Author's
Notes:
Beg pardon, my editor is working overtime and has less time than
usual for fanfic. She just now sent me this chapter,
which I am passing on to you.
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...
If ff.net is giving you fits and you are faithfully writing reviews, you can
always send them along to me at bljeanaol.com. The Muse will bless you.
Expect another chapter of "Small and Passing Thing" in a couple of days, if all
goes well.
Chapter 17. The Song
When Thorn and the hunters reached the pass, the scout they'd left to watch
said, 'They're nearly all across. It won't be long.'
'Right,' Thorn said. Looking around, he
added, 'There's no cover to speak of here. We'll just have to pick them off as
they come, and any that break through will have to be cut down. They're big, and tough — it'll take more than one arrow to bring one
down, I think, especially since we don't have tips.'
He positioned a part of his hobbits on the trail just behind the pass and sent
the others up and over the ridge, looking down on the trail. It would be a
longer shot for these, but they'd have more cover behind the rocky ridge, and
they could drop stones down on the gobble-ums when they ran out of arrows.
They didn't have long to wait before the lookout whistled the alarm, and then
hobbit arrows were raining down upon the gobble-uns.
Without the metal points they didn't do as much damage as the deadlier hunting
arrows might have, but the hunters made each shot count and the first few
gobble-uns in the bunch fell screaming from the path,
each pierced by brightly feathered shafts.
Still, the creatures were large and tough and more than hunger and rage burned
in their eyes. Despite the rain of arrows and rocks from above the creatures
kept advancing, and worse, quite a few began to climb the very cliff to
confront the defenders above.
Thorn shot until he'd used his last arrow, then began
to throw rocks. He heard screams above — Apple's voice among them! — and several hobbit bodies plunged from the heights. The
gobble-uns were overrunning the high defences, even
as they began to press the hobbits on the trail behind the pass. 'Keep
fighting!' he shouted desperately. 'For the People!'
His next throw caught a gobble-un on the cheek and the creature fell back,
nearly losing its footing, before advancing again.
Hobbits were falling around him, even as they slashed at the advancing gobble-uns with their axes and cast stones into the grinning
faces. A black shaft knocked the wind from the leader of the Fallohides and he fell to the path, dragging himself up
again, reaching for his staff and swinging wildly. Another arrow found him and
he collapsed against the cliff, trying to draw breath that wouldn't come. 'Fight!'
he gasped, even as he saw Boxthorn fall. 'Fight...' he whispered, and then the
noise of the battle faded and he descended into darkness.
Pick marked the passage of time by day and night. In the daytime the sun shone
dazzlingly bright, in the night the stars shone coldly down. Pick's furs kept
him warm, and when hunger gnawed too deeply, he waited for the father bird to
hunt and the mother to doze, and then he cut slivers of meat from the
stiffening haunch of one of the small deer that shared his plight and choked
the meat down.
His hurts were worse on the second day, but when the father was gone and the
mother napped he cautiously exercised his joints and muscles, all but the
disjointed arm which had frozen into place. The slightest movement shot agony
through his shoulder, but he gritted his teeth. He'd have to get down the
mountain somehow, even if he had only one usable hand.
By the fourth day he was a little less stiff, and because the father kept
hunting and bringing back fresh game the great birds overlooked the small
hobbit curled beneath a shield of furry bodies at the far side of the nest.
The roar of the wind had lessened, and when the father left to hunt Pick crawled out from beneath his furry shield and peered
over the side of the nest. The clouds were gone and he looked down a sheer drop
onto other peaks that jutted up like teeth below him. He supposed the shadows
between were valleys, filled perhaps with forest and stream. There must be a
fair amount of game, for the father bird was never away for very long before
returning with more food.
Hearing the shriek of the returning hunter, he dropped back down behind the
pile of bodies, and not a moment too soon. The babies grew hungrier with each
day, it seemed, and the father was hunting more often. Now he dropped another
small deer into the nest. 'They're growing,' he panted. 'I thought they'd like
something more substantial.'
'Lovely,' his mate agreed. 'Look, my
dears, nice, warm and steaming, and plenty for all!' She plunged her beak into
the deer's belly and the babies set up an excited clamour for the treat. Too
soon the deer was gone and the father turned to the dwindling heap of rabbits
with a sigh.
'I'll help you feed them full,' he said,
'and then I'll seek another young deer. I found a nice herd of fat hinds below;
plenty more where that one came from. If they'll just take a nice long nap I'll
be able to fill up the larder again.'
'Poor dear, you're working yourself to
skin and bones,' his mate said softly before taking the next mouthful of rabbit
he'd torn free and was extending to her. 'You take the next bite, these babes
won't starve.'
'Much obliged,' he said after swallowing
a hunk of bloody meat. 'They're slowing down, don't you think?'
'I should think so! An entire deer!' the
mother said fondly, taking another piece and putting it into the widest-open
mouth before her. 'I think they're just filling up the corners with these
rabbits. They ought to be napping soon.'
'Good,' the father said, grabbing another
rabbit and plunging his beak into it.
'Now then, darlings,'
the mother soothed, while the father tore the entrails from the latest rabbit.
He'd nearly come to the bottom of the pile that sheltered the hobbit.
'Here you are, my dear,' the father said helpfully, and the mother took the
pieces and methodically filled the hungry mouths. 'Aren't they finished yet?'
'Just a few more rabbits, I think,' the
mother said. The children were slowing down, not quite so frantic in their
cries, but still demanding more.
A few rabbits more and that pile was done; the father hopped over, closing one
great claw about Pick as he prepared to plunge his beak into the hobbit. 'Ah,
this one's nice and fresh!' he said with satisfaction. 'Still
twitching!'
Thorn awakened suddenly to pain and a suffocating feeling. He half expected to
find himself being borne along, on his way to fill the gobble-uns' bellies, but no, he was still lying
against the cliff, surrounded by unmoving bodies, gobble-uns...
and hobbits. He wondered; had the gobble-uns defeated them and continued after the main body of the
People? No, he thought, for they'd face another fight, and there was plenty of
meat for the pot lying about the pass. Surely they'd have taken what was at
hand, freshly butchered, and made use of it.
He was hot and cold at the same time and realised he was burning with fever.
Thirsty, he tried to reach for his water bottle, but his limbs were heavy and
slow to respond. A breeze blew, and a sudden flurry of snow blessed his burning
cheeks. Another storm was blowing from the mountain tops, for though it was
still warm and pleasant in the valleys below, winter came early in the high
passes. The People had finished the mountain passage in good time.
He tried to count the gobble-uns he could see, but a
mist was before his eyes. Besides, he didn't know how many might have fallen
from the path into the abyss below. Had they killed all the gobble-uns, or hadn't they? He suspected he'd never know the
truth. Even as he turned over the thought of pushing himself up and away from
the cliff wall, beginning the long trek to rejoin the People, another part of
him knew that he'd reached his end.
'End,' he whispered, and then was most
surprised to hear an answer.
Not the end, a Voice whispered.
'Are you the one who brought the
warning?' Thorn asked weakly. He did not know this voice.
I have come to take you home, the
Voice answered. It is time to rest.
'Who are You?'
Thorn said, for though it was becoming harder to breathe, the curiosity of his
kind would not be denied. His mother's exasperated You'll probably be asking a question with your last breath! rang in his memory.
When he was answered, he could hear a smile in the Voice. I am Namo, the answer came, the Voice
growing stronger in his mind, closer perhaps, but most call me by another name, Mandos.
'I don't know You,'
Thorn said after a moment. 'Not by either name.'
You
will know me, the Voice said, somehow soothing and strengthening at the
same time.
'The People,' Thorn protested. He no
longer felt as if he were suffocating, instead he was drawing deep breaths of
fresh, bracing air as the pain fell away.
They
are safe, the Voice said. Those who
hunted them are dead, and they have passed beyond the malice of the Dark Power
in the darkening wood.
'Why did you help us?' Thorn asked. 'Are
you a friend of the Lady?'
Astonishingly, he heard laughter, deep, rich and musical, washing over him in
waves that soothed away the last of the lingering pain and fear.
We
have been watching over your People ever since their first Notes were sounded,
the Voice answered. Their greatest part
is yet to come in the Song.
Thorn nodded, feeling sleepy. The snow was falling more thickly about him,
blanketing the still forms in softness.
Come with me, the Voice said. You have saved your People with your wisdom
and humility and your listening heart. There was a pause, and the Voice
added, I have been granted permission to
show you something of their Song, even as your Lady showed you your children in
the new land.
'How?' Thorn
asked sleepily.
Take my hand, he heard, and he saw a
large hand extended to him, while a ethereal face of
indescribable radiance smiled above him. He reached out, felt a firm grasp
close about his hand, and was lifted, not to his feet, but somehow beyond. He
could see clearly, through the blowing snow, the bodies scattered over the
trail, including his own shell still leaning against the cliff as the snow drew
its blanket over him.
'Where are we going?' he asked.
To see some of your descendants, yours,
and Pick's, came the answer.
'Pick's dead,' Thorn said, and somehow
the words did not tear at his heart as they had before. There was no more pain,
no more grief, no sorrow in the Presence that held
him. He heard that marvellous laughter again.
I have not yet fetched him to my halls,
Namo answered through his laughter. He has a few Notes left to sing before his
time is through.
They passed through clouds and over a great field where a battle was raging,
Men and gobble-uns and creatures that Thorn could not
even name, one more terrible than the rest, a pale king robed in Shadow, facing
a defiant, golden-haired woman. As Thorn watched, a hobbit that reminded him of
Blackthorn crawled behind the king, stabbing upwards, and then the woman drove
her sword between crown and mantle. The sword burst into sparkling shards that
tumbled, consumed before they hit the ground, and the king was gone, swallowed
up by Nothing.
Thorn felt himself lifted away into cloud and then they swooped again above
another part of the battle... or perhaps it was another battle, for instead of
a burning city of white stone, an enormous black gate reared before the
battleground. Thorn stiffened, drawn out of his detachment as he saw... Pickthorn?
'Pick!' he shouted, only to hear Namo chuckle.
Not Pickthorn,
Namo said, but
another, one of his great-, great-, great-, great-, many greats of grandsons.
The hobbit in black and silver livery stood firm against the onslaught of
terrifying large creatures that hammered down the taller Men around him; he
stabbed upwards at one creature, bringing it down in a rush of black blood.
'What now?' Thorn asked as he was lifted
away from the scene. He craned to see the hobbit's fate, but the small form was
lost beneath the great creature he'd felled, the melee closed in around them,
and then the swirling mists hid the battle from his sight.
They emerged from the mists over another great field with ranks of Men drawn up
in long lines. Another battle? But
no. The roars that emerged from many throats resolved into cries of
praise; the waving swords were raised in acclamation. Two small figures sat
upon the highest seat of three, the centre of the storm of praise. One of them
he did not know, though he was reminded of Beechnut in the tilt of the chin.
The other looked as Thorn imagined Pick would look when older, or like the
reflection of himself he'd seen in a pool in his younger days. 'Another of Pick's
grands?' he asked in bemusement. He was answered by a
chuckle, and the mists surrounded them once more.
One more Note, Namo
said, and then I think it will be time to
sing you Home.
They stood upon a meadow brilliantly green and thick with flowers. Hobbits were
there, sitting or sprawling or reclining upon blankets upon the grass, singing
a song that sounded something like the new song the People had begun after
crossing the River. Three more hobbits were approaching the group, an older
hobbit with silvering hair who might have been Thorn's brother, such was the
resemblance between them, a younger hobbit who looked like Blackthorn, and
between them they were escorting a golden-haired lass
great with child.
'Fine news!' the older hobbit sang out
as they reached the blankets. 'The Master of Buckland has welcomed his first
grandson!'
'Hurrah!' the hobbits shouted, and a
tiny golden-haired girl clapped her dimpled hands and crowed with delight.
'And tell me,' the older hobbit said as
he helped ease the expectant mother down, 'when am I to greet my latest
grandchild?'
'Sooner than later, to my way of
thinking,' she laughed as the young hobbit on her other side kissed her hand
before releasing it.
The older hobbit sprawled upon the blanket and was soon covered with small
children with curls of gold and bronze and richest ebony. As he gathered them
all into his arms, he said, 'Who needs to dig for gold? I have all I need right
here!'
'You have gold, and Diamonds,' his wife
said, adding her embrace, '...and a Ruby, and an
Emerald, and a Sapphire...'
'I am rich indeed,' came the answer. 'Let's
have another song!'
The Song goes on, Namo
murmured, and then the earth fell away, the stars surrounded them in songs of
splendour, and Thorn saw in the distance the white shores of a far green country.
