They've left him alone in his cell.
He can't really be said to be lucid but he has very acute instincts for when there's someone and when he's alone - it's the last of his senses to depart him - and he's alone.
And then suddenly he isn't.
They've left him alone in his cell.
He can't really be said to be lucid but he has very acute instincts for when there's someone and when he's alone - it's the last of his senses to depart him - and he's alone.
And then suddenly he isn't.
Um. Privacy - a place that's mine and quiet that nobody goes in. Work that I can do in the afternoon or at night - I don't sleep at night, I've never been able to, I sleep in the morning. She feels kind of guilty about this, but she's long since resigned herself to it. Co-workers who aren't going to be mean about it when I have trouble with things. Food that's easy, by which she means both 'not spicy' and 'not requiring complicated utensil use'. Talking like this is easier, can all of you do that? Talking the regular way is a pain, she will definitely not mind never having to do that again. I don't know what kind of work you have for us to do; I'm mostly good with animals and Ila and I together are good at scouting and woodcraft stuff.
We can all talk like this, yes. I can mostly put you on scouting - the only animals we have are horses -
I haven't spent much time with horses, but I should get along fine with them. She gets along fine with everything else, after all. (Really, though, no other animals? That's going to be weird.)
It's kind of a religious thing? We take care of the forest, and that means taking care of the animals in it, and a lot of the time that means taking them into the village - breeding pairs to get more of them to release back out, or just as many as we can get to nurse them through a disease they're having a problem with, or whatever. Plus almost everybody has a pet or a mount or both. Like her Ila, or her one friend's pet giant turtle, or her squad leader's giant sloth bear mount.
Animals on this continent don't come in that size, and we don't really have the resources to feed that many pets. Or to take particular care of the ecosystem, though it seems to do fine on its own.
It's fine, I'm not religious. That's kind of the core of why she came, actually, having to pretend to care about the parts of that that she doesn't really sucked. It's just what I'm used to, and I have my Ila.
I'm glad. Welcome. We're going to want your help in figuring out how we can get the elves to stop hurting people, but not until after the war.
Questions, not quite, but curiosity, definitely; she takes a moment to figure out what she wants to ask first. What's the story with the evil god?
There are fifteen gods. The Valar. Most of them are - okay. Wrong about lots of things but well-meaning, and Valinor is a very nice place to live. One of them is evil. He tortures people for fun and he wants to take over the world and fill it with orcs, which are constantly suffering.
Well, she did ask. And your best plan so far is going to take fifty years? What is the plan, anyway?
We have found a way to use the teleportation spell form to teleport between worlds. We are going to try to send him to one without any life so there's no one he can hurt.
That sounds like an entirely sensible way to deal with an evil god and she wonders why they're waiting fifty years to do it.
And in the meantime?
The teleportation spell form is new, he answers the not explicitly asked question, and we don't have anyone trained with it, and it'll take a long time before they even have a chance of casting it fast enough before he stops them.
Why is she even bothering to arrange her thoughts into sentence-ish structures, that's work and it's obviously not needed, she'll just not do that. She still wants to know what's happening in the next few decades, though.
We're going to live here and fight the orcs if they terrorize people anywhere - orcs are the Enemy's footsoldiers - and grow food to send to other places that need it, and work on backup plans for if that one fails.
Okay. They should probably not expect her to fight - she might change her mind on that but it won't be soon - but that sounds all right.
What are the other people like?
Quendi and orcs and humans and supposedly there are Dwarves somewhere, we haven't been able to set up a meeting yet. Different tribes of Quendi.
If any of those are near enough that she might run into them she should know more, and even if not she's curious; of those species she's only familiar with humans. It can wait, though. How about the city, what are things like here, is there anything she should know? (It's such a pretty city, she had no idea you could do that with stone, it's amazing.)
The Quendi need our surroundings to be pretty or we get deeply unhappy, very fast. I'm glad you like it! The city is run on work teams, which work longer shifts than humans can manage, I don't know if elves are more like us or more like humans - and he goes into its layout and scheduling and authority structure and projects.
Elves are pretty much like humans, yeah, and she's pretty lousy at handling long hours even by that standard; when she gets too tired she has even more trouble thinking than usual. If they have mindless menial work that needs doing and someone can make sure her needs are met - Ila can do a lot of that but can't, say, cook, or walk her through tasks with lots of steps - that'd be possible but in no way ideal; it also takes her a long time to recover from doing a lot of that.
The city's administrative setup is fascinating, though. She doesn't really grasp it as a functional whole - too complicated - but she tucks away a bunch of trivia, anyway.
If you can look after the horses a few hours a day, and go on occasional scouting trips, that would work well for us.