Professor Xavier was wanting to talk to Magneto about Wanda. He didn't realize when he went to see him that he'd end up talking about both of his children instead. [Set five years pre-series.]
So what does it mean to be Berry?
Zuko never confided the story of how he got his scar to the Gaang, but once the war was over and they took up temporary residence in his palace, the story was inevitably going to get out. [Kind of a companion to 'Skin Deep.']
Queen Elodie did not visit her father often.
That first lesson with the younger students. [Post-canon.]
There had always been windows into Beatrice's Golden Land, though few would have known where to look to find them. [Spoilers for the entire series]
"The house was too empty." There were some aspects of Nini's story that Kya didn't share with her daughter.
"Celebrimbor had never been one to give up easily. That was probably a good thing." On the making of the Elessar.
What being a child of the Second Age has meant to Celebrían.
Elros explains to his daughter why he named her as he did.
Celeborn, history, and Celebrían.
Ten different takes on Gil-Galad's parentage.
Naturally, he'd not told them his real name. Maglor was simply glad that his twisted hands were still good for something.
Elros remembers his father.
Elros saw her standing at his brother's side, even when all others remained insensible.
She hadn't gotten a good look at him at the funeral. She'd been so blinded by tears and so relieved by the offer he made that she hadn't thought to get a good look at him. She wished she had, now. [AU, Jessica lives, spoilers for EP5, vague spoilers for EP7.]
From Idril Celebrindal to Idril Gil-Galad. AU.
Elenwë contends with an urban legend, her own uncertainty, and finds some help where she wasn't expecting it.
A mother resolves to teach her daughter how to fight.
The shift from Quenya to Sindarin among the Noldor was not always a welcome one, even before the Ban. Or: Whatever the Age, Celebrimbor finds his relationships with others marked by miscommunication and sometimes a lack of it altogether.