Month-long fic challenge using these LOTRO Rangers + Situations prompts collected by a-lonely-dunedain. Minimum of 100 words, no particular adherence to timelines or canon.
17: Ranger OC (Aderthor) & magically unconscious

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Month-long fic challenge using these LOTRO Rangers + Situations prompts collected by a-lonely-dunedain. Minimum of 100 words, no particular adherence to timelines or canon.
17: Ranger OC (Aderthor) & magically unconscious
Month-long fic challenge using these LOTRO Rangers + Situations prompts collected by a-lonely-dunedain. Minimum of 100 words, no particular adherence to timelines or canon.
10: Ranger OC (Aderthor) and Faeron & monsterâs next meal
Oc-tober Day 6 - Sunrise - Amathan
With a wild clang! Amathan's sword-hand at last succumed to the force battering upon it, and his blade went skittering away across the packed dirt of the guards' training ground. Its erstwhile bearer, on the other hand, collapsed where he stood, head falling back with a similar clang.
"I don't---" he gasped to catch his breath, "---I don't think I'm cut out to be a guard."
Somewhere above him, his brother laughed, sheathing his own sword and offering his hand to help him up. Amathan ignored it, much preferring to remain where he was, and instead surveyed the slowly lightening sky above. Usually, two boys as young as they would not be permitted to use the city guard's equipment and land, but their father had struck some sort of agreement with the captain, and so for the meagre price of a few chores done and errands run, Aderthor and Amathan had the run of the place in the dark of predawn.
"I think Ada has long given up on either of you becomming any kind of soldier." his brother said, interrupting his musing, "You don't have to be a guard to find a sword useful,"
With a huff, Amathan sat up, though he did not deign to stand. If I don't get up, he can't make me go another round. He was still struggling to keep his breath even while Aderthor--- damn him--- had barely broken a sweat.
"So what, I'll be a brigand?"
"Not with that kind of stance you won't," Aderthor replied easily, and he caught at Amathan's arm, easily dragging the shorter boy up to his feet with only the smallest wince of effort. Amathan had half a mind to plop back down, but previous experiance told him that would merely perpetuate the cycle. He shook his head, and his helm gave up and slid off at the sudden movement, clanging once more to the dirt.
"I'll work on the docks, then, like Areher," he said. To the east, a stray sunbeam at last breached the city walls and arched over the barracks. It caught on the sword and helm in the dirt, and on Aderthor's teeth as he smiled. Amathan's heart lifted with the new sun, not least for that the guards would be arriving soon and Aderthor would have no further oppurtunity to beat him into the dust.
"You could," Aderthor agreed, and he removed his own helm, shaking back sweaty dark hair from his face. He reached in to muss Amathan's hair before the latter could stave him off and laughed once more. "You might need to grow a foot or so first, though."
Both standing on the packed dirt, Amathan's head barely crested Aderthor's chin, and though Areher wasn't nearly as tall as their eldest brother, he also stood far above Amathan. It wasn't an entirely fair contest, of course, for Amathan had turned fifteen the winter before, and Aderthor would be twenty-four come August.
He scowled fiercely and bent to collect both sword and helm. They, and both brothers' other practice armour, they would return to the city's armoury--- hopefully before the lieutenent showed up to scold them, permission or no.
Aderthor's sword, though, was his own, gifted by their father at his coming of age. When Amathan finally grew a bit more, he thought, he would have one of his own, and perhaps it would suit him a bit better than the blunted blade he carried now.
Above them, the new day dawned brightly over the city as the pair made their way through swiftly filling streets toward home.
8: That One Pool of Baja Blast (Angmar death water) In Particular (Amathan & Aderthor)
âItâs hot,â says Amathan. Aderthor whirls around to find his brother holding his hands over the surface, ungloved and too close. âDefinitely emanating heat. Are there hot springs here? Donât look at me like that, I am not going to touch it.â
Aderthor does not look away until Amathanâs gloves are back on. His brother, even all in shades of eerie green and roughed up from a fight with ghosts, is squinting and humming at the not-water as if it is a puzzle.
âHm. Do you think we can bring a vial back?â Amathan fishes the emptied poison-vial from his pocket and pokes at it, the thin neck and leather padding. âIf I scoop it in with a rock...â
âGood luck with that.â The hissing from further up the bank is still going, and Aderthor has a terrible idea what it is. Selecting a dusty bit of masonry from the debris, he tosses it far past Amathan into the center of the glowing pond.
The stone is visible for just a second on the surface, hissing and starting to glow, before it sinks. Right where it was the liquid pops and gurgles with a new shade, the red-white of magma.
Amathan leaves without protest after that.
Oc-tober Day 5 - Thunder - Areher
The skies howl and shriek with the wind, but for once he is safe beneath a roof, and can enjoy the storm in peace. As a child he learned to love storms, huddled by the pitiful fire Aderthor had been so proud of, counting each boom and crack. They waited on the hour when the warped door would swing open, creak covered by the rain without, and their father would stumble in with his guard's cloak hung over his head for a hat.
"Why don't you wear your helmet?" he would question, for he imagined that shining helm would serve well for a rain-cover, as it did for so many other things. Ada had laughed and Aderthor had snorted.
"Well, lad," he'd said, towelling his head with the lord's sopping signia, "It would keep off the rain, for certain, but the lightning might prove difficult."
A man he is now, and has learned to curse the sky when the storms gather, to make swift landfall if they can and to weather it if they cannot. The tormented waves would lash their sides as the rain did the sails, and the more delicate of their passengers would retreat below. At this moment, though, he is in a city of stone rather than a ship of wood, and he watches the sky with delight.