Fake Fic Summaries 3/?, The Darcy Lewis crossover edition (2015-07-17)

“Darcy Lewis technically has an older brother named Bennet and a younger sibling named Bingley.

Though it would be more accurate to say that the Lewis triplets have a rather unfortunate naming scheme revolving around their mother’s love of Pride & Prejudice.”

Not sure wtf that’s all about but I just kind of brain fancast Jesse Eisenberg and Kristen Stewart (in her more androgynous looks) as Darcy Lewis’ siblings… and since they all code as the same/similar ages to my eyes I’m just like… well… obviously they are triplets.

And I like the idea that maybe Bennet could pass for Ben, but doesn’t because he’s into formal speaking, even if the reference is super obvious. So Darcy calling Bingley Chandler (as in from the show Friends) and Bingley responding to that totally grates.

So I guess the story would be… how the Lewis siblings get tangled up with the Avengers entirely on accident? So maybe Bennet was one of Bruce’s grad students / TAs when the Hulk-ification happened (it’s canon that Darcy goes to Culver but according to MCU timeline, that’s when she was in New Mexico. Maybe they went to the same college.) Maybe Bingley joined the Air Force and is one of the engineers under Rhodey’s command–or even a fellow Pararescue pilot with Sam Wilson. WHO KNOWS.

“Thor is not Darcy’s first experience with life from other worlds.

Though last time there was a mouse and something called a gummi ship involved, so the story doesn’t sound nearly as impressive.”

BECAUSE Disney has subsumed Marvel, and Kingdom Hearts allows for totally canon crossovers. Maybe Darcy’s a keyblade wielder, or maybe she just knows some tricks (Thunder magic, anyone?).

Maybe the matter comes up because Darcy needs to defend herself and suddenly, KEYBLADE AND MAGIC. Or maybe another gummi ship shows up and this time it’s Sora who needs help and since last time Mickey met Darcy he just kind of points him in her direction. So… sorry Avengers I gotta go take care of this real quick, please ignore the talking duck and dog, thanks, okay, bye.

It could be played both serious and crack-y depending on the style and if you want to sustain a long fic or not. I’m thinking, in a Doctor Who-esque sort of way, Mickey showed up randomly in Darcy’s childhood, he took her on an adventure, she helped him out in a minor to her, major to him, sort of way, and so he gave her some kind of cool way to protect herself even after he’s gone.

~

A/N: Two more quick and dirty Darcy Lewis fake fic summaries.

EDIT: Apparently I wanted to do the second one, so you can find three little drabbles of Darcy Lewis, Keyblade Wielder (title subject to change) here

edit2: apparently I also wanted to do a drabble of the first one, so you can check that out here

Untitled drabble (2015-07-16)

In a world of fated soulmates, soul marks, that first turn of phrase your soul mate speaks writ upon your skin, are held in high regard no matter the country. And yet, cultures develop differently, and they are as variant as ever.

Soul mates are the other part of you, as complementary as one hand is to the other. But are they your one true love? Or as close to you as family, as twins are to one another? What looks like romance to one culture, could be a sick incestuous relationship to another. What may be considered platonic, might as well be a loveless arranged marriage.

Soul marks may be considered sacred–should they be covered or not? Should they be registered with the government for regulated matchmaking?

Some countries consider it proper to introduce yourself with a full name, the better to find your soulmate. Others consider that cheating.

Matchmaking has always been a large industry, but in this world, it’s taken seriously. Handwriting analysis alongside psychology mixed with law and politics.

It’s a strange world we live in, but at least we’re not alone.

~

A/N: Random tidbits of thoughts that I have on soulmates and the soul mark idea.

Untitled drabble (2015-07-15)

“You really want to try playing office politics against her? There’s no point. Either you’re insignificant or she’ll obliterate you. That’s it. There’s no standing your ground if you’re on different levels.”

“`

"Try again,” Tally says, heels kicking into the wall she sits atop. Her small wings flutter behind her in syncopation.

Edwin, Winnie as he has the misfortune to be called by his two friends, huffs in frustration but does as she says, calling for that small glow within him.

Becka, as coolly apathetic as usual, just watches as he flubs the spell once more.

“You’re never going to get assigned if you can’t get this,” Tally chides, worriedly. She’s due to start her commission in a month–guardian over a human who has the unfortunate tendency to steal from the wrong person. Becka, likewise, is already slated for duty in the matchmaker division.

If Winnie doesn’t finish the certification requirements soon, he’ll either have to repeat the final year or get one of the boring Etherlands jobs.

“I know,” Winnie grits out, wings and shoulders both hunched up near his ears.

“Again,” this time Becka demanding, flapping her wings once twice thrice to ease her descent from beside Tally on the wall, “you’re holding on for too long here,” she points at his sternum where the core of his energy rests, then trails her fingers up his throat, along his face, to rest on his forehead, “and over thinking it.”

Catching on to what she’s suggesting, Tally adds, “Prepare the energy and just let the spell do it’s work.”

“`

They don’t have long for this world. A week at most, depending on how much mischief they can scrounge up and how much power they use up to do so. They don’t have much to begin with, even less when it needs to be split between the three of them.

A week.

Unless they can find someone to enter a contract.

That’s pretty difficult–most wizards and witches, as rare as they are, don’t bother with the low level demons. Much less three.

But they do honestly work better as a trio. Not that they’re in the business of honesty.

Jenny laughs at the thought. A Lie demon, so desperate as to consider the truth.

Oh, but she’s the best out of the three of them to find a contract holder. Merely a division of labor.

While Travis sows some chaos, Nick will be the one to keep the angels of their trails.

One week.

A lot can happen in one week.

Say, finding a pair of potential contract holders, thwarting a much stronger demon’s plans, and falling in love with an angel.

Game start.

~

A/N: Random snippets, not necessarily of the same story but definitely in the same "world” of one of my original fics. Uh, in this, angels vs demons is less good vs evil so much as it is order vs chaos.

Into Thin Air x Naruto drabble (2015-07-14)

Windy and Cloud Strife.

She was always an adjective–clever, skillful, ruthless, transient–and it was all fine. Fine, another adjective. It was good enough, she was good enough. Her brother, well, he may not have been as clever, as skillful, but he had big dreams and a heart of gold. He wasn’t an adjective, he was a noun. He could be a hero. She could be helpful, but fleeting.

That’s just the way it had always been.

Zie learns, much much later, after the significance of the name Namikaze, that sealing–fuinjutsu–is not a common skill. In fact, the talent to not only wield it effectively, but to understand it, is very rare.

The last person to gain the title of Fuinjutsu master was also the last person to use the name Namikaze.

It’s not something zie actively takes advantage of, but it certainly is a nice bonus.

The problem, or perhaps, the opportunity arises, because as far as Windy can tell, seals use the same writing system as normal text. Arranged in specific ways, yes, but still just normal text.

Code-breaking zie knows, taught by the Turks, coding as well. Sealing is simply both, zie concludes, where the symbols are adapted Wutaian.

But zie thinks it’s a common skill. Zie sees a lot of the shinobi using tags and scrolls with seals–to explode, to contain, to summon–even low ranking ones. So zie thinks it’s normal.

Windy masters fuinjutsu before zie becomes fluent in the spoken language.

~

A/N: Hahahaha… I have no idea. I guess it’s all my SI!OCs nostalgia feels coming up. So here’s some Windy Strife. Still don’t actually want to write a crossover with Naruto because of my consistent and persistent belief that the language barrier will remain. And that’s always so tricky and frustrating to read and write both. Buuuut I seem to be fond of it despite that? Who knows…

Untitled drabble (2015-07-13)

“Don’t be a stranger,” the man says, affable grin on his face. She lets his hand go and smiles back at him, watching as he walks away into the light.

The man has not been able to walk by himself for six months.

The man has been pronounced dead as of 4:37 this morning.

Her vision distorts as it usually does, back to the normal shades of gray that she sees the world. She is told that it’s usually the opposite for most psychopomps–at least the ones that bother with vision–but for her, the dead and the place they go to has always seemed more vibrant, more real than the monotony of everyday life.

She is in the custodian’s closet on the same floor as the man’s room, just down the hall. Crinkling her nose at the stench of cleaning supplies and soiled laundry, she rises from her prone position seated on an overturned bucket, and leaves the hospital.

The nurses don’t see her, or rather, don’t notice, just another faceless scrub-wearing member of their ranks shuffling along the graveyard shift. She appears frequently enough that the staff know her face, if not quite her purpose and definitely not her name. She will be back, eventually.

She has school in three hours.

~

A/N: Short drabble is short! But you got two yesterday so 😛

I do have an OC name for a psychopomp, though I’m unsure if I want this one to necessarily be her. Anyway, it’s Kira Val, (unsubtle valkyrie pun).

(In)Difference drabble (2015-07-12) [2]

The Utsugi clan compound is hardly deserving of the name. There are maybe eight smaller families, siblings and cousins and aunts and uncles to each other, and really it’s more of a massive extended single house than a neighborhood.

She was born during a low birth peak meaning that, unlike her other cousins who have at least three age mates to grow up with, the nearest Utsugi relatives to her on either side have a gap of over eight years. She’s far from lonely though, a trail of children not yet old enough to be at the academy beseeching her to play ninja. Older cousins ruffling her hair in congratulations for passing, their own flak jackets as new as her headband. An uncle, who may or may not be ANBU, gives her a booklet of shock tags, a handsome graduation gift indeed.

Her parents, as enthusiastic over their only child’s achievements as ever, have begun planning a clan wide celebration. Though, to be fair, there was a celebration for cousin Tetsuo’s promotion to tokujou last month and anyway, her father is the clan head; a celebration was expected.

It should be a good day.

But as she watched her friends get placed on teams obviously slated to fail, and herself put on a team with two of the better male students in their class, she couldn’t help but feel the weight of her plan twelve years in the making crumble around her.

She could have been a Nae-chan, she thinks. She would have been free. Instead, Kunugi Mokume stares dispassionately at her while Dan Katou smiles, young and very much not dead.

Her eyes flick between him and the only other viable team–the one with the Rookie of the Year, the frustratingly skilled dead last, and the Senju Princess.

Likely sensing her gaze, Tsunade looks back and smiles hesitantly.

She could have been free.

~

A/N: Aaaaand some Kiyoshi Utsugi feels, also brought about by my seven hour bus ride to my sister’s.

Also, this derailed itself very quickly. I was going to have it be about how minor clans operate within Konoha–but then I apparently felt like having existential “oh god, I can’t escape canon” feels.

(En)Closure drabble (2015-07-12) [1]

“You know,” Haru starts, which is a terrible sign because whenever she starts a sentence with that phrase it always ends up with Hikaru in trouble, “I could help with the whole NetGo thing,” she offers lightly, hardly a catch or trap in sight.

“You don’t even play Go,” Hikaru automatically responds, which Haru chooses not to verbally react to. Instead she swipes the last of the ajitsuke eggs, relishing in both the flavor and his protesting squawk. She’s the one paying, so technically they’re all hers anyway.

They then spend the next minute or so kicking at each other’s ankles. Because they are the epitome of maturity.

“That did not stop you in the beginnings of our relationship. Haru-san is as capable of placing stones where I point as you are.” Sai scolds, as exasperated with their antics as he is internally amused. Probably.

“Ugh, fine, that would be really helpful.” Hikaru grumbles around a mouth full of ramen. “What do you want in exchange?”

“Wow, rude,” Haru says facetiously, not referring to his terrible table manners, “What if I just want to help you out of the goodness of my heart.”

Even Sai has a skeptical expression on his face.

“Okay, so maybe there’s a case that involves the principal’s office at an all boy’s school and I can no longer convincingly cross dress as a teenage boy.”

Sai, out of politeness, does not let his gaze travel away from her face. Hikaru, out of well trained fear, does the same. But he does protest the arrangement loudly, “No way! There’s a reason I stopped going to school as soon as I could, okay, I’m not going back!”

“You don’t have to actually attend the school, just maybe, you know, call them and make it sound like you’re considering going back and that their school is on your list of potential options. I’m sure they’d be honored to have one of Igo’s young celebrities attend their fine establishment,” she smirks, voice lilting up into a lofty proclamation.

Hikaru grumbles, trying to play the hard sell, but with Sai obviously accepting the trade and eagerly poking him in the shoulder, she knows he’s going to give in: “Ten NetGo games when I choose and you buy me lunch for a week.” He declares, trying to eke out as much as he could.

“Three games when I choose, and I buy you lunch all the time anyway you giant gaping stomach of a leech.” She counters, flicking a crumpled up straw wrapper at him.

“Five matches, times agreed on by all of us, and you really should start contributing to purchasing meals, Hikaru, it isn’t proper,” Sai cuts in before they can devolve into a childish scuffle.

“She makes more than I do!” says Hikaru, the fifteen year old professional Go player.

“Not for long, Mr. I’m going to get the Honinbou title from your grandpa before creepy Ogata can,” says Haru, the seventeen year old professional medium and private investigator, “you should hurry on that, by the way. Grandpa’s getting up there in the years and Ogata is getting desperate.”

“Do try speaking about your elders with respect,” says Sai, the thousand year old ghost.

The two living participants of the conversation meet eyes and, after a beat, start laughing uproariously. As if.

~

A/N: I have now titled the Haru Kuwabara series! Hooray! Written as I was on a seven hour bus ride to visit my sister, and got all weirdly nostalgic over Haru. Gonna be honest, I was tempted to call this Nightlight for a second… but then I realized how potentially shipping sounding that was since Haru’s name is Ash Night and Hikaru’s is light. And, no, they’re just bros. Platonic life partners tied together by the ability to see Sai and their lack of shame. It’s great. 

Untitled LotR drabble (2015-07-10)

jazrdreamer:

jacksgreysays:

The Shire, as gentle and bountiful as it is, is poorly suited to deal with battle shocked hobbits. Though the entirety of the Took clan and a smattering of Brandybucks have gone on quite a many adventure throughout the ages, none were quite so traumatic as the adventures undertaken by the last pair of Baggins.

Unfortunately, the window for Old Mad Bilbo Baggins’ recovery had long past, the weight of decades worth of battle shock combined with loss and the whisperings of the One Ring. His stay in Rivendell, amongst elves who had practice in healing mental trauma alongside the physical, was a balm indeed. But, perhaps, too little too late.

It was no surprise that Bilbo had chosen to venture, one last time, for the Grey Havens.

Nor was it a surprise when Bilbo asked, no, pleaded, with Frodo to try and live, “Please, my dear boy, just try.”

Frodo’s uneasy, but sincere agreement was no surprise either, for while the Baggins family had been much reduced in number, their bond had always been strong.

What was a surprise was that Pippin was the one who came up with a solution.

While Samwise tried juggling a growing family and his, inarguably, stalwart companionship with Frodo–he was simply a single hobbit with too much on his hands. Merry, in turn, attempted to reawaken his cousin, as if the old Frodo were merely hidden beneath this new, morose version and could be restored with books and mathoms.

Rather than see a reprise of the Mad Old Baggins, withering alone in Bag End, not even a young nephew to ease the isolation, Pippin suggested that Frodo leave.

“I don’t mean that we don’t want you around, Frodo,” the youngest of their group assures, words stumbling but eyes steady in their gaze, “But it’s just that, well. I’m still Faramir’s squire and Merry is Eowyn’s and we’re here in the Shire for now, but we were both going to head back. Together, that is, because Eowyn and Faramir are engaged to be married and that means we’ll be seeing a lot of each other, too, and well…”

Because, for all that they’ve (Merry and Pippin, that is) missed the Shire and the comforts of home, they don’t fit anymore. Or rather, they fit less than they did before. They’ve travelled and seen things no hobbit, not even old Bilbo, had ever seen and now their little quests to steal vegetables or set off fireworks simply don’t compare, nowhere near as fulfilling as they used to be.

And if the two of them are feeling this way, then Frodo–bearer of the Ring, savior of all of Middle Earth–must feel even worse. They all can tell, the way he’s shut himself up in Bag End, not even going outside to read in the sunlight like he used to. He still seems sickly, though all the healers have proclaimed him fully restored (barring the missing finger), and except for the occasional brief meet ups with them (Merry, Pippin, and Sam, and Sam’s family, that is), he doesn’t interact with anyone.

“… and maybe, well, that is to say, I know how fond of both Aragorn and Arwen you were, and they of you, so I mean, I can ask Faramir to be sure but even so–”

“Pippin,” Frodo interrupted, wan smile on his face–though, lately all of his smiles were wan–as he reached out a pale, shaking hand, and set it lightly on Pippin’s shoulder, “Thank you. I’ll think about it,” he demurred.

But that wasn’t enough, was hardly anything at all. Frodo needed help. If he couldn’t get it in the Shire, then he had to go elsewhere to get it.

So Pippin told Merry; because Merry’s still the smart one, even if it was Pippin to come up with the idea.

After the moment of surprise, and some name calling and roughhousing, Merry agreed. Merry wrote the necessary letters, made all the arrangements, because a plan was a plan whether it was stealing Farmer Maggot’s carrots or getting a cousin across the continent. It was up to Sam to convince Frodo; though what was said or done during their three hour discussion within Bilbo’s old study, Merry and Pippin anxiously demolishing the contents of Bag End’s pantry, will forever remain a secret between the two of them.

And so, after six months passed, it was three hobbits on the road south to Gondor.

~

A/N: I had this idea bouncing around in my head for a while (actually sort of a cross-post from my lj, here, though it’s all blagh there) ever since I re-watched all three of the Lord of the Rings movies (extended editions, FML) in a row with a friend of mine. But I only recently have been perusing through some Hobbit fic and got some Middle Earth feels that I had to articulate.

Basically, I wouldn’t want to change much of the actual journey but the epilogue didn’t sit right with me. And I know that’s on Tolkien, but it seemed kind of counterproductive to what he wanted? Like, yes, Frodo did suffer through great evil but he didn’t seem to recover from it at all–going off to the Grey havens with Bilbo and the elves–and that seems like a pretty bleak fate for the Baggins family. Part of me thinks that this is because Frodo is suffering from major PTSD, but considering the average hobbit, no one in the Shire really knows how to deal with it or help him. In contrast, nearly everyone is a warrior race and would have more practice in helping traumatized people, even if it’s not exactly the same situation.

Aaaand the end game for this was going to be ArwenxAragornxFrodo sort of threesome with Frodo helping to raise their son (which, since he’s the height of a child would be pretty interesting). Because, I guess, all of them have a fondness for baby-faced (if you consider how old Aragorn REALLY is…) blue-eyed brunettes.

And long author’s note is long. 😛

That’s really cute! I’ve never really thought about it but Frodo would totally have PTSD. And I love Sam and felt so sad that Frodo left, sort of like a settle down with that chick you liked 2 years ago and probably have nothing in common with anymore and have lil’ babies and have your best friend disappear. It’s a real interesting idea, if you wanted to write anymore, I’d totes read it~ Or if you know any, please rec!

Thanks 🙂 It’s a bit rough, but I’m glad you enjoyed it. I wasn’t as submerged into the LotR fandom as much as it was Hobbit fandom leading me there, so I can’t say for sure whether or not there is a fic with a similar idea. I’d love to read that too!

I’m a bit unsure if I will continue this–I feel like in order to do this justice it would need a fairly long fic and I’m only just starting my own writing journey–but maybe one day? Or if anyone else would like to piggyback off of it, feel free–just let me know (because, seriously, would love to read that fic).

Of Veils and Polish, Part Two (2015-07-11)

“A stowaway,” the captain hummed thoughtfully, seated behind the bolted down table in his cabin. He had said the same phrase, and only that phrase, repeatedly since he first laid eyes on her. Practically chanting it on the way from galley to captain’s quarters, excitedly showing her off to the sailors they passed on deck. They rolled their eyes or gave quick chuckles, but there was no hostility. When they spotted Ram again, he winked at her, and she thought, so long as her hair was covered, it wouldn’t hurt to wave back.

Ed, unalarmed, followed gamely after him, so she did, too, if a bit more bemused. She wasn’t entirely sure if she regrets, of all the ships in the port, choosing this one to sneak aboard.

“Now go on, stowaway, tell me your tale,” the captain, a rather tall and thin man, gangly he could be described, commanded, propping his elbows on the table and setting his face in his hands; an eager boy waiting for story time.

She hesitated, glancing at him, then at Ed, gaze flickering back and forth.

“Did you want Ed to leave?” Delano asked softly, his own gaze moving from her to Ed.

She shook her head swiftly, not wanting to isolate her first ally, but still dithered.

“Let’s start with your name, lass,” the sailor suggested from where he stood beside the table.

Suddenly her hands were the most fascinating thing to look at.

“Not even your name, huh?” Delano murmured, fingers drumming against his cheek, “And a headscarf despite the summer heat.”

She flushed at the reminder.

“Let me see your hands,” the captain held out one of his own toward her indolently, head still propped in the other.

Surely, there were only so many times she could refuse before they kicked her off the ship. Warily, she held out her hands.

Slowly, Delano held one and brought it closer to his face, inspecting the nails thoroughly, before releasing.

“Unless you’re a priestess from the western mountain tribes, the only reason you’re wearing a headscarf is to hide something. It’s not your face, as I can see it plain as day, so it must be your hair. Or you’re bald and you’re trying to hide that, but no, it must be something about your hair. What would be so noticeable about your hair that you’d need to hide it? The color, perhaps?” He asked rhetorically, confident in his extrapolation.

Reluctantly, she pulled the hood down.

“Let me guess… faint traces of polish on your nails, blue most likely, combined with your red hair and your attempt to stowaway… a servant from the Court, who caught the unwanted attention of one of the nobles, and is now trying to flee the kingdom by way of sea. Yes?” The captain looked so pleased with himself, despite how clichéd such a tale was, a Court scandal was still intriguing.

“No,” she said, finally breaking her silence to correct him. The indignity of having herself and her past reduced to such a trite guessing game–her hands clenched into fists, still lightly stained fingernails biting into her palm, “No,” she repeated, “I was a green polish, not blue. Scholar, not servant.”

“Ah,” Delano said, voice dropping to flatly unamused, “a runaway noble–”

“No,” she interrupted, “I was the first. I was the only… commoner,” she spat out, hating having to use the epithet so often hurled at her like an insult, “among the scholars.”

“My apologies,” the captain said, interest recovered, though thankfully not the flippancy.

The silence felt heavy, ringing in her ears.

“There’s more to it than that,” Ed’s gravelly voice said, reminding them of his presence.

“You can stay, if you tell us. No matter what you did or what was done to you. You have sanctuary here,” Delano offers, back straight and hands pressed flat to the table.

“Yes,” she sighed, in relief and resignation both, “yes, there more to it than that.”

~

A/N: Direct continuation to this drabble here. And, I guess, the ~expository dialogue~ will be in the next segment.

I am now considering actually telling the full story in this way as a sort of flashback of what led narrator to this point. I mean, it’s a pretty good set up which I hadn’t even thought of originally.

Untitled LotR drabble (2015-07-10)

The Shire, as gentle and bountiful as it is, is poorly suited to deal with battle shocked hobbits. Though the entirety of the Took clan and a smattering of Brandybucks have gone on quite a many adventure throughout the ages, none were quite so traumatic as the adventures undertaken by the last pair of Baggins.

Unfortunately, the window for Old Mad Bilbo Baggins’ recovery had long past, the weight of decades worth of battle shock combined with loss and the whisperings of the One Ring. His stay in Rivendell, amongst elves who had practice in healing mental trauma alongside the physical, was a balm indeed. But, perhaps, too little too late.

It was no surprise that Bilbo had chosen to venture, one last time, for the Grey Havens.

Nor was it a surprise when Bilbo asked, no, pleaded, with Frodo to try and live, “Please, my dear boy, just try.”

Frodo’s uneasy, but sincere agreement was no surprise either, for while the Baggins family had been much reduced in number, their bond had always been strong.

What was a surprise was that Pippin was the one who came up with a solution.

While Samwise tried juggling a growing family and his, inarguably, stalwart companionship with Frodo–he was simply a single hobbit with too much on his hands. Merry, in turn, attempted to reawaken his cousin, as if the old Frodo were merely hidden beneath this new, morose version and could be restored with books and mathoms.

Rather than see a reprise of the Mad Old Baggins, withering alone in Bag End, not even a young nephew to ease the isolation, Pippin suggested that Frodo leave.

“I don’t mean that we don’t want you around, Frodo,” the youngest of their group assures, words stumbling but eyes steady in their gaze, “But it’s just that, well. I’m still Faramir’s squire and Merry is Eowyn’s and we’re here in the Shire for now, but we were both going to head back. Together, that is, because Eowyn and Faramir are engaged to be married and that means we’ll be seeing a lot of each other, too, and well…”

Because, for all that they’ve (Merry and Pippin, that is) missed the Shire and the comforts of home, they don’t fit anymore. Or rather, they fit less than they did before. They’ve travelled and seen things no hobbit, not even old Bilbo, had ever seen and now their little quests to steal vegetables or set off fireworks simply don’t compare, nowhere near as fulfilling as they used to be.

And if the two of them are feeling this way, then Frodo–bearer of the Ring, savior of all of Middle Earth–must feel even worse. They all can tell, the way he’s shut himself up in Bag End, not even going outside to read in the sunlight like he used to. He still seems sickly, though all the healers have proclaimed him fully restored (barring the missing finger), and except for the occasional brief meet ups with them (Merry, Pippin, and Sam, and Sam’s family, that is), he doesn’t interact with anyone.

“… and maybe, well, that is to say, I know how fond of both Aragorn and Arwen you were, and they of you, so I mean, I can ask Faramir to be sure but even so–”

“Pippin,” Frodo interrupted, wan smile on his face–though, lately all of his smiles were wan–as he reached out a pale, shaking hand, and set it lightly on Pippin’s shoulder, “Thank you. I’ll think about it,” he demurred.

But that wasn’t enough, was hardly anything at all. Frodo needed help. If he couldn’t get it in the Shire, then he had to go elsewhere to get it.

So Pippin told Merry; because Merry’s still the smart one, even if it was Pippin to come up with the idea.

After the moment of surprise, and some name calling and roughhousing, Merry agreed. Merry wrote the necessary letters, made all the arrangements, because a plan was a plan whether it was stealing Farmer Maggot’s carrots or getting a cousin across the continent. It was up to Sam to convince Frodo; though what was said or done during their three hour discussion within Bilbo’s old study, Merry and Pippin anxiously demolishing the contents of Bag End’s pantry, will forever remain a secret between the two of them.

And so, after six months passed, it was three hobbits on the road south to Gondor.

~

A/N: I had this idea bouncing around in my head for a while (actually sort of a cross-post from my lj, here, though it’s all blagh there) ever since I re-watched all three of the Lord of the Rings movies (extended editions, FML) in a row with a friend of mine. But I only recently have been perusing through some Hobbit fic and got some Middle Earth feels that I had to articulate.

Basically, I wouldn’t want to change much of the actual journey but the epilogue didn’t sit right with me. And I know that’s on Tolkien, but it seemed kind of counterproductive to what he wanted? Like, yes, Frodo did suffer through great evil but he didn’t seem to recover from it at all–going off to the Grey havens with Bilbo and the elves–and that seems like a pretty bleak fate for the Baggins family. Part of me thinks that this is because Frodo is suffering from major PTSD, but considering the average hobbit, no one in the Shire really knows how to deal with it or help him. In contrast, nearly everyone is a warrior race and would have more practice in helping traumatized people, even if it’s not exactly the same situation.

Aaaand the end game for this was going to be ArwenxAragornxFrodo sort of threesome with Frodo helping to raise their son (which, since he’s the height of a child would be pretty interesting). Because, I guess, all of them have a fondness for baby-faced (if you consider how old Aragorn REALLY is…) blue-eyed brunettes.

And long author’s note is long. 😛