The Puzzle Box
In a sunlit glen,
past the oldest mallorn tree, and through a field of elanor, a couple
say lay back in the grass and looked up at the mystifying shapes of
clouds, dreaming of the future and where it left them. "Nevatoriel..."
Legolas whispered. "I am leaving tomorrow, had you forgotten?"
"No," she
answered, "but I was putting it off until the last possible
moment."
He smiled. "Then I
have ruined your plan.1Goheno
nin."
Her golden laughter
filled the wood and she said, "There is nothing to forgive,
heruamin. But you owe me a kiss, just for thinking such."
He laughed and
kissed her lips, as she ran her fingers through his hair and looked
deeply into his star-blue eyes.
A voice echoed
through the Golden Wood, and they were called from their dream to
reality. As the two Elves walked back along the path, hardly any word
was said, for the companionable silence was enough and neither
thought to stain the quiet with conversation.
Upon reaching Caras
Galadhon, the home of Elvendom in Middle-earth, they walked the
gardens of Lothlorien, and bade each other farewell. Legolas gave
Nevatoriel a beautifully engraved puzzle box, and whispered that she
would find the way to open it. She just smiled and held him close.
By the time the
Elf-maiden awoke the next morning, Legolas had gone. She picked up
the puzzle box from the table beside her bed and failed to discover
the way to open it. She set it back down slightly discouraged, but
all the more determined to find the answer.
Feeling rather
adventurous, Nevatoriel dressed and grabbed up the box, heading down
to the kitchens for some 2lembas
bread. Having retrieved it, she walked out to the stables and saddled
her mare, and rode off into the Wood. Meanwhile, Legolas
was attending the council of Elrond, in Imladris.
Nevatoriel rode past
the old mallorn tree, through the field of elanor, and even past the
glen she and Legolas had been the day before. Slowly trotting along
the sun-spotted path, she sang an elven tune of love and sun-filled
memories, of the days before the darkening of Valinor.
When her song had
ended, she dismounted from her horse and tethered her to a nearby
sapling to graze. Having done so, she settled herself at the base of
a mallorn tree and tried to decipher the puzzle box.
The sudden crack of
a twig sent her climbing gracefully up the tree as orcs appeared
below moments later. They paused at the edge of the small clearing
and saw her horse, now edging fearfully away from the vile creatures.
Nevatoriel, looking
down from a high limb, heard a sharp crack as her branch
broke. She leapt up and found hold on a higher branch, but the orcs
now surrounded the base of the mallorn, and some had begun to
laboriously climb.
She jumped to the
ground and pulled her dagger from her belt and was, for some time,
victorious, for Elves are easily swifter than heavy uruk-hai. But as
she moved to slash one of her few remaining foes, she was pulled back
and her hands held behind her. Nevatoriel kicked the orcs before her
and struggled against the one behind, but she was quickly losing her
strength.
She stiffened when
she felt the icy-cold blade of an uruk on her neck, and the orcs took
their chance to bind her hands. Her dagger was taken from her, and
she was carried on the backs of an orc. They fled from the Golden
Wood, taking their prize to their master. As to whom it was,
Nevatoriel had no knowledge. For five days, they ran on without so
much as a pause, and finally stopped where the Nimrodel met the
Anduin.
Here, Nevatoriel was
set against a tree, with three guards about, and her own lembas bread
laid beside her. Hungry as she was, she barely found the strength to
reach it, and even then, to chew. But feeling slightly refreshed, she
looked about her, and heard the beautiful voice of Nimrodel as it
branched into the Great River, Anduin. Soothed by the serene rushing,
she closed her eyes, and fell into a deep slumber.
Nevatoriel awoke to
the very sound that had lulled her to sleep; only the song of
Nimrodel was differed, sounding angry, while before it had been
quiet, and tame. She tried to stand,
and found that her guards were gone. In fact, there were no orcs
anywhere that she could see. All traces of them had vanished, and
even she, an Elf, could not follow whatever trail had led them.
The only reminders
of her swift journey were her dagger, which she found near the shore,
her lembas, half-eaten from the night before, and her puzzle box.
Abashed, Nevatoriel wandered along the shore, and found that the sun
was barely risen. So, she followed the Nimrodel upstream, knowing it
would bring her back through Lorien.
For the next several
hours, Nevatoriel made her way silently alongside the river, at times
forced to find another path, losing sight of the Nimrodel. But
eventually, the sky was dimmed, and her feet would carry her no more.
She curled up against a tree, and there awaited dawn.
Waking once again to
the sound of Nimrodel, she again began her hike. On the second day,
she found traces of the path she had been carried days before. She
also found the slight footprints of Elves, following after. This
confused her, seeing as how any of her people out looking for her
would have met her along the path. But she neither saw nor heard
traces of her kin. For many days, she
still followed the Nimrodel, and it led her back through Lorien,
though she could find no familiar sights. It was, and yet wasn't,
her home. The forest she knew was bright, and you could hardly take a
step without seeing an animal. But in this forest, though it was the
same, carried no sound, and no creatures fled from her presence.
Mystified, she left
the banks of the river, and wandered deeper in, towards the very
heart of Lorien. The farther inward she went, the deeper and darker
her thoughts became. She began to feel creatures that had been unseen
following after her, always just out of her sight.
Finally, deep within
Lorien, Nevatoriel found Caras Galadhon. She wandered past the very
gates of the city, and finding no Elves about, she wound her way
through the trees, up the stairs, up the very tallest tree, to the
dwelling of Galadriel. Still, she found no kin. The city seemed
abandoned, unlived-in for hundreds of years.
Eventually,
Nevatoriel found herself in what had been the garden where she and
Legolas had said their farewells. Now, all that remained were wild
bushes, vines covering the once well-kept paths, and shadows.
Finally, able to take no more, she sat on a crumbling stone bench and
wept.
A soothing voice
echoed throughout the garden. "Why do you weep? What are these
tears upon your face?"
Without looking up,
Nevatoriel answered, "My soul is empty, and all I have left in me
are my tears."
She felt someone sit
beside her, close enough to touch, yet seemingly unreal. "Surely
this cannot be true, or you would not have returned."
This brought more
sobs from her. "I have returned from my bonds, to find my people
gone, my home forsaken. Why do you linger here, when all have fled?"
For a moment, no
answer was forthcoming. Then, "I have been waiting."
She looked up, to see
an Elf sitting beside her. Swiftly, she stood. "Who are you?"
He remained sitting,
staring, unblinking at her. "That is of no importance. What does
matter is why you are here. How you came to be here."
At this, she was
silent. Then she whispered, "I know not how I have come here, nor
why. I was captured by orcs, and they disappeared in a night. I found
my own way back to this place, only to find it abandoned, and my kin
gone."
He shook his head.
"This makes no sense. There have been no orcs for hundreds of
years; many were destroyed when the One Ring was destroyed, the
others hunted by the first reclaimed king of Gondor, Elessar. Surely,
you knew this?"
She took a step
back, staring at him. "The Ring was destroyed when Isildur cut it
from Sauron's hand, an age ago. Isildur's heir walks the wild; he
has laid no claim to the throne of Gondor. The sword remains broken,
in the halls of Elrond of Rivendell!" She turned and fled from the
garden.
Once away, she
glanced back to see if he followed her, and then she ran into him,
knocking both him and herself to the ground. He swiftly stood and
offered his hand to her. Suspiciously, she took it, and was
effortlessly hoisted to her feet. Still holding his hand, she moved
closer and looked into his eyes. With a gasp, she released his hand
stepped back. The man, thinking she was about to run again, reached
forward and grabbed her arm.
"Please don't
run, I have no wish to harm you."
She answered softly,
"How could I run from you, heruamin?"
Abashed, he released
her arm and looked at her, a puzzled expression on his face. "I
don't understand."
She smiled slightly,
a tear running down her face. "Do you not know me?"
He looked at her
again. "I have no memory of your face."
Another tear fell,
followed by another. "What is your name?"
He stepped forward
and wiped a tear from her face. "I am Lòmiean. My lady, why
do you cry?"
"I thought you
were the one I loved; your eyes tell me so. Yet you do not know me,
and you are not him."
He looked at her
sadly, and said, "Tell me, who was he?"
Another tear fell to
replace those wiped away. "He was Legolas, son of Thranduil."
He furrowed his
brow. "Legolas, the prince of Mirkwood?"
"Yes, do you know
of him?"
"I should. He was
my father."
For the next two
days, Nevatoriel remained abed, held by her dreams, the darkness that
always threatened to take her, and a haunting sense of betrayal that
would not dissipate. When she finally regained her conscientiousness,
Lòmiean was sitting at her bedside, waiting for her to rouse.
When she opened her eyes, she first noticed that he was sitting in a
chair at her bedside, asleep.
She sighed, now
knowing that it could not be a dream. Lòmiean, disturbed by
her awakening, himself awoke and stood. He took a step closer to the
bed, and looked down at her. "My lady, you are well?"
She nodded, finding
no words. He smiled slightly, and turned to walk out of the room. It
was then that she looked about, and found the room familiar to her.
Indeed, it was her own room. She shook her head, and looked to the
table beside, where the puzzle box had been set. She leaned over to
pick it up, and tried, as she had so many times on her return to the
now-abandoned city, to open it.
Lòmiean
returned, bearing a tray of food and fresh water, which he set on the
table where the box had just been. He nodded at the sight of it, and
said, "That is beautiful craftsmanship. Whoever designed it was a
true master."
Nevatoriel smiled
sadly. "Your father gave it to me on our last night together. Then
he left for Imladris."
He sat on the edge
of her bed and replied, "Rivendell is abandoned as well, and none
now dwell there. The Elves of Imladris and Mirkwood left for Valinor
at the end of the Third Age, as did the Lady Galadriel and Lord
Celeborn, and with them the Galadrim."
She turned to look
out of the window, and looked out on the gray city, once bright and
green with happiness and peace. Now she saw all the trees were
overgrown with vines, the paths were shattered, and all of the plants
ran wildly together. "Why did you stay, Lòmiean? What reason
had you to remain, while your kin fled this realm, onto peace and
never-ending youth? In this dim world, surely nothing flourishes, for
where it once bright, now is gray. The sun is darkened, and the light
has fled."
He smiled sadly.
"Beyond the borders of this land, life does flourish. It is an age
of Men, my lady. But I was bidden to stay, by my heart and the will
of my father. I did not then see his purpose, and a life apart from
the light was near more than I could bear. But I did as I was bid,
and now I am thankful for my life of solitude."
"Why should anyone
be grateful to be alone?"
He smiled again.
"Now, when I am no longer alone, I can be grateful for a presence,
instead of taking it for granted."
She looked up from
the window, now seeing a new light. Whether she had been too
distraught to see it before, or due to the new-found hope, there was
a radiance shining from Lòmiean, a slight glow, and it drew
her towards him.
He leaned over and
gently brushed her hand with his own, and smiled. "Now eat, and
rest. When you awake, we can go out into the city, if you wish it."
Turning back to the
window, she replied, "3Hannon
le."
"4Le
creoso. Nîn hiril…Hebo estel." And then he left.
The next morning,
Nevatoriel woke to the sound of birdsong. Amazed, since she had heard
no birds singing the days before, she got out of bed and walked into
the hall. Following the sound down the hall and through various
rooms, she finally came across the source. A nightingale was sitting
in a tree branch, in a room near the center of the palace. The tree,
which had grown through a crack in the tile, now towered far above
her head. Several nests were scattered throughout the limbs, in which
many of the birds now roosted.
Suddenly overcome
with a bubbling happiness, she began to sing with the nightingale,
which flew down to rest upon her shoulder. More birds soon joined in,
and Lòmiean, grinning, also appeared and sang along. By the
time the song was ended, Nevatoriel's face was wet with tears.
Lòmiean
stepped close to her, and gently brushed away a tear. "Why now do
you cry, my lady?"
She looked up at him
and smiled. "I cry because I am happy, Lòmiean."
He smiled as well,
and took her by the hand and led her out the door, outside to show
her the city.
Looking below across
the city, abandoned, but unlessened in beauty, Nevatoriel and Lòmiean
stood above the gates.
He whispered into
her ear, "My lady, you have not yet told me your name."
She smiled and
answered, "Nevatoriel."
The two stood there
long moments, watching the dusk arrive. As the sun set, the most
vivid hues of the sun blazed across the horizon, vibrant reds and
oranges, set with bright pinks and, as the darkness fell, deep
purples and blues. Finally, the moon rose, and the stars shone bright
above them. They walked slowly back to the hall.
Back in her room,
Lòmiean bade her good night. Once he had left, Nevatoriel lay
back on her pillows and turned to look out the window, as she had
just last night. Oh, how different it all seemed now! Yesterday, all
had been bleak and empty, and in one day it had gone to bright and
beautiful once more. She sighed, and burrowed deeper under the
blanket, where she fell to sleep.
The next morning,
Nevatoriel was awakened by the sun's first rays of light shining
into her room. She sat up, and tried to remember all that had
befallen her in the days before. It was then that she turned and saw
Lòmiean leaning in the doorway. "5Mára
aurë, Lòmiean. I Anor hilól." She grinned.
He laughed. "Indeed
it is, 6nîn
hiril."
She leaned over and
picked up her puzzle box from the bedside table as he approached the
bed and sat on the edge. He tilted his head and asked, "Why do you
wish so badly to open it? Does it hold a secret?"
She shook her head.
"As to that, I could not say."
He offered to try
and open it for her, but she refused, saying she was meant to open
it, or never know what it held. He shrugged and watched her struggle
to decipher the puzzle. After a long while, she sighed and placed it
back on the table.
"So, does this
mean you are ready for another day?" He asked.
Smiling, she
answered, "7Tancave."
When the sun was
almost directly above their heads, they found themselves sitting on a
small footbridge over the Nimrodel, their feet dangling over the edge
and hanging in the gently flowing water. Occasionally, a fish would
splash, and now several birds sang their lively tunes. Nevatoriel
held her face in the breeze, her golden hair flowing out behind her.
Lòmiean just smiled and silently watched her.
She sighed
contentedly, and turned to stare into those deep blue eyes, those
that she had once known, and those she knew. Smiling, she stood and
pulled him up after her.
Together, they
walked back into the city, laughing.
As another day was
ended, they watched the dusk embrace the day from a low bluff,
looking out across the far horizon. When the darkness fell once more,
they walked down into a glen and lay in the cool grass, gazing up at
the stars. "You know," Lòmiean said, "the Valar watch us
from the stars. There would be no greater relief than to know that
they guide our ships to the far shore."
Nevatoriel smiled.
"No greater relief, indeed."
There they fell
asleep, Lòmiean leaning against an old mallorn tree, his arm
wrapped around her shoulders, she lying with her cheek resting
against his chest.
Slightly chilled, as
Lorien was not renowned for its warm nights, Nevatoriel and Lòmiean
awoke shivering. He briskly rubbed her shoulders in an effort to warm
her, to no avail. So they went back to the city and sat around a fire
in the hall. Nevatoriel retrieved her puzzle box from her room and
then came back down.
Sitting near the
fire calmed as well as warmed them, and they were grateful for the
sweet smell of smoke, and the sight. A silver column wafting up to
the high ceiling, drifting in curls and swift curves, mesmerizing
them to watch until it reached the top and reluctantly dissipated…
But the silence was
broken with a pop as the puzzle box's lid slowly lifted.
Nevatoriel and Lòmiean stared at it, shocked, and then she
hesitantly reached inside and pulled out a slip of paper.
This is what was
written there:
Neva,
8No
le an-uir nîn. Melon lîn heir
estel nîn. Le
melon, astoldo hiril.
Belain na le,
Legolas
Nevatoriel stared
down at the note in her hands, smiling with tears upon her face. She
looked up, but instead of seeing the eyes of Lòmiean, she
looked up at a ceiling. Moving to turn, she discovered she was lying
abed, in her room once again. Bewildered, she sat up swiftly, drawing
the attention of Celebsilen, who was sitting in the chair at her
bedside.
"Neva, are you
alright?" She asked, her permanent worry mark deepening.
She closed her eyes,
and then looked back down at the note. It was tear-stained, and she
clutched it in her hand. She shook her head, and held a hand to her
head. "As far as I'm concerned, nothing is right."
Celebsilen arched an
eyebrow, but wisely said nothing. Shaking her head, she walked from
the room.
Nevatoriel furrowed
her brow, and flipped the note over. On the other side, another
message was written, but it was not in Legolas' hand. It merely
said:
9Nîn
hiril, en govadad i ambar tûr dûrin. Ten lau lòmë
lîn amarth, melon nîn. Namárië.
Lòmiean
Looking up, new
tears on her face, Nevatoriel turned to look out the window. Her
sharp eyes were not granted the sight of crumbling sidewalks, nor
vine-covered buildings. Instead, her eyes were met with the beautiful
works of centuries, attended and shining with radiance. She sighed,
and heard someone, pausing before the door. She did not turn,
thinking it was Celebsilen. A soft, hesitant
voice sounded through her room. "So, have you forgotten me
already?"
Swiftly, she turned.
"Legolas!" Despite the many blankets attempting to ensnare her
within themselves, she managed to half-leap, half-fall from the bed
and into the prince's arms. She buried her face in his chest.
He held her close as
her tears fell unashamedly from her eyes, and that was how Celebsilen
found them. A slight smile played over the lady's sharp features,
and she left silently.
Nevatoriel looked up
into Legolas' eyes, and in a distant memory, in a very deep corner
of her mind, she thought of Lòmiean. Deep, starry blue, the
light and love reflecting on them, beautiful, mysterious eyes.
Legolas' eyes, however, now shone slightly with worry and
weariness. "Are you alright?"
"Tancave," she answered.
"Positive?"
"Yes."
"Have you opened
the puzzle box?"
She smiled mysteriously. "Yes."
٭
1 Forgive me
2 Elvish waybread; life bread
3 Thank you
4 You're welcome. My lady…Have hope.
5 Hello, Lòmiean. The sun is shining.
6 My lady
7 Yes (certainly)
8 You will be mine forever. Your love gives me hope. I love you, valiant lady. The Valar be with you. Legolas
9 My lady, time and fate are dark masters. Do not let the dusk be your doom, my friend. Farewell. Lòmiean
