fortress, and it is winter.
He used to count the rocks below him. There were seven thousand. Seven hundred. Seventy. Seven.
Would he die if he fell on them? Was he ever allowed to fall?
In a locked room, Father clasped the Silmarils around his neck.
âYou are beautiful,â he said.
Those Silmarils, Morgoth forced on him. He stood and watched their light on his head.
âYou are beautiful,â he said.
And he took Maedhros by the hand and hung him like an ornament. Was he still beautiful?
It is strange what one can remember. What one canât forget.
Strange how you can wake in the dark, still screaming, with your bed soaked with sweat. Undress and your shirt is wet. Hang your sheets to dry.
Sometimes Maglor comes to visit, and Maedhros stays in his room very late until Maglor asks him to sleep there. He lies beside him. Maglorâs hair is braided in one braid down his back, and Maedhros fingers the end of it, and Maglor tells him heâs sorry, but he already knows.
Maglor turns over to face Maedhros. Maglor lies still and studies him, and Maedhros doesnât know what he expects to see in his eyes. But Maglor is soft like he used to be, if he looks hard enough. Heâs a soldier too, but heâs never been stripped down to nothing and forced to remake himself from that.
Maglor has blue eyes like a night sky and black hair like the shadows. He holds Maedhrosâs hand, and light spills from him, and the brightness of it is like Father.
Maedhros has grey eyes like morning and hair like a sunrise, and light erupts from him and breaks through every crack in his body. He could be daylight if he tried.
Maglor rests a hand over a scar on his chest, and that isnât enough to heal him, but still he presses Maglorâs hand to him, and it might be warm.
Outside, the wind howls. It screams against the walls. It is strong enough to lift you.
Maglor gets up and lays another blanket on the bed. A lock of his dark hair has worked itself free of his braid and falls across his face. He shakes his head to move it. It slips over his face again. Maglor gets into bed. Maedhros tucks his hair behind his ear.
âWhat if it all spills out?â he says. His heart. His soul. He tried to let it before, but it wouldnât go.
Maglor lowers his eyes.
âWe are cursed,â Maglor says, and his voice sounds like the night too. Maedhros strokes his hair and shoulder. He feels his fĂŤa brush Maglorâs. It wasnât like this before. Maglor knows this too, but he doesnât pull away. He smiles sweetly at him. Maedhros wonders if he will be able to keep his sweetness forever.
âYour hair smells of smoke,â Maedhros says.
The wind lifts Fingon. It lifts him and sets him on his feet again, and Fingon laughs because he doesnât know how to lose joy or hope. Maedhros does not know yet if that is a curse or blessing.
Fingon holds onto his arm. His mittens are blue and white, patterned with diamonds.
âYou did well,â he says over the wind. His hair is wrapped beneath a scarf and hat and hood, but there is still a glint of gold against his skin, peeking out from beneath his blue scarf.
âThank you,â Maedhros answers. He looks out over the land. The lupine are in bloom, and their purple is strong against the brown land, but still it is winter.
âWe hope for the best, yes?â Fingon says. His arms are tight around Maedhrosâs arm.
Maedhros rests his chin on the top of his head. The wind rips a tree down by the river.
âAre you afraid of what the future holds?â Maedhros asks.
âWe donât know what the future holds,â Fingon answers. His voice is small beneath the wind. âBut I hope for good, and that we will have peace.â So he hopes, but he does not know.
Isnât there a fear in not knowing? Isnât that fear itself?
Maedhros feels Morgoth standing behind them. He sees Morgoth out of the corner of his eye. He disappears when Maedhros looks at him.
The wind carries the torn tree across the ground. It lifts and throws it, and it spins through the air like a pin-wheel and crashes down again. Soon the river takes it.
âItâs cold,â Fingon says.
It is cold, and Morgoth is watching. The wind takes another tree down. The ground is too soft by the river. Nothing lasts.
They go inside and eat supper alone together, off the same plate, from the same cup. (Fingon doesnât comment).
âIt goes down into the very base of the hill,â Maedhros says. âAnd below. It is cut deep.â Maedhros must have told him already.
Fingon nods. He holds the wooden cup and studies the carvings. His hair is braided many times, and each braid is twined with gold. He blows on a spoonful of soup and drinks it.
âItâs good,â he says.
Fingon undresses in Maedhrosâs room after dinner without Maedhros asking him to stay. Maedhros smiles. Fingon stands in his under things in front of the fire. The white of his shirt and pants glows golden in the flames.
Fingon could melt, Maedhros thinks. He is the only person in the world who would melt like a candle if he was set on fire. He does not know how he knows this, but it is true. He would melt, and all that would be left of him would be a puddle. Not any bones.
Fingon smiles at Maedhros. He holds his hand towards the flames.
âDo you think I made a mistake?â Maedhros asks.
Fingon looks over his shoulder again. His lips part.
âYou,â Maedhros said. âUncle. I.â This is incoherent, but Morgoth is watching. âYou wouldnât want it, would you?â
Fingon turns back to the flames.
âWe are immortal.â
They do not die, but they can die. Fingonâs seen enough of death for his answer to not be a true answer. Maedhros does not press him. There is not much Fingon could say. He should not have asked. Fingon touches a taiga jay carved into the mantle.
Morgoth shifts in his seat by the window. Maedhros moves away from him. He stands behind Fingon and rests his hands (flesh and copper) on his arms.
âIs it enough that I loved you?â he asks and this is another thing he shouldnât say. âThat I didnât burn the ships? Was that enough for you?â
âI didnât know you didnât burn them,â Fingon answers. âIt was enough that I loved you.â
âI donât know why.â
Fingon watches the flames.
âDo you ever think of if our places were changed?â Fingon says. âAnd how you would have saved me then?â
Fingon is so certain. Maedhros smells his hair. It smells like spring and gold.
âArenât you cold?â Maedhros says.
âNo. Itâs not cold by the fire.â
Fingon helps Maedhros undress. He folds his clothes for him. He places them with his clothes. He sits on the hearth and pokes at the fire with a stick. Sparks rise. Maedhros sits beside him, wrapped in his blanket of orange and copper.
âSee?â Fingon says.
Maedhros does not know if he sees. Fingon takes his hand, and it is cold.
âDonât cry,â Fingon says. âIâm sorry. What did I say?â
Maedhros does not cry. He brushes his tears away and rests his head against the leg of the fireplace. He watches a log fall as it burns. It is consumed.
They lie together for a long time in his bed without touching. They are not alone. There is the wind, and there is Morgoth, and there is the red of the fire on the stone ceiling.
âYou could paint stars on the ceiling,â Fingon says. His voice sounds distant.
âIâve seen enough of stars,â Maedhros says, and that is why he is no longer an elf, and that is why Fingon cries in the bed beside him.
Maedhros holds him in his arms and kisses him.
âI am sorry, dear,â he whispers.
He is glad that Fingon is crying, and he is sick with himself for that, but comforting Fingon now means he doesnât have to focus on anything but him, and the cold is forgotten. The searching wind is forgotten. And Morgoth isnât forgotten, but he can pretend, really, if he tries.
Fingon presses his face to Maedhrosâs chest. He is a kinslayer too, even though his hands are soft, and he trembles.
Maedhros kisses him.
âHush,â he murmurs. âHush, sweet one.â
He kisses Fingonâs tears and his eyes. He kisses his hair and hands. He holds him, and it is cold, but he could be warm if he tried.
Maedhros sits alone. The wind is his only lover. He is not allowed more. This is like hanging. This is just like hanging. Maedhros touches his right arm.
See how he cut you? Morgoth says. Morgoth waits by the door so that Maedhros will have to pass him to go inside.
Maedhros does not go inside. He sits under the stars and watches the river thaw. The ice creaks. The floes gnash against each other. The wind cries over the hills, and all of it together is music.
Maedhros watches the stars wheel across the sky. He has seen enough of stars. But still it is that he loves them. It is love that lets him draw each new breath. Love that keeps him from breaking apart at every seam and spilling out into the wind.
Love or a curse.
But they could be the same. For love and a vow were. He tilts his head back, and the wind cuts his face.
See? This is strength.
See? This is breaking.
But breaking and being able to piece together again everything broken: That is strength. That is what he knows.
Green light slips across the stars. Maedhros watches it. The air is sweet with lupine and heavy with mud. The ice breaks. Maedhros stands and walks beside the river. He steps over the branches of a bent tree. It bent, but it keeps growing that way. Maybe it will last. He does not count on it.
He follows the river, and the Northern Lights grow above him. He keeps his head high. The wind stings with ice, but he does not hide from it. He walks, and the wind sings, and he watches the North. He is never alone, but he is always alone, and the fate of the world rests in his hands, but he only has one, so isnât it funny?
And he doesnât fly. He doesnât run. He does not hide from the cold, from the winter, from Morgoth, who is watching. He will not be moved.
He runs, and he screams. His body is hale, and his eyes are bright, and he is standing.
He will never leave.
Morgoth watches.
Congrats The Hobbit Trilogy, you are no longer the worst thing to come out of the Tolikien universe!
Are you telling me
That the mithril factory
In Dimension 20âs Fantasy High
Is named Durinson
As fucking Tolkien reference
Because it better be

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Ăowyn my beloved
This is a public service announcement to remind everyone that
Gandalf Easter is on February 15th!!!
So if you are aro, single, or just love Gandalf, remember that this lovely holiday is just around the corner!
Some celebratory suggestions include:
Painting eggs to look like LotR characters!
Hiking up snowy mountains!
Wearing white!
Taking advantage of cold weather to blow smoke rings!
Thinking about philosophy!
Stroking an imaginary beard!
Saying "Happy Gandalf Easter!" to anyone you meet!
(To which the proper response is, of course, "whatever do you mean by that?")
Muttering to moths!
And yourself!
Calling everyone a fool!
Eating PO-TAY-TOES!
(this is more Samwise day, but whatever)
Being mysterious!
Wearing a cool ring with fire doodles on it!
Being "on time" to everything!
FIREWORKS!!!
And, of course
Watching LotR!
So have fun celebrating with your favorite "Fool of a Took" on the most wonderful holiday of the year this Saturday, and remember that although some of us may wish that Valentine's Day need not have happened, all we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given us, and if that choice is Gandalf Easter, you may indeed make your world a happier place.
Fly, you fools! To celebrating!
The True Death of Smaug l An Animated Short Loyal to the Books | Hello Future Me








