Notes to
Readers:
Thanks for the reviews! They are very motivating. What you are seeing here is
the edited draft. (Thanks to my editor—you know who you are!)
Aemilia Rose, well, what's on SoA is the draft. Changes are appearing there as
each edited chapter is posted here. I am trying very hard to make my stories
consistent so that they do not appear in different forms on different websites.
If I were a hobbit, and I knew Lindelea's reputation, I might not be quite so
reassured by your meant-to-be comforting words…
Xena, it is going to be grim. Tolkien didn't say much about the Lockholes, but
the little he said was evocative. "They're beating them oftentimes now" and
Freddy being carried out too weak to walk ("Fatty" no longer), and Lobelia's
dark cell... *shiver* Still, I maintain that it is not gratuitous angst written
for the sake of titillation.
trishette, you're writing a Fatty Bolger story? Great! Fatty could use more
attention, IMHO. He's one of those unsung heroes in the Shire, you know.
Look for an update in "Runaway" on the morrow, if all goes well (i.e., if I can
find Jo's email from two weeks ago in the glut of junk emails in my box! I knew I should have saved it to disk the
day she sent it to me, but procrastination is a hard habit to break), and the
next chapter of "The Rebel" on the day after.
***
3. A Great Smoke Went Up
The rebel leader awakened suddenly, startled out of sleep by a soft voice.
'Tea, Freddy-lad?' It was Old Oakleaf, his family's gardener. Fredegar
suspected the old hobbit had followed him on his father's orders, but he'd
proven a loyal companion. The younger hobbits looked up to him, especially the
Smallfoot cousins, and he'd taken Robin Smallfoot, the youngest of the band,
under his wing, keeping him from the bullying of some of the rougher members.
He took the proffered cup of icy water with a smile. 'Thankee, Gaffer,' he
said, and sipped. 'My, the tea gets finer each day.'
'Trick is to catch the kettle just on the boil, and steep the leaves just the
right number of minutes,' the old hobbit said. 'Some folk let all the life boil
out of the water, and then the tea tastes flat.'
'Real pity, that,' Freddy agreed with another sip. He tried to persuade his
stomach that each sip of water was a part of a very pleasant feast, in fact, an
engrossing entertainment: rich, abundant, varied, and prolonged. By the time he
reached the bottom of the cup, he'd be as full as he was at Bilbo's Birthday
Party, when the Speech began.
***
'Peregrin Took, do you mean to say you went out the back way and came through
the gate again?' Fatty scolded. 'Merry, I thought you were keeping an eye on
him!'
'Lobelia S.-B. grabbed my arm to give me a piece of her mind,' Merry said in
self-defence. 'It wasn't so bad when Pip was standing behind her, mimicking her
every move, but then he slipped away, and Mistress Lobelia fixed me with that
eye of hers and said, "And where d'you think you're going off to, young hobbit?
I haven't finished with you yet!" and it was all I could do to stand there and
nod upon occasion.'
'I got two presents!' Pippin announced proudly. He had come through the front
gate twice, where Bilbo was handing out birthday presents to the arriving
guests, and Bilbo hadn't seemed to notice that the young Took had already been
through one time. 'This one's magical, look! You put a coin in front of the
dragon's mouth... d'you have a coin, Merry?' he asked, all innocence.
Knowing better, Merry nevertheless fished a coin out of his pocket, feeling the
various discs until his fingers distinguished a copper penny, slightly larger
than a silver penny, but not as valuable. 'Here you are, Pip.'
'Put the coin on the stone in front of the dragon's mouth,' Pippin said
importantly. Merry obeyed. A puff of steam came from the dragon's mouth, and
when it cleared, the coin was gone.
'Where did it go?' Merry said.
Pippin laughed with delight. 'It's in his hoard!' he said. He turned the box
over, worked a latch, and opened a small door to show several coins inside.
When Merry reached for one of the coppers, Pippin closed the door. 'No you
don't!' he said. 'Do not meddle in the affairs of dragons! You know what might
happen!'
'But my penny—' Merry protested, more bemused than upset.
'How does it work?' Fatty asked. 'I'd like to see that again.'
'Do you have a coin?' Pippin asked ingenuously.
Fatty fished a coin out of his pocket; a silver penny this time, and Pippin's
eyes gleamed.
'Fatty,' Merry warned. Fatty turned his face towards Merry and winked the eye
that Pippin couldn't see.
'Put the coin on the stone,' Pippin said, and Fatty complied. There was a puff
of steam, and the coin was gone. Fatty's eyebrows went up, and he said, 'A neat
trick, cousin. You ought to make a good haul if you go round the party and show
off your new toy.'
'I will!' Pippin said, and soon was to be seen showing off his new toy to
another gaggle of cousins.
'What--?' Merry said.
Fatty turned a bland eye on him. 'At least he won't go out the back way and
come through the gate a third time,' he said.
There were songs, dances, music, games, and of course, food and drink. Fatty
was able to eat all he wanted, for the first time ever, without his father
complaining that the Bolger hoard would be seriously depleted by the cost of
the food. Of course, he sat down together with all the other guests at luncheon
and tea, but in-between-times he didn't stop eating. As a matter of fact, he
ate continuously from elevenses until six-thirty, when the fireworks started
and the display made him stop, for of course one can hardly chew and swallow
food when one's mouth is wide-opened in wonder.
Of course, Merry and Frodo procured for Pippin the brightest of the
dwarf-candles and elf-fountains, and the loudest of the squibs, crackers,
goblin-barkers and thunder-claps, and the young Took made quite a nuisance of
himself at one point, nearly setting fire to the fur on old Odo Proudfoot's
right foot when he lit off a string of crackers without checking to see if the
area around him was clear. However, old Odo was so busy watching glowing
flowers dropping from the sky at the time, smelling their sweet scent as they
disappeared before his nose, that he didn't notice any smell of singed hair and
only the next morning wondered what had happened to the fur on his right big
toe.
Fatty saw Estella and some other little girls her age waving sparklers and
moved away before his mother could collar him to watch his sister. Just then,
the lights went out. A great smoke went up and formed itself into a mountain,
out of which a small but very realistic dragon emerged and whizzed over the
heads of the crowd. Though Fatty's mind told him that a real dragon would be
much bigger, he ducked with the rest when the dragon flew over, turned a
somersault, and burst over Bywater with a deafening explosion.
'That is the signal for supper!' Bilbo said, and Fatty cheered with the rest.
He sat by Merry, with Pippin between them. Lovely crackers graced each plate.
The guests sat down, crossed arms, and took hold of the crackers between them,
and as everyone chanted together, "One! Two! Three!" they pulled. With a pop,
the crackers opened. The guests examined the contents, many of which were small
musical instruments, of perfect make and enchanting tones, marked "Dale". There
was a murmur of pleasure, but more important matters took precedence (food).
The guests put on their colourful paper crowns and settled down to the feast.
What a feast it was! Fatty ate more in one sitting, if possible, than he had
the whole day up to that point. He was practically in a daze, but still sipping
at a sweet beverage of mixed juices and nibbling at dainties when Bilbo stepped
up to give his speech.
It started out conventionally enough, all obvious stuff, and Fatty applauded
with the rest, shouting when he thought it appropriate. Pippin had fallen
asleep with his head on the table partway through the feast, and now he
blinked, sleepy-eyed, as his relatives shouted, 'Hear! Hear! Hear!' at the
commencement of the Speech. Merry put a reassuring hand on Pippin's shoulder,
and he stretched and snuggled close, watching with wondering eyes as the Speech
progressed.
Finally, Bilbo said, I am eleventy-one today!
'Hurray!' Merry shouted, and Pippin added his young voice. 'Hurray!' They both
waved their serviettes in celebration.
'Many happy returns!' Fatty shouted, not to be outdone.
I hope you are all enjoying yourselves as much as I am. Fatty, Merry,
and Pippin joined in the deafening cheer. Pippin seemed thoroughly awake, now,
and ready for mischief. He picked up the flute from his cracker and blew an
ear-piercing trill, while Merry picked up his horn and practically blasted
Fatty's ears out.
Some young Brandybucks and Tooks, off in one of the corners, supposed Bilbo to
be finished. After all, he had plainly said all that needed to be said. They
struck up a merry dance tune, and one dashing young Took began to dance the
Springle-ring upon a table-top with a pretty young Brandybuck.
Bilbo deftly seized Merry's horn and blew three loud hoots. The noise subsided.
Fatty wasn't really paying attention, now, for he was feeling rather sleepy
himself, and for the first time in his life he was perfectly sated and
satisfied, though he nibbled at a biscuit out of habit. He paid Bilbo no mind
until the old hobbit shouted ANNOUNCEMENT, and then, really, he was more
annoyed than anything else, for he was drifting happily on a dream of loaded
platters and never-empty plates.
Fatty became slightly more alert when Bilbo shouted, END, and he was
nearly paying attention as the Speech came to its conclusion. I am going. I
am leaving NOW. GOOD-BYE!
Bilbo stepped down and vanished. There was a blinding flash of light, and Fatty
blinked. When he opened his eyes, Bilbo was nowhere to be seen. There was a
deep silence, lasting several breaths, and then every hobbit in the place was
trying to talk at once.
'What in the world?' Fatty breathed, fully awake.
'I think I know,' Merry said.
'What, then?' Fatty insisted, while Pippin pulled at Merry's arm demanding not
to be left out.
'Tell you later,' Merry said, and they could not get him to say any more for
the nonce.
***
'Something's happening,' Robin said nervously. He was watching from inside the
cave mouth. The rebels had been able to hold off the ruffians with well-aimed
stones, of which there was no dearth in the cave, and a few well-placed arrows,
though obviously they were much more careful with these. The cave did not
provide more arrows, of course, and they did not want to run short.
His older cousin squeezed his shoulder. 'Keep watch,' Budgie said firmly. 'I'll
let Mr Freddy know.'
Before he got halfway to where the entrance opened into the main room, there
was no need to inform Fredegar. Smouldering bundles were tossed into the cave
entrance, letting off rank smoke. The choking hobbits at first tried to run
forward, to grab the bundles and toss them back, but arrows fired into the cave
drove them away from the entrance, and they retreated towards the back door,
only to encounter more smoke.
Fredegar, thinking quickly, soaked a handkerchief in a bucket and covered his
mouth, shouting orders to the others to do the same. He couldn't do anything
about the stinging of his eyes from the acrid smoke, however, and even through
the wet handkerchief, breathing was difficult.
'What are we going to do?' Rocky shouted.
'I'm open to suggestions,' Freddy returned, and then went into a coughing fit.
The rest were coughing as well, strangling on the smoke.
'D'you want to die sooner, or later?' Old Oakleaf choked. 'Iffen we stay in
here, it'll be sooner, is my way of thinking!'
He was right. Though it was difficult to admit defeat, Freddy raised his voice.
'Everybody out!' he shouted. 'Out right now!' Coughing, choking, blind and
gasping, the hobbits stumbled from the cave.
