A Burg’s (Yule Fest) Tale – Part 2

Previously:

Dandelion pursed her lips. “Money and forms. I bet they would show for sure where the money is going. If it’s not going where it should, the townsfolk can take action against him.” She looked up at me. “More theft?”

Tinendail finally jogged up to us with a happy, “What did I miss?” His bright features and youthful enthusiasm almost lit up the cold night.

“We’re going to steal the Yule Festival,” I replied quietly, eyes narrowed.

———————–

Tinendail’s excited face said it all, but he still blankly replied, “What? How do you steal a festival?”

Trennil chimed in with, “I imagine you take all the decorations.”

The elf frowned. “Oh. And the food?”

The dwarf’s nod turned enthusiastic. “And the kegs!” he answered with a gleam in his eyes.

I lifted my brows at them. “Just the gold, actually.” I waved my hand slightly. “Where would we hide enough food and decorations to fill several wagons to sneak it out of here? And the snowmen. And the kegs.” I stopped. “Though the fancy horses we saw on the way in…”

“Morchandir,” Gammer interrupted me with a glare. “Theft for a good cause, not personal gain.”

I spread my hands with as innocent a look at her as I could produce. “How do you know I wasn’t going to sell them for more money to spread around or give them to the poor here?”

She jabbed me in the stomach with a finger, and I flinched at the feeling. “Because I know you, grandson. Besides, who are you going to sell them to here that has the money to buy them all? Now, do you have a plan to get down to the fort or not?”

Both Gareth and Daley looked from the hobbit to me and back again with expressions of confusion at her title for me. Obviously figuring it was a private joke of some form, they shrugged at one another and let it go. “I would wait for Frostway to take the latest papers and gold down tonight. He usually comes at the twenty-first hour and leaves within a half hour afterward.”

Dandelion nodded slightly. “So, nine in the evening,” she offered to the two Men. At their nods, she glanced back at us. “Do you think you can get there and back, Morchandir? Or should we go with you? You know we have little skill in stealth, but we might prove useful as a distraction for you.”

I shook my head. “No. I can handle it. You should all stay here and see what else you can do to help the poor while I’m gone. If I’m not back in a couple of hours, or you hear a commotion, best high tail it out of Frostbluff before they come looking to question you.”

“Absolutely not,” Dandelion stated with finality. “We’ll come and get you.”

I lifted my hands. “I didn’t say that I would stay captured for long. It’s the alternative you’d need to worry about.”

Gareth made a little sound. “I doubt they’d kill you. Or at least, kill you right away. They’d want to know what you were up to, first. Rough you up and make an example of you to uphold their charitable spirit and dedication to protecting the money-bearing guests in Winter-home.”

“Or use you as a reason to get rid of us poor folks much easier,” Daley added from nearby. “Don’t get caught, would you?”

I nodded with narrowing eyes and rubbed my gloved hands together. “So, it’s going to be murder,” I said with no small amount of grim delight.

“No!” the entire group answered at once in varying degrees of exasperation, horror, and surprise depending on how well they knew me. They looked at one another for a long moment after the outburst.

“No killing people, Morchandir,” Dandelion ordered with a pointed finger up at me.  “It’s Yule, for pity’s sake!”

I rolled my eyes. “Fine,” I replied, elongating the vowel sound. “I won’t take the easy way.”

Dandelion nodded, satisfied, but Gareth lofted a dubious brow. “Perhaps someone should go with you to keep Frostway alive…?”

Trennil grunted softly. “Eh. If longshanks here says he won’t, he won’t. He keeps his word remarkably well for a burglar.”

“If you say so.” Gareth didn’t look particularly convinced. On the other hand, murdering someone intent on directly or indirectly killing him and others like him slowly with exposure to the deep cold of Winter-home seemed to be low on his list of concerns. I could see as that very idea sank in given how his expression relaxed. “You may find Banker Archbluff down there, too. Someone has to count that filthy lucre.”

I set off in my formal festival garments, since I had nothing else to wear for proper sneaking, after spotting the guard entering the settlement. I decided to lie in wait for Frostway’s return just around the corner of the fort. If one could call the tiny little wooden structure a true fort. It wouldn’t last more than a minute in a true fight. The frost grims on the frozen lake nearby would be a far better deterrent to anyone looking to attack.

I plucked several of the winterberries from a nearby snow-covered shrub to pocket and take in with me later. Or eat them. I knew they would come in handy somewhere and somehow, either way. Peering through one of the half-fogged windows, I could see a lantern and a figure at the table inside. Only one, I noted, and no more. Retreating, I examined the structure more in depth, wondering if it would be better to climb up and enter through one of the upper windows. I swear I heard Tinendail’s voice lifted in a cheer and Yule song at one point along with an accompanying, if long-suffering, grunt from a snow-beast. All remained silent after the distant ruckus until the tell-tale noise of approaching boots on ice and snow echoed through the icy air. I crept to the corner of the fort to watch Guard Frostway draw nearer before pulling back to remain unseen. The door creaked open on its hinges and shut with a heavy thump after.

I moved around to the front of the fort and had another good look at it. Kicking in the door was impossible: it may not have been much of a fort, but the building materials still held true. They could bar it from within. They would definitely hear me were I to attempt to scale the wooden walls. I was about to make another circuit to see if I’d missed anything when the door hauled open to reveal Frostway.

The man stepped out, half-closing the door behind him, and demanded, “’You nosey patrons should mind your own business and stay in the Festival area! You’re out of bounds, Man, and out of your depth!”

I blinked at him and held up both hands. “Whoa, sir. I wanted to knock on the door to see if anyone was within who might help me get back to the Festival area. All you need do is point me in the right direction. Why are you being so aggressive?” I squinted at him as my hands dropped. “It’s nearly suspicious, if you ask me. Aren’t you supposed to help us patrons?”

He stabbed a finger along the path leading over the stone bridge. “Back that way, and don’t let me catch you out here again!”

I leveled a stare down at him. “Now, I know something is going on.” I craned my neck to attempt to see around him into the darkness of the fort. “Maybe I should go inside and make sure nobody in there is being hurt.” I stepped forward with intent and found myself staring at his upheld hand almost to my chest and the other at his club.

“So you’re intent on sticking your nose where it don’t belong?” Frostway growled in what he must have thought was a threatening manner. “The mayor pays me good money to make sure folks like you don’t dig up any unwanted dirt!”

I lifted my hand and pushed at his with a single index finger. “You should work on your deception skills,” I sneered. “If I wasn’t sure something bad was happening here and the mayor was involved, you just confirmed it. Hope he finds smarter people soon.”

His club fumbled up from his belt. “You should learn to mind your own business!” he cried as he lunged for me.

He missed as I sidestepped the blow. “I promised no killing, but you’re making it really difficult for me, right now,” I growled. When he came for me again, I grabbed one of his wrists, twisted, and elbowed him in the face before slipping away. He stumbled, hand lifting to touch his nose and cheek, and made an unpleasant noise of pain.

I still hadn’t drawn my weapons, though, and the realization seemed to rattle him just a bit. “Y-you best clear off!” he stammered with as much bravado as he could muster. “There’s no proof of anything!”

“Not until I get my hands on whatever is inside the fort,” I acknowledged, only to find him charging at me again with a desperately angry cry. This time, I swept his legs from beneath him and let his forward motion plant him face-first into both the snow and the side of the fort. I could hear the timbers rattle slightly at the impact.

“You’re strong! Too strong….” he whimpered. Getting to his feet unsteadily, he left his club where it had fallen to half-stagger his way back toward the bridge and Winter-home. I watched him go and heard the door open again behind me as Frostway lamented, “I’ve had enough of this job! The mayor has caused me nothing but trouble.”

“I dare you to tell him to his face that you quit and why!” I called after him smugly.

“Insufferable,” a new voice scoffed from the fort. I turned back to face the speaker and beheld a balding man in a dark robe of rich materials. “You insult the mayor by coming here unbidden!”

“Archbluff, I presume,” I drawled. “Why would I let any man, elf, dwarf, or hobbit tell me where I can and can’t go in a festival?” I looked over his shoulder past the open door. “Besides, you’re up to something rather horrible here, I think, and it’s my duty as a patron of this festival to protect the townsfolk from it.”

The fat man visibly bristled up at my words. “I’ll not let you smear the mayor’s reputation, or the reputation of this town… Not after all the sacrifices we’ve made.”

I motioned. “You do know that sacrificing lives for gold is generally frowned upon by most law-abiding and decent races, don’t you?” I countered. “Those are the only sacrifices I’ve heard you’ve made. Certainly nothing of your own.”

He laughed. “You fool. By challenging this fort, you are challenging the mayor. I think he will send you to the stocks for this, once I knock you out.” He balled up his fists as if he were a brawler. “And he’ll find out whoever sent you here, stranger.”

“The name,” I said as I stood straighter, “is Morchandir. Don’t be an idiot with your arrogance, Archbluff. We both know you can’t fight, let alone fight off your natural predator.” Burglars and bankers, I mused. The great circle of life.

He chose to be an idiot, however. Rushing me, he swung for my face with a bellowed, “I’ll make you wish you never grew so bold!” The problem was that he had to swing up and, from the slight hop he had to do along with his absolutely atrocious form, I revised my impression of his brawler stance. He’d simply been lucky enough to hit on it.

I jerked up and back to avoid it. “Try harder,” I sneered. “Though I doubt it will do you any good.”

He huffed and wildly flailed for my midsection with a growl. He missed by a league. “Why are you here?” he demanded. “Do you think any good will come of exposing us?” He wanted to try a different tactic, I saw. I appreciated the mouth he had on him. It was more than I usually received in a fight.

“I do, actually. It’s almost as if stopping your predatory ways on the poor,” I paused to slap away another slow, heavy strike from him, “of Winter-home is the right thing to do.” I jabbed quickly at his gut and felt it sink into the fleshy mass as if I’d just kneaded dough.

Archbluff doubled over with a cry of dismayed discomfort. “Do you think you have not also profited at the expense of the poor?” he wheezed at me. The words forced my hesitation. “You think you are helping them by coming here…” He laughed breathlessly. “But think! How many coins have you reaped at their expense?”

“Too many.” I slapped his face lightly. “Which means I’m here to make it up to them now that I know what I’ve done. Stand up straight, already!” I snorted. “You wanted this fight. Finish it, then.” I added, “Or actually start it, come to think.”

“Ah!” His cry at the slap bordered on girlish. He valiantly attempted an uppercut, landed it, but I didn’t have a glass jaw while he didn’t have the strength to make it count. It rattled my teeth slightly at most.

Dancing aside at his follow-up blow, I caught his arm, twisted it behind him, and held him at my mercy. While I had him there, I made sure to rifle through his pouches and pockets as he whimpered from the sharp pains in his joints at the positioning. “At least when this news breaks out, you won’t have to worry about the mayor silencing you for your failure.”

When I released him, I shoved him ahead of me toward the stone bridge. He thrashed forward two steps, tripped, and went into the nearby snowbank much like Frostway had done. Pulling up his snow-covered face and beard, he panted, “I… I am not strong enough to stop you.” Glad you came to that same conclusion I did at the start, I told him silently. I wish you’d have done it then, too. “You may do as you like. Just leave me out of it!” he cried as he got unsteadily to his feet to hastily depart.

“Your name and Frostway’s will be on everyone’s tongues before nightfall!” I called after him. “Shame! Shame on your house! On your family!” On your cow? I wondered. What else would there be to shame? I glanced at the hole he’d left in the snow and found a scrap of paper had come from one of his pockets as I’d rifled through them. I bent to retrieve it before looking up at his departing figure.

I made sure he was out of sight down the trail before going into the dimly lit and admittedly barely warm interior of the so-called fort. Unfolding the paper, I read it through. My brows lifted. “Mayor Goodnough, you’ve been a naughty boy,” I said, vaguely impressed at the evidence of wrongdoing I now held in my hand. Misappropriation of funds was the tip of the iceberg – the paper gave specific details of where the money was going, and none of it was for the Festival or the town. Some of it looked to even be of a Shadowy nature.

I ransacked the fort for anything valuable and for backing up the information on the paper I had taken off the banker. Both the former and the latter went into a rug I folded up to make into a makeshift sack, tied off with some rope, and hefted over my shoulder. “Should’ve brought Neeker,” I grumbled mostly to myself as I left the fort, closed the door behind me on its dark interior, and trudged back toward the settlement on the hill above.

It took most of that hour or so I had mentioned to my group to return to the back entrance. Trennil stood nearby looking for me with a mittened hand shielding his squinted eyes from above. “There you are, laddie,” he greeted me with no small amount of relief. “I spotted a battered guard and a huffing banker come this way a bit ago and worried a little for you. I’ve not heard a ruckus from anyone inside yet, and if the mayor had been warned I suppose he’d have either sent people down or been out of here like the Witch-king himself dogged his heels.” He patted my upper arm. “What do you have, there?”

“Evidence,” I replied. “And possibly things to give to the needful from the fort. Plenty of money they had stored down there, but also some goods, too. Some of it goes with our written evidence, but to be honest?” I shook my head. “I don’t think we’ll need much of it once I face down the mayor with what we’ve discovered.”

Trennil grunted. “It probably belongs to someone in Winter-home anyway.” He motioned up the stairs. “Want me to carry that to Rust while you do the honors with the shady ringleader of this mess?”

I hefted the rug off my shoulder and passed it to the dwarf. “Delighted. I’ll meet you there when I’m done.”

I walked past the filthy tables and massive kegs along the side path at the ground level as the scent of freshly baked good wafted along the cold air from the kitchens behind and above me. Revelers laughed and danced in the courtyard just ahead of me as a bard played festive tunes. I prowled past them to where the mayor stood looking around and occasionally waving and chatting with some visitor who passed by. Upon spotting me, his expression brightened noticeably.

“What did you find out from Gareth Rust? Anything I can use against him?” Winston Goodnough asked eagerly. “I’ve been waiting for quite some time to rid myself of him!”

I fished out the paper from my pocket without answering him. Opening it, I thrust it out so that he could read its contents. It was so close to him that he had to step back slightly with a frown. “What’s that you have there?” he asked as he refocused on the receipt. As he read it, he paled until he nearly matched the color of the snow around us. “W- what are you going to do with that?!” he stammered in fright. “Surely you don’t mean to tell our innocent visitors of this… do you?” He stared at me in horror, eyes wide. “Please… I will do anything you ask if you just put that paper back where it belongs, hidden away…” He clasped his hands in front of him.

“Anything?” I echoed coldly, staring down at him without blinking or expression.

“What do you want?” he asked eagerly. “What share of the profit will appease you?”

I folded the paper up and tucked it into my pocket once again, safe and sound. “I have demands,” I replied softly, my gaze never leaving his face. “First, you’ll give back everyone’s jobs. Second, you’ll pay them a wage that is proper for the work they do. Third, you stop abusing the people of Winter-home to line your pockets.”

He whined. “But… but that will bankrupt me! Surely, there must be something…”

“Then you deserve to be destitute,” I interrupted him. “Perhaps living as you make these people live will help you see the error of your ways.” I folded my arms at my chest. “You do that, and I won’t reveal any of this to the festival-goers or the other Winter-home folk so they boot you from your position as mayor.”

He rubbed his face with both hands. “Fine,” he finally agreed. “All of it. I’ll do it.”

“Starting immediately,” I added. “I’ll go and let the beggars know they have their jobs back and won’t be hassled to move along any longer. They can stay warm and enjoy the same food as everyone else in this place, do work, and care for their families.” I dropped my hands to my sides and moved off.

I decided to start with the stairs behind the mayor and headed for where I knew one of the beggars I’d told to shove off still lurked. I’d seen him there, having sneaked back to the warmth to save his life, and couldn’t blame him for risking Guard Kember’s wrath given the circumstances. Barrett Nowell flinched as he saw me approaching. “It’s just too cold, I had to come back. Please, don’t make me move again…” he begged.

I crouched near his supine form. “I won’t. Nobody will.” With a smile, I told him, “I was told to bring news to you and others that you have your job back. Proper wages, too.”

He sat up with a little difficulty. “Surely… surely you are joking.” At my slow headshake, he continued with more wonder, “How can this be? Has the mayor grown a heart?” He struggled to get up, and I offered my hand to him. “I’ll not count my blessings — I will go to work at once!” We stood together, and he held my forearms tightly. “This is wonderful news…!”

“Make sure to eat and drink something warm to gain strength,” I urged him. “You won’t be able to work long if you’re too weak to do so.”

He nodded enthusiastically before he hurried off. “I am so happy!” I could hear him exclaim as he went.

I moved down the nearby street where I had found Ted Ives earlier. He hadn’t moved far from the place I’d shooed him. “What do you want?” he asked with dread in his tone. “Come to move me along once again?”

“Peace, Ted,” I told him. “The mayor has given you your job back, effective immediately. I’ve been sent with the message.”

The other man stared at me as if he’d just spotted a mumak in the center of town. “What sorrow and what joy this winter has brought me! I can hardly believe my ears, Morchandir. By what providence has the mayor decided to give me another chance at life?”

I lifted my shoulders innocently. “Perhaps, someone convinced him of the error of his ways. It is Yule, after all.”

A wide smile split his features. “You are so good to deliver this message to me. My outlook does not seem so bleak now.” He sighed as if a weight had lifted from his shoulders. “I can’t believe it!” he crowed as he hurried off.

I passed my group along with Rust and Utteridge as I turned down another street. I waved to them without stopping and fielded their confused looks with a call of, “I’ll be back soon. I’m delivering messages.” I could see their expressions grow even more perplexed at the words, but I focused on my task at hand. I could explain it later.

Regina Judson found the news of her rehiring joyful, but she tempered it with more wisdom than the others had seen. “I can feel it,” she told me. “You have had a great part in this gift that you now bring me from Mayor Goodnough.” She set a chilled hand against my cheek and smiled with slightly watering eyes. “Such wonderful news! I’ll go to the worksite now.” Her husband, Jack, actively cheered when I told him. “I cannot believe it! I’ve been hoping every moment that some luck would come my way, and it has at last!” he crowed. “You are the bearer of such marvelous news! I can hardly believe my ears…”

“Just so long as you stop lurking outside the Globe looking suspicious,” I warned him. “What is this position that you keep taking? Are you about to jump on someone and eat them like a warg?”

He laughed as he left with a wave. His strangeness had me convinced, for a brief moment, that I would wind up with him as a companion. My final recipient, Bill Hyde, almost collapsed. Clutching my arms and staring up at me, he said gratefully, “You… you give me my life back with your news.” With a shake of his head and the slow strengthening of his knees, he continued. “I don’t know what to say. Can it really be true, Morchandir? Can the mayor have grown a heart?”

“You’re the second person who’s used that turn of phrase today,” I replied. “I can’t say he’s grown a heart. I think, though, he’s developed a very nasty conscience.”

Bill laughed. “What a wonderful day. Things are turning around for this town; I can feel it.” He added, “Heart or conscience. I cannot cry foul with it since it means I will survive to see another year, and a year after, and another after that at the very least!” He sucked in a great draught of the crisp air and said, eyes closed, “I’m so happy!”

By the time I found myself approaching my companions once more, I felt tired. “Messages, was it?” Gareth prodded me. “What happened out there, Morchandir?”

I pulled out the paper from my pocket and handed it to him. “This is the evidence you need to oust the mayor for his crimes,” I explained. “I used it to give people back their jobs at a proper wage and wring some protection for them out of Goodnough.”

Rust took the paper and unfolded it. He read through the receipt and grunted. “Good stuff, this.” He looked up at me. “So, why have you given it to me?”

“Because I promised the mayor I wouldn’t out him,” I replied innocently. “I’ll keep that promise. You, though? You can either hold that over his head to keep him in line or get rid of him entirely. It’s up to you and yours as to what to do with that information.” I waved my hand around at the buildings. “This is your home and not mine, Rust. It’s not right that I have the power over its fate like that.”

Dandelion grasped my free hand in both of hers with a proud smile up at me. “Oh, grandson,” she sighed as she squeezed it. “This is the best gift you could’ve given an old Gammer like me this Yule.”

“Speaking of gifts,” Tinendail chirped happily, “much of what you had Trennil bring has found its way to needful hands. Money, goods, all of it.” He laughed lightly and patted the dwarf’s shoulder. “You should’ve seen him as he approached with that rug slung onto his back! The children swarmed him.”

He scruffed a hand through his beard self-consciously. “I think they thought I was Aulë the Maker,” he grumbled with a blush. “I rather hope he doesn’t mind as I find it a compliment.”

Gareth cleared his throat. “You have done a wonderful thing, Morchandir.”

“Without murdering anyone in cold blood,” Tinendail added with a little cheer afterward.

“Ah. Right.” Rust rubbed the side of his nose before motioning for Daley to come over with a small package. “We workers don’t have much, but we scraped together what we could.”

“Oh, no, I…” I began.

“Please, accept these gifts as tokens of our gratitude,” Gareth said firmly as it was pressed into my hands. “But know that we will not forget you, or the great deeds done this day. If we ever have the opportunity to give you proper thanks, you can rest assured that we will.”

I felt awkward. The outpouring of affection and gratitude made me squirmy, to say the least, but knowing that the workers had all pooled their meager resources together to get me a gift made it worse. I opened it while Tinendail looked on with all the excitement of a half-grown elf in a happy situation. I found a silver and seventy copper as well as shabby clothing and a handful of Yule Festival tokens. I felt slightly cheated and guilty for feeling that way all at once. Dandelion nudged me – I could almost hear her in my head telling me to be gracious – and I smiled at the workers. “Thank you.”

We parted soon after to enjoy the festival for ourselves. I had already begun plotting how to pickpocket several drunk people and, perhaps, make off with a fancy horse for sale near the front entrance when Dandelion halted. We all followed suit to see what she had to say.

“I would like to make a snowman,” she declared. “What would the rest of you like to do, now that we have the leeway to do so?”

“Snowball fights,” Tinendail responded without hesitation. “That looked entertaining when I saw the children doing so earlier. Do you think they might come out again if I asked?”

I set a hand on my hip. “You really think it would be fair for you to use your Elvish reflexes and speed against a pack of slower and weaker children?” I paused and gave him a thumbs up. “Go ask. Challenge them if you have to. They’re ruthless little goblins, though, be prepared.” I had seen my own son playing with other children in the winter snows of the Dale-lands. I knew what the elf was up against. He darted off the way we’d come to find the gaggle of littles skulking about.

“I believe I’d like to sit and drink and watch the fireworks they’ll have,” Trennil said with satisfaction. “Perhaps dance a little, too. How about you, Morchandir?”

I smiled. “I’m going to go pickpocket the mayor, his wife, and then find their house and loot it of whatever I can carry.”

“Morchandir!” Dandelion hissed. A moment later, she subsided with a thoughtful expression. “Very well, just this once. Only because the man deserves it, and I can’t see his wife not knowing about his foul actions with this town. At best, she’s ignorant, and at worst, complicit.” She waved a hand at me as she turned to walk away. “Have fun, grandson.”

We stared at her for a long moment. “That sort of removes the fun from doing it,” Trennil remarked. “It’s so much better when she’s antagonized by your thefts.”

“I’m telling her you said that.” Stuffing my hands into my pockets, I casually remarked, “I’m taking her permission this time as a Yule gift. Don’t look too far into it, my dwarf friend.” I swiveled around as I kept walking. “And take a drink to watch Tinendail at the snowball field. He’ll need all the help he can get, trust me.”

Trennil seemed resistant to the idea, at first, but the obvious images of an elf being bombarded from all sides by expert snowball hurlers cackling madly from behind snow blockades had him brightening instantly. Traveling companions or not, dwarf and elf rivalries needed stoking now and then. It would only be a matter of time before one of the elf’s snowballs found its way into Trennil’s face and the true battle would then begin.

“It’s beginning to look a lot like Yuletide,” I sang under my breath as I made my way toward a sprawled-out hobbit dead to the world from too much drink. Maybe I would swing past the field, too, after I’d made my holiday a bit brighter. I couldn’t be good all the time.

A Burg’s Tale: Chapter 26

I wasn’t sure why we’d cleaned ourselves of the muck and grime of the swamp when we headed right back into it the next day. My clothes hadn’t even dried completely when we set out with the dawn. It left me chilled and wishing for my borrowed clothing from the Eglain once more, even if they had been completely ill-fitting. I hadn’t been the only one in that predicament, at least: the only one who had found anything that suited him had been Tinendail. Dwarf, Hobbit, and extra-tall Man had to make good with almost fitting. Even then, a shirt was all that they had required to be modest and decent. I had spent the majority of the evening wrapped in two cloaks and wearing a voluminous skirt to cover my nethers. The Eglain had finally found a large shirt for me to put on that, while it had been broad enough, only fell to my navel. “Who did this belong to?” I had asked Trennil softly as I had bedded down for the night. “Who could possibly be wider than they are tall?”

Trennil had simply stared at me for a long moment before replying, “Who indeed?” His flat tone had modified after as he, too, had settled in for sleep. “Though, to be sure, I don’t know of many Men who fit that description, it’s true.”

Thinking on how my stomach had been exposed between the end of the shirt and the top of the skirt, however, I decided being slightly chilled would be preferrable after all. You can’t save the world when you’re hoping it all ends immediately to end your suffering, I hazarded as retort to my own desire during our slog.

And slog it was. Unlike the first foray into the morass of Haragmar, this journey took us completely through the swamp and past the Circle of Blood and eastward still. The undead shambled in increasing numbers the closer we came to the looming darkness that was Nan Dhelu. “I can feel the evil from here,” whispered Tinendail as he clattered along as quietly as he could manage. Even the small bits of cloth we’d had him tuck into his armor to help muffle the sounds could only do so much, especially once they’d fallen free into the mire and required wringing out and replacement. At least Elves don’t feel the cold, I comforted myself.

“Is it getting darker the closer we get?” Trennil asked a moment later.

“It is,” Tinendail replied softly. “That is the darkness I spoke of creeping forth.”

Dandelion lifted a hand so that we stopped. Ahead of us, three walking corpses moved together across the rocky incline leading toward the mountain-carved hold. We waited for them to be out of earshot once more, though how they could hear anything given their corpse state was beyond me, before continuing. “Remember what it is we’re looking for,” she then said. “Gaunt-men, not these dead things.”

“Not that they’re really alive, either,” Trennil muttered.

“Aye,” Dandelion agreed. “But not in the way of the wights.”

“Pale, terribly thin,” I added. “As if they’d starved for months. Flesh laid over bone. They seem withered rather than decayed and putrid.”

Trennil grunted. “Jerky and not spoiled meat.” We halted all together to stare at him. “It’s true!” he hissed defensively.

I grimaced beneath my mask and saw Gammer openly doing the same. “Morgoth,” our Elvish companion began in a tone that sounded as if he meant to explain something, but I interrupted him. “Salted and smoked his minions for long storage rather than leave them out to rot. I can see it. Ivar did seem…” I paused to find the best word. “Dried? Crispy?”

“Chewy,” Trennil offered. “Maybe leathery?”

Dandelion shook her head and turned away. “Can we stop pondering the texture of gaunt-men and lords and move on to–”

“But wouldn’t turning them into jerky darken their flesh from pale to brown?” Tinendail asked in confusion. “Perhaps the addition of fell spirits lightens them?”

“TO BATTLE TACTICS FOR ANCIENT TRAVEL RATION EVIL,” Dandelion finished far louder than she intended. We snapped our mouths shut immediately. Casting wary looks around in case the forces of evil had overheard Gammer’s voice, we finally relaxed to talk about how to handle our foes.

I turned my attention to the elf among us. “Did Radagast have any words of wisdom as to what we could expect from these gaunt-men and war-singers?”

“Necromancy,” Tinendail replied immediately. “Pestilence and plague. The undead, both bestial and not. Perhaps even the ancient trees and creatures here have been poisoned by them to attack everything – even their own.”

Trennil sank to a crouch with a grim nod. “Aye. And that means they can use some form of magic, too, I’d wager. Especially if it relates to this Shadow Realm that Radagast mentioned they could summon spirits from.”

Gammer and I both sank to the ground for a few moments of rest. Tinendail managed not to clank too much as he shook his head. “It is the Unseen Realm,” he offered to us hesitantly. “I have yet to learn much about it, but I do know that it is a world like our Ennor. All that exist there are spirits, things that we cannot readily and easily see with our eyes.”

“It’s full of evil, then?” Gammer asked with a troubled expression.

The elf’s features brightened. “Oh, no, Gammer Digweed. There are some fell things there, but also gloriously brilliant ones. The Nazgul exist in both the Seen and Unseen Realms as do the Quendi and, I’m sure, other beings.” We offered him blank expressions that took another moment or two for him to fully realize as he happily nattered on. “Olorin and other Maiar were said to move in the Unseen World in Valinor long ago while the Quendi,” he quickly added, “– we Elves – remained fully in the Seen Realm.” He shrugged slightly. “It is neither good nor evil. It simply is.”

I chewed on my lower lip in thought as everything slowly connected in my brain. “Then,” I drawled slowly as I verbally hashed it out, “when the necromancers summon spirits to take over corpses and do their bidding, become wights, they’re summoning them from the Unseen Realm.”

Gammer made a displeased noise. “Then when we defeat these wights, or even the spirits inside them if they’re visible, do they truly die?”

“No.” Tinendail sighed. “They only return to the Unseen World, weakened enough that they’re unable to return to our own unless summoned and given enough power to do so once again.” He paused. “It’s what happened to Sauron at the end of the Second Age. Instead of dying, he merely vanished and wandered the world until he could grow powerful enough again to threaten it.”

Trennil growled, “It was far better to believe that he had been defeated for good.”

The elf pressed his lips into a thin line. “The wights, some of them, have an aura to them that is disturbing. It seems to detect you even when you’re virtually impossible to see or sense, Morchandir. I believe these gaunt-men, especially the war-singers, may have something similar. They would also have a lesser form of Shadow pulsing from them to produce fear in their opponents. Having never met them in person let alone the Witch-King, I cannot say if it is less or more powerful. I would think less, or they might be higher in rank as the Nazgul.”

“Terrible enough as it is,” Dandelion said. “But is there nothing we can do to defeat these creatures?” She motioned at Trennil. “Dwarf-made weapons seem to harm dragons and their kin.”

I snorted. “I’ll keep that bit in mind when we meet a dragon, then.” Just our luck that’s what will happen, I silently groused. I bet Radagast would want to make a friend of it.

“Not very likely,” Trennil said with more than a little pride. “We dwarves killed them all years ago. Bard took care of Smaug, and he was the last dragon.”

Dandelion frowned. “Was he? Mad Baggins always said so, but I have my doubts…”

Tinendail motioned. “Elf-made weapons,” he said firmly. “Beleriand make, they’re called by you Men, yes? Those will harm the spirits of the Unseen World far more than any others.” He touched the sword he carried. “You happen to have one, here.”

“Much to your father’s dismay,” I added drolly. “I’m not sure he’ll let you live to see your first century when he catches up to you.”

The young elf suddenly looked stricken. “Do you think he’s searching for me? Ah, Elbereth! I hope Trennil has covered our passage with his skills, then!” Gaunt-men and undead shambling horrors all around us, I thought as my masked face lowered, and this boy is more afraid that his father will find him and drag him home by his pointy ear than he is of dying horribly in an ill-fitting suit of armor.

I cleared my throat. “So, what you’re saying is that you’ll lead the charge against the enemy when we find them,” I stated. “I might feel better if you had Gammer helping to shield you so that you can get close enough to use that sword.”

“I can fire from a distance,” Trennil assured us. “If the war-singer summons anything, I’ll be able to see it before the rest of you since you’ll be much closer for melee.”

I sighed. “That’s going to leave me. I won’t be much use when it comes to stealth, and that will limit my effectiveness. I do more damage when I can steal in from behind unseen for my strikes.” I half-drew one of the long knives I carried without looking. “I don’t have Beleriand weaponry.”

“You can be on wight duty along with me,” Trennil said with a quick pat on my shoulder with an impressively sized hand given his height. “If all else fails, let Gammer distract him, Tinendail hack at him, and leap onto him from behind to saw off his head.” He smacked his lips in satisfaction. “Shouldn’t be terribly difficult even if he is a bit leathery and tough.”

I pulled my mask free of my face. Though the elf had seen me bared this way before, he still took the time to peer intently at my features as if he might discover some new answer in them. It unnerved me. Attempting to ignore his stare, I instead asked our dwarf, “You want me to remove a dangerous creature’s head in the most awkward way possible while on their back?” At the Hunter’s nod, I sighed. “Right, then. How many pieces are our wights going to be in out here, again?”

“It’s only in extreme last measures,” Trennil protested. “I’m sure that your weapons do more than enough damage on their own despite not being of elf-make, Morchandir. Leaping in to steal a stab at a war-singer’s kidneys…” He stopped. “Or at least where they should be, if they even still have them,” he amended. “I’m sure that will still suffice.”

Tinendail made a soft noise from my right. “I don’t see how you can stand the mask,” he said thoughtfully. “Hot and bothersome. Do you even see well out of it, or—”

“You can find out later,” Dandelion stated firmly to quash the line of questioning. “We have no time for it now, nor will it be enough to keep you lingering on here in spirit form if you die without an answer.” She got to her feet to check our surroundings once more.

The elf seemed mildly offended. “I would not linger here in death even so,” he assured her as he, too, prepared to move once more. “Provided I have not been trapped by one of the necromancers, I will return to Valinor.”

“Do Men go there?” Trennil asked our companion. “Or Hobbits?”

“No,” the Champion replied sadly. “Valinor is for the Elves alone.”

I couldn’t resist. “Then it’s why we see so many Men wandering around as evil spirits. We’re not allowed to rest where the good people go.” I snorted. “Not exactly a fair exchange, if you ask me.”

Tinendail blinked over at me with his hand poised above the visor of his helm. “Oh, Men do not linger, either,” he says. “What ultimately happens to them is unknown even to the Valar, we are told. They have a purpose none can know until the end times. The final battle with Morgoth. They go to the Halls of Mandos and truly die, are sundered from this world, while Elves do not. Then they are sent beyond the confines of this world. Beyond the Music of the Ainur. That is your fate, Morchandir, as a mortal Man doomed to die. But it is also the Gift of Iluvatar, and many among my kind envy yours for it.” He slid his visor down with a soft metallic clap. “Morgoth convinced Men that the gift was a curse. I can only hope that you will not fear it when your time comes, no matter how painful, for it means you will not suffer as the Quendi – or even the Valar.”

Dandelion paused to look back at the elf. “And Hobbits?”

“You are like Men,” Tinendail said with a nod, his voice echoing slightly in his visor. “You will share the same fate.” He turned his head to Trennil. “Dwarves,” he began.

“Go to the Halls of Mandos in a place set apart for them by our maker, Aule,” Trennil finished with a firm nod. “We will have a place among everyone in the end and aid in rebuilding this world.”

Tinendail didn’t reply for a long moment. “Ah,” he finally said very softly. “We have always said that you will return to the rock and stone that gave birth to you via Aule.” He moved ahead. “We should track our quarry.”

Trennil harrumphed and moved ahead on his thick legs. “Yes, yes. I’m on it, leaf-ears, don’t let your temporary leadership go to your head.”

I slipped my mask back over my head. I hadn’t ever considered what happened to us after we died. I’d assumed, for the most part, that we simply vanished into the ether never to be seen again. We had no afterlife. We weren’t special. Death was something to be feared. Was it, though? If what Tinendail, young though he was for his kind, had said was true, Dandelion and I would be headed to an afterlife that even the Valar couldn’t foresee. Only Eru knew.

Or does he? I suddenly wondered with slight unease. Does he simply point the way for us, we walk off, and nobody knows what’s there? If he didn’t make where we end up and knows nothing of it, then who did?

“Bloody elf,” I muttered under my breath with a glower at his armored figure ahead of me. As if I didn’t have enough to worry about already.

 

It wasn’t until an hour later, after nearly dying more than once in various ways courtesy of the gaunt-men, that I spotted yet another target on the mountain near one of the dilapidated and crumbling stone columns of Nan Dhelu. “There’s another one ahead,” I told the others as they finished tending Dandelion’s light wounds.

“How many are there?” Trennil asked in exasperation. “We’ve killed more than is healthy already!”

“Radagast wasn’t sure,” Dandelion replied. “It’s why we’re here, I think. We’re flushing them out and getting the sigils he wants in the process.”

Tinendail sighed. “There can’t be terribly many. Most of them were destroyed by the wizards long ago. Morgoth created them. Without him, no more can be created.”

I snorted behind the mask. “Not unless Sauron learned from him.”

The elf’s expression turned concerned. “That might be beyond him. He’s not one of the Valar like Morgoth. His powers aren’t great enough, I think.”

He finished with Dandelion’s bandaging and stood, offering her a hand to get back to her feet. “Then these gaunt-men may be all that are here,” she said. “Especially if they were decimated in the First Age. There are most likely more in other parts of the world. Let us hope that these are all that remain in Haragmar.”

Trennil peered at the patrolling creature. “It has a servant at its side,” he said after a moment. “A skeletal wight.”

“Joy,” I growled. “More stabbing things I won’t be able to sneak up on and dispatch.” Those had been notorious, from the Barrow-downs to this place, for shedding dread that kept me from using my stealth.

The pat that I received from Dandelion coincided with her look of pity. “We’ll manage, grandson.”

I gave her a long look through my mask. “Will you be fit to fight again? This one looks like the worst of the lot.” Always the best for last, I told myself sardonically.

“It takes more than these shallow wounds to keep me down and render me useless.” She hefted her heavy shield and rolled her armor-clad shoulders. “Just keep an eye on yourself and on Trennil, young man. I’ll keep that gaunt-man’s attention while our elf friend makes short work of it. You and Trennil should be able to handle its companion or anything it summons, like the others.”

The elf nodded slightly. “Those tactics have been working thus far,” he agreed. “This should be no different.”

A rough grunt sounded from the direction of the dwarf. “So far as any battle is the same as another.”

It was a caution I could appreciate. Dropping back so that Dandelion and Tinendail could take the lead, mostly the Guardian, I once again waited for Trennil to call the shots for the two of us. He pointed toward a bit of higher ground from where the war-singer’s path would take it. “Let us head there,” he said. “I have a good range and safe place to let fly with arrows. If you need to leap in with them, it’s not too much of a drop to hurt you.”

“Good thinking,” I responded as we made our way to the half-fallen wall of stone. I wasn’t lightly prone to heroic acts like soaring from broken walls to stab my enemies. The chances of hurting myself remained too great. It would do me no good to dive in with knives bared only to land, twist my ankle, and lame myself so I slowed. I would be permanently grounded, then. Any other place, that might mean buried, but here, I’d be another shuffling corpse dropping limbs off as I rotted away. Heroes died early deaths, and I had a son to consider. Unless the payout was worth it, of course. Regardless, this little mission I’d been sent upon hadn’t necessarily been my idea even if it meant I protected him. I didn’t have to behave stupidly to become respected.

* * *

Silence entombed us for several long moments while we panted and realized we had survived. Trennil knelt by the emaciated figure of the gaunt-man and poked at one of its arms with his thick index finger. “Definitely leathery and not chewy,” he ultimately declared. “Though I bet -”

“We do NOT eat ancient evil, Trennil!” Dandelion declared firmly from nearby.

I stumbled over to the gaunt-man. “We do rob their corpses, however,” I said as I pulled the last sigil from its pride of place. Slipping it into the small satchel alongside the others, I scanned the area for any further danger. “Do you think there are any more of these war-singers here or was this the last of them?”

“I think if there are,” Trennil answered, “they can stay here. If that wizard wants their sigils, he can bloody well come get them himself. Five should be plenty for him to find out what he needs, I say.”

Tinendail frowned down at the gaunt-man as Trennil stood once more. “Some had no sigils. Five of them did. That there were more than five here concerns me, as I know it will Radagast.” He looked up at us again through his opened visor. “We should get back to him.”

I finished searching the strange necromancer and moved to the wights he had summoned. They held nothing, given they had no pockets, and it made the looting efficient. We headed off into the Red Swamp with Trennil in the lead as pathfinder, avoiding both dead and corrupted things, until we climbed the hill leading into Ost Guruth once more.

The sun had begun setting by the time we pushed open the tower door. Both Tinendail and I removed our headwear. “Didn’t we just have to bathe yesterday?” the dwarf groused. “We’ll need to do so again tonight after that slog and all the fighting.”

“Dandelion,” Tinendail began, amending it at her sharp look to, “Gammer should, at least. Her wounds need better than field medicine for tending. They have a healing house.” He grew chipper as we mounted the spiral stairwell. “At least none of us required Elvish healing. I’m afraid I can’t do much of that presently.”

“Skivved off from school that day?” I asked with a long-suffering look at the blasted stairs. I didn’t understand how the elf wasn’t as exhausted by now as the rest of us.

He laughed lightly. “Oh, no, mellon.” He clapped a hand onto my shoulder as we paused on a landing between flights. “It takes many years to learn the art of healing, just as it does anything else. I’m not even that much of a fighter yet.”

“Says the one who hasn’t even dented his armor with a blow from an enemy yet because of his agility and speed,” Trennil grunted in what might be envy.

The elf pulled a face. “Oh, that’s only because I know how angry adar will be if I bring it back too ruined. It’s not skill at all.”

I looked at him for a long moment. “Right. Not skill at all.” I hefted a sigh and continued up the final flight. He really is a child, I marveled. How does he not realize what he’s saying?

As we straggled into Radagast’s study, he never once looked up. “Have all of you returned intact?” he asked after a moment.

“I will visit a healer when we’re done here,” Dandelion replied curtly. “The wounds are shallow.”

The wizard held his place in his tome with a finger and peered up at her sharply. Beckoning her closer with his other hand, he waited until she stood at his side before laying a hand on her. Nothing changed that we could see, but he nodded and told her, “Strangsig will be most useful to you. None of your wounds have a taint of corruption to them.” He turned his gaze direct toward me. “You, however, I can sense it pouring from.”

I stepped toward his desk. “There were more gaunt-men there than we’d expected. Not all of them carried sigils. There had to be seven-”

“Eight,” grumbled Trennil.

“Eight,” I revised, “in total.” Pulling up my pack while I spoke, I unlatched it and offered it to him. I felt like dumping them out and letting him handle them, but I wasn’t sure what he was doing that interrupting might hurt. “Five war-singers.”

He took my satchel and opened it only after marking his place and setting the book aside. He dumped them out at that point and handed the pack back to me without looking at me. “Ah. That is troublesome,” he replied with a frown. “I shall have to let the head of our Order know how many seem to have escaped the First Age intact.”

More than you expected, I wanted to tell him smugly. All-powerful, all-knowing wizards who can only assume and don’t bother to check. Dandelion moved back to my side as Radagast lifted one sigil with obvious distaste. Again, I saw nothing happening as he did whatever it was that he needed to so that he could find out his information. He made a soft sound of what I could only say was dismay before setting the sigil aside. His dismay grew with each sigil he examined. Only when he had completed it, and my other two companions had drawn near to watch him, Tinendail especially, did he stare at them while tapping his lower lip.

He said nothing, however, and after several minutes of looking at each other and shrugging helplessly, Trennil asked, “What did you find out?”

“These sigils bear the mark of Ivar the Blood-hand,” Radagast said. “He is a powerful lord of the gaunt-men, and a dangerous and vile creature. It is he who is behind the corruption of the Red Swamp.” I held my tongue but could feel how the others glanced up at me meaningfully. “Why would a creature such as Ivar travel so far from Angmar? Power, perhaps. But what drew him here?”

Dandelion elbowed me in the thigh. I stumbled slightly at the bloom of pain and glared down at her. “Fine,” I sighed. “Radagast, Sambrog said Ivar wanted something powerful under the waters of this place.”

He pursed his lips. “Mm. That is entirely possible, though I’m not confident of what it could be.” I knew that was as close to an apology from a wizard as anyone might likely receive. “This land was the site of many battles in the past,” he explained. “Some say the swamp takes its name from the blood of fallen Men that stains the earth red. But my knowledge of the swamp’s history is limited.” He paused and looked up and to the side in sudden thought. “I do know of a man named Aric, a wise man of the Eglain, though only by reputation. He is a Stone-speaker, a scholar who studies the stones and collects knowledge from their markings. Aric knows much of the local lore.”

“Stone-speaker,” Tinendail echoed with gleeful anticipation. “I’ve never heard of them! Reading marks on stones – more than simply languages left behind? Are they only in the race of Men?”

“Tinendail,” I warned quietly, wanting him to rein in his enthusiasm.

Radagast seemed not to notice. If he did, he didn’t show it and remained somber. “Travel to him and ask for his help. He currently dwells south of here, beyond Talath Gaun, down in Harloeg. He may provide us with the knowledge we seek.”

“Tomorrow,” Dandelion said firmly. “I must see the healer, and we must rest. We have had a long day and cannot make another journey at this time. Nightfall brings out the worst creatures, and we should not be in the wilderness when they appear. Especially not if they are being directed by something as dire as Ivar Blood-hand.”

The wizard shook his head. “I fear I must ask you to leave as soon as your wounds are tended. Find Aric the Stone-speaker. We do not have the luxury of time.”

That’s very ironic given an immortal wizard is saying it, I thought with a snort as we turned away to exit. That didn’t mean Radagast was wrong, though. Even Dandelion, in her irritation, could see that much.

A Burg’s Tale: Chapter 25

Clang! Clank! Rattle!

We halted in front of the wizard’s tower and the metallic scraping and clattering also went quiet. I slowly swiveled around to stare at Tinendail. “I thought you said your name meant “leaf-walker” in Sindarin because you were so stealthy?” I accused, aggrieved.

The elf’s genuine frown of consternation didn’t help matters. Trennil answered in his dwarf brogue, “That is what I’ve been asking for days, now. Exactly how am I supposed to sneak up on things to shoot them when they’ve heard him coming from leagues away?”

“My father,” the elf replied stiffly to us both, “had high hopes for me. And I assure you, I am soundless when I wish to be.”

I rubbed one of my cheeks. The dried mud and water on it, other than garnering more than one concerned look from the camp of skirmishers just outside the walls, had begun to itch. I refrained from asking them as we went past why they weren’t helping the Eglain survive, since they were there, so that the rest of us could do what we needed to quickly and easily. “Could you, possibly, maybe, wish to be that way all the time?” I asked flatly.

Dandelion nudged me forward. “Let’s just go in,” she told me. “The sooner we see to Radagast, the sooner we can be away from these scoundrels.”

Trennil looked up at the tower with narrowed brown eyes and a creased brow. “You’re really off to see the wizard?” he asked in mild surprise, not having believed it when Dandelion mentioned it on the way back.

I snorted. “The wonderful wizard of moss.” My shoulders lifted in a shrug. “You may as well come up with us. He may have something you can do for him as well.” I paused. “That, and it takes quite a bit of labor for the Eglain in order to even get an audience with his majesty up there, so I would take the opportunity to flaunt their authority.” Gammer made a noise and hauled open the door. “What? I don’t like authority, if you haven’t noticed.”

“Switchings,” Gammer grumbled, “you needed more switches.” She glared at Trennil. “This could’ve been avoided if you’d stayed with me to raise the children!”

The dwarf stared at her. “How… are you this delusional?”

Tinendail looked around the tower with great interest. “You shouldn’t switch your children,” he said solemnly. “Why do you want to hurt them to teach them right from wrong? The Elves refuse to. Children are blessings.”

I snorted. “You also live for thousands of years and have the time to be patient with them. You protect them in your homes and very little attempts to kill them, unlike us.” I glanced over at the elf before mounting the spiral stairwell up to Radagast’s study. “I’m betting it takes at least five hundred or a thousand years before an elf is considered an adult. Men are at around eighteen, last I checked. Some younger.”

“Thirty-three, for hobbits,” Gammer said from ahead of us. “Oof, these stairs… when did I get so old?”

Trennil made a sound from the end of our little line. “Forty is when we’re physically adults,” he commented. “But we don’t go out adventuring as true adults until seventy-five or so. Can fight at thirty.”

Tinendail’s eyes were round at the numbers. “Such little time,” he whispered sadly. “It’s… hard to comprehend. We’re considered children until between fifty and one hundred years. I appeared the same age as a seven-year-old Man child at my twentieth birthday.”

I paused at the second floor to frown at him. “You looked how old?” I asked. The comparison was bewildering. “How old are you right now, then?”

“Seventy,” the elf replied at the same time the dwarf said, “Ninety.” They looked at one another with various stages of curiosity and shock for a moment.

Trennil was the first to speak. “I’m older than you?” he asked with a puffing out of his long moustache to punctuate it. I expected him to start huffing and flailing and yelling about how preposterous it was at any moment.

Tinendail seemed floored. “You look far older than that,” he pointed out to the dwarf. “I would never have guessed.”

I pointed accusingly toward the Champion. “You’re not even an adult, yet. Why are you out in the world?”

Our other companion straightened proudly. “We dwarves age slowly until we’re quite old. I’m fit and strong.” His eyes narrowed slightly at the elf. “And an adult.” The cogs turned in his head. I could see them. We were all capable of bossing the elf around now that we knew he was still an adolescent. Mostly.

Tinendail cleared his throat. He may have realized the same thing that we did. “I’m exploring,” he replied with a pert nod. “Satisfying my natural curiosity about everything.”

Gammer clicked her tongue. “Tsk. Just a baby. You and my grandson are bound to get into trouble if we don’t keep an eye on you.” She eyed him. “How did you leave without the other elves, especially your parents, forbidding it since children are so precious?”

The young elf glanced askance and ran a hand through his hair. “I was very convincing.”

I laughed as it occurred to me. “You sneaked out, didn’t you?” I asked with a smirk. “Sneaky, sneaky elf.”

Tinendail ducked his head. Trennil’s brow furrowed as he looked up at us. “How?” he demanded. “You can’t even walk quietly to save your life in that armor!” He looked up at me. “Literally. Remind me to tell you about the goblin ambush.”

The elf’s aggrieved expression said it all. Gammer sighed. “Trouble,” she reiterated. “You young’uns are trouble.”

Tinendail turned his gaze to her. “How old are you, ah… Gammer Digweed?”

I winced. Trennil made a soft, “oof” noise and looked anywhere but the hobbit. The Guardian glared at the elf Champion and said primly, “A lady never tells. A gentleman never asks. And if you do so again, I shall switch you, elf or not!” She hmphed and started up the stairs again.

Trennil peered up as she stomped further away from them and whispered to us, “She’s seventy! I met her ten years back and she was sixty, then.”

“I heard you!”

“Oops,” the dwarf replied as he shooed us on. “Best keep moving.”

When we reached the top of the tower and came upon Radagast among his stacks of books and other sundries in the lantern-lit room, he appeared bemused at first. “I see you’ve returned safely despite the danger you were just in.” I wasn’t sure if he meant the bog-guardians or the angry hobbit Guardian still steaming with her arms crossed off to the side.

I approached the desk as I tugged out the pouch with its contents from where I’d secured it. I still felt dirty and flaky from the disgusting swamp water that had dried on me. Radagast smirked when he saw me. “I need a nice soak,” I growled.

He didn’t respond to that. Instead, he took the bag, rolled out a little parchment, and began to empty the moss out atop it. “You did well. This moss will help me understand how the evil is tainting the Red Swamp.” He didn’t look up as he spoke. “This is but the first step in determining what caused the shepherds to become confused and irrational.” I knew what was coming before he said it. “There is more still to do, my friend. It will not be easy.”

He hadn’t even questioned the addition of two people the Eglain hadn’t vetted. Tinendail stepped forward with some scraping of metal to metal and asked, “Is this the same thing that has upset the creatures and lands between here and Imladris, Radagast?” He brightened. “Do you need any help?”

No, I groaned silently. No, don’t ask that, elf boy. Gammer must have spotted my expression since she silently stomped my booted toe with a foot and gave me a glare daring me to keep looking that way. I almost gasped at the pain as I snatched away my foot; instead, I kept it to a glare for her. Tinendail’s motion forward to the desk covered the interaction and resultant sounds. Trennil did give us a quick look, though, as if wondering what had just happened.

Radagast lifted the moss and smelled it like a fine tobacco. One pinch. Two. Three. He did this for the whole pile before frowning as if disturbed. “I can smell death in the moss, as if it was plucked from an ancient grave. This stench of decay is not a thing from nature.” He nodded grimly. “I believe that the wights are to blame.”

“Nnngh.” I couldn’t help the noise that escaped me that time. “Them again.” This time, Gammer patted my forearm gently.

Tinendail looked toward me and then back to the wizard. “Wights?” he asked.

Radagast’s brows lifted at the question. An elf had just asked him something he must have assumed an elf would already know about. I wondered at it, too. An elf still too young to be outside on his own was, in theory, still old enough to have read widely of the wisdom in Rivendell. It struck me then how innocent an elf had to be before he went out into the world, if he ever did, before he was an adult. A Man could live and die of old age before that innocence might leave; Tinendail’s childhood spanned generations of Men, Hobbits, and Dwarves.

But the wizard had continued. “Wights are the bones of the dead stirred by fell spirits out of Angmar and Rhudaur.” Tinendail’s horrified features spoke everything he couldn’t say about the abhorrence of the idea. “The wars here long ago made Haragmar as ripe for wights as the Barrow-downs in the west.”

“And there are plenty there,” I told the Champion. “I had to fight them. And worse.”

“Worse than fight them?” Trennil asked from my side.

I looked down at him. “What? No. Worse than wights.”

Radagast pressed his lips together amid the reddish-brown that surrounded them. “Return to Haragmar, the swamp in the east, and destroy these foul creatures.” Acknowledging that he’d heard me, he added, “If there are wights, I fear there are other fell creatures haunting the swamp, as well. For now, though, you need only concern yourself with the wights.”

I looked to the ceiling and closed my eyes. “Fabulous. More swamp and dead things that don’t stay dead. That soak is going to have to wait.”

We turned away to start filing down the stairs again, Gammer first, then myself. This time, Trennil followed me and Tinendail took up the rear. Three of us had headed down when Radagast called to the elf, “Unlike the living, wights grow stronger and more powerful with time and age. Destroy them, while I determine their origins.”

Dandelion muttered, “Oh, he didn’t just say that!” and turned to go back up the stairs. I didn’t know what she had planned – give a wizard a piece of her mind (if she had any pieces left, crazy as she was) or switch him – but we couldn’t let her do it. I grabbed her up, lifted her off her feet with a soft sound of effort, and started carefully moving down the stairs again. “No,” I cautioned her wriggling form. “No, Gammer, he wasn’t saying anything about you…”

“I’m not old,” she insisted in her wrath. “How dare he? A wizard should know better!”

Oh, I’m sure he does, I thought to myself. I wondered if he might’ve been making a purposeful dig at us for our conversation while ascending to his study. If there was one thing I’d learned about wizards, out of the two I had met, it was that they really had no sense of tact.

************

The corpses sloshed through the murky bog water. I felt ill. “I had that in my mouth,” I said with an urge to be sick. A piece of the mostly rotted Man splashed into the bog where it fell from his back.

Dandelion shook her head where we crouched behind a hummock nearby. “I can see mischief like this happening in a vast graveyard like the barrows near Bree,” she told us softly. “I was unaware there were so many of the dead in this area to do it here, too.”

“Plenty of history in Rhudar and fighting to have the bones there,” Tinendail assured her.

She wrinkled her nose. “Yes, but so many are still….” She looked back at us as she searched for a good word.

“Juicy,” Trennil offered in grim assistance.

She nodded. “Juicy,” she agreed with a shudder.

Tinendail happily offered an answer. “Oh, Angmar had control of this region for a long while. The Hill-men serve him, I’m sure, and so they bury their bodies or use them. And who knows what the Angmarim did to their dead in this area even before that.”

“Necromancers,” the dwarf growled with a little spit into the ground nearby for punctuation.

I breathed in through my nose, regretted it, and then remembered I wanted the stench of decay and death in my mouth (again) even less. “I don’t know what possesses those people,” I also agreed with the Hunter.

Tinendail lay very still on the ground despite the fact the corpses couldn’t actually hear the clanking of his armor with their dead ears. “Wights,” he reminded me quietly. “Wights possess them. Though I don’t think they’re really people now they’re dead?”

I closed my eyes and forced myself to stay silent. Opening them after a few long, very long, moments, I murmured, “Well, he wants us to kill several and… that’s it.”

“Thank goodness!” Dandelion breathed in relief. She pointed at us. “No hacking off bits for him! I’m not walking all the way back to Ost Guruth with rotting bits of flesh bringing in the flies and worse. I’ve seen wargs out there, you know!”

Trennil made a low noise. “Makes me wonder what else is out here in this swamp if they’ve not come in looking for easy meals.” It was a thought that put me on edge. I’d already been face to face, more or less, with a Black Rider on more than one occasion.

“I have some ideas given what I’ve already met along the way here,” I assured him. “Best not to think about it.” That includes you, I reminded myself. “I would bet one of them is the same creature from the Great Barrow in Othrongroth.”

The elf’s eyes grew huge. “You were in the Great Barrow?” he whispered in awe. “What happened? Father would tell us stories of when it was first built and–”

“Later,” Dandelion firmly hissed. “Dead things first. Bedtime tales later!”

The dwarf snorted as he hefted his bow. “If any of us get to sleep tonight without horrible dreams.”

Oh, trust me, my dreams aren’t usually good regardless, I thought with a humorless smirk. Rather than say it aloud, I drew my knives and nodded to them. “Here’s the plan,” I said. “You head over the top and follow whatever target Trennil marks with an arrow. He’s going to be hanging back as much as possible.”

“I’ll pull their attention away and keep it,” Dandelion added. “If they’re focused on me, that will let Trennil and Tinendail do the most damage.”

Trennil glanced at me. “What are you doing, then?”

I circled an index finger at the ground. “Sneaking. I’m a burglar by trade. You and the elf can handle more than one opponent fairly easily. I can finish them off from behind before they know I’m there and make sure you, dwarven Hunter, aren’t set upon from somewhere you aren’t paying attention to.” I nodded at the others. “Same with the rest of you. I’m not good at direct assaults. But final ones?” I beamed beneath my mask. “I’m your Man.”

“Unfortunately,” Dandelion groused. “It’s that Took blood in you.”

Trennil seemed about to argue about the impossibility of Took-blooded Men when I made a cutting motion with a flat hand near my throat to stop him. Instead, he offered a brief, “Sounds like a plan. Gammer goes in to take their attention, I stand and mark a target with arrows, and Tinendail makes his charge, correct?”

Dandelion nodded firmly and Tinendail shrugged his agreement so that his armor rattled. I wondered not for the first time if it actually fit him or if he’d taken his father’s and had yet to grow into it. I tried not to think about how old I’d be before I could figure that mystery out when he became an adult by Elf standards. “Right, then,” the dwarf said to me. “Off you go. We’ll give you to a count of ten before the Guardian and Champion make their charge.” He peeked over the edge of the hill once more. “They’ve wandered away slightly.”

I took the chance offered and crept over the hill off to the side. As I did so, I counted in my head. One Minas Tirith, two Minas Tirith… I was on nine when a small female roar resounded through the close air of the swamp. I heard the splashing before the solid yet wet impact noises of a shield meeting flesh that was, as a dwarf had mentioned not long before, still terribly juicy. I kept my mind off that particular idea lest I find myself sick and distracted. I turned as arrows began to plant themselves into a secondary target, and a ferocious rattling of slightly too-big armor bounced through the moist air. Tinendail let loose an Elvish bellow – literally, in Elvish, and I had no real idea what it meant – before his zweihander split one of the walking undead in two. The sound wasn’t pleasant. The image was even worse.

I rather preferred this method of fighting, all told. I hadn’t lied about not doing well in direct, face-to-face combat despite being trained for it; perhaps it was some of my innate laziness involved, but I had never truly liked the type of fighting that had me standing and dodging constantly while hacking at my opponent. It wasn’t all because of my bad memories of the past with the lieutenant and guards thanks to my ex-wife. I felt the whole problem should be settled as quickly as possible instead. No shouting. No protracted parries and blocks and instantaneous reactions to whatever the other person would do. Get in, slit their throat or punch a knife into their heart or lungs from behind, and end it so that you could move along. Poison blades or drinks or food. A dozen different ways better than crying out, “For Gondor!” and roaring with flashing armor and blade lofted overhead to smite the wicked.

That was for heroes and idiots. I, thankfully, was neither.

My services went unrendered in the fight. The group of wights sank beneath the surface of the bog from whence some of them had come (the skeletal ones, at least), and we regrouped to find another patch of them. Then a third. By the time we trudged back into Ost Guruth for the night, we had a better grasp on tactics when fighting together to use our strengths, and I, personally, had finally managed stab a wight in the kidneys. Which I’d been able to see given the gap in its flesh, and which hadn’t really slowed the thing down to lose.

We trailed a bit of mud and foul plant matter through Radagast’s entrance and up the first flight of his spiral stairs as we went. I felt a little bit smug for it, too. Upon reaching the top where the brown-robed wizard sat studying the moss we’d left for him earlier, he looked up. “Hm. You’ve returned.” He yet again sounded so surprised by it that I had to narrow my eyes at him in suspicion for his motives in sending us on these errands. “The wights have been destroyed, I take it?”

“Yes, Radagast,” Tinendail replied with a small bow. “We slew many.” He then amended, “Or… slew again?”

The wizard nodded. “The wights’ destruction can only prove to help us in the time to come. Now listen, for there is much more to do.” He waved us forward. “How many did you return to their sleep?”

I pulled my mask up and away from my face. “I stopped counting after the first dozen,” I told him. “Can this not wait until we’ve rested and rinsed the stench from ourselves and found new clothes to wear?” Please? I almost added to the end after catching another good nose full of my own foulness.

Radagast squinted toward one of the torches in the room. “I forget how often you need to rest,” he remarked almost disdainfully. “There is great danger here, but it cannot be faced with a weakened body and mind.” I could almost feel how Dandelion bristled up at the reminder of his last words to us earlier. “Go, eat. Rest. Return to me in the morning, for you will be embarking on a most treacherous leg of this mystery.”

Trennil’s beard seemed to stiffen ferociously. “Worse than wandering the swamp killing wicked dead things and crazed bog lurkers?” he growled.

Radagast merely nodded. “Quite.” He grew grim. “The sheer number of wights in Haragmar indicates the presence of gaunt-men,” he glanced at the young elf with us, “vile necromancers who serve the Dark Lord.” Tinendail gave a tiny, audible gasp. “In ages past, they dwelt in the Witch-realm of Angmar, but the White Council believed them all destroyed.” He motioned at the moss and then at us. “Clearly, they were wrong.”

I rubbed my face. “Like that tall creature from the Great Barrow walking around with the dead dwarf king.”

Trennil offered me a double take. “Pardon, the what?”

But Radagast continued. “Only the strongest of the gaunt-men, the Gaunt-lords, have the power to summon the spirits of the Shadow Realm. The war-singers carry the sigil of their Gaunt-lord. Search the ruins in the far east of Haragmar, defeat these creatures, and bring me their sigils.” He sank back into his chair. “We must learn which Gaunt-lord these creatures serve.”

“Tomorrow,” Dandelion told us sternly. “It sounds as if we’ll need all the rest we can get tonight after a good wash. Hopefully, the Eglain won’t mind helping us with getting these clothes cleaned.”

It was as we were leaving that Trennil spoke up again, safely outside of the Lore-tower, to ask, “What did you mean by a dead dwarf king?”

I sighed. “Something happened to the west, in the dwarf lands,” I explained. “Dourhands, they’re called? One of your people.”

He nodded. “Aye. Much to my disgrace. Heard they’d done something terrible and were allied with Angmar these days. Good Longbeards have shunned them.” Tinendail rattled along slightly behind us listening intently.

“Yes, well, their dead king isn’t dead any longer. That’s why they’ve decided to throw in their lot with the wrong side. They think he’s their king reborn and not…” I waved a hand helplessly. “A wight. The thing that raised him was a gaunt-man. Gaunt-lord, I suppose, now that I know there’s a difference.”

Trennil halted, and we did the same. His large hands waved in a ludicrous manner as he spluttered. “This is an outrage!” he finally shouted. “The Dourhands turned against Durin’s Folk nearly two years ago! This thing, this Skorgrím puppet, has been roaming around for all this time?”

“Looks like,” Dandelion murmured not unkindly.

I glanced back up at the Tower. “Ivar,” I said. “I almost forgot his name. The Gaunt-lord.” An idea formed in my mind as pieces fit together. “The east. Here. That’s what the Witch-king meant when he spoke to Ivar.”

I didn’t know that an elf could grow deathly pale and ashen while still alive until I looked at Tinendail to see him doing just that. It was his companion who spoke, however. “By Durin’s Beard,” Trennil said in horror. “You saw that fell spirit?”

I grimaced. “I’ve never felt a terror so oppressive.” I sucked in a deep breath. “It’s not the point. Ivar was the Gaunt-lord who was there. The Witch-king instructed him to make trouble in the east with his ward. I don’t know who the ward is, but I’m going to bet that the one doing all of this is Ivar.”

Dandelion took my hand in both of hers. “Grandson, why have you not told Radagast this information?” Her worried eyes looked up into mine.

“Because he already knows,” I said. “Or suspects it. Going to retrieve the sigils tomorrow will confirm that suspicion or tell him it’s another of the gaunt-lords he knows about.”

“This is very bad,” Tinendail finally said with a shaky voice. “I know there are many gaunt-men from the First Age, but only five Gaunt-lords. Those are records that the Elves kept since that Age was theirs.”

I regarded him. “You can go home,” I told him. “Take this information back to Rivendell and the elves there. Perhaps they might offer assistance to us, even if it’s only one of their member and not an army.”

He shook his head. “No. What would be the use of me returning home and never getting to leave again, and them sending a single elf here to help, when by staying, I AM the elf who will help?”

I didn’t have a good argument for that other than that of a father. If my son had sneaked away to go on adventures and had come into the path of danger, I wouldn’t want him there. Not while he wasn’t a man. But this elf, despite not being an adult, was already older than my own father would’ve been and perhaps even his father after him. What would time matter to the immortal? When could I tell that immortal that he wasn’t old enough to risk his life for a worthy cause if it meant so many others would be saved? When would I tell a young Man the same when I was barely sixteen when I began my own training in the arts of war and manhood?

I nodded at him. Dandelion made a sound of dismay. For the first time, I turned a scowl to her that brooked no argument, and she seemed taken aback. “No, Gammer. He’s right. And if the danger is dire enough, he’d never make it there and back in time to offer any aid, besides. As much as it might pain us to let a child help us, he’s here and skilled. And he’s not a child too young to hold a sword or fight beside us. We’ve seen as much.”

Tinendail straightened a bit more. “I’m almost grown,” he assured us all. “Another quarter century at most.”

She sighed heavily. “Let’s find somewhere to rest and eat and wash ourselves. We have a long day ahead of us come the dawn.”

We began walking once again, and Trennil rumbled slightly either in thought or dismay of his own. “We’ll need to discuss our tactics on the way to these ruins. Definitely once we reach them and get the lay of the land and our enemies. Remind me to ask Radagast how to tell these gaunt-men apart from one another so that we know which to target for the sigils.”

At least there aren’t many, I consoled myself. The wizard thought they’d died out and been destroyed Ages ago. There may only be one working for Ivar, perhaps two, and we can figure out their weaknesses with the wizard’s help. The task is daunting, but it isn’t impossible. It can’t be.

A Burg’s (Yule Fest) Tale – Part 1

Neeker’s coat had grown shaggy with the onset of winter. It made him look slightly unkempt, but I had to admit that it kept him warmer as he plodded over the hard-packed, frozen path leading through the bare forest toward the lights of Winter-home. The snows had grown deep in some of the mountain passes; here, though, they remained manageable. The invitations and flyers that pointed me here for the festival had also lured in enough people to keep the road clear.

They called it Winter-home, but it was in an area that had been named Frostbluff. I hadn’t wanted to come here for Yule. I hadn’t been the one to make that decision, though. That dubious honor had gone to Trennil, who had taken one look at the flyer that had been posted and happily announced, “Aye! A bit of drink and merriment while out and about would suit us well! If we can’t be with our families for this holiday, then we should at least be where we can celebrate with others.”

Not to be outdone, Tinendail had cheerily added, “We can bring gifts for the less fortunate. Especially the little ones.” He had rubbed his hands together at the thought. “What do the children of Men like to play with, I wonder? Do you think they’ll explain to me what the purpose of hobby-horses are if I ask?”

“Oh, I’m sure they’ll want you to practice on one with them,” Trennil had replied with a slight roll of his eyes.

The elf’s eyes had lit up instantly. “Do you really think so?” I had known right then we wouldn’t need to gift him anything ourselves.

It hadn’t ended there, though. Dandelion had stubbornly forced us into properly festive and formal clothing when we had awakened the morning we meant to ride into Winter-home. I’d found myself in a heavy, fur-lined cloak of burgundy and gold with a matching robe and boots beneath. I even had the gloves. She’d made sure that I kept my mask hidden away and that no hair was out of place despite the wintry winds blowing past us. I had sourly used my golden scarf to half cover my features to keep the nipping cold from stinging my skin too badly. The others had been decked out much the same by the hobbit. I had only felt a little commiseration for our predicament from Trennil; apparently, Tinendail had leaped at the chance to leave his armor behind for a time and don “appropriate” clothing instead.

He had then decorated our mounts. Poor Neeker had received a bridle complete with candle-laden antlers and an elaborate caparison to go with it. The elf had somehow laid hands on fur for the beast’s lower legs like that of a draft horse, too. “There, now you match,” he had chirped at me with a final pat to Neeker’s rump over the gold-stitched cloth. When I had realized he was right, I’d narrowed my eyes at his retreating figure. He and Dandelion had been suspiciously coordinated.

As we approached the outer gates of Winter-home, I found one of the stablemasters nearby nodding in appreciation for Neeker’s appearance. Considering he stood next to a huge white stag with black antlers, though, I chose not to take his opinion to heart.

“Oh, Morchandir,” Dandelion fussed at me from her pony. “Stop scowling. This is the one time of year when you shouldn’t need to!”

I snorted. “If you’d let me wear my mask, you wouldn’t see it and neither would anyone else,” I reminded her.

She swiped at my scarf and came up short by some distance. “And pull that down, grandson! We’re out of the wind, now.”

Trennil grunted from slightly behind and to the right of me. “Aye, lad, she’s right for once. Try to have a little fun.” He then added, “And not the kind that comes from watching how confused everyone is when a plague-mask wearing giant rides in through the front gates.”

I grinned far more sharply than I probably should’ve at the idea. “Oh, that’s a brilliant image. I’ll have to do that later.”

“Don’t you dare!” Dandelion growled at me. “I’ll have your hide, young man!” Tinnendail giggled from the other side of me, behind the Guardian’s pony.

“Yes, Gammer,” I responded automatically, sulking. At least when I used that reply, I seemed to appease her ire. It worked yet again. I tugged down the scarf unwillingly as we came to a halt where the guest mounts would be sheltered out of the cold. At least the horses would be warm while we explored the place. We took up the small satchels of gifts to bring along with us as we walked across the snow-limned cobblestones of the road.

Trennil moved closer to me and dropped his voice once I had let Gammer and the elf surge ahead. “Maybe you’ll find a pretty girl to dance with this way,” he pointed out quietly. “Just don’t let the Gammer notice, or you’ll come out of this festival married.”

Again, I wanted to add. I didn’t. “That doesn’t work well as support for keeping a mask off my face, you know.”

He pointed ahead at Tinendail. “You brought a pretty elf Champion along. Use him as a shield.” He chuckled. “It’s better than a plague mask. Just imagine the girls fawning over him trying to flirt and the elf not realizing it in the least.”

I glanced over at him. “Are you saying I’ll be invisible?”

He waved one large hand vaguely. “So long as you’re… sitting, somewhere. Not looming and drawing attention to yourself in all that finery.” He added, “You’re a burglar. It shouldn’t be hard. Just enjoy the festival, Morchandir. It’s the one time you won’t have to hide who you are around others.”

You mean an unfortunate pawn of fate? I wanted to ask but didn’t get the chance. “Hoy!” a voice called out from near a large fire by the entrance. I blinked and looked that way at the same moment as my companions. My reply to Trennil vanished as I noticed a hobbit woman warmly dressed in red and white. “I thought I was the one giving out gifts here?”

Dandelion moved closer with a confused expression. “What do you mean? We brought these to hand out to any less fortunate Folk here in Winter-home.”

The other hobbit blinked, and a smile split her face. “Oh! Well, I suppose that’s just fine, then. I give gifts to the festival-goers if they enjoy themselves enough.” She stuck out a mittened hand. “I’m Mara Sandydowns. Pleased to meet another hobbit!” Dandelion shook her hand. “I thought there’d been a mix-up somewhere. Oh!” She pointed toward the middle of the town. “There are some others of us at the theatre just over that way led by Mr. Shakesburrow.” She nodded at Dandelion. “I highly recommend catching one of their shows!”

Tinendail clapped slightly. “Oh, that sounds delightful!” he told her.

Mara turned and pointed to the sacks of gifts that she had lying nearby. “Participate in any Yule Festival activity today and earn a sack of presents!” She then added, “If you want to leave yours here, I’ll set them aside for when you come back. I promise I won’t give them away if you’d rather do so yourselves.”

Dandelion nodded. “We can in a little while. Thank you.” She set her small sack down and we followed suit. Our young elf seemed to become a child in front of us when the gifts left his hands. Not a very young one, perhaps, but it was easy to see why his own kind hadn’t considered him old enough to be out on his own just yet. “Gammer Digweed! Let’s go to the theatre! I’ve never seen a play before. I’ve only ever read about them!” His eyes danced in the firelight. Dandelion couldn’t help herself: she took his hand and led him away, laughing lightly, looking a little bit younger, too.

I could feel my own lips tugging up at the sight. Perhaps, if everything remained good, I could bring my son here next year and enjoy it the way that I truly wanted. All of this cheer and warmth felt wasted on me without my family there. I felt the tremble that moved through my innards and shivered around my heart as it squeezed slightly. I couldn’t give them anything. The disappointment felt sharp as it bit me. I glanced toward the sacks of presents once again. At first, the idea of stealing something came to me. A moment later, I pushed out the idea – if all it took was engaging in some of the festival activities, then I would do so and see what I might receive. Something that I could take to my son if I were lucky. If I wasn’t lucky, then I could at least see if I could barter it somewhere for something he might enjoy.

My gaze caught on movement beyond the firelight in the shadows and the snow. Someone sat in the lee of the wall as close to the fire as they dared. Why they didn’t come closer, I wasn’t sure. Every town had beggars; it was far too cold for them to lurk in the shadows here, however.

Trennil clapped me on the back. “I’ll be going to find something to do. You coming, mumak?” he asked me with another chuckle.

Mara rubbed her gloved hands together. “Oh, you can find an eating competition nearby. You can go and ask Basil if he needs help with his kegs, too.”

The dwarf perked up instantly. “Kegs, you say?”

Mara nodded quickly. “Or Mabel. She should be near him. I think she’s looking for help gathering things to make foodstuffs. Oh, and getting to the Grumpwood to collect firewood.” She paused. “Unwilling firewood.”

The Hunter blinked. “Unwilling firewood?” he asked blankly.

She nodded again. “Something about angry trees and flailing limbs.” I watched the dwarf twitch violently at the words and fought back the urge to snort laughing.

“Keg it is,” Trennil stated as he turned and moved off quickly. “Not Mabel,” I heard him muttering as he left. “Ignore Mabel…”

Mara frowned after him with much the same look of confusion that the dwarf had just worn. “You have strange friends,” she told me.

“You have no idea,” I agreed. “Thank you for your help, Mara.” I moved off in Trennil’s wake when I heard someone clear his throat close by and offer a polite, “Hello there! New to the Frostbluff, are you?”

Looking toward the man, I found myself facing a guard. The instant tension I felt was almost instinctive. I hadn’t even stolen anything yet even if I’d considered it. “One of many,” I replied.

“Well, you’ve come at the finest time of year. I just hope you behave yourself, or else you’ll be hearing from me!”

He didn’t sound at all convincing to me given how jovial he made it, and I felt myself relax. “Can I help you?”

“Funny you should ask that,” he replied. “I’m Kember. Guard Kember. I couldn’t help overhearing about you and yours wanting something to do.” He fidgeted with the hilt of his sword. “Don’t get me wrong. I’m sure you’ll have a wonderful time. The mayor employs me to see to it that everyone keeps the peace so that you patrons can have the best possible experience during Yule.”

I stared down at him. “That’s usually what a guard is meant to do, yes,” I agreed dispassionately.

He shrugged at me. “You should begin by speaking to Ona Kay who runs the Eating Contest. All good celebrations should start with a full belly of delicious food!” He turned and pointed in the direction that Trennil and the others had gone. “Come back here after you’ve had a tour of the place. I could use a hand with one or two things someone like you might be good at.”

That doesn’t sound questionable at all, I mused as my lips twitched up again. “Fine.” I moved past him toward the square and the sound of a woman’s voice announcing when an eating contest would begin once more. When I was close enough, I asked, “Are you Ona Kay?”

She turned her smile toward me, froze a moment, and let her gaze travel up from where a normal man’s head would be to where mine sat. She blinked before catching herself and becoming warm once more. “Good day to you! Yes, I’m Ona, the Announcer for the first station at the Eating Contest.” She motioned to her left and behind her. “There are many more stations, of course, and I hope you will be able to visit all of them before you get too full.” She spread her hands slightly as if helpless. “What is a festival without wonderfully excessive amounts of food? I doubt you will find a bigger feast anywhere in Middle-Earth than here in Winter-home.”

I chuckled. “I think I know some hobbits who might take up that challenge. Have you ever seen one of them eat?” I shook my head. “Anyway, the guard said to come see you as I got familiar with the town and everything going on in it.”

Something moved behind her eyes. “Ah, Guard Kember. Well, if you’re speaking with people…” She nodded at the stairs leading down into the square itself. “You should speak next to the mayor, Winston Goodnough. The Festival is here thanks to his efforts, and he wishes to greet all of his guests personally.”

I wasn’t sure what I’d seen. She’d seemed on the verge of saying something about Kember before thinking better of it. Shrugging it off, I made my escape to meet with the mayor. It was probably my imagination.

The mayor, a grey-haired man in finery, greeted me and sent me to look around the festival. Something about him reminded me of my usual marks enough that I could feel my fingers itching in my gloves to pick his pocket. I would most likely come up with something good. His wife, Carolyn, stood nearby with her arms crossed at her chest and a smile on her face. She, too, welcomed me and then moved me on to the festival. I knew their kind, though. I’d robbed enough of them. I had half a mind to do it before I left the festival just on principle alone.

I didn’t know where to go next, though. A pair of people, servants by their dress, stood near the bottom of a set of stairs. Music skirled through the air so that patrons danced individually or in pairs near the food and drink laden tables and benches in the square. Mara’s words came back to me about the woman’s identity before the man’s, and I couldn’t help the grin that split my face when I noticed Trennil’s lack of presence anywhere nearby. As I approached her, I nodded a greeting. She looked up and up at me with a soft, “Oh, my goodness!” and a little more color touched her already pink cheeks.

“Are you Mabel?” I asked in vague amusement. “I just came from the mayor. I was wondering if you had any suggestions for where to go to tour the town?”

She dropped her gaze. “I’m sorry, I’m only a servant. The Mayor surely doesn’t need you to talk to me.”

I shook my head. “No. I wanted to, though. Mara mentioned you, actually.” She brightened immediately at the hobbit’s name. “I’ll try to return and help you out once my tour is done.”

“Well, if it’s Mara who’s sent you…” Mabel said, trailing off. “I’ll not take up any more of your time; but perhaps you’d like to see the games we have to offer? It’s a bit of a walk, but you should go talk to Cecil Voller, the host of the Snowball Fight. Cecil is a ways north of the town, but I’ve heard that the snowball fights are well worth the trip.” She shifted and pointed. “Just go around the corner, here, and then make a right to go through the gate. You’ll see the lights and the snowmen from there and can direct your steps. The snowball field is beyond that, right by Cluckland.”

I frowned at her. “Cluck… land?”

She nodded happily. “It’s where we raise our chickens. They’re almost as pampered as our tent of mushrooms.”

So, that was the tent we passed on the way into the town, I realized. “I won’t tell my hobbit friend. You may wind up with an empty tent if they’re anything like Farmer Maggot’s.”

She grimaced. “That’s an unfortunate name.” She waved at me. “I’ll see you in a bit, then!”

I bowed my head and moved off around the corner as she explained. I passed another series of tables with celebrants before finding the arched exit. The hike out through the snow was cold but uneventful. I could hear chickens clucking on the crisp air from not too distant before heading back inside. Tinendail would want to make a snowman, and Dandelion would enable him. Reconciling the elf’s two images in my head, that of a child building a snowman and a fully plated Champion hewing through enemies, felt almost impossible. It was like trying to think of my son doing the same, if my son happened to already have the physical form of an adult.

But Cecil had sent me back inside to the Theatre, speaking of Tinendail and Dandelion, and I wondered if I would see them there. I went in and up the stairs near the ovens, followed the feasting path around to the second set of steps where Mabel and Basil still remained, and on to where a hobbit stood outside the theatre door. “Oh, hello! Are you interested in theater?” the announcer asked brightly. “We have quite a show that we’re putting on this Yule, and we’ve travelled all the way from the Shire!”

“Have you?” I asked with a little grin. “That seems a touch unusual, hobbits traveling out of the Shire.”

She shrugged helplessly. “We love theatre too much to keep it to ourselves. Besides, Mr. Shakesburrow did very well. We’ve been quite safe and happy for the most part. Well fed, too!” She clapped her hands together. “Speaking of which! Make sure you come back and see the show when you’re finished with your tour of town. I know you won’t be disappointed.” Her hands dropped to her waist. “Well, I am the last stop on your tour. You should return to the mayor. Do come back to see our wonderful show!”

I chuckled as I moved away. The L-shaped pathway in front of the theatre led back out to the feasting path back the way he came, but the rest returned to the thoroughfare to the west and south – an area he hadn’t been to just yet and that remained darker and less frequented by the festival goers. He had seen enough places like it, had immersed himself in them, to know it was the area for the less fortunate. That the “tour” I had been on avoided it only made me want to go there more. Enough wealth flowed through Winter-home that I didn’t expect many of the poor to remain poor, or unemployed, for at least this bit of time.

I passed a man near the entrance to that part of town and frowned at the sight of children, people, and a lack of warmth and consideration there despite the festivities a short distance away. A red-headed man leaning against a support pole of a rundown building sneered at me. “What do you want, O Revered Patron? Have you come to show off your silver and gold and your fat belly?” He waved a hand while I glanced down dubious at my very not-fat belly. “Well, show away. We earn our meager bread while you stuff your faces and play in the snow.”

I looked back up at him. “I haven’t done either of those, thanks.”

His tone continued to pull up my hackles. I didn’t like the challenge in it. It sounded too much like the way I’d been spoken down to most of my life, never mind that this man had decided to assume so much about me. “You are not welcome in Winter-home, not to all of its residents,” he continued. “We slave so that the Mayor can be rich, and so that he can throw marvelous parties for you all. Begone! We are not welcome among you, and you are not welcome among us!”

I opened my mouth to respond when a man near the red-head beckoned to me and said a touch sharply, “Gareth. Enough.” I stepped toward him. “My name is Daley Utteridge.” He sighed. “Please, pardon my friend. It is a hard winter, and there is less money and bread to go around than usual. But that is no cause to be uncivil to the guests of this town.”

I felt myself relax slightly through my shoulders as I nodded slightly. “He’s assuming too much about me. I’m neither rich nor unaware of how things are for the poor.”

Daley nodded. “Life can be cruel here, as you can plainly see, but I count myself among the lucky. Those who cannot work go even colder and hungrier than we.” I frowned at that. He offered a smile to me that seemed weary. “I am sure you are more welcome among us than Gareth implied; we are a friendly folk. You are welcome to visit any time you wish. I hope you enjoy your time in our little town!”

I puffed out a little sigh of my own that left a cloud in the air. “My friends and I brought gifts for everyone in this part of town. We’ll bring them by soon, especially for the children.”

The other man’s features softened. “Bless you, then. Perhaps, there is hope yet for this town and its poorest folk.” He offered a hand to me that I clasped. “You had best take this road straight to the festival once again. I doubt that the mayor wanted you to see us here, let alone speak to us.”

He was right. No mayor wanted the high-class money-spenders lining his pockets to see the poor and indigent. As I walked back to Winston Goodnough and his wife, I noticed that several of those unfortunates had taken up positions near the warmth and light of the fires as close as they dared. After I spoke with the mayor and his wife, who gave me copper and the festival tokens they used, I returned to where Mara remained, intent on getting the sacks of presents we had brought so we could deliver them. Kember stopped me before I could reach her.

“Oh, we can’t have this. No indeed, the mayor’s instructions were incredibly clear,” he was telling himself as I approached. “Oh! Hello, again.” He squinted at me in thought. “Maybe you can help…”

I glanced around myself in case the watchman meant someone else. He didn’t. “What seems to be the issue?” I asked a touch warily.

He scowled and pointed as he looked back toward where I had seen the figure in the shadows earlier while speaking with Mara. “Those beggars need to move off. I don’t care where they go, but we can’t have good patrons and patronesses seeing them like this.”

I had a feeling that was coming. Tension pulled my shoulders back once again. “What’s wrong with letting them find warmth and coin from the better off gathered here?” I asked a touch sharper than I probably should have.

He didn’t seem to notice. “The mayor wants this town to look pristine and happy and clean as long as the Yule Festivities go on. These beggars must get off the streets at once and clear out.” His expression cleared. “Are you looking for something to do between festival games? I’ll give you a nice reward if you clear out those beggars. I have my hands full with my other guard duties right now.”

“Where should I tell them to go?” I asked after a moment. “They shouldn’t be sent off to die in the cold or anything.”

Kember shrugged. “I don’t care. They just can’t be where people can see them.” He moved off afterward without looking the least remorseful, and I stared after him with a clenched jaw. So, you do want them dying in the cold, you and the mayor, just so long as they stop inconveniencing you and the patrons, I thought in frustration.

I found myself gritting my teeth while I approached the first man nearby. He gave me a weary look from where he had settled in a clear, dry patch away from the snow and within the circle of warmth from a nearby fire. “Listen,” I told him. “You have to go somewhere else.”

He slumped. “You want me to leave, but… Guard Kember just told me to leave a few hours ago, so I did, and this is where I ended up. Where should I go now?”

I shook my head. “I don’t know. I asked him the same thing, but he didn’t give me an answer. He just told me to say that you had to move.” Guilt wriggled in me. “I would let you stay if it were up to me.”

He slowly climbed to his feet. “All right, then. I suppose I’ll just have to amble along somewhere else.” He laughed without humor. “And then Guard Kember or you or the Mayor or someone will tell me that’s no good either,” he continued bitterly. “Then I’ll amble elsewhere. I’m sure we beggars make a good sport for the rich folk.” He slogged through the snow in threadbare shoes and clothing, leaving me smarting.

“This isn’t right,” I told myself roughly. I had been one of them more than once. It didn’t sit well with me in the least. Just do it. Kember will make your life miserable here if you don’t. There has to be something you can do for them to make up for it.

As I moved toward the poor area of town, I found another man to one side. He was too close to the festival area where Ona began her eating contest, and I knew that he’d be hassled if I left him there. Steeling myself, I told him, “I’m sorry. You have to move.”

He didn’t fight. He did, however, give me a disappointed look that pricked my conscience all over again. “I’ll go, I’ll go. Though I think it’s abominable bad the way you rich folks treat us beggars. Just who do you think made us this way? The world ain’t made of coins, you know. When one class gets all the coins, another gets none.”

“I know,” I agreed somberly. “Trust me, I understand.” I only continued around the corner once I’d made sure he was on his way elsewhere. I encountered a woman next who wailed in frustration, “There’s nowhere for me to go! If they want me to leave, they should tell me where to go….” Her brother stood near the theatre entry. The hobbit announcer I had spoken to didn’t mind in the least; all the same, the patrons gave him such suspicious looks that I knew it was only a matter of time before someone came looking for him. He seemed ashamed of having to beg for bread and was truly appalled at having disturbed anyone by doing so. The last man, near the back exit out to the snow fields, just wanted some warmth. I had to harden myself to tell him to move on, unwilling to do it otherwise, and he did so still reddened from the cold.

By the time I marched back to Kember, I felt like stabbing him. “It’s done,” I growled. They needed warmth and food, money for it, and nobody was allowing them to ask for help.

He must have taken my growl for annoyance about the beggars being there to begin with. “I don’t see any beggars loitering about now. Whatever you said to them seemed to do the trick!” Reaching into his belt, he fished out some coins. I almost didn’t take them before thinking better of it. “As promised, there’s a reward for the favor you did me. Now the mayor will be pleased, which means that I will be pleased, and that is always just how I want it!”

I nearly punched him with the fist I’d made over my ill-gotten reward. Ninety copper and four festival tokens. I’d have rather slipped a knife between someone’s ribs. It would’ve been less cruel and dirty. I settled them into my money pouch, tucked it away safely, and stalked away from Kember without another word.

I slowed a few moments later. So far, I had done as the mayor and the guard had asked. My reward had been the festival tokens, but it had also been ninety copper as well. I now had a silver and twenty copper, total, and I knew that bread didn’t cost too much. I would need help, though, if I meant to right some of the wrongs that this town had decided to commit. That I had decided to commit already. I would have to do it like a burglar, though, if I didn’t want us tossed out for causing trouble.

I started off toward Daley Utteridge once again. I already knew Mabel needed help. Let’s see what else I can do, I decided internally. And then I’ll go find the others.

* * *

Daley wanted me to give everyone I’d chased off a festival coin. They could use it to get something for themselves as a result. He also asked for me to clear off the frost grims making it dangerously cold in the area. “Guard Kember and the watchmen have been making an effort to keep those less fortunate from the festivities, but I never thought that some of our own patrons would drive them out!” he declared with a look at me that said he knew what I’d done.

“Unwillingly in at least one case,” I’d growled back at him. But he’d made a good point and had asked for my help with something I knew I could do to help make it up to the people I had wronged.

Basil Wyndham asked me to tidy up the tables from the eating contest since he “couldn’t.” The lazy git. I’d take his money and then some. He also wanted me to do his job with the kegs. Mabel asked me to get firewood, as Mara had said she would, but also to collect ingredients for making foodstuffs for the festival. By that point, Dandelion and Tinendail had rejoined me and could help me remember everything I needed. I returned to Kember to see if he had anything other than chasing off beggars for me and was surprised to find him needing help with snowbeasts in the area. Driving them off, which I could see the wisdom of since so many people were out there, by “bringing them some cheer.” I snorted at the idea.

We then separated with ulterior motives in mind. Trennil went on keg duty and cleanup detail. Tinendail went off to hack at living trees for firewood and to gather some of the ingredients for food while he was out. He would also bring back enough of those for the beggars to use. Dandelion went off to cheer at the snowbeasts, collect the rest of the ingredients, and destroy the frost grims.

That left me. The last thing that I had done, before setting off from Daley, had been to speak with Gareth Rust. “Back again?” he’d asked. He had paused and then offered, “Maybe I spoke unjustly the first time we met. Mayor Goodnough’s wish to please the folk like you is the reason folk like me go hungry this winter. But you don’t seem like a bad sort, despite the Mayor seeming to like you.”

“I don’t know that he will once I’m done here,” I had drawled back.

That had apparently piqued Gareth’s interest. “If you want to earn yet more favor with me and my fellows here, you surely won’t object to playing a little prank on the Mayor for the sport of the real townsfolk.”

I had canted my head slightly. “You have my attention.”

He had smirked. “The mayor has some fireworks stored near the festival area, and he’s intent on saving them for just the right moment. If you set off where they are, you’ll ruin the show (at least for him).” He had rubbed his hands together. “While the patrons are distracted, you should pinch Frostbluff Coins from their pockets! I can think of better uses for those coins….” He had nodded slightly. “Money is wasted on folk like them.”

It was like the world had grown lighter. I straightened and knew my grin had gone wolfish. “Finally, something I don’t mind doing and that I’m good at,” I had announced with more than a bit of glee.

That was why I had stayed behind in the end. I had work to do that I didn’t want Dandelion to see. My Yule gift from her would be a switching if she caught me doing this before I could explain to her why I was doing it. I knew the explanation might mitigate the doing of it.

I didn’t want to take that chance, though. Better to ask forgiveness than permission, I reminded myself. She had quite the arm on her with a switching branch and, despite my certainty of her delusional nature, I had to wonder if, at some point, Gammer Digweed hadn’t actually had children.

I casually wandered down the snow-lined street, turned right, and stood pondering the theatre as one of the watchmen passed by. Once he had done so, I continued on toward the short line of tables currently bare of contestants. An announcer, who I’d come to know as Mabel’s husband, Jack, stood nearby speaking with a patron between contests. I need a small distraction, I realized as I casually took a look around and spotted the box of fireworks near the low wall next to the stairs leading down to the square.

I needn’t have worried. Before the thought had fully formed and gone in my mind, the first set of contestants from the next wave of Ona’s contest hustled toward the food-laden tables. Jack stopped talking to take his position and the patron moved to watch the group as they straggled in. Others did as well and, with the air of someone who knows his height makes for an annoyance in an audience, I stepped back toward the rear of the gathering crowd of onlookers. I just happened to move toward the fireworks when I did so. Easing back, I leaned against the low wall as nonchalantly as possible as they began to cheer. I had a way to light the fireworks and enough tinder. I just needed the few moments it would take to get more than one of the ends burning so that the rest would be triggered. Unfortunately, that would require enough space for me to get away from them before they started exploding. Timing was everything.

The first contestant moved off, accompanied by cheers. Then a second one followed, and then a third. The next table of food awaited. With the eaters went their supporters, and it quickly became active as bodies began to shift and move away. I slowly sank into a crouch behind the large, snow-blanketed tree near the box of explosives and pulled out my tinderbox. Placing the dry tinder inside in two places, I hurriedly struck off some sparks from the flint and firesteel until a small flame flickered to life in each site. Rising, I hoped that it was enough as I made my way down the steps toward the dancing people and minstrels playing for them below.

I had only just come even with Mabel and her lazy partner, Basil, when the first firework went off with a loud whine and crackle of light. The dancers immediately stopped. “Ooh, so nice!” a woman cooed, clapping her hands in delight. I turned to look up as well with as much surprise as I could manage. Another firework went off; a third; a fourth. A servant came running up to the box above, yelling, “Blasted fireworks!”

My nimble fingers, gloved or otherwise, went to work. As the crowd clapped for the show, distracted, I plucked whatever I could from each of their pockets with the ease of one who had done it his entire life. I silently thanked Dandelion for putting the long, heavy robe on me given it had deep pockets well-suited for carrying extra weight without giving anything away. The patrons were too enthralled to notice their festival coins were vanishing.

The poor servant above us could do nothing but stand, stare, and flap his hands wildly as he bewailed his luck. “The mayor will never forgive me for letting these go off early!” he cried. I glanced at the other set of stairs to find the mayor livid and steaming while trying to hide it. “Stop, stop!” the servant wailed to no avail. “Noooo… I have the worst luck!” Smirking, I tucked the last few coins away in my clothing as the fireworks finally died back down and the man above us began to cry. With a final explosion that consumed the entire box in an impressive display, the fireworks went silent, and the servant stared from between his fingers at where the box had been just before turning and fleeing. I felt a little bad for him, but I felt worse for the people I had decided to help.

I regrouped with the others near Gareth. Trennil, Tinendail, and Dandelion seemed oddly subdued as they saw the squalor and misery in the poor area compared to the rest. Trennil had retrieved our sacks of gifts for us on his way back. “Daley, Gareth,” I greeted them both. “I have plenty of things for everyone back here.” Gareth straightened from his pole while Daley came forward to take our satchels. “Most of it is for the children,” I admitted. “But not everything.” I started fishing out everything I’d pilfered from the crowd and grinned at Gareth. “I hope you enjoyed the fireworks.”

He knew exactly what it was I meant and chuckled in return. “That was quite a display, Morchandir! And judging from how close they were, I’ll warrant you sent the mayor into a fit and disrupted things rather nicely!”

Dandelion shot a dark look up at me. “What did you do?” she asked immediately.

“Helped out with a request,” I replied blandly. “Nothing violent.” I offered what I had in my hand to Gareth and pulled out the rest, much to his startlement. He seemed to see me in another light by the time he had secured most of it.

“Well done, well done.” He handed back some of the coins. “Here, you should keep half of what you managed to collect. These coins,” he patted his pocket, “will be enough to spread out among my friends so that they won’t go hungry tonight!”

“Morchandir…” Dandelion growled dangerously low.

I stuffed my gloved hands into my robe’s outer pockets. “Gammer, it was for a good cause,” I told her. “You heard the man: people won’t go hungry tonight who would’ve otherwise.”

Trennil made a sound and hooked a thumb toward a dark corner. “I hid a small barrel of their ale there for you lot,” he told Daley and the ginger. “It’s not much, but I hope that it helps.”

Dandelion made a grumpy noise, but she dropped the issue of my burglaries. “Tinendail and I brought in enough ingredients that we made some bread and whatnot to bring for you that won’t be missed by the main festival. They got theirs. And I destroyed several of the frost grims that were making it colder.” She said this last to Daley, given it had been his request she fulfilled.

The elf offered the second sack to Gareth directly. It was much smaller but smelled heavenly enough that I was reminded of how I hadn’t eaten in all of my running around. The sound of my stomach rumbling turned their amused eyes toward me. I shrugged helplessly. “I’ve been too busy to eat anything,” I explained. “It’s not the longest I’ve gone without food. I’m fine.”

Tinendail motioned at Daley. “If you have a moment, could you bring over some of the firewood I bundled?” He clapped Trennil’s shoulder with a cheery look. “Be glad you weren’t there,” he told the dwarf. “Those wood-trolls were throwing heavy stones.”

The dwarf shuddered. “Bad enough they were alive, but using them for fires… it feels off, somehow.”

“Any port in a storm,” Gareth pointed out. Daley moved off with the elf, and we watched them depart in silence for a few moments before he spoke again. Turning back to me, he said, “Morchandir, we should talk.”

His serious tone immediately brought the Gammer out in Dandelion. “Are you well, young man?” she asked worriedly. “Do I need to fetch something else for you?”

Gareth shook his head. “No, I am well, as you see.” He nodded his head in thanks to her offer. “Better than well!” he continued, his attention returning to me. “I have a plan that might just fix everything that’s wrong with this town, and I need your help.” He crossed his arms at his chest. “Something big is stirring. This festival has pushed a lot of folk right to the edge, if you know what I mean. I’m going to pull them back.”

Trennil grunted. “That’s well and good, lad, but I think we need to know a little more before jumping in.” He then added, mostly because Dandelion had begun to glare at him, “We’ve given them quite a bit already. And besides, you know like I do that it’s better to have the full story before going in headlong.”

She sighed and relented. “I don’t want you to be right.” Even if he is, I agreed. She agreed, too, even if her need to do good and help warred with her desire to do it safely.

Gareth nodded at us. “That’s why I need you to speak to Mara. Let her know that I sent you. She has the information you need, but I’m not the only one who spoke to her. It’s up to you to decide if you want to help us or not.” He spread his hands. “Not much I can do about that other than ask. All of these families without money and food didn’t just happen accidentally, I do know that much.”

I frowned. “We’ll go speak to Mara Sandydowns.” I gestured at the sacks. “Make good use of these. Oh, and send the elf to Mara when he gets back with the firewood, would you?” At Gareth’s nod, I lifted my hand and waved to him as I turned to make my way down the road toward the front entrance of Winter-home. Dandelion and Trennil followed closely.

“I don’t like it,” the dwarf announced. “I knew something felt wrong. I didn’t know what it was until I saw how bad off these people were. The guards were telling them to leave.”

“Patrons, too,” I added. I hesitated and then said, “I was one of them. Though, in my defense, I was roped into it and didn’t really want to.” I pointed toward Kember, who still stood near the entrance. “He caught me and asked me to do it just after you all had left.”

“Morchandir!” Dandelion gasped, horrified.

“I didn’t want him making trouble for us, so I did it.” I said it with finality. “I regretted it and went off to collect as many things as I could to offset it. That’s where you all came in, too. I knew you wouldn’t want them going hungry and cold.” I sighed and we sidestepped several revelers who were a bit too far into their drinks. “So, if there is something else going on here, and my instincts are telling me there is, I want to put an end to it.”

Dandelion turned a pair of troubled eyes up to me. “You don’t usually care this much about other people, grandson.” I wasn’t sure if she sounded pleased or unnerved.

I half-smiled down at her. “You want me to stop? I can stop.”

“What? No!” she hurriedly yelped. “I just don’t know where this is coming from, that’s all. It’s a change that I don’t mind witnessing.”

I glanced away from her and stopped walking. “We’re here, Mara,” I announced, not answering the hobbit’s curiosity. “I heard you were looking to speak with me.”

Her expression this time was far less jovial than the first time we had met. “Well, well. You have made yourself right at home here. You have participated, just as the mayor wished, and you have also gone against his wishes by speaking with those he considers an unsavory influence on his great Festival.” She lifted her chin in a way I recognized from Dandelion’s more stubborn moments. “But now you must choose. One cannot have things both ways in life, not where it matters. Who will you choose to ally yourself with?”

My brows lifted. “That’s going to depend on what you tell me,” I replied. “What are my options and why do I even need to make an alliance in the first place?”

She made a thoughtful sound. “You must help either the workers and beggars or the mayor. You will be rewarded according to the financial abilities of each.”

I shook my head. “I need more information than that, Mara. I don’t jump in blindly. It’s a way to get myself killed.” Or at least, I don’t jump in blindly when I can manage it, I amended privately.

She rubbed her hands together near the flames of her campfire. “I’ll give you the short of it: the mayor is feeling a little suspicious of the workers and wants someone to spy on them to see what’s afoot. What you make of this is for you to decide, but I would talk to the mayor if I were you. See if what he has to say is to your liking.”

“Or?” Trennil prompted almost immediately, as if the idea of aiding the mayor had left a sour taste in his mouth.

“Or,” Mara continued. “You use that information to help the poor of Winter-home, whatever that information might be. Gareth Rust would be the one to speak with after the mayor, in that case.” She looked over at us. “So, make your decision and follow it through. The mayor will almost certainly reward you handsomely for your services. The poor? Not so much.”

I grimaced. She’d said something about wealth. It had my innate avarice flaring up. Dandelion knew me well enough by this point to guess – I received an elbow to the ribs and a glower. She then told her fellow hobbit, “We’ll speak with the mayor. Thank you, Mara.”

For what? I wanted to ask. Telling us to go talk to someone else and make a decision based on no information whatsoever? All the same, I muttered my thanks and we moved off toward the stairs. As I stepped off the last one, the mayor turned and recognized me. His smirk made me want to walk into a dark alley with him and emerge alone. “Ah, just the Man I wanted to see. You look quite a useful sort, so I have no qualms asking you to do a bit of dirty work for me.”

I snorted. “Useful.” I smirked at him. “Go on. Start talking.” I could play the heartless monster easily enough. I often was that monster in truth, after all.

“You see, the workers here have never been fond of my policies.” He made a flippant gesture. “They can feel however they wish, but if I hear of them stirring up any trouble or complaining to folks, that will mean trouble for them.” Too late, I told him mentally. “Gareth Rust is the one who seems to be the most upstart among his peers.”

“It goes with his red hair, you know,” I drawled.

“You must go spy on him and convince him to talk to you. If he says anything out of place, the rascal won’t have a job!” Goodnough promised.

“So, you want me to trick him into saying something so that you can take his job from him?” I asked.

The mayor squinted slightly. “Yes,” he finally agreed. “I think that might be for the best.”

I nodded. “Consider it done.” I motioned to the hobbit and the dwarf as I ascended the stone stairs. Only when I was at the top did I quietly offer to them, “I’m fairly sure that’s not at all legal of him.”

Dandelion shook her head. “I don’t know anything about laws. I just know it’s not right to do to someone, especially not in the middle of winter when everyone needs as much help as they can get.”

We made it back to Gareth, who seemed to have expected us. I told him the mayor’s plan and he laughed. “The mayor is right to send a spy. But you are a friend to us workers, and that is a great boon.” Insofar as I’m a friend to anyone, I agreed. He didn’t need to know that, though. “I have reason to believe that the mayor uses the extra funds from our lowered wages and over-time for unsavory transactions and doesn’t invest it in making our town better.”

Trennil set his hands on his hips. “You couldn’t have mentioned that before we went to Mara and the mayor?”

I patted the air at the dwarf. “Settle, Trennil. If we hadn’t decided to help them, telling us that would’ve been a disaster, especially for Gareth himself. The mayor’s targeted him.” I looked back at the Man. “Go on.”

He nodded in thanks to me. “I have seen Guard Frostway coming to town at night to collect money and forms to bring to the fort down by the lake. Will you go investigate down there? The mayor will fire me on sight if I leave my post.” He said the last while pointedly looking at Trennil.

Dandelion pursed her lips. “Money and forms. I bet they would show for sure where the money is going. If it’s not going where it should, the townsfolk can take action against him.” She looked up at me. “More theft?”

Tinendail finally jogged up to us with a happy, “What did I miss?” His bright features and youthful enthusiasm almost lit up the cold night.

“We’re going to steal the Yule Festival,” I replied quietly, eyes narrowed.

A Burg’s Tale: Chapter 24

If you’ve never tried to ride up on a suspicious folk living in the ruins of an actual ancient, still defensible fort, I would suggest doing so with caution. Our approach to Ost Guruth – apparently, the word “ost” means “fort” in Sindarin – had guards on the front-facing stairwell hailing us with very real threats as soon as we arrived. It took mentioning Gadaric Munce’s name and a flash of a token that he had given us at some point in our duties for him for the armed men to allow us passage further inside. That was where we met Frideric the Elder, who only believed our tale when we showed him our Eglain relics. Even so, his trust only went so far, and both Dandelion and I found ourselves once more working to aid these people when we woke in the morning. “I’m going to start stabbing,” I had grumbled to her.

“Don’t you dare, young man,” she had replied firmly, adding something about jerking a knot in my tail if I tried.

The biggest threats to the Eglain in Ost Guruth, we found, were spiders, wargs, and orcs, though half-orcs also infested some of the ruins of the area, and some of the other Eglain sent us into the swamps where dead things roamed. Dandelion had patted my forearm when she heard me cursing under my breath once we found out about the latter. It had been a testament to her understanding of my utter loathing of the undead that she hadn’t chastised me on my language instead.

Only after we had killed enough of these creatures that the Forsaken were safe did Frideric finally allow us to do more than ask about Radagast the Brown. “Morchandir,” he intoned gravely, “you have proven over and again the sincerity of your claims. It is only fair then that we honor our request and provide you the information that you require.

I stirred to reply with “How good of you to grace us with the critical information that we need to save the world after all this backbreaking labor we’ve offered,” but Dandelion elbowed me in the side so that all I got out was, “How g-” before I grunted. Frideric offered us a skeptically lofted brow, but I grumbled, “Thank you” instead.

He continued. “Radagast is ever a friend to our people. He comes to us now as a favor to our leader who called him when the wildlife in Agamaur turned foul.”

I blinked. Leader? I wondered. I thought Frideric was the leader? Are we going to need to do more chores for someone before we’re allowed to do anything helpful like actually speak with this wizard?

Frideric turned and motioned toward the hindmost parts of the run-down fortress. “He is in private study in the last tower in the back of the ruins of Ost Guruth.” He added “the place where we make our home” afterward, much to my confusion.

As if we hadn’t received that information repeatedly over the last little while? I thought. I suddenly wondered if “the Elder” wasn’t a title but a warning of his spotty memory. “Err, yes,” I offered awkwardly.

He seemed not to notice. “Seek him out. Perhaps there is a way that both of you can aid the other.”

“Thank you,” Dandelion offered. I nodded in agreement as politely as I could, stepped away, and walked off to the back of Ost Guruth. Once I was safely out of earshot of the man, I growled at the hobbit beside me, “If we get to this tower and find out Radagast moved on a day ago while we were stabbing half-orcs and entirely too-large spiders, I swear to Eru…”

“Easy, grandson,” she replied softly. “The Eglain would have told us if he had left.”

I snorted. “You have a great deal more faith in humanity’s desire for free labor than I do, Gammer.”

“Perhaps I still believe that most people will do the right thing when given the chance,” she argued.

I looked at her in disbelief. “You really HAVE been knocked in the head once too often.”

She glared up at me. “Morchandir…” she growled in warning.

I found myself saved by our arrival at the tower. We had been here once or twice already to help one of the Eglain, a girl named Hana, whose words had stymied us further. A woman draped in vines and reeds had been found beyond a wall to the north in a place named Agamaur, but she had been hostile. From what Hana had told us, the woman sounded like a wizard. Perhaps it was why Radagast was here, now? One of his own had turned from her course? I waved to her as we passed and Dandelion growled up at me. “We’re here,” I told the hobbit to stay her wrath.

The door wasn’t terribly heavy despite its appearance when I heaved it. In fact, it was light enough that I almost slammed it into my masked face before I could catch it. Gammer snickered, and I let her do so as payment for my comment about hitting her head. Not that it’s not true, I amended privately as we stepped inside the tower.

We had to mount the stone steps circling upward since nobody stood in the bottom level. When we reached the top, we found an older man dressed in brown, a desk, plenty of lighting, open windows to the world outside, and bookshelves full of books and scrolls. Radagast didn’t look imposing. Then again, neither had Gandalf, though at least he had been tall and thin. Radagast was shorter and stockier, and his earthen brown robes made him seem darker despite having the beard and hair of an old Man. He looked up from where he sat at the desk writing and appeared unsurprised to see us.

“The Eglain let you in, did they?” he greeted us almost irritably.

“They did,” Dandelion answered, which was a good thing considering my initial response was to tell him that I’d sneaked in because I was the greatest thief in the world. “Candaith sent us here because of a glyph we found on Weathertop when we investigated a disturbance there.”

“Three lines,” I added. “One vertical and two angled up and to the right from it, with four dots at the cardinal points.”

Radagast’s gaze sharpened as we spoke. He motioned for us to come forward silently. “I am Radagast the Brown, master of shapes and hues, but then you must know that if you have truly met Gandalf.” I frowned, having remained silent regarding our true mission here, and he continued. “How did I know about Gandalf? You mentioned the rubbing from the top of Amon Sûl. I do believe it is a G-rune, a mark oft used by Gandalf, another of my order. I guessed from the description of those three lines that he was at Amon Sûl on October the third, naught but a few days past.” He sketched out the G-rune on a small sheaf of blank parchment nearby. “This one?”

I nodded. “Gandalf told me to come find you, too,” I added as I rocked back on my heels. “Something to do with a gathering of evil forces, Black Riders, powerful undead things…”

He waved me to silence. “It’s as much as I feared. If Candaith saw such lights above Weathertop as he claims, then I fear Gandalf had found trouble there. I have not seen him since we parted at Sarn Ford, so I can tell you no more of him or his travels.” He frowned as he looked out a nearby window. “Of this place, I can tell you much, but make reason of very little.”

“Then maybe some of my information can aid you, given I was sent for that purpose,” I told him. I wanted to do something more than chores for people before they let me help them. It was ludicrous to me how dire a situation might be for them, yet they wanted me to waste time on tasks unrelated to it before offering me the information I required.

“The land itself is turning against us, and I know not the reason why,” Radagast explained. “Even the shepherds are twisted shadows of their former selves.” At our blank looks to his frustrated tone, he offered, “I speak of the bog-prowlers, those that tend to the trees.”

I glanced down at Dandelion and found her doing the same for me. “Bog-prowlers tend to trees?” she asked with a frown. “H… how, though?”

“They protect the trees, huorn or otherwise, from fell creatures who might harm them,” Radagast stated brusquely. “With the land as it is, here, the shepherds have become violent even to harmless creatures.”

I grimaced. “That’s not good.”

He shook his head in agreement. “It is not.” He pressed his lips together. “If I can discern what is twisting the shepherds, I may be able to determine what is fouling the land. Bring me the moss that they use to line their nests. They roam the swamp to the east of here.”

It was my turn to shake my head. “How will that help you?” I wondered aloud.

“The land has corrupted the matter. Trees. Grasses. Mosses. Animals, too. The very water itself. By bringing it here to me, I can sense that corruption as surely as another of my order might sense the poison in someone’s body and trace it back to its source. What we take in from our surroundings becomes part of us.”

“Makes me wonder what Holly Hornblower did to ruin her pies with spoiled ingredients,” Dandelion muttered mostly to herself, her eyes squinting suspiciously.

I focused on Radagast. “Bog-prowlers. They aren’t the undead we’ve encountered in the swamp—” I began.

“Haragmar,” he corrected idly. “Also known as the Red Swamp.”

I offered a dubious expression in return. “Right. They aren’t the undead, though. What do they look like?”

Dandelion spoke up before the wizard could do so. “Tall legs like yours,” she said, gesturing at me. “But very spindly. And there are four of them. Their bodies are a little onion shaped, that I’ve seen.” Her hands moved as she spoke. “They grow quite a bit of moss over their backs, cattails and even trees or shrubs, and vines around their legs. They have very strange looking heads, though. They remind me of turtle heads.”

I opened my mouth to say something even as I twitched at the mention of turtles, realized what it was that she had described, and closed it again. “Moss-backs and marsh-tenders,” I said. “They were in the Gladden Fields when I traveled with the caravans to guard them.”

Radagast looked surprised. “You’ve been in the Gladden?” he asked. “I suppose you do sound Dalish, when I think on it.” He flipped his quill at me. “Height is a Gondoran’s, but who knows what your face looks like with that ridiculous mask.” I shot a look at him that he didn’t see. Ridiculous mask my rosy bottom. “Go now and fetch the moss for me.” He looked up and his voice became stern. “Remember, I do not wish to harm the shepherds, no matter how confused they appear. They are innocent victims of the corruption and know not the harm they do.”

“So, if they attack us, we can’t kill them no matter what?” I countered. “Forget my mask, THAT is ridiculous!”

“All the same, it’s what I require,” he replied. “If you’re truly here to aid me, you’ll follow those directions.” He nodded at the stairwell. “Off with you.” He dismissed us at that point by going silent and focusing back on his writing.

The sound of Dandelion’s armor took me out of my thoughts of what my chances were leaping for the wizard to throttle him at how curt and rude he had been. Not particularly good, I’d wager, I told myself as I followed her down the corkscrewed steps. “Just consider it a test of how good of a thief you are,” Gammer offered once we had left the tower.

“I thought I wasn’t supposed to be a thief?” I retorted perhaps too sharply. I still felt irritated by the wizard’s attitude. He acted as if he cared more about the animals and plants than the humans involved!

She didn’t reply for a moment or two. “We aren’t supposed to be many things,” she finally told me. “But that doesn’t mean we have to use those things for ill purposes.” She nodded forward. “Let’s fetch the horses and ride out to the Red Swamp. The Eglain should know more precisely where the most lurkers are nesting at this time if Radagast has only arrived very recently.”

* * * * *

“The Circle of Blood.” I sighed. “Why not the Circle of Pretty Fish? Or the Bakers’ Circle?”

Dandelion took on a wistful look. “The Circle of Pies.”

I snorted softly. “Just not that Holly hobbit’s, from what you said earlier.”

She grimaced and looked peeved for some reason. “I cannot believe a hobbit like that would allow spoiled pies out into the Shire! It goes against nature!”

I stared at her and then waved a hand around us where we stood. “Gammer. Have you really taken a look around us? The water is crimson. The smell has blood in it, and I have no idea why. There is a fortress just up there that practically oozes menace so that I’m not keen on getting any closer, and even these bog-lurkers are corrupted enough to kill things because they want their blood. Spoiled pies are unfortunate. THIS place goes against nature.”

She blinked at me as if I’d spoken Elvish. “You have been too long out of the Shire, grandson. I wish your parents had never left.” She turned from me and pointed. “I see an untended nest just over there. I’ll keep lookout for you while you get to it and take the moss.”

“We’ll have to pull some from more than one nest to make sure,” I said with a roll of my shoulders. “If it’s widespread, then we won’t have to come back for more to prove it that way.” She nodded in agreement and moved to take up position near one of the scraggly trees in the area. I waited for her to get there before stepping through the liquid morass of the Circle of Blood toward my first target.

I spotted more than one bog-lurker wading around on their stilted legs in the near distance. Avoiding them, I crept up to the empty nest, bared a short knife, and sliced away some of the moss. I could see another nest not far away and made for it to do the same. I paused for a moment away from the first nest to bind the moss from it into a tiny little bundle. Keeping them separate would be for the best.

I found a third nest, a fourth, but had problems with finding others. The nests had no real rhyme or reason to where they were placed other than atop small bits of dry land in the midst of the muck and mire. The trouble with the Circle was that it wasn’t actually a circle; the islets that dotted it moved in and out of the larger area so that I would find myself wandering too far away and need to backtrack.  After a good hour and a half, I had nine small bundles of moss tucked away in my clothing and found myself back at Dandelion’s lookout point. “I think that’s all of them,” I told her.

She shook her head. “Not quite. There’s one more in that direction.” She pointed. “I saw the lurker stand up from where it was sitting on it and walk away a bit ago.”

I followed where she had pointed and growled. “I missed that one, then, yes. There are two around it.”

She shook her head. “If we take back all but one nest’s worth, I doubt that it will make much difference. Especially if they’re all tainted.”

I sighed. “But if this one isn’t?” I asked. “Why would it not be when the others are? You know he’ll ask that.”

“Morchandir,” Dandelion began in exasperation. I stopped her by pulling my nine little moss bundles out and offering them to her. “Just hold these,” I told her. “I’ll be back with this last one and then we’ll take them to Radagast. If we’ve missed any others, he can come out and get them himself.”

“I shouldn’t have mentioned it,” she groused as she accepted the moss and found homes for them in one or two of her pouches. They would be far safer there than in my pockets at this point. “Go but keep an eye out for that bog prowler. It may come back at any moment if there are… eggs?” We looked at one another in consternation, both obviously wondering where, exactly, baby bog-creatures might come from.

“Seedlings?” I offered quietly.

“Cuttings,” she countered.

“Shoots.” I nodded and turned away. “I’ll be right back.”

“Sprouts!” she hissed after me triumphantly as I crept away once more.

I found no sign of the lurker as I made it to the nest. I got my clipping, tied it up, and pocketed it without incident. I was easing my way from the nest when my luck ran out. I heard a strange growling, purring sound from neither wight nor warg just before I felt myself grabbed by the leg and jerked backward.

I went face-first into the muck and mire of the Circle of Blood wondering, yet again, how I would possibly get the stench of the stagnant water out of my clothing and yet relieved it wasn’t turtles I was after this time. That was, until I realized I’d been yanked into water deep enough to cover my head as I lay there and had a pressure lying against my back holding me beneath the surface.

No, no, I refuse to drown in six inches of stinking bog water just because I needed to get moss from a marsh-tender nest for a bloody mad wizard, I railed. The trouble was that, as I set my hands into the ground beneath the water to push myself up against the spindly-legged creature’s weight, they sank into the soft mush to make it more difficult. I had some choice words in my head for the situation. Plan two, I told myself as I drew one of my knives.

I couldn’t count on Dandelion this time. Her tiny stature and heavier armor would weight her down as she slogged through the water. What was only to my knees at most would be almost to her waist. If I killed one, I’m sure that Radagast would somehow know. I would need to wound it non-lethally if I meant to survive. Finding its other front leg and slashing it might do the trick. I would need to work fast, however, since I had to do it blind and only had a finite amount of air to use while thrashing about.

I received a blow to the back of my head. Stares flared and died in my eyes as my ears rang and I lay there just under the water. I couldn’t move. The blasted thing had cuffed me, hard, and I lost precious moments trying to collect myself once again. My lungs had begun to burn by the time I righted my head enough to stop from breathing in. Rancid water in my clothing? Tolerable. That same water in my internal organs? Unacceptable.

The weight lifted unexpectedly. Splashing noises erupted from nearby on both sides. I tried to get my legs beneath me to push myself forward and up – and felt rough hands grabbing my clothing near the back of my neck and along my spine. Whoever it was, they were strong, hauling me up and tossing me forward so that I landed heavily on my stomach. The air was forced out of my lungs, but I registered dry land beneath me in enough time to breath in deeply. I still had my knife clutched in one hand even if loose earth now frosted me like cocoa powder. I coughed and breathed, getting back my bearings, before squeezing shut my eyes to try clearing them of the fetid liquid burning them.

More splashing sounded, moving away, before slower noises and voices approached me. “Durin’s beard,” one of them proclaimed. “What’s he got on his bleedin’ head?”

Before I could do more than identify the voice as dwarven for the oath used, another voice, smoother and more cultured, said, “I believe it is a mask. Though why a human might wear one out here is fascinating.”

Dandelion joined in as she hurried to my side. “Grandson, are you well?” she asked as she helped me sit up. “I saw you take a blow to the back of your head.”

I reached up to pull off my sodden beaked mask and let it splat messily into my equally sodden lap. I blinked as the swamp water stung my eyes. “I’ve been better,” I told her flatly. She went fussing around the back of my head. I glanced toward the newcomers with a wince and grunted a welcome. “Here we are, way out in the Circle of Blood in Hargammer—”

“Haragmar,” corrected Dandelion idly. “Be still, Morchandir, I’m trying to see if you’ve broken your skull open.”

I rolled my eyes. “I did that years ago if I’m undertaking this bloody quest for a bunch of wizards and madmen,” I assured her. Returning to the new duo, I continued. “Haragmar,” I enunciated properly. “And we happen to come across…” I lifted a hand to point at them. “A dwarf and an elf. Don’t tell me you happened to be passing by a death-infested land of blood and evil and decided to stop for a picnic. I still have my knife in hand and a need to stab something.” I lifted it and waved it side to side to illustrate.

The dwarf boomed out a hearty laugh. “Oh, no, young Man. As much as I wish otherwise, I am a Hunter leading this…” He glanced toward the tall elf beside him. “This ELF out of danger in Harloeg to the south.”

The blonde Elf looked back at the Hunter and sniffed slightly. “I was in no danger,” he replied evenly. “I felled the trolls quickly enough without you.”

The dwarf harrumphed as if he were about to spit to the side. “So says the elf who shoots a bow worse than I do!” he retorted.

I lifted my hands. “I really don’t care,” I interjected. “I’m just thanking you both for the timely rescue and sending you on your way.” I motioned with a thumb at the hobbit behind me. “I have enough trouble with Gammer, here. I don’t need your flavor of lunacy, too.”

“Well, Morchandir, was it?” the elf asked, peering at me with uncomfortably close scrutiny. “How did you receive a Sindarin name, I wonder? And such a dark one, at that. Shadow-man.”

Dandelion’s fingers pressed a little too hard on my bruising head as she heard that. “Is that what it means?” At my gasp of pain, she lightened her hands with a muttered, “Terribly sorry, love.”

“Burglar, Gammer, remember?” I replied as I waved at her hands with my own gloved ones. “I come from the Dale-lands.”

“Shire,” Dandelion offered as she moved away.

“Dale-lands,” I repeated firmly. The elf watched the interplay with interest. “Sindarin words and phrases can get picked up easily if you know where to listen.”

“Then why does this hobbit call you her grandson?” the elf asked in confusion. “You’re very obviously a Man and she’s very obviously a hobbit.”

Dandelion set her mailed fists on her hips to glower at the dwarf. “Oh, he didn’t tell you?” she said angrily.

The dwarf shifted on his feet uneasily. “We should return to Ost Guruth,” he said quickly. “Up, young Morchandir.”

“I don’t even know your names,” I pointed out. I glanced over at the Guardian and then back at the dwarf with a blank expression. “Do you both know each other?”

“Yes!” she snapped at the same time he said, “No!”

The elf brightened instantly. “Oh, this is very intriguing,” he offered.

I rubbed at my face. “And you are?” I asked him.

He blinked as if he’d only remembered he hadn’t introduced himself and then smiled cheerily. “My name is Tinendail of Imladris. I’m a Champion.” He waved toward the other male. “This is a dwarf.”

I looked his way. “I would’ve never guessed.”

Said dwarf, red beard and all, looked over at me after a last wary look at Dandelion. “Name’s Trennil Sharp-axe.” He patted the black-hafted weapon at his side carved of ebony. “And this is Maedhrais. She is my pride and joy.”

“Scoundrel,” growled a furious Dandelion. “So was I, not so long ago.”

I looked between the dwarf and the hobbit in consternation. “Uhh. Gammer, no offense, but he’s old enough to be your son.” I took another look at the dwarf. “I think? I have no idea how old he is, but he doesn’t look—”

Trennil pushed at the air to stop me with a desperate air, but he was too late. Dandelion yelled out, “He’s your grandfather, Morchandir!”

The Hunter dropped his hands with a heavy sigh. Tinendail’s dark brows rose as his pointed ears perked just like a puppy’s upon hearing something. I sat in silence for a long moment before I turned and grunted as I slowly started crawling back to the bog water. “Drowning is better. Just leave me here. Farewell.”

Tinendail laughed and hurriedly moved to me. He placed his hands under my arms and hefted me upward without too much trouble. Blasted elves and their unnatural strength, I groused as I put my feet beneath him. “Oh, don’t say that, friend burglar!” he trilled brightly. “Besides, if you drown yourself, however will I study you?” I rose to my full height and looked down at him, which seemed to surprise him, delight him, even more. “Such a tall Man, and we are not small as Elves! Delightful! Tell me where you’re from?”

“You mad bat,” Trennil told Dandelion from nearby as he wildly waved his arms. “I told you when I left that I wasn’t married to you! I’m not even a hobbit!”

She gasped and set a hand at her chest. “How dare you! What will the children say when they hear?!” She pointed at me. “You’re going to tell your grandson that you were never married to his Gammer?”

I stared at the elf. I looked toward the arguing pair of much-shorter individuals. I rubbed my face with both gritty, muddied hands and made a sound that I noted, in a distant and clinical way, sounded a lot like a whimper for mercy. What did I do to deserve this? I silently begged the powers-that-be. Was it the thefts? Was it the stabbings? Was it when I punched Arne and broke his nose back when I was eight?  Dropping my hands, I bent to retrieve my mask and started walking back toward Ost Guruth. Maybe I would get lucky and something dead would eat everyone but me.