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!)
Xena, it would have been nice if everyone could have managed Oakleaf's escape.
I love Stony—here's this hobbit who drove waggonloads of stone and gravel from
the Quarry for a living, turned into the resident entertainer and storyteller
for the band of rebels, putting on an act for the ruffians. Lovely thought.
Bookworm, the height of irony, watching yourself hanged in effigy, but much
better than the alternative. "Wouldn't Rosie have been confident since
*fall* that Sam would be returning to her soon, as they likely heard of his
disappearance by October?" No, for some reason, the Professor said in "Scouring
of the Shire" that Rose was confident since Spring ("They said you were dead;
but I've been expecting you since the Spring."). Was she somehow connected to
Sam in a way that she knew when the Ring was destroyed, even though she hadn't
a clue to any of the details? Jodancingtree elaborates on this in a lovely way
in her story "Sam's Rose". Anyhow, thanks so much for mentioning something that
niggled at you—I try to write within canon but sometimes I miss (like with
Estella's age in "Jewels"), and I appreciate astute writers helping me catch
those little nits! (or big ones…)
Aemilia Rose, I'm sorry, it'll get worse before it gets better. *hug*
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.
***
Chapter 5. "Courage is
Found in Unlikely Places"
The rebel leader and his band stumbled into Waymeet sometime after middle
night. The march from Bywater had been slow, weak as they were from hunger,
thirst, and marching in the heat of the day. Some were reeling, heads pounding,
near to dropping from the exhaustion resulting from the earlier heat, but their
fellows, fearing the beating that might result, dragged them along.
They came to the trough in the town square, filled fresh each morning and at
need until the waning of the day meant no more thirsty animals passing by. The
ruffian chief held back his Men, watching tolerantly as the hobbits fell to
their knees around the trough, scooping up stale water, with its bits of hay
and other debris floating atop, from the few inches left in the bottom.
Finally, he said in a bored tone, 'That's enough.' The ruffians prodded the
hobbits away from the trough with clubs and the butts of whips, forming them to
march again to the Shirriff house. Pounding on the door, the ruffian chief
shouted, 'Open in the name of the Boss! We've got prisoners here to house, and
hungry guards to feed!'
The door was opened by a weary Shirriff, obviously awakened from sleep, and the
ruffians shoved the hobbits inside, telling them to sit down in the corner of
the room. 'You're too late for supper,' the chief told them nastily. 'Too bad
you couldn't march a bit faster.'
Turning to the Shirriff, he said, 'We'll be wanting bread and cheese, freshest
you got. If the bread's stale, you'll lose your feather, and maybe more.'
'Yes, sir,' the Shirriff stammered. With a regretful look at the prisoners, he
hurried off to the storeroom where the ruffians' rations were stocked.
The ruffians fell to hungrily, with a great smacking of lips, loud remarks on
the quality of the food, sighs of satisfaction, and calls for more. Their
prisoners sat silent in their shadowy corner, huddled together for comfort.
Freddy noticed Robin weeping silently, and reached out to squeeze his hand.
When the tween looked at him, shamefaced in the dim lantern light, he smiled
and nodded encouragement. Robin wiped his eyes on his sleeve and tried to sit a
little straighter.
'This apple's wormy!' one of the ruffians erupted with a curse. He threw the
offensive apple at the prisoners, half expecting them to fight over the prize,
but they sat without apparent reaction (though the apple disappeared quickly
from sight under someone's leg). He grunted, dissatisfied. The little rats must
be too drained to provide any entertainment.
After eating to repletion, the ruffians rolled out their blankets on the floor,
all but the two that would take the first watch, and began to snore.
The hobbit prisoners sat silent a long while, and then the apple slowly began
to pass from hand to hand. There was perhaps a nibble for each, maybe as much
as a bite, large, glossy apple that it was, of the kind that had filled Farmer
Cotton's waggon on a long-ago market day.
***
'Good apple,' Fredegar Bolger said, continuing to enjoy his purchase. He could
tell that the farmer wished to speed him away from his pretty daughter, and he
took a perverse pleasure in standing there, savouring each leisurely bite. When
he'd finished the first apple, he tossed the core towards the farmer's ponies
and laughed to see one of the beasts stretch his neck to seize the treat from
the dusty ground.
With a wink at Rose, Fatty fished the second apple out of his pocket and
nibbled delicately at the skin. Farmer Cotton glared, but the gentlehobbit
looked up at the sky and remarked on the fineness of the weather. The farmer
maintained a stony silence.
Finishing the second apple, after he'd drawn out the eating as long as
possible, Fatty fished out a snowy handkerchief from his pocket and delicately
wiped his fingers. Gentlehobbits, after all, possess manners, and do nothing so
indelicate as licking one's fingers after eating.
'How much?' he said.
'Eh? What's that?' Farmer Cotton said, blinking.
'For the waggon?' Fatty said, with an expressive gesture.
'I don't take your meaning, young sir,' Farmer Cotton replied.
'I'll take the whole waggonload of apples,' Fatty said with a grin.
'Wonderfully fine they are, sweet—' his eye caressed Rose's blushing cheek,
'and ever so juicy.'
What Farmer Cotton really wanted was to flatten the impertinent tween, but that
would be an imprudent move, since the Shirriff had just walked up and was
buying an apple from Rose.
Farmer Cotton named an impossible figure, at least four times what the apples
were worth. Without batting an eye, Fatty took his purse from his pocket and
paid the farmer. 'Just the apples, mind,' he said, 'and a bargain at that
price! You can have the waggon back after you deliver the contents.'
'And where shall I deliver them?' Farmer Cotton said. 'Cartage is extra.' He
remembered that the Bolgers lived in Eastfarthing, nearly to the Brandywine
Bridge.
'Not far,' Fatty said thoughtfully. 'Only as far as Bag End, you can take them
there, can't you? Up the Hill from Hobbiton.'
'I know where Bag End is,' Farmer Cotton said through his teeth.
'Very well, old fellow,' Fatty said lazily. 'Here's a little extra for your
trouble,' and he dropped a golden sovereign into Farmer Cotton's hand, enough
to pay for the repairs needed for the farmhouse roof, and then some. 'O, and
buy a new hair ribbon for the lass, or ten of them,' he said generously, adding
a handful of silver. 'There's a good hobbit.'
'Yes, sir,' Farmer Cotton gritted.
Fatty turned to walk away, but then looked over his shoulder to say, 'O yes, I
nearly forgot. The apples are for one Meriadoc Brandybuck, who is staying with
his cousin Frodo Baggins at the moment. He's extraordinarily fond of apples,
you know.'
Leaving the open-mouthed farmer and daughter behind, he chuckled as he walked
away, swinging the heavy walking stick that went everywhere that he did. He
wished he could see Merry's face when the apples were delivered.
***
When the apple finally came to Freddy, he hefted the remnant thoughtfully for a
moment, then passed it on to Robin. 'You take my portion,' he said in a tone
too low for the drowsy guards to hear.
'I couldn't!' Robin whispered, trying to push Freddy's hand away.
'No, really, lad,' Freddy insisted, placing the bit of apple in the tween's
hand and closing Robin's fingers about it. 'You finish it off,' he said kindly.
'I couldn't eat a bite, really I couldn't.'
Robin hesitated, but Budgie hissed at him to obey, and so he took that last
bite that was left, and proceeded to eat the core, worm and all, more than
likely, in the darkness.
