9. Loeg Ningloron
Bidding farewell to Lórien's tranquil groves and resplendent trees knifed
Aragorn, and doggedly he trudged along the cracking stones and heather of
the valley below the Dimrill Dale, feeling worn and gloomy. The ruined stonework,
broken statues, toppled columns, and a cracked road slowly being gnawed away
by vegetation did not lighten his heavy heart. Once this region had been
a splendid Dwarf kingdom until ancient evil awoke in Khazad-Dûm -- the Mines
of Moria -- and the Dwarves had long since fled. The place seemed especially
forlorn, abandoned to the wild and to the evil stirring within the mountains.
Forgotten conversations with Gandalf about Khazad-Dûm came to Aragorn's mind,
debates about the demons the Dwarves, in their greed and hunger for mithril,
awoke in the bowels of the Hithaeglir. Though neither he nor Gandalf knew
with certainty what dwelt in the caverns of Moria, they had agreed that the
Mines were hazardous. In his many wanderings he had once passed through the
Dimrill Gate, an evil memory of the darkest places in Middle-Earth, and he
cared not to ever go that way again. The reminiscence alone chilled him.
And the presence of evil had strengthened since those days when he was young
and feckless. A nipping wind blew through the fir trees, sweeping across
broken gray rock, biting exposed flesh and drying the eyes. Looking towards
the towering peaks as they plummeted away into deep ravines and grim cliff
walls, Aragorn sensed a foreboding malevolence.
In the long journeys and toils of his life, he had witnessed horrors and
faced the vilest evil; rarely did it plunge his spirit into such gloom. Mayhap
it was Gollum. Over the miles between the Dead Marshes and Lothlórien, Aragorn
had become almost accustomed, or at least grimly resigned, to Gollum's insufferable
presence. But his single night spent separated from the creature left him
with a keen awareness of his loathing. And Gollum's behavior had worsened
since they parted from Lórien and entered the hills and steppes of the vales
at the feet of the mountains. He mumbled to himself more, barrages of bitter
curses about Elves and Men; he reeked of reckless malice and hate kept contained
only by the rope about his neck, the bonds around his wrists, and the gag
in his mouth. Sullenly he skulked ahead of Aragorn, prowling along on all
fours. The Númenorean sword Aragorn had drawn from its scabbard, and it glinted
in the sun, vanquishing any thought Gollum had of escape or murder. Often
Gollum looked back, shrinking away in fear and resentment at the sight of
the sword, the Westernesse markings blazing in the sunlight, and at Aragorn's
face, as unforgiving as the visages of the Argonath.
His enemies seemed to breathe upon his heels. There was no telling which
creatures he saw crossing his path spied for Sauron. In the open steppes,
Aragorn felt like a hunted beast surrounded by a ring of unseen foes. He
knew orcs inhabited the somber cliffs of the Misty Mountains, and he did
not doubt that some of the ravens, hawks, and other fowl circling above the
peaks were the eyes and ears of the Enemy. How soon would it be before the
orcs and wargs in the mountains became aware of his presence and set upon
him?
Anduin he followed at a distance. On the opposite shore the dim plains melted
into Mirkwood, the leading edge of dark shadow forty leagues to the East.
Aragorn kept a wary eye upon the sinister shadow as he trod along a narrow
path between Anduin's western shores and the wild, rough country of the Hithaeglir's
foothills. Peril lurked there, and it lurked in the clefts and rims at the
knees of the mountains. The orcs and wargs roaming this land grew bolder
as the power of the Elves waned and the power of Mordor swelled.
At dusk, the howling of wolves rose on all sides of them, a chorus of packs
singing to one another, yearning and mournful cries of sadness and lonesomeness.
Aragorn forsook sleep for many nights and lay awake beside small fires he
kindled, his sword and assorted daggers unsheathed and at hand. His heart
brimmed with the sadness carried in the refrain of howls, pining for the hearth
of Rivendell or the gardens of Lothlórien. But he was a Ranger, Lord of the
Dúnedain, and there would be no home and hearth for him until he took up the
throne in Minas Tirith or met his fate at death's shores. The White Tower
in Minas Tirith; the tall pillars and marble floors and statues and graven
images of men and other beasts carved into its stately stones; the high dais
on which the throne sat and the black, unadorned seat of the steward below
it, was no more than a faded memory. In the bleak and sleepless nights in
the wilderness, listening to the wolves' howling, Gollum's half-mad incantations,
and the river whispering some miles to the east, Aragorn contemplated whether
he would see the White City again. Long ago had he resigned himself to this
fate, when Lord Elrond of Rivendell revealed to him his lineage and decreed
that only if Aragorn were King could he wed Arwen. For the most part he stoically
bore it and did not forsake hope, for he was Isildur's heir and such was
his burden, but there were times when it depressed him beyond words of hope
and comfort.
He sat still before the fire, with his back against a toppled pillar, broken
in two, his head bowed to his knees. The sun had fallen behind the Hithaeglir,
the clouds shifted from bloody red and orange hues to soft blues and purples.
The Westernesse sword, unsheathed, rested upon the ground beside him, and
the firelight shone red on its blade. Something stirred in the darkness and
he raised his head, alertness and fear unsettling his thoughts. Though the
nightly chorus of wolves kept him company every night, he had not seen any,
but alas it seemed as if his luck would not last. Vigilant, he wrapped his
fingers around the hilt of the sword and guardedly watched the inky blackness
surrounding the flickering fire. With his other hand he grasped one of his
daggers. His intuition he trusted, and he knew that he and Gollum were not
alone.
There, creeping between the campsite and the mountains, dim forms took shape,
six pinpoints of light gleaming in the dark; a pack of wolves lurking and
snuffling just outside of the bivouac. Aragorn leapt to his feet, the two
shining blades upraised, his eyes alighted by the reflection of the flames.
He stepped towards the wolves. They shied from the weapons and his boldness,
skittering backwards and then fearfully turning tail to him and vanishing
into the shadows.
On his toes more than ever, Aragorn returned to his seat against the shattered
pillar, intently scanning the black hillsides. Those had been ordinary wolves,
dangerous hunters but rather skittish of prey with the will to fight them,
and Aragorn had little fear of them. It was the wargs that concerned him,
intelligent and fearless beasts with little compunctions about the strength
of their foes or the force of arms. Absently he fingered the blades, running
his thumb and forefinger against smooth, cold steel, shifting his gaze from
the mesmerizing, dancing flames to the shadows beyond reach of the fire's
diffuse light. Whilst he watched the fire, he mulled over the wolves and
could not stem festering uneasiness in his heart that those creatures served
some dark master. Had they visited the camp to attack him at all, or merely
to investigate? For their own purposes or for someone else's? Whatever
has poisoned Gollum's mind must be infecting me, Aragorn thought wryly.
This persistent fear of being hunted, which had grown since Lórien, seemed
disturbingly like that of his prisoner. He attempted to quell it, but ever
he wondered whether those wolves slunk into the night to warn their sinister
master of his presence.
When Valacirca fell behind the shadowy mountains, Aragorn at last succumbed
to his concerns, rising to his feet, nudging Gollum with the sword, putting
out the fire. His fear was not ridiculous. If Sauron discovered he had captured
Gollum and sent a substantial force after him, he could not stand alone.
He faded into the country of dark hills and dales, sloshing through a shallow
mountain stream to avoid leaving a scent and tracks until he came to a massive
boulder that had fallen from the shoulder of a cliff. It provided cover from
any eyes above. The remainder of the night he spent beneath the rock, cold
and shivering for winter's bite was sharp, but too cautious to risk a fire.
* * *
If wargs and orcs inhabited the northern half of the vale, they left Aragorn
and Gollum in peace or unnoticed. The incessant howling was a constant companion
at night, but only in that one night did wolves actually appear; and as Aragorn
raced across the rocky hills and splashed through the clear and swift-running
streams cutting a maze of dikes and gullies through the valley, no fell creature
harangued him. In spite of Gollum who loathed the speed at which Aragorn
drove him, they readily made up whatever time had been lost in Lórien and
satiated Aragorn's will – indeed, that of all Rangers – for great haste.
Beneath his feet the land rose up an incline, climbing out of the vale. The
broken shelves of rock and heath were swallowed by dry grass, leaving only
scattered outcroppings and lonely white cliffs.
The ground became wet, for water from the Gladden River, a tributary of
Anduin, seeped through many tiny rills and troughs, pooling in small ponds
and marshes, islets and beds of reeds and rushes. In warmer seasons the land
was green and lush, donning wildflowers like fireworks of radiant color exploding
across the hills. Now the grass was dead and brown, grim patches of snow
speckled the marshland. Ice crunched beneath Aragorn's feet. His breath steamed,
wisps of smoke puffing in the frigid air. At knife's tip Gollum limped ahead
of him, even further withdrawn into his madness and cravings for the Ring
than was usual for him.
As they drew nearer to the Gladden River, unease pierced Aragorn's breast,
shards of the memory of Gandalf and Elrond telling him of Isildur's demise
in its waters.
Grim and forlorn, he toiled through the squishy footing. Elves once lived
in the Gladden Fields, which they called Loeg Ningloron for the yellow irises
that grew there in profusion, some of them taller than a Man. But the Elves
had fled long ago, in years barely within the reckoning of even Lord Elrond.
Then the Stoors, a halfling-like folk, inhabited the banks of the Gladden
but in the course of many years and many wars flooding their lands, they
too had vanished. The fields had a sullen emptiness about them, a perturbing
and inescapable sadness.
Here Isildur was ambushed by orcs, his company of two hundred Dúnedain outnumbered,
and in an effort to escape death and bring the Ring to the Elves, for even
besotted by it he had begun to understand its malice, Isildur put on the
Ring and dove into the Gladden River. But the Ring fell from his finger, and
orc arrows pierced Isildur's chest and throat. Ghosts haunted the banks of
the Gladden River, the wetlands of tussled reeds and watery fissures. Aragorn
felt their oppressive company, the presence of his long-dead ancestors sitting
in judgment of him, and he withstood the judgment of the dead with all the
pride and might of Númenor. I am Isildur's heir, not Isildur himself.
Do not judge me so!
He sighed wearily and said to Gollum, "If it were not for Loeg Ningloron,
neither you or I would be here now."
Gollum made no answer, but then Aragorn had no illusions he would. "Preciouss...,"
he hissed to no one in particular, wringing his bound hands and clawing his
face as if blotting horrors from his eyes. What ghosts beleaguered him? What
debris of memory of a forgotten life remained in his shriveled and corrupted
mind? Before Gandalf left Aragorn to continue the hunt for Gollum alone,
he had stated his unwavering belief that in Gollum's soul there was but a
small corner unscathed by the Ring, concealed in the dark chasms of his ravaged
mind but there nonetheless. "Where iss it, my preciouss? They stole it from
us," Gollum cried. "Filthy little thieves!"
Aragorn sighed and swallowed the sour taste of revulsion sickening him.
It seemed to him that the Ring had rotted out and devoured what good there
was in Gollum and all that remained was villainy and hate.
At Aragorn's behest – a rough jerk upon the rope – Gollum quieted, his plaintive
dirges disintegrated into soft, nonsensical mumblings. The orcs that had
slain Isildur here two thousand years ago probably still roamed the marshes
or at least traversed it in pestilent hordes pouring from Mirkwood. And while
the land seemed bare but for fowl, redwing blackbirds, ravens, and bone-white
egrets, other things dwelt in the Gladden Fields, an evil more pernicious
than a rabble of orcs. Aragorn did not willingly dismiss his unease as absurd
fears of the past and nothing more.
Aragorn liked Loeg Ningloron less and less the further they proceeded into
its mires and grasping reeds and rushes, and he was determined to push on
through darkness until he reached the Gladden River. From the river it was
less than a day's hike out of the marshes, but there he must rest, for crossing
unknown waters by nightfall was treacherous. Alas, the unhappy weather waylaid
his travel plans. Night brought with it a heavy fog rolling across the marshes
like a wet, woolen blanket, obliterating moonlight and starlight, hiding
the ghostly silver and white peaks. The contiguous blackness was an impregnable
wall. Each breath seemed akin to inhaling water, and navigation soon became
impossible, a blind bearing through reeds and peat bogs. If ever a night
proved impregnable to a Ranger, in spite of his keen sense of direction and
formidable tracking skills, it was this one. Aragorn gave up on it and opted
to wait out the fog near a lonesome standing stone, amongst tangled reeds
reaching above his chest.
In the thick blackness, he barely made out the dim shape of Gollum not five
feet from him. A wet veil had been drawn over his eyes. Then the cold abruptly
intensified, as if he had plummeted into a cave so deep not a trace of warmth
touched it. Alarmed, he tried to rise and draw his sword, but a grip as cold
and as hard as steel clutched his throat and froze his bones and his lungs.
A great weight pulled on his limbs, pressed upon his breast, and he collapsed
to the wet earth. Darkness engulfed him.
* * *
Gollum's disjointed rhymes and ramblings brought Aragorn to. He vied with
dread and fog consuming thought and memory. Suddenly, his wits and recollection
returned and herein he knew he had suffered the attack of some fell thing
and it had dragged him to the cavernous maw of some cave or barrow and then
deserted him lying at its mouth, unscathed save for the dire chill. The barrow
rose before him, an amorphous dark mass. His limbs remained immobile. Years
ago, when he was quite young ere he roamed afield from Eriador, he had fallen
prey to the dreadful spells of barrow-wights on the outskirts of the Shire.
That seemed like another lifetime, yet nevertheless the paralyses of body,
the oblivion of thought, and the deathly cold overthrowing his senses reminded
him sharply of that remote incident. He had not heard tales of wights dwelling
in the Gladden Fields. But many had died here in wars that had come and gone.
Perhaps restless spirits dwelt in tombs beneath the marshy tablelands. Wights
were agents of the Dark Lord, and with the shadow falling across Middle-Earth,
they walked in the hollow places of the world once more. Aragorn's suspicions
of birds and beasts serving Sauron were justifiable, for how else could the
wights have found him? An ill-choice of foes, Sauron, he thought.
A legion of orcs could slay a lone man in minutes, but while steel did not
stand against a wight's perilous spells, courage and strength of heart and
will did.
A looming form, paler than the moon, coalesced out of the cave. A stark
chill froze the air Aragorn breathed. Whether it was a barrow-wight of the
sort dwelling in the Barrow Downs, Aragorn did not know with certainty, but
ever he remembered the guileful apparitions, and it seemed the spectral shadow
had sprung from dark memory. Somewhere to his offside, a wheedling voice
chanted,
In the black wind the stars shall die,
and still on gold here let them lie,
till the dark lord lifts his hand
over dead sea and withered land.[i]
Gollum, Aragorn thought, feeling anger stir, a hot glow in his chilled
breast. The deceitful little creep! How did he bring this about? Mayhap
in his wanderings the wretch had befriended the wights – fell creatures of
the dark had no allies but one another – but he had been under Aragorn's
eye since Lothlórien. Had the rhymes and murmurings Aragorn dismissed as
half-mad nonsense called out to the wights? He had no time to ponder. The
pale wight loomed closer. Not even with Narsil reforged anew could he fight
it.
Short of breath, he sang weakly an Elvish lament, for often had the sweet
tongue of the Eldar held evil at bay. Sauron had made no mistake, but Gollum
had.
Men cenuva fánë cirya
métima hrestallo círa,
i fairi néc
ringa súmaryass
ve maiwi yaimië?[ii]
The wight hesitated and Gollum's insalubrious mutterings silenced. Louder,
Aragorn sang,
Man tiruva fána cirya,
wilwarin wilwa,
ëar-celumessen
rámainen elvi
ëar falastala,
winga hlápula
rámar sisílala,[iii]
Flinching away, the wight retreated, shrieking an earsplitting cry slitting
the night like a flaming sword, and it edged into the black maw of its cave.
As it withdrew, its malevolent spell lifted and blood poured into Aragorn's
limbs, carrying warmth and vigor. He sprang to his feet, drawing his sword
from his scabbard.
cálë fifírula?
Man hlaruva rávëa súr
ve tauri lillassi
ninqui carcar yarra
isilmë ilcalass
isilmë pícalass
isilmë lantalass
ve loicolícuma;
raumo nurrua,
undumë rúma?[iv]
Then in Westron, he cried, "In my veins flows the blood of Númenor and Westernesse.
I am Lord of the Dúnedain, the sons of forgotten kings, and the heir of Isildur,
Elendil's son. Do not thwart me!"
The wight uttered a last long shriek that trailed into the dank night, and
it dissolved into the mist. For a moment Aragorn stood still, bewildered
by the strange mood that had befallen him and the words that had come unbidden
to his tongue. His real name – which he had, to his relief, not revealed
– and his lineage he kept secret and only with great prudence did he unveil
it. He did not know why he did it just then, for the Gladden Fields, barren
and unfriendly, was not a place to pronounce that Isildur's heir had come
forth. But the night was still as a tomb. Unless spies of Sauron or orcs
patrolled the Fields in the unassailable mist, only Gollum and the barrow-wight
heard him and little could be done for it now. And where had Gollum vanished?
Like the wight, he too had dissolved in the mist.
"Gollum!" hissed Aragorn sharply. It would not surprise him if the slippery
sycophant had escaped into the murky water and hid amongst reeds, shielded
from sight by fog. By trickery had he thought to get Aragorn killed and then
make his bid for freedom? Is this desperate flight and living each day
in fear of Sauron's spies discovering I have captured the wretch not enough?
Aragorn thought. He swore he would forego his promise to let Gollum live
and slay him as soon as he recaptured him. "Gollum!" he repeated. "You maggot!
Show yourself or you will not survive the night!"
"Yes, my precious," hissed a thin, muffled voice from a patch of tussocks.
"Nasty steel burns us, so we are very, very good," Gollum added, half-muffled
by the gag. Through a mire Aragorn floundered hither, stumbling to his knees
when the earth fell away beneath his feet, and he staggered through the muddy
fen. He barely made out the shape of Gollum huddled on the other side, clutching
his knees, head buried in his forearms, and rocking to and fro. When Aragorn
nudged him with the sword, he raised his eyes; in them shone a terror keener
than any Aragorn had seen in the miserable wretch yet. Fear, perhaps, of Aragorn's
lineage and all that his proud and pure bloodlines of Númenor conferred.
Obedient to Aragorn's will, Gollum scrambled forth ahead of him. Aragorn
clenched the hilt of the sword and ground his teeth. He could not yet forego
on his word to Gandalf, nor could Gollum's sudden turn to supplication justify
the beating he richly deserved. The only thing to do was race the shadow
of death to Mirkwood; fly as he had never had the need before.
Heedless of the misty shroud, Aragorn plunged through the fens, anxious
to put Loeg Ningloron behind him. The place was fraught with peril, barrow-wights
and orcs, fell shadows of the restless dead.
The gurgling and chortling of rushing water reached Aragorn's ears. Suddenly
Gollum – a wraith to Aragorn's eyes – stumbled into water and halted as if
a demon had arisen from the water and barred him from going further. Aragorn
too skidded to a halt before he crashed through the stream. The mists rolled
away to reveal a brisk river, blacker than the night sky, gliding untiringly
through reeds and fog, its opposite shore a formless opaque mass rising from
an indistinct, muddy bank. "The Gladden River," he breathed softly. It had
been his aim to spend the night on its shores, and then ford it come morning.
But he feared what hunted him on the river's southerly bank, the attention
Gollum had drawn to their passage. No longer did the southern marches of
Loeg Ningloron offer solace. The cold touch of the barrow-wight had spread
across his heart, foretelling death and torment should he linger here.
Gollum had broken his trance and cast himself into the shallow water. There
he lay writhing and moaning, thrashing about in the throes of a nightmare.
Silver ringlets of water sprayed into the oppressive gloom. "Give us that,
Déagol, my love. Because it's my birthday, my love, and I wants it!"
What memories had the Gladden River evoked and driven out of the crags and
shadows of his ruinous mind? Aragorn had not the time nor the inclination
to concern himself with it, and he thrust the sword at Gollum. That was a
riddle for minds more curious than his at this moment. "Get up," he commanded.
Crossing the river was hazardous and foolish, for the fog made invisible rapids,
currents and eddies, but Aragorn thought it less imprudent than remaining
on this shore. Gollum ignored him. Casting a fearful glance over his shoulder,
Aragorn waded into the water, which rose to his ankles and bit his toes with
icy teeth. Lightly he kicked Gollum in the side. "We cannot tarry here,"
he said. "Come along. Get up now." When the wretch paid him no heed, he overpowered
him, grabbing him by the nape of the neck and dragging him into the river.
Gollum flailed and his thin wails receded into the night.
Aragorn sloshed through the knee-deep water. Abruptly he staggered off a
shelf into water pooling near his breast, inhaling sharply with shock and
pain as the angry cold seemed to freeze the very air in his lungs and chill
him to the marrow. He gasped for air. His prisoner he flung over his shoulder
or the creature, forestalled from swimming or wading, would drown in his
bound condition. Half walking and half swimming, Aragorn floundered inelegantly
through the water, hindered by the burden across his shoulders. The current
was strong and threatened to rip his feet out from under him, to sweep him
to the confluence. And the foul odor of Gollum so close to his face sickened
him, made him lightheaded, and he fought dizziness and illness as fervently
as he battled the river. A wrathful riptide knocked him off his feet like
an orc broadsword. With a final surge of strength, he pitched against it,
struggling for the shore. Then his knee scraped against a rocky shelf and
he scrambled over it. Once again he found himself splashing through the shallows.
He flung Gollum into the water and lugged the creature out with the rope.
Up the bank he climbed, for he did not risk tarrying on the muddy flats.
Then he fell against another standing stone at the lip of the bank and could
no longer bend his will to walking. In spite of the wet, bone-chilling cold,
he must kindle a fire or he would not wake from dreary sleep threatening
to consume him. Violently he shivered and his breathing was troubled. It
took coaxing fingers that felt as though they had frozen around the hilt
of the sword to nurse a fire along, a pitiful flame gasping for air but bringing
heat nevertheless. Though the cold had quelled his appetite, he ate lembas
anyway. Water he heated over the flames and gladly he swallowed it. At length
the shivering subsided and the thick clouds dissipated from his thoughts.
With a clearer head, he contemplated his grim choices – to go or wait for
morning? The Gladden River was now between him and peril, Gollum was more
subdued than ever, and orcs could no more see through the mist than he could.
Hence Aragorn decided to wait out the night near this standing stone lest
he drift far from his course in the fog.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[i] Fellowship of the Ring. The barrow-wight in Fellowship chants this verse
as it approaches Frodo. However, in the movie The Two Towers, Gollum says
the first half of this verse, which is not quoted here. Since I strongly
imply that Gollum is on friendly terms with the barrow-wights (there is no
evidence suggesting there were wights in the Gladden Fields, but then nothing
explicitly says there were not, either), I therefore reconcile Peter Jackson's
decision to give the Cold be hand and heart and bone lines to Gollum with
Tolkien's original work.
[ii] Quenya: "Who shall see a white ship
leave the last shore,
the pale phantoms
in her cold bosom
like gulls wailing?"
[iii]:"Who shall heed a white ship,
vague as a butterfly,
in the flowing sea
on wings like stars,
the sea surging,
the foam blowing,
the wings shining,
the light fading?"
[iv]"Who shall hear the wind roaring
like leaves of forests;
the white rocks snarling
in the moon gleaming,
in the moon waning,
in the moon falling
a corpse-candle;
the storm mumbling,
the abyss moving?"
