A/N: So, here I am updating! Yay? *Furiously ignores the fact that it's three days late.* Okay, I'm really, really sorry about this. I know I told some of you I'm aiming to update once a week on Sundays (if not SURPRISE! I'm aiming to update once a week on Sundays!), but then hit week three and Did Not Update. FYI I don't plan on abandoning this ever. I'm either going to finish it, or die trying, no matter how long it takes me *furiously prays it doesn't take me until I turn 40*. And no, to that person who PM'd me on , I did not get hit by a car or something, but thank you for your concern :). What actually happened is I go to an art school and we had this huge, two night performance thing that literally everyone in the Music Department was involved in (so were a lot of rehersals), and I got a total of 30 minutes of computer time that whole week. I had the chapter all written up, but I'm such a slow typer that I was seriously considering reading it out to my Mom and getting her to type it up for me, no joke. So, I may be a little late on the next chapter as well, based off the fact it's Wednesday and I have two and a half paragraphs written. Oops. Also, please forgive any mistakes, as this was posted within the hour of my having typed it up and thus did not get any help from my beta (or all that much from me).
Anyways, on a completely different note thank you so much to everyone who read, followed, subscribed, kudo'd, liked, and voted, but most of all commented or reviewed. You guys have each made my day, and I actually smile like a total idiot every time I look in my email and see "... left a comment/review on your story." You guys are the actual best, especially HoldTightAndPretendItIsAPlan and NarglesOnHerTongue for answering my question on whether or not Dwarf and Dwarrow are capitalized. You two are my favourites.
Later on that evening, Bilbo was waiting, as he'd completely ran out of things to do. He'd already gone through the house in search of any practical clothes, given up, gone to the market, bought some fabric and a couple of spools of thread, and made himself a few durable shirts (some longsleeved, some short sleeved), two pairs of pants he was pretty sure could be landed on point blank by a nuclear missile and come out looking fine, and a jacket which was more indestructible as a cockroach (the things you learn after thirty-odd years of bachelordom).
He'd taken all the non perishable food and packed it in a backpack along with a bedroll, an oily cloak thing (prehistoric raincoat?), an actual cloak, a rope, a few candles and some flint and tinder, a water-holdy thing, and a couple of nice hunting knives he found in a box in the front along with a very nice crossbow with no small amount of bolts and a pair of tempered steel forearm guards that fit him nicely (a little heavier than kevlar, but he could roll with that). He managed to stuff in a few first aid supplies: two rolls of gauze, a needle and a spool of thread (he really hoped he didn't have to use them), and a piece of thicker string to cut off circulation to a limb if need be (if he slipped a couple more pieces into his sleeves more for the purposes of necks than limbs, that's his business), and all the different herbs he could remember from the days when his mother taught him plant lore as if his life depended on it (deadly nightshade and some others may or may not have ended up in his pockets, but again, his business, you crazy stalker).
He'd gone to see people about the hobbit hole's upkeep (it was currently in Mary Poppins condition and he was pretty sure the owner would be pissed if they got back to find it in crappy shape), he'd put together a will (just in case there was no real owner), and cooked all the perishable food into enough for a small army of giants or Oliphaunts, so maybe if the gods smiled upon him may last for twenty minutes.
Maybe.
Probably not.
Oh well.
But now there he was at twilight, in the sitting room, doing nothing. See, doing nothing was not good for Bilbo. He always had to be doing something or his mind went wandering, and seemed to have a penchant for some of the most dark and disturbing alleys on his mental map.
Currently, it was going over all the lovely ways any one of their number could fall along the way, which was slightly odd, as he'd never actually met any of them save Gandalf, but he'd already made up his mind that they were all going to make it to the mountain and see it restored to it's former glory. Too many of his comrades had never returned to see their homes or families again, so whenever he had the chance to do his best to get someone home, he took it. This was no exception, although it would probably be a lot harder than any of the other times he'd pulled this.
Thankfully, just as his mind made the jump from bandits to orcs, there was a knock on the door.
There was a single dwarf at his door. The dwarf was large, muscular, covered in tattoos, and had a beard to make anyone jealous. Essentially, exactly what Bilbo was used to from a dwarvish perspective. The one thing he was not used to, however, was being looked at like he was a small rodent.
Who taught him manners? A squirrel?
There were a lot of things Dwalin expected of the halfling burglar.
For one, he expected him to be small, pampered, and fussy. After riding through the Shire, with it's inhabitants who seemed to be on the flabbier side, it was clear to him that the Shire had never seen war or hardship of any kind.
Dwalin was also expecting the burglar to be judgemental. In the years since Smaug's attack, he'd been cast out of more buildings (or entire towns) than he had hairs in his beard. He'd learned the hard way that people were wary, untrusting, and untrustworthy. Sure, when you had a monopoly over all the precious metals in the Earth and ruled powerful cities everyone was your friend (or pretended to be), but once you lost that wealth, that changed fast enough to give a dwarf whiplash. A lone dwarf could only trust his own.
When Dwalin opened the door the halfling met a few of his expectations: he was small, curly-haired, pointy-eared and beardless, with large feet with more hair on top. Those were about the only similarities between the halfling and the rest of his race. His build looked to be pure lean muscle, and his eyes held the same haunted quality that so many other dwarves' had after Azanulbizar. The halfling's hair, while curly, looked to be recovering from a close shave (why in Durin's name would anyone do that?!). That wasn't the part that rattled Dwalin the most.
It was his skin that scared him.
The halfling didn't have a huge amount of exposed skin, just some from where his sleeves left off at his forearms, a little halfway down his shins, and some around his collarbone and upwards but what he saw even there was unlike anything he'd ever come into contact with. The halfling's skin was covered, literally covered in hundreds upon hundreds of scars. Some were thick and looked fairly fresh, while others were thin white lines, far older, and as close to healed as they'd ever be. Some were obviously from stitches (Mahal's balls, why would anyone need so many stitches?) others were from cuts both shallow and deep enough to seriously endanger a dwarrow's life, let alone something as small as a halfling, with a disturbing amount circling his neck (that would explain the stitches), and the most common kind of scar, angry and puffed around the edges, and smooth and flat in the slightly indented middle, like an arrow wound, but hundreds of times worse. Dwalin internally shuddered. Whatever weapon had created those scars he'd never seen, and prayed he never would.
Even more surprising than the hobbit's skin was his stare: blank as as sheet of paper. No fear, no hatred, no disgust, nothing, despite the fact that Dwalin was fixing him with his fourth-to-best glare.
He mentally ordered himself not to be surprised after the hobbit met his greeting with a completely steady "Bilbo Baggins, pleased to meet you," but he was pretty sure he failed
Well, that was Dwarf Number One, who apparently went by Dwalin down, Dwarves Two through Thirteen to go. And of course that dratted wizard.
Bilbo ushered Dwalin into the kitchen and came very, very close to running into into him when the dwarf stopped dead in his tracks, and was staring at the kitchen table. Well, more lack thereof, as the entire thing was covered in mountains upon mountains of food of all and any kind imaginable.
Bilbo took a look over at Dwalin's face and suddenly found it about as hard to refrain from laughing as the time the Drill Sergeant mooned his entire squadron in an attempt to get any of them to break composure after the screaming and taunting them about their mothers' lack of virginity didn't do it.
Dwalin looked as if his eyes bulged any farther, they'd simply drop straight out of his head and his mouth was open at a truly alarming angle. All in all, the expression would be hilarious on anyone, but on Dwalin it was pure gold.
Bilbo managed to get him to sit down after a fuckton more staring, and talked a bit with Dwalin about his favourite weapons (it hadn't escaped his notice that Dwalin was the polar opposite of unarmed and apparently the same went for Dwalin to him) before there was another knock on the door.
And here comes Number Two.
The second dwarf turned out to be a wizened, older fellow, Dwalin's brother, and apparently named Balin. Bilbo wasn't sure they were joking or not, but decided to let them have their space to catch up, because judging by their reactions upon seeing each other it had been a while at least.
Bilbo wasn't kept waiting for more than ten minutes before not one but two knocks sounded and- oh, no.
No.
Nope.
Nopenopenope.
.no
In that moment Bilbo Baggins was nine hundred percent done, because if numbers Three and Four's expressions were anything to go by, there would be several... special experiences coming up for the lot of them. The last time he'd seen smirks almost that bad was on a pair of elf twins in his trainee days who had everyone dyed fluorescent, glow-in-the-dark, neon pink that didn't wash out for two months within the first week of training (it had gotten worse from there).
Was there an age restriction on this quest or not?
After inviting the two heavily-armed dwarves (Fili and Kili- whose idea was it to trust those two with any manner of sharp or pointy object?) into the hobbit hole (yes, Dwalin and Balin are here. No, my name is not 'Boggins'. Yes, I am really a hobbit. No, you cannot eat it all, there's plenty for everyone, and you'd probably explode like that guy on Monty Pyth ... nevermind. How about you go greet the others) he only had a few more minutes to wait before a literal dwarf avalanche fell into his day ass-first, and took out a couple of his ribs in the process (because everyone knows the absolute best way to start a quest is with a bruised everything), however the literal dwarf avalanche accounted for dwarves five through twelve.
The dwarves introduced themselves, and if Bilbo knew some of the dwarves in the RMEA had similar names to their siblings, but this was just ridiculous. Dori, Nori, and Ori? Bifur, Bofur, and Bombur? Absolutely ridiculous, and he could just see a world of mental pain when he inevitably screwed up their names at least once per dwarf, per day in the coming weeks.
Once all the dwarves were settled in the dining room Bilbo finally elected to join them. He couldn't exactly hide out in the front hall all night waiting for Dwarf number late.
Coming in to the room, Bilbo saw more than a few (okay, all of them) staring at his scars. The older ones had enough manners to (badly) attempt to conceal it, but most of the younger ones were openly staring (there may have been a slight bit of gaping).
Wait a second- crap. Crap crap crap crapcrap- he'd forgotten to cover up his bullet scars.
Well done, Baggins. Way to screw up timelines.
It didn't take Bilbo too long to get the dwarves to start demolishing the mountains of food on the table. They started out messy, and it all went downhill from there. Bilbo found himself laughing his ass off almost an hour later at dwarf number three or four (the blonde one- they'd both come in at the same time), who had crossed the line between "tipsy" and "hella drunk", as evidenced by the fact he was "pulling a Hobbit" and table dancing. Badly. The dwarves were shouting and roaring, prompting him to think that Fili (he thinks that was Blondie's name) wasn't the only one who had stumbled over the fine line.
Unfortunately, it was because of this that the Dwarves got their next great idea for entertainment when Fili (?) stomped for the four thousandth time (liberal estimate), he sent a bowl flying full-tilt at Bilbo's face, who ducked low and when he was back up (approximately a half second later) shouted "do you want to take someone's head off?"
If their reaction was anything to go by, the answer was an unanimous "yes", because the next thing Bilbo knew literally all the pieces of cutlery, plates, and cups had taken flight.
The next couple minutes passed like a game of hacky sack from Bilbo's own personal Hell. The Dwarves bounced anything and everything off any available body part, all the while singing a song about what he "hated" (in reality he didn't mind any of it, except the 'blunt the knives' part. You blunt his knives he bludgeons you to death with said blunted knives.), and somehow managed to clean and stack the dishes as well.
Bilbo just ducked. Repeatedly. It kind of looked like fun (loose definition, anyways), so when it cleared up a bit he decided to join in.
That didn't go so well.
The first dwarf to send anything in his general direction (a cup) was the one with all the knits- Ori, that was it.
He sent the cup back with a high kick he'd learned in the Taekwondo portion of the martial arts portion of his Black Ops training.
Wrong thing to do, apparently, as it surprised the young Dwarf enough that he accidentally sent the cup back to Bilbo again.
The problem was, he'd sent it too fast and too hard to deflect or dodge, and at that velocity if it hit it would be harmful (to say the least). It also just so happened to be heading straight for Bilbo's head, because his day was already going so wonderfully, but just needed the cherry on top.
Before Bilbo even knew what he was doing, his hands were pulling the hunting knives he'd found out of Sting's sheath and the concealed sheath he'd built into the pants, and he was slicing through the cup midair.
The whole room went silent as the shards were deflected off of (or stuck in) Bilbo's forearms and rained harmlessly to the ground.
It took a second or two for Bilbo's mind to slow down and figure out what just happened, during which everyone stayed still and silent, save for more than a few wide eyed looks thrown around.
Once he had his bearings, Bilbo took stock of his position and smiled. He'd ended up feet wide and planted, left foot in front of his right, knees bent, center of gravity lowered, fists and forearms together (thumbs outside) and held vertically in front of his face. Apparently a couple of glass shards had gotten stuck, but none were deep enough to actually register on his 'pain' spectrum, so he left them there, deciding that he'd prefer to remove them with some bandages handy, but if they fell out beforehand it was no big deal.
That aside, he'd adopted a fighter's stance on pure muscle memory, despite his last mission having ended a year and a half ago.
Why is it all so quiet all of a sudden?
Bilbo looked at the Dwarves, who were all wearing expressions of shock or in more than one case, distrust and mentally facepalmed.
"Um... sorry? It was an- accident..?"
Well, what else can you do when you use a fighting style that wouldn't be fully developed for another five hundred years?
Fortunately, a knock on the door ended that particular awkward situation.
Not-so-fortunately, another one began the second some idiot said "he's here."
Well, whoever he was, it sure took him long enough.
Dwarf Number Late could certainly make an entrance, Bilbo thought.
He'd opened the door and found himself face-to-face with quite possibly the most regal Dwarf he'd ever seen, who promptly ignored him and told Gandalf:
"I got lost. Twice."
Bilbo vowed to learn how he somehow managed to make that sound like Gandalf's fault.
Then, the Dwarf turned his intense glare on Bilbo, who suddenly found himself glad he had stuck with his slightly creepy habit of observing things from the shadowiest or most concealed point in a room he could find. He recognized that look, and if the verbal sparring he'd engaged in over on his Middle Earth with small-minded people was anything to go by, he would probably need all the tricks in his arsenal, from his flare for the dramatic to his extreme amounts of sass (the only way to deal with Drill Sergeants) to make a dent in this Dwarf's head.
"Is this the halfling?"
Oh, he did not. If there was one thing Bilbo, or any Hobbit for that matter, hated, it was being called a halfling. The term is as highly derogatory as it is commonly used (levels on both: OVER NINE THOUSAAAAAAND!), and unfortunately most Hobbits were too polite to correct anyone when they used it.
Bilbo was not one of those Hobbits.
He knew there were always going to be people who would only ever think of him as one, but it was another thing entirely to say it out loud, on the first meeting no less.
Bilbo scowled. The gloves were off.
"No. I don't see any halflings here, do you? I for one see thirteen Dwarves, a Wizard and a Hobbit, but no halflings."
The Dwarf took a step forward and asked "which do you prefer, sword or axe?"
"Sword, knife, gu-crossbow, or my own hands, feet, knees, elbows, head, and shins."
The Dwarf scoffed, his glare once again settling on Gandalf.
"He looks more like a grocer than a burglar."
Bilbo didn't even try to fight to subdue the creepy grin he knew was dominating his face, even when he saw a few of the younger ones (Fili, Kili, and Ori- dang, he was getting good with these ridiculous names) took a step or two away from him.
Bilbo was pretty sure his creepy grin was the scariest thing about him. He'd heard it being compared to a jack-o-lantern's unnerving, carved slit, or the Joker's flat-out terrifying one, more than once (or twice, or three times, or four times, or ten times, or fifty times, or a hundred times). He usually kept his smiles to a) polite, or b) tight (aka secretly pissed off) in public, but when on his own he let his (only) natural kind shine through (or while playing FPS games, but oh well). It was extremely rare to see, and the recipient usually found themselves mentally writing their last wills and testaments.
He took a few steps forward until there were about six inches between him and that infuriating Dwarf, smiled up at him, and ground out in a tone that was pure venom: "A grocer, hm? I'm pretty sure your grocers don't look like this," while taking a step back and spreading his arms, putting some of his medium level scars on his inner forearms on display for the first time in years.
When he was met with a shocked-eyed glare, he knew he'd won this one.
Allowing almost all of the tension to flow out of his posture in the space of a second, Bilbo relaxed his grin to one four degrees off his standard pokerface.
"Now what was this you said about me being a burglar? Gandalf didn't explain it all too well when he told me about it this morning. There should be some food left in the kitchen, and we can discuss it there if you wish."
The Dwarf responded with a snort and yet another glare (geez, was this his pokerface?) and shouldered by him, heading deeper into the smial, and around the corner.
"The bedrooms? Master Dwarf, you could've just asked."
That was about when Dwalin had a sudden (and very mysterious) choking fit.
