· Concerning DwarvesàŒ*·Ë
Part I of Silver Tears and Golden Arrows
Gold had always been the apple of a dwarfâs eye, such an appealing little speckle of color and ore that, much like a crow to shiny rubies, drew them near. That is what had caused the rise of Erebor, and much in its own succession, its fall. Much is not needed for it to be understood the dangers of dwarven greed, as it had been told many times before-instead, this tale will recount a deeper part of the dwarves and the time I had spent with them.Â
Many know the story of Thorin Oakenshield, the King beneath the Mountain. Yet I have found part of this story neglected within even my own writings, though there were many great battles within my own tales and recountings, this one speaks less of wounds to fleshâmore to the wounds of the heart, and how centuries of disregard cannot heal the slashes beneath the skin.Â
My dear Frodo, I wish to tell you of the dwarrodam within Thorin Oakenshieldâs partyâhis niece, and a faithful lover of Thranduil.
âI am unsure of this burglar, KĂli.â You moaned out as your boots remained heavy against the pebbles and dirt roads of the shire, furs weighing heavy upon your feet. The layers you wore seemed to add an extra thirty kilos to your form, if not more with the way KĂli had forced you to carry his own few layers when he grew tired of themâclaiming you were âsuch a kind sisterâ and that he would âsurely give you extra morsels while travelingâ. The dwarf was always chivalrous with dwarrodams until it came to his own twin sister.Â
âGandalf would not lead us astray, surely he would not.â FĂli tried to quell your worries as he walked beside you, swaying slightly as he grew distracted by a firefly that floated by his headâthe golden light radiating his matching yellow hair.Â
âJust as FĂli said, I trust this fellow.â KĂli hummed in agreement, sending a glance your wayâthough you did not notice it as you were rather distracted by the beauty of the Shire. It was grassy, the air holding a breeze that was not quite cold yet it was not hot either. There were flowersâreal and vibrant flowers that did not incite a horrid reaction if your fingertips brushed against them, the people were slightly judgemental though it was quite easy to ignore when your eyes caught the horizon and the deep magenta and indigo hues that coated the sky above. In short, the Shire was everything that your homeland was not. Your uncle had tried to provide little beauties to you and your brothers whenever he could, yet he seemed blisteringly aware of the luxuries your lives lacked after the abandonment of Erebor.
Which has led you to here, adorned in thick furs and leatherâtreading uphill toward a hobbit hole that Gandalf had told you little of, yet you trusted Thorinâs judgement just enough to follow the wise manâs words nonetheless.Â
One hand rested within the pocket of your trousers, thumb tracing along the talisman your mother had provided you before your departureâa promise carved into amethyst. KĂli had been provided an identical oneâa set, if you will. Two twins deserved two stones, two promises that each would return safe from their travels.Â
FĂliâs hand was first to ring the bell of the unfamiliar door, wood colored a gemstone green that complimented the natural tones of the environment around it. The wood creaked as, whom you could assume to be, Bilbo Baggins opened the doorâobviously dressed in leisurely attire that contrasted the dirtiness of your own. FĂli and KĂli were first to introduce themselvesâand you did not miss the distraught look that overcame the hobbitâs face at the sight of more dwarves entering his home. You were last to introduce yourself, standing just between the two before you all bowed in unison, speaking so in sync that it seemed to even mildly perturb Bilbo. âAt your service.â
âYou must be Mr. Boggins!â Your boot came into quick contact with the back of KĂliâs as you sent him a quick glare, receiving a look of cluelessness in response from him.Â
âItâs Baggins, KĂliâŠâ You hissed out as Bilbo began to reject your presence rather quickly, the door beginning to swing shut and almost successfully closing if it were not for KĂliâs gloved fingers grasping around its rim and preventing it.Â
âWhat? Has it been cancelled?âÂ
âNo one told us.â FĂli tilted his head toward you both as Bilbo began to answerâbrows fusing into one from how tightly they were drawn across his forehead.Â
âNo,â He tilted his headâgazing around his own home as if he were lost. âNothingâs been cancelled.â
âThatâs a relief!â KĂli exclaimed as he pushed past the threshold of the doorway, FĂli and you quickly followed after.
The innards of the hobbit home were warmâdaresay, even cozy, copper lighting coating the rooms and the faint smell of jam and tea floating through the air. You kept more to yourself compared to Balin, Dwalin and your brothers, placing your bearings in the corner as your feet carried you throughout the halls of Bilboâs homely abode.Â
The bell rang for the door once more and soon a loud thudding noise followed by the groans of many dwarves rang throughout the hobbit hole, an obvious sign of the arrival of more company. Oin, Gloin, Nori, Dori, Ori, Bofur, Bifur, and Bombur had piled through the doorâeach of them greeting you and the others were a certain chipper familiarity that warmed your heart more than the candlelight could. It has been far too long since youâd last spent time in the company of dwarves that were not your infuriating brothersâeven if you did love them to death.Â
Everyone busied themselves with forming a feast from the remnants of Bilboâs pantryâan assortment of cheese wheels, wine, vegetables, and sliced meats placed upon a long wooden table as the hobbit seemed to boil and toil within his robe.Â
âIt is greatly appreciated for what you are providing us, Mr. Baggins.â You quickly spoke as Ori rushed beside you with another barrel of cheeseâalmost knocking the tea that was held upon the tray within your hands. Bilbo, panicked at the thought of the broken tea set, rushed forwardâhands stabilizing your own as he groaned.Â
âI do not know where your lot came from, but I must make it known that I had not planned for your company.âÂ
Your brows furrowed in confusion at the revelationâconsidering that Gandalf had told you that this would be your burglar, a hobbit that was apparently unaware of his deemed role to begin with. Reluctantly, Bilbo allowed you to take the tea set toward the table where the other dwarves had begun to gatherâshoving food down their gullets. KĂli and FĂli both laughed loudly as Bombur caught a flying egg within his mouth, and Bifur poured mead down his drinking horn. It was an array of movement and soundâeach heartier and fuller than the last. It was messy and free. It was like home.Â
And Bilbo hated every moment of it.
KĂli had spoken something that had irked you, a silent jab toward you hidden within his wordsâand soon a piece of pork was sent flying across the tables and landing flat upon his face. FĂliâs laughter was richâmatching your own as you watched KĂli peel the slice from his face before eating it, your boots rapting against the ground in unison.Â
When the feast was over, your voices no longer covered the other, but instead rose into a lively melody as each played their part in cleaning the mess left within Bilbo Bagginsâ home. You busied yourself with wiping the table down, humming along just as happily as the other dwarves sang. âThatâs what Bilbo Baggins hates!âÂ
A thudding knock was heardânot the ringing of the bell, nor the call of a voice. Just an ominous thud, followed by anticipation of the arrival of the infamous dwarf.Â
When Thorin Oakenshield entered the home of Bilbo Baggins, it was not to celebrate a reunion or to enjoy mead and food. No, it was to discuss a plan thatâs pendulum had already been set in motionâto acquaint Bilbo with the dwarves he would spend a total of fourteen months beside. Nonetheless, the contents of those fourteen months will be discussed later.
Bilboâs rejection of the plan was quite imminent, for he had a homeâsomewhere that was comfortable, cushy, and provided stability that would not be found on the trek to Erebor. You could not fault the hobbit, for you yourself had yearned for such a thing. Though Bilbo had rejected the joining of Thorinâs company, he was kind enough to provide a place for you to stay just for a nightâto rest before dawn and mildew coated Middle-Earth.Â
Peeling off your furs and coat, you tossed them messily upon the wooden chair beside the small bundle of blankets Bilbo had provided you.
âIt is no surprise the hobbit would not wish to join us.â You began, earning a curious look from FĂliâleading you to quickly elaborate. âThink of it, truly, think of it. A home so cozy, a life so simple⊠I would not wish to leave either.â
You bundled a knitted blanket within the palm of your hands, bringing it to your face as you inhaled the scent of chamomile and firewood through your nostrils.Â
âI assume youâre right, even if it is hard to accept.â KĂli matched the whispered nature of your voice with his ownâgrasping another blanket as he himself had inhaled the scent as well.Â
âRest now, you will need it.â Thorin mumbled out from beside the fireplace, a pipe within his hand as each of the dwarves began to bundle themselvesâcocooning into the floor until they were each cozied within wool and knitted blankets. The night's rest was comfortableâfar more so than sleeping upon soiled forest grounds and stoney pathways, yet it did not remove the sense of dread that had begun to form within the pit of your stomach.
We must away, âere break of day, to find our long forgotten home.
And so you did, saddled upon ponies as you began your trek through the forestâa yawn from Bombur causing a chain of wide mouthed sleepiness to consume you all. The sun had begun to pierce the canopy of trees, illuminating the path ahead in a soft dewy mist.Â
âPlease, KĂli, stop talking. I do not think I can bear to hear you whine about your beard once moreââ You began, only to be rudely interrupted by KĂli in all his whining glory.
âBut you simply do not understand! What an embarrassment it would be if my own sister were to outgrow me with a beard!â KĂli exclaimed dramatically, and in turn, you gave him a playful shoveâsmirking at him as your boots tapped comfortably against the midnight black coat of your pony.Â
âThen I will be ever-more charming and appealing to dwarrodams than the likes of you!â The jab drew a laugh from Gandalf, a victory in itself to make the old man laugh so heartily.Â
Just as KĂli opened his mouth to retort, a shouting voice interrupted himâlight footfalls slowly growing louder in the crunching of grass beneath bare feet.Â
âWait!â
It had been your burglarâa bright smile upon his face and the contract held tightly within his raised fist.
Oh, FĂli was going to owe you a large sack of gold.
Trolls were pesky little creaturesâif little is what you could call them. Your company had been quite lucky that they were particularly weak against sunlight, and that your burglar had a smart mouthâeven if it was not fully appreciated at first due to the dubious nature of his comments.Â
You, KĂli, and FĂli had chosen to remain behind as a few of dwarves and Gandalf had explored the troll cave and the assets that may reside in its cobweb-covered depths. You stood beside KĂli, examining the stoney trolls in their terror-stricken faces, gaze cast upon the horizon.Â
âMust be such a sad lot.â KĂli scoffed out at your almost sympathetic wordsâdrawing an annoyed huff from your lips. âWhat?â
âYou sound like you feel remorse over them not eating us.â KĂli crossed his arms, planting one foot onto the ground as he leaned forwardâgloved hand swiping across the rough stone patches that had once been even rougher troll skin.
âI didnât say that, I simply meant it must be a miserable life to live. To never see the sun on the horizon, or feel it on your skin.â There was a pause in between your words. âThough, I think that is for the best. They almost squashed you into jelly, even if you would have been the tiniest morsel of jelly to ever touch their vile mouths.â
âIâll have you know I would have been delicious!--â There was a sudden grumbling noise that caught the two of you off-guard, jolting within your skin as your gazes met.
âFor Durinâs sake, KĂli, silence that stomach.â You hissed out in an annoyed grumble, assuming it was just KĂliâs insatiable appetite. Yet, the noise came againâlouder, closer than before.
KĂliâs voice lowered into a whisper of his own as he slowly retrieved his switchbladeâreadying himself for the threat at hand. âThat sound did not come from me.â
Bristles coated your skin as paranoia creeped into your mind swiftly, coating your nerves in a sudden need to defend yourself. Neither of you nor KĂli had your bows, and your axe had been left at the encampmentâmuch to your chagrin.Â
The sound grew and rose in intensity, drawing nearer and nearer until it practically breathed down your neck and suffocated the two. Then, it stoppedâsilence consumed the forest with the exception of chirping birds in the distance.Â
You had not realized that you were holding your breath until a shaky exhale left your lungs, body hunched low to the ground. Gazing up at KĂli, it seemed he had been as wellâhis gaze matching your own, wary of his surroundings even in the absence of sound.Â
Suddenly, a loud bellowing noise was heard from behind you, frightening you as your heart leapt within your lungs. FĂli jumped from the trollâs back, blaring a horn loudlyâsomething heâd seemingly obtained from the outskirts of the trollâs cave, the very thing that had been producing such horrid noises.
âMahal!â You cursed out as you fell upon your bumâthe dwarf landing right before you with this cocky grin that you wished to wipe from his features. KĂli was no better as he flinched away from the spot, holding out his switchblade quite defensively until he realized there was no threat but his brotherâs shenanigans within the forest.Â
âYou think yourself so clever.â You huffed out as FĂli doubled over in laughter, a large grin upon his lips. Though you were annoyed, there was still a hint of laughter and a smile beneath the irritated expression you bore.
âYes, I do.â He spoke triumphantly as he barely managed to dodge the petty swipe of your boots toward his own. Tossing the horn to the earth, FĂli approached you both in a suave manner, obviously taking pride in his work of distressing the both of you.
KĂli quickly stored away his switchblade as a small grin pulled at his own features. âYouâd given us a fright.âÂ
âHow could I possibly resist when you both were standing over here looking so clueless?â FĂli laughed out so eagerly, taking your arm as he did not ask before hauling you up from the groundâhis hand coming to pat your shoulder quickly in reassurance.Â
You smoothed your hands along the underside of your pants, brushing away dirt and leaves that clung to you generously like second skin. âYou are such a pain in my arse, I hope you know!â
FĂli only chuckled as he made his way toward Thorin, whom had now left the cave along with Gloin, Bofur, and Nori.Â
There was a pause of silence between you and KĂli as you watched the blonde dwarf walk away with radiating confidence, as if he hadnât just frightened his own siblings to the death for the sake of being a pest.
âShall we put twigs in his boots tonight?â KĂli leaned over to you, whispering his devious plan of revenge.
 There was no hesitation as you silently, and quite eagerly nodded in agreement.
âSomethingâs coming!â Thorin called out at the sound of sudden movement in the shrubbery and bush, and Galndalf quickly gave word to the company to arm themselves.Â
You and KĂli moved as a pairârushing forward as you retrieved your bows and quivers, each of them identical with the exception of your initials carved into place. Twins deserved twin-like weaponry, your mother had said.
âThieves! Fire! Murder!â A voice had shoutedâsoon to be closer until finally a sleigh pulled by a peculiar breed of rabbits emerged from the green symphony. The person that emerged was rather odd in stature, composed of an earthy scent and color palette to match. Radagast, you soon discovered, was his name and he was a rather jittery creature. His words were quick, floaty like a squirrel and rabbit combined.
He spoke to Gandalf of things you could not quite comprehendâwords and places mentioned that you did not know, nor did not care to know. Yet what they were speaking of did not last long, for the conversation was interrupted by howlingâfrightfully piercing in sound and vibration.Â
Bilbo was first to panicâhis head turning as his heart seemed to beat out of his chest and his anxieties spiked. âWas that a wolf? Are there wolves out here?â
âWolves? No, that is not a wolf.â Bofur mumbled out to Bilbo as he gazed around the forest skeptically, the largeness of his hat blocking your view for a moment before you ultimately pushed pastâholding your bow tight within your grasps.
âWolf or not, there is something near.â You slowly began to turn around, the noise of snarling became evermore apparent. Just above the rocks, a warg began to creep above the mossy pathâits gaze intense and hostile as it snarled out at the company.
When it had pounced, Thorin was first to slew itâthe company moving into their own defensive stances, including you as you stood opposite of KĂli with your bow drawn, muscles tight, and eyes vigilant. Another warg came pouncing through the shrubbery, and KĂli made quick work of attacking as his arrow found its way to the creatureâs neck. Dwalin finished it off as KĂli retrieved his arrow, his gaze flitting to you.
âWarg scoutsâwhich means an orc pack is not far behind.â Thorin grunted out as he withdrew his blade from the bloody creatureâs body.
Gandalf began to question Thorin regarding whom he had previously told about his quest and goal to obtain Ereborâof whom could the responsibility be placed upon. There was a silent realization hidden within the wise wizardâs questionsâa grimmer reality setting into place.
KĂliâs gloved fist was balled around the shaft of the arrowâthe golden string tied upon the crest gleaming in the sunlight, a silent reminder of the home you had left in pursuit of a future beyond its bordersâa future in Erebor. A future that could easily be compromised by the notion that Gandalf spoke: âYou are being hunted.âÂ
Radagast, the strange fellow he was, was rather brave for his statureâquickly offsetting the path of the orcs as he rode past with his rhosgobel rabbits, his wooden sleigh clattering klunkily against forest path and stone. For his age, Gandalf was quick in his movements as he led the company astray from their original courseâweaving through shrubbery with weapons raised in pursuit of shelter.Â
Your boots rushed across mossy flooring and stony passages, knees bent low as you crept through the forest like a haunting rather than a dwarf. Silence had become the virtue of all, and dwarves were not exactly known for their ability to stay quiet. KĂli walked ahead of you, while FĂli was incredibly insistent on moving behind youâmuch to your protest.Â
You were aware of his purpose to remain behindâbecause even if FĂli was adamant on the fact that he believed you and KĂli capable enough to defend yourselves, there was some sort of duty he felt sworn to protect the both of you more than he would ever defend himself. Each and every few steps, you cast your gaze back upon him, if not for his own protection, then for the quelling of your beating heart.
Radagast rushed past a cluster of boulders and sharply edged rocks, his sleigh clattering as the wargs chased after him and directly past the location of the company. The group moved as one beingâone prey being hunted by a larger predator. Just as you had ducked beneath stone once more, a warg and its master had strayed from its packâcreeping above hills and boulders, nose sharp and teeth even more so. Thorinâs gaze flickered to both you and KĂli, expectant as you both held your bows at a ready stanceâtension soon overcoming your forms as you both moved in unison, the twin archers finally in motion as both took aim.Â
The arrow sliced across your glove, floating through the air in a graceful manner that contrasted intent rather beautifully. KĂliâs arrow took root within the wargâs upper chest and leg, while yours had found home in the center of its sternum. The thing collapsed in a whimpering heap, throwing its master from its furry backâand soon, its master was slain by the weapons of Bifur and Bofur.Â
The pained sounds of the orc were harsh upon your ears, the squealing vibration that echoed throughout the hills being far from comfortingâyet there was no place for comfort when being hunted by an orc pack. KĂliâs boots brushed against bloodied grass and dirt as he moved to retrieve the arrows, and just as he had moved to place both within his quiver, your voice whispered out harshly in disbelief.
âKĂli! That is my arrow.â His hand still remained wrapped around the golden strung, firm and unyielding as he moved. KĂliâs face dropped at the accusationâas if he were being accused of some sinister falsehood that he may never recover from.
âNo, it is not. Look!â
âIt is! It has my name carved into the shaftâdo not tell lies!â You whispered out just a bit louder as your boots pounded against the ground, grasping the other end of the arrowâto which KĂli objected most physically, attempting to pull it away pettily.
âWell, we can share arrows!â He whispered back, yet you knew he was simply trying to take the arrow from youâeven if it meant receiving a mouthful about it.
âNo! Last time we did that youââ
Your voice was cut off by the sound of Gandalfâs booming one, the sound of wargs growing closer and you had not even realized it because of some petty squabble. âFor Durinâs sake, stop bickering and run!â
âOh.â You both seemed to have the realization in unison as KĂli released the arrow, breaking into a sprint along with the rest of the company. Before you slipped the arrow into your quiver, you had taken a quick glance to the shaftâjust for safe measure because in truth, you were not entirely sure that the arrow actually belonged to you, you simply knew of KĂliâs squandering tactics. Clear as day within the wood was a carving of your initials, and you silently celebrated as you followed quickly behind KĂli and the company.Â
You would think yourself to have preferred being torn apart by wargs if it meant not being indebted to the elves of Rivendell, with their disgustingly pristine buildings and eloquent ways of life. In spite of the mutual distaste that had long been shared by dwarves and elves for one another, the elves provided refuge for your companyâand what bountiful refuge it was.Â
A feast provided beneath the setting horizon, music strumming lightly in the air as each of you ate to your heartâs content and your bellies were fuller than the rising moon.Â
Beside you, KĂli satâhis gaze cast across the wood and marbled table as he sent a wink toward an elf strumming the harp, and he believed himself to be so sly until heâd seen the unamused expression upon both yours and Dwalinâs face.Â
His once self-assured smirk melted away as he cleared his throat, gazing around toward the food-filled table for a moment before speaking: âI canât say I fancy Elf maids myself, too thin.â
Dwalinâs slight twitch of brow seemed to egg KĂli on in his deconstruction of elven appearances and his lack of interest within themâas if history between dwarves and elves was not enough to dissuade him alone. âTheyâre all high cheekbones⊠and creamy skin. Not enough facial hair for me.â
That comment irked you for just a moment, your jaw tightening at his commentâyet you could not truly blame him. It was not his fault that neither you, nor him were considered very dwarven in features. Memories of being teased for your more-so elven features began to flood within your brain, yet as KĂliâs last few words muttered from his mouth, you could barely focus upon soured reminiscence as Dwalin informed him so dutifully.
âAlthough, that one there is not bad.â
Dwalin leaned forward as he spoke, attempting to give KĂli some resemblance of grace when the opportunity had already passed long ago. âThatâs not an elf maid.â
And so it was not, as the elf turned around and masculine features came into view.
The wooden chalice you drank from was soon slammed upon the table as hearty laughter resounded from not only you, but Bofur, and from Dwalinâwho rarely partook in the joys of laughter so audibly. KĂliâs expression was nothing short of betrayed by the realization, his face falling into one of morbid shock.Â
âWhat was that about elf maids, KĂli?â You questioned with a mixture of mock and tease, giggling within your seat as your brother cast you a look that spoke of revenge yet to come.Â
âThatâs funny.â KĂli spoke begrudgingly.
When the sun had set and the moon had risen high within the cavernous expanse of starlight, many of the dwarves had retired to sleep within Rivendellâall except Bilbo, Thorin, Balin, and Gandalf had taken comfort beneath the starlight.Â
You had laid upon the cotâbasking within the night above, watching as stars twinkled down in their own hidden form of communication, whispering words of promise and past. In your heart, something began to tightenâtwisting and yearning for understanding beneath such starlight, to understand them and in turn, be understood. Yet that was a simple fantasy, such a sentimentality that would only serve to distract you from your slumber.
And so, you rolled overâblocking the stars from your gaze and in turn, from your mind. Slumber took you like sand upon the shore, overshadowing your senses and consuming you wholeâyet your dreams had more so been your foe even when you were a wee lass.Â
You stirred in a sweat, fists balled tightly within white woolen blanketsâheart thrumming intensely within your chest as your eyes grew wet with emotion. Hands came to clench at your tunic, feeling the fabric weigh just a bit heavier upon your skin than it had beforeâunwilling tears rimming your eyes. Your breathing was uneven bursts of air past chapped lips, hair falling upon your face in a pattern that was somehow too much and too little.
You had always despised this aspect of yourselfâthe helplessness that felt unfitting for a descendent of Durin. If your physical differences did not feed into the creeping shadow of insecurity, the mental difference seemed just enough to quell the hunger of that imaginary beast and force the tears that had welled past their pooling crevices.
Gazing around, everyone else seemed deep within their own peaceful slumberâbasking in the comfort of a warm blanket and the hidden tales told by the stars, all except youâas it had always been, as it shall always be.Â
âDid you have another dream?â A voice called in KhuzdĂ»l.
Your head quickly swiveled to gaze behind, your hand bracing against silken fabric. Your uncle stood in the moonlight, that small familiar smile poking past his normally solemn expression. There were no words that needed to be spoken, a simple nod of your head as the torchlight caught the wetness that rimmed your eyes was just enough to answer.Â
With the quietest of steps he could muster, Thorin crept through the crowd of sleep drunken dwarvesâhelping you from your cot before wordlessly guiding you toward the marble pillar where he had seemingly set up his own resting spot. The material was cool against the contrasting warmth of your arms, body sliding along the pillar as your uncle gathered a bundle of blankets that the company had been just barely conscious enough to leave behind for their leader.
There was a warmth within Thorinâs gaze, a fondness that he kept reserved for only his closest of kinâa fondness you hadnât quite seen since your days back in the Blue Mountains. This, was your uncleânot Thorin Oakenshield, the dwarven warrior whom so many told courageous tales of, or the son of Thror, the son of the King under the Mountain.Â
âA child of Durin who cannot control her own dreamsâwho cries at her own dreams⊠it is such an embarrassment.â You muttered out in a croaky sound, gazing flitting up toward the stars for a moment before it trailed down to KĂli and FĂli who seemed so deep in slumber that they may never wake again.Â
Your uncle sat beside you, side pressed against side as blankets were draped over both of your legsâhis arm sneaking around your shoulders until you felt just a bit more secureâa bit more home amongst the cold marble. Memories from the Blue Mountains began to stir within your mindânostalgic and childish, just as you were thenâa wee lass beside her brothers and mother.Â
Thorin had once held you the same way when youâd stirred from the most horrible of nightmares, tears pooling within your eyes and streaming along your tiny rose-filled cheeks. You sniffled into the darkness, the fire crackling of the hearth being the only comfort you could find as KĂli lay clung to your motherâs lap, fingers bundled within the thick fabric of her gown. FĂli had been laid to bed within his own bedchambers, the faintness of his own snoring being heard from down the hall.Â
You were aloneâalone with dreams of vicious creatures and tearful frights.Â
You were alone, as you had always truly beenâas you shall always be, or so you had believed. Bundled beneath the yarn-woven blankets, you hid your tearful face from all of Middle-Earthâs sights as you had attempted and failed to force yourself back into that pitious dreamland. With one too many failures, you had embarked upon a new missionâto distract yourself until morning came, through any means necessary.
Little legs carried you through big great halls, even littler fists holding upon stony walls as you moved beneath torch to torchâignoring the way shadows seemed to twist within the crackling fire. A rough, deep voice spoke from within a room down the grand hallâcommanding in presence, and all too familiar.
Reaching the room, your hands pried against the stone doorsâas if you could possibly move them on your own, yet you were lucky to find a small dwarf-sized crack just big enough for you to wedge between.
Thorin stood beside a large hearth, his gaze cast upon a large stone tableâthick brows furrowed in thought, he spoke words in KhuzdĂ»l that you were not quite able to understand at such a young age. Though you wished to believe yourself full of stealth, the pattering of your tiny boots upon the stone floors was enough to alert your uncle of another presenceâhis gaze catching your own as you stood just beyond the gap of the door.
His voice called to youânot your common name, but your name spoken only in KhuzdĂ»lâonly for those whom knew it and whom believed it to be true. Gloved hands bundled up scrolls and maps, Thorin quickly having dismissed himself from whatever important meeting was occurringâdismissing himself from being a ruler to tend to his niece.Â
Strong arms scooped you up into the airâmaking you somehow feel smaller than you already were, carrying past twisting shadows and heathen whispers in the darknessâshielding you, protecting you. With much quieter steps than you had walked with, Thorin pushed the door of your bedchambers openâplacing you upon the comically large expanse of your bed. He spoke in your native tongueâin KhuzdĂ»l. âWas it another bad dream?â
You nodded, pulling the blankets tightly around your formâbundling yourself within imaginary armour as your uncle sat upon the foot of the wooden structure.Â
âWhat do you dream of?âÂ
âMonsters from the Eastâhorrible things that come and scream in my ear, and they hurt KĂli.â Your little voice trembled in answer, fists wrenching just a bit tighter within the woven armour. âKĂli and FĂli never wake in the night as I do, they never cry when in our home.â
âFĂli is older, more wise than you and KĂli.â He bespoke, the hearth crackling from behind as your mother shifted within her sleep slightlyâthe tiny KĂli within her lap bundling just a bit tighter into her gown, so snuggly asleep.
âBut⊠but KĂli never fears these monsters. He is brave, and strong⊠and a warrior. Just as you are, Uncle.â There was a sniffle in your voice, a break in the symphony as you could not help but fall into the pit of endless comparison. KĂli had never been fearful of such fantasies as you hadâsuch fallacies created by a dwarven childâs mind.Â
Thorin murmured your name in KhuzdĂ»l, his gaze flitting toward your brotherâslowly shaking his head as a sigh pushed past his lips, gaze slowly becoming less sympathetic and more empathetic as he seemed to realize a deeper plight that your child-like mind could not. âKĂli has feared many things before⊠I have feared many things before. Your fears, they do not make you less of a child of Durinâor a warrior.â
Your uncle shifted along the bedâscooting upward with a grunt before settling beside you, arm snaking around tiny shoulders and holding you firm within the cavernous darkness. His voice was soft, a gentle rasping whisper mixed with the crackling of the hearth. âYour fears for your familyâfor KĂliâwill drive you to be a great warrior, even when you believe it to be a hindrance. CourageâŠâ
There was a pause in Thorinâs voice as his gaze cast down upon your formâface smooshed against his side as tiny vibrations left your mouth in the form of snores. A rumbling laughter left his chest, low and murmuring as his grip remained steadfast.
âTrue courage is about not knowing when to take a life, but when to spare one.â His words were whispered, not wishing to wake you from your peaceful slumber.
Your name was called in KhuzdĂ»l, hands grasping along your armsâshaking you gently at first, then just a bit rougher as tired eyes fought to peel open against the rather desirable proposition of sleep. The voice spoke just a bit firmerâlouder even as gloved hands tightened upon your sleeves, stirring you finally from your sleep drunken state.
You first began to respond in KhuzdĂ»l, yet quickly caught yourself in the mixture of languages before speaking in English. âWhat is it?â
Stray strands of hair protected your eyes from the dawning sun as you ascended the mountain, the company ahead all wandering in a singular lineâsacks placed high upon your shoulders, rocking with each step upon stone and gravel. None left this formation, none questioned its purpose even when pushed beyond the borders of the mountainside and upon hillsâtraveling upon rocky and grassy terrain alike.Â
Soon, the company had found itself caught between wind and stone on another mountainsideârain pouring down upon oneâs skin and slashing across eyes unforgivingly. You remained close to KĂli, even as the wind seemed to push you further away from your kin. Thorinâs shouts were the only sound that could be heard beyond the whooshing of wind and the clapping of thunder upon Middle-Earth. Soaked to the bone and shivering as you were, there was no rest for a dwarven company like youâmuchless in an area such as this, where the elements were as unforgiving as the creatures that dwelled here.Â
Giants, carved of stone and something far crueler, began to duel against their own kind. The company was quickly separated, each fleeing for their own good as the rock beneath their very feet began to shift and move in its own rhythm. Boulders flew overhead, never truly missing their mark as they crashed into the stone giant aboveâsending its own head toppling down.Â
You had shouted out to your brothers, gaze flickering around you only to realize you had been separated from the twoâremaining with the other half as something nervous and uneven began to fester within your stomach. Your breath came in quickened and huffed puffs of air, searching for KĂli and FĂliâand soon enough, recognizing that familiar blonde rain-soaked tuft upon the moving stone across from you. A wave of relief overcame youâyet it did not last, not as the mountainsides came colliding togetherâsmashing to bits as the giant finally accepted its pitiful defeat and crumbled into a valley of nothingness.Â
Fear, genuine and unforgiving fear coursed through your veins as you rushed toward the edge of the stony cliff before you, the only thing stopping you from possibly falling being Thorinâs grip upon you as you screamed. âKĂli! FĂli!â
You continued to scream, the panic and cruelty of the situation becoming ever-more apparent as you felt a wetness form within your eyes that was not due to the rain. Your limbs shook and rattled in ways you had never experienced, breath quickening and never quite filling your lungs as you continued to shout their names with no response in return.
Thorinâs own voice boomed beside you, and just beyond the haze of rain and mist, there was a shift upon the mountainsideâa peaking of familiar cloaks and sacks, and there they were. Alive and breathing.
Thorinâs grasp upon your arm was nonexistent as you pushed past him, the rain ceasing a bit as you turned the corner of the edgeâKĂli and FĂliâs forms resting upon stone as they panted out harshly for breath. Your arms wrapped around their necks far before you could think to scold them for not staying with you, and their own arms reciprocated the gestureâholding you firmly. FĂli let out a laugh that sounded akin to a sigh, while KĂli just held onto youâunmoving, firm, and forever there even as you parted. âDo not ever leave me againâI felt my heart drop to my arse!â
Faintly beneath the thunder and rain, you could hear Thorinâs voice and his gruff disregard for Bilboâwords spoken harshly from his tongue, something regarding his lack of belongingâyet it all seemed so distant now that your heartbeat was even and your brothers were safe.
The company had found a small divot in the mountainâthe perfect size for a company of dwarves. The place was nothing comfortable, far less cozy than the home of Bilbo Baggins and your own residing within the Blue Mountainsâyet you made it work, it seemed. No fire was lit, only sacks filled with blankets and spare suppliesâstill, there was a certain cozy nature about the snug fit between you, KĂli, and FĂli, reminiscent of nights long-spent near the fireside as your mother told stories of the heroism of your grandfather. Yet those memories were all so distant now, a dream of a past life sacrificed for a noble future.
Sleep had never come easy to you, so when you had finally managed to find some semblance of peaceful slumber only to have it cruelly ripped away from you by vile, putrid smelling goblinsârage was the only word to describe what you had felt in a polite manner, otherwise there were many in KhuzdĂ»l. There was only one thing you had learned to hate more than a pestering goblin, and that was a pack of orcs with their hideous wargsâsharp teeth nipping at your boots and snarling froth from its mouth.Â
Azogâs own decrepit voice called from the darkness, speaking ill words upon your uncleâupon your kin. Thorinâs jaw tightened at the recognition of his foeâthe remembrance of what was stolen from him, and what shall never be returned.Â
Wargs jumped higher into the trees, their teeth grazing along your boot just as you had managed to pull the fabric from its jawsâbreath hitching as you began to climb higher, yet the effort was in vain as your weight suddenly shifted and all around you seemed to topple. Trees, one by one, began to tumble and twirlâknocking against one another until one final tree stood and all the dwarves clambered toward it.Â
The final tree rocked and swayed, yet managed to remain rooted in the stone cliff. Your legs wrapped tightly around the bark, gaze locked below at the wargs whose jaws beckoned you closerâattempting to lure each of you to your doom. Your focus did not remain on such creatures for long as a blaze of flaming light flew by your head, one, then anotherâuntil KĂli had delivered you a pinecone of your very own.
Flames consumed the bundle of nature, the flooring of the trees becoming engrossed in fire and ashâthe wargs being forced back from the flames. You all began to celebrate at their retreat, shouting and bolsteringâyour own fist colliding with KĂliâs as you released the tree for a moment of joy to be shared.Â
The final tree, once standing tall and prosperous, began to tilt upon its axisâcolliding with the flat of the cliff as each of you had been flung and dangled from branches and leaves. Unable to reach the nearest branch, you watched as you began to descend down the cliffâbreath leaving your form as moonlight was all you could see.Â
Weightlessness, lighter than wind itself, and utterly weightless was the sensationâthe shouts of your brotherâs being so distant compared to the feeling of falling so far, of breathless death approaching so quickly. Your eyes met the moon one last time, the stars around it somehow managing to shine brighter the further you were from themâand soon, you collided.
Death oddly felt rather warm and fuzzyâfar too fuzzy. You had not realized your eyes had been shut from fear or worse, acceptanceâyet it mattered little as for when you did open them, you were not lifeless, bloodied upon stone and bark, but resting comfortably upon the back of a creature so marvelous: an eagle.Â
You soared high above mountaintops, floating through the air as feathers tickled your nose and caused you to smile far too sweetly for such circumstances. In fact, you had barely noticed your own company trailing just a ways behindâtheir hearts heavy with grief and destruction.
The eagle was gentle as it rested upon the cliff, generously bowing as you descended its feathered back and whispered words of appreciation in KhuzdĂ»l. There was this odd sense of recognition within the eagleâs gaze, dissecting as its brown eyes met yoursâstaring deep beyond the boundaries of flesh and bone.Â
Spreading its wings, it ascended into the air once moreâturning away from you as it moved with its fellow eagles in departure to better lands.
There was a sniffle that came behind youâone that sounded far too familiar and far too dwarven. You bobbed upon your heel, slowly turning to see whom could produce such a pitiful soundâonly to be met with the even more pitiful sight of KĂli, tears welling within his gaze as he rushed toward you.
The hug given to your bones was nothing short of crushing, squeezing each ounce of you as if to breakâyet you did not complain, not as he nor FĂli began to fret over you so clearly.
âAre you mad? We believed you deadâdonât you everââ
âBe quiet, KĂli! She just fell off a cliff's length!â
âBut FĂli!â
âKĂli! FĂli!â Your voice was sharp as FĂliâs hands grasped your face, accessing for wounds while KĂli scolded you. â...I am well, truly.â
Something shifted within FĂliâs expression as his eyes traced along your face, his hands remaining steadfast there but still careful. An emotion flickered within the deep crevices of those blue eyes, an emotion you had never quite been on the receiving end of, and that fact alone had made you curiousâyet there was little time to dissect such a thing as Thorinâs voice was booming upon the edge of the cliff.
âDid I not say that you would be a burden? That you would not survive in the wild? That you had no place amongst us?â The silence that followed was intenseâsuffocating the breeze that pushed high upon the crest. Your brothers had parted from you, weaving around as Thorin slowly approached Bilbo with a harsh tone and even harsher expression. â...I have never been so wrong in all my life.â
Thorinâs arms had wrapped around Bilboâs, pulling the hobbit into a hug that was nothing short of tender as his tone softened in a way that was rather rareâsomething you had only seen in the depths of the Blue Mountains when none was watching, shown so beautifully to this hobbit. You knew, deep down, Bilbo Baggins had to be quite special to receive such earnest treatment from your uncle.
When Thorin and Bilbo parted, your uncleâs head lifted from the hobbit to something far off in the distanceâsomething none had seen in quite a long time, and few within the company had never had the grace of seeing before. You followed behind your uncle, Gandalfâs voice mimicking the gentle breeze as he spoke.
âErebor⊠The Lonely Mountain,â
A small peak, just barely visible amongst lilac sky and mistâits presence so subtle amongst the greenery of Middle-Earth below. It was your destinationâyour home.
âThe last of the Great Dwarf Kingdoms of Middle-Earth.â
Birds floated and chirped through the air, flight carrying them toward the mountain so peacefully as dawn caught upon their blackened wings and silvered beaks. Their chirps were music to your ears, an accompaniment to the mountain itself in the distanceâthe very thing you had longed for.
Gazing out longingly toward the mountain, the company stoodâtall and full of newfound courage. There was a mutual deep exhale at the sight alone, a sense of being beckoned toward its beautyâdrawn in by its promise of future and fortune.Â
Sighing out, Bilbo spoke. âI do believe the worst is behind us.â
And finally, you had mustered the courage to believe him.








