Here is the ballroom scene piece for Faelothien and his brother Thalorian. While Fae is the first born, his brother Thalorian appears more mature and is consistently looked upon as the true heir of House Elenarith.
Under the read more is a written scene to accompany the drawing. Once again I am playing it fast and loose with elder scrolls lore. This takes places years before the events of the Dark Brotherhood/Oblivion Gates.
The Gilded Cage
The ballroom of House Elenarith came alive at dusk. A white-and-gold chamber cast in the afterglow of Alinor’s setting sun, its domed ceiling veined with quartz and banded in thin gold leaf. Chandeliers hung from slender arches like inverted crowns, their glass arms dripping with floating mage-lights that washed the hall in shifting radiance. At every turn, some detail vied for attention: here, a frieze of ancient ancestors hunting lions; there, a sunken garden framed by opal tiles and thin-leaved silver trees, their branches trailing pale blossoms that filled the air with the faintest scent of bitter orange.
All around, Alinor’s great houses mingled and measured each other. Nine banners draped above the crowd. Sable on sapphire, crimson on ivory, emerald on copper, each bearing the crest of a lineage older than memory. Beneath them, guests circulated, every one a silhouette of intent: elders conferring beneath arcs, junior scions whispering by the fountains, matriarchs watching from gallery seats high enough to survey the world and its intrigues at leisure.
The noise was a tapestry. Melodic Altmeri with snatches of Cyrodiilic, laughter trailing after a barbed jest, the thin chime of glass. Somewhere, unseen musicians played a flowing tune on harp and viol, their melody rippling above the low thrum of a hundred conversations. Trays of wine and jewel-toned cordials drifted through the crowd on the arms of house servants. The wine was green-gold and faintly bitter. The food served on silver platters, fruit sliced so thin it glimmered, sweetmeats shaped like mythic beasts, chilled slivers of fish perfumed with fennel and orange blossom.
Faelothien Elenarith stood by one of the gallery’s great columns, half in shadow, half revealed by the wash of lantern-light spilling from the chandeliers overhead. His robe tonight was a deep garnet, rich and heavy, trimmed at length and sleeve with a slender edge of gold and filigree. The color caught the mage light with each subtle movement, picking out his hair—a fall of crimson, half gathered in a knot at the crown, the rest left to spill loose and long, framing a face whose sharpness was more striking for its beauty.
He was not alone. His father stood near, tall and silent, his own robe a study in white and pale gold, every fold and fastening immaculate. Auronar Elenarith surveyed the room with the same chill detachment that marked all his dealings. His eyes, pale and cold as winter wine, missed nothing: not the councilors glancing slyly his way, nor the subtle jostling of new money against old at the foot of the dais. Every so often, he would lean toward Faelothien, voice pitched so only his son could hear, murmuring a name, a warning, a reminder. Each one adding to the weight of his house over Faelothien’s shoulders.
Faelothien played his part with the kind of composure that was second nature. He stood upright, hands folded neatly, gaze fixed not on the floor but just beyond the nearest group of guests, as if searching for a distant mark in a crowd. When spoken to, he responded in clear, polished tones, his words chosen with care, his cadence flawless. The young lords and ladies who drifted past eyed him in ways that blurred envy and intrigue. Some clearly wondered if the stories were true, if his rumored instability would show itself, if the Elenarith heir was as fragile as he was lovely.
He had learned the cost of being watched. He felt every glance at the back of his neck like the whisper of a spell, every sidelong smile as a weighing of his worth. The red of his robe drew the eye, but it was the quiet reserve in his posture, the brittle self-possession, that kept most at bay.
A laugh rose at the other end of the hall—a little too sharp, a little too bold. Faelothien’s father flicked his gaze that way and the circle around the offender tightened at once, eager to police its own in the ways that high Altmer society loved to do. The tension in the room was a living thing; no moment passed without someone maneuvering for place.
From the center of the ballroom, where the light burned brightest, a new stir rolled outward. A shifting of focus, a ripple in conversation as Thalorian entered, flanked by two young officers in blue and gold. Thalorian looked every inch of what a perfect son of a great house should look like: tall and long-limbed, his hair pale as unspun silk, worn loose over a robe of cream and soft gold. The color suited him, brightening his altmeri complexion, and there was an ease to his bearing that drew people in, a readiness to smile, to offer a hand or a word that felt like a gift.
Thalorian moved through the room with a kind of gentle confidence. He greeted older nobles with bows precise enough to please but never servile, never low enough to displease his father. He laughed with the sons of powerful merchants, offering a joke in flawless Cyrodiilic, then listened as the daughters of House Caelora gossiped, his expression attentive but lightly amused. He accepted compliments, brushed aside provocations, moved ever closer to where Faelothien stood in his pocket of shadow.
Faelothien watched him approach with a blend of fondness and wariness. His brother’s arrival shifted the attention of the nearby circle; Thalorian always seemed to bring light with him, leaving a wake of interest and the faint stirrings of envy. When he reached Faelothien, he slipped easily into place at his side, the two forming a line of defense against the rest of the world as they surveyed the gathering.
“You’re late,” Faelothien murmured, keeping his eyes on a trio of young women across the way, their faces hidden behind intricately painted fans. Something in the way they kept glazing towards them led him to suspect they were more interested in his brother.
“I needed to let them miss me,” Thalorian replied, and the smirk on his lips was both bravado and shield. Yet his eyes slid sideways, past Faelothien’s shoulder, tracking the rigid, watchful figure of their father across the room. “I see you’re surviving.”
Faelothien gave a small nod, neither smile nor frown upon his face, only a weary acknowledgement. His gaze swept across the hall, catching the patterns of blue and gold, the drape of banners, the glint of glassware carried by silent, robed servants.
“They’re whispering,” he said softly, his tone weightless, practiced, neither complaint nor confession. Just a fact between them.
“They always are,” Thalorian said, his voice lighter than his expression. “Don’t let it catch.”
A moment’s silence. Then Faelothien spoke again, voice dropping further, edged in dry humor that would pass unnoticed by anyone else.
“One of the councilor’s sons offered me wine and asked if I was ‘available.’ I think he thought I was here to be auctioned.” He lets out a little huff that could have almost been a laugh.
Thalorian’s smirk slipped into something more genuine and pained, almost sympathetic. “You are,” he said gently. “So am I. We just wear different tags. Different prices.”
Faelothien’s smile this time was real, but small and brittle, a ghost’s reflection behind polished glass. “I hate this.”
“I know,” Thalorian said, his tone softening. “But you’re doing well.”
A cluster of young nobles drew closer, perhaps seeking to draw Thalorian into their games. He ignored them, shifting his weight to stand with his brother more clearly. Shoulder to shoulder, the golden son and the red. Their similarity was clearest up close: the set of their jaws, the arch of brow, the shape of their hands. Yet Thalorian’s ease made him seem older, while Faelothien’s quiet sharpened the space around him into something delicate and fragile.
The conversation at their backs turned to speculation. A snatch of gossip about an arranged marriage, the merits of a rival house’s library, a joke about the cost of last year’s failed diplomatic party. Servants slipped through with more wine; Faelothien accepted a glass, downed it without care, and let the cold bitterness settle on his tongue. If his father saw, he’ll be sure to hear of it later.
The music shifted, a new tempo rising. In the far corner, a minor lord began to dance with a niece of another house, the move bold enough to draw laughter and a few pointed remarks from the elders. Thalorian glanced at their father, noting the small crease that had appeared at the corner of Auronar’s mouth, a sign of disapproval that would be remembered by all who saw it.
“He’ll hold court about this for days,” Thalorian said, low enough that only Faelothien could hear.
Faelothien nodded. “Better a private mistake than a public one. Out here, you can’t see the knives coming.”
A moment passed between them, a pause where the world seemed to hold its breath. Then Thalorian leaned closer, voice barely more than a whisper.
“One day, I’ll take it from you. This heirship. Let them forget you were the firstborn.”
Faelothien turned, caught by the sudden sincerity in his brother’s voice. For a heartbeat, he let the armor drop; the mask of court fell away and he was simply Faelothien, not an heir, not a disappointment, just an elf standing beside the one person who had never turned away.
“You’ve carried enough,” Thalorian said again, quiet and sure.
Faelothien did not answer. He looked back to the hall to the shifting tides of gilded colors, the distant sound of music, the endless hunger of the city’s great and grasping families. But for the first time that evening, the pressure eased. He breathed, and the room, with all its bright cruelty, faded into something almost bearable.
The night rolled on. The gathering pressed forward: new alliances forming over laughter, old resentments sparked beneath the wine. Somewhere above, the stars of Alinor wheeled unseen. Down in the ballroom, two brothers held their ground, together in the swirling heart of expectation. Unaware of how quickly everything could be snatched away.












