He shrugs. "The Teleri mostly don't read. Writing is a new invention, and Fëanor's invention, so they can't be bothered. I'm more thinking that no one could possibly parent at twenty. That's one of the most demanding tasks out there, and you hurt other people so badly if you try it and aren't up for it."
"Well. My mother was not twenty when she had her children, and yet I have seen Midgardian parents I might have preferred. They vary."
"Only one of the people who was in the room introduced himself. Curufinwë. Or I could conjure an illusion of the faces."
"I think Fëanor is dying. He is not doing it quickly enough that I had to make a snap decision before coming back to mention it."
"He made it on behalf of his people as well. Although perhaps he expects it to expire on his death."
"I mentioned that I have healing magic. He did not ask for it. Some of the others looked like they might have done, but - they did not either."
If he knew you and trusted you and some of his people had asked your aid and benefitted from it, he might be willing to discuss it. He doesn't. And his association with healing is with the Valar using their powers to assert how indebted to them we are, and treating his mother - less than ideally."
"Well," says Loki. "I can go back, ingratiate myself to his people with other, lesser injuries, and see if he will accept my help, keeping you under the protection of his oath. I can not do that. I could, I suppose, go and look for some Men and live among them instead and be assured that their generations will pass quickly enough that if I delay a succession or prolong a political mess at least it will be history in a century. And that no one I meet is operating under some sort of inexorable fate imposed by a sadistic creator which I may or may not be able to ameliorate however I try."
"Why would you fix him? He deserves to die. And if your concern is how to accomplish the most, that's obviously by defeating the Enemy; our family politics are engrossing but don't really matter in the grand scheme of things. And Melkor's defeat is fated, and not supposed to come by our hands, so even if lots of things are fixed that may be up to you."
"Yes, I suppose I could also go and flood his fortress with illusory light and see if I can kill him before he kills me. Refreshingly unambiguous and exactly the sort of problem I was always brought up to solve."