Feud | By : narcolinde Category: -Multi-Age > General Views: 27149 -:- Recommendations : 1 -:- Currently Reading : 1 |
Disclaimer: I do not own the Lord of the Rings (and associated) book series, nor any of the characters from it. I do not make any money from the writing of this story. |
"That is the reason for the distress of the trees, Hiren," one of the Mirkwood guards added, ignoring the interruption. "The young usurper has gone after his Adar's murderer and Legolas has gone to stop him, for the youth has little knowledge either of combat or the forest beyond the bounds of the realm. The Tawarwaith fears he will fall to Orcs or spiders, or worse should the Wraiths discover him first."
"I will not stand for it! I count myself responsible in part for Lindalcon's rash heroics." The March Warden ground the recrimination through his clenched teeth. Now with the absence of Talagan, Haldir assumed control, turning to his soldiers. "Take the horses and have them stabled, procure fresh mounts and what supplies may be found, and gather Greenwood's forces. We ride."
"Greenwood's forces have been sent forth," said Gandalf, "thus you find the place deserted. One company after another has formed up and departed, for word has come back throughout the day and night of many Orcs gathering and skirmishes breaking out all around the city. In the war room you will find the charts and maps the others used, but I cannot say that any of it will be helpful."
"We will go with you," Elladan announced as he and his brother moved to join the Lorien warriors hustling to obey the orders of their captain.
"I forbid it!" Elrond shouted. "Your allegiance is to Imladris, to me. You will not abandon your father to chase after that outcast." He leaped from the lax grip of Thranduil's guards, meaning to grapple Elladan and hold him fast. He found Elrohir in his way.
"Dare you speak such hypocrisy with so much arrogance?" Elrohir breathed a heavy sigh and shook his head. "Did you not forsake your family and your people? Indeed, your very honour you discarded to seek the self-same elf."
"Nay! I held to my family and my people to the despair of my own well-being. How can you see it otherwise? If I have renounced anyone it is myself. Do not go from me now!" he grasped the younger of his sons only to find himself shoved back into the waiting hands of the
woodland warriors.
"Daro, Adar!" Elladan commanded once more, pulling Elrohir to his side. "We will act as our consciences direct. You do not truly want Legolas dead, even if you do not see this now. Be grateful we are here to compensate for your lack of reason."
"And compassion," added Elrohir. "Ada, do as Thranduil bids and accompany the guards. We will return as soon as Legolas and his friend are found." The younger twin turned to Haldir. "Our swords, mellon."
Elrond gaped, completely at a loss over his sons' decision. He watched in helpless denial; they would not go and leave him to be locked away like any common thief. They would not turn their backs on him. They would not ride out and let him face Thranduil alone. Yet as he watched the brothers accepted their arms and did exactly that, without a backward glance, striding quickly after Haldir to secure new mounts. In mere minutes the courtyard was empty save for the wizards, Elrond, and the guards. The Lord of Imladris looked to them, summoning up the most indignant and austere expression of disapproval he could produce, completely unaware that it was a pale imitation of the daunting demeanour for which he was legendary. He did not fail to comprehend the dawning of pity in the piercing eyes of the canny wizards. The shock of seeing it washed the false bravado from his features.
"You will not be left on your own for long," instructed Mithrandir gravely. "Put the solitude to use and benefit from the lessons such introspection may teach. There is someone here most anxious to make your acquaintance, though I cannot say if you will appreciate the visit."
"If you mean Thranduil, be assured I do not quake at the thought of confronting him," Elrond boasted, not as sure of his resolve as he hoped he sounded. In truth, he had no desire to meet the Sindarin ruler alone and unarmed.
"I do not mean Thranduil," Gandalf spat back sourly, calling up the memory of Legolas' agony during the night of grieving and with it numerous justifications for giving equal hurt to the Elven Lord. The soft pressure of Radagast's hand upon his forearm brought him out of his vivid ruminations and he drew his features into a horrific scowl of utter repugnance. "I am done with you, Elrond of Rivendell. I cannot say what I hoped would happen upon this meeting, but you have not mitigated my fury nor allayed my fears."
"Instead, remaining near you pushes us beyond the capacity for charitable consideration," Aewendil interjected. "Call us not 'mellyn' again until you show yourself worthy of that friendship."
"We will not back you in this confrontation," finished Gandalf. The Istari turned in unison and strode back inside the cavern.
The page resumed the watch at his post inside the portal and the guards shifted subtly, turning the Noldo Lord to face the rear of the stronghold. Sharing a glance between them to strengthen their courage, they marched forward, lungs resuming their function once their charge fell into step as well. They followed the curve of the garden wall but did not enter in, heading for the stable yard and the barracks beyond. As they progressed, the sound of Haldir's warriors galloping through the postern and into the woods briefly met their hearing and as quickly receded.
Eventually the light from the torches diminished until it was no more than a faint glow behind them. Their breath fogged the air around their chins, a shimmering ephemeral mist greedily absorbed, hoarded to manufacture winter's desiccated frost. The deserted grounds stretched ahead in distorted obscurity, the features of the landscape transmuted into shapes and forms that described a hint of peril in false repose.
Elrond at first attributed the uneasy tribulation building in his soul to the presence of the silvan people, hidden all around them in their treetop talans. That or the undeniable sentience of the ancient forest. Perhaps the two concepts are not distinguishable or separable.
Yet even lacking as he was in knowledge of Greenwood's culture, he could discern the barrier here between Thranduil's fortress and the crowding trees. To keep them out or to seal him in?
To his right, Orod Im'elaidh (the Mountain Amid the Trees) rose up, obliterating the skies and surmounting the tallest trees. Scattered round its skirts were low buildings of wood and daub for housing the warriors, livestock, weapons, and supplies. Everything seemed in order but order was not of necessity benign. Too long had he lived to ignore his insight, and Elrond's instincts were alert to some undefined danger that was wholly new to his experience. The soldiers turned slightly and he found himself headed toward a long black flank of the mountain, facing a point where the solid rock melted into oblivion, a gaping hole cut into the stone.
"Hold, what is this place?" the Elven Lord demanded, struggling against hands that gripped his elbows and pressed at the small of his back, not shoving but not yielding either.
Whatever he had expected to endure during his inquisition, this was not part of the imagined scene, this small, dark, dirty storeroom smelling of foul seeps that usually stained the ground after battle or coated the walls and floor of a dungeon cell. Fear gripped him. Inexorably closer he was drawn, simultaneously compelled and repulsed by the entrance, a yawning rectangle of black obscurity. Something sinister had happened within; the frigid air reeked of it and Elrond balked at entering a room so steeped in evil.
"You must enter," said one guard quietly.
"Nay, take me to Thranduil at once!"
"It is the King who commands it. This is the place where you will wait."
"Am I to have no trial, then? What madness is this? I will not suffer confinement in so foetid a tomb!"
Elrond fought them, jerking against their unbending solidity, scrambling his fine boots in the gritty dust to gain purchase enough to free himself. They stopped moving and merely waited, holding him tight and secure, not attempting to subdue him or harm him or propel him forward, until their indifferent complacency finally attracted his notice. He stilled, breathing hard more from the engulfing dread the room exuded than his futile exertion. From one to the other, Elrond stared at the warriors, seeing now that they were neither wholly sylvan nor Sindarin, and understood why the folk of Mirkwood referred to themselves as simply Wood Elves. They looked back upon him, nothing of their thoughts revealed in the bland expressions.
"Ready now, Hiren?" said the one on the right, but his inquiry was genuine rather than fraught with gloating mockery.
His companion said naught, merely waiting for their prisoner to comply. Neither one enjoyed this allotted task yet it had fallen to them and so neither would they fail to see it through. Small it was but vital, that verily defined it, and while there was little glory in guiding a prisoner to his doom, a veneer of pride remained to them for being so entrusted.
Thus was the lot of warriors under Thranduil's command. Many orders given were unpalatable to accomplish, their aftermath ill-suited to the the confines of the conscience, but to be in Thranduil's favour was like basking in the sun. He was as generous in repaying loyalty as he was brutal in punishing treachery. He forgot neither a deed well done nor the slightest affront, be it thousands of years in the past. They had made their choice half an Age ago and more, affirming it during the recent strife; they would serve their King.
"Please, what is this place?" Elrond was pleading now, no longer trying to disguise his terror behind tones of feigned superiority.
"It is not a good place, Hiren," one warrior sighed as if the vile taint of sorrow and torment emanating from the storeroom pained him to exhibit, as it did. Admitting its existence shamed him, displaying it to outlanders was mortifying, but he could not deny the justice in revealing it to this particular Elf.
"Our Tawarwaith endured much suffering here and here our King demands you to be held," the other appended.
"If I refuse to go in?"
"You cannot refuse. I think the room has been kept this way just for you. Be thankful the chains are there to see only and not to hold you bound."
At this statement a strong premonition of despair overtook Elrond, nearly a vision it was, vivid with the fullness of the humiliation and degradation certain to be visited upon him. Upon him personally and not upon his House or his children or his realm, this was to be a punishment endured alone. For the first time since the day the formal charges arrived in Imladris, Elrond was isolated from everything he knew and everyone he loved.
Hecilo.
He stared at the bleak hole in the stone, swallowing in revulsion as a memory arose: his fingers running over a myriad of criss-crossed, layered, and over-lapping scars, marks in flesh that should never be marred. It was in this room, then, that those grotesque wounds had been laid down upon Legolas' body. Panic gripped Elrond and sweat, rank with the stench of his own dread, broke from the pores of his upper lip. Wars he had fought, wounds he had taken, but Elrond had never faced torture, but once.
Once, he had been hunted down and captured. Once, he had been shoved into a cold, empty cave, shut away, alone, parted from Elros for the first time since their genesis. He could neither hear him nor feel his thoughts and the isolation initiated a break with reason, believing his brother was dead. What transpired during the interval of separation Elrond's mind refused to present, even now. Events leaped from the heart-stopping shock of solitary existence to their reunion, kneeling on the floor of some drawing room or study, sobbing brokenly, clasping each other close, wordlessly supplying mutual comfort as a tall and princely Elf looked on. A tug on his arms jarred him back to the current situation. He stared at his captors' placid faces.
"What will happen here?" he shuddered involuntarily and braced his feet upon the ground, desperate and determined. "Why do you not answer?"
The black void loomed.
I will not go in.
The woodland warriors took a solid step forward. Elrond's feet skidded through the dirt.
"What will happen here?"
The air became heavy, rolling out of the room frigid and cloying like a fog off the sea, enveloping him, tasting him, poking its ghostly fingers into his psyche, the weight of its substance animate and aware.
"I will not go in there!"
The soldiers stoically resumed the journey, forced to drag the noble Elf the last few steps. They refused to meet his wide and wild eyes, ashamed for him since he could not muster the emotion for himself. He thrashed against their hold and kicked out at their legs, but they were well prepared and he could not escape. He shouted the names of loved ones to rally to his aid, a horrendous and deafening din to which they made no reply. He went limp under their hands, a dead weight pleading mercy, beseeching any form of punishment but this, promising wealth untold, renown, and fair lands in exchange for freedom.
It meant nothing to them. With a mighty heave they shoved him through the opening and slammed shut the heavy door, throwing the bolt with a grating rasp.
He pounded against the barrier for a time, alternately demanding to be set free, begging for light, imploring for his sons to come. No one heeded him. He ceased yelling, realising the guards had left long ago, and huddled on the floor against the wooden planks, for he was not alone. He recognised them, for they wanted him to remember who they were. In confusion he attempted to bargain, not understanding what they wanted of him. In the end, Elrond had no means to combat them, understanding little of unhoused spirits. A long, piercing, shriek rent the night, a sound made by a body struggling against the prying invasion of a foreign soul, rising in pitch and volume as the battle peaked, wavering, dying into echoes absorbed by the stone.
TBC
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