faolanmeadowes:
Faolan stares. It isn’t the first time someone’s regarded his work with something like this, he hasn’t been a blacksmith for this long with mastering the trade, but it’s the first time someone’s remembered him from the Otherlands. He left the accomplishments behind a long time ago, but it doesn’t stop the pleased smile from crossing his lips. “I have not had an article used in front of my name in some centuries. Some people still remember my name then?” he wonders, a little surprised his mother didn’t try to erase that from history. It’s good to know there’s limits to even her power. Faolan grasps his hand, shaking it firmly. “Pleasure, Marek. Faolan is fine, I am not the type of person to stand on ceremony. I have to admit, I did not know they still made blades like this in the Otherlands, I always thought someone would take my work and run with it.” He studies the hilt only a moment longer. “Not my finest work, but one of my favorites. I can calibrate it for you at my shop whenever you are free, it is down the road from here,” he says, gesturing in the vague direction of Heat of the Moment. It isn’t far from them, but he won’t assume Marek has the time to handle it now, not when Faolan has clearly interrupted some sort of training. A familiar sort of training, too, but it takes him a moment of thoughtfully studying Marek before it clicks. “You are a guard? I did not work with them much, they had their own blacksmiths and I was not much of a name still, but you stand the way I imagined they did. Are you fresh from the Otherlands then?” Faolan hasn’t thought of the Otherlands as his home since… probably since the mid 1300′s, but he’s still got a curiosity for it. “Have they still got the uhh… mad man from Barstew trying to start a new religion? I have not heard about home since the 1900s, I am not sure what has changed.”
“Of course” he replied with hesitation. Faolan wasn’t as much of an obscure figure as he seemed to think he was, at least amongst the regiment of guards Marek had served with, the other fae was still remembered for his brilliant invention. He shook the man’s hand, so pleased to be meeting someone he’d admired and respected for a good portion of his life. “Fortunately for us, no, your work remained. I wouldn’t say it became standard amongst royal guards, but a great majority of us used them”. He couldn’t help but laugh a little when Faolan said the electrokinetic blade wasn’t his best work. Gods, if this wasn’t the best thing he’d created then what could be? Then when the offer was made to recalibrate his blade, Marek didn’t hesitate to answer “Yes, that would be great! Thank you. It’ll be wonderful to have it restored to its former glory”. When Faolan asked whether he was a guard he smiled and shook his head. “Not anymore, no”. His title was stripped in a way that some might deem dishonorable, but Marek had left his post in order to keep one of the most sacred vows he’d ever sworn. So to him, it wasn’t dishonorable in the least that he found himself in this realm now and that he’d chosen to build the kind of life he wanted for himself. “Not quite, I first came here a little over two years ago for what I thought might be only a temporary period of time, and I officially settled here last June. So Lethe is home now” he said with a proud smile, very much content with the choice to stay in this world, even more so because he had someone who was home to him. “Gods, I wouldn’t know. I’ve never heard of him” Marek admitted, scratching the back of his head. “I’m only seventy-four, so” he added with a laugh. He was a very young fae for the standards of their race. “Though I suppose some things never change because every few years some new faith sprouts out of nowhere. Last one I recall had something to do with worshipping an immortal firebird that inhabited a volcano south of the capital”. It sounded a bit ridiculous to him, but then again, maybe those firebird worshippers thought the religion of the Gods of the Forest was the one that made no sense. So to each their own, believing what brought them serenity or hope. “You’ve been here long, then” he stated more than asked, though he was admittedly curious to know what the great Faolan had been doing in this world for such a long time. Part of him also wondered why he left the Otherlands in the first place but he didn’t even consider asking that, considering it might be too personal.













