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MEDDLING
Dwimordene

The Bree-land hill rose gently over the patchwork fields of farms, with
their autumn wheat hanging ripe and ready for harvest. No rain in the past
week, which was good, and farmers could be seen whetting their scythes,
while children roamed the fields, throwing stones at hungry birds. The air
was clear, with just that hint of cool to it, herald of the season to come.
No sign of trouble. No sign of fear. Just a curious glance to greet an old,
grey wanderer, and then the concerns of hearth and home prevailed.
Ah, Bree! Gandalf thought,
appreciatively, and quickened his pace.
The sun was sinking by the time he reached the town, and Mr. Goatleaf, who
watched the gates, greeted him and absently waved him within without looking
up from the lantern he was repairing. "You have a good night, Mr.
Gandalf-don't mind me any, I hope, I've got to get this hinge working
right!" he grunted.
"A very good night to you, as well, Mr. Goatleaf, and a good watch," Gandalf
replied, tipping his hat slightly before continuing on his way, heading for
his haven of choice: The
Prancing Pony.
Butterbur's inn had light blazing out all the windows on the first floor,
and wizardly ears picked up the sounds of merriment well before he reached
the door. The porch was packed with Bree-land grandfathers and their chairs,
and the door opened to a merry haze of pipeweed and laughter.
"Why it's Mr. Gandalf come back to see us!" exclaimed a voice from somewhere
about waist-height, or a little lower, and the wizard smiled as Tobbard
Bybrooks came trotting over, bearing a huge basket of bread that had to be
nearly half as large as he was.
"Hello Toby," Gandalf replied. "How are your lads this year?"
"They're well, quite well. Timo's done me and his mum proud, he has-got
himself apprenticed to the fuller this last year. And my Tib's still working
here, likely will follow me," Tobbard said, beaming. "Well, sir, I'll just
go fetch Mr. Butterbur. You wait right there."
With that, the hobbit trotted off, hefting his basket, and disappeared in
the direction of the kitchens. Given the season, and Butterbur's fondness
for ale, it was not unlikely the innkeeper was keeping an eye on the kegs
between runs to the common rooms or parlors. Gandalf removed his hat and
leaned upon his staff, letting his gaze wander over the room. There were
Bree-landers aplenty in the common room tonight-Men and hobbits from Combe
and Archet, and of course from Bree itself-a number of Dwarves on their way
to the Blue Mountains, no doubt, or else returning from them. He spied a few
merchants that he recognized from the village about the Forsaken Inn, and
even a party of Brandybucks.
And as he squinted a bit into the darker corners, he caught sight of a few
men clad in green and brown and black and grey, smoking their pipes and
eyeing the company out of watchful habit. Rangers, of course, and Gandalf
made a note to see whether he could not get a word with them and catch up on
the news, though he did not immediately recognize any of them.
Is Pelhar still captain of the Sarn
Ford guard, I wonder? Gandalf
thought, musing on the possibility that the Ranger had gone to another post.
Of course, they might also be with the North Greenway guard.
But all such musings were interrupted by a loud hail, and then Balibar
Butterbur was shaking his hand. "Long time away again, eh, Gandalf? What's
it been, two years? More? Seen enough of the world yet?" the innkeep asked.
"It has been two years and a season more, and there's yet more of the world
to see," the wizard answered.
"You ask me, it's a shame it's as big as all that, and mostly filled with
wastes and strangeness," Butterbur declared, shaking his head. "But I
suppose a wizard knows his own business, which ain't that of regular folk.
You'll be wanting a bath, I'm sure-the mistress is seeing to it. And I'll
show you your room-upstairs, I hope you don't mind. It's just that with
harvest coming on, we're busy, and then there's the Heathertoes wedding set
to go in a couple of weeks."
"No trouble at all, Bali," Gandalf assured him, as he followed the man up
the stairs. "'Tis good to be
back."
Butterbur showed him to a small room at the end of east wing. It had a
little round window in it, and Gandalf, depositing his pack in the corner,
opened it and looked out. The room itself was partly under the hill, and he
had only to reach down a short ways to touch the grass.
"Here's the key. Now, if any of the lads give you trouble, coming up to rap
on the windows or make faces or what not, you just let me know, or throw a
stone, and we'll take care of it. Just, um, no magicking them, if you
would-wouldn't be very good for business," the innkeep said, just a little
nervously. For all he and Gandalf had known each other for many years now,
there were times when Butterbur was uncomfortably reminded that his old
friend was a wizard.
"My dear Bali, have I once turned any of your lads into frogs?" Gandalf
replied, serenely, and smiled at the other's discomfiture. "Now, about that
bath.?"
* * *
Perhaps
an hour later, having taken a late afternoon's tea in his room, and
eventually followed Tobbard down to the wash room where a tub and hot water
and soap and towels had been laid out for him, Gandalf, feeling much
improved for having rid himself of the Road's leavings, returned up the
stairs to fetch his pipe. He fished the key out of his scrip, unlocked the
door, then stepped into the room and frowned.
There was a Ranger in it.
Having been a wanderer all his long years in Middle-earth, Gandalf had
certainly been the unexpected guest of many, and had had all manner of
unexpected guests in his camps, and he fortunately knew the ways of Rangers,
and so did not immediately reach for the knife he kept tucked in the back of
his belt. Nor did he immediately level his staff at the fellow, and it
seemed the Ranger was not inclined to reach for his weapons either.
And so, after a moment's silent staring at each other, Gandalf cocked his
head, and asked, "Window, or did you pick the lock?"
"The locks here are easy," the Ranger replied, and the wizard raised a brow.
Though certainly man-grown, the voice sounded still young to his ears, and
familiar, too.
"Have we met?" Gandalf asked. At that, the Ranger pushed his hood back,
though he said nothing, waiting on recognition. And it did not take long.
"Halbarad?"
"Aye," Halbarad replied.
"I had no idea you had been sent out this way."
"The captains thought it the wisest course-a tamer posting, less likelihood
of hot-headed ventures," the young man replied, a bit sourly.
"I'd not have thought you hot-headed from our travels together, you and
Aragorn and I."
"Well, that's the point of it, you see," Halbarad replied, folding his arms
across his chest as he paced a little nearer. "When we parted ways, and I
ended with Celenor's band, and Aragorn continued on with you to bring word
to the Angle, no one knew Aragorn would be leaving for Rohan by spring. It
was something of a shock, you might say. Some of us were a bit upset by it."
Which was hardly news to Gandalf, who had weathered the outburst in the
Angle that Aragorn's announcement had inspired, and no few dark looks for
supporting the Heir of Isildur in his aims. Judging from the way Halbarad
was looking at him, he had yet to redeem himself in the eyes of at least
some of the Dúnedain, and he supposed he ought not to be surprised in this
particular case.
The older men, who had known him longer, had eventually, grudgingly accepted
that a wizard had his reasons for supporting-mayhap even suggesting, though
no one had quite dared to voice that question-such a journey to the last
remaining scion of the House of Isildur.
Halbarad, however, knew far less of Gandalf than did others. What he knew
was his duty by his cousin, whom he quite clearly adored.
And now Aragorn is
in Rohan, and Halbarad is in the Bree-land. Like parting a bear from her
cub! He sighed.
"Out of curiosity, do the others know you are here?"
"I said I was going for the latrine."
"And how long do you think they shall wait before they come looking for
you?"
"It has already been a quarter hour."
Gandalf raised a bushy brow. "Not one to fear your captain's wrath, are
you?"
Halbarad grunted. "My captain says meddling with a wizard's affairs is not
wise. But the way I see it," he said, eyeing Gandalf sharply, "you meddled
first. I trusted you when we parted to see Aragorn safely home-that was my
charge, 'til we found Celenor and his lads. I still would have left them had
it been just the two of us on the Road, but you said you would see that help
was sent, and walk home with Aragorn."
"And we did that."
"And then you sent him off on this venture into Rohan!"
"Aragorn took that task for himself," Gandalf replied. "I did not 'send' him
anywhere."
"He never spoke of wanting to leave Eriador before we met you."
"Might he not have desired to, but kept it secret?"
"Not from me!" came the quick, certain response. "He would not have kept
such from me."
Which might well be true, from all that Gandalf had seen of the pair in the
little more than four months he had spent on the road with them, coming back
from Lake-town. The wizard gazed upon the worried, angry young face before
him, with its scraggle of beard, and all the angles sharpened by a hungrier
season abroad than would have been had at home, and he sighed once more.
"What is it that you want, Halbarad?" he asked quietly. "The deed is
done-you cannot go charging into Rohan to drag him out, though play your
cards right with your captains, and you may end up his contact from time to
time. I will suggest it to them, if you wish."
"I'll earn my own way with the captains, thank you," Halbarad said, stiffly,
and shook his head. "I do not wish for your help in that."
"What, then?"
"Why did you do it? Was it some - vision? Some wizardly knowing?" the
lad demanded, and there was a note of desperate hope twisting in that
undertone.
Gandalf gazed at him for a long moment, before he answered: "If you like, it
was a 'wizardly knowing.' There are things, Halbarad, that Aragorn cannot
learn from Eriador, or from message runs and trade-runs to the Lonely
Mountain, and yet learn them he must. A moment!" he cautioned, when he saw
the relief in the other's face. "You have asked for an answer, and like it
or not, lad, you have meddled in a wizard's affairs-and that means you
should be prepared to know something of that in which you have entangled
yourself."
He paused, waiting until Halbarad nodded, and then continued: "A wizard's
sight tells him only what must be done, if he is wise enough to discern it.
That is all that it tells him. You do not know, young man, how many have
died under the yoke of necessity, whether foreseen by a wizard or not. But
you were not long ago in Dale, beneath Erebor-the Dwarves and the Bardings
prosper now because Thorin and many others did what was necessary, at my
prompting. You know how their tales ended. For that matter, you know the
tales of your own people, the long line of Lúthien's children. You know what
necessity demanded of them, and how their tales ended. Wizardly knowing does
not guarantee anything to the one who listens-not one single life."
And all the while that he spoke, Gandalf watched Halbarad's expression grow
taut, and the worry twist in him.
Poor lad!
he thought, feeling pity and compassion stir. And no sooner had he ceased to
speak than the other murmured, "But we
need
him. We need-"
"I know. And for what it is worth, I have hope. I do not believe he shall
come to harm. He has been well-trained, and he is a canny fellow-looks down
the road a ways even now, as many of so tender years do not. And Halbarad,"
the wizard said, and risked to lay a hand upon the other's shoulder, "though
he may not be in your care, he will be in the care of many others, more than
all the Rangers together. Trust them! Let them see him through this thing
that has come to him, and you will find, unless I am much mistaken, that
what you need is not the Ranger, nor even the Chieftain, but the man he will
become."
Halbarad bit his lip, and he lowered his eyes, staring down at the floor for
a little while, ere, abruptly, he nodded. "Thank you, sir," he murmured, and
then coughed to clear his throat.
"If you are answered, then let us return." In response, Halbarad nodded once
more, giving himself a bit of a shake ere he raised his head, and the dour
Ranger's mask was back in place.
"Aye, sir."
"Good," the wizard said. But he stayed the lad when Halbarad would have made
for the door, and at the questioning looks, said: "I have answered your
question, but I wonder: what were you planning to do had I not done so?"
At that, the faintest hint of pink touched the other's cheeks, and Halbarad
looked once more away, down at his hands this time, which he rubbed in an
almost-idle fashion against each other. Then: "I do not know, in truth. I
thought you would answer, or you would send me away-maybe with some spell on
me. Either way, there was nothing more for me to do but come and ask."
Gandalf laughed at that, and he gave the young man a clap on the back.
"Well," he said, "there's hope for you yet. Come along then. Let's be going.
You can introduce me to your captain-tell me something of your ventures as
we go, and I shall have my questions ready. No one need know more than that
we met each other on the way back from the latrines."
"Thank you, sir."
"'Gandalf' was good enough, once," the wizard said mildly. And with that,
they were off, Halbarad speaking low and swift of his company's doings as
they went, and Gandalf, absorbing it all, looked appraisingly upon the young
Ranger and smiled to himself.
Oh yes,
he thought,
there is hope for you. For as much as we shall need Aragorn to be the scion
of kings, greatness is not in the end a lonely endeavor. You should do for
him, my friend; aye, you shall do indeed.
Ends
© 2007
Dwimordene |