The Ephel Dúath, a towering wall of serrated peaks and
cliffs of shadow, blotted out sun and stars. Beyond the woods bordering Anduin,
the land was desolate, dusty and blemished by cruel, jagged rocks, a bleak
sight to behold. Poisonous fumes spewed up from vents in the barren ground,
discharging gases searing the lungs and eyes if inhaled. No cool breezes
bringing hope and life blew here. The air was stale and oppressive, sweltering,
for volcanic fumes from Mordor eddied in the Vale, vanquishing sweet and fresh
air. There was no water and the plant life was sparse; spiny cacti, poisonous
flowers, brush with barbs that rent like knives, plants struggling for life
that would not perish in the toxic wasteland.
Aragorn attempted to steer wide of the vents, but sometimes he had no choice
but to inhale the noxious air belching from the foul earth beneath Mordor.
Brooding gloom caked the desolate tors, the cragged spurs of Ephel Dúath
thrusting down to the broken vale. The summit of the Mountains of Shadow was swathed
in cloud and ash and smoke, black as a moonless night. The fumes sickened him;
Aragorn stumbled deliriously through the sharp rocks and twisted, bitter brush
until he could walk no more, and then he cast himself down upon the sand until
the noisome toxins cleared his blood and some measure of strength returned –
usually within several hours – and persisted his dismal slog through the Vale.
The very air he breathed scalded the lungs and tears stung his cheeks.
The morose cloud of ash hugging Mordor and Ephel Dúath veiled his mountains,
the mountains of the West, the Ered Nimrais, in an impregnable black and gray
haze. How it tempted him to turn away from this desolate place of misery and
despair at the ends of the earth, and flee to the North or even Gondor! But he
trudged onwards. If Aragorn faltered irreparably on his path, if he did not
rise above the height of his fathers since the days of Elendil, the beloved
mountain ranges would be forever concealed by fire and ash. Knowledge of
Middle-Earth's fate should Sauron be reunited with the Ring infused strength
into his will. He had to persevere, as once did Beren in the dungeons of
Morgoth, so he forced himself along another mile.
Four days he proceeded in this manner: four days walking through the inhospitable
wasteland, although it seemed an age. On the fifth day, the ominous shadow of
Minas Morgul itself, the city of the Ringwraiths, lanced him like a spear
wielded by a stone-giant. Still, Aragorn could not see the city. It lay one day
more to the North, concealed by high ridges and ugly defiles. The sulphuric
stench of fumaroles rose to his nostrils and he saw noxious green and gray
steam belching from the ground not fifty feet to his right. Covering his nose
and mouth with his torn and bloodied sleeve (from scraping over rocks), he
turned away from the vent, but it was too late and ere long dizziness swept
over him. He sank down upon the ground, head between his knees, resting his
eyes from the twirling mirages. As he rested underneath the shadow of a
boulder, he heard rough voices, clanking metal, and hard boots stomping against
rock and earth. A large company of orcs. For a several breathless minutes,
Aragorn waited, listening until it became apparent the orcs would find him.
Hope fled his heart. His days had gone down into the shadow. But not in vain
would he die! Weak as he was, they had not found him yet; the element of
surprise worked in his favor. He unsheathed his sword. At least he would die a
glorious death in battle and not the ignominious death of a poor fool ambushed
by orcs.
The moment the orcs came close enough for their stench to furl his nostrils, he
gathered what strength remained and rushed at them, sword brandished high. His
swift attack stunned them, and he slew two before they besieged him like a pack
of rabid curs. Blades clashed. Aragorn maimed a third orc and turned upon a
fourth, breathing labored as the air burned and choked his lungs, battling
exhaustion and strain as furiously as he battled his enemies. Alas, he failed on
both counts. He felt a sharp blow across the back of his head. There was agony
and then there was nothing. Death perhaps bearing him away at last.
Death should fair green fields, tranquil and beautiful, liberated from life's
sorrows and toils. Aragorn should have walked into the embracing arms of his
mother and father, of long-dead kin, Elendil and Isildur and all those who died
in the Fall of Númenor and in great battles, of friends who had died at his
side.
There should be neither pain nor sweltering heat. There should be neither foul
odors nor grating voices. There should be no rough hands clawing at his
shoulder, jerking him about, flinging him upon his back and forcing
vile-tasting, acidic liquid down his throat, which caused him to sputter and
cough and thrash in protestation, and brought consciousness back like a blow to
the head. He was not dead after all. The hands pinned him against the ground
and depraved orc voices laughed at his suffering and more liquid was forced
into him. In spite of its astringent taste, it brought warmth to his stomach
and strength to his mind and body. He knew enough of orcs to recognize the
liquid from stories and scrolls; a powerful tonic that could ease many hurts if
the taste of it alone did not kill, sometimes used to enliven a prisoner so
that information could be tortured out of him. They will cure me to torment
me, Aragorn thought, so I shall not respond to it.
The orcs shook him violently. "It's not working," one said.
"Who's fault is that, Snegrath? You're the fool who hit 'im in the 'ead." The
owner of the second voice kicked Aragorn in the ribs, and it took all Aragorn's
will to not do more than curl up in pain. Lie still he must, for heavy boots in
his ribs would be the least of his agonies should his captors think him closer
to life than death.
Spitting vile curses upon Aragorn and upon one another, the orcs flung him
aside and lurched to their main encampment. Greatly relieved to be let alone,
he considered his predicament, and an ember of hope burned. Sharp rocks bore
into his side and hip, but he feared movement of any sort would draw their
attention again; better to withstand discomfort and prolong his life. The orcs
had bound his wrists together with rough rope, which chafed painfully at his flesh,
but they had not bound his feet. They had also removed all weaponry, but left
him his mail corset and the ring of Barahir. If hording treasure be their
mission, why leave him the ring and the mail? He wondered that he was still
breathing, for orcs were not known for mercy or for taking prisoners. A stroke
of fortune indeed.
Apparently that was a source of much contention amongst the orcs. It seemed
there was more than one tribe, for they all argued in a disfigured version of
Westron instead of their own coarse tongues.
"The Eye wants 'im alive," the one called Snegrath grunted. "That's the orders,
lads, to bring any Man or Elf caught wanderin' these lands to 'im alive. For
questionin'."
"This one's already 'alf dead," said a new voice. "He won't be much good for
questionin.'"
"And we ain't had much to eat 'cept moldy bread since we left Lugbúrz with you
rats," added a third. "You think the Eye'll notice if you don't bring back one
prisoner?"
"We 'ave our orders," snarled Snegrath. "And intend on keepin' to 'em."
"And we're 'ungry! 'e's not walkin' anyway, so we 'ave to drag him all the way
to Lugbúrz? Might as well drag a bloody corpse."
"Why are you complaining? You ain't doing the dragging."
The harsh voices went back and forth for some time. Aragorn guessed that one
group of orcs was from Minas Morgul, the other from Barad-Dûr, and the
Barad-Dûr orcs ostensibly had orders from their dark master to not
indiscriminately kill Men and Elves found wandering within their borders, while
the Minas Morgul orcs had less compunction and saw more value in satiating
their appetites with flesh than in appeasing Sauron. Either way, death was
inevitable if he did not escape. But orcs were not attentive creatures and a
distraction, food or a skirmish amongst their ranks, which was brewing in any
event, might provide him with an opportunity for flight.
And so did he shut his eyes and abide his time. Only in the vaguest sense was
he aware of a shining snake, silver and copper diamonds ornamenting its back as
if an Elven smith had hammered jewels into its scales, crawling out from
beneath a rock – snakes and lizards were the only life he had observed in the
Vale – and coiling against his breast, seeking warmth. A sudden movement would
incite the snake to bite him and facilitate the orcs' decision. The thing
might be one of Sauron's vassals, he thought, but it I can thwart.
Were there no creatures in this place that did not hold allegiance to the Dark
Lord? He remained as still as a stone.
For a long while, he was left lying on the borders of the orc encampment, but
after some hours Snegrath stomped over to him, spitting, "You're still 'alf
dead. Well, not much can be done about it now and you're still comin' along
with us." The orc bent down, touching Aragorn's face with ice cold hands like a
dead fish, prodding him with a scythe-like knife, and he grunted, "Well, you
ain't all the way dead yet. You'll be of some use." Grunting some words in the
cruel language of Mordor orcs, he grabbed Aragorn's shoulders and heaved him
over onto his back and there saw the wriggling copper tail slithering into
Aragorn's tunic, fleeing from the cold and the light. "Fresh meat!" he said in
Westron and grasped the snake by the tail.
For a second, the orc and the snake stared yellow eye to yellow eye, the former
drooling ravenously and the latter thrashing in terror. Then the orc took the
tail in his slavering jaws and bit down hard upon it and the snake struck at
Snegrath's unshielded neck. Uttering a strangled cry, the orc fell back,
dropping the knife and clutching his throat, gurgling as the poison flowed
through him. Aragorn opened his eyes. Not five feet from him the orc lay
sprawled upon his back, writhing hither and thither in the throes of death. And
glinting like a beacon of hope in the dust was his scythe. Aragorn's eye fixed
upon the knife and he rolled over onto his stomach, wriggling towards the
weapon and taking it between his bound hands.
Curious as to the strangled cries, another two orcs scurried towards where
Aragorn and Snegrath lay. Lying flat upon his stomach, Aragorn hid the scythe
beneath his breast, twisting the blade upwards so it pressed into the ropes
binding his wrists.
The orcs shoved Snegrath's convulsing body aside and stared at Aragorn, gluttony
gleaming in their pale eyes.
"Looks as if your little reprieve is over," one said. "Your protector's gone.
'e's the only one who cared that the Eye 'ad a talk with you before we killed
you." Grinning at his companion, he added, "Ain't that right?"
"Right, right," said the other. "Gut 'im. Bleed 'im like a stuck pig."
Drawing their blades, they reached for him, slavering, quivering with
exultation at the prospect of slitting open his belly. As their coarse, clammy
hands touched his shoulder and the notched tip of the scimitar prodded his
stomach, he kicked out with all the speed and ferociousness he had at his
command, catching one in the groin and sending him toppling sideways. Yelping,
stunned by seeing a Man presumed almost dead spring back into life with such
vigor, the other orc shied away from him. Aragorn drew himself to his feet,
wielding the scythe and allowing the bonds to fall to the ground before the
quavering orc's bloodshot eyes.
"The only blood spilt here tonight will be yours," he said and thrust the
curved dagger through the orc's throat. Blood spurted, a great fountain, oozing
into the black volcanic ground.
Over two dozen orcs had set up a camp fifty or so yards away, a number Aragorn
would be hard pressed to battle single-handedly when in the best of health and
strength, and in this moment he had neither. Already their scuffle had alerted
those in the camp to something going amiss and in seconds, they would set upon
him and unquestionably kill him. He had to flee into the craggy hills at the
foot of the Ephel Dúath, a precarious place to hide indeed, but he had grasped
at tenuous threads of life, and he had won thus far. Light and hope pierced
him, a smiting and transplendent thought that the shadow was no more than a
passing thing and the light of Ilúvatar would prevail in the end.
His assortment of weapons had been thrown callously into an immense pile of
daggers, swords, knives, and bows the orcs had assembled in their rampaging and
pillaging. Though he regretted losing the sword, it was hardly worth losing his
life to retrieve. Instead, he collected a scimitar, the scythe of course, three
small daggers, a broadsword, and two skins of water from Snegrath and the two
orcs he had slain.
"Where are they?"
" 'ow long does it take to drag a bloody prisoner over 'ere?"
The grating voices intensified as the orcs advanced. Hastily Aragorn knelt
behind
a rock and thrust his arsenal into his belt and cloak, and then he vaulted over
another boulder and ran to the lee side of another, situating as many rocks
between himself and Sauron's vassals as he could. Enraged curses floated to his
ears: the orcs had found their three comrades dead and their prisoner gone
astray. Before they could commence a search, Aragorn crawled over the rocks,
clinging to the granite and basalt so as to leave no track, clambering into the
nethermost coombs, the vast crevasses and faults slicing through the Ephel
Dúath.
A vista of serrated peaks rearing for the dark sky stretched before him, and
not more than two miles to the North, high on its rocky seat at the knees of
the Ephel Dúath, the gloomy walls and tower of Minas Morgul guarded the
mountains and Cirith Ungol. All was dark about it, the earth and sky, yet it
glowed with a pale light, paler than moon and stars. The mere sight of the Dead
City sank Aragorn's spirit. His ancestors had safeguarded it for a thousand
years when it stood proud as Minas Ithil, Tower of the Moon, a gem in the
paradise of Ithilien, and the blood of Westernesse infused strength into Men.
In these dark days the blood of Númenor was all but exhausted, the Ring found
at last, the Enemy's strength swelling. But Sauron did not have the Ring yet –
it was in the possession of a hobbit, a race Gandalf, one of the Wise, had a
great deal of faith in -- nor had he yet slain Elendil's heir.
Below him, Aragorn saw the orcs crawling about, searching for a track, but he
had vanished like a wraith, traceless into the shadowy foothills. He hid in a
dank crevasse just wide enough for him to brace his knees against one side and
his back against the other, the broadsword drawn in the event he was found, his
heart beating a heavy rhythm. Find him they did not, though they searched
exhaustively. Mayhaps a more patient and exacting search would have led the
orcs to Aragorn's hiding-place, but orcs, especially when angered, were
impatient creatures and under the best of circumstances, they were not
exceedingly clever.
As night fell and the orcs abandoned their search, Aragorn cautiously climbed
out of his crevasse, chimnying up the sheer walls and resting upon the crest,
concealed from view of any creature below by toothy ridges jutting from the
hogback. Minas Morgul glowed a dim and pallid green in the dark. Aragorn gazed
at the sky seeking Eärendil, a flare of hope, but no stars pierced through the
ashen sky. The only visible light being the evil green glow cast by Minas
Morgul on the side of a long, tilted valley, a deep gulf of shadow reaching far
back into the mountains. Tomorrow Aragorn would venture to its gates, hunting
for a sign that Gollum had traversed the Pass of Cirith Ungol and waylaying
festering doubts that Gollum had gone that way at all. Tonight, he would rest
and examine his wounds as best he could, given that he loathed the idea of
removing his cloak or mail in this noxious place.
His body ached and the toxic air had sapped his strength, but to his
astonishment he had suffered no grievous injury; the pain afflicting him no
more appalling than what he had suffered in countless battles and errantries.
Dried blood encrusted the back of his head and neck, and blood oozed from raw
and painful flesh on his wrists. He tore off two strips from his cloak and
wrapped his wrists. Until he reached Ithilien, where the flowers were not
deadly to the touch and the water not poisonous, and there clean the wounds
with fresh water and salve them with the athelas plant, these makeshift
bandages would have to do. Tired from his ordeal, he tried to sleep upon the
rock face, a restless sleep, ever and anon tossing and turning, listening
fearfully the night-noises with one ear open.
Thus Aragorn was still exhausted when feeble tendrils of morning sunlight
pushed their way through cloud and ash – what could be called by some dawn. It
was always dark here. Menacing black clouds clung to the tower of Minas Morgul,
casting the valley where the city huddled against the Ephel Dúath in shadow, a
faint bloodied light glowed sullenly within the dark clouds and mist covering
Mordor beyond the mountain range. Rest had stiffened bruised muscles, his
wounds and fatigue harried him as he trudged over the rocks. Should orcs or
other chattel of Sauron attack him now, he felt sure he could not withstand it.
Yet his luck did not forsake him and he encountered few living creatures in the
crags of Ephel Dúath, not even snakes and lizards. Only crows circled high
overhead, spies of Sauron they well might be, but they would not harm him
themselves.
By his will alone, he pressed onward, holding a course high above the long valley,
climbing wearily over the black volcanic rock, sharp and unforgiving, scraping
his flesh every time he slipped or stumbled; his breath coming in laborious
gasps as he drew closer to Minas Morgul.
As he crouched beneath its southernmost wall, terror keener than any he had
ever known in all his long life clutched him, an icy clasp crushing the breath
from his lungs. The head of Cirith Ungol lay on the other side of the city. He
crawled along the wall, shoulder pressed against chilled stone, until he reached
the gap in the bulwark where the road proceeded through the gate, two hideous
stone sentinels, gaping, disfigured demons baring vicious fangs, atop
intricately filigreed columns guarding the causeway. The gate itself was a
cavernous maw in the northward walls. A road crawled deviously up the side of
the valley towards the gate, crossing a stream from which steam rose in
insalubrious wisps and wrapped around the ghostly white bridge. Behind the
walls of the city stood the tower, once the Tower of the Rising Moon, a
beautiful and prized possession of Gondor, but now gleaming with a ghastly
fallow light. The top tier of the tower rotated, a steady back and forth motion
like some unblinking pale eye surveying its realm.
A steep drop-off from the road to a culvert alongside it afforded Aragorn some
scanty protection. On his hands and knees, he crept through the culvert lest he
be espied by the evil fortifying Minas Morgul, the Nazgûl and other fell things
dwelling in the battlements. His eyes he averted from the hideous tower until
he reached the white bridge and the wide flats flanking the Morguldruin, the
polluted, steaming stream trickling silently from the city. Luminous flowers
speckled the flats, beautiful yet disfigured and corrupted, the images of a nightmare.
They stank of rotting flesh, of death and decay. Who knew if they were deadly
to the touch? If Aragorn did not cross the bridge, he must pass though the
flowers and jump the rill. From where he huddled on the bank, he felt a chill
colder than death brush his face -- the deadly touch of foul steam wafting from
the Morguldruin. He must cross the road, and it seemed wiser to cross in the
dark instead of upon the pale bridge in full view of the city. Holding his
breath, he negotiated the flat, stepping over and around the flowers, hopped
across the water and dropped upon his stomach on the other side of the flat,
crawled to the road and stared across it towards the toothy cliffs concealing
Cirith Ungol from his eyes.
All warmth fled from his body. The steam of Morguldruin had brushed him and
cast a chill, a black shadow, upon him whilst he had jumped the stream. For
several minutes he lay on the stony bank. He knew what watched the gates and
what malevolence inhabited this place. His keen vision blurred, the rocks and
fulsome green tower shimmering in a netherworld of haze. A lesser man would
have despaired utterly days ago in this forsaken place, but Aragorn son of
Arathorn, Isildur's heir, Elessar the Elfstone, Chieftain of the Dúnadain, was
blessed with great courage and stamina and thus had traveled further into this
desolate land; yet alas, he too would fail.
Just as the realm of Lothlórien brought one hope and life, merely by breathing
in the fragrant air, listening to the breath of the wind through the mellyrn
trees and the singing of the Elves, and beholding its illustrious beauty, the
Morgul Vale brought despair, its toxins infiltrating body and mind until death
appeared inviting, indeed, the only refuge from unbearable misery. Aragorn knew
this – he had known it for many years and thought he had a staunch enough heart
to withstand it. "I cannot die here," he whispered. The chief weapon of the
Nazgûl was terror. Terror coalesced in a shapeless and invisible wall about the
city, a weapon more frightful than any arrow or catapult. Rising to his knees,
he crawled up to the road and stared keenly into the gate. Dismay crossed his
heart, shadows lengthening under a setting sun. "You will not take me," he said
to the cavernous ruins. He listened attentively for the clatter of hooves or
feet, but the only sound in his ears was his anxious breathing in the ghoulish
silence. Silently Aragorn raced across the road, making for the cliffs on the
other side.
He collapsed amongst the rocks and lay still for a time until he perceived
shadows slinking about the walls, reason to withdraw further from Minas Morgul
and climb behind a pile of jagged boulders fallen from the cliff. There, his
eyes failed him and the shadows rending the tors deepened, darkness accursed
and forlorn and more fearsome than the deepest chasm in the Mines of Moria.
Aragorn shivered. It was cold, so very cold. And Minas Morgul itself glowed, a
translucent light growing ever more luminous, a lance brighter than the sun
stabbing his eyes, and yet he could not forestall his gaze, though hot tears
coursed down his cheeks and the pain was unendurable. Then a bloodcurdling
screech arose from the city, freezing Aragorn's blood and shattering his ears.
Six black figures swathed in black robes riding black horses sprang forth from
the gate. Terror overcame him and wrenched him from his torpor, and he flung
his forearm before his eyes, blocking the stabbing light, and abruptly the
shrieks fell silent and some great force cast Aragorn upon his back, gazing at
the pitch black, starless sky. The haziness clouding his eyes dwindled, and
while things remained blurry round their edges, his sight came back to him. All
was silent as a tomb, but for the breath sobbing in his throat. Trembling, he
crawled to a cumbrous gap between two rocks. Ere the pale city held its
venomous breath and did not stir. No horsemen rode hence from its gates. "Tiro
nin Elbereth," (1) he whispered.
What were the six horsemen Aragorn had seen galloping from the leering gate? A
vision, then, the foresight of his Númenorean lineage troubling him with
premonitions of the terror Sauron would unleash. Mayhaps it was no more than
delirium, the poisons from the Morguldruin and the deadly flowers contaminating
his mind, dissembling his sight. Whichever it had been, it had passed like a
lethal yet swift-moving squall. If it was delirium, then he should let it be
and if not, it presaged an uncertain future and he was more concerned with
surviving the present.
Furtively he crept down the rock wall towards the stairs of Cirith Ungol,
keeping his body pressed to the ground and rocks. Alone in this dreadful place,
he had not the palest hope of survival should one of the watchers in the towers
pierce him with a well-aimed arrow. He considered the chances that one had shot
Gollum, putting a quick and just end to the wretched creature's miserable life.
A fainter hope than Aragorn's hope of tracking Gollum, for the little footpad
was too wily to be easily slain from the watchtowers of Minas Morgul. Too long
had he scratched out his despicable life beneath the very eyes of the orcs in
the Hithaeglir.
At long last Aragorn arrived at the pass, a series of treacherous, steep stairs
carved into the sheer cliffs rearing their jagged heads above Minas Morgul. The
pass reached to the looming clouds at the top of the mountains, beyond
Aragorn's sight. Few creatures, good or evil, hazarded the precarious stairs,
for a single misstep caused a deadly fall for a thousand feet or more; and in
the tunnels at the summit lurked an ancient evil, a malevolence even the orcs
feared.
Aragorn knelt upon the bottom stairs, looking for a track or any sign in the
iron-gray dust suggesting that some creature had recently passed this way. For
all he saw, the pass was long abandoned. Neither orcs nor anything else had
trod the virulent stairs. Gollum, if he had been in or out of Mordor at all,
had either traveled by a different road or crept so stealthily that not even a
Ranger could hunt him. Breathing a curse at Minas Morgul, the Pass of Cirith
Ungol, and his own foolishness, Aragorn climbed surreptitiously up the stairs
about one hundred feet, often bending on one knee, brushing the rock with his
fingers, studying every mark and depression. Drained and disconsolate, he
rested upon a flat ledge overlooking the pale city, catching his laboring
breath and wiping sweat off his brow with his sleeve, muscles taught and
tremulous and a fierce headache brewing, the affliction of the Morguldruin's
fulsome poisons.
He could continue to search the pass for Gollum, but exhausted and ill as he
was, the ascent would prove arduous and dangerous. If Aragorn had found neither
track nor trace of Gollum down here, he doubted his odds of finding it closer
to the summit of the pass. The sluggish pace aggrieved him. When hale and
vigorous, Aragorn was an adept climber, quite capable of scrambling up or down
nearly any rock face with swiftness and nearly Elvish agility, no matter how
fearsome the cant.
Once he stood upon firm earth again, he searched for signs in the dust near the
head of the stairs, but he expected to find naught and indeed, his expectations
did not fail him. Resting his back against a boulder, concealing himself from
the dead tower's watchful eyes, Aragorn entertained the idea that Gollum had
exited Mordor via the Black Gate after all. He did not understand how the
craven creature would be so courageous, for the Morannon was heavily guarded
and afforded few hiding places. The Pass had seemed to him a more likely route
to Gollum, a secret way through the Ephel Dúath into Mordor. Though he desired
to dismiss the idea as ludicrous and leave this blackened land, he could not
cast it aside without regret. Stranger things had happened. While the chance
remained that Gollum had passed through the Black Gate, Aragorn would uphold
his duty and seek him there, an onerous burden upon his spirit.
Continuing his journey through the foothills of Ephel Dúath until they
intersected with Mordor's northern mountain range -- Ered Lithui, the Ash Mountains
-- at the Morannon was a fatal undertaking. Not too much longer could he walk
through the desolate, poisonous land alone and injured without food and
substantially more water than the inadequate skins he had pilfered from the
dead orcs. His heart ached, pining for glittering snowcapped peaks, for cold
and clear rushing rivers pounding glorious music against the rocks, for ancient
and beautiful forests of fragrant trees, for windswept plains rolling to the
horizon, rising and falling like the sea.
A spiral of dust, disturbed by a whisper of air expelling its last breath in
the stale valley, settled near his right hand. Absently he scooped up a
handful, black and sooty, and let it sift through his fingers. The only way to
survive then was to prolong his quest by swinging around through Ithilien and
then approaching the Morannon through Dagorlad, the Battle Plain. In Ithilien,
he could replenish his food and water, treat his various wounds, and recover
his strength ere he imperiled himself at the Morannon. The Black Gate itself
did not devour the soul as did the Morgul Vale, but armies passed daily through
its ramparts and raised a substantial risk of getting captured or killed. And
traveling through Ithilien's glades without leave from the Steward of Gondor or
in the very least the captain of the Rangers of Ithilien violated the law of
Gondor, but was a safer road than journeying in the confines of Mordor. Aragorn
had faith in his ability to talk his way out of a confrontation with soldiers
of Gondor. Although these dark days and the heightened activity in Mordor gave
them grounds to be suspicious of strangers, they would not shoot a man first
and ask questions afterwards. At least Aragorn hoped not, though Gandalf had
spoken darkly of an evil thing eating away at the mind of the Steward.
Nevertheless the Steward's son, Faramir, commanded Ithilien, and the stories
Aragorn heard described him as fair of heart and clear of mind. Perhaps not so
swift to shoot.
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(1) Sindarin: "May Varda watch over me." Translation by Taramiluiel.
