Young Adventures: A Tall Ones Tale
Nov. 28th, 2023 08:35 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Young Adventures (1984 words) by Sharpest_Asp
Chapters: 2/2
Fandom: Forgotten Realms
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Alustriel Silverhand/Original Character(s)
Characters: Alustriel Silverhand, Andelver Aerasumé, Dolthauvin Aerasumé, Ghaelryss Aerasumé, Elinthalar Aerasumé, Original Elf Character(s)
Additional Tags: Coming of Age, Fluff, Family Bonding
Summary:
"Bad memories."
"You came through it fine."
"Your sister terrified me."
There was soft laughter, and a pause in discussion as she made it up to her elf-lord.
"We could track down that amulet."
"Hmm, a little too high a risk for the boys. They've learned well, but that should have an experienced hand. I'd wind up stifling them."
"True. Or maybe we're being too protective."
"You were the one that insisted they go with one or both of us to see how well they fare."
"Yes, with reason."
Silence fell, an easy one, as they thought a bit longer.
"Ruins," he finally offered. "I know a set that was cleared within the last century, but we didn't have time to explore, and those things attract new trouble."
"But the trouble won't be as entrenched… a good idea, my love."
Andelver tried hard not to be too smug as he looked at his younger brothers being shepherded back up into the trees by Mama. He also didn't want to look too nervous, so he checked on Dolthauvin to be sure his twin was steady.
They were going out of the village! Out of the High Forest even! Father and Mother were both in their traveling clothes, and the four of them would be going by foot to the very edge of the High Forest and past, to a set of ruins Father knew about.
Dolthauvin gave him a quick grin, then paid sharp attention as Father indicated for him to be their forward scout. Andelver was allowed to take the rear, and the quartet began their adventure.
Up in a higher branch, Sam poked Kor, knowing he was fretting about not going with them.
"So how much trouble do you think they'll find?" the wizard asked playfully.
The fighter just growled at him, and watched until they could not see the four any longer.
The travel included camping time, for magic lessons. Sharr watched and listened, offering occasional tips to his sons as their mother helped them mastering one new spell each.
"Why aren't you a wizard, Father?" Dol asked, after they had settled down for their rest.
Sharr half-shrugged. "I preferred the idea of being able to defend Sam, to lead the village fighters from the front. Mother kept me in her classes through the first level spells she thought I would need.
"Corellon grants me the ability to read magic, thankfully, as Sam's command of the ancient scripts is spotty at best."
"You probably could learn, even now, my love," Elué said. "More than the first level."
"Likely, but I am settling more into the preservation of knowledge," he said. "I'm set on my path, and content. I will take pride in each of our children that follow your choice of life."
Andy nodded at all of that. "I think the four of us boys choosing both is going to be slow-going, but it also lets us either lead into battle or work from behind the fighters to protect more of them."
"Indeed it does," Elué said.
Working their way into the ruins required finesse and magic both, Dol found. Every puzzle lock, every trap — Mother was not offering any advice at all, which meant it was a fair test of his and Andy's ability to work together.
They wound up having to shelter in place, inside the ruined keep, as the pair had not memorized the best spells, and did not want to risk going lower without magic.
Even in this, Mother did not protect them, and Andy wound up working out a watch pattern to use all four of them without leaning into the greater experience of their parents. Dol was content to let him lead, having been copying some of the inscriptions as they moved further in. He saw their father nod approvingly once, and decided all knowledge, in some form or other, might be useful.
The moment Andy's foot came down on the stone, he realized his mistake. It hadn't been a trick of light or shadow, but an actually slight difference he should have seen. It fell under his foot, and the bones littering the corridor began to rise into undead warriors.
"Squirrel nuts," he hissed before analyzing the best approach to protect the others.
"Let me run into them, give me at least three body lengths, and then come in behind me," Dol said, sword in hand. "You didn't take an area effect spell today."
Andy nodded, and remembered which one his twin had. He didn't like it, but leading was going to mean sometimes letting others take the risk.
Dol took off at a run, dodging between the skeletons, sword deflecting one blow, and once he was far enough away from his brother and parents, he evoked the thunderwave. The boom was almost deafening in close quarters, but it disrupted — even shook apart! — several of the undead, allowing Andy to wade in behind and use his enchanted blade to break more of them up.
Both boys cleared the path, taking minor cuts from rusted weapons, while their parents only dealt with the one skeleton that wandered back to them.
For having set off a trap, it hadn't turned out so badly.
Dol reached out for his twin as they made it to the lowest level, and found his fear was very real.
"What?" Andy snapped.
"I think we need to leave," Dol told him. "You're feverish."
Behind them, Elué twitched, but Sharr put a hand on her arm, stopping her from moving forward.
Andy opened his mouth, shut it, and listened past the mind-fog he'd been dealing with since they got up from their second rest in this place.
The hum in his ears confirmed his twin's words, and he ground his jaw. "We made it this far. It's just a fever."
"Means you didn't get all the cuts from the skeletons cleaned out, you idiot," Dol hissed at him. "I don't have a potion. You don't have a potion. The infection is set in. We have to get back out and somewhere I can treat you.
"Past every trap we avoided, by thinking through them."
His brother wanted so much to deny the logic, but —
— he had taken the lead. He was responsible for the party.
"Yeah, you're right," Andy said. He looked at his parents. "Not finding out what's down here today; we're going out. Dol, you guide this time; your memory is going to be better.
"Defensive positions only, so we can keep moving out."
"Alright, let's do it."
Once they made it fully out, and made camp far enough from the ruined keep to be safe, Andy looked at his parents. Sharr had tended the infected wound, and the fever, with plant-lore he knew, but Andy still felt wretched.
"Other than missing the scratch that got infected, what did I do wrong?"
"Nothing," Elué said.
"Other than not being aware of yourself, to possibly head the fever off earlier," Sharr amended. "At the first sign you were feeling off, you should have done a second check of your arms and legs, had Dol check your body.
"You might have been able to purge the infection with a bit of the alcohol you carry, and could have made the choice to turn around sooner, if that failed."
"But I didn't get us all the way to the treasure room," Andy said, even as that sunk in.
"No," Elué said. "You made the choice for greater good. With no consequences but unsatisfied curiosity, you made the correct choice to turn back. In time, you may have a quest that has consequences for not seeing it through, but you should always try to build in failsafes."
"Like having baby brothers on standby, if it is a really big thing that needs done, more potions and elixirs at hand?" Dol asked.
"Among other steps, but yes." Sharr gave both boys — young men — a smile. "You each did your parts remarkably well. And did not let the idea we were there lessen your appreciation of the dangers possible.
"We're proud of you both. And think that come spring, if you choose, the two of you can begin to roam on your own."
Dol broke out in a grin, but Andy frowned for a long moment before sighing.
"It's going to take experience to learn the mistakes I can make," he said, working through what he'd felt was a failure slowly. "And experience to know how to avoid or mitigate them."
"Yes. A valuable lesson, my son," Elué told him. "Now, are we walking back, or am I memorizing two phantom steeds after our rest?"
That actually made Andy laugh, letting go of the failure, as all four debated the merits of each option.
Elin reasoned that Father's pegasus knew them, and would watch over them if they whistled for the mare. So they followed her flight line, watching the lazy glide, and wound up seeing a handful of others in the air as well.
Ghael was the one that pointed out that was more pegasi than usual, and the pair pushed themselves to keep her in sight.
"Kor?" Charic asked. "Have you seen the boys? They left berry picking this morning, and no one's seen them since."
Kor rousted himself from checking his pack; he'd been meaning to go over to his own village, since Sam was supposed to be teaching magic to the pair.
"Where did they leave from?" he asked, buckling on his sword as he asked. Charic told him, and left the matter in his hands; she had other duties to see to.
Ghael and Elin had found a fair-sized herd, and when their father's mare, Trynseel, had spotted them, she nickered for the colts and fillies to come meet them. Trynseel kept an indulgent eye on the younger pair of her friend's colts, knowing they were both sturdy and learning the ways of being adult.
She really wasn't surprised when the sole pair of hatched-together foals, now yearlings, fluttered and pranced, claiming the right to finish growing up with Ghael and Elin. The filly went to Elin, and the colt to Ghael. That done, there was more social time, and Trynseel let all the young ones play, including the pair of two legs that were just past the gangly stage.
Kor swore the moment he was beyond the borders of even Charic's village, but knew Sam would eventually send to him to check on them. He pushed on into the night, refusing to rest while the pair of nineteen year old boys were out loose in the world, away from safety, exposed to their mother's enemies.
Just after the sun rose, he came to a glade, and found Trynseel, both boys, and two young pegasi sleeping on the ground, with each boy under a pegasus wing.
"Well, damn," he said to himself, remembering finding their father with what became his first pegasus friend.
Trynseel opened her eyes, and he would have sworn she looked smug about it all.
They made it back to the village about a day ahead of Sharr and Elué with the older pair. A hasty 'no one was hurt' and then the two yearlings made their presence known.
"Mother! Father! Come see!" Ghael called happily. "You two can come as well," he added to his brothers before scampering off a limb into the forest below.
Sharr looked at Kor, then Sam, raised an eyebrow at them, before grinning.
"Not so much trouble to keep up with a pair of boys, hmm?" he teased, leading to Kor muttering about wood-sun elves and leaving them.
"Dad," Dol said, seriously. "It's not fair."
Sharr clapped both elder sons on the shoulders. "I'll ask Trynseel if there can be another meeting."
Chapters: 2/2
Fandom: Forgotten Realms
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Alustriel Silverhand/Original Character(s)
Characters: Alustriel Silverhand, Andelver Aerasumé, Dolthauvin Aerasumé, Ghaelryss Aerasumé, Elinthalar Aerasumé, Original Elf Character(s)
Additional Tags: Coming of Age, Fluff, Family Bonding
Summary:
The eldest pair of boys are almost ready to begin exploring on their own, so Alustriel and Sharrevaliir take them on an adventure.
Meanwhile, the next pair make an adventure of their own.
Young Adventures: Chapter One
"There's that wyrmling nest.""Bad memories."
"You came through it fine."
"Your sister terrified me."
There was soft laughter, and a pause in discussion as she made it up to her elf-lord.
"We could track down that amulet."
"Hmm, a little too high a risk for the boys. They've learned well, but that should have an experienced hand. I'd wind up stifling them."
"True. Or maybe we're being too protective."
"You were the one that insisted they go with one or both of us to see how well they fare."
"Yes, with reason."
Silence fell, an easy one, as they thought a bit longer.
"Ruins," he finally offered. "I know a set that was cleared within the last century, but we didn't have time to explore, and those things attract new trouble."
"But the trouble won't be as entrenched… a good idea, my love."
Andelver tried hard not to be too smug as he looked at his younger brothers being shepherded back up into the trees by Mama. He also didn't want to look too nervous, so he checked on Dolthauvin to be sure his twin was steady.
They were going out of the village! Out of the High Forest even! Father and Mother were both in their traveling clothes, and the four of them would be going by foot to the very edge of the High Forest and past, to a set of ruins Father knew about.
Dolthauvin gave him a quick grin, then paid sharp attention as Father indicated for him to be their forward scout. Andelver was allowed to take the rear, and the quartet began their adventure.
Up in a higher branch, Sam poked Kor, knowing he was fretting about not going with them.
"So how much trouble do you think they'll find?" the wizard asked playfully.
The fighter just growled at him, and watched until they could not see the four any longer.
The travel included camping time, for magic lessons. Sharr watched and listened, offering occasional tips to his sons as their mother helped them mastering one new spell each.
"Why aren't you a wizard, Father?" Dol asked, after they had settled down for their rest.
Sharr half-shrugged. "I preferred the idea of being able to defend Sam, to lead the village fighters from the front. Mother kept me in her classes through the first level spells she thought I would need.
"Corellon grants me the ability to read magic, thankfully, as Sam's command of the ancient scripts is spotty at best."
"You probably could learn, even now, my love," Elué said. "More than the first level."
"Likely, but I am settling more into the preservation of knowledge," he said. "I'm set on my path, and content. I will take pride in each of our children that follow your choice of life."
Andy nodded at all of that. "I think the four of us boys choosing both is going to be slow-going, but it also lets us either lead into battle or work from behind the fighters to protect more of them."
"Indeed it does," Elué said.
Working their way into the ruins required finesse and magic both, Dol found. Every puzzle lock, every trap — Mother was not offering any advice at all, which meant it was a fair test of his and Andy's ability to work together.
They wound up having to shelter in place, inside the ruined keep, as the pair had not memorized the best spells, and did not want to risk going lower without magic.
Even in this, Mother did not protect them, and Andy wound up working out a watch pattern to use all four of them without leaning into the greater experience of their parents. Dol was content to let him lead, having been copying some of the inscriptions as they moved further in. He saw their father nod approvingly once, and decided all knowledge, in some form or other, might be useful.
The moment Andy's foot came down on the stone, he realized his mistake. It hadn't been a trick of light or shadow, but an actually slight difference he should have seen. It fell under his foot, and the bones littering the corridor began to rise into undead warriors.
"Squirrel nuts," he hissed before analyzing the best approach to protect the others.
"Let me run into them, give me at least three body lengths, and then come in behind me," Dol said, sword in hand. "You didn't take an area effect spell today."
Andy nodded, and remembered which one his twin had. He didn't like it, but leading was going to mean sometimes letting others take the risk.
Dol took off at a run, dodging between the skeletons, sword deflecting one blow, and once he was far enough away from his brother and parents, he evoked the thunderwave. The boom was almost deafening in close quarters, but it disrupted — even shook apart! — several of the undead, allowing Andy to wade in behind and use his enchanted blade to break more of them up.
Both boys cleared the path, taking minor cuts from rusted weapons, while their parents only dealt with the one skeleton that wandered back to them.
For having set off a trap, it hadn't turned out so badly.
Dol reached out for his twin as they made it to the lowest level, and found his fear was very real.
"What?" Andy snapped.
"I think we need to leave," Dol told him. "You're feverish."
Behind them, Elué twitched, but Sharr put a hand on her arm, stopping her from moving forward.
Andy opened his mouth, shut it, and listened past the mind-fog he'd been dealing with since they got up from their second rest in this place.
The hum in his ears confirmed his twin's words, and he ground his jaw. "We made it this far. It's just a fever."
"Means you didn't get all the cuts from the skeletons cleaned out, you idiot," Dol hissed at him. "I don't have a potion. You don't have a potion. The infection is set in. We have to get back out and somewhere I can treat you.
"Past every trap we avoided, by thinking through them."
His brother wanted so much to deny the logic, but —
— he had taken the lead. He was responsible for the party.
"Yeah, you're right," Andy said. He looked at his parents. "Not finding out what's down here today; we're going out. Dol, you guide this time; your memory is going to be better.
"Defensive positions only, so we can keep moving out."
"Alright, let's do it."
Once they made it fully out, and made camp far enough from the ruined keep to be safe, Andy looked at his parents. Sharr had tended the infected wound, and the fever, with plant-lore he knew, but Andy still felt wretched.
"Other than missing the scratch that got infected, what did I do wrong?"
"Nothing," Elué said.
"Other than not being aware of yourself, to possibly head the fever off earlier," Sharr amended. "At the first sign you were feeling off, you should have done a second check of your arms and legs, had Dol check your body.
"You might have been able to purge the infection with a bit of the alcohol you carry, and could have made the choice to turn around sooner, if that failed."
"But I didn't get us all the way to the treasure room," Andy said, even as that sunk in.
"No," Elué said. "You made the choice for greater good. With no consequences but unsatisfied curiosity, you made the correct choice to turn back. In time, you may have a quest that has consequences for not seeing it through, but you should always try to build in failsafes."
"Like having baby brothers on standby, if it is a really big thing that needs done, more potions and elixirs at hand?" Dol asked.
"Among other steps, but yes." Sharr gave both boys — young men — a smile. "You each did your parts remarkably well. And did not let the idea we were there lessen your appreciation of the dangers possible.
"We're proud of you both. And think that come spring, if you choose, the two of you can begin to roam on your own."
Dol broke out in a grin, but Andy frowned for a long moment before sighing.
"It's going to take experience to learn the mistakes I can make," he said, working through what he'd felt was a failure slowly. "And experience to know how to avoid or mitigate them."
"Yes. A valuable lesson, my son," Elué told him. "Now, are we walking back, or am I memorizing two phantom steeds after our rest?"
That actually made Andy laugh, letting go of the failure, as all four debated the merits of each option.
Young Adventures: Chapter Two
They both knew the rules. No further than they could be seen by someone that knew them.Elin reasoned that Father's pegasus knew them, and would watch over them if they whistled for the mare. So they followed her flight line, watching the lazy glide, and wound up seeing a handful of others in the air as well.
Ghael was the one that pointed out that was more pegasi than usual, and the pair pushed themselves to keep her in sight.
"Kor?" Charic asked. "Have you seen the boys? They left berry picking this morning, and no one's seen them since."
Kor rousted himself from checking his pack; he'd been meaning to go over to his own village, since Sam was supposed to be teaching magic to the pair.
"Where did they leave from?" he asked, buckling on his sword as he asked. Charic told him, and left the matter in his hands; she had other duties to see to.
Ghael and Elin had found a fair-sized herd, and when their father's mare, Trynseel, had spotted them, she nickered for the colts and fillies to come meet them. Trynseel kept an indulgent eye on the younger pair of her friend's colts, knowing they were both sturdy and learning the ways of being adult.
She really wasn't surprised when the sole pair of hatched-together foals, now yearlings, fluttered and pranced, claiming the right to finish growing up with Ghael and Elin. The filly went to Elin, and the colt to Ghael. That done, there was more social time, and Trynseel let all the young ones play, including the pair of two legs that were just past the gangly stage.
Kor swore the moment he was beyond the borders of even Charic's village, but knew Sam would eventually send to him to check on them. He pushed on into the night, refusing to rest while the pair of nineteen year old boys were out loose in the world, away from safety, exposed to their mother's enemies.
Just after the sun rose, he came to a glade, and found Trynseel, both boys, and two young pegasi sleeping on the ground, with each boy under a pegasus wing.
"Well, damn," he said to himself, remembering finding their father with what became his first pegasus friend.
Trynseel opened her eyes, and he would have sworn she looked smug about it all.
They made it back to the village about a day ahead of Sharr and Elué with the older pair. A hasty 'no one was hurt' and then the two yearlings made their presence known.
"Mother! Father! Come see!" Ghael called happily. "You two can come as well," he added to his brothers before scampering off a limb into the forest below.
Sharr looked at Kor, then Sam, raised an eyebrow at them, before grinning.
"Not so much trouble to keep up with a pair of boys, hmm?" he teased, leading to Kor muttering about wood-sun elves and leaving them.
"Dad," Dol said, seriously. "It's not fair."
Sharr clapped both elder sons on the shoulders. "I'll ask Trynseel if there can be another meeting."