Author's Notes:
Once upon a time, hobbits lived in harmony with Men, farming the upper vales of
the Anduin. They lived so quietly, as a matter of
fact, that none of the Great noticed them at all. (The Great are more likely to
notice troublemakers than folk doing what they ought.) Times changed, a darkness crept over the land, shadowing the hearts of Men,
and some Little Folk made the dangerous crossing of the Mountains to the West,
while others were driven into the shelter of the forest, where they passed quite
a few years in pleasant obscurity once more. It is not always a misfortune
being overlooked...
Readers taking the time to review are muchly
appreciated. The Muse seems to run on virtual pina
coladas and reviews...
Xena, I hadn't even thought of Legolas
guessing the quarry had sprouted wings! Thanks for making that connection!
Bookworm, I just love it when something just "happens" and you can write it
in—it just struck me when reading aloud to the little ones one night when I
realised that "goblins" sounded like "gobble-uns".
Hildegard, glad you're still with me. The mental picture of Gandalf as a
she-wolf is, ummm, I haven't the words to describe
it. Must be I
need a cup of tea.
If ff.net is giving you fits and you are faithfully writing reviews, you can
always send them along to me at bljean@aol.com. The Muse will bless you.
"Runaway" is finished (all 35 chapters),
Farry and Goldi's wedding
story is finished, and Frodo Gamgee's wedding is
nearly done. My editor has another chapter of "Small and Passing Thing" ready
to post on the morrow, if ffnet cooperates. So we are
back in the groove of daily or near-daily postings (I hope). Ff.net was not on
speaking terms with me last week and wouldn't let me post more than one chapter
all week. Sorry about that.
***
Chapter 6. Difficult Decision
'We must leave,' Thorn said
quietly.
'Leave?' Burr said incredulously. 'Leave? And go where? This is all we've
ever known!'
'How could we abandon our homes?' Fern demanded. 'How dare we leave the
Lady's protection?'
'We've had precious little protection lately,' Beech said. The other
hobbits bristled at his sacrilege.
'We have no home,' Thorn added. 'Nor do the Root and Bark families, and
with these creatures coming every few days, soon you'll have no homes, either.'
'We could band together, fight them,' Burr said.
'Did you see them?' Root asked. 'There were an hundred, or more, all
twice the size of one of us. We haven't the numbers to defeat them.'
'They only seem to come at night,' Fern said. 'We can keep hiding in the
trees...'
'The two who took Pick were abroad in daylight. Besides, what if they
learn to climb trees?' Beech said. 'They've arms and legs; Fern, you saw the
gobble-uns that had taken Pickthorn.
If once they look up, notice us-uns in the trees,
we're lost, done for, meat in the pot. Would you risk your little-uns so?'
'But where do we go?' Burr repeated. 'How do we know that... "out there",' he gestured
vaguely, 'isn't worse?'
'We do not know,' Thorn said, frustrated, 'but we cannot stay here, in
the gobble-uns' larder, waiting to be cooked and
eaten.' Such blunt talk shocked the others speechless, but slowly they began to
nod.
'Pack up what you can carry,' Thorn said. 'Those who still have
possessions, we who have been dispossessed must trust to your generosity.'
'You shall not starve, so long as I have a hole,
and food in it,' Fern said, and the others echoed him.
Thorn, Root, and Bark nodded thanks. Thorn continued. 'We will leave on
the morrow. Pack up what you can, share out what you have, seek your beds in
the treetops again this night, and on the morrow, we shall begin.'
'Pack your ropes,' Beech added. 'We shall sleep in the treetops wherever
we find ourselves, until we have gone beyond the reach of the gobble-uns.'
'Which way?' Burr asked. A silence fell.
Thorn spoke, but not to any of the hobbits gathered there. 'Lady?' he
said quietly, reverently, closing his eyes and turning his face towards the
canopy above. The rest bowed their heads. 'Lady, we have lived beneath your
skirts these many years. You have given us food, shelter, and protection; you
have cared for us as your children. Tell us now where to go. We beg of you,
Lady, this last boon.'
A gentle breeze caressed his upturned face; high above, a black squirrel
scolded.
'North,' Beech said suddenly. 'The bad things, the black squirrels, the
spreading blackness in the stream, all these things come from the South.'
Thorn nodded. 'Thank you, Lady,' he said to the treetops, then turned to
the others. 'On the morrow, we go North.'
***
'Leave?' Mistress Thorn said to her husband. 'But...' She looked around
the yard, at the wanton destruction that remained from last night's waking
nightmare. There was nothing to hold on to, except the fact that hobbits had
lived here as long as any could remember. For all they knew, the Lady had
planted them in the upper vales of the Great River,
watered them, grown them up here; they'd never known
anything else. They'd been driven from the land to the forest, and now were
being driven from the forest perhaps... but what else was there for them?
'Leave?' little Pickthorn said, puzzled. His
face brightened as he added, 'You mean, travel?'
'Travel?' Beech asked. 'What's that?'
'You know, a journey!' Pick said triumphantly.
'A-journey?' Thorn
echoed. 'Pick, you're not making sense.'
'Going from one place to another,' Pick said slowly, remembering the grey
one's words. 'Walking all day, stopping for the night, getting up and walking
again,' he added.
'Where have you heard such talk?' Thorn asked.
'The grey one spoke of such things,' Pick said.
'The grey one,' Beech echoed. They had never satisfactorily worked out
who or what the creature was. All they knew was that he was tall, grey, shaggy, wore coverings on his feet, and had saved Pick from
being eaten by the gobble-uns. He must not be all
bad, at that. 'It sounds as if this grey one knows something about the matter.'
'He does!' Pick said stoutly. 'He even has special food for travelling.'
'Waybread,' Thorn said, nodding. 'I remember
you telling us about that.'
'We have no waybread,' Beech said, 'but we can
bake acorn cakes this day, to wrap and take with us, and we can snare coneys along the way, and pick berries.'
'We can dig roots, and find mushrooms as well,' his sister said
practically. 'This time of year ought to be good for... what did you call it,
Pick?'
'Travelling,' Pick said, feeling important. 'Or a journey.'
'A-journey,' Mistress Thorn said. She sighed. 'I suppose I'd better get
used to the word; I have the feeling it'll be tossed about quite a bit for as
far as I can see.'
'We'll make it into a song,' her brother said soothingly. 'Then it won't
seem so unnatural.'
***
For the rest of that day, the hobbits prepared. Some baked as many acorn
cakes as they had flour for, while others scavenged, in well-guarded groups,
for all the food they could find, mushrooms, roots, berries. Hobbit mums
wrapped food, clothing and other practical possessions in blankets and formed
carry-a-backs by knotting rope around the bundles and making loops for
arm-holds. Those who'd lost all to the gobble-uns
were able to make up carry-a-backs of the extra possessions shared out by those
whose homes had not yet been invaded.
Late that afternoon, as ready as they'd ever be, the hobbits sought the
treetops above their homes for the last time. It was a good thing they'd taken
themselves and their carry-a-backs up into the treetops, for the gobble-uns came again that night, rampaging through the community,
destroying all in their path, howling in their hunger and frustration. The
hobbits sat tense, silent, motionless, the hobbit dads and uncles with nocked bows ready to shoot, but thankfully none of the
creatures thought to look up. The grey light of dawn found the Little Folk
weary, having passed a sleepless night, but alive. At least they were not on
their way to make a feast for gobble-uns. They were
alive, and free. They meant to stay that way.
