"Yes. So, the thing with orcs is that they're all made to swear to serve," which excess name did Meril call him, "Morgoth, along with a number of other specifics, I have the text of -" She produces the transcript of the oath as she last heard it repurposed. "But they are made to do this very young, barely old enough to speak - so they don't have a very firm understanding of what they're supposed to mean by it at the time. I can cure their chronic pain conditions and this tends to make them pretty receptive to talking, although like any group of people they vary. If they can in this mood be convinced of certain redefinitions, in particular that 'Melkor' is actually a benign noninterventionist deity I'm familiar with from home and that all the people of your species on this continent are 'Quendi' and not 'Elves', they can re-swear the same words with the revised meanings and they've been getting along all right with the Fëanorians so far in a way that would be wholly implausible for unaffected orcs. Although they do still make their Quendi neighbors nervous to the point where they're expending a fair amount of labor on keeping an eye on them, and I'd like to get them settled somewhere else."
"Until I get to them, yes. The first one I healed was so confused."
"I don't expect to save them all. I would never ask someone to risk their own or their friends' lives more than they already do by engaging orcs to take some alive. And I couldn't heal that many in any reasonable amount of time, and while I was very lucky that the first orc I spoke to turned out to be an effective and committed missionary we have not turned up more of the same, so that's another bottleneck. But I would like to save some, and I would like them to have a place to be when they've been saved."
"I hadn't even considered that complication; I don't think that apart from the Enemy and Melian I've seen anything that looked attributable to attentive Powers."
"I was actually considering transporting them all by air, but it would be less convenient in some ways - it would require more of my personal attention, on a per-orc basis, and it'd mean they wouldn't have much cargo allowance. And if Ulmo disapproved of them I suppose living on an island would be a bad idea anyway..."
"I did already have an opinion of the Valar," Loki says. "But yes."
Loki winces. "That's not the timetable I was hoping for, but I suppose the Fëanorians can stop catching new orcs when they have as many as they feel they can harbor."
"Pretty much. It wouldn't be fair to them. The other place that Elu said was open was -" She pulls out her map. "This area, but it's pretty exposed to Angband, and they don't want to be easily found by the Enemy."
"If you can suggest other settlement locations that don't require waiting for a Vala to reply to a question I'm delighted to hear them. I am a poor judge of how willing Quendi may be to have orcs, even friendly ones, as neighbors, but it's certainly not the orcs who'd mind."
"Thank you!" exclaims Loki. "That's wonderful to hear. I'm sure Vár - the first one, the one who's all excited about converting others - and the rest will be excited."
"...Some more than others, admittedly, but I'd say that about almost any group of people. I think if some of them decided to defect they'd have trouble with their fellows before you ever heard about it."