shieldofrohan: (pic#13979533)
[personal profile] shieldofrohan
She had been prepared for the end. She had been ready to die with sword in hand, to watch Edoras burn and bring her down with it, while the Shadow covered the land and all that they clung to was swept away. She had done all that she could, and even doing it, she had known it would not be enough. She had been ready.

She had not been ready to survive it. Every day since, she has wished with all her heart that she did not.

He had tried to woo her, at first. If it had not been so terrible to see, it would almost have been funny: the sheer clumsy stupidity of it, to think that power was enough, that a grief-stricken captive would flee to the architect of her misery. He had brought her flowers, and tried to make himself a confidant. She had spat in his face, and bidden him to kill her too, or else she would kill him.

Even Gríma's foolishness had its limits, but his covetousness did not. He would have her, he told her, and she would be his wife and kneel for him, and she would know her place. At the time, she had laughed openly, certain that nothing he could do would break her will, knowing that she had resigned herself to pain and death, believing that there was nothing left for him to turn against her. Éomer was dead. Théodred was dead. The only leverage he had over her was Théoden, who lingered half-conscious and no longer himself; and he needed the King more than he needed his desires met.

She had been so innocent, back then. Even in what had seemed to her the darkest possible hour, with everything lost and all that she loved ripped from her, she had still been so naïve.

The first time he had tried to bed her, she had clawed her nails across his face, snarling and spitting like a wildcat; and Gríma would not have overcome her alone, being both smaller and weaker than his unwilling bride, but he was not alone. She had been held down by his new guard, muscular men of Dunlending stock, and her maidenhead was lost to her most loathed enemy beneath the eyes and hands of three uncaring strangers, and she had wept as bitterly as ever a woman wept - not for her lost virginity, nor even for its circumstances, but because that was the moment at which she understood fully how utterly helpless she had become.

She tried to rally. She tried to find some strength, some pride to carry her forward. At every turn, it was ripped from her.

She had not given way easily. She had made him fight for every inch: made him drag her by her hair sooner than go where she was told; met his demands with stony, proud silence; watched for any weakness. She had left her mark on him more than once, biting and scratching and kicking and punching, and in time, it seemed, he had changed his aim. If he had once seemed to hope that she would love him, he soon sought only to see her broken, like a horse to the bridle; if he had once intended to make her his wife, now he was content to make her his whore. Anything, it seemed, to make her crawl.

She tried to escape, more than once. She knew the King's hall better than anyone still living, and they could not guard her all the time. Her second attempt, in hindsight, had come close to success - would have been successful, in all likelihood, if she had simply fled. But she could not bear to flee and leave him living, and she had managed to come so close, had had the knife almost to his throat, when the men he hired had heard his screams and dragged her off. That she had been soundly beaten did nothing to dissuade her; that thereafter she was locked away for over a week without light or food only hardened her resolve. But then there had been the prisoners.

Gríma needed the King alive. He needed Éowyn alive. The other Men of Rohan, those who had survived his takeover... he needed them far less. He had brought her out of her captivity, weak with hunger and grief, to see the ends of the men who had tried to help her. Háma, Ceolfrith, Harbeorn, and the rest, all men she had known since her childhood, bloodied and beaten and trying to remain strong; he had made her stand there as they were hanged, and their bodies thrown onto the dungheap, and all she could do for them was to give them the honour of not looking away.

And then he had turned to her, and said in a tone low enough for her, Their wives, their children. And when the guards released her arms, and Gríma told her to kneel, she had knelt.

That was a year ago. She has rebelled since, in smaller ways; twice more she attempted escape, alone in her planning, but that made no difference to the deaths that came from it. The second time she came close to killing him, wrapping her hands around his throat so that he could not call for help, was the last time he was alone with her. He was still alive, and she was still a slave, and all that she had accomplished was that her humiliations were more public.

Little by little, he broke her down. She rarely spoke, rarely moved without being ordered to. For a time, she tried to kill herself: refused food and water, until they forced it down her throat anyway; sought any weapon to end things, without success; tried to break her skull against the walls of her room, until they bound her helpless to a bed. In the end, with even that escape blocked to her, she surrendered. She hated herself for surrendering. She hated Théoden, in his sickness and his weakness, for surrendering them. She hated everything, with a ferocity that was the only thing she could still feel, and she had no recourse.

When he told her to kneel, now, she knelt. When he told her to stand, she stood. When he told her to open her legs, or her mouth, or any other part of her, she did. She stood behind his seat, beside the empty throne, and she was a shell: she said not one word, nor shed one tear, nor moved a muscle unless she was told. She had spoken against him perhaps a dozen times since the winter, never for her own sake: to denounce some political cruelty, to refuse him some right that was not his to claim, to say aloud You are not King. Each time, she had been made to pay. Each time, her people had been made to pay. She would never allow herself to close her eyes, as the bodies were brought before her. She would never give their lives lightly, and so she surrendered, over and over again, and hated herself more every moment.

And then, the King died.

She did not weep, finding Théoden cold and stiff in his bed when she came to bring his breakfast. She felt no sorrow, only a dull ache where her feelings had once been. She thought, without the horror she should feel: I would that you had died two years sooner, and spared us all this end. She closed his eyes, and settled his withered hands upon his counterpane, and, despite it all, she kissed his brow.

If he was dead, then Gríma was King. He was King by her hand, by her claim. He was King because he had married the Queen, and so long as she surrendered to him, who was to dispute it? And in time, she knew, his attempts would bear fruit, and she would fall pregnant with his son, and then the line of Eorl would be reduced to a whore's get, and what remained of Rohan would mean less than the dirt.

They had ceased to watch her so closely, now. It had been months since she had made any attempt at escape or rebellion. She had no contact with her own people, those who were loyal to the line of Eorl; she had no weapon and no horse. She had only one thing to aid her: the last scraps of Éowyn, Éomund's daughter, who had once sworn that she would never bend.

She would die, she swore, there in the dead man's room. She would die, before she lived a day as King Wormtongue's queen.

And she hurled herself at the guardsman, and as he stumbled back, taken by surprise, she scrabbled the eating-knife from his belt, and drove it into his eye, and then his throat, and she ran. There were few windows in the living-quarters of the hall, and fewer still large enough to climb through; she ran for the nearest door, a headlong and desperate dash which had no chance of success, no hope of escape...

And out into the summer sunlight, so dazzlingly bright after months almost entirely spend inside. She staggered at the heat of it like a hammer-blow, and tried to catch herself, looking back into the shadows of the hall and out into a city that was no longer hers, and wondered why they were not yet upon her; but there was no virtue in wondering, or in pause. She held the knife white-knuckled, turning toward the stables. It would do nothing to defend her, if armoured men came to reclaim her. It would not save her from capture - but it could save her from once again surviving it.

They did not come.

She did not discover why until she was outside the city. She had taken, of all among them, the King's own horse: Snowmane knew her well, and he had almost smashed down the door of his stall when she called to him. He charged through the street and down the Barrow-Road, and she clung bareback to his mane, almost flat against his back, the bloody knife still in her hand; and as the gates were closed to bar her leaving, the guards at last moving to prevent her, she dug her heels into the stallion's flanks and urged him on, with all the swiftness that only Rohan's horses could claim, and the guards were Men of Rohan, and they hesitated a split second to recognise the King's horse, and then he was upon them, and bursting out onto the open hillside, and he did not stop until the strength left him, and then he settled from a gallop to a trot, his white flanks heaving and dark with sweat.

And it was then, and only then, that she found she was not alone.

That was two weeks ago. Now, she and her strange rescuers are far from Edoras, outside the borders of the Mark, farther than she has ever been. She has spoken to them, by now: enough to know that they were sent to retrieve her, that their rulers seek an alliance, and that they will see her returned to the throne. It should be a hopeful thing, but it fills her with a terrible dread to think of it. Will she be Queen, who has already betrayed her people a thousand times, and surrendered them and herself to the man who would destroy them? Will she take up their cause, only to fail them anew?

She should have died, she thinks. She should have died in the escape. She should have died in the imprisonment. She should have died a year and a half ago, when she saw her people fall. But she is alive, and she cannot pretend that she has no duty to them, and even in the direst moments of her imprisonment, she has never been so afraid.

They brought clothing and supplies, and at last she is permitted some of the things she has been denied: she is given a knife to eat with, and a belt, and riding-gear. She looks, as they ride into the courtyard, almost the woman she was before the war: she is tall and fair and she sits upright in the saddle of a milk-white warhorse, her chin raised and her long golden hair fluttering in the August breeze. But there is an emptiness behind the grey eyes that fix themselves on some imagined point, and her hand clutches tightly to the horn of her saddle, the mark of a shackle half-visible on her wrist, and, inside, she is nothing the same.

She does not dismount when they draw to a halt. She barely seems to have realised that they have stopped at all. It is with the slowness of one moving through a dream that at last she turns her head, looking uncomprehendingly at the small party who have left the palace to meet them.

"They will follow me here, as like as not." Her voice feels rusty, alien on her tongue. It is the voice of the old Éowyn, who had never knelt with her head bowed and called herself whore and slave. It is the voice of a woman who expects to be taken seriously, coming from the mouth of one who has grown to expect mocking laughter. It is the voice of a Queen, and she is not Queen; she is not sure she is even human any more.

She wants to scream. She wants to say: Kill me or leave me to the wolves, but do not ask me to be Éomund's daughter now. She is dead, the Lady Éowyn is dead, and all is lost. Do not look at me as though I carry hope; I have none even for myself. She wants to say: I cannot offer you alliance, I cannot offer you help, I can offer you nothing at all. But there is no other Lady Éowyn, and she is needed, all the same.

"They will follow me," she repeats, and her hand winds tighter in the reins, her nails digging into her palm. They are longer nails than she would choose. It has been a long time since she has been trusted with either work to keep them short for, or with scissors. "Are you ready, if they come?"

Date: 2025-07-26 12:30 am (UTC)
sent_to_try_us: (you were my everything)
From: [personal profile] sent_to_try_us
"No." She is, but Glinda is not about to say anything of the sort, not when Éowyn stands here before her looking like she is only a step away from collapse. Not when she can gather the other woman into her arms, hold her close, and try to fight back her tears as she realizes just how thin Éowyn is now, just how small. This is not the woman who left her four months ago, so brave and proud. This woman could barely stand in mail. This woman should be in bed, an invalid, being fed nourishing broths and tended by physicians.

"Come, sit," she says softly, and does her best to pretend tears are not glittering in her eyes as she draws away again - but her hands do not leave Éowyn's arms; she may be tired, may be sore from hours of riding a fast horse, may want nothing more than drink and rest, but she is still far better off than the young queen is. "Let me call for food and wine, sit with me and tell me - everything. I would know all of it, Éowyn. I have missed you so dearly."

There are chairs by the fire; there is an uncertain maid by the door, flanked now by one of the courtiers Glinda glided past on her path to see Éowyn, but neither of them dare enter or say anything now that they see how Glinda is received by their queen. She glances back at them, daring them with a look to do anything but her bidding, and is rewarded by the maid bobbing another curtsey and disappearing. The man is less easily intimidated, and so she simply ignores him. He is unimportant. Éowyn is here: there is nothing else in the world.

Date: 2025-07-29 05:59 am (UTC)
sent_to_try_us: (pic#9973660)
From: [personal profile] sent_to_try_us
She is not surprised - Glinda is, after all, the daughter of a king, and one who holds his throne in an iron grip. Since her earliest memories she has attended executions for treason, the king and his family watching as traitors paid the price for their crimes. Wormtongue will, of course, have to die. Even if he had not harmed Éowyn, he is an usurper and pretender who seized the crown from the legitimate ruler.

But he has harmed Éowyn, and for Glinda that is what makes the difference.

"I will stand by your side," she tells Éowyn softly, squeezing the young queen's hands gently, shifting forward to sit at the very edge of her chair and be as close as possible. Her knees bump into Éowyn's, and she does not care. They are still not close enough. "You must pass the sentence, dearest; it is your court - but of course I will be there." She cannot seem to stop wanting to touch Éowyn, to hold her close; Glinda reaches up to tuck a loose strand of hair back behind the other woman's ear, her hand lingering against Éowyn's cheek.

"I dreamed of you," she says, very quietly. "Almost every night I dreamed of you, and every day I thought of you; you have not been out of my mind since last I saw you." Some of the dreams were nightmares, especially when a letter was late. Some of them were merely pleasant thoughts, imaginings of them walking together, riding together, simply cuddled together to talk. And there were others - the kind of dream she has never had before, ones that make her blush to think of. "I do not think I could bear to leave you again," Glinda adds, and tries to smile.

Date: 2025-07-30 03:35 pm (UTC)
sent_to_try_us: (there's nothing like me and you)
From: [personal profile] sent_to_try_us
It is hard to say what causes the thrill that runs through her - Éowyn's voice, so soft and yearning; the words, the promise of welcome, of being together; the way Éowyn leans in, about to kiss her. Glinda stays seated as the other woman stands, looking away from the door and pretending she was merely gazing into the fire. It is, at least, a good excuse for how her cheeks have heated - and it gives her a moment to regain her composure, to act as though she hasn't dreamed of kissing Éowyn for four months.

It takes a little effort to remember herself and smile at the women as they lay their trays down, the cool smile her mother made her practice for use on domestics and other lowly creatures. She is grateful that they are doing no more than glancing dubiously at her when Éowyn speaks next, for she has to swallow hard and barely manages to keep from biting her own lip at the thought of staying here with Éowyn overnight. The idea is not a surprise: it is what she had hoped for, dreamed of. The swell of feeling inside her at the thought of waking once again in Éowyn's arms - it is almost like a fire blazing up out of embers, sudden and overwhelming.

As the door closes behind them, Glinda realizes she has been holding her breath. Now they are alone, truly alone, as she has wanted for so long, and she is standing and coming towards Éowyn almost before the sound of the women's footsteps dies away. Her arms fit around Éowyn's neck as if they were supposed to be there; their bodies, too, seem a perfect match one against the other. And certainly she wants to kiss Éowyn - but for now, for a start, Glinda only holds her tightly, perhaps too tight: but it has been so long, and she has ached to be able to do just this until she thought she might go mad with wanting.

Date: 2025-07-30 04:11 pm (UTC)
sent_to_try_us: (thank goodness)
From: [personal profile] sent_to_try_us
Éowyn says please so softly, with that almost broken note, and Glinda has to bite at her own lip again and try to blink away the tears that spring to her eyes. She shakes her head a little, tightens her grasp on the other woman, and swallows before she can speak.

"I have wanted you to," she answers, fervently but trying for gentleness anyway. "I have dreamed of you - my officers said we must wait, and perhaps arrive tomorrow, or even the next day, and I rode away anyway - Éowyn, they will be ever so cross, and I cannot find it in me to care." She cannot seem to look away from the young queen's eyes, cannot seem to step away. The aches in her lower back and hips seem irrelevant, cold and hunger mere trifles. Glinda is not used to feeling this way: as though she might overlook almost anything, so long as Éowyn is near her.

"I am at peace," Glinda adds, and this time her smile is real. "For I am here now, am I not? And so are you, so I am content." She tilts her head up a little, brings one hand up to cradle Éowyn's head and tug her down just enough to kiss her - chastely, sweetly, yes, but evidence enough that it is not only one of them who has dreamed of kisses.

Date: 2025-07-30 06:58 pm (UTC)
sent_to_try_us: (simply couldn't be happier)
From: [personal profile] sent_to_try_us
It is such a small thing to be worried about, whether she has had a drink recently or not, that Glinda cannot help but laugh. She tilts her head up to steal another kiss before - very reluctantly - stepping back. Even then it seems too much to take more than one step, and she reaches to take Éowyn's hand and wind their fingers together.

"If you will join me," she says, still light, as though she hasn't seen how sharp Éowyn's cheekbones are, how fragile the older woman felt in her arms. "For a meal is much better shared, don't you think?" Which is both true and an excuse, for Glinda is trying to persuade herself that hunger is the most pressing desire. She is hungry, yes, and thirsty too, but she is also very certain that both of them could easily be forgotten if Éowyn were to kiss her again. The only difficulty is that even if Glinda could go without a meal, Éowyn has clearly gone without far too many recently; she cannot take advantage of the other woman for her own wants. There will be time - if not tonight, then the next, or the next. Glinda does not especially like to be patient, but she does know how to wait if she must.

She sits, drawing Éowyn down to sit beside her, unwilling to let her friend go. The meal is simple, but the bread looks very fine, the fruits are plentiful, and the cheese is creamy. Rohan's kings and queens are well served, it seems, and she makes a note to find out who is in charge of running the household and see they receive a reward. Her mother has always been very firm on the matter of ensuring good servants are well recompensed, and her mother never receives anything less than the best.

"What shall you start with?" she asks Éowyn, reluctantly withdrawing her hand so that she can pour them both cups of wine. "For I hardly know where to begin."

Date: 2025-07-31 06:22 am (UTC)
sent_to_try_us: (thank goodness)
From: [personal profile] sent_to_try_us
It does not take long for the two of them to demolish their small feast. Glinda keeps up a chatter throughout, telling Éowyn all the petty problems of her little court: the noble lady mooning over the lowliest of her husband's grooms; the fight that broke out over who was to carry a headboard to a cart; the maids who quarrelled for weeks over one of the serving boys and were then caught kissing in the scullery late at night. She does her best to make it entertaining and light, to get Éowyn to smile or even laugh at the antics of the court in motion. Compared to what the young queen has faced, these scandals and disagreements are nothing, but that is the point: if she can take Éowyn's mind away from her troubles, Glinda intends to do just that.

Once they are finished, and Glinda is warm and fed and comfortable, she leans against Éowyn and takes the other woman's hand in her own, lifting it to her lips to kiss Éowyn's knuckles. And then she cannot quite bear to let it go; instead she measures their hands against each other, traces the lines of Éowyn's fingers, the curve of her palm. There is something enchanting about it, this play of their hands together, the softness of her own skin against the calluses Éowyn has won from training. It is hard to believe that she can finally do this, that her head rests on Éowyn's shoulder, that Éowyn's hand is in her lap, that all she need do is speak in order to hear the other woman's voice.

"I missed you terribly," she says - for the fourth or fifth time, perhaps, but the quiet need in her voice has not yet diminished. "I had always thought the lovers in the minstrels' songs were being perhaps a little unreasonable, but I see I have misjudged them all along."

Date: 2025-08-01 04:54 am (UTC)
sent_to_try_us: (it seems a little - well - complicated)
From: [personal profile] sent_to_try_us
The question is one she had not expected, does not know how to answer. Glinda sits upright, her fingers tightening briefly on Éowyn's hand, gaze searching the other woman's eyes.

"I don't know," she says, uncertain, "I don't - how do you tell? I have not written you a poem, or anything like that..." For poems are usually a staple of the courtly romances, with a lover wooing his mistress, although deciding which of them is the mistress is another puzzle. "I do not think either of us are supposed to have a lover," Glinda adds, very reluctantly. "But I am not supposed to have kissed you, either, and I did." And will again, she thinks - or will as long as Éowyn wants to be kissed again, as long as she can do it without ruining both their chances for a good marriage. That is the main problem: marriage, which is inevitable for a queen, for a princess. And while Éowyn may choose her suitors, Glinda knows she may not.

Date: 2025-08-02 04:59 am (UTC)
sent_to_try_us: (pic#9973660)
From: [personal profile] sent_to_try_us
For a long moment, all she can do is look into Éowyn's eyes, so clear and so troubled, and try to think past her immediate, instinctive response of yes. It is not a good offer: she knows it, and Éowyn does too. If she is to gamble her reputation, it ought to be for benefit either for herself or for her family. Rohan is close to a client kingdom, if her father has his way; Éowyn can give her nothing. But Glinda is having a very hard time making herself care.

There is no one at this court she might be expected to marry; there is no one who will carry tales back to her father and be believed, especially not if those tales are rumours of an unwarranted closeness with the young queen of Rohan. She is, after all, here specifically to be close with the queen. She is here to be the Uplands in person, the proxy of her father the king. No doubt he would be pleased to think that Éowyn will have no suitor, will take no lover, without Glinda being able to tell him at once about it.

"I will be called back to my father's court," she says, slowly, gently. "Some day. And I do not know when; and I will have to go, and to marry whoever he chooses for me. I will have to be a maiden on my wedding night, and I do not know - I have not - I would rely on your honour to keep me safe." Éowyn has laid her terms out clearly; Glinda feels she can do no less, even as she bites her lip, wishing she did not have to. "But if you will have me, even so, I will be yours and gladly. And - and I will stay, no matter what you choose, for so long as you do not send me away and my father does not call me."

Date: 2025-08-03 12:45 am (UTC)
sent_to_try_us: (there's nothing like me and you)
From: [personal profile] sent_to_try_us
Éowyn kisses her again, gently drawing Glinda's hands into her lap, and Glinda finds she has to tilt her head up a little to meet the kiss - and there is something about that small kind of surrender that makes her breath catch, sends sparks through her. When Éowyn draws away, Glinda does not quite manage to hold back a soft, needy sound, a wordless plea for more. Still, though, she listens; she is no fool, and Éowyn's gaze is saying this is important.

"You are not," she manages, a little breathless. "I promise, of course I promise, but Éowyn, you would never - " What exactly Éowyn would never doesn't come out; they both understand without them. And perhaps she has only really known Éowyn for a few days, perhaps she is leaping from the edge of a cliff without bothering to look how far below the ground is, but Glinda cannot imagine the young queen ever doing any of the things the Wormtongue has done. Even if she has had to reason out most of it, unwilling to ask Éowyn questions that so clearly hurt her, there was evidence enough on Éowyn's body to speak of just how cruel he had been.

And then there are no more words, only Éowyn sitting so very close and yet not close enough. Glinda reaches up to curl one hand around the other woman's neck, fingers tangling in her hair, as she tugs Éowyn forward and leans in to kiss her. She is still a little clumsy, and perhaps ought to be embarrassed, but Glinda does not care. She has learned enough: how to tilt her head, how to let her lips part just slightly in invitation, how to run her tongue along Éowyn's bottom lip - and how to draw back, eyes hazy with desire, and offer Éowyn a sweet, wicked smile.

Date: 2025-08-03 02:19 am (UTC)
sent_to_try_us: (thank goodness)
From: [personal profile] sent_to_try_us
They are both entranced, the two of them; Glinda finds herself studying everything about Éowyn, from the wisps of fair hair escaping around her face to the way the fabric of her nightgown clings to her knee. She leans into the other woman's touch, turning her head to press a kiss to the palm of Éowyn's hand, wanting abruptly to kiss every inch of her lover's body - and if that takes forever, so be it; she will happily dwell in this moment where Éowyn gazes at her as if she is the most beautiful thing in the world.

"You," she answers, her voice as soft as Éowyn's. "I want you, only I don't know - " What to do. Where to start. Anything, really; the minstrels' songs have not been especially informative, and courtly novels of romance tend to skip right over the wedding night (or, perhaps more frequently, the night when the distant lady finally lets down her guard for her enamoured suitor).

In her dreams, Éowyn had reached for her, pushed her down, kissed her again and again. There had been something frightening and wonderful in the sensation of being captured, being unable to get away but not wanting to even if she could. She cannot explain it to Éowyn, could not possibly say it out loud - but the dreams began with safer, tamer territory, and perhaps she too can start there. Very daring, and not entirely sure of herself, Glinda reaches up to take hold of Éowyn's wrist, guiding her lover's hand slowly down her neck; the light touch makes her shiver and bite at her lip, head tilting back a little almost instinctively. But she is not done: she draws Éowyn's hand a little lower, along the neckline of her gown, before letting go as the other woman's knuckles graze against her breast.

Date: 2025-08-03 04:01 am (UTC)
sent_to_try_us: (there's nothing like me and you)
From: [personal profile] sent_to_try_us
Éowyn surges towards her and Glinda reaches out, her hands finding the other woman's hips as if they were meant to be there. It is so easy to let Éowyn lean into her, so easy to tilt her head up and let herself drown in the pleasure of kissing her lover again and again and again. Éowyn's fingers graze the curve of her breast, Éowyn's palm presses against her nipple, and Glinda gasps into the kiss. Her body seems to know what to do, even though she doesn't; her back arches, pressing closer to Éowyn, and she finds herself reaching up to wind her fingers through the other woman's hair. That long golden braid will be a mess, and Glinda does not care - more than that, she finds she likes the idea of seeing Éowyn dishevelled and heedless with pleasure.

When she breaks the kiss to catch her breath, Éowyn is almost on her lap, limned with gold in the light of the fire and the candles. Her lover's nightgown, tied loosely at the neck with a ribbon, is temptingly close; daring, Glinda reaches to tug at it until the ribbon comes undone and the linen parts smoothly. Her fingers trace the soft skin beneath, and then she is leaning in to press kisses against Éowyn's collarbone, down her chest, turning her head to find and follow the curve of her lover's breast with her mouth.

Date: 2025-08-04 03:39 pm (UTC)
sent_to_try_us: (thank goodness)
From: [personal profile] sent_to_try_us
[⚠️ Suspicious Content] There is something in Éowyn's voice that Glinda has never heard before, something that makes her breath stutter and her thighs press together, that makes desire pool inside her. Éowyn's skin is smooth and warm against her lips, her scent irresistible, and Glinda is not sure how she can possibly stop kissing her lover for even a moment.

"I will," she murmurs, the words blurred against Éowyn's breast. "I will, only we must both stand up first - " There is laughter in her voice, because neither of them are making any move towards actually doing that; it takes a real effort to draw back, even a little, and look up at the young queen. This time when Glinda bites at her lip, it is not from embarrassment: Éowyn is flushed and almost unbearably pretty, her eyes dark, her breath coming quickly. It is hard to believe any of this is real instead of just another dream. But in a dream her legs would not be pressed uncomfortably against the chair; in a dream she would simply need to blink in order to be in a bed.

Besides, her dreams have ended very quickly after being in a bed, and the idea that this might not end abruptly is both thrilling and terrifying.

She follows Éowyn to stand, already reaching for the other woman even before she's quite out of the chair, her hands going back to Éowyn's hips to tug her nightgown up. They have done this before, Glinda is practised at getting the young queen out of her clothing - but this is different. Before, she had been careful to keep her gaze modest, to concentrate on what she was doing rather than on Éowyn's body, and besides Éowyn had been covered with scrapes and bruises that aroused concern rather than desire. This time -

"Oh, but you are beautiful," Glinda says softly, and means it with all her heart.

Date: 2025-08-07 09:31 am (UTC)
sent_to_try_us: (Default)
From: [personal profile] sent_to_try_us
Until now, Glinda had been rather inclined to resent the number of ladies who had been sent with her - she had understood it, yes, but had not been pleased about it. But that same lack of assistants had informed the clothing she brought, the dress she is even now wearing, and it means that they will not spend more than a few minutes in undoing the laces. Beneath the pretty dress (which gets draped across a chest, with somewhat less care than normal) her shift is made of the same fine linen as Éowyn's, embroidered with delicate white stitchwork - one of the prettier ones she owns, and Glinda is pleased to have chosen it.

For some reason the idea of taking it off herself seems far too immodest, even though the thought of her lover taking it off ought to be no better. She reaches for Éowyn's hands, steps in close as she sets the other woman's hands on her hips - an invitation as well as a request - and tilts her head up to steal yet another kiss.

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shieldofrohan: Art by Ellaine on dA (Default)
Éowyn

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