Son
of the King
By Etharei
With Isildur
went his three sons, Elendur, Aratan, and Ciryon, and his Guard
of two hundred knights and soldiers, stern men of Arnor and
war-hardened. Of their journey nothing is told until they had
passed over the Dagorlad, and on northward into the wide and
empty lands south of Greenwood the Great
So it came to
pass that late in the afternoon of the thirtieth day of their
journey they were passing the north borders of the Gladden Fields
Journeys end was but a few days before us. We were nearing
Thranduils realm, who was King now that his father Oropher
had perished in the War, where we expected to find food and
respite. Night fell.
Then the Orcs came.
"Atarinya,
what of the power that would cow these foul creatures and command
them to obey you? Is it then of no avail?"
Weary eyes gazed
at me, and for the first time it struck me that my father was
old. Not yet past his vigour, yet threading upon the brink.
In the count of years he was still young, at least for one of
the line of Elros, yet the War of the Alliance has put a great
weight of him, the equal of several decades.
"Alas,"
he said quietly. "It is not, senya. I cannot use it. I
dread the pain of touching it. And I have not found the strength
to bend it to my will. It needs one greater than I now know
myself to be. My pride has fallen. It should go to the Keepers
of the Three."
I tried not to
sigh. Yes, he has become old indeed.
My eyes fall upon
the accursed thing, in a small case of gold attached to a fine
chain around the Kings neck. The Dark Lord has fallen,
or so we had believed, yet I could feel the touch of his evil
in that golden talisman. The first time my father showed it
to me, I had recoiled, for in it I sense still that dark figure
that had plagued by dreams during the War, seeking to thwart
me as we marched towards his stronghold.
Alas, sire, that
you overestimated your own strength! I see that even my family
did not escaped the pride of Men completely.
There, in the midst
of battle, I saw that I was truly stronger than my father, as
my mother had foretold at my birth. Yet little comfort does
the confirmation give me, for I could also sense, as my father
already had, our inevitable doom.
Knowing that I
had my fathers full confidence, the Lords Elrond and Cirdan
had sought me out ere they left for their own realms after
the War. Despairing of convincing my father of his danger in
bearing the thing, they had warned me to be wary of it. But
I had not needed their advice, for I had already seen that my
father had become dangerously enamoured by the fair and deceptively
simple piece of jewelry. Nay, not a simple jewel indeed, but
the One. The Ring of Sauron. And It burned my father for taking
It from Its master, yet at the same time It had branded his
soul.
Was the fault mine?
Out of love for my father I had stilled my objections, instead
begging him to put it out of sight so I at least would not have
to endure the pain of its presence. I had never dared take it,
for I knew that it was even beyond my strength, yet perhaps
we could have hidden it, in some deep unknown cave or sent it
down the Anduin to be lost for all of Time. Why had I let my
father carry it?
Even now it calls
to me, whispering treachery into my thoughts. In my mind I saw
myself a mighty King, greater than Elendil himself, Lord of
a Land greater than Númenor had ever been. With the power
in the Ring I could heal the hurts of the world, and ease the
sufferings that the War had caused. Surely I was strong enough?
I could undo what the Dark Lord had done!
I had only to reach
out and take it, and it would be so. My father was too weak
to stop me!
It was there under
the light of newly-risen Eärendil that I faced the Dark
Lord in my own fashion; in a different place and manner than
my grandfather and my father had done. All my hopes and dreams
for life, my very purpose for being, seemed to spiral up to
that frozen moment. The battle with the Orcs faded away, and
I stood there, even as my predecessors had done, facing the
evil Dark Lord.
It had taken the
combined might of Elves and Men, and the strength of their two
Races friendship, embodied in Gil-Galad Elvenking and
Elendil of Westernesse, to bring down Sauron the Deceiver. Isildur
son of Elendil, who had rescued the scion of Nimloth in Númenor
from the fire, should have finished it, by casting the Ring
into Mount Doom.
It should have
ended there.
I knew that in
my heart and mind, and for a brief second I scorned my fathers
weakness. I chose scorn over relief, for it was my own emotion.
The relief came from the Ring.
And now I stood
before Sauron, yet what little will and power he still had left
was great, despite being reduced to a mere bodiless spirit,
a memory upon the world. On one road I saw death for me and
all I loved, there in the Gladden Fields, to be forgotten as
the one that should have been King. And on the other was the
chance to redress the sins of the Ring, to turn its power into
a force of good instead of evil, and to be the greatest King
that had ever lived.
I stood, for a
moment and an eternity, at the crossroads of the fate of Middle-Earth.
A responsibility for so many lives no mortal should ever burdened
with, yet a choice only a mortal can make.
The name of Elbereth
upon my lips, I chose.
The horns came.
My mind returned to my body, and it seemed as if no time at
all had passed, though I had stood and observed the trails of
the future for many minutes. The Orcs pressed in, and the Dúnedain
fell around me. Two leapt upon Ciryon my brother, tearing his
mail and savagely killed him ere we could come to his
aid. My other brother, Aratan, was hit by a poisoned arrow as
he strove to reach our fallen sibling. I did not let the grief
touch me, for there was not time. No time for any of us. Nor,
had I wanted it, was there reclamation for choice thus made,
with the whole of body and spirit. Yet as I fought and fought,
my heart still searching for some glimmer of hope in the night,
some chance unlooked-for. But of course, there was none.
Seeing the blaze
of the Elendilmir, I sought out my father as he rallied the
men on the east side. For a moment I feared that the Ring had
finally possessed his mind, for as I touched his shoulder he
swung around and moved to smite me. But seeing me he nearly
dropped his sword, and his shoulders slumped; his eyes bore
despair beyond utter defeat, and I wondered if he had seen what
I had done.
"My King!
Ciryon is dead and Aratan is dying. Your last councellor must
advise, nay command you, as you commanded Ohtar. Go! Take your
burden, and at all costs bring it to the Keepers: even at the
cost of abandoning your men and me!"
Tears came to both
our eyes then, and I knew that he understood what I was saying,
had understood my choice. I wished I could offer him words of
comfort to ease his guilt-ridden spirit, yet they would be false,
or less than truthful, for this defeat was rightfully his to
bear.
"Kings
son," he said haltingly. "I knew what I must do; but
I feared the pain. Nor could I go without your leave. Forgive
me, and my pride that has brought you this doom."
I kissed him, and
through my eyes showed my love and forgiveness for a Mans
folly. For now I was the King, and he was an old, broken fool
who had sired me "Go! Go now!" A final embrace, between
a father and son who will never meet again in the world, then
I watched him run into the darkness.
May we meet again
beyond this world, father and King, where no shadow can come
between us!
"Estelmo,"
I said softly. The loyal young esquire, ever by my side, turned
to me. In his eyes I saw fear, yet fear tempered with undying
loyalty. "If you live beyond this night, will you swear
to me that you will travel to Imladris, and tell Lord Elrond
Half-Elven of what happened here? Will tell him that the King,
recalling our ancient kinship from his brother Tar-Minyatur,
asks that he give shelter and aid to our line?" For now,
knowing that my end was so near, I suddenly thought of my brother
Valandil, left with my mother in that Elven refuge.
"Aye, sire,"
Estelmo said over the din of battle.
With renewed strength
I swung my sword, rallying the Dúnedain with hearty cries.
Though I knew there could be no hope, no chance for victory,
my mortal heart would not surrender to death without battle.
The Dúnedain were whittled down slowly, until but one
score of us were left standing, and still we fought. Through
the red mist I did no see what had become of the esquire, but
I feared that he had fallen, and my message with him.
As I watched certain
death approach me, and felt final weariness steal over my body,
in despair my mind retreated to memories of our ancient home
of Númenor. Instead of Orc snarls and dying screams I
heard the crash of wave against shore around the port of Roménna,
where I played with my father. I remembered standing amongst
the great ships of my grandfather, and the first time I was
allowed on board one of the mighty vessels. My father, against
my mothers wishes, had taken me up to the crows
nest, where I first beheld the splendor of the Pillar bathed
in the light of a sunset. It had been before the building of
the temple at Armenelos, after which a great column of smoke
marred the sky.
Finally the stroke
came, and it was as if such a heavy burden was lifted from my
heart. The vision in my mind became more substantial that the
waking world, and I thought from afar I could hear voices calling
me, voices I had thought had been lost to the Sea. The cold
sword slid out from me even as another arrow pierced my throat.
I stumbled twice, then fell forward.
I could feel groping
hands tearing at my mail, but my mind was already gone. I left
the vessel of my spirit glad, for by some merciful power I had
seen a measure of the future bought about by my choice. The
ultimate hope for my people was so distant in the future, balanced
upon so many possibilities that could come to nothing at one
stray pebble, yet it was still there, gleaming like far-off
Eärendil.
I had time to register
one final thought.
Beneath me, Estelmo
breathed.
"So perished Elendur, who should afterwards have been King,
and as all foretold who knew him, in his strength and wisdom,
and his majesty without pride, one of the greatest, the fairest
of the seed of Elendil, most like to his grandsire"
~
END ~
Scholar
(Scribe)
29th September 2005