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'For Today'

For Today
“…and then you go down past the place where they make the pots and
through the trees, he said. It’s right there….”
Glorfindel, drowsing lazily on a bench in the sun on a wonderfully
warm summer’s morning, heard the words somewhere on the edge of
consciousness. He had missed most of the conversation, but something
in the elfling’s tone forced him back to full wakefulness. Being
careful not to move and draw attention to himself, he waited for the
response.
“Ada said we weren’t to.”
Aha.
“No.” The voice of reason. “Ada just said we must not go down to the
river where it runs fast over the rocks next to the House. This is a
pool. That’s different.”
Glorfindel sighed softly and sat up, “Elladan. Elrohir.”
Breathless silence, followed by quick, scuffling sounds. The warrior
got to his feet and looked around. Nothing. No sign of anything
resembling an elven prince. However, he had been given a fair idea
where to look. His swift strides took him along the path and up the
few steps that led to one of the many entrances to the House, but
his speed was such that it took him round the corner and straight
into an approaching elf.
Erestor, knocked quite off balance by the far larger elf, fetched up
against the wall with a thud causing Glorfindel to turn back to him,
an expression of dawning horror on his face. “Erestor? Are you all
right? Forgive me, that was so….”
“…clumsy, unthinking? Running indoors is the kind of thing I expect
from an elfling. Where are they?”
“What, the twins? Well that’s where I was…”
“No, not the twins,” Elrond’s senior councillor snapped, pushing
back the hair that was hanging forward loosely on the left side of
his face and resembled nothing so much as a curtain of black silk.
He bent to retrieve the hair clasp dislodged when he had reached out
a hand to save himself from falling, then favoured the blonde
warrior with a frown. “I was enquiring after the army of orcs about
which you were undoubtedly rushing in to warn us.”
Glorfindel sighed. Erestor disliked summer, had no pleasure in those
long, hot lazy days. He was a child of the winter months, a fact
borne witness to by his delicate skin, which responded badly to
overmuch exposure to the sun. The heat of the last week had made him
– prickly. “I was trying to head the twins off. They were on their
way to some pool – from what I overheard it must be down below the
Middle Falls. I was too slow to catch them this side, so I was
trying to get there ahead of them. If this is the place I think,
then it’s far deeper than Elladan realises.”
“Elrond expressly forbade them from going near the river without the
company of an adult who could swim.”
“Ah, well, I imagine that would exclude you then?” Glorfindel
ventured, daring to tease the irritated elf.
Erestor, who was fastening back his hair while keeping pace with him
through the maze of passageways, shot him a deadly glance from the
corner of an eye. “I swim very well when I have to, Glorfindel. I
just prefer to keep out of the sun on days like this.”
Glorfindel nodded. “Perhaps a moonlight dip some night?” he
suggested.
The black-haired elf snorted softly, but declined to dignify the
invitation with an answer.
Their route took them out through the kitchens, from where they
followed a winding path that led away from the sprawl that was the
Last Homely House, the former fortress that had been steadily
expanding along the cliff face for nearly two thousand years. They
headed down the valley to where houses and tiny settlements blended
amongst rock and tree, and fruit and vegetables grew in small
allotments, cared for with the skill and love that came naturally to
elves in their dealings with all living things.
After all but tripping over a family of chickens who seemed to
believe they had the right of way over elves, the pair crossed rocks
and loose stones to reach a lower path that took them down to a
small huddle of cottages grouped around a communal kiln, This was
where the more utilitarian of the valley’s pottery – mainly everyday
plate and water jars – was manufactured.
“There they are,” Glorfindel exclaimed, pointing.
The twins must have seen them at more or less the same time and,
apparently acting on instinct, turned and ran into the bushes. Had
Glorfindel been alone they might have stopped and tried to offer an
explanation for their presence, but Erestor was not only their
father’s advisor but also oversaw their tutors and produced all
manner of unwelcome activities to fill their leisure. He knew the
boundaries within which they were permitted to roam and would have
been far more difficult to convince.
“…so undignified,” Erestor muttered as he hitched up his ankle
length robes and ran after Glorfindel who had taken off like a hare
at the first sight of the elflings.
“I think I know a quicker way down to the river,” the golden warrior
said over his shoulder.
“Our last shortcut through woods nearly ended in disaster,” Erestor
reminded him darkly. They had wandered around for hours, reaching
home shortly after midnight. Embarrassingly, no one had believed
they had been lost.
Glorfindel, who had hoped the former debacle was finally dead and
buried, groaned to himself. “It was almost dark last time, and I
mistook the path. This is totally different.”
With a sigh, Erestor stopped for a moment to kick off his soft house
shoes. Barefoot, he sped after the golden warrior, dodging round
bushes and trees with unerring skill. A born sprinter, he soon
passed Glorfindel, following the combined sounds of the twins moving
through the undergrowth ahead of him and the rushing of the river.
Concern spurred him on. Besides the depth of the nearby pool, he
knew that the river itself was far from safe at this point as it
rushed down from the Falls.
He finally spotted his lord’s sons through a gap between the trees.
They had been running as fast as their far shorter legs could carry
them, but now, under the shadow of bushes leaning out over the water
they halted and drew breath. Or at least that had been the idea, but
one of them, impossible to tell which from behind, had been unable
to stop in time and had gone too close to the edge of the bank
which, in this spot, cut down sharply into the river. For a moment
there was a wild flailing of arms, followed by a shriek as the small
figure overbalanced and fell forward into the rushing water.
Without pausing, Erestor ran past the second elfling who was
standing helpless with the beginnings of terrified tears welling in
his eyes and leapt straight into the water. The current was indeed
strong and the river ran swiftly, but it lacked the potentially
fatal vigour of winter. It proved a simple matter for Erestor to
find and catch hold of the struggling elfling - who he identified
without surprise as Elrohir, who more often than not was the
unintended victim of many of his twin’s misadventures.
When Glorfindel arrived, it was to be presented with the sight of
one twin standing on the river bank howling in fright while the
other, making only marginally less noise, was being hauled up onto
dry land by Erestor who, as soon as he could draw breath, yelled,
“Manwë’s balls, what is in your heads?! Do either of you ever
think?”
The oath, legacy of a past spent in the employ of the late High
King, had an immediate impact on both elflings. By the time a now
grimly silent Erestor had Elrohir standing upright, had checked him
briskly for injuries, and had none too gently wrung some of the
water out of his hair, the brothers had fallen quiet save for
intermittent sniffs and restrained sobs. They watched the councillor
anxiously. Erestor seldom raised his voice; when he did it was
normally time to take cover, a lesson understood by young and old
alike.
Glorfindel caught Elladan’s eye. “And you ran off when I called,
because…?” the warrior enquired in a polite voice.
Elladan tore his attention away from Erestor and his twin to focus
on a potentially greater threat. Erestor might be furious, he might
set any manner of punishment, but he could be relied upon to keep a
misdemeanour, properly punished, to himself. Glorfindel would have a
warrior’s regard for chain of command, which was something that had
been carefully explained to them by Thenin, who was tutoring the
young of Imladris on the theoretical side of the arts of war. The
hero of Gondolin would be far too likely to inform their father.
Elladan looked down at his feet and shuffled the dry leaves beneath
them.
“We just wanted to sit by the water, Hîren…” he attempted.
Glorfindel’s dark gold brows drew down, and his face looked suddenly
forbidding. “No, I think what happened here was that you wanted to
go swimming, you knew you were not allowed to do so unsupervised,
and you wanted to avoid me asking awkward questions.”
Erestor clicked his tongue impatiently. “They wanted to do something
forbidden, you tried to call them on it, they did what you would
have at their age – they ran. However,” he continued, stepping back
from Elrohir and trying to squeeze excess moisture from his own
long, black hair. “I can outrun all three of you – as I have just
proved.” He sounded thoroughly satisfied with himself. Giving up on
his hair, he beckoned Elladan over. Standing the brothers side by
side he stepped back and surveyed them. Turning to Glorfindel, he
raised an eyebrow.
“What do you suggest we do about this?”
Glorfindel paused, distracted by the sight of the dripping wet
advisor, whose robe was clinging to his body in a most suggestive
manner. Suddenly aware that all three of them were waiting for him
to speak, he forced his attention back to the twins.
“I think their father should deal with this,” he declared.
Erestor appeared to consider this. “No,” he said finally, shaking
his head. “I think not. It would only worry him and I think we
should avoid that. After all, it is not as though this will ever
happen again. Will it?” he added sharply to the two younglings.
Identical dark heads shook vehemently. “Please don’t tell Ada,”
Elrohir begged in a small voice. “He would be sad we forgot what he
said.”
Erestor nodded. “Yes, he would indeed be sad you chose to ignore a
warning given for your own protection,” he agreed dryly.
He stood staring out at the river, arms folded, face inscrutable,
and the twins waited. Elladan started to fidget after a while, but
stopped when Elrohir nudged him. Finally, apparently reaching a
decision, Erestor turned back to them. “Very well,” he said
judiciously, maintaining his dignity despite dripping wet hair and
clothing. “I will say nothing to him – this time. Should I ever see
you near the river unattended, however, he will hear of that and
this and much, much more besides. I am far too lenient with you
two.”
“Thank you, Erestor,” two voices said as one, and the twins turned,
preparing to leave.
“One moment,” their father’s advisor said sharply, using a tone that
caused them to stop in mid-step as though turned to stone. “Lord
Glorfindel called to you and you saw fit to disregard him. An
apology is due for that inexcusable rudeness. He must be wondering
what the Valar were thinking to send him back to live amongst such
barbarians.”
“Sorry Hîren,” said the two-voices-as-one, identical faces looking
up at the golden warrior with solemn, worried eyes. Erestor was a
known quantity who had always formed an integral part of their lives
but, glorious, heroic and good natured though he appeared, they had
far less experience of the reborn elf.
Glorfindel, understanding their uncertainty, crouched down so that
they were on eye level. “I accept your apology,” he said in a
completely serious voice. If Erestor could keep a straight face, so
could he. “And if the Chief Councillor feels it is in order not to
mention this to your father, then so be it. But he is also right
when he says this must never happen again. If we had not followed
you, who knows what might have happened.” He directed this last to
Elrohir, who had the grace to drop his eyes and nod.
As Glorfindel rose and the twins again prepared to make good their
escape, Erestor added almost casually, “And you have three days to
prepare an essay for me discussing the political developments that
led up to the Battle of Unnumbered Tears. You may work on it
together, as it is a somewhat advanced project. Two thousand words,
please.”
The look of horror on their faces remained unspoken. When Erestor
used that tone, they had learned the futility of argument. Even
pleading would serve no purpose. As they hurried off between the
trees their clear young voices drifted back, debating names of elves
in the household who might be old enough to be of some help in
researching the ancient battle.
Glorfindel turned to Erestor, grinning. “A hard lesson, but one they
probably won’t forget – for at least a week. They’re a little young
to have learned much about the Tears though, aren’t they?”
Erestor laughed softly. “It was part of Thenin’s lesson plan for
next week,” he explained. “I have just pre empted him a little. I
wonder if it will occur to them to ask you about it?”
Glorfindel chuckled, watching the black-haired elf busily attempting
to knot his very wet hair back out of his face. “If you give me your
robe, I can wring it out for you,” he suggested. “Then, if you put
it on the grass in the sun for about half an hour, you’ll be able to
wear it back to the House.”
“I think not,” Erestor said rather briefly. “Perhaps you can lend me
your tunic? It will be decently long on me…”
“But not necessary,” Glorfindel protested. “Just take the robe off,
like I said. Your underclothes should dry on you quickly enough in
this heat. It shouldn’t take long, It’s lovely here beside the
river. We can sit and talk and…”
“…no underclothes…” Erestor muttered, making much of watching a fish
eagle winging up over the trees.
Glorfindel had another look, more openly this time, and started
laughing, his face alight with delight. “Do you mean to tell me that
under that oh so correct robe you are actually – butt naked?”
Erestor turned on him and tried to glare with dignity. He almost
succeeded. “Well, you try wearing something even halfway formal in
this weather. Add undershirt and leggings and it becomes completely
unbearable.”
“You sat through a council meeting bare as a newborn under your
robe…”
Refusing to admit to embarrassment, Erestor scowled at Glorfindel
who by now was almost doubled up with mirth. “Don’t just stand there
laughing, you irritating creature. Give me your tunic. I refuse to
perch naked on the edge of the Bruinen like a woodelf for the next
half hour, and I cannot go back looking like this.”
Stripping off the pale green, sleeveless tunic, Glorfindel held it
out, still grinning broadly. “I have an idea this might create
almost as much talk as wearing a wet robe that shows every line of
your body…though I’m willing to bet you’ll carry it off so well no
one will think to question it,” he added hastily as Erestor stood
holding the tunic and staring at him, wet black hair gleaming in the
dappled sunlight, eyes slitted determinedly. He might have been –
less than tall, as he preferred to phrase it – but he was nothing if
not intimidating.
“I’m willing to swear to it having been a popular summer fashion
back in Gondolin,” the warrior suggested placatingly.
Erestor sighed. “Glorfindel, turn your back and let me get changed,
please. You’ve seen all you are going to see for today.”
The golden warrior obligingly turned around and stood contemplating
the trees and thought about two words that may or may not have been
merely a slip of the tongue.
‘…for today’
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Finis
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