Matilda meets Fëanáro in Valinor
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"Thank you!" repeats Matilda. "Wow, that's way better than Tylenol."

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"What's Tylenol?"

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"It's a painkiller," says Matilda. She manages a functional osanwë introduction to the concept and its component parts, neatly organized if clumsily transmitted. "Am I doing the telepathy thing right?"

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"Yes. Do you not do it usually?"

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"It isn't a thing humans can normally do at all! Is it normal for - what's the plural of Elda?"

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"Eldar. Yes, but we can't fly houses." He communicates envy, fascination, frustration. "Yet."

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"I'm the only person I've ever met who could move things with their mind the way I can," says Matilda, "but obviously if you want to figure out how to do it anyway, I want to help! Can you or other Eldar do any things that are sort of like flying houses? Would it count if you built a house that could fly and then you piloted it?" She transmits a loose impression of the concept of airplanes.

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"Flying houses with your mind seems more ...versatile," he says dubiously, "but we could build one of those anyway, that looks like fun. Do you know what alloy of steel that is?"

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"No. I might have a book about it, though."

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"What's that?"

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"...A book? Do you not have those?"

She holds out her hand and summons one off a shelf, opening it to show him. "It has words in it."

The symbols in the book match the symbols that appear faintly in Matilda's thoughts whenever she speaks.

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"We don't. What a clever idea, give it to me so I can look closer."

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"Sure," giggles Matilda, and she floats the book to him. It's a cookbook, with pictures.

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"I'm not going to be able to guess the correspondence of symbols to sounds in your language without more familiarity with your language, would you keep talking?"

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"Okay," says Matilda agreeably. "Or I could just tell you, but it might be more fun to guess. Or, wait, if you're telepathic can you read everything I'm saying where it's written down in my mind?"

The symbols in her thoughts are definitely less clear than the ones on the page, but also definitely a big improvement over not having any guidelines at all.

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"I can, is that habit one that is typically acquired when learning symbol-sound correspondences? Or are symbol-sound correspondences innate among your people?"

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"No, I don't think Jenny has the same thing," says Matilda.

"I don't think I do," Jenny agrees, and indeed the symbols do not appear in her thoughts - although they appear in Matilda's, as Matilda hears her.

"I think it might actually be kind of rare," Matilda goes on. "Although plenty of people learn the symbol-sound correspondences just fine without it."

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"I might have enough to go off," he says, "but keep talking. And then I'll teach you my language, though it doesn't have symbol-sound correspondences and I don't want to invent them on the spot, it seems important that they be beautiful and well-suited."

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"Can I help invent them?" asks Matilda excitedly. "I've never had a chance to invent an alphabet before!"

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"Yeah, of course. Yours has fifty distinct symbols I've run across so far, do you have that many distinct sounds? I bet we can do it with less."

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"We don't have nearly that many sounds, it's just each letter in our alphabet has two different shapes. I'm not sure why. Your alphabet doesn't need to have capital and lowercase letters if you don't want them."

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"I think people will learn it faster and like it more if there are less extraneous symbols. Do you have parchment and a quill I can use, or should I call for one?"

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"I have paper and pens," she says, and a drawer opens across the room and disgorges a notebook and a ballpoint, both of which fly over to Fëanáro. "Will those do?"

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He starts disassembling it. "You're very talented, what materials did you use for these?"

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"I didn't make them, I just have them."

"They were probably mass-produced," says Jenny, with vague mental images of factories and printing presses. "The paper is made of wood pulp and the pen is made of plastic. I don't know about the ink."

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