Exodus of the Noldor by Writing Gecko

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Fanwork Notes

Posted as part of the Silmarillion40 event.

Fanwork Information

Summary:

After the Exile of the Noldor, Arafinwe and Aule reflect on things which can be fixed, and those that cannot.

Major Characters: Aulë, Finarfin

Major Relationships:

Artwork Type: No artwork type listed

Genre:

Challenges:

Rating: Creator Chooses Not to Rate

Warnings: Creator Chooses Not to Warn

This fanwork belongs to the series

Chapters: 1 Word Count: 2, 707
Posted on 25 September 2017 Updated on 25 September 2017

This fanwork is complete.

Exodus of the Noldor

Read Exodus of the Noldor

Arafinwe leaned his hands against the balcony’s rail, feeling a sudden and unprecedented urge to fling himself over the edge to certain death. Perhaps in Mandos, he reflected glumly, he could find a measure of peace. And then he would be with Finwë again, and no longer be the one to answer for his half-brother’s mistakes.

Before the exile, he hadn’t had a half-brother in his reckoning, only two full brothers.

“I am not certain that is meant to support your weight my friend.” Arafinwe turned sharply at the voice, having already made up his mind to shout and rage at whomever had dared to invade his privacy – was he not allowed even a moment of peace anymore? – but at the sight of the speaker he quelled his anger, instead bowing his head in greeting.

Aulë, the maker, and great friend of the Noldor, waved away his formalities, and before Arafinwe could decide how he should host the Vala – everything was more complex when one was the High King, life had been much simpler when he was just Finwe’s strange youngest son – Aulë dropped to his knees and ran a weathered hand along the base of the rail, where it had begun to slip free of the wooden floor. “It seems the bolts have been stripped,” he mused, as though they were the best of friends and it was a perfectly normal conversation. “Of course, this palace is ancient, even by the reckoning of your people.”

“It is older than I,” Arafinwe finally found his voice, and sunk to the floor beside the Vala. He had never been one for metal work – not like the other – but watching Aulë is a good enough distraction.

The Vala pulls a set of tools from his belt, Arafinwe supposes he should not be surprised that he is always prepared for his craft, and sets about removing the broken bolts, passing them to Arafinwe, and setting new ones. He works in silence, the clink of his tools the only noise that is heard about the sounds of nature.

“Fëanáro has chosen to destroy the Swan Ships,” he said after many moments. “And Nolofinwe has chosen to travel north and cross the Helcaraxe.”

Arafinwe’s chest tightened, he knew little of the lands beyond the shores of Valinor, but he had heard tales of the Grinding Ice, and knew that it was the very last place he would wish for anyone to go. “And my children?” he whispered, fearing the response.

“They have chosen to accompany him.”

Numbly he nodded, wondering how many of them – if any – will survive the perilous journey, and felt tempted, neither for the first time or the last, to cast aside the crown and the desperate court he had set up to follow his children. As if hearing his thoughts, Aulë slowly said, “Although the Doom shall be brought down upon them, I do believe we shall see them again. I have faith enough in that.”

Arafinwe nodded quietly, watching the Ainu finish his work. “How shall we go on?”

Aulë pushed against the railing, leaning back and surveying his work. “Stubbornly,” he said after a moment, a smile almost touching his lips.


Comments

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What a lovely story! I have a great deal of sympathy with Finarfin and this is a totally believable interpretation of that moment in time for me. I love Aule in this story also. Of course, Aule travels with his tools(!) even on an errand of mercy to inform the new King of the Noldor of very bad news--and how kind of him it was to be willing to be the bearer of that news. That also feels very in-character to me. I've always imagined him as the most human of the Valar--probably from spending so much training and working with the Noldor--for as the texts tell us, "the Noldor were beloved of Aulë." (And I have always loved him for that!)

Beautifully crafted. Thanks so much for sharing.

really atmospheric, poor old Finarfin, left to pick up the pieces :(

er, i've seen other tales which use the Quenya names, but this is the Silmarillion thing. they are not used in the Silmarillion and are still unknown even to me (Russandol, i now know, is not even a real one). so i didnt know who you were writing about until you spelled it out. i mean, the artist is king, but its already really niche...

i liked the story, dont get me wrong, but the way its presented, maybe a hint of who the protagonist is...

the way you ended it was one of my fave linguistic tricks. 'but what are we gonna do ?', 'we have to xyz', ' but how ?',  'carefully!'.

heheheh, marvellous. :)

p.s. re: 'whomever'. the thing is, the most famous version of that word is from the Arthurian 'whomsoever draweth this sword...' thing. so though it may be correct, it looks  wrong. of course i'm quibbling ! we're nerds, aren't we ? :) 

An intriguing choice of characters for this prompt, and it works great! This is not a perspective often taken when talking about the Flight of the Noldor. I get the impression that even Aulë either appreciates the distraction provided by replacing the broken bolts, or he realises that Finarfin is at the end of his tether. Either way, he comes across as very sympathetic and supportive. Particularly as his advice his to proceed "stubbornly". Aulë rocks (pun fully intended)! Well done.

(Don't worry about the naming thing, btw; the list of characters uses the "standard" forms from the published Silm, and beyond that, you can use whatever form you like. They're reasonably common, and if readers are really helplessly lost, Google is their friend.)