Saeril was doing her best to shield the company from the majority of the damage. Had she not swooped in as she had, they may have suffered a few casualties. Having to hear the worried voice of the princess, the winged she-elf kept herself her hovering, before acknowledging the girl with a nod, almost tiredly. It only got worse from there. The first giant threw a boulder into the air; a second giant appeared from behind the company, and was hit in the head. A few of the dwarves yelled at each other to brace and hold on, but the rocks beneath their feet started to give way from all the vibrations, and from the impact of the falling rocks. The ground then began to split; part of the group was separated to one half, the rest on the other. "Hold on!", Saeril shouted over the thunder as the mountain around the company began to break. "KiĀ­li, grab my hand!", she heard her eldest godson shout to his sibling, as she just saw the rock between them begins to separate them. Yavanna was stuck with Fili; just as she saw the crack between her godsons, Saeril knew that they couldn't protect each other now. The mountain they were on starts coming to life, and starts fighting with another. With the company split in half, she didn't know which one to protect more. Seeing that the moving rock Kili was on, made his situation even more risky, which resulted in her making up her mind: she flew over to the swaying dwarves, and gripped the youngest's coat, so he was at least in her line of sight, and not falling off the moving rock. The she-elf looked in fear as they were just about to collide into the mountain. Thinking fast, she tucked Kili in against her to shield him from their upcoming fate. However, when they finally hit the mountain, there was no pressure against them, only making them fall off and land on the more safe-like part of the cliff. She still had Kili tucked against her chest as they landed. Unraveling her wings, she could see the others safe as well, which was a relief. Panting from exhaustion, Saeril allowed herself to catch her breath, and attempt to stand, although she didn't get far, and landed back down to one knee, feeling an ache in her leg.