The Chronicles of Ithilien
By Berzerker_prime
Chapter Three: The Battle of Minas Morgul
There was a tradition in Gondor that dated back to the
times of the Third Age before the War of the Ring; before the wilder places of
the land had grown too dangerous and overrun with the minions of the
Enemy. At its heart were all the young men who were aspiring to be
Rangers and who would be turning eighteen within the next year. Each of
them was awoken early one morning, before the sun, and told by their teachers
that they had an hour to prepare. After that, they were gathered in an
open area where they could see the sun rise.
The very oldest of old soldiers, those who had been but
fledgling lads at the same time as Denethor, remembered it. The original
gathering place was in the old city upon Emyn Arnen. Now, the gathering
took place in the Citadel of Minas Estel for the first time in nearly two
generations; a full seven years following the crowning of King Elessar.
Some dozen or so youths had gathered on the morning of the mid year, all
dressed in the greens and browns of the Ithilien Rangers under Mablung’s
command and all blearily rubbing their eyes in confusion.
Strangely enough, it had not been Mablung who had greeted
them. Rather, it was Captain Beregond who addressed the assembly, a
silent Prince Faramir looking on in the space behind him. It was then
that they were told that their task was but a simple one; prove they had
learned their skill.
The Ranger-cadets had one day, from one sunrise to the next,
to find Mablung somewhere in the woods of Ithilien, take from him a message,
and deliver it to the hands of either Beregond or Faramir in Minas Estel.
And with that explanation and the rising of the sun,
Beregond had bid them begin. The boys were momentarily confused and cast
about, speaking quickly to each other in an effort to organize. But it
soon became clear to all of them that it was a race.
And thus it was that Bergil, son of Beregond, now found
himself alone in the woods of Ithilien sometime after moonrise on mid-year’s
night, a small, battered scroll tucked inside his gambeson and a green strip of
cloth tied around his upper arm. When he had found Mablung, the commander
had informed him that he would be penalized time for each instance he was
spotted by other Rangers in the area on his way back. Evidently, his
mission was to return to the Citadel by way of both stealth and speed.
Bergil had sprouted in recent years and now stood only a
head shorter than his father. His hair had darkened somewhat and he chose
to wear it long, pulled back into a tail with a leather thong. His
training as a Ranger had begun to take root and he had the thin, fit build of a
woodland athlete, archer’s muscles beginning to form in his shoulders. At
the age of fourteen, he had traded in his white tabard for a gambeson of brown
leather and his ankle slippers for a pair of high boots. He carried a
small bow and a modest quiver of arrows on his back, poking through a half
cloak of a dull green hue. Still at his side was the short sword he had
had as a White Company squire, a token of his intent to one day earn a rank in
the Guard of the Lord Faramir.
At the moment, he was perched upon a tree branch in an
effort to see farther into the woods and check that his way was clear. He
was just about to climb down and push onward when he heard a peculiar snap of a
twig not far off. Adjusting his stance so that he was more covered by the
leaves of the tree, he looked to it. Not far away, climbing another tree,
was one of his fellow-cadets. They were in a dead heat for the return to
Minas Estel. Bergil stood as still as he could and waited until the other
cadet climbed down and started off again. He passed almost directly under
Bergil as he went and Bergil jumped down from his branch directly into his
path.
“Well met, Galborn,” he greeted in a hushed tone.
“Bergil!” the other exclaimed. “By the Valar, don’t do
that! You startled me half out of Eä!”
Bergil gave Galborn a poke in the chest. “You should
have seen me. Master Mablung would be quite disappointed, I’d say.”
“What about you?” Galborn shot back. “You help an
adversary.”
“Who said anything about helping you?”
“Ah, so now t’is out! You succumb to bravado, then?”
“What say we make a proper race of it, eh? Loser buys
the winner a pint?”
Galborn pondered for a moment. “It is agreed,” he
said, toeing a line in the dirt next to them. Wordlessly, the two youths
put their right foots upon the line and stood at the ready.
“By the way,” said Bergil absently, “we wait to determine a
winner until the time penalties have been added in.”
“What?” Galborn asked in alarm.
“Go!” Bergil said at the same moment. An instant later
and Galborn was left to stare at Bergil’s back. He followed quickly,
though, and gave Bergil no quarter.
The tree line just north of Emyn Arnen was not far off and
for a time, the two boys both ran straight toward it. However, just short
of it, Bergil dropped back and allowed Galborn to pass. Thus it was
Galborn who came out of the woods first and began his sprint across the
grasslands north of Minas Estel.
Bergil, meanwhile, remained in the trees. Rather than
approaching the city head-on, he came at it from the east and was unhindered by
nearly so many prying eyes as his compatriot. Slowly, he crept along the
wall, remaining in the dark shadows of the grey morning twilight.
Galborn had been halted at the gate and was being
questioned, nearly interrogated, by several of Damrod’s gate guards.
Silently, Bergil slipped past them as a shadow over water. But then, as
he emerged from the portcullis, he ran out of darkness in which to hide.
“Hey! You there lad!” called the watch
commander. “Halt and declare yourself!”
Bergil took off at a run and began the sprint up the main
road of Minas Estel to the citadel. He allowed himself but a moment to
glance back over his shoulder and saw there two of the gate guard in pursuit
and Galborn a step behind them. He came to the first tunnel at the west
of the first circle. The road continued through it, but he took the
tunnel that came off it and went left, taking the stairs within two at a time,
never breaking stride. When he emerged into the waxing daylight, he went
eastward along the road of the second circle. Similar tunnels and similar
stairs he took, east, west, east, west, and east again until he emerged from
the Tunnel of the Stewards in the citadel. He sensed his pursuers still
behind him, feet hitting the ground in a pattering flurry.
Beregond was there, waiting near the grand entryway to the
Prince’s House. As Bergil came to him, he wore an expression on his face
that held no small amount of perturbation but also no trace of surprise.
Bergil fumbled with the pocket in his gambeson and pulled
from it his rolled and crumpled parchment. He laid it in Beregond’s hand
just as the gate guards caught up to him. Galborn was only seconds
behind.
“Peace, peace,” Beregond said, waving off the two gate
guards, “they are two of Mablung’s students. Return to your posts.”
As Damrod’s men left, the captain returned his gaze to the two
Ranger-cadets. “Bergil, you return seventh. Galborn, you are
eighth. And so far none have entered the citadel with so much activity
following behind. You shirked the gate guard, I take it?”
Bergil and Galborn did not immediately respond, both near
doubled over and gasping for breath. Beregond waited patiently, but with
a look of disapproval directed at the youths. Finally, it was Bergil who
spoke up.
“Apologies, father,” he said, “I’m afraid my plan to return
to the citadel in secrecy went awry.”
“Your plan?” Galborn asked, venom in his voice. “You
used me as your tool to get past the gate guard?”
“It almost worked,” said Bergil, “Galborn, you make an
excellent decoy!”
“Decoy!” Galborn roared. “What base trickery!”
And despite his weariness, Galborn moved to strike at Bergil with a fist.
He was halted by Beregond’s stronger arms. The captain placed himself
between both youths.
“Enough!” he rumbled. “Galborn, you will strike not at
your ally. And you, Bergil, shall treat an ally as such in the
future. And you shall remember that you need not enter a friendly citadel
in secrecy.”
“Aye sir,” Galborn said in dejection.
“Yes father,” Bergil agreed in kind.
“Cadet, you are on duty and you shall address me as
captain!”
“Aye captain!” Bergil replied, straightening to attention.
“Your mission is complete,” Beregond stated, “go and take
some rest. You will be assembled with the others, later.”
Elboron could not fathom why his father was pacing.
To and fro the Steward walked, always with looks of varying degrees of worry on
his face. At times it seemed to the five-year-old as though Faramir
longed for a larger room in which to move about as he seemed hindered by the
walls.
“Ada,” Elboron finally said, “how come you’re
worried? I thought you said the Eagles brought new babies to people.”
Faramir stopped pacing and looked at his eldest son sitting
on a long couch, his younger brother of two years curled up into a small ball
next to him. In truth, Elboron and Eldamir had been so silent that
Faramir had nearly forgotten they were there.
“Didn’t the Eagles bring Eldamir to live with us?” Elboron
pressed. “From the Valar?”
“Yes, yes of course they did,” said Faramir, suddenly
remembering the conversation he had had with the boy two years prior when
Eldamir had been born. “And they brought you, too.”
“But how come you can’t be there?” Elboron asked.
“Ioreth said you can’t be there.”
“Ioreth?” Faramir asked of him, raising a prompting eyebrow.
“I mean, Madame Ioreth,” Elboron corrected.
“Very good.”
“But why did she send you away?”
“Because… it… is the custom,” said Faramir, “only women may
greet the Eagles when they bring a child.”
“How come you aren’t going to hug nana any more?”
Elboron asked next. “Don’t you like each other any more?”
“’Not going to…’ Elboron, what in Eä gave you that idea?”
“When nana started yelling before. I heard her
say that you weren’t going to touch her again. Is she mad at you?
You should say your sorry if she’s mad.”
And with that, Faramir was completely and utterly
flabbergasted. He could face whole councils of lords and speak to the
King without a thought, but more and more often, he was done in by the keen
observations of his own son. He had but one way out of this crucible.
“You are correct, of course,” said the Steward to his son,
“I’m certain your naneth was simply anxious over the Eagles’ visit, but
I shall apologize when I am allowed to see her. Worry not.” He sat
down on the couch and the boy crept in closer to lean on his shoulder.
“That’s good, ada,” Elboron said, “I don’t want nana
to be mad.”
“Nor do I. Your naneth was quite the warrior
years ago when the Shadow came out of Mordor.”
“She killed a Nazgúl, didn’t she!”
“Most certainly. But harder still, she stole the heart
of a young lord who had suffered a great loss and did it before anyone could
notice. It was so fast that the young lord had no hope of preventing it
from happening.”
“Is that you, ada?”
“Yes. And I do not think she would so lightly throw
away such a prize, do you?”
Elboron shook his head, unsuccessfully stifling a
yawn. He leaned his head into the crook of Faramir’s arm, rubbing his
eyes. Within a few silent moments, Elboron drifted off to sleep.
Carefully, Faramir extricated himself from the boy’s grasp and covered him with
a nearby blanket of blue. For a long moment, Faramir looked at his two
boys as they slept side by side, remembering the days when each of them had
been born.
In Elboron, Faramir could see a growing glimmer of understanding.
He was beginning to come to know his future role in life as the heir of the
Stewardship. Although he was yet a child, Faramir sensed that Elboron
would grow in his consciousness before other boys his age. Already,
Faramir heard whispered that the boy was clearly his father’s son.
Eldamir, meanwhile, took after Éowyn’s people in face and
temperament alike. He had his mother’s golden hair and delighted in the
sun and the wind when he was taken outside. The stamping hooves of horses
made him squeal with joy. There was no mistaking who his mother was.
All of this Faramir took in for but a few moments before
there was a gentle rapping at the room’s door. Silently, Faramir crossed
the room and answered it. Beregond was on the other side and Faramir
slipped out into the hall where they could speak without waking the two
boys. Gently, he closed the door behind him.
“My lord,” Beregond greeted, “is there any word on the
lady?”
“Not as yet,” Faramir answered, “not since sundown. I
do not understand; Eldamir did not take so long as this.”
Beregond laughed. “Even in this, all children are
different,” he said, “or so I have been told by others. I have only the
one instance to draw upon.”
“The sun is up,” Faramir observed, “did Bergil return in the
allotted time?”
“With fanfare,” Beregond answered, sourly, “he was chased
through all seven circles of the city by two of Damrod’s men and a
classmate. Truly, I know not what is to be done about him! All
things are contests to him; games! He takes nothing seriously and Mablung
tells me that Bergil delights in frivolous pranks played upon his fellow
cadets. I am at wit’s end!”
Faramir thought again of his two young sons, sleeping in the
room behind him. He was suddenly afflicted by visions of Elboron and
Eldamir running rampant through the citadel with no adequate check. And
then, he found himself hoping that his third child would turn out to be a girl;
one, in fact, who took after her Gondorian blood rather than that of the
Rohirrim.
“Well, at any rate,” Beregond continued, “I’m sure he will
come around in time. Or perhaps face a sound beating in a match with
Mablung.” The captain now produced several small scrolls that Faramir had
not even noticed he had been carrying. He handed them to the
Steward. “A messenger arrived from Minas Tirith. The usual reports
of the King’s council and whatnot, but I believe that one,” he indicated the
smallest, “is personal correspondence from Master Peregrin in the Shire.”
As they were mainly informative, Faramir set the other
scrolls aside and took up the letter from Pippin. It was closed with a
blue string and sealed with green wax. Pressed into the seal was a leaf
of five points. Faramir broke the seal and unrolled the parchment with a
smile, glad to have received the letter. He took a few silent moments to
read over the scrawling Westron. But as he did, his face fell and
Beregond could see that he finished it somewhat haltingly. When he was
done, he set it aside and went to the window at the end of the hall, facing
west.
“My lord?” Beregond asked. “Ill news?”
“Perhaps,” Faramir answered, “but, perhaps not. At any
rate, it marks an end.” He turned back to Beregond with a sigh.
“Frodo sailed for the Undying Lands. He could not find healing in the
Shire. Only now has Master Peregrin been able to bring himself to write
of it.”
Beregond’s face twisted into a mixture of confusion and
concern and he joined Faramir at the window. “The Periannath are mortal,
are they not?”
“So I have been told,” Faramir replied.
“Will he be allowed to pass into the West?”
“He sailed with Mithrandir, Master Elrond, and the Lady
Galadriel. If any can obtain this grace for him, it is the bearers of the
Three. His time will be short there, as a flickering candle burning at
both ends. But what time remains to Frodo will be spent in the bliss of
Valinor, I am certain. Alas! Alas for Frodo of the Nine
Fingers! So grievous were his hurts.”
They stood in silence for some time after that, watching the
light spreading in the west and shining in the tones of dawn.
“Then, the power of the Rings is undone at last,” Beregond
said at length, “and the Istari have left us to our own devices. It seems
to me as if some magic has left Middle-earth.”
Faramir’s vision shifted. The blue sky above the
distant White Mountains darkened. Lightning flashed from above, striking
the green fields between Minas Estel and the Andúin. Figures moved below,
dark and sharp against what little light there was.
Beregond was there, as well. He stood alone to hinder
the dark shapes, sword shining. Two spears of lightning struck at him,
blue against the sky. Beregond was gone and the darkness advanced
unhindered.
A voice seemed to speak in Faramir’s ear and if he could
have moved he would have turned to see the speaker.
Beware the two who are sundered…
And then, someone was shaking his shoulders.
“My lord!” Beregond cried. “My lord!”
Startled, Faramir grabbed Beregond’s hands with a
gasp. His vision cleared and he could see the captain’s concerned face
staring back at him. Faramir blinked several times and glanced about.
“My lord, are you well?” Beregond asked.
“Yes, yes,” Faramir said, leaning against the window sill,
half in a swoon. “I am fine, worry not.”
“You did not say anything for some time. When I asked
your thoughts, you did not respond.”
Faramir drew himself up once again, yet still he felt
somehow small. Evenly, he met Beregond’s gaze. “It came again,” he
said, “this time in the waking.”
“It has never done so?” Beregond asked.
“Nay. It has strengthened now. Beregond, my
friend, you must have caution.”
“Always, my friend. Yet, as we have agreed, I will
look not for such disaster to befall. I will live as I always have; as a
man doing his duty and fulfilling his honor.”
“I would have it no other way,” said Faramir, “but, perhaps,
we should not discount magic in Middle-earth as yet.”
Some hours after dawn, Faramir was called by the healer
Ioreth to Éowyn’s side. The Princess of Ithilien was exhausted, but the
labor had gone exactly as had been expected. When Faramir arrived, it was
to greet her and their youngest child. The babe, a girl of dark hair and
the eyes of her kind great-uncle of Dol Amroth, was larger than her brothers
had been, being a full week past the time the healers had expected her.
The Steward spent as much time as he could spare in the company of both ladies
that day, holding his beloved third child. Much of the basic
administration of the city he left to Beregond in the meantime.
The building of Minas Estel was nearing its
completion. The city was quickly becoming Ithilien’s biggest center for
trade, with nearly all of the outermost two circles given over to commerce and
craftsmanship. The great master tower was all but complete, still
awaiting the metal-shod capstone that was to be the gift of the Dwarves of the
Glittering Caves. The Lord Gimli, himself, was to accompany its
coming. Its setting upon the spire was to be the crowning ceremony of the
city’s establishment, the symbolic completion of building. As such, a
week of celebration was being planned.
It was noon time but three days after the birth of the
youngest member of the Prince’s family – Fréodgyth she was called, named after
the manner of her mother’s people – when the watch of Minas Estel saw
approaching from the north a small band of Dwarves marching under the banner of
the House of Glóin; a field of black with anvil and hammer and a seven-pointed
star of gold. Two traveled upon ponies at the lead and amid the rest was
carried a heavy-leaden cart packed carefully with cloth and rope.
It did not go unnoticed that they traveled quickly but
tiredly and that their numbers were too few for the expected party. And
so, Damrod sent men out to meet them. Beregond met them when they entered
the gates. Eight were their numbers and they were led by Gimli
Mellonedhel. At his elbow was a Dwarf of black hair and beard carrying a
great battle ax and a shield nearly equal his height.
It was then that Beregond learned that trouble had befallen
the Dwarves on their journey. Eight were all that remained of the initial
fifteen travelers and the Dwarves told of a menace from the skies falling upon
them between Cair Andros and the Crossroads. Leaving business at the gate
to Damrod, Beregond took Gimli and his black-haired companion to the citadel,
sending a runner ahead. The Steward met them as they emerged from the
tunnel
“Master Gimli,” he greeted, “glad I am to see you
well. I am told danger welcomed you to Ithilien.”
“Aye, that it did,” said Gimli, “as we traveled from our
crossing at Cair Andros. Alas for the seven we have lost! Bravely
they fought!”
“I have met no Dwarf that fights otherwise,” said Faramir,
“it must have been a horrific enemy to have felled so many of your
company! Please, you must tell me everything.”
They went together within the House of the Prince and sat
around a great circular table in a room of many windows and white stone.
Inlays of black lined the arches of the small basilica and the pillars that
lined the side walls were topped with carvings in the shapes of leaves.
All the seats at the table were set so that no one sat higher than the others,
but the one nearest the wall had a high back and was inlaid with the star-leaf
of Ithilien in Mithril. Just behind it and to the right was a stand of
wrought iron holding the White Rod of the Steward. This seat Faramir took
and Beregond sat to his right. Gimli and his companion took the two seats
to the left, putting their arms aside near the door as they entered.
“My lord Gimli,” said Beregond, “you’ll have to forgive me,
but I do not believe I have made the acquaintance of your companion.”
Gimli gave a laugh, rumbling it out of his toes, it
seemed. “Your captain worries about offending us!” he said to
Faramir. “Do not be so cautious, Master Beregond. We Dwarves are
not so easily put out as all that! Indeed, I would think that you have
not met Ghan unless you have made a visit to Erebor or the Glittering
Caves. Captain of the Hammer Dwarves is he and never have you met another
so adept at defeating Orcs and others of the evil nature.”
“You can call it a personal quest,” said Ghan, “but, Gimli,
forget not that I am also your third cousin. Never sundered in spirit are
those of the line of Dúrin!”
“Alas, but it is of those of the evil nature that we must
speak,” said Faramir, “please, tell us of your journey.”
“Of course,” said Gimli, “this will concern us all in the
end, I fear. We journeyed over the plains of Anórien and crossed the
Andúin at your city of Cair Andros.”
“I must say, it is much improved since the war,” said Ghan,
“we left in good spirits after a day of pleasantries.”
“By which he means to say that the men of Cair Andros brew
pleasant spirits,” Gimli amended, “but it was a day south of the city that
trouble befell us. A band of Uruk-hai fell upon us, numbering perhaps
twenty. But we had the high ground and fought the downhill battle.
We were making short work of them.”
“By which he means to say that we worked them until they
were short!” Ghan exclaimed, making a chopping motion horizontally through the
air with one hand.
“Indeed!” Gimli agreed. “And then, the Uruk-hai did
something most strange; I have never seen its like in the Orkish races.
They actually sounded a retreat. One blew a foul horn and they all made
eastward at a run. We thought it strange, but we celebrated victory as we
watched them run. Fifteen Dwarves against twenty Uruk-hai! A
glorious victory!”
“But, alas, we were premature,” said Ghan.
“As he says,” Gimli continued, “watching the Uruk-hai, none
of us ever thought to look to the skies, so we did not see the black shapes
wheeling overhead.”
“Aye,” Ghan agreed, “if I did not know better, I would have
called them Dragons. But they were smaller and darker and there was no
thought in their eyes but for destruction.”
“They reminded me of the flying mounts of the Nazgúl that I
saw at the Battle of the Black Gate during the war,” said Gimli, “they swooped
down upon us and snatched up four of the company. I swear by Aulë, I felt
the claws of their foul wings brush against me! We lost three more of the
company before we reached the river valley where they could not swoop down to
reach us.”
“I have seen these fell worms,” said Faramir, “this is not
the first time they have flown over Ithilien. They first came five years
ago. We have not seen them since, save for a few sightings over Ephel
Dúath.”
“My lord, that brings us to other news,” said Beregond, “one
of the Ranger-cadets sighted a band of Orcs to the north east during the
exercise a few days hence.”
“Why did he not report this three days ago?” Faramir asked.
“He was convinced for a time that his imagination had run
rampant on him,” said Beregond, “for he said he saw a great dark shape, winged,
with gleaming claws aside a dim fire. It was night and he was tired and
thought he was seeing things.”
“The Orcs and the fell worms came from that direction,” said
Gimli, “it would seem that Ithilien has been invaded.”
Faramir was clearly troubled by this. He rose from his
seat and began to slowly circle the table as the rest of the conversation
continued, a hand to his chin in thought.
“What puzzles me most is how they are choosing to move,”
said Beregond, “Orcs have never bothered to act covertly before. If they
are making a move, why not simply attack, as is their way?”
“Much as I am loathe to say anything in their praise,” said
Ghan, “the Uruk-hai have shown the ability to adapt to new situations.
Perhaps the defeat of the Enemy has forced them to find new ways of waging
war.”
“Or perhaps they receive aid and direction for someone
else,” said Gimli.
“Uruk-hai are too treacherous to be ruled or controlled by
anything less than a wizard,” said Faramir, “Mithrandir has sailed for the west
and Curunír is dead. I have from time to time heard of a third wizard in
the north, Radagast the Brown. But it is said that he cares more for the
beasts of the world than for Men or Orcs.”
“Perhaps he has gained new interest,” said Beregond.
“I do not think so,” said Gimli, shaking his head, “Gandalf
and Aragorn spoke of him from time to time in the days of the Fellowship.
I don’t think Radagast has the wit or the inclination to lead the Orcs against
Men.”
“Then we are left with self-ruling Uruk-hai,” said Faramir.
He stopped pacing then and, clasping his hands behind his back, he faced the
table again. “At any rate, this does not address the problem of the
Orkish incursion. Beregond, assemble a company to rout them. Take
the Ranger-cadet as a guide, if he is able.”
“Aye, my lord,” said Beregond, “with your permission, I
shall lead the company.”
After a momentary pause, Faramir nodded his assent.
“Have caution, my friend.”
“Aye, my lord,” said Beregond, rising. He gave a short
bow, then departed.
“If ye don’t mind my saying, Lord Steward,” said Gimli, “you
seem more than passing troubled by all this.”
“It is for a simple reason, Master Gimli,” said Faramir, “it
is because I am troubled.”
Beregond took the next hours to prepare for the
sortie. To his aid, he called Léowine and the Ithilrochonath as well as
Mablung and the Rangers. With them also went Ranger-cadet Glorlas, who
had seen the Orkish company in the woods. A measure of the Moon Riders
remained behind to augment the Minas Estel citadel guard and were placed
temporarily under the command of Damrod.
For the first time since the siege of Minas Tirith during
the War of the Ring, Beregond donned his full armor. Ithilien had enjoyed
five years of relative peace, bothered only by the occasional raid by Orcs upon
patrols. As the captain’s main duty was in Minas Estel, he had not had
reason to ride to battle. And so, as he put it on, the armor felt coarse
and restricting. But, with Bergil’s help, it was adjusted back to a
comfortable state. All throughout the process, Bergil looked at his
father with trepidation. Finally, Beregond could stand the worried looks
no longer.
“All right then, Bergil,” he said as he fastened the last
strap on his bracer, “what is on your mind?”
“Nothing,” Bergil replied, “everything is fine.”
“Bergil, I am your father. Think you that I do not
recognize when you are in a foul mood?”
“Of course not, father.”
“Out with it, then.”
The youth said nothing, instead handing Beregond his sword
and watching him buckle it to his side. Finally, Bergil found enough
conviction to speak his peace.
“Father, I wish to ride with you.”
“Absolutely not.”
“But, father, Glorlas is going!”
“Glorlas is needed to show us where he saw the Orcs,”
Beregond stated, “and aside from that, he has shown that he is ready for this.”
“And I have not?”
“No, Bergil, you have not!”
Beregond’s admission seemed to hit Bergil as forcefully as a
strike across the face. Shrinking somewhat, he took a step back,
seemingly in a desire to melt into the wall. His eyes were cast down in a
mixture of hurt and confusion. “But, I don’t understand,” he all but
whispered, “am I not one of the best fighters among the cadets? Can I not
hold my own? Father, I will not be hurt! No mere Orc will lay hand
on me ere I strike him down!”
“And that is why you are not ready,” said Beregond, “no
soldier rides to battle assuming that his enemy is weaker than he! To do
so is folly!”
“I came through the Dawnless Day!”
“You did not see any real battle in the Dawnless Day!”
The argument had grown in volume. Both father and son
were shouting now, standing toe-to-toe. Unwaveringly, Beregond met
Bergil’s gaze.
“Battle is not your drills. Battle is not your
practice matches! Could you abandon a comrade to complete your
task? To follow orders? Could you leave him to your enemy knowing
that he will die?”
Bergil shrank back again and it was clear that it was
Beregond who had the upper hand in the argument, now. Although Bergil
looked every bit the grown youth of seventeen, Beregond could see only the boy
he had been in his eyes. Bergil searched and searched his mind for a
suitable response, but he had been struck witless by the thoughts his father
had conjured up for him. Beregond set aside his sword and gathered his
son to him, feeling the youth tremble slightly.
“That is battle, Bergil,” he said, “that is war. Never
have I faced a day more terrible than when I had to choose between the lives of
Lord Faramir and my brothers in arms of the Citadel. You are not ready to
make such a choice. You are not ready to take such an action.”
“How could any man be ready for such horror?” Bergil asked.
“No man can be ready unless he is soulless and black of
heart. Men can only hope to survive it.”
That part of the White Company that Beregond led departed
not long later. Bergil was at the gate and watched his father leave,
riding at the head of the column. After the captain was through the gate,
Bergil went back to the Citadel and looked northward. The company showed
bright against the grasslands, a short stream of white flowing along the south
road.
Bergil watched them travel for as long as his eyes could
make them out. At last, they faded into the distance. His heart
heavy with concern, he made his way to his father’s house in the citadel,
looking to find the peace of solitude.
However, as he went, he passed a door to one of the watch
towers and it opened suddenly. The Lord Faramir stepped out and Bergil
saw for but a moment a mirror of his own concern upon the Steward’s face.
It was quickly covered by a look of confusion. Bergil inclined his head
in a bow and stepped aside so Faramir could pass, but the Prince paused.
“Young Master Bergil, haven’t you lessons?” he asked.
“Nay, my lord,” said Bergil, “Commander Mablung rides with
my father.”
“I see,” said Faramir in thought, “then the Ranger-cadets
have been left idle while their fathers ride without them. Nay, I shall
not have lessons suffer for lack of an instructor. Gather your
fellows. I shall instruct you today.”
“Aye, my lord,” said Bergil, “it will be a great
honor.” He bowed again and hastened on his way.
Not long after, the Ranger-cadets were assembled on the
practice grounds in the sixth circle within sight of the Houses of
Healing. For long hours, Faramir instructed them in the art of sword and
bow until at last the Sun went down in the west and the stars began to
shine. It was then that Faramir instructed the cadets in a skill of a
different sort; reading the stars. Though most seemed tried by the
academic lesson, Bergil and a few others listened with rapt attention as
Faramir explained how to use the stars to tell direction, time, even how far
north they were. At last, the hour grew late and the cadets were
dismissed.
No word came from Beregond all that night, nor did any
come in the morning. Indeed, it was nearly mid-day before a single horse
rode the path to Minas Estel, its rider dressed in the browns and greens of the
Rangers.
It was the cadet Glorlas who passed through the gate.
He had been wounded, scratched by great claws that had raked his back, and had
only barely made it to the city. Exhausted and unwell, he had to be
carried from the gate to the Houses of Healing. Worried that he would
fall into deep sleep, he told his tale to the healer Ioreth. Faramir came
to the houses only minutes after Glorlas fell into unconsciousness, and so it
was left to Ioreth to tell the tale.
“My lord, the company has been attacked!” she said to him.
“Such a thing is hardly surprising, Madame,” said Faramir,
“they rode to war.”
“Nay, nay, but forgive me; I was not clear,” she said, “or rather
I was not complete in my telling. It’s as my father always said to
me. One must say what one means or one can never mean what one says.
He was a wise man, my father. Knew the lore of the kings of old, he did.”
“Ioreth, our lives will pass into the lore of old if you do
not tell me what you have learned from Glorlas.”
“Oh, of course. Please forgive an old woman.
Well, as I said, my lord, the White Company has been attacked. But not
just by the Orkish types they went to hunt. Glorlas spoke of winged
creatures issuing from Minas Morgul; a whole swarm of them, fifteen or maybe
more!”
“Fifteen!” Faramir exclaimed. “Were they the fell
worms?”
“Well, I… I don’t rightly know, I’m afraid. But, they
began to get the better of Captain Beregond’s men, that much is certain.
Glorlas was sent to call for aid and he fears the White Company may be trapped
near Minas Morgul by now.”
“This is ill news indeed,” said Faramir, “I must go and see
what strength we here in Minas Estel can send to Beregond.” Faramir
turned to leave in haste, but was halted by Ioreth’s voice.
“There was one other thing the boy mentioned, my lord,” she
said, “it would seem that one of the flying creatures pursued Glorlas for a
time. He lost it in the woods, but… well, he is convinced its eyes are
still upon him.”
Faramir nodded his understanding. “Tend your patient,
Madame Ioreth,” he told her, “I shall see to this.”
The Prince departed and went to see what could be
done. So in haste was he that he failed to notice Bergil standing just
out of sight around a corner, wearing a look of distress.
“Just who would ye send, Lord Steward?” This was
the question of Gimli the Dwarf when once again the concerned parties were
assembled in the council chamber of the House of the Prince. “You’ve
naught but a skeleton guard here in Minas Estel already.”
“I must agree with Master Gimli,” said Damrod, sitting for
the moment in Beregond’s chair. “To send any more of the White Company
away… we would not hold the city if it was attacked.”
Shaking his head and pacing up and down the length of the
chamber with his hands clasped behind his back, Faramir turned back to
them. “We would not hold it now,” he said, “not against a full attack out
of Mordor.”
“Begging pardon, Lord Steward,” said Ghan, “but I don’t
think the Orkish King has the resources to reach this far south with a full
attack.”
“That is no reason to send away more of the Company,” said
Damrod, “my lord, my men are not trained for warfare away from
battlements. Most of them have only seen war from the walls of
fortresses. They excel at that, but they would falter quickly in battle
upon the plains before Minas Morgul. To send them out is madness!”
“To leave Beregond’s company to die is madness!” Faramir
rejoined. “We cannot afford to decimate the White Company in that
way! And you, Commander, should mind how you bandy about such
words as ‘madness!’”
“Aye, my lord,” Damrod said, crestfallen, “my apologies.”
“Whatever you decide to do, best decide quickly,” said Ghan
from his place at Gimli’s elbow, “Captain Beregond and his company can’t have
much time left to them.”
“We could send to Minas Tirith for aid,” Damrod suggested,
“surely the King could send help.”
“It is dangerous,” said Faramir, “the worm that pursued
Glorlas may be watching for others. And, as you said, Damrod, none of the
Gate Guard are trained in the Ranger arts and could evade it.”
“I will go, my lord,” came a voice from the doorway of the
chamber, small but certain. All turned to it and saw there Bergil, a
mixture of worry and determination on his face. “If this task is best
left to a Ranger, and if no other can be spared, send me.”
“Why you skulking rascal!” Gimli exclaimed. “Eavesdropping
on the conversations and councils of warriors like a specter!”
“I am no specter, Master Gimli,” said Bergil, “indeed, I am
myself a warrior.”
“This is no task for a cadet!” Damrod snapped at him.
“And no council for one, either! Depart this hall at once and I shall
deal with you later!”
But Faramir had paused in thought and stood watching Bergil
as the others protested his presence. The youth stood tall and determined
and did not waver. The Prince finally spoke just as Damrod was rising to
usher Bergil from the room.
“Wait,” he said. He approached Bergil and Damrod stood
aside. For a long moment, he looked down at the youth, considering the
look in his eyes. “This task requires both stealth and speed,” he said at
last, “you have shown a propensity to forgo one for the other.”
“Mere war games, my lord,” Bergil stated, a note of
desperation now coming to his voice, “in this, lives are at stake. My
father’s life is at stake! If I cannot ride with him, at least let me
ride for him!”
With a sigh, Faramir turned away from Bergil in
thought. He paced to the nearest window and stood there, looking out, his
hands once again clasped behind his back. Damrod, Gimli, and Ghan all
stood in silence, watching him and waiting for a reply, but none of them
watched more closely than Bergil. So quiet was the hall that Faramir
could make out the sob deep in Bergil’s throat, held back desperately.
Finally, his decision made, he turned back to the youth.
“This task needs doing and there is no one else to do it,”
he said, “I have my doubts about this. But, I see in you a determination
that will not be denied. You would go against my word for what you
perceive to be the greater good, if it came to it. You are like your father
in that respect, yes?”
Bergil made no reply, but he colored a rather deep shade of
red and shifted uncomfortably under Faramir’s scrutiny.
“I am willing to put my faith in you, Bergil.
Nay! Smile not! This is a grave thing. If you fail in this,
it will mean the death of many, including your father. It may also mean
the ruin of Ithilien.”
“I swear to you, I will not fail.”
Faramir nodded. “Then your honor is tied to this task
as of this moment. Go to Minas Tirith and tell King Elessar of all that
we have here heard. Stay in the wood until you come to Osgiliath and
cross the Andúin in the ruins’ shadow. From there, make for the City of
Kings.”
“Yes, my lord. As you say.”
“Then go and fear no darkness, son of Beregond.”
With a short, quick bow, Bergil departed in haste. The
others in the room stood in silence a long while, pondering what had happened.
“This is a thing unheard of,” Gimli said at last, “leaving
the fate of Ithilien in the hands of a mere boy!”
“Take heart, Master Gimli,” said Faramir, “Bergil may be
young, but he is well-trained and he has heart in his favor. I said I put
my faith in him and to that I will hold.”
Thus it was that Bergil was sent from Minas Estel.
He had now the full authority of a Ranger, though that privilege was to lapse
upon his arrival in Minas Tirith. He traveled light, taking only his
sword and bow, a few arrows, provision for one day, and the Steward’s
message. He took no horse, preferring the subtle fall of his own feet and
the ability to disappear into the brush at need. One of the fell worms
had been spotted from Minas Estel’s greatest tower and Bergil had been told
that the worm’s eyes had seemed keen enough to see through the thinner trees
that overhung the paths.
Swift as a shadow, he passed over the narrow grassland that
surrounded the city and entered the woods. He took care to leave little
sign of his passing, but did not take overmuch time in the hiding. For
some hours, his journey was unhindered and he moved swiftly.
However, Bergil was brought to a halt with a chill when he
heard a soulless wail and the beating of strong wings. A dark shape
passed overhead and Bergil took to the brush, pulling in his green cloak,
hoping it would hide him. The black figure passed onward and he heard the
beating wings fade into the distance. All was silence until Bergil heard
the rustling of leaves and branches nearby. It came from the north and
was heading straight for him. It spread and manifested itself into at
least three distinct patches, arrayed about him in a rough semi-circle.
As silently as he could, Bergil drew his sword.
Suddenly, from above, there came a terrible squeal and a
round shape dropped down upon Bergil, wrapping eight barbed legs around his
shoulders. Forgoing his hiding place, Bergil jumped up and slashed at it
with his sword, sending it flying into a nearby tree. Almost immediately,
the three patches of disturbed brush exploded forth with similar creatures, spiders
large enough to grasp his chest. Bergil felled one with a great slash of
his sword and stepped aside of the other two. As the spiders regrouped,
he took off at a run, heading straight westward. Bergil heard the spiders
behind him, moving terrible fast.
“T’was a trap,” Bergil realized, “something moves these
creatures.” He had no time to ponder this, though. The dark figure
of the fell worm wheeled overhead again, now blocking his light, now circling
back around.
The edge of the wood was now not far off. Bergil knew
he would soon lose what little cover he had as he would have to cross the
grasses to Osgiliath; both the spiders and the worm would be upon him.
His secrecy was lost and all hope now lay in his swiftness, unless he was fortunate
enough to have some luck.
Short of the tree line, Bergil turned. Knocking an
arrow in his bow, he took aim at one spider and let loose, slaying it.
The other two came at him at once. One met the point of his sword and was
run through. But Bergil’s sword became entrapped in the spider corpse and
the last of the creatures landed on his back and wrapped its legs around his
chest. His sword left his hand and he thrashed about wildly, trying to
dislodge the spider. Finally, feeling the beginning prick of a sting
making its way through the leather armor on his side, Bergil stumbled backward
into a great stone, crushing the spider. As it fell, dead and bloodied,
Bergil felt the prick in his side begin to itch. He put it out of his
mind and retrieved his sword. He hastened southward, away from the site
of the battle, taking to stealth once again.
Overhead, the fell worm wound back and forth along the tree
line, now farther north, now south, now looping over the river. Bergil
watched it, still as a stone, for nearly an hour until it was clear that the
worm and its Uruk-hai rider could not see him and knew not where he was.
The worm turned its back to him and flew north. As
soon as he felt the time right, Bergil left his hiding place and went out from
the woods, sprinting for the ruin of Osgiliath. Halfway across the grass,
Bergil heard the worm wail again. He did not break stride, but looked to
it and saw it swooping southward toward him. Renewing his sprint, Bergil
made for the wooden bridge over the river. The worm was upon him as he
crossed and he fell to the rough boards to avoid its claws. As the worm
circled around for a second strafe, Bergil recovered and stumbled the rest of
the way across the bridge. He dove into the crumbled husk of an ancient
building and the worm’s claws met naught but stone. Bergil sheltered in
the ruin, but the worm circled overhead as if daring him to leave his newfound
safety.
And so, halfway to Minas Tirith, the only hope of the White
Company, Bergil was trapped.
The book that Faramir would write in, as a great many
articles of his office were, was white. Upon the cover was gilt in silver
the symbol of the White Tree in splendor. It was one of the things he had
learned from his father; that a record of the day to day happenings of Gondor
needed keeping. Boromir had always rolled his eyes each time Denethor had
stressed its importance, but it was one of the things that made Faramir’s eyes
light with admiration.
This day, there had been much for the Steward to
write. He tried to keep it to the impersonal account of fact he knew it
was his duty to write, but always it seemed to drift back to the respective
plights of the Captain of the White Company and his young son. Faramir
was greatly worried for both Beregond and Bergil and it showed in the writing.
Nearly mournfully, he set his quill aside, leaving the
account unfinished as the events were the same. He let the ink dry as he
read over the page once more. Finally, he closed the book and looked at
its cover for some time, pondering his various duties and their implications
and consequences.
Éowyn entered then, quietly, and seeing that Faramir was
teetering on the edge of despair went to embrace him from behind.
“It is too early to despair,” she told him, “the White
Company is strong. They will hold until the King’s aid arrives.”
“Fréodgyth is asleep?” Faramir asked.
“At last,” Éowyn replied, “I have not slept a night through
in years, it seems to me at times.”
Faramir took her hand in his. “Our children are the
most cherished gift you have given me. Éowyn, if this battle should go
ill...”
“I will not remove to Minas Tirith without you.”
Faramir stood and turned to face Éowyn, her hands still
grasped in his. “Not with me, but with our children.”
“I will send them with their governess, but I will not
go. Not while there is need of healing hands in Minas Estel and
Ithilien.”
“They will need a parent.”
“A parent?” Éowyn questioned. “Surely, they
will have both, will they not?”
“As I said,” Faramir stated, “if the battle should go ill-”
With a scowl, Éowyn cast Faramir’s hands away from
her. “You mean to ride with whatever aid the King sends.”
“They will have need of leadership and of someone who knows
the lay of the land.”
“If I understand Aragorn’s motivations, I am given to
believe that he will lead them himself.”
“Then I must go as the King’s man.”
“Faramir, there is no need for you to ride! If the
battle should go ill, as you say, will Gondor not have need of her Steward?”
“Eldarion shall be king after Elessar,” said Faramir, “the
rule of Gondor need not return to the Stewards, nor should it.”
“Eldarion is four years old! He cannot possibly-”
“What would you have me do, Éowyn? Call the king to my
service? I am Arandur, king’s servant! It is I who draws my
sword for him, not the other way ‘round!”
As soon as it had tumbled from his mouth, Faramir regretted
the half-truth and wondered at how easily he had uttered it. And yet,
though he tasted bitterness in his mouth at it, he knew this was how it had to
be. His responsibilities would let him do no less. He had very
little time to ponder all of this further, though, for Éowyn no longer stood
before him in distress. Rather her eyes grew hard and her hands, hidden
in her long sleeves, became fists in defiance.
They were in that moment strangers to each other and it
angered them both. Understanding did not bind them together and yet they
were both desperate to grasp its tattered shreds. Finally, it was Éowyn
who broke the silence.
“I would not have you forget your duties to the king, my
lord,” she said, spitting out the last two words as a curse, “but nor would I
have you forget your duties to your family of which I am a part.” She
stared at him long and hard and there was a certain amount of venom in the
gaze. But there was sadness also and this it was that finally pierced
through to Faramir’s heart and he could stand it no longer.
“Éowyn,” he began softly.
But she whirled away from him and departed the room,
quickly, leaving Faramir alone and despondent.
Faramir finally collapsed back into the seat before his
desk. Once again, he was met with the sight of the white book. He
contemplated it a long time before opening it to the page where he left
off. Taking up his pen, he wrote one more line:
I begin to understand the words of my father; pride and despair.
Some time later, Faramir went to the great tower of the
citadel. He climbed the winding stairs and emerged in the circular
overlook just below the topmost chamber. Damrod was there, his eye
pressed to the eyepiece of a mounted spyglass, pointing westward into the
setting sunlight.
“Any news?” Faramir asked the commander.
Damrod jumped, surprised to hear a voice behind him, and
knocked into the spyglass. His quick reflexes managed to save it from
toppling over the side of the wall and down the tower.
“My lord!” he exclaimed, righting the spyglass. “No,
no movement from Minas Tirith, yet. But...” Damrod cast his gaze to
the west, a wrinkle in his brow.
“But?” Faramir questioned. “Do not keep me in
suspense, Damrod.”
“I’ve spotted the fell worm. It circles over Osgiliath,
near the bridge. I think it hunts Bergil.”
Faramir pushed Damrod aside and took up the spyglass.
Squinting through the orange light of the Sun, he trained it on Osgiliath and
saw there a dark, winged form perched upon the broken dome of the city
ruin. It was hunched over like a vulture in a tree awaiting the chance to
move in on left over carrion.
“Our messenger has failed,” Damrod said, despair in his
voice, “the White Company will fall.”
“Nay, hope is not lost,” said Faramir, “the creature still
hunts him. That means it has not yet found him. Bergil may be young
and unprepared for full war, but he is not incapable as a Ranger.”
“Forgive me, my lord, for I wish to speak no ill of Captain
Beregond or his kin, but the lad is impulsive and undisciplined. I fear
he will deliver himself into the creature’s claws yet.”
“Perhaps,” said Faramir, “but I doubt he will fail us.
Bergil is still a lad of ten years in his eyes. His heroes cannot be
defeated and most especially his father can do no wrong. That is what he
aspires to; that grand, idyllic myth that you and I have lost. Scoff not
at the power of such a vision.”
“Aye, my lord,” said Damrod, “but can such a vision really
deliver one from the claws of a beast?”
“Probably not,” said Faramir, “but in this case, salvation
is the domain of help unlooked for.”
As he spoke, Faramir saw the gate of Minas Tirith
open. A legion of silver-clad horsemen poured forth, glinting in the
orange light, and raced across the Pelennor.
“Where your aspirations fail,” said Faramir, “your luck and
your faith in your heroes may prevail.”
Through a small crack in the wall, barely larger than his
hand, Bergil could see the fell worm perched upon the broken dome. It had
been there for some time, its rider and master patiently waiting for the moment
Bergil dared to crawl outside again.
At more than one point, the youth met the creature’s gaze
and stared it down. In those moments he was frozen with the icy chill of
terror, unable even to breathe. He was trapped in one of those moments
now, the creature’s steely eye boring into his will, attempting to undermine
it. Give up, it seemed to say, your struggle is futile.
Their silent discourse was interrupted when it seeped into
the back of Bergil’s mind that he heard the call of a horn and the shouting of
men. The beast broke contact first as its rider jerked the reins
aside. It spread its wings and with a great wind lifted off from the
dome. Bergil scrambled to the other side of his refuge and looked out
another hole to the west. He there saw, riding over the Pelennor, no less
than twenty mounted knights of Gondor, some with short bows, the rest with
swords raised high. The dark shape of the fell worm passed over them.
The strings of the bowmen twanged. The worm shrieked and circled around.
Bergil scrambled out of his hiding place and pulled a white
kerchief, the lone symbol of the White Company that he carried, from a pouch on
his belt with his left hand. With his right, he drew his sword. He
took off at his fastest run and sprinted from the ruin of Osgiliath, waving the
kerchief above his head. Even so, he was near halfway to Rammas Echor
before the Captain of the Knights saw him and rallied his men to Bergil’s aid.
Too late, Bergil noticed that he had lost track of the
worm. For one insane moment, he could have sworn the bowmen were taking
aim at him. But an instant later, sharp claws pierced through his
upraised arm and Bergil was lifted off the ground. The worm wailed again
and the wind around him was so foul he would have retched if his throat had not
been constricted in terror. Wildly, and without thinking, Bergil lashed
out with his sword, slashing upward. The fell worm shrieked and Bergil’s
arm was released. He found himself falling and he hit the ground hard,
feeling a sharp pain in his leg, then tumbling to a halt. Somehow, he
climbed to his feet and found that the Knights had surrounded him. The
Captain called an attack on the worm and the rest of the Knights went forth
again.
“You seem to be in no small amount of danger, lad,” said the
Captain, dismounting and moving to steady Bergil.
“I am Bergil, son of Beregond,” he said in reply, “I bear an
urgent message for the King from Prince Faramir.”
“I am needed here,” said the Captain, “and you are not fit
to run any longer. Take my horse and ride. We of the Grey Company
shall deal with the flying menace.” Bergil was about to protest but
before he could say anything, the Captain had hoisted him into the
saddle. “Go now,” he said, “deliver your message.”
“Wait!” said Bergil, unhitching his bow and quiver from his
gear. “You cannot wound that beast with sword alone. Take these.”
The Captain took the arms without hesitation. “Enough
talk, lad! Ride!” He gave the horse a sturdy nudge and the mount
whinnied and took off at a gallop.
By the time Bergil had passed through Rammas Echor, his arm
and leg had begun to scream in agony and he wished to call the horse to a halt
and collapse to the ground. Yet when he caught sight of Minas Tirith, a
strange terror seized him again. Suddenly, all Bergil wished to do was
flee the worm and harbor within the walls of the White City. In the face
of this fear, his pain fled. Bergil spurred the horse on and it was all
too glad to comply. It was only a few minutes before Bergil came to the
gate of the city.
“In the name of the White Company!” he called. “Let me
pass!”
There were shouts on the wall above and the gate opened a
horse’s breadth a moment later. As he entered, Bergil again announced
that he carried a message for the King. The guards let him pass, but not
without giving Bergil rather strange looks somewhere between amazement and
pity. Bergil could not think why they would be looking at him in that
way, but he cared not.
Bergil galloped his horse up the winding road to the
Citadel, shouting for people to make way. For a moment, he thought that
perhaps he was riding all the way to the sky. But it was just then that
he came to the tunnel that entered the Citadel. He was allowed to pass
and he reined his horse to a halt beneath the Tower of Ecthelion. He
dismounted and stumbled up the stairs into the antechamber.
He could not remember later whether or not he had followed
protocol, nor could he remember if he had cared at that moment. Bergil
remembered standing in the middle of the throne hall, the tight scroll from
Prince Faramir clutched in his hand and several people all staring at him
aghast. King Elessar descended the stairs of his throne quickly and
looked at him with worry.
“Ithilien is attacked,” said Bergil, desperately, “the White
Company is besieged. Prince Faramir calls for aid.”
Gently, Elessar took the scroll from Bergil’s hand.
“The message is delivered,” he said softly, “the White Company will have its
aid.” He passed the scroll aside to another set of hands and for the
first time, Bergil noticed that Queen Arwen was near as well, her gentle face
creased with concern. Elessar then took Bergil’s face in both hands and
leaned in closely. “Leithio goe lín,” he said, “garo post a
nesto.”
Though Bergil could not understand the words, he found at
once that the terror that had beset him lifted. As if exploding inward to
fill some vacuum, the pain of his previous hurts slammed into him. His
arm screamed in agony, his side started afire, he was beset by an
uncontrollable shiver, the room began to spin, and his leg gave way beneath
him. All these would have deposited him on the floor if hands had not
been there to catch him.
The face of the Queen was above him a moment later.
“Fetch a litter, quickly!” She exclaimed. “Bring him to the Houses
of Healing!”
He was aware of footfalls somewhere not far off. But Bergil’s
vision began to blur. He closed his eyes to it. Then he heard the
voice of the King.
“Muster the Grey Company!” he commanded. “We ride for
Ithilien!”
As his waking mind began to spin off into darkness, all
Bergil could think of was that his father was saved.
By the time the Grey Company had been mustered and
rank-and-file soldiers of the White City were added to their number, the
company that rode out of Minas Tirith numbered somewhere around
three-hundred. Elessar rode at the head of the column beneath the banner
of the king, his silver armor covered by a surcoat of black and Andúril at his
side.
As they passed beyond Rammas Echor, they came to the downed
carcass of the fell worm. Flies had already begun to swarm around it and
the summer heat made it reek so badly the company could almost see the fumes
rising from it. Silence settled upon them as they passed and no single
soldier could keep himself from looking upon it.
Elessar led his company through most of the night, cross the
Andúin at Osgiliath and coming within sight of Minas Estel but two hours before
dawn. There, four riders approached them under the banner of the
Steward. It was Faramir and one of his knights, arrayed in the colors of
the White Company, and Gimli and Ghan. The were welcomed into the King’s
company and so set forth with them. On the Steward’s counsel, they rode
north from there, making for the battlefield beneath Minas Morgul.
As they went, Elessar spent time conversing with Gimli for
he had not seen his friend for some time. They spoke of days past and
better nights spent sitting around fires and sharing stories. At length,
their talk turned to the Fellowship of the Ring and when it turned also to
Boromir, Faramir distanced himself from them and concerned himself with the
company. Eventually, he saw Gimli and Ghan drop back to tend to other
things and the King beckoned Faramir over.
“Faramir, why have you ridden with the Grey Company?”
Aragorn asked as they rode. “I would think that your skill would be
needed in your city.”
“I am confident in the safety of Minas Estel,” Faramir
replied, “and I would know first hand what threat there is against my lands and
my people.”
“Faramir,” said Aragorn with skepticism, “I asked not for an
excuse.”
The Steward gave a short, humorless laugh.
“Apologies. An old habit.”
“I read you correctly, then. You worry for Beregond
and the White Company.”
“It would seem I’ve made a complete blunder of the
situation. If I read this correctly, this was from the beginning a
trap. The Orkish king may seek to wipe out the Gondorian soldiery east of
the Andúin. That is how I would begin a war in all earnest in this land,
if I were he.”
“But you are most decidedly not he,” said Aragorn, “and no
Orc bothers with such tactics. Their strength lies in their numbers.”
“It is pure speculation, my lord. And in any case, it
comes too late.”
“And so you seek to clean up the mess personally. That
is admirable. But you cannot always ride to the captain’s rescue.”
“Why not?” Faramir asked, rather more sharply than he had
intended at first. “He is the captain of my company and therefore my
responsibility. But more than that and more importantly, he is my
friend. He stood for me in the dark days with Mithrandir and
Peregrin. And yet of all three of them, he is the one who has remained at
my side without condition and without regret. How could I do any less
than to... nay, Aragorn, I will ride to his aid as long as it is within my
power to do so.”
There was a very long silence between them after that.
The sound of their horses’ feet hung in the air. Finally, Aragorn shook
his head with a smile.
“By the Valar!” he said. “You have been carrying that
around for some time! Have you not even spoken to Éowyn of this?”
“Well,” Faramir said at length around a bitter laugh, “there
is another matter entirely.”
Aragorn was about to ask him to elaborate, but a voice
called from the ridge ahead of them. It was the vanguard rider they had
sent to scout the way ahead.
“A rider approaches!” he called. “He wears the colors
of the White Company!”
Elessar and Faramir spurred their horses onward and rode to
the top of the ridge. There they saw approaching them Léowine, riding
hard and fast. As he came close, he appeared to them over-weary and much
in need of relief.
“King Elessar, my lord Faramir,” he greeted, bringing his
horse along side and inclining his head respectfully, “glad I am to see the
banners of the King and the Grey Company. We were beginning to think word
had not reached you.”
“Come, Commander, and ride with us,” said Elessar, “what
news of the White Company?”
“They hold their position on the plains before Minas
Morgul,” Léowine answered, “but we have lost near a third of those who set out
with us from Minas Estel.”
“A third?” Faramir exclaimed. “Léowine, we must know
everything. Begin at the beginning.”
“Yes, my lord,” said Léowine, “as you know, we began at
Minas Estel. Glorlas led us to the place he had seen the Orcs and the
fell worm. Mablung found the signs and once again they pointed to Minas
Morgul. And so we followed them, expecting only a small party. In
point of fact, we did observe a party of twenty or so Uruk-hai making their way
across the plain when we arrived. We thought we had perhaps mustered the
whole of the White Company without reason. Beregond sent fifty of my
riders in pursuit of them.
“T’was then a thing most strange happened. The Orkish
party made across the bridge before the Dead City and entered within. The
gate closed after them and we thought they had decided to harbor within.
The captain, Mablung, and I gave thought to perhaps leaving them be; they
seemed harmless enough and cowed. But, our orders were to rout them
utterly, so we turned our thought to dragging them from the city. We set
a camp upon the plain and debated how to go about it as we would have to get
into the city first.
“But that, it turned out, was our mistake. It was just
after sunset when our folly was revealed. Horns sounded from the city and
the cries of the worms answered; first one, then a few more, then a din that
would have drowned the fair music of Lúthien Tinúviel even in its brightest hour.
The gates of Minas Morgul opened and no less than a dozen of the worms took to
the sky. Orcs poured forth from the city just after them and made to
attack the camp, hundreds of them! T’was then we realized that the
Uruk-hai had already taken the city and fortified it.”
“By the Valar,” Faramir said, grinding his teeth together,
“when could they have slipped past our patrols? And on such a scale!”
“The White Company has done an excellent job guarding these
lands,” said Elessar, “but they cannot be everywhere at once. Minas Estel
and Cair Andros were properly your first priorities. Perhaps this was
inevitable. Pray, Master Léowine, continue.”
The Ithilrochon nodded. “We were forced to fight a
holding action throughout the night,” he said, “and as we did, the Orcs set
their own garrisons, leaving the company with but one path of retreat. We
tried to take it, but the fell worms beset us and we found we could not
retreat.”
“Then, Faramir, you guess right!” Elessar exclaimed in near
horror. “A trap it was, indeed! But that cannot be. That is
not the Orkish way of waging war.”
“The Uruk-hai have been using many such tactics of late,”
said Faramir, “it disturbs me greatly.”
“We managed to hold our chosen ground until dawn,” Léowine
continued, “and we sent Glorlas to call for aid. At sunrise, the worms
became curiously less fierce. They did not circle above us except at need
to keep us hemmed in. It was by that grace alone that we were able to
hold throughout the day. And, I suspect, the reason Glorlas was able to
get through to you.”
“And what of this night?” Faramir asked.
“Both sides weary of the battle, my lord, but our company’s
strength is failing faster. The Uruk-hai are tightening their
noose. I left but a few hours ago to see what help had been sent,
although I will admit that we had begun to despair of any coming.”
“Despair no longer,” said Elessar, “we here shall break the
Orkish lines, if only to allow the White Company to escape.”
“Then, you do not mean to besiege Minas Morgul?” Léowine
asked.
“Nay,” said the king, “we have not the manpower. It
would take both the White Company and the Grey for such a task, and the former
is far too exhausted.”
“I am loathe simply to leave Minas Ithil to the Orcs,” said
Faramir, bitterly, “they will have a line available to them out of the
Morannon.”
“True,” said Elessar, “but the Orcs have won this battle
already. Best to rescue the company and fight another day.”
“I agree, my king,” said Faramir, “but still, I dislike the
thought of an Orkish supply route through my fair Ithilien.”
They continued riding for a few hours more. Elessar
and Faramir questioned Léowine further concerning the strength and positions of
the Orcs and they took counsel with Gimli and Ghan.
At last, the company came to a high hill overlooking the
plain before Minas Morgul. Smoke rose from the ground and hung in the air
in stagnant patches. The Orcs had set fires along the perimeter of the
battle field to guard the places where they could not hinder the White
Company’s escape. The ground was blackened where such fires had already
gone out and battle had begun anew atop them. There were great gashes in
the plain, the tell tale sign of boulders flying from the catapults upon the
city battlements. The din that arose held screams of war and agony alike
in a cacophonous mixture of terror.
The White Company stood as a knot of white encircled on all
sides but one by the foul and dirty black-clad Orcs. Valiantly, they
pushed outward upon the lines, but it did little save to prevent the inward
push of the Orkish forces. High upon the crags of Ephel Dúath, the forms
of the fell worms hunched over and watched, eyes keen to the battle.
Elessar absorbed the scene for but a moment, then turned his
horse aside to speak, riding up and down along the line of the Grey
Company. Faramir’s own horse stamped the ground in agitation.
“Hold, friends!” shouted the king. “Hold firm!
Captain Inglor, lead your men on an assault upon the northern line!
Bowmen, ride the center and clear the air of the worms! Third and fourth
battalions, follow the Steward’s banner! The rest of you, ride with
me! Now we ride to the aid of our comrades! Knights of Gondor, to
the White Company!” And saying this, he drew forth Andúril, shining in
the first rays of the morning sunrise, and held it aloft. The ringing of
other swords drawn from their scabbards answered it and horns sounded.
Elessar began the charge and the Grey Company followed as one.
Faramir led his men around toward the south and broke upon
the back edge of the Orkish line there. They hewed down the first ranks
before slowing from the onslaught. The battle was joined and Faramir
found himself leading his horse in deadly circles, his sword singing as it
whirled through the air. He saw not far ahead the banner of the White
Company. Knowing Beregond would be near, he determined to fight through
the growing melee to it. By then, though the Uruk-hai stood their ground,
the Orcs had scattered somewhat, shielding their eyes from the rising
sun. The few still left were quickly trampled under the hooves of the
Grey Company horses.
Faramir quickly broke through and he set his eyes upon his
beleaguered White Company. Beregond was in the thick of the fighting,
desperately rallying those men near to him to a new attack. Several
Uruk-hai were closing in on him, bearing terrible swords, their faces hidden
under dark helms of crude steel. The Steward and the soldiers with him
charged in at the Uruk-hai from behind and pushed them aside. With a
great cheer, the White Company sprang ahead and joined them.
“To the south, to the south!” they shouted. “A path is
opened!”
As soon as he was able, Faramir came along side Beregond.
“Can the company fight its way through?” he asked over the
din.
“We can now,” the captain answered, “the aid you brought is
beyond my imagination. Where did you find so many more soldiers in
Ithilien?”
“Not Ithilien,” said Faramir, “these are knights who ride
under the banner of the King.”
“The king!” Beregond exclaimed. “Then we may yet
retake Minas Morgul.”
“Nay, we have not the forces. The Grey Company was not
prepared to make siege.”
“But, my lord-”
“Nay, Beregond. It shall avail us not. We shall
have to reclaim it another time.” Saying this, he turned to address the
rest of the White Company. “Make for the king’s banner!” he
shouted. The White Company gave a cheer in response and brandished their
swords high.
The battle also continued elsewhere. From the north,
Captain Inglor of the Grey Company led his men on a furious charge, forcing the
lines of the Uruk-hai to swing eastward, nearly back to the bridge before Minas
Morgul. The king’s banner and the men who rode with it made its way up
the center, west to east. The fell worms, prodded by their masters from
their cliffside roosts, swooped over them. Now and then, a terrible cry
would issue from the Grey Company as a rider was lifted from the field.
Most often, he would rain back down to the ground in splattering red pieces so
mangled it was hard to distinguish horse from rider.
Elessar continued his charge through all of this.
Andúril glinted in the dawn light and some Orcs were heard to cry out that the
king wielded fire in his hand. At his side rode Gimli and Ghan upon their
war ponies, axes raised high and falling in deadly blows.
An Orkish horn sounded from the cliffs and echoed off of the
nearby stone. It was heard even over the sounds of battle, resonating its
low note. The last of the fell worms took to they sky, then, and went
directly toward the king’s banner. But, it did not swoop to attack.
Rather, it wheeled overhead, its rider still sounding its horn. The
Uruk-hai and what few Orcs there were rallied under it.
At nearly the same time, the gates of Minas Morgul opened,
scraping metal upon stone. A torn and tattered black flag was revealed, a
crude pattern of fire in its center in a dirty red. In front of it, a massive
Uruk-hai came riding atop a warg, black spikes upon his helm and a jagged
halberd in his hand. Behind him marched a legion of Orcs and Uruk-hai as
though they had been all but forced from the city. The Uruk-hai held up
his halberd and horns sounded again. He legion charged forward behind him
and made for the Tree and Stars.
The Orkish rally cleared the field for a moment, just long
enough for the White Company to join the Grey under the king’s banner.
The worms circled overhead. By now, the entire Gondorian army stood
together, Elessar and Faramir at its head, their captains at their sides and no
Orc or Uruk-hai stood west of them.
The Orkish line continued to advance, marching forward with
pounding, unrelenting footsteps. They came behind their warg-riding
leader and their voices cried out a single, undulating chant.
“Urlak bhosh zurlug! Urlak bhosh zurlug!”
This was Urlak, greatest of the Uruk-hai. This was the
Orkish king, reared for battle in the days of the creeping fear and hardened by
the War of the Ring. In him was a combination most rare in an Orc;
ambition and the strength to back it up.
“My lord,” said Faramir to Elessar, “the White Company is
too exhausted to fight such an army. Most of them will not survive.”
“The Grey Company cannot fight them alone,” Inglor
protested.
“No, the Orcs have already won this day,” said Elessar,
“Faramir, have the White Company retreat to Cair Andros. We will cover
you for a time.”
“Aye, my lord,” said Faramir. He turned to Beregond to
beckon him along, then rode to pass the word among his soldiers.
“Well now,” said Gimli, having appeared at the king’s side
where Faramir had been. Ghan was close at hand as well. “We’ve
faced bigger armies than this rabble!”
“True, Gimli,” Elessar said evenly, “but we have also had
larger armies than the one we have now standing at our backs.”
“Fool ranger,” Gimli muttered with a smirk showing even
under his beard, “ever ready to dwell on the down side. Still, never let
it be said that Dwarves ever backed away from a fight such as this. Ghan
and I shall stand with you, Aragorn, though we rode here with Lord Faramir.”
As the Orkish line approached, the Grey Company stood its
ground. The White Company filtered back through the ranks of the
Gondorians and stood at the Grey Company’s back. For moments
interminable, the adversaries stood gazing at each other across the torn
battlefield. Sound seemed to have been sucked from the air. Then,
from the back of the army of the Orcs, an undulating rumble began. It
moved forward through their ranks until it finally came to the first line, just
behind Urlak. The Uruk-hai stamped their feet in a fearsome march,
beating the ground with their weapons.
“Who now is the ruler of Gondor?” Urlak shouted over the
din. “Lesser men call the King of the Reunited Kingdom to battle!”
“The Orcs may have thrown off their Dark Lord master,”
Elessar called back, “but their base minds remain. I see no lesser men
here! Only lesser races!”
To this, the lines of men standing behind the king shouted
their agreement, utterly drowning the threatening pound of the Orcs.
Elessar raised Andúril and a horn sounded over all. In one movement, the
Grey Company surged forward to begin the battle.
Faramir watched this new motion for but a moment, only long
enough to see it erupt into the utter chaos of battle. As the Grey
Company advanced, Faramir signaled the White Company to turn west. Swift
as their horses would carry them, they surged down the path opened to them by
their rescuers, toward the river Andúin. The Steward came last of them,
shouting over the rumble of the horses’ hooves.
“Ride! To the river! Ride now!”
Above them, the dark shape of a fell worm circled, barely
heeding the command of its master. It turned to make for its cliff-side
refuge once, but the crack of a cruel whip brought it about. The rider
mastered it and it swooped down low over the retreating White Company.
Faramir tied his horses reins to his saddle quickly and made to ready his
bow. But, the worm was over him too quickly and he could not hold his
horse steady enough without the use of his hands.
Then, quick as lightning, Léowine spurred back toward
Faramir upon Windmane, an arrow already upon the string of his small bow.
Using the skill taught to him since childhood, he mastered his horse with legs
alone. Looping around behind Faramir, between him and the wheeling worm,
he let his arrow fly. It caught flesh, where the worm’s serpentine neck
joined to its body. The worm thrashed, but did not cry out. It
struggled onward for a moment more, then fell rolling from the sky. When
it landed upon the ground, its rider was caught beneath.
As Léowine caught up to Faramir and the two of them came
riding after the rest of the White Company, the Steward cast an ear back toward
the fading sound of battle behind them. For a moment, he was torn in two,
desiring both to lead his own company to safety and to stay and aid his king.
But Elessar’s order had been clear; he was to make for Cair Andros. And
so, he went.
And thus was the rescue of the White Company achieved.
Some hours after their retreat, the White Company
approached the fleet waters of the Andúin and the island in their midst known
as Cair Andros. Trees stood out upon its shore and in between them high
walls of brown stone could be glimpsed, capped every so often with short, round
turrets where archers stood on watch. The shore lines were broken only by
two grand, wooden bridges which reached from the island to the east shore of
Ithilien and the west shore of Anórien. Buildings rose from the center of
the island, clustered together as if huddling from some menace, clinging to the
tall tower in their center, the tallest structure by far. The space
between this small city and the island walls was covered in a ring of
woodland. Paths had been cut through it at need and a wide one went from
the gates at the bridges to the city. As the White Company approached the
east bridge, the figures atop the walls moved about with activity.
Faramir rode at the head of the company, careful to keep an
eye upon Beregond. Though for some time the captain had been as sharp as
ever, as they journeyed he grew ever more silent and wan. At one point,
he had all but fallen out of his saddle, asleep. Thus, Faramir silently
took on more and more of Beregond’s duties as they went.
Now they crossed the east bridge and the gate into the
fortress walls opened. The company entered the forests within and when
they had come to a large enough clearing Faramir ordered a camp set. The
captain of the east gate came down and met the Steward amidst the activity.
“Prince Faramir,” he said, “we had heard of trouble east of
here, but we did not know the White Company rode.”
“We ride from battle at Minas Morgul,” said Faramir, “the
king and the Grey Company will follow us shortly.”
“I shall inform the lord of the city. Have you
wounded?”
“Yes.”
“Then I shall send for healers as well,” said the
soldier. He gave a short bow. “Welcome to Cair Andros, Lord
Arandur.”
After the soldier departed, Faramir realized he had lost
track of Beregond. Never one to shirk his duty, the captain had busied
himself with setting the camp. Faramir searched for him and found him not
long later, speaking to Léowine. Mid-way through their conversation,
Beregond started and the Ithilrochon reached a calming hand out to his
shoulder. Beregond shook it off and stalked away with new purpose.
Faramir went after him, but lost him amid the shuffle of the company and the
sunset-dappled shadows of the trees.
“My lord,” Mablung called a moment later. The Ranger
appeared out of the crowd and came to Faramir. “My lord, the men are near
out of their food. We cannot feed everyone this night at full ration.”
“I’ll not have my company march home hungry,” said Faramir,
shaking his head, “send five men into the city to obtain what provisions we
need. Have them tell the merchants that I shall reimburse them personally
if need be.”
“Aye, my lord,” said Mablung. He was about to leave
when Faramir halted him.
“I seek Beregond. Have you seen him?”
“Not since we crossed the east bridge.”
“Do you know what rest he has taken?”
Mablung paused, a peculiar look of thought upon his
face. Slowly, he shook his head. “I had not noticed until now, but
I cannot recall if he has had any since we left Minas Estel, though he insisted
the rest of us take rest in turns.”
Faramir nodded his thanks and, as Mablung left to tend to
his duties, recommenced his search for his captain. It was near an hour
later and the sun was almost set in the west when he found him. Beregond
was tiredly issuing orders to the city healers who had come and seemed to have
determined to stay near the wounded.
“Beregond, you should take some rest,” said Faramir as he
finally caught up with him.
The captain, however, took the conversation in another
direction entirely, as if he had not heard the Steward at all. “My
lord! I am told that Bergil rode to Minas Tirith to summon the Grey
Company!”
“He did,” Faramir answered, evenly.
“Léowine tells me he was attacked and wounded by one of the
fell worms!”
“He was, but-”
“By your leave, my lord, I would ride to Minas Tirith at
once.”
“Nay,” Faramir answered quickly, “at least not at
once. You must take some rest before that.”
“But, my lord-”
“I will hear no argument from you on this, Beregond; you
have not slept in nearly three days, I am told. Bergil rode to save
you. It would do him no good if you were to fall from your horse and be
lost in the wood.”
There was silence between the two men for a long moment as
Faramir’s words moved through Beregond’s exhausted mind. The captain’s
eyes seemed to scream out the frustration he was no doubt feeling, then gave
way to utter helplessness. Desperately, Beregond held back tears and he
leaned against the nearest tree in weariness. Faramir put a steadying
hand on his shoulder.
“He is my son,” said Beregond, “I should be with him.
I should have been there to protect him.”
“Fear not,” said Faramir, “I am told by the king that
Bergil’s wounds will have him abed for some days, but they will not kill
him. And he is receiving the best of care in the White City.
Rest. Ride to him in the morning. I shall look to the company in
the meantime.”
Some hours later, the Grey Company rode through the east
gate of Cair Andros, King Elessar and Gimli at its head. Captain Inglor
had been wounded and was carried on a horse before his lieutenant. Ghan
rode his pony nearby them.
As they entered the city, Faramir was there to greet them
with the lord of the city, Megildan, and his son, Belecthor, standing
near. It was apparent to them that the result of the battle weighed
heavily on them. Though the White Company had been rescued, Minas Morgul
was now in the hands of Urlak and the Orkish races. Elessar and Faramir
spoke long with Megildan that night and made plans for the defense of
Ithilien. Though Minas Estel was well protected by the White Company,
Cair Andros now needed reinforcement. Elessar pledged a measure of the
Knights of Gondor to the task.
That night, as the stars shone between the trees above the
camp’s flickering fires, the two companies mingled and many tales of the battle
were exchanged. Chief among them was the story of the Dwarf Ghan who
charged to the defense of the fallen Captain Inglor and trampled no less than
three Uruk-hai beneath his great shield and slew the first with his ax, even
through the iron helm of the Uruk-hai. Thus it was that among the men of
Gondor, Ghan was ever known as Ironax.
A tale was also told of a great battle between Elessar and
Urlak. They had met on the battlefield and the Orkish king had issued a
challenge. In due time, Andúril clashed with the Uruk-hai’s hideous
halberd. Men who saw it later said that though Elessar had looked small
compared Urlak, still he shone the brighter and mightier of the two. At last,
Andúril broke the Uruk-hai’s halberd in two and Urlak was forced to run to his
army for aid, ending the challenge in dishonor.
And yet, as wondrous as these tales of the battle were,
there was behind them a great sense of loss and unease. Many had been
lost and Minas Morgul was once again occupied by evil. All assembled at
Cair Andros were aware of what the future was going to hold for by the end of
the night, there was not a soldier in the camp who did not name the battle the
First Battle of Minas Morgul.
Faramir spent most of that night in counsel with King
Elessar. After speaking for long hours about the course of the battle and
the circumstances that had led to it, several things were decided.
The first was that word needed to be sent to Edoras of the
circumstances in Ithilien. Some of the northern reaches of the Moon-land
boarded Rohan with only the great river to separate them. If war were to
break out in all earnest, Éomer-king would need to look to that short spit of
his eastern boarder.
A messenger was sent also to the Prince Legolas at
Galenost. With the Orkish conquest of Minas Morgul, the Elven settlement
was near to the paths that the Orcs would now frequent. Though Mablung’s
Rangers would do what they could from Henneth Annún, the Elves would have to
fortify their new city.
The king decided to reinstate the garrison at Osgiliath
which since the end of the War of the Ring had been disbanded in order to man
other outposts to the south and north. The sight of the fell worm,
Elessar said, had rattled him being so close to Minas Tirith; indeed, so far
into the lands of Gondor. The Citadel of the Stars and its crossing were
still too critical to leave its fate in the hands of other leaguers.
And finally, the Steward and the King gave thought to
communication between Minas Tirith and Minas Estel. They had no doubt not
that Urlak had devised his trap thinking that word would not reach the City of
Kings. He had even acted to prevent just that by sending the fell worm
after Glorlas and Bergil. The youths’ skills as Rangers had been all that
had saved both of them. Faramir was quick to praise the king’s foresight
in ordering Minas Estel to be built within sight of Minas Tirith. Their
visibility to each other allowed for a visual signal. The beacon fires
had worked well to save time in summoning the Riders of Rohan during the War of
the Ring; there was no reason it could not be used in Ithilien.
The sun was risen by the time all these plans had been made
and Faramir went out from the king’s tent to find Beregond once again.
The captain had evidently taken to the nearest empty cot he could find the
night before for Faramir found him in a tent mere horse-lengths from where they
had last spoken, near the tents of the healers. Faramir was loathe to
rouse Beregond, for the captain slept deeply and looked exhausted still, but he
would not hinder a father worried about his child. And so, he saw
Beregond off mid-morning, riding over the western bridge of Cair Andros and
into the land of Anórien.
Beregond rode hard throughout most of the day. He
found the road that led around the tip of Ered Nimrais and followed it
south. Amon Dín came into his view mid-afternoon and by the time the sun
was setting, he entered the gates of Minas Tirith. He went at once to the
sixth circle and quickly saw to his horse, then made for the Houses of Healing.
As he entered, he passed a noble who could not have been any
older than he. His hair was graying already and his cloth was dyed a deep
red that was generally reserved for persons of status. He moved with calm
but strangely self-interested purpose.
Beregond cared not for protocol at the moment and stepped
past the noble fleetly. But his way was blocked a moment later by the
noble’s hand and he saw that his face was twisted into impatient recognition.
“You are Beregond, son of Baranor, are you not?” he asked,
his voice cold.
“I am,” said Beregond, “is there-”
“Why are you in the White City?” the noble asked, anger now
in his tone. “Certainly, the king has not reinstated you to the Citadel
Guard!”
“Indeed he has not,” said Beregond in confusion, “I remain
Captain of the White Company. Forgive me, but I must go within. My
son is-”
“You have no business in Minas Tirith, vile serpent!”
snapped the noble, moving to block Beregond’s way into the Houses.
“I beg pardon, sir,” said Beregond, his patience wearing
thin and his ire rising.
“Pardon! You are a slayer of your brothers-in-arms and
you will receive no pardon from me!” The noble now braced himself in the
doorway, glaring at the captain.
Finally, Beregond was at his wit’s end. As his rage
exploded forth, he grabbed the noble by his collar and pushed him against the
post of the doorway.
“I know not who you are, nor do I care!” Beregond
growled. “But you stand between me and my son who lies wounded
within. By the Valar, if you do not move aside, I will move you one way
or another!”
The noble shook free of Beregond’s grasp and regained his
feet, brushing his hands off on the captain’s leather gambeson. Though
shorter than Beregond by a great measure, he still managed to gaze down his
nose at him in contempt.
“T’was my beloved cousin you slew at Fen Hollen,” said the
noble, “you should not have been allowed to remain in Gondor, let alone be made
captain of a company of soldiers.”
Beregond threw up his hands and turned away. He
stalked into the Houses of Healing in a foul mood. As he went, he heard
the noble shouting after him.
“This is not over, traitor! You will rue the day you
crossed Maelrúth, Lord of Ethring!”
“As if I do not already,” Beregond muttered to himself.
After that, it took him only a few minutes and an inquiry of
a healer to locate Bergil’s room in the Houses. He all but ran there,
skidding to a halt when he reached the proper door.
His son lay within upon a low bed. Bergil was pale and
his skin shone with sweat. One leg was leaden with splints, his left arm
was bound to his side, and bandages were wrapped about his midriff
tightly. He slumbered fitfully, seemingly unfeeling of his hurts.
Bergil was not alone in his room. As Beregond entered,
he saw a young lady, not much older than Bergil and dressed in the brown habit
of a healer’s apprentice, lighting a hanging lamp to ward off the growing
dark. Hearing Beregond, she turned to him and curtsied quickly.
“You are his father?” she asked. “You are Beregond?”
Beregond’s resolved crumbled at seeing the plight of his
son. His voice caught in his throat and he could do little more than nod
in response to the young healer.
“Your son will heal, sir captain,” she said, “exhaustion and
the heat-fever took him as well as a wound the master healer named a spider
bite. He has a broken leg and his arm was removed from its place in his
shoulder, but both are in remarkably good condition, considering how far he
went with them as they were. He needs but rest and time to heal.”
“How long has he been like this?” Beregond managed to say,
taking a few uncertain steps toward his son.
“He was brought to us two days ago,” the healer replied, “in
truth, he is already much improved.”
Beregond nodded his understanding and placed his hands on
the back of the small wooden chair next to the head of Bergil’s bed. “If
I could have some time?” he asked.
“Of course, sir captain,” said the healer, and turned to
leave.
“Wait,” said Beregond, with an afterthought, “you have
watched over him?”
“Yes.”
“What is your name?”
“My name is Higethryth, sir captain.”
“That is no Sindarin name.”
“Nay. It is Rohirric. I hail from Edoras and
have come to Minas Tirith for study in the healing arts. I wish to follow
in the steps of the Lady Éowyn who herself studies healing.”
“I thank you for your patient watch over my son, Higethryth
of Edoras.”
The healer acknowledged the thanks with a slight bow of her
head and a gentle smile. “I take my leave. Good eve to you, sir
captain.”
As the young healer departed, Beregond took the seat by
Bergil’s bed. He clasped the youth’s unbound hand in his and gently
called his name. Bergil stirred, but did not awaken, so Beregond put his
other hand upon Bergil’s brow and pushed aside sweat-matted hair. He
called Bergil’s name once again and the youth’s eyes opened and slowly focused
upon him.
“Father?” he asked as if through a haze. “Am I
dreaming?”
“No, lad,” Beregond answered around forming tears and a
mirthless laugh, “no dream, this time. It is I.”
“You wanted me to stay in Minas Estel,” Bergil murmured,
“and I went forth anyway.”
Beregond hushed him with a whisper and a hand upon his
cheek. “No, no, you did well. Your message and your flight may have
saved the company. I am proud of you.”
“The worm frightened me.”
“I know. Fear it no longer; it is slain.”
“Are you leaving?”
“Nay, Bergil. I shall watch over you.”
“I came through the Dawnless Day.”
“I know.”
With no more words between them, Bergil dropped off into
slumber once again. This time, however, it was deep and peaceful.
And there Beregond sat all that night, his son’s hand clasped in his.
Three-hundred of the White Company had ridden forth from
Minas Estel. Weeks later, near one-hundred of them lay at rest in Caras
Faerath in the southern shadow of the city’s greatest tower. Of the three
battalions, Mablung’s Rangers had taken the heaviest losses with nearly fifty
of their number dead. And so, it was decided that it was time to graduate
the first class of Emyn Arnen’s Ranger-cadets. Twenty-nine received their
first orders on the same day as the setting of the great tower’s
capstone. Among them and received in honor were Bergil and Glorlas who of
the cadets had already risked much in defense of Ithilien.
All this happened a month after the mid-year in the Citadel
of Minas Estel. Beregond handed out the commissions to the young Rangers,
Mablung at his side calling the names. When Bergil’s name was called, the
youth came forward slowly, still hobbling upon a pair of wooden crutches.
And at that moment, Beregond saw in his son’s eyes that something had
changed. There was new understanding and yet also something akin to
pride, though not as presumptuous. In the space of a few short weeks,
Bergil had grown.
Part of Beregond wept for that for his son’s innocence he
perceived to have come from his wife who had passed. And now, that too
was gone. Yet there remained admiration in Bergil’s eyes when he looked
upon his father and Beregond found that it flattered him.
A great scaffold had thus far wrapped itself around Minas
Estel’s greatest tower. Most of the city had assembled to watch the
ascent of the tower’s capstone and the citadel was opened to them.
Slowly, the copper-shod stone was dragged to the top by the Dwarves of Gimli’s
folk who had accompanied it. In the noon-time sun, it gleamed of metal
fire, as if the sparks of the Dwarven hammers that had forged it were caught
within. As it was placed, a great cheer arose from the crowd.
Finally, Minas Estel’s full height was achieved; near four-hundred feet from
the base of the mountain to the tip of that capstone. Though it did not
rival Minas Tirith and the height of the Tower of Ecthelion, still it was a
marvel to behold.
Standing before the assembled crowd, Faramir waited for
their cheers to calm. In his hand was the White Rod of the Stewards and
standing near was Éowyn, though she did not take his hand.
“This day,” said Faramir to the crowd, “with the laying of
this stone, we men of Gondor and our brothers from Rohan declare that we are
all men of Ithilien. This city stands as a declaration to all of
Middle-earth; the time of men has come and we shall dwell here as long as this
great tower stands. Already we have purchased Minas Estel’s defense with
the blood of our own. Man have already fallen to save Ithilien. And
not only men, but others stand with us; Dwarves and Elves. Let it be
known to any who would raise their sword against us; Ithilien does not stand
alone.”
Here the crowd cheered and a cry came from the Dwarves high
atop the tower.
“Baruk khazad! Khazad ai menu!”
Faramir was glad of the pause this gave him for once again,
something whispered in his mind. He saw again shadow to the east, but
there was also light in Ithilien. Finally, the crowd quieted again and
Faramir found his voice.
“Let it be known in the farthest reaches of Eä! The
light begins here!"
As always, thanks go out to everyone for their encouraging words. Thanks especially to Raksha the Demon for the mini-Nuzgúl about spiders and French Pony for being my sounding board. Also thanks to Branwyn of HASA for much feedback and discussion.
Here’s some translation notes;
Leithio goe lín. Garo post a nesto. “Release your fear. Have rest and heal.”
Urlak bhosh zurlug! Urlak bhosh zurlug! Has no translation. Followed what I could find of patterns Tolkien himself established for Orkish; in other words, total gibberish.
Baruk khazad! Khazad ai menu! Dwarven battle cry lifted from the books.
Galborn – one of the Ranger-cadets. Sindarin meaning “red light.”
Fréodgyth – the name of Faramir and Éowyn’s third child and first daughter. From the Old English word “fréod” meaning “friend” and a feminine name suffix.
Glorlas – one of the Ranger-cadets. Sindarin meaning “gold leaf.”
Megildan – Lord of Cair Andros. Sindarin meaning “sword-wright.”
Maelrúth – the name of the noble that Beregond ran into. Sindarin with a meaning I don’t want to give away just yet. Needless to say, if he was an Elf, this would be his mother-given name.
Higethryth – the name of the young healer in Minas Tirith. From the Old English word “hige” meaning “thinking” and a feminine name suffix.
And, as always, a hint for the next chapter; old friends return from western lands. ^_^
Bado na sídh.
Berz.