Fëanáro Curufinwë (
feanaro_curufinwe) wrote2014-12-19 08:41 pm
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Fëanáro stands alone at the side of a black road, stretching in a straight line from horizon to horizon, sere grasses waving on either side, stretching just as far. The breeze ruffles his hair as well, carrying the smell of sun-warmed earth and those same grasses, as well as smells unfamiliar to him, but welcome nonetheless.
Because he never thought he would stand here, never thought he would see the line where earth meets sky again until the end of all things, and so even though this place is nothing like what he would ever have chosen to be in himself... He can enjoy it and appreciate it, for at least as long as it takes to find his way to some kind of civilisation.
Because he never thought he would stand here, never thought he would see the line where earth meets sky again until the end of all things, and so even though this place is nothing like what he would ever have chosen to be in himself... He can enjoy it and appreciate it, for at least as long as it takes to find his way to some kind of civilisation.
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"Better light up here," he said quietly.
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Sorry Clark, you are much less interesting than your... whatever it is. Perhaps if Fëanáro had been more inclined to the life sciences Clark would have been more interesting - her certainly doesn't miss the ease with which the Man(?) lifted the object - but he is accustomed to such feats, from the Ainur, and the more mighty among the Eldar alike, and therefore...
Well.
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...not that the elf is thinking on secrets of that nature right now, so much as the mechanical secrets of the...
"What do you call this?"
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"My capsule. My space ship. My rocket."
He walks over to the front end, the small globe of blue and pokes the side. It wobbles, like water suspended in a bubble.
"I was put in here when I was a baby. This brought me from the planet I came from to this one. We don't have... anything like this in this country. On this world, really. Like I said: it's the most advanced thing you're going to find. Mostly because it came from a civilization so far away from here, the light from--" he swallowed again, "the light from Rao, the star that serves as the planet's sun, takes roughly twenty seven years to reach this world."
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...congratulations Clark, you have officially rendered the High King speechless.
For approximately thirty seconds, before he unleashes a genuine barrage of questions about this other world, because another world??? With people, and cities, and technology that was unknown in his day, and apparently yet unknown on Arda, and he wants to know all about it.
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"It took me a few years to figure out the language. Even with my... I mean, I'm pretty smart, but the language is incredibly complex. This was put with me, though, so I figure they wanted me to know where I came from. Who I came from."
His father had hated every bit of it.
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"So then this is the tongue of your birth?"
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His lip twitched just a little into a smile, the first genuine one since he'd come out here.
"It's a little more orthographically sound than English."
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"The forms are certainly more pleasing to the eye," he says wryly. "I should like to learn them, as well; in return, I would be pleased to both continue your Quenya lessons, and teach you the Tengwar. Unless," he continues, arching a brow. "You already know them? You said before that you had learned some Quenya from a book."
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He looked at the images from the tablet.
"It makes it more real, to share it. Someone else other than me will remember them."
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"Destroyed. My father was..." he thought back to the books he'd read, the scholar's lore, and couldn't help the smile, "he was a bit like you. The foremost scientist of his world.
"He saw the end coming, saw what was happening to the planet. He tried to warn the council that ruled Krypton what could occur and they didn't listen. So, trying to..." he looked at the spaceship, at the tablet, "trying to preserve the best parts of Krypton and his culture, he and my mother sent me here."
He knew now what his biological father intended for him, but he wasn't quite sure how to accomplish it, what to do with it. He was still figuring that out. Really, it all sounded too grand for him, too big. For all he could do, for all he knew, for all the wonders he could see and hear and feel, it still seemed so big.
His head tipped towards the house.
"Ma and Pa found me in this thing, took me in, raised me like their own. As their own."
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"You do them credit," he says finally. "I cannot yet say that I know you well at all, but I can see that it is so."
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"My name amongst Men is Clark Joseph Kent. My Kryptonian name, the one that text refers to me as, is Kal-El, last of the House of El. And the glyph that you see on the ship and on that tablet is the sign of the House of El. It means 'hope'."
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And it makes enough sense. He was, in a very real sense, the carrier of his planet's, and his parents', hopes and dreams.
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"That is great deal to put onto one small child," he says. "Though you would hardly be the first so burdened."
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He breathes out with a bit of a huff.
"Would you like to spend some time studying the tablet and the ship or discussing the book from earlier?"
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"I am torn," he admits then, feeling-- sheepish, in a way that he has not for Years untold. "For as a lover-of-language I wish nothing more than to discuss a new piece of literature. As an artist and crafter, however, I would dearly love to explore the possibilities - if only hypothetical - inherent in the existence of materials from entire other worlds."
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"You're probably going to be here more than one night. All you need to chooses is for tonight."
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"All I ask is that you're careful with the ship. It's... all that I have, but I'm sure you can understand."