Boundaries by Dawn Felagund
Fanwork Notes
This story was written for my friend and collaborator Oshun on the occasion of her 100th character bio.
See the endnotes for translations of Quenya names.
- Fanwork Information
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Summary:
Fingon is constantly pushing Maedhros's boundaries, but this time, he has gone too far. Put on mandatory sick leave after an injury, Maedhros decides to spend his three weeks recuperating alone, setting Fingon on a chase across Aman to find and make amends to his lover ... and yes, transgress one more boundary, one more time. Maedhros/Fingon. Written for Oshun, for the occasion of her 100th character biography.
Major Characters: Fëanor, Fingolfin, Fingon, Maedhros, Turgon
Major Relationships:
Artwork Type: No artwork type listed
Genre: Drama, Romance, Slash/Femslash
Challenges: Caprice and Chance
Rating: Adult
Warnings: Expletive Language, Mature Themes, Sexual Content (Moderate)
This fanwork belongs to the series
Chapters: 1 Word Count: 13, 627 Posted on 18 July 2019 Updated on 18 July 2019 This fanwork is complete.
Table of Contents
(1) Comment by oshun for Boundaries
I love this story! There is so much to love! It is certainly the longest gift-fic I have ever received from you (and perhaps the longest ever, including some awesome fic swap entries in this fandom over the years).
AND it is about my two very favorite characters and their relationship with one another.
I cannot post the final and adequate comment on this story this morning. But I want you to know it is coming soon--I am writing it in my head as I type. Meanwhile, I raced through this story and now am re-reading.
Thank you with all of my heart. It is chock-full of awesome elements and I intend to tell you what I think they are.
Later!!
Re: (1) Comment by oshun for Boundaries
I'm so glad you liked it! Thank you for reading it so quickly and enthusiastically--and telling me right away! :D I wrote it entirely with you in mind. I fought against it going dark; naturally, it wanted to because I was writing it. But I didn't let it! :D
It probably would have been much shorter but for the damned Matryoshka challenge. I figured that, since I keep foisting them on others, I should try writing one myself. I remember the first year we did one, there was a minimum word count (something like 2K-3K words?) for the Difficult, and people complained because they couldn't use the challenge to write their 500-word ficlets. Having done one, and a Difficult, I don't see how anything that short would be possible for this challenge. It could have spiraled much longer than it did. I kept it in check because it was late enough as it is!
(2) Comment by Himring for Boundaries
This story is packed with so many rich and varied details! I'll have to re-read it.
My favourite bit probably is your description of Maglor's music: both how wonderful it is, as an experience, and its effect on the listeners.
It's extremely well-described, that moment when Fingolfin is inspired to be friendly to Feanor and how that impulse dissipates. It also made me sad, as all those other hints of the deterioriation of relations among Feanor's family and the rest.
At least Turgon manages to follow through on his friendly impulse!
(The different fighting styles of the brothers are also well described.)
Fingon is almost as dogged, pursuing elusive Maedhros all the way through Valinor, as he will be later on... Even if he was at fault, to begin with.
Oh, I was also amused by the chard!
Re: (2) Comment by Himring for Boundaries
Thank you, Himring! I'm glad you liked it, although as an old-school AMC fan, I expected this one might appeal as well! :D
I'm so relieved to hear that the scene with Feanor and Fingolfin at the concert worked as I intended. I wanted this to be the turning point in the story--the moment when Fingon (deliberately naive of family politics) is effortlessly made into a pawn in his father's fight with his uncle and fully realizes WHY Nelyo's work is actually important and what it means to be the keystone in their family, as he says of Nelyo.
The chard! I actually adore chard (all greens in fact) and am a little jealous because a pair of voracious groundhogs ate all of ours this year. But maybe chard every day for a week would get old ... It just seemed a food that wouldn't appeal to Fingon, and the word is so damned unappealing (even though the plant is delicious and beautiful).
Thanks again for reading and commenting! ^_^
(3) Comment by oshun for Boundaries
First, chard! Ha! I was dying in sympathy with Fingon about this. We buy chard every week, but throw out half of it (and I hate to waste food!). My favorite method of preparing chard takes two days! (*--see recipe below.) I am the master of preparing meals in the summer from all fresh food and having them ready and on the table in less than an hour without heating up the kitchen. But chard annoys the hell out of me. And a lot of it goes bad before I can summon the energy/foresight to prepare it. I understand why Maedhros buys it. I also understand why a little goes a long, long way for Fingon. I am assuming that Maedhros does the cooking.
There is so much to unpack from this story! I love how it fits with AMC verse and some of my stories heavily derivative, but different from AMC. Wow!
On a purely emotional and storytelling level I adore the romance and contrast between the two in their styles. Fingon is the aggressor but actually is a needy, pushy-bottom if one has to make those distinctions. (I think in real life it is rarely that simple. And it is not in this story either!) I absolutely adore the descriptions of Fingon making the first moves, but Maedhros blowing his mind with his intensity and forceful responses.
He knows me and that I don’t care for being crushed beneath him (he’s tall!), and I know him and that he prefers to do the crushing.
* * *
He pulled me into bed with him and flipped me onto my back. “Damn it, Findekáno,” he said and crushed me.
* * *
It was helped by a bottle of lemon-yellow Telerin mead that must have gotten the bees drunk making the honey because it left Nelyo utterly uninhibited to where I would have worried about the amount of noise he was making if, one, I wasn’t thoroughly drunk myself and, two, we weren’t in Alqualondë where attitudes toward sex are decidedly less buttoned-up than in Tirion. Anyway, Nelyo uninhibited in bed? Is a force of nature, like making love with an electrical storm.
I cannot even wrap my mind around how hot that last part is without being the slightest bit explicit. Less is more in this case, although I have been thinking that myself in recent years. No wonder Fingon chases after Maedhros--who would be willing to let that go!
This next part is WILD! And absolutely perfect characterization!!
I tried to make small talk with them—“Are you enjoying the summer? Get any deer lately? How’s the weather been holding up?”—but talking with the twins was like throwing pebbles at a mountain (Ambarto) where they made not even a whisper of sound or impression or into a big cloudy pond (Ambarussa) where you know the words went in but what happened to them? Never for me to know.
Feanor's banner(s)! Where have your principles gone, Feenie!?
I'm trying to figure out less who knows what is going on between Maedhros and Fingon--almost everyone? More interesting is who hasn't guessed? ["I mean that all forms of love are accepted here. All forms.”] And, if so, why not? M/F seem pretty obvious to me. I remember discussions about that kind of thing in my family--like when one of my nephews brought his "best friend" to Thanksgiving and had never come out as gay--and how there were those who did not see the obvious while others had known long before the couple themselves had acted.
The family stuff in your various Finwean story-verses never ceases to kill me! You always nail it. (And this praise is coming from someone with a BIG and often contentious family.)
You have a way of making me feel so unexpectedly tender toward Feanor. You bring tears to my eyes. No matter what kind of an ass he has been earlier in a story.
“Your son, he’s nothing short of extraordinary,” and Fëanáro said, “I know,” for once not sounding arrogant but slightly surprised, like he-who-knew-so-much had discovered something new too.
Speaking of Maglor, OMG! You outdid yourself with that entire description of Maglor's artistry--so many canon references covered by that. For example, of course, I thought of the ability to elevate the power of music to a form of magical communication and power. We see examples of Luthien and Finrod in canon texts, but imagine what Maglor is capable of... Wonderful stuff in those passages.
And Fingon and the little harp!!
“Our Cousin’s favorite song can be played upon such a harp, in fact, small enough to be carried in a pack on the Great Journey.”
* * *
“I brought this back,” I said, “to serenade you—after I broke into Grandfather’s study, of course, and forced him to reveal where you’d gone—and win you back by playing that song you love? The one you discovered with Macalaurë?”
Jeez, Dawn! You are not above pulling out all the stops on the organ here, are you?
This is killing me--the entire story is echoing just how far Fingon is willing to go to find Maedhros when he goes missing. I am envious that you wrote this, but my gratitude outweighs my envy.
I need to send this without proofing. I have written so much that if I accidentally lost it I would slit my wrists!
I adore this. Love it so much!! You knocked it out of the ballpark again! Thank you so much.
*Chard recipe: easy but requires planning--remove the tough veins/stems from mature chard (throw those in the freezer and use in soup another time or use baby chard) slice into ribbons, massage with olive oil and lemon juice, mash up avocado as though one was making guacamole, stir into the chard mixture, marinate overnight--or the chard will be bitter and tough--and, finally, dress with more slices/or chunks of avocado the next day and serve. (We salt to taste at the table.) It is ambrosia! If you try to prepare it with less than the overnight marinating, it's likely to be bitter and tough. But despite the ambrosiac results, it is a p-i-a. Who feels like doing that even once a week? Not me. Wow! But guests rave over the chard salad when we can manage to produce it.
Re: (3) Comment by oshun for Boundaries
I'm sorry for the delay in replying to this wonderful comment--my family was visiting this past week, so my computer was limited. I got it and read it right away, however, while riding in the car going to the beach at Willoughby Lake. I told my family when I got it and how happy it made me. :D
Chard: I adore chard! All greens, really. I mostly chose it, from the array of greens available, because the name sounds so unappetizing to me. Chard. Ugh. It doesn't sound like it should be as tasty and as beautiful of a plant as it is. I hoped the ugly name might give it a little comic effect, which seems to have worked. (Also, a groundhog got into our greens, including the chard, and devoured them all. I was listening to daily rants from Bobby about this. So I had chard on the brain.)
Thank you for the chard recipe too! I'll pass that on to Bobby ... once we get some chard back! (He killed the groundhog, but the mere mention of groundhogs is still kind of triggering right now! :D)
"I'm trying to figure out less who knows what is going on between Maedhros and Fingon--almost everyone? More interesting is who hasn't guessed?"
Definitely Maglor. Caranthir because he's my Caranthir. (Same with the Arafinweans.) And I'm guessing Turgon too; he knows the edge to his remarks when he wields them. And Nerdanel.
I don't see either of the fathers being able to see far enough beyond their own noses to understand much beyond the use of having the other's eldest son in his back pocket. The other siblings are questionable. Definitely not Tyelko; that poor kid is SO naive.
That's my own vision, of course, assuming that others *do* know (which I also would not find surprising. I suspected my sister was bi before she came out to me.)
"The family stuff in your various Finwean story-verses never ceases to kill me! You always nail it. (And this praise is coming from someone with a BIG and often contentious family.)"
This is funny, given how small my own immediate family is and that I spent most of my life estranged from most of my extended family. (My family is eccentric, though, so maybe it's just turning up the volume on how they/we act. My dad definitely inspires my Feanor, for instance.)
"Jeez, Dawn! You are not above pulling out all the stops on the organ here, are you?"
Hell no I'm not! This story was intended to honor 100 freaking bios! :D I went full send!
I'm glad you liked it. You are probably the friend whose reading tastes I know best, so I really tried to make something you would love. I had to pull it back from wanting to go dark multiple times, but for you, I did it! :D
And thank *you* for such a lovely, long, thoughtful comment. <3
(4) Comment by ziggy for Boundaries
I read and savoured EVERY WORD of this, not only reading but enacting it in my mind- imagining how Findekano would do this, and then that- and Nelyo's expression, his hands- because you have PERFECTLY described every moment. It is like drninking the telerin mead you describe. Utterly gorgeous, absorbing, layered, affectionate, perfect.
From the moment, Kano tumbles them ridiculously down the steps, imagining the silly romance he has been reading, to the harp- he absolutely has me falling in love with him- and for me it has always been Nelyo then Kano. But this made me see him differently- I love the narrative voice-his impetuous headlong rush to pursue Nelyo is slightly surprised and bemused- and yet he is accepted so easily (Love the visit to Formenos!)
I really enjoyed the scenes/ progress of their relationship, how hopefully Findekano listened (not quite listening but squirming in hope and anticipation) to Nelyo's oh so sensible caution.
Or, mostly, I wanted to impress Nelyo that I was capable of being adult about all this. I did become aware that I was twisting my fingers. They hurt. And I’m afraid I was rather pop-eyed with anticipation and hope that was not dying an easy death, and my mouth was open a bit. My heart was pounding so loudly that I might have heard him wrong? Oh, let me have heard him wrong!
But, no, when I said nothing, he went on. “Surely you understand, Káno. Even if it weren’t a double taboo—two men! and first cousins!—our family is in such a delicate situation right now, a situation that, if not resolved properly, could be ruinous for our people. We have to walk so, so lightly, and another scandal—”
“Half,” I said.
He’d clearly prepared the words he was saying to me. I knew the way he blinked when derailed from a lecture he’d intended to deliver straight-through; Tyelkormo and I used to do it intentionally, when we were children and he was trying to teach us. He blinked at me now. “What?” he said.
“Half,” I repeated. “We’re half first cousins.”
Just as it used to, his face firmed into that you’re-being-ridiculous look of disapproval. My heart broke a little inside me.
Desperate last line! And then there is this WONDERFUL, blissful piece of writing:
I took myself down the hall to his room. I knocked but was already opening the door when he called for me to come in. He was in bed, nodding off over a book. His crimson hair was unbound and fanned behind him on the pillow. It was a hot night, and the thin silk sheet that covered him from the hips down was clearly all he wore. I went and sat on the edge of his bed and took the book from his hands and clapped it shut and put it on the night table. There was a bookmark there but fuck it.
“Ulmo’s water, Findekáno!” He was groggy but clearly upset that I’d lost his place. He reached for the book, so I gave it an extra shove that sent it out of reach and almost to the floor. “What in the—”
I touched his face.
Instantly he stilled and quieted. “Boundaries are meant to be crossed, Nelyo,” I said. “When our grandfather and Ingwë planted those flowers between their cities, they didn’t do it to stop people from coming over. They did it so people would know, hey, the rules have changed here! I need to be a little different on this side! So there’s a boundary for us. That doesn’t mean we don’t cross it! Oh, we cross it, my love, but we just act differently on the other side. Carefully.”
His hand had risen to my wrist. I believe he meant to toss my hand away, but when I said “my love,” the touch changed. He covered my hand with his, slid it from his face to his throat, his chest. I could feel his heart thundering under my palm. I think he wanted to slide it further down, but he lost his courage there, so I helped him by leaning over and kissing him.
Fangurrrllll screaming!
I love the little jokes, chard, the sword fighting positions, and the glimpse of Formenos - although the changes are marked and emphasised indeed just how much Nelyo's work is important, that delicate balance, the arguments between Feanaro and Nelyo and their denial that they were anything but. These layers of meaning in your writing give it such depth and it is succincnt and whilst not sparse, never wasteful or indulgent or hyperbolic. I am always envious of your self -discipline!
The other two scenes, the warm pool and telerin mead scene ( oh. my) wonderfully understated and so much wilder because of just that one word: unihibited; and then Macalure's concert -which is stunning- these two scenes I have read over and over. And then this lovely detail:
“Our Cousin’s favorite song can be played upon such a harp, in fact, small enough to be carried in a pack on the Great Journey.”
Turukáno watched me for a moment, then pushed the harp in my hands. “Take it then. Maybe it will help you find him.”
Oh yes!
Gorgeous.
Re: (4) Comment by ziggy for Boundaries
Wow--what a great comment! Thank you so much! This was lovely to come in to this morning.
I'm really glad you enjoyed the story. I really enjoyed writing it! It was my first time writing a Matryoshka challenge so the whole story was shaped to fit those prompts, and it was a little scarier than I expected, but a lot of the details that have been well-liked (like the little harp!) wouldn't be in here if not for that challenge.
All the scenes you noted were favorites of mine too, so I'm glad they worked for more than just me!
And the chard! I feel like the chard has achieved a special status in this story. I included it because a groundhog had destroyed all of our greens, so I had greens on the brain, and "chard" is such an unpleasant-sounding word for such a lovely, tasty plant. I feel like it's reaching the level of the snails in AMC that Macalaure spits on the floor.
Thank you again for such a lovely comment. I'm so happy you liked this! :D
(5) Comment by ziggy for Boundaries
More than liked it-adored is not a strong enough word for how I feel when I see you have posted something. I do give a fangurrrl scream- frightens the cat!
I don't know this challenge so will google it but I wish you posted elsewhere as well as SWG- your writing should have such a wide and appreciative readership. I know you have some stories on Ao3 and Faerie would welcome you (small select readership). I just love your writing and am so excited that you are writing another Caranthir fic. You write him better than anyone else.
Ha- chard. There is a place called Chard in Somerset, England. When we go past it we always pronounce it with a very strong rhotic rrrrrrrrrrr like some Somerset yokel.
Re: (5) Comment by ziggy for Boundaries
I don't know if you'll find much about Matryoshka challenges because I invented them! :D We run one each year on the SWG. The idea is that you receive a series of prompts. You open the first one and follow the directions (which will include directions on when to open the next), so your story is being constantly reshaped by new prompts as you write. There are three levels: easy (3 prompts), medium (5 prompts), and difficult (7 prompts). This one was for the difficult set.
Usually I can't participate because I make the prompts, so it's not exactly fair since I know what's coming. (Making one of these challenges takes hours of deliberation and rearrangement of prompts, so they're usually seared into my brain by the end.) But work this year, at the end of the school year, was so stressful that I have actually lost memory of most of it. Like, May is pretty much completely gone. Which conveniently included the challenge I made. So I went ahead and tried it this year.
I do cross-post to AO3 and my own website. I would consider Faerie; I just worry that there's a lot of overlap in readership already? I don't want to be annoying. In any case, I'll think about it! :D
(6) Comment by ziggy for Boundaries
Didn't know about YOUR website!!!!
I did realise there is a post about the challenges- might have a go at those next time. At the moment, I'm struggling with my own stuff but nearly finished the long one and am looking forward to a bit of freedom.
Re: (6) Comment by ziggy for Boundaries
Yes! DawnFelagund.com! :D It doesn't have all (or even most) of my fiction up yet; all of my meta/scholarly work is there.
We do the challenges monthly; there is usually a new one on the 15th, even though I might very rarely be a day late in announcing it. They're announced here, on our DW and LJ, Tumblr, and our Discord. If you get to a point where you want to do a challenge, I hope you'll join us! :D
Author's Response:
Yes! DawnFelagund.com! :D It doesn't have all (or even most) of my fiction up yet; all of my meta/scholarly work is there.
We do the challenges monthly; there is usually a new one on the 15th, even though I might very rarely be a day late in announcing it. They're announced here, on our DW and LJ, Tumblr, and our Discord. If you get to a point where you want to do a challenge, I hope you'll join us! :D
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