Houses of Might

misbehavingmaiar:

“Let none admire
That riches grow in Hell;
That soil may best
Deserve the precious bane.”


When he had been a young god, fresh and brazen in his power, the earth had seemed too fragile for him. He had been made before it, out of scale with it. There was nothing put up that he could not knock down; from the densest core to the vastest plains of bedrock. All were as malleable to him as clay.

When the world had been lit by volcanic fires and the two, fixed lamps, he delved Utumno, his first dwelling.

Delved, not built.

He had sunk his immaterial hands into the heaving red rock and plunged himself down. He scooped up pillars out of onyx, and scraped level his chambers with a swipe of his arm. He’d rummaged in the guts of mountains and pulled out seams of gold and copper; with a breath melting them, pooling them, unhammered and unpolished, over the floors of the monstrous caverns.

The immeasurable pillars there he twisted and clawed until they resembled coiled serpents holding aloft the jagged ceiling. Rivers of open magma lit his home, and the churning growl of the pits echoed forever through his halls. His throne was a high mound of raw jewels, and rippling blue-black lava. Nothing mortal could have survived his presence or his domain in that early age; no eyes but the Ainur’s could see the splendors he’d wrought there. All things in Utumno glittered, though darkly.

He missed it, that rough-hewn palace. It pained him to know that in his current state, even if Utumno still stood, he could no longer endure it. He did not fit its scale now. He could not wade into oceans nor plunge his head in the streaming red clouds. He stood, yes, like a fearsome tower over his enemies, but what a pittance that was! The rumbling of the earth now simply made his ears ache.

Every splendor had been muddied since the beginning– the primordial fires had cooled and green choking things crept over the earth. Even the icy walls and spines of Thangorodrim could not shield him entirely from the sun, the hateful eye of the Valar leering at him in his pain…  His only shelter was inadequate on so many levels.

Angband had been built for war and war alone. Nothing there glittered, but for steel and blackest glass. It was a dull place. A designed place.  It was true that in the early days, he’d hollowed out the spiraling pits of its dungeons, the lava-nests for the Valaraukar to rest in… but the rest of the construction he had left to his minions. Angband had been built of quarried stone and the mind of an architect. This was Sauron’s fortress; his siege breaker, his battle trench, the breeding ground for armies, and though the loyal Maia had done his best to accommodate his master, it was still cramped quarters for a Vala.

His lieutenant had salvaged some fragments of Utumno that had escaped the Valar’s wrath; obsidian from the halls, gold from the floors, glittering gems from the throne. He’d sought to please Melkor, fearing perhaps that his master thought him idle during the long years of his imprisonment in Aman. He had reshaped the dark pillars– carving them beautifully into the shapes of wyrms, snakes whose coiling bodies sought the roof and whose ruby-eyed heads formed the capitols. What once had been wrung into an unnatural helix by a mighty and careless hand, was now meticulously crafted. Every detail, each flute and column carved in the perfect likeness of serpents– no longer nature but art.

Melkor had not been able to conceal his disappointment.

Hastily added luxuries brought the Vala little comfort. Porphyry basins that could hold a steaming lake were still a poor substitute for boiling seas, and a gold-plated throneroom floor was not a gleaming netherworld. His own body had a disgusting permanence to it now; form fitting function, fixed in mass.  As he saw himself reflected in the volcanic glass mirrors of the walls and the more he hated this cage,  almost as much as he hated the sun and moon. He was too vulnerable to venture far into the world– the earth had grown strong while he had diminished.

There had been a time when the bright gold god had not known fear; when he had plundered the world, ran over it rough-shod; feeding the air and stone to his fires and casing the rest in ice. His siblings had objected, but had he not been set above them in their Father’s esteem? Had he not been named the rising star, the mightiest of the Valar? He had loved his power dearly, and the steaming Earth and his freedom most of all, though he’d been made to feel ashamed of this love.

Melkor knew shame, but he had not known fear– not because he was brave but because he had never been introduced to it, and therefore knew nothing of its dangers, like a child who has never been burnt is careless with matches.

But he came to know it in a sound: the thunder-laughter of the one who fell as a comet from heaven, making glass ripples in the desert.

When they’d unhoused him in Utumno, he’d fled to the bottom-most pit. He’d not understood that it was fear taking him there, in the unguarded chambers of his mind. At last he’d drawn himself up like a mountain, his face a lurking monster from the crushing depths of the sea, so hideous and needled it would have brought madness in a mortal mind. He had wreathed himself in flame and magma and the sound he shrieked in challenge was a hurricane’s wail and the sound of brittle ice forming amplified a thousand times. But the ruddy Vala had stepped forward onto the rock bridge and smiled, and all Melkor’s fire turned to flaccid tar.

They grappled. The Champion’s brazen hands dared the barbs and crackling heat of Melkor’s flesh. Tulkas broke the golden god’s face with his fist, crushed the furnace of his ribs, wrapped his mighty arm about the blazing head, so that strive as he may, his opponent could gain no purchase. Melkor flamed, and shrieked, and fought, and scarred the rock with clawing, but at last– and from then ever after– he was thrown to the ground by the Champion of the Valar, and his face struck the earth in bitter shame.

–Three ages after, he had not forgotten. When time is wrapped up like a ball of twine and Arda is undone, Melkor will still not have forgotten the  day when he met Fear and learned to hate him.

Yet having met fear, the dark Vala learned to recognize it in himself. Deceit was the first art he learned, after three ages gnawing on his own thoughts in the monotony of Mandos. He learned, for example, to withdraw his cowardice deep and unseen into his heart, or reproduce all the outward effects of fear while inwardly he sneered and preened.

Before the throne of Manwë he had shivered and pleaded. He flinched like a rabbit before the eyes of Tulkas and looked with contrition up at Yavanna, who’s hatred was expressed by the vicious curling and uncurling of her thick-twined hair; and for Nienna, who spoke in his favor, he conjured his most credible sincerity. And all the while inside, he laughed– not like thunder, but a stygian clatter of wings.

Now in the darkness of his keep Melkor reflected, picking at the scabs of gold that sloughed off his unhealing wounds. Each season his skin shed, and unlike a serpent, it left him duller and more tarnished than before. Each shedding left him in a tighter skin, constricting his spirit within a cage of matter.

It had always been his flexibility and cunning that had served him best; his deceit, his patience, his poisons, his knives in the dark– these had led to victories, to escape.  Towers and walls were solid and immutable; they were a liability that he was forced to rely upon… Even Formenos whose doors had been slammed and barred against him had fallen.

 

Angband was a mighty stronghold, fenced with mountains of fire and iron gates, but it was still fixed. It was immovable– inescapable. As much a prison as Mandos had been.

Even if he won the war against the armies that battered his gates, even if his siblings did not rise up against him, he would be entombed here, he knew. It would fall, eventually, as all things fell. And though this terrified him almost as much as the thought of diminishing to nothing, it brought with it a gallows-comfort: the idea that all towers of might must fall, that no place of power was sacred; that perhaps even, given time and strange turnings, the Halls of Eru too would crumble, and return into the endless, silent Void.


 

–Find this on AO3!–

*dips hand in the ocean*

misbehavingmaiar:

”I have known enchantment for the sea
for coasts of citrine, emerald, lazuli,
in the bounty fishers reap,
and in terror of the deep.

For every ship may but the surface glide,
the sailor’s muse seen mirrored in her tide,
yet life beneath writhes frenzied, brisk, and bleak
or else devoured slow, with hooks and beak.

Of these twain aspects I, both, admire;
Two sides of the sea’s dichotomous empire,
to them equally my heart bequeath:
the jeweled surface, and the dread beneath.”

*splashes

@masteroftheseas

Gabil Baraz Uzbad Mahal, barakh shley dhoyar.

misbehavingmaiar‌:

galvornsmith‌:

“Blessed art thou, Great Red Lord; merciful is thy Hammer. Blessed be thy forge and thy fire, that giveth life. May there be peace in my tribe, and strength in my arms. May the work of my shaping honor thee; may it never rust nor tarnish. Great Red Lord, M-H-L, bless now my anvil.“ 

The Smith’s Prayer

misbehavingmaiar:

Let’s talk about things my muses are afraid of: Sauron Edition

1. Cirdan:  what does he want? he doesn’t want anything I have. I can’t control him. Hard to manipulate. I have done my best Nice Elf impression and he was not impressed. Nothing I say or do makes him believe me, how am I supposed to work like this?
Further complaints:  He lives on a boat where I can’t get him. Ossë likes him. Ossë’s a big deal. Water is wet. Drowning sucks. Cirdan = water. This is awful I will kill all of his friends maybe that will help. Oh no. Now he’s just mad. Calm, and mad. That’s terrifying. What intimidates this guy? Is it nothing? I think it’s nothing. I hate this, send me a different elf please. 

2. Drowning/Large Bodies of Water/see above point. Fire and water is a no go. All my shit rusts in water. None of my abilities or maia talents are effective in this medium. Wtf water, why are you like this.

3. The Void: Baby Jail. 

4. The Valar: look, okay, I get it. You’re big, you’re powerful, you could wipe me from the face of the earth if you ever got off your couch in paradise to get the remote. I had to go toe-to-toe with Aulë once. He told me to go to my room, it was the worst day. So I’m going to dedicate my existence to pissing you off, but not so much that you come for me. How about that. 

Wow remember that post I made 2 years ago that’s got 51,500 fucking notes and counting?  THIS –^  THIS UP HERE, WAS THE *FIRST PART*. LOST TO TIME AND MEMORY.  This part down here? —v  This part, that makes NO SENSE on its own, has been three times around the known earth and continues to haunt me in my waking hours. I understand nothing, and hate all things. 

misbehavingmaiar:

Things my muses fear, Melkor Edition:

1. Tulkas. he has one job on this miserable earth, ordained by god, and it is to kick my ass whenever possible. that’s it. that’s his raison d’être. he’s the god of kicking one ass. my ass. so fuck that guy. 

2. Mandos: 1/10 stars, terrible hospitality, would not recommend. Guess how many dust particles you can count in Four Ages? So many! I named all 98 quadrillion of them. Shout out to my boy Jimmy for being the best, least-identical mote and a great listener haha call me bro

3. Bondage: hey you know what’s great about being chained up for eons? literally nothing

4. Námo: he’s the death guy. he does death. 

5. Varda: Do you ever look up at the stars and think “why are they flipping me off?” No? Just me? Okay. 
Furthermore: The universe is a giant, scary, cold, unfeeling place. It will keep going with or without you. 

I am personally offended by this.

I feel like the endless reaches of space don’t respect me? Don’t they know who I am?

6: The Void: there is so much of it, all the time everywhere forever, and nothing else except me because i’m in it. I miss dust. And my legs. 

7. Manwë:  HAHAHA JK what a nerd 

Questions for a Bad Dog

misbehavingmaiar:

misbehavingmaiar:

–Drabble, hot off the press, probably full of typos, written in great haste. Warnings for *:・゚✧~mild gore~*:・゚✧  Shoutout to @thearrogantemu for lighting a goddamn fire under me with their meta post jfc

Keep reading

–I was inspired to draw Good Dogs

min/maxed doggo fic is getting notes again and I’m v happy :’) 

Psst: if you liked this and want more Oromë Maiar headcanons, you might like my Tilion post

Dear Sauron: I heard you like dogs. What is your favorite kind of dog, and why did you let Huan kick your ass?

misbehavingmaiar:

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Dearest Lady Sath, your sources betray you. 

It is -wolves- I am historically fond of, not hounds; though I have found the company of certain beasts agreeable. This is a recent development (domesticated animals, as a phenomenon, are a recent development by my reckoning). Dogs are part of the world of Men, and it was not until I joined their company that I made favorable acquaintance with any. They were bred largely to hunt and guard against intruders; a set of abilities usually pitted against me and mine– as you well know, given your last question. I cannot decide if its tone is impertinent or naively generous; ought I be flattered by the assumption that I *let* the hound of Oromë win? Or is this mockery? I shall give you the benefit of the doubt. 

I could waste a great deal of paper expounding on the nature of Maiar’s abilities (for Huan is indeed a Maia), and predestination, and the circumstances of our battle– but I will spare you the long treatise and simply say that continuing to fight would have been deeply disadvantageous to me. Tol Sirion was an important holding in North Beleriand and its loss was grievous, but not so much so that I was willing to stake my physical body on the chance of its recapture. In short, it was not a hill I was ready to die on. So, I fled. I did not throw the fight; Fate itself was against me, and if two of the Valar bowed to Luthien’s charms, a Maia like myself need not feel shame forever over such a defeat. Besides, Huan is dead, his houseless spirit fled back to his master in Aman, while I remain. 

After all that, I fear I did not answer your question, Lady Sath. I’m partial to the aloof energy of the larger Spitzes; Shepherds I admire for their intelligence and loyalty; and a Molosser is a grand, imposing companion for a lord to keep at his side.  

I hope I have satisfied your curiosity on this matter. Should you wish to make further inquiries, you should find me at the University of Umbar. 

 Yours,

The Emperor of the Eastern Kingdoms, Lord of Mordor and its Vassal States, Zîgur of the Temple of Freedom

~Ar-Anaškad Thû (Sauron) 


P.S. Cats are lovely too.

Who was more fun to seduce Lord Sauron, Ar-Pharazôn or Celebrimbor?

misbehavingmaiar:

…Fun?

Why, Ar-Pharazôn, of course. 

That is the difference between upholding a facade for many years, sensitive to every detail lest it betray your intentions, and performing a version of yourself that your enemies expect, while letting them do the tedious work of engineering their fate. 

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More was at stake in Eregion. I had to make myself quite vulnerable to infiltrate the elven kingdoms; my foothold was tenuous, my goals uncertain. Securing power in the west required the cooperation of at least one ruler, and depending on whose ear I gained, the method of influence would change to match. My plans had to remain flexible, my disguise absolute. 

…I was very lucky to have gained the trust of the greatest smith of the Second Age. Of all the rulers of elfindom, wooing the grandson of Fëanor was more than I had dared to hope. If everything had gone as I desired, I could have formed a powerful alliance; our kingdom could have been iron-fast, a seat of industry and ingenuity. I admired Tyelpë very much. It was less a ‘seduction’ than a slow-formed bond. Many times I regretted the deception that lay between us; like a pane of clear glass… easy to forget, until one stretches out a hand. 

“Annatar” was less a lie than an omission; he was comprised of truths, leaving out only what would compromise. What was built on those truths was genuine– but it was not enough. And I learned that too late. 

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…But the lesson I remembered. I will never again allow myself to become so close to my enemies that I feel sympathy on their behalf– not that this was very difficult. I despised Tar Calion. Only his grandfather was a more despicable despot, and he a less lustful conqueror. 

This may surprise you, but the East is dear to me.
Men, as a race, I do not love, but the people of Umbar, Harad, Khand, and Nurn are different from the Edain; they are less stuffed full of the presumption and arrogance of the Valar. They are rich with gods and heroes unheard of in the West; they have built temples to science and art, they reject no ideas for being too full of what fools call “Melkor’s influence”– as if my Master gave any thought to the taxonomy of nature, or mathematics, or industry. I find this refreshing. The country too is as rich and varied as its people. I have tried to be a good ruler; preserving the existing kingships and systems of governance and religion wherever I could. 

The Sea Kings ran rough-shod over every foreign land they came across. Though the Numenorian influence has long since been integrated into the local milieu, most continue to begrudge the hierarchies brought with it. Their ships and dignitaries are no welcome sight. 

Ar-Pharazôn came with armies and slave galleons. He routed my armies throughout Harad and where he did he left garrisons and exacted tribute, burnt heresies and forbade teachings. …I am no stranger to many of these practices. I have known ages of war, presided over a kingdom’s worth of prisoners. Yet this was a systematic purging of history and culture I have never seen before. I have come to loathe it. 

Calion was an arrogant, brutal little man. It became clear to me that the easiest way to manipulate him was to give him the semblance of victory wherever he sought it. My attacks became feints, my retreats led him farther and farther inland, until he came to my very gates. The sea of tents and banners that stretched into the desert was a glorious, chilling sight indeed… but if it had come to battle, that bloated army would have sunk under its own weight crossing the Mountains of Shadow. 
But I came to him like a tame horse, and stretched out my neck for him, and let him parade me through the streets of Armenelos; a vanquished god, an exotic beast. He would have me perform transformations for his amusements, sing songs for his court like a minstrel or a trained bird. I obliged his every whim, and the more he was reminded of the power he had conquered, the more besotted with he became. I was his private wishing-well, a genie at his command. Calion was a man of many violent passions; he considered himself a great lover of women and, occasionally, young men of certain castes (there was little distinction made in the laws of the land). I do not believe he was ever attracted to me, as I was… but the thought of a powerful warlord on his knees was a potent drug to him; enough to bring him panting and fumbling at his laces– at least, until old age withered such impulses at the root. 

I took a long-steeped and subtle pleasure in the reversal of power; sweet as Umbarim tea. Each submission was a victory, every humiliation I endured became a knot around his soul. He was a clever man, a cautious, paranoid, ambitious man… but precious easy to bind, if one had a little patience. Even while he thought me his toy, I had his ear. How tame he was, how easy to steer once the hooks were in. 

It was his wife that was the true obstacle to my designs. Lucky was I, that time and the chains of propriety had done their work long before I came to power. Her rebellions were toothless, lacking the support or structure necessary to supplant me. Still, she worried me more than Calion and his armies ever did. What an empress she would have been… 

But as I said, no enemy since has come close to my heart. Tormenting her with my victories was part of a daily game that brought me great amusement.

Sending that whole hateful island to hell almost made my loss worthwhile.

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Okay so forging question for Sauron. Like obviously, an anvil isn’t the right place for forging rings. Anvils are more or less for hammer the metal into the desired shape for larger pieces. So do you use like molds and things for such small pieces? And then do you smooth it out? How does that work?

misbehavingmaiar:

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There are many ways to craft rings (for those of you who can’t shape metal with your mind)!

One simple method is simply to drill a hole in an appropriately sized disc of metal, and mill it out on a lathe until it fits the desired proportions. A bit crude, not much room for artistry, but effective. 

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Another popular method is to hammer out a strip of metal (yes, for this step and this step only, one might see a smith bent over the anvil with a flatter) and coax it around a die until the ends meet and can be welded together. Welded rings can be very elaborate, set with stones, cut into lovely shapes, but depending on the strength of the bond and the delicacy of the materials, one might sacrifice durability. 

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And then there is my favorite and arguably the best method: metal casting!
First one carves a model of one’s ring out of wax, making sure to leave in spurs as conduits for the wax to flow out of the mold and the metal to flow in. 
Then one encases the wax ring in molding material, secure within a mother-mold. Heating the mold burns out the wax, leaving a hollow inside mold in the shape of your ring. Then it is only a matter of pouring in the desired metals, letting them cool, and then completing the project by sawing off the spurs, filing down the metal, and adding whatever embellishments the design requires. 

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Naturally, one finished any fired piece by giving it a good pickling in acid and a high polish! 
Then you teach your friends the process, adding in a pinch of blood magic and sorcery, and murder them when they use your techniques to thwart your plans!

*cough*

In any case, none of the methods above will look like this: 

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Or this

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Or this

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Uruk Food Groups

misbehavingmaiar:

“Aaps Fitg-Mazauk-ishi , Blûg Bûf-ishi”

“Victory is Meat, Vegetables in Defeat” –Orcish proverb

Orcs recognize three basic food groups: Meat, Not-Meat*, and Grog. 

*Not-Meat is generally referred to, disdainfully, as “Vegetables”, even things that are categorically not plants, such as bread, cheese, boot leather, etc.

Meat is what you get when you win battles, for obvious reasons: there’s plenty of it laying around free for the taking. Meat is given as part of a soldier’s wages, and as reward for exceptional service; the wage-meat for successful orcs and captains is of higher quality than for grunts. Orcs do have discerning tastes when it comes to meat, preferring freshly butchered cuts from livestock animals and large game rather than from small game animals and “found meat” looted from slain enemies. While CAN eat just about anything, from whole bones to old corpses, they are liable to grumble and complain about it. 

Vegetables” are considered a starvation food– the thing you eat when you have literally no other option available, or to pad out the supply of rations on a long march. This isn’t mere pickiness on the part of the Orcs– they are mesocarnivores by nature, and while they do eat other foods, their digestive systems really don’t handle it well. They get substantively less nutrients out of vegetables and dairy than they would from meat alone. They get most of the vitamins and minerals they need by eating every part of their prey including stomach, organs, and intestines. By scavenging and consuming whole corpses and carrion, Orcs serve a fairly crucial ecological function, much like vultures. 

–Mushrooms and other fungi are the only non-meat item that are considered actively worthwhile to obtain. Various types of fungus and molds are farmed in many Orc societies as a crop; it is the only known example of Orcish agriculture to date. Pickled and fermented foods are common fare for Orcs, especially as a form of food preservation. 

Grog” is not mainly a recreational beverage but a functional one. It is a fermented beverage made up of active cultures, yeast and bacteria, that Orcs have cultivated for most of their history. It can be made from a variety of base substances including mushrooms, fish, meat, and root pulp, and the final result is not necessarily alcoholic, though some varieties certainly are. The cultures present in Grog help Orcs with digestion, particularly of non-meat substances. It is typically rich in protein, minerals and B vitamins.*

*While not universally toxic, humans and hobbits attempting to consume Grog should take into consideration Orcs’ naturally immunity to botulism and higher tolerance for bacteria. Try to get it while it’s fresh, and hold your nose.

misbehavingmaiar:

Salgant, Lord of the House of the Harp – R.Wesley Nipper 2017

“…Behind them came the host of the Harp, and this was a battalion of brave warriors; but their leader Salgant was a craven, and he fawned upon Maeglin. They were dight with tassels of silver and tassels of gold, and a harp of silver shone in their blazonry upon a field of black; but Salgant bore one of gold, and he alone rode into battle of all the sons of the Gondolithrim, and he was heavy and squat.” –from The Book of Lost Tales vol. II

Maeglin’s friend, Eärendil’s babysitter, and my favorite soft, good boy, Salgant. Best elf, A+, canonically chubby, you-can’t-prove-he-didn’t-survive-the-Fall-of-Gondolin-by-being-adopted-and-made-Official-Dragon-Babysitter-by-Melkor, fight me.  

–To see a version of Salgant with some very cute baby dragons, sign up for my Patreon and get this and lots of other high resolution bonus art at the $1 tier and above! 🙂

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After the Fall

misbehavingmaiar:

Having survived the fall of Gondolin, Maeglin pulls some strings with management to secure the freedom of his friend Salgant. They are both put to work in the Great Forge of Angband, under the supervision of Sauron himself. Salgant learns a trade, he and Maeglin both come to terms with the changing future of Beleriand, Sauron waxes hopeful about the end of the war, and healing happens in unlikely places.

Revenge isn’t nearly as sweet as candied chestnuts.

Chubby Elves And The Dark Lords Who Love Them! 

Explicit: Salgant/Maeglin/Sauron aka The Pairing Literally No One Asked For But Me

After the Fall

misbehavingmaiar:

Songs of Power – RivkaZ 2017

You guys, the wizard duel between Finrod and Thû is one of my favorite scenes in the whole legendarium, I love it so, so much. :’) 

This picture was a WIP in my art folder for a year and while I always meant to finish it, I didn’t plan on spending as much time on it as I did. It’s still super rough, and I may revisit it again sometime in the future when I’m inspired, but for now I’ve gotta move on. XD 

Songs of Power

misbehavingmaiar:

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–Werewolves, weregild, wizards, and weaponized ballads! 

I intended to post this on Halloween but circumstances did not permit. This is the first chapter of an ongoing work, intended to be more of a retelling of my absolute favorite scene in the Lay of Leithian (possibly my favorite scene in the whole legendarium), and can be read as a stand-alone work if you’re not into all that shipping business 🙂 Enjoy!   ~Wes

Chapter Rating: General 


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