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, hmmm, a stop-off in Imladris,
now there's a thought...
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.
Expect another chapter of "Small and Passing Thing" in a couple of days, if all
goes well.
***
Chapter 13. River Crossing
After ten days of travel the wandering hobbits came to the edge of the wood,
looking out over a grassy plain that sloped downwards towards a distant sparkle—the
River!
'It's more than one day's journey,'
Beech said, eyeing the prospect. The People were some ways back from the edge,
secreted in the trees, eating the roots they'd dug during rest stops and wild
strawberries they'd gathered along the way. Thorn had ordered the saving of the
travel rations: dried meat, acorn cakes, and the way-bread pressed upon them by
the alfs. He'd been warned of the barren rocky
stretches in the mountains where no food was to be found, and so the hobbits
foraged as they went. In silence, Beech and Thorn watched the traffic on the
road, moving steadily in both directions.
'Where are they going?' Thorn asked.
'There are settlements on the other side
of the Mountains,' Beech said. 'Grand-alf mentioned
them, whole countries of Men, ruled by a King he said.'
'A King,' Thorn echoed. The word stirred
faint memory of old stories told around the fire, but no more than that.
Someone who set the standards, he thought. One to whom the Big Folk looked for
guidance, perhaps. He could only hope the King was wise and fair, like the
farmers from the dim past, who'd been good neighbours, friends even, before a
shadow of fear and suspicion fell upon them and caused them to drive the People
from the land. 'And what of the other end of the Road? Why do Men go into the Forest?'
'Not in
but through,' Beech said. 'The alfs told me that
on the other side of the wood there is another river, where the travellers load
their crops and other goods for trade onto boats to float downstream.'
'Boats?' Thorn
said, puzzled. This was a word he did not know.
'Waggons that
float,' Beech explained. 'Instead of beasts drawing them, they allow the river
itself to carry them away.'
'Sounds awfully chancy to me,' Thorn
said dubiously.
Beech nodded. 'At the end of the river is a great sea,' he continued. 'A large
body of water, so great you cannot see the land on the other side,' he added,
knowing that "sea" was another unfamiliar word. 'The alfs
told me that it is a land where fine wine is produced.'
'Wine,' Thorn said,
smacking his lips in remembrance of the nectar of Dorwinion
he'd tasted from Elladan's flask. 'That stuff the alfs shared with us,' he said. 'That might well be worth
braving a journey over water, indeed.' He looked at the waggons
again. 'Traders,' he said reflectively. 'Why haven't the gobble-uns bothered them?'
'Too many? Too strong?' Beech shrugged. 'The Road cuts through the
trees and the Sun shines down in the daytime. Gobble-uns
don't like the Sun, I'm told.'
Thorn looked out over the plain once more. 'The grass is tall,' he said
approvingly. 'Taller than we are. We could travel in broad daylight, I think, if we stayed in the shelter of the grass. It is only when
we come to the Ford that we must cross in the darkness, to avoid the Men.'
'Is there no other place to cross?'
Beech asked.
Thorn shook his head. 'Grand-alf said there was none
for miles, and wherever there is a crossing we'd find traffic,' he said. 'Worse,
he told me the Ford is deep; easy enough for Men with waggons,
but dangerous for the People.'
'We'll get over,' Beech said. 'We've
come this far.' He peered at the dark shadows on the horizon, mountains, he knew they were, though they might have been
great clouds rising up in the West as far as he could see.
'Three, maybe four days' journey to the
Ford,' he decided. 'Come, let us take our rest.'
One good thing about walking parallel to the Road was that the gobble-uns did not come again, not even at night, when the traders
pulled their waggons into great circles and set a
watch of armed Men. Beech crept close to one of these groups under cover of
darkness, curious. He was able to crawl beneath one of the great waggons without being seen, peering into the circle to see
what manner of Men these were. There were fires, and savoury smells, talk and
laughter and singing. There were guards silent and grim who peered into the
night, bows in hand, ready to shoot. Curiosity satisfied, Beech crept away
again without trying to bespeak any of the Men he saw. He remembered too well
what had happened to his father.
A fire would have been pleasant, but the summer nights were warm and the People
ate their roots and berries and the last of the mushrooms from the wood in
silence, listening to the songs wafting on the breeze from the nearby camp of
Men which was just outside the skirts of the wood. When morning came, Thorn led
the People some ways away from the Road, until the creak of waggons
came to them but faintly, and there the Fallohides
stopped to look back at the wood that had sheltered them these many years. Fair
was Greenwood
the Great in those days, still fair and not yet completely fallen under shadow
of fear. Birds sang, the trees were graceful and crowned with green, leaves
rustled in the soft breeze, and a mingled scent of rich earth and green growing
things was in the air.
Tears running down their faces, hands joined, the
hobbits sang their last fare-well to the Lady and received her blessing in
return. As the Sun climbed in the East, finally rising above the canopy of
trees to shine upon their upturned faces, they ended their song, took up their
burdens, and turned towards the River.
It was not an arduous trek, moving down the gentle slope through tall grass
under the smiling Sun. Bees buzzed lazily in the air, butterflies fluttered above, scattered trees provided shady resting places. The
scouts shot enough red deer
to supply all with as much as they could eat, and though cooked meat would have
been preferable, the People feasted and felt all the stronger for the meal.
Distance from wood to water was deceptive, and they did not reach the River
until the seventh day, though as the hobbits travelled the distant mountains
grew more solid and less misty.
On the evening of the seventh day, by the light of the stars, several scouts
crept to the edge of the Ford. Beech, tallest of the People, knotted a rope
about his waist and waded into the River, feeling his way carefully with his toes,
thrusting his staff ahead of him to probe the bottom. If he could not make his
way across, the People would be in more trouble than he liked to think about.
They must cross this barrier before attempting the mountains.
He could feel the tug of the current as he waded steadily deeper, sucking first
at his ankles, then his knees, cold fingers of water pulling at him, reaching
ever higher until he sucked his breath sharply at its touch on his belly.
Resolutely he continued, trusting that if he were swept off his feet the others
would pull him to safety before he drowned. Ever higher the water climbed, its
pull growing more insistent. He found himself turning to face the current,
edging sideways towards the opposite bank, leaning into the force that tried to
push him from his feet. The River felt like a living thing, a wild cat playing
with a rabbit, dragging at him with inexorable claws. Still, Beech kept on. The
water reached his chest, tickled him under his arms, slapped his shoulders, touched his chin as he nearly lost his balance. He gripped
the rocks tightly with his toes, and then with another step he could feel he
was rising, or the water was going down, or both at once.
Yes, the water was going down, step by slow, careful step. He did not relax his
caution. Rivers were treacherous creatures, with sudden holes, or rocks that
might turn under foot. Enough hobbits had drowned, fishing the forest streams,
to teach the People to take great care in their dealings with moving water.
Reaching the far shore, Beech threw himself to the ground, gathering the sandy
dirt in his embrace, kissing the reassuringly solid bank in his gladness to be
out of the monster's grasp. Only after thanking the ground for receiving him,
he stood and tugged on the rope, a signal to those waiting on the opposite
shore. He picked up a rock and hammered his staff into the ground, slipped the
rope from his waist and tied it to this impromptu stake. Taking firm hold on
rope and staff, he anchored the rough bridge, a handhold, really, for hobbits
to pull themselves along and across, trusting to the rope when their feet could
no longer find hold.
It took nearly the entire night for all of the People to cross, little ones
tied firmly to adults, the strongest making several crossings to bring children
or baggage across, but by dawn the People were all safely on the Western shore
of the great River, as far from the Road as they could stagger, finding
sheltered hollows to rest in as the sky brightened in the East. The hobbits
rested through that day, drying their clothes and possessions in the summer sunshine, listening to the creak
of the waggons, the shouting of Men, the splashing of
the great draught beasts entering a river lately overcome with great courage
and daring by People who, for much of the journey, had been in over their
heads. They rested through the following night, hearing the distant songs of
the Men carried to them on the breeze along with the tantalising smell of
roasting meat. Silently they ate their cold food and hoped for better days to
come. With the dawn of the next day the hobbits were ready to go on their way.
