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 piña coladas and
reviews...
If ffnet is giving you fits and you are faithfully
writing reviews, you can always send them along to me at
The Muse will bless you.
"Small and Passing Thing" was updated today as well.
O-O-O
Chapter 25. First Foot
The Thorn sat before Elladan on the great grey steed Gwilohíth, feeling the ripple and surge of muscles beneath
his feet as they climbed the steep zig-zag path out
of the deep valley. The air grew ever colder, and the young leader of the Fallohides shrugged deeper into the fine cloak Elrond had
pressed upon him as they walked from the Homely House. They emerged into a
stinging storm, pellets of icy snow that lashed against their cheeks.
'Lovely!' the hobbit shouted, hearing Elladan's laughter in reply. He was glad for the warm
horse-hide under him and the light but warm cloak. 'Real
weather!' He breathed deeply of the freezing air.
'The valley is protected,' Elladan said close to his ear, and he nodded. While he had
hoped to see the Sun, and perhaps Moon and stars, for night came early in this
time of the year, he'd settle for the stimulation of stinging snow, all the better for the feast and fire that would await them
upon their return. Not for the first time, the hobbit wondered just how the
valley was protected... that was one of the questions Elrond never quite
answered, no matter how many different ways it was phrased.
The horse plunged forward into drifting snow, prancing playfully until a word
from Elladan halted him. Ghostly figures loomed
before them and Elladan slid from Gwilohíth's
back, shouting greetings. Squinting against the assault of the snow, Blackthorn
thought he recognised Glorfindel, yes, and Elrohir, Tarion, Faron, Cúnirion, Lagoron, Nórion, other
Elf-warriors he could not name, and in their midst, Arwen,
snowflakes glinting like diamonds in her dark hair.
The hobbit was wearing several layers of clothing including a multi-coloured
jumper, topped off by the Elven cloak, muffler
wrapped over all, yet he shivered. The Elves, by contrast, were lightly clad
yet seeming to feel no discomfort as they gathered around Elladan,
exchanging greetings.
'Blackthorn!' Glorfindel said, turning from greeting Elladan.
The hobbit slid from the horse's back, trusting the snow, shallow as it looked,
to give him a soft landing. To his surprise he found himself nearly buried,
floundering in snow that felt as if it had no bottom.
A laughing Elrohir pulled him out of the snow, setting
him firmly on the horse's back. 'Don't try that again!'
he warned. Blackthorn looked in wonder at the Elves,
all standing atop the snow as if it were a bare dusting upon the ground.
Looking more closely down the horse's flank, he saw that Gwilohíth
stood nearly to his hocks in snow.
'But let us not stand about taking the air!' Elladan
said. 'The feast is laid, the Master is waiting and the other guests will grow
hungry if we linger.'
Arwen walked beside the great horse in the dimming light,
one graceful hand entwined in the long mane. 'Other guests?' she said. 'Are
your People at Imladris, then, Black?'
'We are,' Blackthorn answered, 'Rescued
from an untimely end and brought to the Homely House to recover our strength
before setting out to find our new land.'
'Untimely end!'
Glorfindel said, exchanging glances with Elrohir. He didn't like the sounds of that.
'There are stories to be told,' Elladan said, 'as well as plans to be made, but such can
wait until after the feast.'
'Indeed,' Blackthorn said. 'I'm
perishing of hunger!'
'We cannot have that,' Arwen began, but her brother Elladan
laughed.
'When are you ever not hungry?' he said.
'Plenty of times!'
Blackthorn shouted back, but they had begun the descent into the valley and his
words rang loud, no longer fighting to be heard above the wind. 'After each
meal,' he added in normal tones. 'For at least half an hour,
or more, depending on the meal!'
'The People are eating us out of House
and Home,' Elladan said behind his hand with a grin.
'Your cooks are glad to be so
appreciated,' the hobbit retorted. 'They have threatened to follow us to our
new home, for they fear the time will hang heavy on their hands after we
depart.'
Talk and laughter made the long, steep descent go quickly, and in no time it
seemed they were crossing the narrow stone bridge. Elladan
lifted the hobbit from the horse's back and sent the steed on to the stables,
to his own feast of oats, and thick bed of straw.
As the group approached the door, a small figure detached itself from the
shadows. 'Welcome!' a small voice cried, assuming much the same tone as an
official greeter might take. 'Welcome to the House of Elrond!'
'Pick!' Arwen
laughed, running forward to scoop the small hobbit up and whirling around until
both were breathless with laughter.
'I thought you'd never come,' Pick said
when they stopped spinning.
'Have you been waiting long?' Arwen asked solicitously.
'No, but I'm hungry!' Pick announced.
'We cannot have that,' Elrond said
severely from the doorway. 'Put him down, daughter, so that he may run to tell
the cooks to serve.' He just took enough time to kiss Arwen
and greet her escort before he was ushering them to the feast, 'For we must not
keep our guests waiting!'
Arwen stopped short at the door to the hall, her gaze
sweeping the tables. 'There are so few,' she said, turning to her father.
Glorfindel added quietly, 'Are there only a few of
the Little People come to the feast? I do not see Thorn.'
'All are come,' Blackthorn said. 'And I
am now Thorn. My father was slain by goblins in the passes of the mountains,
with many other of our folk.'
'And too many others died at the hands
of the Men of Rhudaur,' Elladan
said grimly. 'We will drink to their memory.'
'It is our custom,' Blackthorn said. 'At the turning of the year, to remember those who will not see the
return of the Light.'
'Yes,' Elrond said. 'And we will drink
to the Light, as well, and hope for the future. Come, Thorn.' He led Blackthorn
to the high table, for the Thorn and his mate would sit elevated on cushions to
join Elrond and his children at the feast this evening. Beech presided over one
of the tables of Little People, and Leaf headed the other.
Arwen's eyes lighted as she recognised Pick's mother,
walking arm-in-arm with a hobbit lass heavy with child. 'Mistress Thorn,' she
said, bowing to speak at hobbit height.
The hobbit mum smiled faintly, though she did not lift her eyes from the floor.
'I am Violet,' she said. 'Only Violet. Lily here, she's
Mistress Thorn now, though we are hardly formal these days. Indeed, it is a wonder
that there are any Fallohides at all.'
'Call me Lily,' that hobbit said firmly.
'My husband ought to be called "Thorn", but he answers to "Blackthorn" at the
moment. He says he led the People to their deaths, and does not deserve the
title.'
'Not all the People,' Arwen said, glancing at the two tables crowded with
hobbits, not a grey head among them, and a disproportionate number of small
children, she thought. Any further conversation was forestalled as Elrond
called the feasters to their places. Lily escorted Violet to a place beside her
oldest daughter Holly, then joined her husband at the
head table. She looked in dismay at the pile of cushions.
'You expect me to climb up there?' she
asked. Shaking her head, she turned to Blackthorn. 'I'm sorry, my love,' she
said. 'I simply cannot manage it.'
'I have an idea!' Arwen
said brightly. 'Wait just a moment...' She was not gone long, for she knew what
she sought stood near the kitchen door, holding pots of herbs. A quick wash, a
dab of polish with a dry cloth, and it would serve.
Lily couldn't help laughing at the idea of a giant-sized high chair. 'It was
mine,' Arwen said, 'and one of my brothers used it
before me. There is another, if...'
'Cushions are fine,' Blackthorn said
hastily. The idea of sitting in a toddler's chair to be at table height, at his
age! If he had any hopes at all of leading the People after they left Imladris, he'd better avoid presenting such a sight.
Lily had no such compunctions. Arwen and Elrond
lifted her into the chair and she settled back with a sigh. 'I do feel safer,'
she confessed. 'I have no sense of balance these days.'
The feast was served, a lengthy and varied affair, accompanied by much talk and
laughter. Arwen noticed that Elves sat on the floor
to join the hobbits at their tables, and hobbits sat on cushions to join the
Elves at theirs.
When the feast finally ended, and even the hobbits declared themselves replete
with good food, Elrond and Arwen rose and lifted Lily
down from her high chair, setting her gently on her feet. Blackthorn slid from
his cushions to take her hand, and the two hobbits walked between Elrond and
his fair daughter down the hall, through the doors, across a wide passage and
through the farther doors of the Hall of Fire.
Elrond moved to his accustomed seat, placing Thorn and his mate beside him.
Lily sighed as the music began. 'I have listened to them practice each day,'
she said, 'and I never tire of their songs.' She rested her head against Thorn's
shoulders and before long her eyes closed and she dozed, a smile upon her face.
'I am sorry Gandalf could not join us at
the feast,' Blackthorn said.
'He had an errand,' Elrond replied. 'He
did hope to return in time for the music, however.'
'You will tell me when the night is
half-passed,' Blackthorn said. 'I fear I am not so well able to determine the
passage of time in your valley. It seems to me as if time stands still here.'
Elrond laughed. 'I have already
promised,' he said. 'When you see wine being served throughout the hall, you
will know it is nearly time.'
'Ah,' Blackthorn said. 'Very foresighted of you. Now you need not fear my asking
you after every tenth breath whether it is yet time.' Lily murmured in her
sleep and moved her head upon his shoulder. He smiled tenderly at her, raising
a hand to stroke her hair, then settled himself to listen to the music. Most of
the resident Elves were in the hall this night, their expressions intent as the
soft music filled the room, many cradling sleeping hobbit children in their
laps.
Most of the adult hobbits were wakeful, faces solemn. Deep inside himself Blackthorn knew what they were feeling. Perhaps this
time the Darkness had triumphed and the Light would not return. Yet, looking
about the Hall of Fire at the many fair faces that had become familiar over the
past weeks, looking into the face of the Lord who had opened his House to them,
he felt hope stir afresh. The music soothed, pulling him into a half-dream
where he walked in a fair land, fields and woods, well-kept roads and fences of
neatly-piled stone, holes and houses with bright painted round doors, hobbit
children playing in flowering meadows...
'I beg your pardon, Thorn,' a voice
broke into his pleasant dream and he blinked, seeing Elrond holding two
glasses, one blown to proper hobbit-size.
'It is time, already?' Blackthorn said,
stretching. 'How pleasantly the time passes here.' He took the glass, gazing
for a few moments into the bright fire, before standing to his feet. At a
signal from Elrond the song ended and silence fell.
The other grown and half-grown hobbits shook off dreams and stood up as well,
raising their glasses. The Elves waited.
'We gather to remember,' Thorn said in a
ringing voice that filled the hall.
'We remember,' the hobbits murmured, and
the Elves echoed.
'We honour those left behind,' he said,
and his voice dropped, the next words spoken in a low tone. 'Father.
Apple. Box...' All about the hall, the other hobbits
were naming names, loved ones who were not with them now. Sobs were heard, and
tears spilled, but the soft litany continued until every name had been said.
'We gather in thanksgiving, for all our
blessings, known to us, and beyond our knowledge,' Blackthorn intoned.
'Thanks,' the hobbits repeated, lifting
their glasses to the ceiling and then toasting their hosts and rescuers.
'We gather in hope,' Blackthorn
concluded, 'and to welcome the return of the Light.'
'Light!' the hobbits shouted, lifting
their glasses once more, and then draining the contents. Blackthorn turned to
Elrond. 'May your cup never be empty,' he said, 'and may your heart ever be
full.' All about the hall the other hobbits were saying the ritual words to
each other and to their elven friends, and the Elves
found themselves repeating the sentiments.
A tall figure in grey appeared in the doorway and the hobbits chorused, 'Gandalf!
Welcome!' Quite a few moved to the doorway, seizing his hands to draw him into
the room, bringing him to where Blackthorn stood beside Elrond's chair.
'Your foot is first over the threshold,'
the Thorn told him. 'To bring good luck for the new year
we must gift you.'
'Gift me?' the grey one said, bemused, quirking a shaggy eyebrow.
'Mother?'
Blackthorn said, and Violet stepped forward, a bulky parcel in her arms.
'You must take it,' she said. 'It will
bring us luck.'
The grey one took the parcel as the hobbits gathered about him. Curious, the
Elves watched as well. He untied the string, unwrapped the paper to reveal a
scarf knitted of silvery yarn the colour of moonlight on the river.
'Put it on!' Violet said firmly.
Grandalf fingered the soft yarn thoughtfully, and
then a smile creased his aged face. 'How does this come to me?' he asked.
'You were first to set foot over the
threshold after we called to the Light to return,' Thorn said. 'Yours is the
first foot. We must gift you for luck.'
'Put it on,' Leaf said.
Beech added, 'We need all the luck we
can get!'
Gandalf laughed softly and placed the scarf around his neck. 'Soft and warm,'
he said. 'And just the right colour!'
'You see?' Lily said in satisfaction. 'Already
the luck is starting.'
