"I think," said Strider, "that we had best make for
Weathertop. It commands a wide view all round. Then we shall see what we
shall see."
"I hope we see Gandalf," Frodo said querulously. "It
is not like him to be so late. "
"We may see many things," said Strider, "not least
of which might be servants of the enemy. Yet it is strange. We are five
days from Bree, and I can detect no sign of the enemy or his spies.
Considering how closely you were pursued before, I cannot think why none
of them has chosen to search in this direction. Yet there is no feeling of
their presence anywhere at hand."
"Well, sir, I'd put that down to your skill," Sam
volunteered. "I'll admit I had my doubts, when you first popped up in Bree.
I thought none too kindly of you keeping us from joining the company that
evening, when it sounded so cheerful and we'd been through such a trial
and all. But I have to say, you were proved right in the end. Hardly a
soul knew we were in town, which was just as well. There were those bad
folk what made off with all the ponies in old Mr. Butterbur's stable. Who
knows what other mischief they might have got up to if we'd showed
ourselves?"
Merry said, "I would find it strange if the theft of
the ponies was a mere coincidence, Sam."
"It has certainly proved to be an inconvenience!"
cried Pippin. "I think all of us have done more walking on this journey
than we had imagined in our wildest dreams!"
"But I'd rather walk than have to run from Black
Riders, which is my point," said Sam. "I think we owe Mr. Strider a lot.
All that doubling back we did on the first day must have done the trick,
and put the enemy off our track."
"Perhaps," said Strider, frowning.
Frodo was too ill-humored to join in the
conversation, and impatient with their progress. They were still two weeks
away from Elrond's house, and he felt weary beyond belief. Perhaps it was
as Pippin said, and he was simply unused to such prolonged physical
activity. Yet he felt restless and irritable; that didn't seem a product
of mere fatigue.
Once again his hand stole towards the pocket where
he kept the Ring. He had never felt right about it, ever since Tom
Bombadil had done his disappearing trick with it. True, the Ring he
carried now appeared to be genuine. It certainly seemed as if Merry
couldn't see him when he had tried it on after Tom returned it. But… if
Tom could make a ring disappear, would he be able to do the same to a
person? Perhaps it wasn't the Ring that had made Frodo invisible that
night but Tom, playing a trick on Frodo by making him invisible to
his friends. Tom had many unusual powers.
Frodo remembered Bombadil's potent songs against Old
Man Willow and the Barrow-wight. 'Old grey Willow-man! I'll freeze his
marrow cold, if he don't behave himself. I'll sing his roots off. I'll
sing a wind up and blow leaf and branch away.' Tom's powers perhaps
exceeded even Gandalf's. Of course, Gandalf could talk sharply as well.
But the wizard had vehemently refused to take the Ring, when Frodo had
offered it to him so many months ago. And Gandalf had been unwilling even
to handle the Ring, or discuss it except by daylight—whereas Tom had shown
no such reluctance.
It now struck Frodo how oddly he had behaved that
night in Tom's house. All Tom had said was, "Show me the precious Ring!"
and Frodo without a thought had taken the Ring off its chain and handed it
to him. He had not even given it to Gandalf so easily, that morning the
wizard had conducted his test for the fiery letters in Bag End. Yet Tom
had merely to make the request, and Frodo obeyed this virtual stranger
without hesitation.
Even after the exchange, and Tom had supposedly
returned the Ring, his host's words haunted him. Frodo recollected them up
clearly, along with the image of Tom's too-sharp eyes, shining with
interest. "Take off your golden ring! Your hand's more fair without
it."
What if… what if this was not Frodo's ring?
What if the old conjuror had decided to take matters into his own hands,
literally. Perhaps he had decided that another hand besides Frodo's would
look fairer with the Ring. His own, perhaps.
Today, the temptation was too much to resist.
Frodo's hand crept towards the ring in his pocket, the ring that felt
increasingly suspect with every mile that Frodo traveled. Under the cover
of the cloth, he took it into his hand. How easy it would be, to slip the
ring onto his finger…
"Do not."
Frodo started. Strider was eying him severely. "Do
not put it on, Frodo. Even for an instant. Such an act would call the
servants of the enemy to us. They would not need your summons to feel the
pull of the Ring. It is ingrained in their very being. They would track us
as a hound on a blood trail."
Frodo looked round to see his friends looking
amazed. Shamefaced, he withdrew his hand. Strider favored him with a hard
look, then turned to lead them on.
Sam plodded after him, head down, apparently
embarrassed on Frodo's behalf. But Merry sidled near.
"What did you think you were doing?" he whispered,
at a moment when it seemed the others would not overhear.
"I just… lately I've had the growing feeling that
the Ring isn't genuine," he murmured back. "Absurd, isn't it?"
Merry looked thoughtful. "Perhaps the Enemy is
trying to trick you into putting it on, so his servants can find us."
"How would he manage that?"
Merry shrugged. "I don't know. You told me earlier
that the Ring liked to slip out of people's pockets. It seems to me a most
cunning artifact. Perhaps we'd best do as Strider suggests. I'm certain
there are folk in Elrond's house who will be able to verify its
authenticity."
"Undoubtedly."
The party marched on. But Frodo's doubts never left
him. Rather, they seemed to loom ever larger, like the threatening bulge
of Weathertop growing on the horizon.
#
''Tom is no master of Riders from the Black Land far
beyond his borders.'
—"Fog on
the Barrow-Downs", Fellowship of the Ring
Tom was on the point of going out when a clear voice
stopped him in his tracks.
"Tom!"
Tom's heart quickened as it always did when he
beheld the object of his passion, his life's only desire. Goldberry, fair
River-daughter, stepped into the room with a sly look on her face. She
held out her hand; from her palm came a golden gleam. She smiled
indulgently. "You left it in the washbasin again."
"A-merrio, derrio, a-dinga-ding-ding! I can't
keep track of the pretty little thing." He took the golden band, and
slipped it into his pocket. Skipping about, he pressed a tender kiss on
his beloved's lips. Goldberry never failed to make his heart sing.
"Mind you don't leave it along the riverbank again,"
Goldberry called, as Tom at length danced out the door. "Some sort of
winged creature was flying over the Barrow-downs again. I suspect such a
creature is very far-sighted."
"Do not fear, pretty lady! Heed no flying creatures!
Tom's songs are the stronger songs, and of this land he's Master."
He hopped down the front lawn to the stone-lined
path along the River. The Sun shone brightly in the new day, making every
veined leaf glow, and sending reflective shimmers from the river's molten
surface to ripple along the lush foliage. Tom bounded along the path,
taking his favorite route towards the water lilies that Goldberry loved.
Since he'd acquired the Ring, the lilies had bloomed splendidly. Never had
there been such bounty to lay at Goldberry's feet as there had been these
last few months. Tom sang with his joy.
The Withywindle lay in a valley, and the trees rose
up on all sides. Normally Tom never looked beyond the bounds of his land.
Why should he? All he desired was here: the green leaves, the young
grasses, the fragrant flowers for his lady's girdle. He had honeycomb and
berries, and milk from a few gentle cows. What more could he want?
Yet today, when he glanced back towards the house,
perched on its grassy knoll, the sky beyond it looked grey. Tom halted.
Such a thing could not be allowed, to have distant smokes cloud such a
beautiful morning. He took himself off the familiar path, and skipped up
to the hilltop, whence Goldberry had bidden farewell to their small guests
nearly two years ago. That had been only weeks before Tom had been forced
to close his borders for good. He regretted doing it, but he simply could
not have all these people coming onto his land, bothering him about that
golden bauble. Elves or no, it was best they stayed away, and minded their
own concerns. Tom always knew what was best to do, inside his own land.
From the hill's vantage point, he looked round. The
Old Forest lay to the immediate west, hazy and tangled as ever. Old Man
Willow he had been forced to obliterate last year, when Tom found he could
no longer tolerate that grim spirit's influence over so many trees of the
forest. There was only one Master here, and Tom was it! So his long-time
rival was vanquished, his wood split open and left to rot; Tom's songs had
always been stronger. Yet evil remained, running like a network of roots
beneath the soil. The source of that root lay elsewhere, beyond where Tom
could sing it away. So evil persisted, mutely, in the forest, but it was
not pressing. Here in his valley, Tom was secure.
To the South and East, the view was more bleak.
Once, Tom could see the Baranduin sparkling all the way to the horizon.
But darkness had encroached over the past year. Now, the River disappeared
behind a grey cloud as soon as it left the southern border of the Old
Forest. In the lands beyond—indeed, in every direction—mists curled up
like snakes in slow coils. The good grass was withered, and upon the brown
surface of the land crawled numerous creatures. Not Men or hobbits; these
were squat and bandy-legged, with long arms and bowed heads. They had only
appeared in force early in the year, following the Greenway past his land
to attack the settlements at Bree. For a while there had been intense
fighting, as the remnant of the Free Peoples of the North made their stand
there. Futilely, as the kings of old had done long ago, and nothing now
remained of them but smooth mounds in the Barrow-downs. But for many
months now, the lands to the north had been quiet.
As were the lands farther west. That Spring, what
Tom could see of the Shire had been gobbled up in a matter of days. For
weeks smokes had risen from the former sites of towns, and the setting Sun
had gleamed dully through the haze. Now, there was nothing left to burn.
Tom shook his head. Such a waste, but that was how the world went. Once
this forest had stretched from sea to sea. Now all that was left was this
tiny remnant under Tom's dominion. It was unsettling how small the world
had become—but Tom couldn't worry about that. Who could worry about the
whole world?
What concerned Tom most was the Barrow-downs. These
were part of his domain, within his unseen borders. The Sun burned
strongly upon Tom, standing atop his hill. But northward, the sunlight was
bleared. The rolling Downs looked grey rather than green. This was his
land; he could not permit the sunlight to be obscured here, not where
Goldberry would see it.
Tom lifted his gaze. A brown cloud seemed to press
against the air above the Downs, as if held back by an invisible bowl.
Within the cloud, vast winged shapes circled. These were the creatures
that had troubled his fair River-daughter's thoughts that morning. Their
flesh appeared naked, their outspread fingers webbed. Foul brutes with
sharp beaks and dark-shrouded riders. The croaks and mournful cries of the
beasts, and the screeches of the riders, drifted to him faintly upon the
wind.
Tom set his jaw. He was the Master here. He had
always been Master! Tom lifted his hands. Skipping a little, he sang: