Author's
Notes:
I apologise for the gap in posting. Have been sick as a dog, and
so has my editor, and neither one of us feels like doing much that involves
intellectual effort. She finally dragged herself out of bed to send me off this
chapter and one of "Small and Passing Thing", for which I am grateful. "Above and beyond the call of duty." She says that's going
to be her middle name from now on.
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,
glad to hear you are keeping your hopes up. Pick could certainly use any good
wishes you want to send his way... It will be a bit before we pick up his
thread of the story.
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 15. Pursuit
'He's gone!' Beech shouted in Thorn's
ear yet again. Thorn clung to the lifeline with one hand, his other reaching
out into the whiteout, grasping at nothing, his face a mask of grief. Keeping a
tight hold on the lifeline, Beech grabbed Thorn's free hand. 'We must seek
shelter!'
Another blast of wind shook them, throwing icy pellets directly into their
faces hard as a slap. Thorn shook his head and Beech tugged at his
brother-in-love. 'Come!' he shouted. Thorn looked to him. Beech placed Thorn's
hand on the lifeline, closing the fingers of both their hands firmly around it.
Putting their heads down to avoid the buffeting of the wind, they pulled
themselves along the lifeline step by careful step through blinding whiteness.
As they ducked beneath the overhang, the wind was cut off so abruptly that the
exhausted hobbits staggered. Hands pulled them to safety, peeled their
ice-encrusted cloaks away, wrapped them in furs and eased them down. Warm
bodies pressed close. Thorn found himself shivering, his teeth chattering.
'Pick! Where's Pick?' Blackthorn said.
Straightening up, he added, 'I'm going back out.'
'N-n-n-no,' Beech chattered. He clamped
his jaw and tried to gain control of the involuntary shudders. When he could
speak, he gasped out the account of the disaster. There were exclamations of
shock and grief from the surrounding hobbits, and Mistress Thorn hugged her
husband more tightly, mingling their tears.
The hobbits waited out the storm. For three days it blew and the air beyond the
overhang was a curtain of swirling white in the daytime. Complete and unvarying
darkness ruled the night, and the hobbits dared not stir for fear of stepping
off into thin air, keeping their backs tight against the wall of the cliff.
They blessed the Lady for the shelter of the overhang. Had She
not spoken to Thorn once more...
One morning they awakened to silence, no more shriek or moan of wind, and
looked out upon a world of dazzling white. Two hunters followed the lifeline to
the axe that anchored it and fetched the second rope, then coiled the near rope
as they made their way back to the overhang. Silently the travellers tied the
carry-sacks again and shouldered their burdens.
They proceeded as before, anchoring an axe in the ice-crusted snow and tying a
lifeline to it, sending out a scout to anchor the other end of the rope and
then having the People work their way along the rope one by one. The slope fell
away steeply and within a surprisingly short span of time they were out of the
snow and walking along a rocky path once more. In one place a rockslide had
swept away the trail. It took the better part of a day to get all safely
across, and Beech eyed the slopes above the path nervously as they continued.
The path began to rise again, not as steeply, and when they reached the top of
the ascent there were only patches of snow, no treacherous snow field to cross.
Thorn stopped at the top of the lesser pass, staring back over the way they had
come. Even after the last of the travellers had passed him, beginning the
descent, he stood as if turned to stone.
'Father?'
Blackthorn said, pausing by his side, but Thorn made no answer. Black called
again, touching Thorn on the shoulder, but Thorn never moved, his gaze fixed on
the higher pass. Alarmed, Black jogged ahead to find his Uncle Beech, marching
near the fore after scouting ahead and bringing back a promising report. The
way ahead was clear and not too difficult, the path, wide enough for three to
walk abreast, gently descending and rising again to a last low pass, apparently
free of rockslides. It seemed that the worst was over, and they would pass
between the peaks and into the new land without any more serious difficulties.
'He doesn't move or answer,' Black told
Beech as they walked swiftly up the slope to the lesser pass, nodding
reassuringly to the hobbits they passed. When they reached the leader of the Fallohides, Thorn had not moved.
'What is it, brother? Is it the Lady?'
Beech said. When Thorn did not respond, Beech said to Blackthorn, 'Take him
from the other side; we'll carry him down.'
As they picked him up, Thorn stirred. 'Wait,' he said in a faraway tone. 'Wait,
I'm trying to hear...' They put him down again and waited as he stood and
resumed his abstracted expression.
'Now I understand,' Thorn said at last,
seeming to waken. He looked from Beech to Blackthorn. 'We are pursued,' he
said.
'Pursued?' Beech said. 'Wolves?'
'Gobble-uns,'
Thorn replied matter-of-factly. 'I do not know how or why, but they have
followed our path and will soon reach the snow field.'
'What do we do? There's no hiding
here...' Beech said.
'And nothing to stop them, once they
cross the treacherous place and the rockslide, yes, I know. They will catch us
quickly,' Thorn said. 'I have little doubt as to their plans.'
'Rockslide,' Beech said, thinking
furiously. 'Yes, that's it! We'll set off a rockslide, not to block the path,
for we found our way over and that means it will present no barrier to our
pursuers.'
'What then?' Thorn snapped.
'We wait above, set off a slide atop
them, sweep them from the mountainside,' Beech said.
'Dangerous,' Thorn said. 'Do you think
it can be done?'
'I was afraid we'd set off a slide
without meaning to do so,' Beech answered. 'I'm sure it'll be easy enough. Give
me ten hobbits. We'll stop them halfway between the other slide and this crest.'
'And if you don't stop them?' Thorn
said.
'Have your arrows ready,' Beech said. 'Hurry
the people along, see if you can find a sheltered
spot.'
Thorn and Black ran along the path; Thorn sent the rearguard back to Beech at a
run. Then father and son jogged quickly through the body of travellers, warning
of danger and urging all possible speed. Reaching the front, Thorn split the
hunters there, sending half to the rear to replace those who'd gone with Beech.
When they reached the last low summit, the People passed over and then rested
on the far side while the hunters checked their arrows and lads and lasses
gathered likely stones for throwing. Thorn placed guards to watch the back
trail, then he and his sons jogged back to the next crest, secreting themselves
behind a large boulder to watch and wait.
They saw the creatures before they heard anything: black forms crossing the icy
pass, their horny feet making them sure-footed, claws digging into the snow.
The hobbits were silent, having discovered how sound carried in those parts,
but the gobble-uns were eerily silent as well, intent
on the chase.
The creatures began the descent and broke into a run. Black's eyes widened.
There was no way the People could outdistance their pursuers if it came down to
a race. The gobble-uns had to be stopped.
The watching hobbits saw the gobble-uns pause at the
rockslide, and then the creatures began to pick their way across. Not being
burdened with children to carry and old folk to help over the dangerous
stretch, they made better time than the Fallohides
had. All too soon the first had crossed and were starting along the trail.
Black saw Thorn's hands clench and knew what his father was thinking. Keep them together! The rockslide must
wipe out the gobble-uns, for if only a part were
swept away the lack of trail would present little barrier.
Happily to the hobbits' minds, the stragglers put on a burst of speed after
crossing the slide and soon the gobble-uns were running
in a bunch. There were four-score or more, Black counted, and while the Fallohides outnumbered them by several hundreds, most were
women and children. Even the full-grown, armed hobbits were hardly a match for
creatures twice their size or more. If it came to a fight, every shot must
count.
A rock bounced from above the trail, followed by another, then two or three.
The gobble-uns did not notice these harbingers of
danger, but as the hillside above them started to move, one shouted a hoarse
warning and suddenly the creatures were scattering, some putting on speed to
try to outrun the slide, some stopping, turning back. In a great rumbling and
explosion of dust half the hillside came down upon the trail, sweeping gobble-uns over the side of the cliff, their screams drowned by
the roar of sliding rock.
The few that had outrun the rockslide paused in confusion at the edge, looking
back to their fellows on the other side. These immediately tried to find safe
passage across, but the freshly fallen rock and gravel was unstable yet and
would need some time to settle before they might attempt the crossing.
'Will it hold them?' Black whispered in
his father's ear.
'I don't know,' Thorn said. 'Where are
the hunters? Did they fall with the slide they set off?'
'I saw no hobbits falling,' Black
answered. He craned to look at the slope above the trail but saw no sign.
About an hour later, one of the hunters came from behind them. 'We travelled just over the crest of the ridge until
we were out of the creatures' sight,' he said, 'but Beech — he fell.'
'Fell?' Thorn whispered sharply.
The hunter nodded. 'Nearly started another slide, he did, stepped upon a loose
rock and it threw him down.'
'Was he hurt?'
'Broken arm and bloody head,' the hunter
said. 'We'll have to carry him along; he's not steady enough to carry himself.'
Thorn nodded, then stiffened. 'I don't believe it,' he
said, staring back along the trail. 'That ground is unstable as anything, being
a fresh fall and all.'
The gobble-uns had sent scouts ahead to find a way
across the slide. Of the three that went out, one went sliding and shrieking
into the abyss, but the others continued to pick their way slowly and carefully,
and one-by-one the remaining gobble-uns followed
their cautious lead.
'Come on,' Thorn hissed. 'At the rate
they're going they'll be across the slide in a few hours.' The hobbits raced
down the gently descending trail and up the other side to where the People
waited, covering the miles more quickly than any had run before, for deadly
peril would soon be on their trail once more.
