14.
City of the Wraiths
It was more than a few days before Frodo could walk without pain, and they
camped there in the open, waiting for his foot to heal. Even so, his heart was
light, and he lay with the injured foot propped up on his pack, watching the
clouds and the flight of birds. He was himself again; for the second time he'd
had the chance to let go of life, and instead he had held on with all his
strength. Not this time because someone was calling him back, but because he
wanted to live.
"I'm healed, Radagast," he said softly, marveling, and the wizard smiled.
"You are indeed, my Donkey." Radagast sat with his pipe, sending rings of smoke
dancing off across the prairie. "Now you must find your purpose. What is it you
wish to do with your life?"
Frodo grinned. "Follow you - and make sure you eat properly," he said, and
Radagast laughed so hard he brought on a coughing fit and had to lay the pipe
aside.
They went on at last, moving into hilly country, climbing slopes that grew
steadily higher as they pushed south. One day they came to the top of a hill
higher than any they had yet climbed, and Frodo gasped and stood still. He had
never expected to see it again, but he knew this place. The marble pavement,
the tall stone chair on its pedestal… His knees buckled beneath him and he sat
down hard on the ground.
"Amon Hen, the Hill of Seeing," said Radagast. "Have you been
here before, Donkey?"
Frodo bowed his head. "When I fled from Boromir – I had the Ring on, and I
sat there –" He was shaken by a tremor so violent that it rattled his
teeth. "He nearly had me," he whispered, seeing again in memory a
terrible Shadow that seemed to reach out from Mordor to seize him. He sprang to
his feet. "Come, Radagast, let us leave this place. It is accursed!"
The wizard put a comforting arm around him. "Not accursed, Donkey, but you
need not stay here. Go on down to the river and start making camp. I wish to
look where we are going, here where I can see far and clear, but I will join
you soon."
Frodo went, more shaken than he wanted Radagast to know. He wasn't looking
where he was going and fell headlong over a tree root within the first ten
paces. After that he went more carefully, and came out at last on the green
lawn of Parth Galen. By the time Radagast appeared, the campfire was going and
Frodo was splashing in the river, dunking his head in the water as if it could
wash away evil memories.
"Before it gets dark I want to look for something; come and help me,
Donkey," Radagast called. Frodo waded out and dried off, and the wizard
led the way back under the trees. "Look for piles of brush; poke around
and see if there's anything inside," he said.
Frodo stared at him for a moment before he understood. "You're looking for
the other boat? Of course; Aragorn hid it here, didn't he, before he went after
Merry and Pippin."
Aragorn had been in a hurry, that long ago day, and it didn't take them long to
find the abandoned boat. It was covered over with branches hastily lopped from
nearby trees, and buried under the leaf-fall of the passing years.
Radagast turned it upright and dragged it down to the water, and Frodo followed
with the one paddle that remained; the others had rotted away from lying on the
ground. The boat was still sound however; the next morning they crossed the
river in it, and the Elven craft hardly leaked at all. They upended it above
the high-water mark, but didn't trouble to hide it before they left the
riverbank and started up the steep hill.
The rough slopes of Emyn Muil were as pitiless and unforgiving as they had been
when Frodo and Sam had struggled to find a way through them, but they were not
lost this time – Radagast had a bump of direction that never failed. Frodo was
bone tired by day's end, but it was physical tiredness only, not the sinking,
hopeless weariness of the last weeks of the Quest.
They stood at last looking out over the Marshes. The sun was westering behind
them, casting out long rays of golden light, but to the East it was already
dark. Deep, purple darkness; no angry red glow on the horizon this time. The
Mountain was sleeping.
"Will it sleep forever now?" Frodo asked. His voice broke the
silence, and he looked back as if something might be behind him.
"Forever is a long time, Donkey. But I think the Mountain will rest for many
years now, perhaps for an age of the world. Your finger bought us a long spell
of peace when it went into the fire. Costly for you, but I think it was well
spent."
"And it would not have been better if the rest of me had gone with
it." Frodo could smile as he said it, and it proved how far he had come,
not only in miles, since he traveled with the wizard.
"No, indeed! The rest of you has other work to do. Come, we will find a
place to camp."
"Will we have to go through the Dead Marshes?"
"Not a passage you would relish, eh, Donkey? Nor would I. We'll find a way
around them – we can travel openly, you and I, not hunted and in fear of our
lives, as you did before."
The Dead Marshes were the least of it, but Frodo could not make himself speak
of his true dread. They were traveling openly, as the wizard said, and the
Ringwraiths were no more. They could walk boldly into the Morgul Vale, up the
road and across the bridge to the very gates. There would be no need to take
the Straight Stair, the Winding Stair, the lightless, airless tunnel…
He stumbled and nearly fell, and Radagast caught him by the elbow. "Stop
here, lad, this is as good a place as any to spend the night." Frodo was
shaking as if with ague and sweat shone on his forehead, but he made no sound.
Radagast eased him to the ground, a blanket under him and another around his
shoulders, before he turned to make a fire.
"Drink this, Donkey." A mug of some fragrant herbal brew was held to
his lips, and he drank. After a few swallows he took the mug himself, warming
his hands on it gratefully and inhaling the steam between sips.
Radagast busied himself at the fire, humming tunelessly, bringing out a pot and
various foodstuffs from his bag and putting supper on to cook. All the while he
watched Frodo without seeming to. Finally he put a lid on the pot and came to
refill Frodo's mug.
"You are braver than you are wise sometimes, Donkey. Why do you not tell
me when something troubles you?"
Frodo shrugged. "It was as you said, a phantom." He drank a long
swallow of his tisane. "We will not have to pass the – the Spider –"
He drained his mug in one gulp. Radagast filled it a third time and gave it
back to him.
"Ah." Now the wizard understood. "Ungoliant's child. That is a
phantom to be reckoned with, indeed. I had forgot that she lairs in the Morgul
Valley." He sat down by Frodo, slipping his hand under the blanket at his
neck to massage the old scar. Frodo felt the icy pain ease and disappear.
"I could leave you in Ithilien, Donkey, while I go to Minas Morgul."
Yes, Frodo thought, please yes! Leave me in Ithilien! I fear the
Spider as you feared the Nazgul, and she is still there, perhaps – she would
not fade away when Sauron fell. But how will we enter Mordor, if not through
the Morgul Pass?
He sat up straighter. "I am going with you," he said.
They had no difficulty in avoiding the Dead Marshes. They came down from Emyn
Muil onto the old Orc road, stone-paved for the speed of the Dark Lord's
servants. They passed between the Marshes to the north and the Wetwang on the
south without setting foot in either wetland, and came out at last in North
Ithilien. Frodo inhaled the remembered fragrance with delight, and it brought
back other memories.
"We could stop and see Faramir," he said, "if we knew where to
find him."
Radagast looked at him in surprise; in all their time together, it was the
first time Frodo had expressed a desire to visit anyone. "I can probably
find him for you, Frodo, if you would like to see him."
"I would. He was a good friend when I sorely needed one. And also he might
send word to Sam…" His voice trailed off.
"Homesick, Donkey?" the wizard asked, but Frodo smiled.
"Not homesick, no. Don't send me away, Radagast! Only I am healed now; Sam
would like to know that."
"He would." The wizard's dark face split in a wide smile. "He would indeed!"
Ithilien was not deserted now, as it had been when Frodo saw it before. They
passed many villages, pleasant enough places with neat houses and flourishing
gardens, but every one of them was walled. The larger ones were protected by
walls of stone; the smaller hamlets might have only a palisade of logs, their
tips filed into points, but there was no village without a protective
barricade. Frodo and Radagast saw no sign of any enemy, but plainly the
returned settlers of Ithilien were on their guard.
The people greeted them kindly, however, inviting them inside for a hot meal
and a place to spend the night. When Radagast asked if the land was really so
unsafe, even now, so many years after the War, someone always had a story of an
attack away off somewhere, on another, unnamed village. One man said he had
seen an orc in the woods the previous autumn; later Radagast told Frodo
privately that it sounded more like a dead tree seen in the twilight and
transformed by fear into a monster.
They reached the Crossroads at last, and found that a stone fort had been built
there, garrisoned by soldiers of Gondor. A little town had grown up around the
fort, walled like all the others. The place even had an inn, presumably for the
King's officials who had business in Ithilien, and Frodo found ale in the
common room almost as good as that of the Green Dragon back home.
When they came down for breakfast the next morning, a soldier was waiting for them.
"Your pardon, sirs," he said, "I have orders to bring you to the Commander's
quarters, to take breakfast with him."
Radagast raised his brows. "Do you? Well, that is a kindly thought. Very well,
my friend, lead us to the place." He smiled, but the man was sober-faced, stiff
and correct.
They followed him through streets that were already busy at this early hour,
into the fortress and up a narrow stairway that turned a sharp corner every
fourth step. "For defense," Radagast said quietly to Frodo; "two men could hold
this staircase against a horde of enemies." It was another reminder of the
watchfulness of Ithilien.
The Commander's quarters were spacious and comfortable. Tapestries hung from
the walls and a thick wool carpet warmed the stone floor; a massive table was
set for four persons, but there was no one in the room. Their guide opened the
door for them and saluted smartly, then retreated back down the stairs.
"Well," said Radagast. "Come on in, Donkey; I suppose our host will join us
soon. A fine room this is, for a fortress, even if the view is somewhat
straitened."
There was a single window in each wall, taller than a man but so narrow that
even Frodo could not have squeezed through. A branched candelabra on the table
held a score of lighted candles, the flames dancing in the drafty room.
Suddenly a door opened and two men came in. One was plainly the Commander,
stern-visaged with grey hair and beard. The other --
"Faramir!" cried Frodo joyfully, and the man laughed and came forward with
outstretched hands.
"It is you, Frodo! We had word from Gimli months ago, that you had been
in Rohan -- when I heard that a halfling had entered the town in company with a
man in brown robes, I hoped it might be you." Faramir bent to kiss Frodo's
forehead, his hands on the hobbit's shoulders. "Commander, I would have you
welcome Frodo, son of Drogo, who carried the Ring to Mordor."
The officer stared at Frodo in open wonder before bowing deeply, and Frodo
blushed but bowed in return. "And this is my friend and teacher, Radagast of
Rhosgobel, of the same Order as Mithrandir," he said.
The men greeted Radagast with respect, and Faramir led them to the table. "If
my memory serves me, Frodo, your people are renowned trenchermen. I hope you
are in good appetite, for I had the cook prepare a breakfast for six strong
men, or four halflings."
Frodo laughed. "You invited Sam and me to supper when we had been half-starving
in the wilderness, Faramir, but I will not deny that I am ready for breakfast!
I think I can uphold the honor of the Shire this morning."
Servants brought in platters and covered ramekins till there was hardly any
bare space on the table, and if breakfast stretched on toward lunchtime, there
was plenty for them to talk about during the meal. The Commander ate silently,
casting curious glances at Frodo and the wizard, but Faramir was full of
questions.
"When did you leave the Shire, Frodo? Two years ago - and you are exploring
Middle Earth, are you, in the company of this brown wanderer?" He smiled at the
wizard. "I have heard of you, sir, from Mithrandir, but he gave me to
understand that you seldom left your home west of Mirkwood."
"I have been traveling in recent years," Radagast said placidly, "and I have
found some good friends I would not otherwise have met -- this hobbit being the
best of the lot."
"Yes," Faramir agreed with a smile, "he is a gem, in truth, and I also am proud
to call him friend. So where are you going now, the two of you? To Minas
Tirith, I hope; King Elessar will be eager to see you."
Frodo took another slice of beef without answering; he did not feel equal to
explaing to Faramir where they were going now. "No," said Radagast. "We are not
going into Gondor, I'm afraid. I have work to do in Mordor."
Faramir lost his smile, staring from the wizard to Frodo. "Mordor! And do you
go with him, Frodo, back to that accursed place?"
"Yes, I do. Radagast's work is mine as well."
"What is there to do in Mordor, for either of you?" Faramir demanded. "Only
hunting down and destroying the last of the Enemy's servants, and that is for
armed soldiers to do. There are no birds for you to tame in that land, Radagast
the Brown."
"That is my task, to bring back the birds -- to bring healing to a land that
has lain under a curse since the Second Age."
Faramir shook his head. "I think that is beyond the scope even of a wizard. The
Valar themselves would be hard put to restore that land to life - and it is no
place for Frodo! He has suffered enough; if you are his friend in truth, you
will not drag him again to Mordor!"
"He is not dragging me, Faramir. I go of my own will."
"Do you know clearly what you go to?" Faramir had risen and was pacing around
the table as if he could not sit still. "It is a dead land, Frodo; if anything
it is worse than when you went before, for the Mountain has spread its noxious
waste for furlongs all around. There is no water, and any living thing you find
there will be vile or poisonous - or worse. We still send in patrols to hunt
down bands of orcs! You are not armed?" he asked the wizard.
"I have my staff; that is all the protection we need." Radagast looked at him
kindly. "There are more deadly perils than orcs in this world, my friend. One
of the worst is to have no purpose in living. Frodo has come through a fierce
battle for his life, and he is well and strong, ready for the challenge. I will
watch over him, be sure of it!"
Faramir regarded him doubtfully, then turned to Frodo. "There is plenty to be
done in Ithilien, Frodo. I would be glad to have you by my side as I work to
restore this land; you need not go to Mordor to find labor worthy of
your efforts."
Frodo went to him, drawing him over to a chair. "Sit down, Faramir; you are too
tall for me!" He met the man's eyes, speaking earnestly. "I would stay with you
gladly if I could; you are a true friend and I wanted to see you again. I told
Radagast so." The wizard nodded. "But I will not let Radagast go alone to
Mordor, and he is bound to go there. He saved my life and I would be an ingrate
to abandon him."
The wizard frowned. "You must not come with me out of gratitude, Donkey," he
said, but Frodo chuckled.
"Out of gratitude, out of friendship, what does it matter? I am going,
Radagast, and you will have to send me home tied in a sack to get rid of me, as
my cousin told the Master of Imladris! But Faramir," he turned serious again,
"there is a favor I would ask of you, if you are willing."
"Anything that is in my power, Frodo." He smiled slightly. "Out of friendship
-- and gratitude."
"Can you find a way to send word to Samwise, in the Shire? I was -- unwell,
when he saw me last. I would like for him to know that I am well now."
"I would send a rider for that purpose alone, Frodo, but there is no need. We
have regular couriers going throughout the Kingdom now; one of them will take
your message. Would you like to write a letter?"
A letter, he hadn't thought of a letter! "Yes, please. May I borrow paper and
ink?"
Faramir gave him what he needed and they left him alone to compose his letter.
He worked for an hour and it was a thick missive when he was done, but only he
and Sam ever knew what he had written, unless perhaps Sam showed it to Rose. He
sealed it and gave it into Faramir's hand.
"It will go tomorrow," the man promised. "Is there anything else you need,
Frodo? If I cannot persuade you against this venture, at least I would have you
as well-supplied as I can make you."
Frodo smiled up at him. "There is nothing we need; only your goodwill. Thank
you for sending my letter." He took Faramir's hand in both of his, but Faramir
went to one knee and embraced him.
"Go with my blessing, Frodo, and may the Powers protect you both! Walk
cautiously in that land, for there is still danger there."
"We will be watchful," Radagast assured him.
They left at sunrise the following morning, Faramir walking them to the town
gate, for they would not linger in spite of his exhortations to stay a few days
and rest. They bade him farewell and took the road into the East. When they
entered Morgul Vale it was still deep in shadow, but as they walked the sun
climbed above the mountains and the valley filled with light.
It was mid-morning when they came to a place where the road split, the left
fork continuing farther into the valley and running more steeply uphill. But
the right-hand fork ended abruptly at the edge of a shallow drop, the pavement
broken off as if it had been hacked away by giants.
Frodo looked from the broken road out across the valley. A narrow stream ran
along the bottom and on the opposite side was a bare, stony ledge in a cleft of
the mountains. There was nothing more, and yet –
"This is the place," he said.
The city he remembered had seemed to grow out of the very rock, its towers and
battlements gleaming with fell light in the mountain's embrace, its iron gates
a maw with jagged teeth. It was all gone. Even the pale flowers whose reek had
clouded his mind that dreadful night, had vanished. There was nothing left but
the broken road and the stream, and the empty shelf of rock partway up the
cliff.
"Elessar has been very thorough," said Radagast. He sounded relieved.
"I had forgot that he said he would have it destroyed," said Frodo. "He
said the evil would linger here for a long time, even so."
"No doubt!" said Radagast. "I would not make a home here!"
Frodo crossed over to the other side of the road. The old stone wall was still
there; it seemed to be the only man-made thing left standing. He followed it
till he came to the gap in the wall, and stood looking through it at a narrow
path that wound up the side of the mountain.
"You are sure this is the place?" Radagast asked quietly behind him,
and Frodo started. The wizard laid a steadying hand on his shoulder.
"Yes. That's the path we took to Cirith Ungol – it looks the same as it
did then." His eyes traced the path unwillingly, but he could not see the
fortress that had guarded the high pass, not from here. He hoped Aragorn had
destroyed that tower as well.
"We are not going that way, Donkey. Come, we have walked all morning. It
is time for a rest." Radagast went and sat down on the road's edge, his
legs hanging over the broken part, and reached into his bag. He brought forth
his pipe and a pouch of leaf; Frodo smiled and drew out his own pipe.
"I didn't know we had any pipeweed left," he said.
"Faramir gave it to me; he said it is some of the best." The wizard
filled his pipe and passed the pouch to Frodo. "I've been told that
Saruman was inclined to mock Gandalf for his love of this leaf your people
grow. Perhaps he would have been less precipitous in his actions, had he taken
time out for a pipe now and again."
"He came to like it later," Frodo said dryly. "It caused enough
trouble, Saruman's taste for our leaf, but it did not seem to make him any
wiser."
"No, perhaps not. That is a sad commentary on pride, Donkey. When pride
comes in the door, wisdom flies out the window. Remind me of that, if it seems
needful." He puffed at his pipe, staring across at the empty space where
the City of the Moon had been, and Frodo sat smoking and swinging his legs,
reflecting that he doubted he'd ever need to warn Radagast against pride.
At last the wizard stirred, knocking out his pipe and tucking it into his belt.
"There is nothing left here but water and stone. If I failed to do my part
in defeating this evil, it is defeated all the same. Come, Donkey! Let us put
Morgul Vale behind us. If we make long legs, we can reach the pass before the
day is spent."
They turned away from the site of the old city and followed the left fork of
the road up the valley. Before long the road curved around the side of the
mountain, and the hollow of the razed city was lost to sight. Radagast brought
out a skin of some mild, sweet drink, and they passed it back and forth between
them. He handed Frodo a little bundle wrapped in leaves.
"Lembas?" Frodo said in surprise, and the wizard smiled. "Do you
like them? We'll eat while we walk."
When they reached the top of the pass, the sky behind them was a splendor of
gold and crimson. They sat there for a while, watching the display of light and
color, eating more of the lembas, until the red sun sank below the horizon.
Then they turned their backs on the West and started down the mountain into
Mordor, where the shadows lie.
