Notes to Readers:
Please be sure to leave a review! They are very motivating, and each review you
leave entitles you to a free cup of cyber-tea in the parlour (The Muse and I do
try to make our guests feel welcome). What you are seeing here is the edited draft.
(Thanks to my editor who prefers to work behind the scenes.)
Thanks for the comments! How do you like your tea?
Bookworm, I wonder what Freddy will think when he finally hears the truth about
Shelob.
Aemilia, it is nice to see him feeling better. I'm glad (speaking as writer and
reader) that hobbits recover from their ills so quickly. Just think, it's been
only a few days since he was released from the Lockholes!
Xena, there's nothing quite like cousinly badgering to make a hobbit feel more
like himself.
Another chapter of "Runaway" is in the works and you'll see it as soon as we
can get it finished. We are stalled at the moment. The demands of this season
have hijacked the schedule and very little writing is being done. I am hoping
that we'll be able to finish it after the holidays. (Good thing "Small and
Passing Thing" is already written! In the meantime work continues on "Shire"
and a story about Pearl Took.) Expect another chapter of "Small and Passing
Thing" day after tomorrow, if all goes well. Thank you for your patience.
***
Chapter 15. Another Pause
'Hurrah!' young Frodo-lad cheered. 'Mr Freddy is on the mend!'
'But what of Estella? When will her family get her back?' little Rose wanted to
know.
'I think it would be fun to be a boy,' Lily mused.
'Lily!' Her mother laughed in shocked amusement. The thought had sometimes
crossed Elanor's mind, to be truthful, when cumbersome skirts and dusting had
frustrated her, whilst her brothers worked in the fresh air out of doors. Of
course, she would never admit as much to her daughters, not until they were
joyful mothers with their own brood and understood how fine it was to be a girl
after all.
'Is the story nearly over?' Elfstan wanted to know.
'Not for quite awhile,' Samwise said, 'but that's enough for tonight. Why, your
mum might put me on water rations if I read into the wee hours again, as I did
last night!'
'I wish I could eat every hour on the hour,' Tolman grumbled. He was a
teen, growing rapidly, and his mother despaired of ever filling him up.
'Off to bed with you now,' Fastred said, knocking out his pipe. 'If you tire
your gran-dad too much, he might not be up to reading to you on the morrow, eh,
Sam-dad?'
'Gran-dad's never tired!' Frodo-lad shouted.
'I don't know whose gran-dad you're talking about,' Sam said reasonably. 'This
one's ready to seek the pillow.' He smiled at the eager faces before him, the
future of the Shire. How he'd miss seeing them grow up.
'We'll read on tomorrow, if you get all your chores done in good time without
grumbling,' he said.
'It's a promise!' the children chorused, and Elanor laughed.
'Honestly, Dad, I don't know what took you so long!' she said.
'Eh? What's that?' Sam said.
'You ought to have come round here years ago with a big book and a
promise. Chores done in good time and no grumbling! 'Tis every mum's dream!'
'Ah, then, sweet dreams, Ellie,' Sam said with a fond smile, ruffling the curls
that would not stay confined. 'Sweet dreams, my lass, and I'll see you in the
morning.'
As she moved around the parlour to blow out the lamps, he patted the Red Book.
'Good night, Mr Frodo,' he said softly. 'One of these mornings I'll be seeing
you.'
'What was that, Dad?' Elanor said, turning from putting the watch-lamp in the
window.
'O just talking to myself, lass, naught for you to worry your bright head
about,' Sam said, and yawned.
'Ah,' Elanor said wisely. 'I won't trouble my head about it, then, unless you
start to answer yourself. Good night, Dad,' she said tenderly, and they went
their separate ways.
