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.)
Aemilia and Xena, the last chapter was a difficult read (and write!) but this
next chapter is more fun, I promise.
Runaway Update: The last chapter is written! Now we just need to finish
the in-between material—two chapters? Three? Not quite sure yet. Another
chapter is finished and ready to put up in the next day or two (when I get to
it), I hope. I know I promised it this week but my co-author was on vacation
last week.
Expect another chapter of "Small and Passing Thing" the day after tomorrow, if
all goes well. My editor is helping me whip the thing into shape, chapter by
chapter. Thank you for your patience. You might check the bio page at ff.net on
days when no update of "Small and Passing" is due, for I still hope to be
putting up snippets of one-shot stories (another cold has laid me low), and/or "Shire"
which is finished (!) and now under my editor's knife.
***
Chapter 32. Black Sheep Shorn
When the merrymakers returned from the Green Dragon, Frodo had a minor crisis
to deal with.
Mrs Cotton met him with a grim face. 'She's your cousin, Mr Frodo, and
with her parents away, it's up to you to deal with her, her brother
being so ill and all...'
Frodo wondered what in the world Estella had done now. He didn't have to wait
long to find out. He knocked at the door of the room the Cottons had given her
upon her arrival, and at the defiant "Enter!" he opened the door cautiously,
wary of thrown objects. No war engines launched their shot however, and he
entered the room, stopping short in surprise.
'Estella, what have you done to yourself?' he asked in astonishment. 'You look
like a sheep that's been shorn.'
'I cut my hair,' she sniffed as a tear spilled over and ran down her cheek.
'Freddy said—he said—and he didn't know me,' she sobbed, 'and it was because my
hair was growing out and I looked as he remembered me, and so I cut it off, and
so... so there!'
'You look positively...' Frodo searched for a word, but ended up spilling the
truth. '...awful.'
'I know,' Estella said with another sniff. 'The worst part is, I'm afraid to go
and see Freddy. What if he still doesn't know me after I've gone and done
this?'
Some instinct prompted Frodo to hold out his arms, and Estella crossed the room
to him, snuggling against him and weeping the tears she had not let fall
before. He folded his arms around her and held her while she cried, and when
she finished he fished a snowy handkerchief from his pocket and dabbed at her
face. She took it from him to finish the job.
'Better?' Frodo asked. Estella nodded. 'Shall we go and see Freddy?' Estella
shook her head. 'Come now, midge; I think at the very least he will laugh.'
'Do you think so?' she whispered, torn between hope and fear. 'O Fro, do you
really think so?'
'We have to find out,' Frodo said. He put a hand to his head. 'Do you think my
hair looks satisfactory?' She snorted and gave him a push, and he laughed.
'Come along, midge. Why, Freddy's not been pestered all day, you know.'
She let him lead her to Freddy's room. He peeked in to see Rose sitting by the
bed, knitting. 'Hullo!' Frodo said. 'Is anyone in?'
Freddy looked up from his contemplation of Rose's work. 'Hullo Frodo, did you
have a pint for me?'
Frodo slapped a hand to his forehead in apparent consternation. 'I forgot!' he
said. 'Now I will have to go back and do it over again to get it right!'
'Ah,' Freddy said. 'Practice makes perfect.' He looked past Frodo. 'What're you
doing hovering back there, Babe? Do you have some mischief or other planned?'
Estella stepped into the room, her expression brightening. 'Of course, you old
Gaffer,' she said haughtily. 'When have I not had mischief planned?'
Rose looked from Estella to Freddy with a thoughtful expression. 'I'll just go
tell Mum to brew a pot of tea,' she said, putting her knitting away and
slipping from the room. Frodo had the feeling that Mrs Cotton would be set
straight, and very soon.
***
Later that evening after Estella had badgered Freddy into eating every scrap of
his supper and asking for more in the bargain, Farmer Cotton came into the
bedroom. 'Thought I'd sit and smoke in here, if you don't mind,' he said. 'I
brought an extra pipe, just in case, Mr Freddy...'
'Very thoughtful of you,' Freddy said. 'As a matter of fact, a pipe would be a
fine ending to that meal.'
Farmer Cotton nodded, filled one of the pipes, got it going well, and passed it
to Freddy. He soon had his own pipe going and sat down to a companionable
smoke.
'I'm off to bed,' Estella announced, getting up and picking up the tray. 'And
you ought to sleep soon yourself, Gaffer,' she said.
'Don't you worry your little head about me, Babe,' Freddy said placidly. 'Why,
I might drop off before the pipe is smoked.'
'You'd do better to finish the pipe first,' Farmer Cotton said. 'It's some
pipeweed we hid in the barn, that didn't get gathered, and it would be a
terrible waste to fall asleep and spill your pipe on the bed only half-done.'
'Not to mention what it would do to the bedcovers,' Estella said righteously.
'Such a touching concern for the bedcovers, Babe,' Freddy said. 'How many
sheets have you cut up?'
'That was when I was little,' Estella said with dignity, 'and folk
didn't have the sense to keep the scissors out of a small child's reach!'
'Ah, so that's how it was,' Freddy said. 'Well then, Babe, good night. Mistress
Cotton needn't worry about her sheets this night it seems. The good Farmer will
catch my pipe ere it falls, should I drop off, and you've left off cutting up
good bedclothes, although you've turned to other interests, I'd warrant.' It
was the closest he'd come to mentioning her hair, but there was a thoughtful
look in his eye, and perhaps... a touch of gratitude?
'Perhaps,' Estella said grandly, with her nose in the air. 'I shall see you at
breakfast, brother, and I hope your ancient and creaking bones rest
comfortably.' She marched from the room.
Frodo caught her in the kitchen. 'It went exactly as I thought it would,' he
said, taking the tray from her and carrying it over to the washstand. 'Come
here, midge.' He put the plate, cup and silver into the wash water, picked up a
scrubber and began to wash each article, nodded to Estella to take up a cloth
and dry what he dipped into the rinse water and handed to her. It was the first
time she'd dried dishes since leaving Twig behind, and it gave her a pleasant,
useful feeling.
When they were finished Frodo said, 'Come, sit with me for a moment.' There was
a cosied teapot and two mugs on the kitchen table, and they sat down opposite
each other. The rest of the family and guests were already preparing for bed,
for common hobbits do not as a rule stay up past supper the way the great
families do, except for a special occasion such as a birthday or wedding.
Frodo poured out tea and let Estella fix her own cup to her liking, not
commenting when she added several spoonfuls of sweetening to her cup. 'You did
exactly the right thing today,' he said firmly.
Estella's hand rose halfway to her head and then she snatched it down and put
it flat on the table. 'What do you mean?' she asked.
'Cutting your hair was just the right thing for Freddy,' Frodo said. He put a
hand on hers and said, 'This will not be easy to tell you, but I think you
ought to know. I think you are old enough, and strong enough, and Freddy needs
you if he is to survive this.'
'Survive!' she gasped. Frodo waited for
her to calm herself, and calm herself she did, showing some of the iron will
that had made her mother despair in Estella's earlier years, but would stand
her in good stead now and in future. 'Very well,' she said resolutely. 'Tell
away.'
Frodo recounted the conversation in the quiet corner at the Green Dragon,
watching her face intently all the while. She swallowed hard and her fingers
tightened on her mug until the knuckles turned white, but she showed no sign of
queasiness or fainting, and Frodo nodded to himself. He'd been right in his
estimation of this young cousin of his.
'So the wizard poisoned his mind with thoughts of family and home,' Estella said
slowly when he'd finished. She shivered but her eyes were hard and cold.
'Yes,' Frodo said quietly. 'Your parents confounded the wizard's plot by the
fact that they were wearing the old cast-off clothes of the gardener and his
wife, not richly dressed as Freddy remembered them, and you...'
'And I didn't look like the little sister he remembered,' Estella said. 'It is
a mercy, I suppose, that in the wizard's dreams I looked like Estella of Budge
Hall and not Twig.'
'Yes,' Frodo said seriously. 'It is a mercy indeed. We'd have to send you away
otherwise, and I do not know if he would ever be strong enough to see you
again.'
'Ever!' Estella gasped.
Frodo shook his head. 'I do not know if he will ever recover from this spell
that has been laid upon him by Saruman's Voice,' he said. 'I mean to send a
message to Gandalf, to ask his advice, but I do not know how long it will take
to reach him, for I am not even sure where he is at present.'
'Freddy will be well again,' Estella said, grim determination in her voice. 'He
will!'
'He may never be able to go home again,' Frodo warned.
'Don't say that!' Estella snapped. 'We are going to fight this! No dead wizard
is going to ruin my brother's life!'
Frodo had no doubt that if it was anywhere in Estella's power to save Fredegar,
he'd be saved. If...
