The
Witch of Angmar
Legacy
of the Fellowship
Part
Seven
The Ruins of Annúminas
R
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ose’s
first glimpse of Annúminas was of a cluster of stone towers, rising from above
the treetops, with the shadowy slopes of Emyn Uial behind them. Despite that it
was a somewhat forbidding sight, Rose let out a deep sigh of relief at the
realisation that they had reached Annúminas at last.
Not
for the first time since the goblin attack, Rose glimpsed down at Sting and
eased the blade slightly out of its scabbard. All was still well – the sword
had not glowed blue in over two days. It had warned them of an approaching band
of goblins the morning following the attack, allowing Salrean to lead them on a
detour so that they skirted danger completely – three goblins they might be
able to manage, but not a group of them. They had a narrow escape.
“Who
are we actually seeing in Annúminas?” Rose quickened her stride, and was forced
to run in order to draw level and keep pace with Salrean. “You said he is an
old friend. How can he help us?”
“Barandur
grew up with my father,” Salrean replied briskly, her dark gaze scanning the
trees as they walked. Even this close to Annúminas, the ranger did not relax
her guard. “They both share the gift of ‘far-sight’, although Barandur’s
abilities appeared to intensify with age, whereas my father’s did not. He was
my father’s most trusted ranger for many years, but when I was a girl they
quarrelled and my father banished him from Farnost. He is known all over the
Lost Realm as a wise-man, a teller of truth. I have visited him a few times,
although my father would be furious if he knew.”
“What
did they quarrel over?” Peri asked, speaking for the first time in hours.
Salrean
shrugged, her face becoming pensive. “I know not – although from what my father
has told me of Barandur over the years, I would say he was threatened by his
friend’s abilities. In Farnost, my father is revered for his skills as a seer,
and he did not like having a rival.”
Rose
thought that Salrean’s father sounded a formidable, if inflexible, man. She was
not looking forward to meeting him. Thinking of Salrean’s father made her think
of her own, and a stab of grief pierced her through the chest.
I’ll make this right
papa, she thought,
clenching her fist by her sides, I don’t
know where I’m going, or if I’m right to trust this ranger – but I won’t fail
you again.
They
entered Annúminas through a perimeter of scattered wattle and daub houses, where
the poorest folk lived. Here, they attracted many stares, some of which made
Rose uncomfortable. Salrean strode ahead, oblivious of the gazes following her,
while the two hobbits ran to keep up with her. Further ahead, the dwellings
grew larger. Many were half-timbered, and the further they travelled towards
the centre of Annúminas, the more of the local grey stone featured.
The
buildings drew upwards, until Rose had to crane her head to see the sky. The
streets changed from mud and gravel to cobblestones, and instead of home-spun
shifts, the people here wore fine clothes and leather boots. Rose was
overwhelmed. She much preferred the green hills of Hobbiton, with its patchwork
of fields and wide sky. Glancing across at Peri, Rose saw that he too was
unnerved by the sheer size of this city of men.
“It
makes you feel so small,” he whispered, his eyes wide. “I will never look upon
Hobbiton, or Bree, in the same way again.”
Eventually,
they entered a wide cobbled square with a great, half-timbered hall at one end.
“That
is where the Lord of Annúminas resides,” Salrean told the hobbits. “The great
Lord Gildur. My father tried to arrange a marriage between us, years ago now,
before he realised that I had planned to become a ranger. When I refused,
relations were strained for many years between Gildur and my father. I think it
best if we don’t pay him a visit.”
Rose
glanced up at Salrean’s face and saw that the ranger wore a whimsical
half-smile. Salrean was an enigma. She rarely revealed details about herself,
but on the rare occasions she did, her revelations always surprised Rose.
“Where
does this Barandur live then?” Peri puffed alongside Salrean, his short legs
pumping to keep pace with her.
“On
the other side of the city Master Took,” Salrean glanced down at Peri. “In the
ruins of the ancient city – all that remains of the Tower of the West.”
They
walked through the ruins of old Annúminas, amongst crumbled stone buildings
encrusted with lichen and moss. Here, Rose could see the glittering waters of
Lake Nenuial and the ruined docks that once stretched along its shores.
“I
have read little of the history of the place,” she said to Salrean. “When was
old Annúminas abandoned?”
“Following
the death of the last High King of Arnor, many years ago,” Salrean replied. “It
once housed one of the three seeing stones of the North Kingdom but after the
city fell into ruin, its palantir was removed and taken to Farnost. After my
city was destroyed by Angmar, the palantir was lost.”
Rose
knew of the palantir, the ancient seeing stones. She had heard that one was
kept deep in the vaults in Minas Tirith, but had no idea where the others had
gone.
“Why
didn’t they rebuild the old city, instead of creating a new one?” Peri asked, ignoring
the mention of the lost seeing stone.
“Superstition,”
Salrean led them along and ancient cobbled street with high, crumbling walls
either-side. Ahead, a battered stone tower missing its top rose against the
pale sky. “The people here preferred to start afresh.”
Rose
could understand that. The ruined city had an eerie, melancholy air. A cold
wind blew in from Lake Nenuial and whistled down the streets. Rose felt an
itching between her shoulder blades, as if someone was watching her. She
wondered if spirits of the dead roamed the ruins at night in a place such as
this.
Ahead,
a man, dressed in a frayed grey cloak, came out of the crumbling tower to meet
them. He had long, black hair; a beard, streaked with grey; and penetrating
dark eyes and a sharp-featured face.
“Salrean,”
he greeted the ranger coolly, although his gaze riveted upon her two
companions. “I saw you approaching. Why have you brought halflings with you?”
“Greetings
Barandur,” Salrean replied, unperturbed by his abrupt welcome. “Apologies for
disturbing your peace but I, and my companions are about to embark on a journey
to the far north and we need your counsel.”
“To
Angmar?” Barandur turned to Salrean, his brow darkening. “You would take two
hobbits into Morwyn’s domain?”
Salrean
nodded, her face still expressionless.
“Not without good reason.”
Barandur’s
frown deepened before he stepped back and motioned to the open door behind him.
“Well,
you’d all better come in then. I will cook us some supper and you can tell me
what foolery you are about to embark upon.”
***
It
was damp and cold inside the lower levels of the ruined tower, despite the fire
that roared in the hearth. Barandur lived in one large room that smelt of damp,
wood-smoke and mutton stew. An iron pot, containing their evening meal,
simmered over glowing embers in a second hearth on the other side of the
chamber.
Rose
sat on an upturned wooden crate, her cloak wrapped tightly about her, and
wondered what possessed a man to live in such a cold, lonely place. Looking at
the severe lines that carved Barandur’s face as he ladled the mutton stew into
earthen bowls, she guessed that he had chosen the ruins of Annúminas for a
reason. He exuded bitterness and, despite the fact that Salrean had spoken
warmly of him, did not appear pleased to see her.
They
ate their stew, which was surprisingly good. Salrean recounted their story; from
her discovery that Morwyn sought the Red Book, to its theft from the Tower
Hills and the murder of Rose’s father. Barandur listened in silence, his
intense gaze riveted upon Salrean. However, when she finished her tale, his
features twisted in scorn.
“This
journey you plan to take is madness,” he tossed the remains of his stew on the
fire and leant back in his chair. “The Red Book has been taken – let her have
it. There’s nothing in it of value, apart from old stories of those who are
long dead.”
“But
my father believes that…”
“You
father is a fool,” Barandur snapped. “If he thinks the book is valuable then
let him go fetch it. He wouldn’t dare raise an army against the Witch of Angmar
– he knows he has not the men to withstand her and the goblin king’s forces.
Yet, he would send you and these hobbits into her lair. You’re his only child
but he would willingly sacrifice you for vain ambition.”
For
the first time, anger flashed across Salrean’s features.
“I
go willingly. He does not send me anywhere I do not wish to go!”
“You
go to please him,” Barandur’s tone softened then. “When will you realise that
he is unpleasable?”
The
man’s gaze swivelled round to Rose and Peri then, and Rose shrank under his
penetrating stare.
“Looking
for the man who killed your father will be like searching for a needle in a
haystack. Would your father want you to risk your life to bring back a family
heirloom?”
“I
will remember his killer’s face till the end of my days,” Rose replied coldly.
“Thin, bloodless and pock-marked with eyes the colour of blue ice. I will find
him.”
“You
are a brave young thing,” Barandur shook his head and Rose saw a trace of
mockery there that made anger curl up within her. She did not enjoy being
patronised. “But ‘twill not save you when you come face-to-face with the
Witch-king’s fell sister.”
“Barandur,”
Salrean interrupted, her voice sharp. “We came here, not to get your blessing
but for your advice. Will you use the runes to aid us?”
Barandur
tore his gaze from Rose and focused on Salrean once more.
“You’re
far more like your mother than your father,” he rumbled, “except for when you
want something. Then you remind me of Rendur.”
Salrean
gave a tight smile at that and shrugged. “Will you help us?”
The
man sighed and crossed his arms across his chest.
“I
can use the runes, if that’s what you want – but I warn you that they don’t
often give you the answer you seek. More often than not they give me riddles
that you must untangle yourselves.”
“I
understand,” Salrean put her empty bowl aside and leant forward, resting her
elbows on her knees.
Barandur
stood up and walked over to a shelf at the far end of the room, retrieving a
small leather pouch from it. He returned to the fireside and pulled up a low
table between them. Then, he gently tossed the pouch in the centre of his palm,
as if feeling the weight of the runes. His visitors looked on, waiting for him
to empty the runes onto the table.
Instead,
Barandur paused, his gaze snaring Salrean’s.
“I
visited Carn Dûm, years ago now – when I was young and seeking adventure. It
was abandoned then; crumbling towers surrounded by ruined walls on the desolate
slopes of Mount Gundabad. I explored the ruins from top
to bottom; at that time even the orcs had forsaken it – and I found a secret
way in.”
“You
did?” Salrean bolted upright, her eyes gleaming. “Can you tell us of it?”
“I
thought that would interest you,” Barandur’s mouth curved into a grim smile.
“To the west of the towers of Carn Dûm, there is a collection of jagged rocks
that climb the mountainside. Make your way into the centre of them, and under a
sharp rock, darker than all the others, you will find a tunnel. It will take
you deep under Carn Dûm into the dungeons; from there you can make your way up
into the fortress itself.”
Salrean
nodded before glancing across at Rose and Peri. “Will you both remember that?”
The
hobbits nodded.
“It
sounds easy enough,” Peri ventured.
Barandur
laughed, showing his teeth. “It might do, but ‘tis not. Unpleasant things dwell
under Carn Dûm. I was lucky to emerge from the tunnels alive – and I’d wager
you will be too. All the same, ‘tis safer than walking in through the front
door.”
“What
unpleasant things?” Peri had gone white.
“Wights,
from the time of the Witch-king himself,” Barandur replied, the wry humour
fading from his rugged face. “They are Carn Dûm’s protectors and do not welcome
visitors.”
Silence
fell in the room then, and despite the roaring fire at her back, Rose shivered.
Barandur,
his sharp gaze missing nothing, undid the leather pouch and poured the runes
out onto his large palm. He clasped his fingers around them, preparing to cast
the stones on the table before him.
“Now,
shall we see what the runes have to say about your endeavour?” he looked
straight at Rose. “Foul or fair? What lies before you in the Realm of Angmar?”
End of Part #7
Be back for Part #8 on 27 September!
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