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Visit The *EVEN NEWER* Barrow-Downs Photo Page |
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#1 |
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Shadow of Starlight
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Aman prepared the drinks as she looked over the bar at Bredan, unsure of how the man would act, but her expression was all business. After all, the last time she had seen him, he had looked quite prepared to murder Snaveling simply for being near Aman. Death on suspicion of courting...
She nodded to Uien, smiling at her under her eyelashes as she pulled out a pint. The fair elf had been waylaid by an ancient hobbit who, by the painstaking care with which the hobbit's lips were moving and the eternally patient look on Uien's face, would keep her there for a fair few minutes. It would be wonderful to talk to her again! But first, to Bredan. "Master Bredan," she said politely, pushing the pint across the bar to the man. "How may I help you? I fear last time we were acquainted you were a little..." she sought for the right word, before finally settling upon "upset. Can I ask whether you are less agitated now, and if you slept well?"
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I am what I was, a harmless little devil |
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#2 |
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Shade of Carn Dûm
Join Date: May 2003
Location: Wind's Road
Posts: 467
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Twylight
"Why, yes!" Bingo responded to Twylight's query, a delighted smile lighting up his entire face. "Do come with me, Miss Twylight, and I will introduce you to Marcho and Posco."
He led her over to a table over by the fireplace where to hobbits were sitting. She realized with a start that one of the hobbits - the one Bingo introduced as Marcho - was the one she had noticed earlier. But his look of evident self-loathing was now replaced with one of great suspicion. She wrote him a note, her smile faltering slightly. Pleased to meet you, Marcho. The note had the opposite of the intended effect. His eyes narrowed to slits and his upper lip curled up in a sneer. He was beginning to make Twylight feel very uncomfortable and guilty, even though she had done nothing wrong. She shook herself mentally, and turned her attention to the second hobbit. He was sitting hunched down in his chair, as if he wanted to avoid everyone's eyes. She had heard Bingo introduce him as Posco. It is wonderful to meet you, Posco. she wrote, smiling as a faint blush tinged his round cheeks. He looked up through his eyelashes at her, which she noticed were startlingly long. Taking the chair Bingo pulled out for her, she watched the hobbits drink in silence. Marcho, the surly hobbit, had insisted that Bingo sit next to him as opposed to "the lady of the Big-Folk." Bingo had seemed somewhat taken aback by this, but had agreed with good humor. An awkward silence followed as Posco gazed into the depths of his mug and Marcho glared at Twylight. She had just realized how warm it was right next to the fire, and was wondering if the other hobbits noticed. "So," Marcho said gruffly, "what brings you to the Shire?" She jumped, her mind being pulled away her discomfort. Visiting. I have a very good friend who lives here, in the Shire. We have been friends since our childhood. She pushed the paper into the middle of the table, and all three hobbits craned their necks to read what she had written. While they read, Twylight pulled her midnight-blue cloak off, revealing a tunic made of what appeared to be the same material underneath and leggings of a silvery material that was akin in looks to mithril, but was soft and supple. Marcho seemed unsatisfied with her answer, but remained silent for the moment.
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"My name is Mallard, but you can call me Duck." ~Random Saying, compliments of Sirith and her best friend, concerning a book. Last edited by Sirithheruwen; 06-09-2004 at 01:55 PM. Reason: Spelling |
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#3 |
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Ubiquitous Urulóki
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Toby Hornblower had to admit, but not in the least to others, that he was confused. Perhaps it was just the fact that days passed too quickly now, or perhaps it was the fact that hobbits seemed to be spurting from between the slivers of the floorboards like blossoming, multicolored plants stuffed foppishly into a dizzying array of Halfling garb. Losing track of all the conversations around him, Toby had busied himself with manufacturing smoky circlets from his carefully carved pipe, which he held delicately between two fingers in an upper-class manner, dangling the device, and bobbing it up and down as one would a crystalline chalice of the finest wine. Marcho, the hobbit left to tend Toby’s nonexistent whims, had seemed wrapped up in his own descended gloom, which accosted Tobias with some slight, but manageable level of annoyance as he let the chair he had moved to devour him comfortably, still humming stupidly to himself.
Yet again, the old hobbit's mind wandered through the lofty attic of itself, searching within for some reminiscence, some vague and nervous memory he could summon up from murky depths and sigh over pitifully until he felt the need to be jocund again. He thought back to Snaveling, and his rugged, overbearing expression, hunched form, and wretched gait. He thought back to Roa, with her lady-like strides and her gentle, but firm attitude towards life. He thought back To Valthalion, that upstanding man, brave and brash, though somewhat stalwart and conffused about the theories he continually spawned. He reminded himself of that calm, brisk day when he'd come to the inn to hear Snaveling's raspy voice broken and, having undergone a magical metamorphosis, sweetly singing like the skyward birds, with the melodious melody of Galadel's flute behind. Those, thought the withered old Southfarthinger, were the days. Soon enough, Tobias Hornblower was able to piece together what was occurring. Though the hobbits that Toby had been discoursing with were all but dispersed, they began to slowly reassemble. At last, two figures materialized before Toby and Marcho. One was the characteristically small silhouette with a long, flickering shadow painted on the floor behind him by firelight’s delicate brush-hairs, of Bingo. The other, more slender, less jovial, but still with a certain imposition, was an unknown female, who’s demeanor quickly caught Toby’s eye. As Bingo introduced the lady to Marcho, who seemed just as displeased with the state of things as ever, Toby stood, brushing himself off and smoothing his ruffled feathers politically, and stepped forward towards the woman and hobbit lad, acknowledging the presence of the former as he spoke to the latter, looking a little beleguered and sleepy, with an inane tiredness in his dark eyes. “You’ll have to pardon my…antisocial tendencies, Masters Cotton and Brandybuck,” he murmured at first, his yet unaccustomed voice still quavering involuntarily as he addressed the two polar opposites, “but I have been a bit indisposed by my muddled self for longer than I can remember, so this uprising of new folk in the inn has stolen my wits from me. Let me say that I think those lost wits may have been recovered, so I may join you in the world of reality now.” With that, after bowing his head apologetically, the upstanding, barrel-chested Halfling turned to the delicate figure beside Bingo, not taking note of the scrap of parchment she clutched or the very mild glint in her enchanting eyes. “I see you’ve brought a charming maiden to our ‘table.’ Might I have the profuse pleasure of an introduction, madam?” |
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