Five hundred and sixty-eight, the final chapter - marriage

Eventually, he convinces Thrandil, and the feud with Arnoll is over. Two years later, Vernor was fully restored and was restored to nobility and returned to the woodlands.

Thranduil announces that the advisor has left Middle-earth and that the soul has gone to Vera. He also planned to give Vernor, the former royal city of Amun Lance, so that she would have the title of "Lord of Amun Lance", but the wood elves were not familiar with the role of "Vernor" and objected, and Elrond also persuaded him on the grounds that he was too busy with territorial affairs to get rid of government affairs, and finally Vernorr only accepted the empty title of Gam Manor and "Lord". Despite this, the sheer cost of building the Gam Manor still gave the Wood Elves a bad opinion of Vernor. In their eyes, the sudden appearance of Vernoll did not contribute to the woodland, and accepted an undeserved reward as a "meritorious".

After Vernor moved into the manor, Thranduil visited him and did not shy away from it. Gradually, rumors began to spread among the wood elves that Vernorr had lured the king, and when Devon and Edmund went to beat Vernor, Thranduil learned that he was becoming more and more unhappy.

Hundreds of years later, the Flame Princess of the Eastern Kingdom of Rune came to find Vernor. She once took in Vernor to study in the country of Lune, and also sent people to help the woodlands after the battle of the "Last Alliance", and Vernor was hospitable. The Flame Princess expressed her intention to marry King Thrandil and asked Vernor to do her best to make it happen.

At this time, the wood elves were already extremely disgusted with Vernor's approach to the king, and Vernor, who had already broken his mind, readily agreed, and arranged for the Flame Princess to meet with King Thrandil. Because Blaze had already controlled the entire kingdom of Rune at this time, her army was strong, and she was a half-elf, the woodland wood elves did not object to the proposal of marriage, and only wanted to get the king married as soon as possible.

Thranduil was upset by Vernor's act of pushing himself to Flame, but not enough to get him to agree to Flame's alliance, but Flame offered a condition he couldn't refuse.

Blaze tells him that Okpa's reason for marrying Vernorr is because he has lost his masculine traits, and that Vernore has never had a husband. In exchange for the marriage between Thrandel and Vernor, Blaze demanded that Thranduil marry him on the surface, making the woodland another of her supporters. And after she has the status of the queen of the woodland, it is more conducive to Thranduil and Vernor.

Thranduil did not hesitate to agree to Blaze, and found evidence in King Aurifel's old letter that Vernor and Okpa were not really husband and wife. Thranduil asks the woodland officials to begin the marriage process, openly addressing Flame as "my queen", hoping to complete her marriage to Flame as soon as possible. Because Blaze promised him that on the night of his wedding, there was a way to make Vernore the queen of the woodlands in the truest sense of the word. However, Blaze demanded that Thrandel not reveal it to Vernor, lest it disrupt her plans, causing Vernore to flee westward in anger. Thranduil agreed.

Furnore knew nothing about this, and when he saw that Thranduil was enjoying himself with the flames, he deliberately stayed away. Blaze encouraged Thranduil to leave the royal city and enter Vernor's estate, causing Thranduil to let her guard down in gratitude.

At the beginning of the negotiation process, Thranduil joked that the strength of the queen of the woodland should be shown to all the people. Blaze very sincerely offered to let the Rune army come for the Elven King's parade. The army had to leave the country with many affairs, and the army mobilized the people, and Thranduil mischievously agreed, and expressed his expectation. At this time, it was already the year 498 of the Third Age.

At the end of the Third Age 499, nearly 100,000 troops from the Plains of Lune arrived in the Woodland Kingdom. Thranduil recognized the flame's prowess, and the woodland elves praised the future queen's prowess. Considering that he would eventually become a nominal husband and wife, and that Blaze trusted him so much that he moved all his troops into the woodland kingdom for his own perusal, Thranduil began to entrust Blaze with the menial affairs of affairs, and he was able to go to Vernor's manor more often. By chance, Blaze caused Thranduil to drink a drink with a secret potion, and he temporarily lost his ability to mobilize his troops.

No one expected that Blaze's sincere intention was not to let King Thranduil parade, let alone show his strength to the woodlands. She used the parade as an excuse to allow the Lune army to reach the woodlands, from which she made their way to the kingdom of Gondor. Without using the Woodland Kingdom as a transit point, it would be difficult for the movement of the Lune army to escape the prying eyes of the countries of Middle-earth. If you go straight to Gondor from the Plains of Rune, you will reach Mordor first, which has been taken over by Gondor, and you will be trapped in Mordor and it will be difficult to move on. The Rune, on the other hand, hated the Gondor and wanted nothing more than to invade the Gondor people.

Blaze instructed some of the Runnes to change into their woodland uniforms, and told the sergeants to destroy all woodland-related supplies before reaching Gondor.

Since Rune is located to the east of Gondor, Gondor only monitors movements in the east, and is completely unwary of the woodland kingdom to the north. The army of Rune, which had left from the Woodland King's army, had traveled to Gondor, and all the way were neutral areas, which could be described as unimpeded.

In the year 500 of the Third Age, the Eastern Runes invaded Gondor for the first time. As a result of the fact that they had not been monitored beforehand, the Lune army, which had replenished the woodlands, seemed to have arrived suddenly, and the unsuspecting Gondor nation was overwhelmed. Filled with doubts, King Ostor of Gondor hastily mobilized his troops to resist, he sent a plea for help to the Woodland Kingdom. Only then did Thranduil understand that the so-called military parade was nothing more than a conspiracy.

Thranduil did not dare to let people know the truth, and if the Gondor people knew that the Rune were from the woodlands, they would think that the woodlands were in conspiration with the rune. Not wanting the woodland to be exposed to the flames of war, and losing the ability to mobilize troops, Thranduil had no choice but not to send troops to support the flames. At this point, his movements were already limited, and he took great pains to send a letter to King Gondor, in which he suggested that King Gondor lure Ox of the Misty Mountains into the war zone between Gondor and Rune, and defeat Rune's army with the help of the uncommanded Oakes rebellion. In the end, King Osto of Gondor and his son Romandashir I defeated the Rune army by "winning the rebellion".

The invasion of Gondor was thwarted, and the flames revealed their true colors. She threatens Thrandeil with the truth that "the Rune are from the Woodland Kingdom", and she does not want to suffer any more war, and Thranduil has nowhere to tell her about her suffering, so she can only let Blaze put herself under house arrest.

Since Thranduil openly called Flame the queen to the outside world, and the two countries had already begun to discuss marriage, and Flame often helped with government affairs, the woodland officials did not notice anything unusual, and only thought that King Thranduil, who rarely showed his face publicly, was obsessed with growing orchids, as Princess Flame said.