Cold Iron
standard
disclaimer: This is a fanfic. Characters: ain't mine. World:
ain't
mine neither. Mistakes: mine, all mine.
"Eala Earendel engla beorhtast,
Ofer middangeard monnum sended."
The
bard of Rohan ended his harpensway to applause, and one of
the
minstrels of Gondor rose to begin his recitation. This contest
was
likely to go on for several days, and had already lasted well
past
the noon hour, so Eowyn decided it was not at all impolite to
rise
and drift away from the poetry competition at the pinched end
of the
courtyard, and toward the refreshment tent pitched just shy
of the
Fountain and the Tree.
Eowyn smiled a little,
nostalgic smile when she saw a bowl of
mushrooms among the
offerings at the buffet table. They reminded her
of Merry. She
wondered how he was doing, back in his home country.
Right now she
felt she could probably give him a good run in an
eating contest,
as long as it was held in the afternoon.
She saw Arwen,
resplendent in elven court finery of blue velvet,
waving away the
hovering servants. Eowyn accepted some of the same
yellow wine
from a proferred tray, and struck up a conversation with
the
Queen. "They say elves have quite the appetite for
poetry."
"They are right, in that case," Arwen
replied. "Yet those of the
competition's entries which deal
with elves can grow so tiresome in
their wrongheadedness."
"Oh? How so?" asked Eowyn.
Arwen reached over to the table and
picked up a tiny pickle fork and
speared a gerkhin. "Already
this morning I have heard three verses
that claim I should not be
able to do this without burning myself."
"What? Oh--
touch steel?" Eowyn also snagged a pickle. And then
another.
And another.
Arwen sighed. "It is my own fault, I suppose."
"What is this tale?" Eowyn asked,
looking tickled. She munched on
some cheese cubes.
"When
I was a young elf maid, I composed a very bad linnod. It was
one
of my first, I was only a few hundred years old. It was
about
Luthien, actually. Looking back now, it sends a shiver up my
spine to
think I was fascinated by her in my youth. I wonder-- but
I digress.
I recited this poem for some visitors in Imladris, Men
of some kind.
Emissaries from the court of Elendur, of Arnor, I
think."
Arwen blushed. "Among the things they say
about elves is that we
never forget anything, but I cannot
remember how my own poem went
now. Except that there was a line in
it about elven immortality. I
had but recently heard the story of
how my uncle Elros chose his
mortal lineage, long ago, and became
the first King of Numenor, and I
was still puzzling out the idea
for myself. It is most shuddersome to
think of now, after... In
any case, I spoke of the various things
that cannot fell an elf:
"not plagues of rats nor the weary wearing
of old bone tired
bones", I think was the line. Dreadful. And then it
went,
"but cold iron and love alone." By which I meant we can die
in
battle, or go like Luthien out of the circles of the world from
a
choice of the heart. But the Men who heard me took the
line
literally, I'm afraid. That odd notion has been repeated so
many
times that Men now apparently think it is true. I want to go
back in
time and strangle myself every time I hear about cold iron
being
fatal to elven-kin. And I am quite sure I shall hear it more
than
thrice before the bardic competition is over." Arwen
smiled ruefully.
Eowyn shook her head. "Think of it as
wily propaganda, if that would
cheer you, my Queen. Imagine how
surprised some credulous highway
robber may someday be when he
threatens an elven warrior with a
butter knife."
Arwen
laughed. "You are a delight, Eowyn. Always the
shieldmaiden,
even now that you are the Princess of
Ithilien."
"Shield-matron perhaps," Eowyn
offered, moving on to the melon
squares.
Arwen snickered.
Hardly anyone ever made a risque joke around her,
even such a mild
one. It was quite refreshing. "And how is the little
prince
or princess coming along?"
"Not so little, now. I
feel like a cow in a horse race. Thank
goodness for that talented
dressmaker you sent to me! At least I do
not look like
one."
"Never."
Eowyn grazed on some
little meat pastry things. "If I keep this up, I
will. Or
perhaps I shall turn into a hobbit."
"In that case I
shall have to send a talented cobbler, to hide the
evidence."
The two women shared a smile. Then Arwen cocked her
head. "Ah!
I hear the strains of Farewell to the Blue Mountains.
Falmahal is
playing. This I want to hear. Join me?"
"Certainly."
They
made their way back to the contest grounds and ruthlessly
evicted
two young gentlemen from a pair of front row seats. Arwen
noticed
the chair she had chosen was wrought iron, and touched
Eowyn's arm
to get her attention. She pointed down with a mischievous
grin and
stroked a hand along the twisted black metal, and winked.
Eowyn
winked back. They settled in to hear the music.
The End.
