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'Do You Know the Way to Pearly Bay?'
Do You Know the Way
To Pearly Bay?
“Just ask
them!” Aredhel wiggled in frustration. She would have tapped her
foot in impatience had she not been on horseback. “Just ride up to
them, say good afternoon, and ask them if this is the road to Pearly
Bay.”
Celegorm watched
the small line of woodcutters vanishing off between the trees but
made no move to follow them. “We’ll find it on our own,” he said for
the third time. “It has to be somewhere along here. It’s on the
coast just past Avallónë, and there’s a mountain behind it, or so he
said in his letter.”
“Everything is on
the coast or close to,” Aredhel exploded. “This is an island,
Celegorm. Surrounded by water? And there are mountains everywhere.
Admit it, please. We’re lost!”
Celegorm shook
his head stubbornly. “No we’re not. We just haven’t ridden far
enough yet.”
“It’ll be night
soon. What do you intend to do then, camp on the side of the road?”
Celegorm glared
at her. “You never had a problem camping in the forest back in the
old days,” he growled. “I remember how you used to like hunting down
a nice, plump bunny for dinner, watching the stars…”
”…getting it in
the neck from my father, my brothers, anyone who happened to hear
I’d spent the night away from home with you,” she finished off, her
tone sharp. “Yes, well, that was a long time ago. I’ve grown up
since then, got quite used to sleeping in a bed.”
Celegorm rolled
his eyes. He had finally been released from Mandos only a couple of
weeks previous and had so far only been reunited with a couple of
members of his family. He had been thrilled to find Aredhel all but
waiting at the gate for him, but was starting to wish she would stop
reminding him how much time had passed and how mature she now
thought she was.
“Why didn’t you
ask them the way?” One thing hadn’t changed, once she had an idea in
her head she was as tenacious with it as fleas in a blanket. It was
a wonder she hadn’t driven Turgon crazy back there over the sea.
Mind, what he’d heard of the setup in Gondolin didn’t speak well for
that cousin’s probable sanity.
“Don’t need to,”
he replied. “We have the stars and our own sense of direction, and
Tol Eressëa isn’t all that big really. Would only take a few days to
ride around it if we had to. Which we won’t. I don’t ask directions.
That’s for people with no personal resources.”
Aredhel stared at
him, disbelief written across her fair face and blazing from her
clear, grey eyes. “I don’t believe it. You were embarrassed
to ask? We’re going to end up camping out without a tent or
groundcloth or – anything – because you were too damn embarrassed to
ask for directions?”
“Men don’t ask
for directions. That’s for helpless women who can’t read the stars.”
Her mouth forsook
its habitual sensual pout and dropped open as she stared at him.
After a minute she recalled herself and closed it smartly. “I’ll
have you know that when I left Gondolin with those idiots Glorfindel
and Ecthelion – and Egalmoth, least said about him the better
– I was the only person who had a clue where we were going. I left
them in the end and made my own way. My only worry was whether they
would find their way home without me.”
And look where
that all ended up, Celegorm thought. He had been carefully briefed
about his family’s exploits before Lord Námo let him leave, and
Aredhel’s story was amongst the least surprising. Trust her, she
always liked the bad boys.
Fingolfin’s
daughter found a rather squashed bunch of purple grapes in her
saddlebag and proceeded to eat them one at a time, peeling the skin
off efficiently with her teeth before sucking them into her mouth
and chewing slowly and with savour. At any other time the effect
would have been devastatingly erotic. She very pointedly did not
offer any to Celegorm.
They rode on,
Aredhel craning her neck to look around, but the elves they had seen
earlier had apparently vanished. “I would have asked them myself if
you were too chicken,” she said darkly. “I’m not scared to admit I
don’t know where I am. Not in a strange place. And anyone we talk to
must surely know where to find Glorfindel. Big, blonde, not terribly
bright…”
“They wouldn’t
have known him,” her cousin cut in.
Aredhel blinked.
“Why ever not? How many people living around here could fit that
description?”
Celegorm’s jaw
muscles twitched. “Well yes, but they were Sindar. Not likely to
know a Noldorin lord.”
“Don’t be silly,”
Aredhel retorted. “A good third of the people in Gondolin were
Sindar. And from what I’ve heard, they made up the majority east of
the sea after the First Age. They’d be the best people to ask. The
only Sindar who had nothing to do with us were those in Doriath, so
unless they were….” She fell silent, then shot a sidelong glance at
her tall, impossibly good looking cousin. “Ah.”
“What do you
mean, ‘ah’?” Celegorm saw where this was going and urged his horse
forward, but Aredhel kept pace with him effortlessly.
“Just ‘ah’. You
weren’t just embarrassed about asking for directions. You didn’t
want to talk to them in case they came from Doriath.”
“Never crossed my
mind.”
“No, of course
not dear.” Aredhel smiled smugly. “Not a cause for concern at all.
No chance they might recognise you and find another use to put their
axes to.”
“Now you’re being
ridiculous,” he snapped. “This is the edge of the Undying Lands. No
one gets killed here…”
They stared at
one another.
“Oh all right.
There was Grandfather.”
“Yes indeed there
was.”
“And… Yes.”
They exchanged
eloquent looks. The least said about Alqualondé the better.
“I’m sure if
they’d been in Doriath when you --- came calling, their time in the
Halls would have given them some perspective on things,” Aredhel
said in an attempt to be reassuring. “And as for the survivors? It
was a very long time ago. And it wasn’t your fault anyway. Blame
Maedhros.”
“Hmph.”
“Really. Just –
don’t worry about it. Unless you run into Dior and Nimloth, of
course. Then you might want to say sorry.”
Celegorm shot her
a sharp look, then compressed his lips and made a business of
studying the sun’s angle to estimate the hour. “Well, whatever,”
Aredhel finished, realizing it was time to drop the subject.
“Anyhow, I think right now we…”
“They’re not
living here, are they?” he asked abruptly, clearing his throat
roughly. “Glorfindel would have mentioned, wouldn’t he? He’d know,
right? About me maybe not wanting to run into them.”
Aredhel reached
over and patted his arm, acknowledging how hard it must have been
for him to admit his concern. There had always been an exceptional
degree of trust between them. “Oh, I’m sure he knows the whole story
by now,” she said. “He had two ages to catch up on the gossip about
what we’d all done and where and why. In his letter, he sounded
quite up to date and really looking forward to meeting up with
everyone again.”
Glorfindel had
arrived from Middle-earth around the same time Celegorm had been
released from Lord Námo’s care and, like many who had spent a long
time in the east, had made his home on the Lonely Isle. He had
written to several old friends and family members inviting them to
visit while he and those who had sailed with him settled into their
new lives. He had made no mention of grudge-bearing Sindar, but then
he had not been expecting Celegorm.
Aredhel, bored
witless with the social round in Tirion, had accepted almost as soon
as she finished reading the friendly missive and had then set about
persuading Celegorm to keep her company on the journey. It had all
started well. They had ridden to the coast, taken the ferry across
to Avallónë, collected their horses, and set out to find the cottage
by the sea that the half-Vanyar former lord of the House of the
Golden Flower had been at such pains to describe. Just north of the
town, he had said, overlooking the sea. On the road to Pearly Bay
Can’t miss it.
While they were
talking, the horses carried them through the trees and out into the
open again. The sea sparkled up at them from the bottom of the steep
drop to their left, the wave-caps dancing white in the late
afternoon sunlight. Just ahead of them, a tall elf came into view,
trudging along on the mountain side of the road. A fishing rod was
slung over his shoulder, and he carried three silvery fish threaded
on a stick.
“Right, I’ll ask
then,” Aredhel said determinedly. “There isn’t a house for miles
here.”
“Manwë’s Balls,
do you never give up…?”
“Hush! You can’t
say that here.”
“Oh yes I can.”
“That attitude is
what got you into trouble in the first place. And he’s not Sindar
either. Look at his hair. Definitely Noldor.”
Aredhel sat a
little straighter and tilted her chin up fetchingly. “Excuse me,”
she hailed, urging her horse forward. The elf looked her up and
down, apparently unimpressed. She reined in and tried her brightest
smile, the one that Cousin Artanis – she couldn’t get used to that
stupid new name – said looked like a cat that had swallowed the
house finch. “Would you happen to know where we could find
Glorfindel of Gondolin? He’s --- about your height? With long blonde
hair and blue eyes. Recently arrived from Endor?”
The elf startled
her by spitting off to the side of the road. “New arrivals,” he
muttered. “Place is crawling with them all of a sudden.”
Celegorm had
caught up with them and waited, affecting a bored expression. “I’m
sure he hasn’t a clue where Glorfindel lives,” he told Aredhel.
“Stop wasting his time. If we just keep going along this road, we’ll
find him eventually.”
“That you won’t,”
the elf informed him. “Not along here.”
“Oh for --- come
on, Ari, we’re wasting our time here. You were worried about it
getting dark.”
“Wait,” Aredhel
said imperiously. Keeping pace beside the elf, she asked sweetly,
“Not along here? Why would that be?”
“Back that way,
way you’ve come,” he replied, jerking a thumb over his shoulder. “Go
into town, take the lower road that passes the harbour, keep riding,
it’s just after the ostriches. Can’t miss it. Got a hulking great
flag out front, big gold flower on a purple background.”
“But he said
north,” Celegorm said, genuinely puzzled. “And this is…”
“This road heads
east,” the elf told him with a look of unveiled disgust. “Back
there in town, you turn north from the harbour, follow the
road up.”
Aredhel was
careful not to look in her cousin’s direction while she thanked the
fisherman and bade him a hearty meal. They turned back the way they
had come, riding in silence. Finally Celegorm broke it. “Could have
sworn this was north. Must have turned the directions around when
they --- bent the sea. Or whatever they did with it. Can’t get my
head around that one. But this was always north before.”
Aredhel nodded
placatingly. “I’m sure it was, dear,” she agreed. “Just got all
turned around, yes. It would have been much easier if we’d arrived
at night.”
Celegorm gave her
a suspicious look. Somewhere in a corner of his mind that he
disliked exploring he had always suspected Aredhel was smarter than
him. In an even deeper corner dwelt a little voice that had on
occasion very softly suggested that perhaps she thought so too.
“Night? Why would arriving at night have helped?”
“Stars,” Aredhel
said airily. “After all, you say men never ask for directions, All
they really need are the stars to guide them. And now,” she went on,
tossing her dark hair back over her shoulders, “Let’s try and get
back to town before it grows dark enough to put that to the test.
Come on, I’ll race you to the first crossroads. Winner gets to ask
Findel about the balrog.”
~*~*~*~*~
Finis
~*~*~*~*~
Beta: Red Lasbelin
AN: For Zhie in the
Midwinter drabble swap. |