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At the End of All Things Elves in Revelation
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For three months after Revelation he ignores his father's calls.

 

Yes. It should be possible to summon a demon and, depending how their powers work, either get a Silmaril from them or get the location of the patch of ground closest to the Silmaril from them or at worst do binary search over conjured models of parts of the planet to find the Silmarils. Yes, it should be possible to summon an angel to then dig the thing out of bedrock. And then they won't live life walking against the currents of fading, they will be whole again, they can summon some more for spaceship plans and head away from Earth much sooner, and much more powerful, than they imagined.

 

Also, the curious demon might go back to Hell and conjure some more Silmarils, if their powers happen to shake out that way, and might start handing out Silmarils to anyone on Earth who wants one, because why not, and the oath might still be in force, the risk is unimaginable - 

 

- they can of course get a Silmaril and then, if it turns out they can be conjured, not let the demon go home, that is merely incredibly rude and might strand someone a dimension away from their family for centuries. It at least does not risk unleashing the oath on this innocent world that has, at last, left the scars of the last time that happened beyond the reach of living memory.

 

For three months after Revelation he ignores his father's calls because he is childishly frightened, because his well-polished coping skills are fraying, because if he feels the tug of that oath on him again it will be too late to kill himself and therefore he wants, very badly, to do it now. For three months he wavers.

 

And then he answers the calls, and takes some vacation, and goes home for a Fëanorian planning session. He doesn't remember what loving them felt like but he remembers that he loved them, that it was once very important to him, and he knows he would do this for someone he loved. They plan and they read and they learn and they practice - without summoning, because daeva get the languages you speak when you summon them and so the first daeva they summon will know, if observant enough, they're not of this society - 

- he gets two weeks vacation a year, they plan very very slowly - 

 

- and six years after Revelation they have a binding and a few possible options for payment and a plan for the case where Silmarils turn out to be trivially conjurable and conjurable ones oath-relevant. Maedhros is terrified, and miserable, but no one can tell. He prides himself on that. 

 

Curufin doesn't want to do it because he speaks Khuzdul and the Dwarves who taught him it in confidence did not give him permission to share it. (They did give him permission, when it came up one optimistic night, to share it with his father should his father ever return to life, and so Fëanor speaks Khuzdul too.) Maglor's pretending to be a currently-dead pop star and that invites its own host of complications. 

Maedhros does not speak Khuzdul. He speaks the Black Speech in addition to a few human languages and Thindarin and Quenya, but the language won't scare daeva in itself (if they get his exact vocabulary, they might be frightened.) Maedhros picks a place in the castle in Canada that could be a room in an unusually wealthy human's house, unremarkable, and he painstakingly copies all but one bit of the circle they decided on together, and he calls in everyone to look and make sure he did it right, and he dismisses them all - one Elf alone is not obviously inhuman, two or more together raises suspicions -

- and he completes the circle.

 

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"Lakes of fire are traditional."

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"It's weird how much - matches - do you think the human mythology around demons is based off stories from actual demons?"

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"It seems likeliest."

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"What advantage does a lake of fire have over just lighting things on fire?"

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"Centralizes the smoke and particulates and prevents it from burning other people's stuff down while it would be inconvenient."

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"Where do new people appear -"

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"Near existing people - there do not seem to be multiple pockets of demons bajillions of parsecs away from each other. I showed up in Dite, one of the big cities."

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"Was it terrifying to die and wake up in Hell, I feel like it might be."

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"Very disorienting. One minute, crazed gunman, the next minute, stark naked on a busy pedestrian street staring at something made of malachite where all the stripes spell things in Arabic."

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"Hey, at least you didn't land in a lake of fire."

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"Would've been uncomfy! And worrying! Although the limited nature of the uncomfy would mitigate the worrying."

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"Eternal moderate discomfort! Have you gone to talk to the guy who murdered you?"

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"Thought about it, haven't. I don't really think there's anything to be gained. I might have done it if I'd gotten a chance sooner after the incident mostly to deliver subtext about how he didn't murder me very hard, ha ha, but at this point I'm less interested."

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"What do you think you'd be if you were a daeva?"

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"What goes into it?"

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"My theory - it's only that, but still - is that it's personal affinity with the magic -" He repeats the evidence about the ex-human demons.

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"Huh. Making stuff suits me best. I hope that is how it works, demons clearly have the most convenient powerset."

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"We do! I mean, you could make a case for the others, but we've got the infosec-hazard thing going on, I have fun with that."

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"I mean, sure, takes all kinds and everything, but - exploring things, changing things, that really only appeals to the extent the good stuff is already out there somewhere. And - it's just not. Most of everywhere's just empty. Most things that would be nice to have don't exist at all yet."

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"Most people seem to be fairies. I'm not sure if they're a catchall or if it's something broader than 'exploring'."

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"Really? I feel like - no, wait, I guess 'most L.A. screenwriters are not the fairy type at all' doesn't disprove anything. Are naturally-occurring daeva evenly distributed?"

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"It's inexact but all three appear at similar rates and seem to have been doing so for a similar length of time."

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"The rate has stayed the same?"

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"More or less. It's not 'so many annually', it's more 'within this range over a decade'."

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