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Promises
Chapter Two
Prophecy
As it turned out, several days later, when
Frodo’s invitation to tea was received at the Brownings’ home, Mae was in
no condition to attend. Quite coincidentally to her fall, she had been
helping Dore Browning care for old Banda Chubb who had suddenly come ill
with fever. After a quick examination, Dore had found nothing seriously
amiss with him that good care would not cure and so she set her
apprentice, Mae, to tend him. Two days later the fever was worse not
better, and Dore returned to take another look. Whatever had grappled hold
of old Banda was more formidable than the midwife originally suspected and
she commenced to taking charge of his care immediately. Mae was sent home.
So it happened that Dore Browning was not initially aware that her
apprentice was also developing a case of the very same fever that was
racking Banda Chubb.
The old hobbit lasted 2 days more and died in the height of a raging
fever. Dore kept his family away, for fear of whatever was spreading the
sickness, because by this time, she knew that her apprentice was also
deathly ill. She wanted to make certain no other hobbits would be lost to
it. Dore and her family took care of the arrangements for Banda – and
after a smoking of the house and all possessions, they left the home for
his relations. The Chubbs, being as they were, were most eager to examine
the house, and to make sure that the Brownings had made off with nothing
but what was owed them for Dore’s services.
Mae Burrows was very ill. Even the self-imposed quarantine the Brownings
were under didn’t prevent the spread of gossip and the events were quickly
known. There was general agreement in the Shire that Dore Browning had
acted with good judgment and quickly and had probably prevented a
Shire-wide tragedy, but it was also generally agreed that young Mae would
likely die, just as old Banda had. Frodo heard the gossip and felt more
than what he might have considered a normal amount of concern for someone
whom he had only just met. Perhaps it was still the guilt he felt for
falling on her, or perhaps it was the memory he had of her brilliant green
eyes, but he could not help feeling greatly distressed at the thought of
her ill to the point of death. If Bilbo noted his nephew’s concern, he
said nothing about it – but he kept himself apprised of the situation in
Bywater nonetheless, and so kept Frodo informed.
----------------------------------------
For a week and a half, Mae raved. Dore used all her skills to keep the
girl’s fever down, and tried all her strongest herbs and potions in an
effort to defeat and break it. At last, grudgingly, the fever abated and
the girl began to wake and speak. “I’ve had dreams…,” was one of the first
coherent things she said to Dore. “Dreams of loss and pain…. Oh, the
sorrow!” Dore was not certain her apprentice was completely well or
unchanged by the illness. As sometimes happens, the mind can be affected
by high fever and it may never be right again. Dore hoped this was not so,
as she was more than passing fond of Mae and was a friend of the child’s
mother. Mae had shown promise and skill in the profession of midwifery,
and Dore felt it would be a sore trial to lose her. A week after the fever
had broken, on a day that dawned bright and warm as a harbinger of a fair
summer to come, Mae Burrows woke fully and was at last able to come out of
doors and enjoy the sun. Dore put her in the garden, with a gentle tea of
toast and milk and honey, and sat with her cleaning freshly picked peas.
Mae delighted basking in the sun but still felt far too weak to do more
than sit and enjoy the day. At length, she stirred a bit and looked to
Dore who was finishing the last of her labor.
“Did you read to me as I slept, Mistress Dore? For it seems to me I heard
a great tale of heros told to me through my fever.”
Dore wiped her hands on her apron. “Why, no, not so as you’d say. We spoke
to you, of course, being as that is a way to keep the mind in touch with
the day to day when the body is unable, but no, we told no great tales to
you while you slept.”
Mae frowned slightly but was beginning to feel sleepy again in the warm
sunshine. “A dream it was then,” she sighed. “Strange, though. Most dreams
fade upon waking, but this one grows ever stronger on my mind.” She closed
her eyes and signed, eased in comfort. Dore smiled, thinking her charge
had fallen asleep again. She stood and took her peas inside. Mae did not
sleep, though. She listened to the sounds of the early summer garden, the
twittering of birds, the trickle of the rivulet that passed through the
garden’s southern edge, the warm sigh of the wind as it stirred the rose
bushes and she smelled the scent of those blossoms as they drifted on that
wind. All was contentment, but as sleep tried to steal upon her again, Mae
felt the poignant sadness that her dream had filled her with take hold and
she roused again. It was so vivid, this vision, but it was not a memory of
image or word as much as of emotion. Her heart was responding to something
that she had no conscious memory of hearing or seeing and it disturbed
her. It seemed to her that she was dreaming of someone – a singular figure
who glowed from within with a strange, clear light. It also seemed that
she understood this figure to be a hobbit, though she knew of no tale of
the Shire that matched the dream, as she understood it. It seemed this
small figure had a great task set before him, and though the figure
thought himself too small to accomplish it, he moved through trials
unimaginable in an effort to do so. There were images in her dream too –
but they were vague and though there were many strange faces there, of
elves and big people, and even dwarves, Mae could never see the face of
the hobbit clearly. She saw a kingly man with long dark hair and the
hobbit seemed to be carrying a crown to him. There was also the image of a
great dark expanse of heaving grey water. She knew that to be the sea –
though Mae had never even seen it herself – and the sight brought her
inexplicably to tears. She opened her eyes to find herself back in the
sunny garden. Dore had come to check on her.
“You’re crying! My child! Whatever is the matter? Do you still feel ill?”
Mae felt the tears on her cheeks. “I don’t know!” she cried. “I am
suddenly filled with the most profound sorrow I have ever known – and I am
not sure why! My dream….” Her voice trailed off and the tears continued to
fall. Dore shushed her and took her hand, guiding her back to the safety
and warmth of her small house. Obviously, Mae still needed time to mend
before she would be whole and fit once more.
----------------------------------------
Mae did mend, but she kept her dream to herself from that point on. She
did not wish to trouble her mistress with what Dore would probably
consider trifles. As time when by, the tale unfolded only a little to
Mae’s conscious mind, but the images and feelings intensified till she
could hardly pass an hour of the day without thinking of them. Other
strange happenings were also occurring that were troubling enough to Dore
without Mae mentioning her fevered imaginings.
It started innocently enough. When Mae started to once again help Dore
deliver babies and mend the hurts of the folk of Bywater and Hobbiton, she
seemed to have developed an uncanny ability to guess the gender of the
child about to be delivered. Dore was skilled in noting the way a child
lay in his mother and making a fair guess from that, but Mae was never
wrong, and even more strangely, she seemed to hardly even look at the
mother before proclaiming the child’s gender. Truly, it was a skill that
would be helpful to a future midwife, but it’s development, following so
closely on the heels of Mae’s illness, troubled Dore. There was also the
time when the two of them had been called to the home of a farm to the
north of Bywater Pool. Mae and Dore had set off late in the evening for
the call had been urgent and there had been no time to wait. Fierce rains
had been falling all the day and the evening fell swiftly. It was wholly
dark when the hobbits started out. Poor Toby, Dore’s eldest son, was hard
pressed to keep their small cart from miring in the deep ruts that were
forming in the road, especially since he couldn’t see them ahead. As the
three approached one of the small streams that fed Bywater Pool, the sound
of swiftly rushing water could be heard coming from the darkness ahead.
Mae touched Toby’s sleeve and asked him to stop. The tone of her voice
sounded as if she were in a dream.
“The bridge is gone…” she whispered. “We could not go down this road much
farther. There is need for haste – take the upper road – and hurry – that
bridge has held.” She sat back and was silent. Dore stared at her but
could not clearly see Mae’s face in the deep gloom. What possessed the
girl, Dore did not know, but she tapped Toby’s arm and indicated that he
should follow the advice given. Mae seemed to stir after a mile or so and
was quite herself by the time they arrived. She had been right about the
need for haste, as the child was sorely in need of the medicines Dore had
brought. She was also right about the bridge, as it turned out, for the
next day it was found that the lower bridge had indeed been washed away by
the rain swollen stream.
----------------------------------------
So went the summer and as the autumn came to the Shire and harvests were
brought in, it seemed the promise of spring had been fulfilled. The
granaries and barns were full and, though there had been better years in
recent memory, there was enough to share for even the poorest hobbit
families. September came, and with it an invitation that was delivered to
the Browning home addressed to Jack and Dore Browning of Bywater and their
son, and to Miss Mae Burrows from Mr. Frodo Baggins. Since the birthdays
of both Messer’s Baggins landed on the same day in September, a large
party was being planned. The Brownings were surprised to have received an
invitation to such a prestigious party – they were a notable enough
family, if not very wealthy, but were not of a station that might be
expected an invitation to such an auspicious occasion. Mae was delighted
to go. Other than her odd recurring dream, she was quite herself again,
and as any hobbit maid, she loved parties and presents. She found herself
looking forward to the festivities quite eagerly. On the 22nd, at teatime
precisely, the guests began arriving at Bag End. Mr. Bilbo and Mr. Frodo
greeted them at the door and invited all to the garden where a table had
been set with cakes, tea, cold meats, breads and wine. There was also a
large barrel of ale in the corner, which boded well that the party would
continue into the evening and that refreshments would be plentiful. The
Brownings were prompt as befitted their station, and Mr. Bilbo greeted
Jack Browning warmly and, as there were few guests yet, brought he and
Toby inside to show them around Bag End, something they had never been
privileged to see before. Frodo stood beside the ladies and smiled warmly
at Mae. Mae blushed, but found his smile contagious.
“I was glad to hear you were feeling better.” he said. “I sent an
invitation to tea shortly after we met, but when I received word that you
were so ill, I couldn’t help feeling guilty that I had truly caused you
harm – despite all your and Missus Dore’s assurances to the contrary. I am
afraid it made me hesitate to invite you again.” He bowed cordially
towards her and held forth his hand. “But as you see, I have built up my
courage since.” Mae smiled broadly. The attention of such a handsome young
hobbit was definitely intoxicating and she felt suddenly coy. She took his
hand.
For an instant she felt the warm flesh of his palm on hers. Then, without
warning, a flash of memory or dream filled her mind. She saw, with crystal
clarity, an image that she had never seen so clearly before – that of a
hobbit, carried on the back of another, both covered in dust and dirt,
their faces scratched, their lips, cracked and dry. Mae’s eyes opened wide
and she stared at Frodo in abject horror. The face of the hobbit in her
dream was staring back at her – it’s wide, blue eyes beginning to show
shock at her reaction to his touch. Suddenly it seemed to Mae that all of
the half seen images she had previously thought were fanciful creations of
her fever came rocketing back to her and she was for the first time able
to see them clearly. They were all of this hobbit, Frodo Baggins – older,
perhaps, but not much so, and others, some hobbits also, whom she didn’t
recognize. There was also for the first time an image of the old wizard
and a horrible shriveled dark creature that she could barely see for the
shadows around it. She felt again the horror and sorrow engulf her and she
swooned. Dore cried out and reached to catch her, but Frodo was faster. He
picked her up and gently carried her into the hole and laid her on a couch
in the first small bedroom. Dore followed in great distress, wringing her
hands. Frodo knelt and touched Mae’s brow. She sobbed softly, grasped
Frodo’s hand and buried her face into it. Frodo was shocked to feel hot
tears on his palm. He looked up at Dore at a complete loss for what to do.
The old midwife was also at a loss and seemed quite upset by Mae’s
behavior.
“I don’t know, Mr. Baggins, she’s not done this since her illness – I’d
thought she was quite over these spells!” Dore looked about to cry
herself. “I don’t know what has come over the child!”
“It’s alright,” Frodo replied. “There’s no harm done. Perhaps the
excitement…” Frodo looked down at Mae. She had stopped sobbing but held
his hand to her face, her eyes were closed but the tears still streamed
down her cheeks. “Perhaps she is unused to such stimulation. We can let
her rest in here, till she is recovered.” Frodo wondered how he was going
to disentangle himself. Mae showed no sign of relinquishing his hand –
indeed she seemed to be most attached to it – as if she lived by its
touch. Frodo was beginning to feel uncomfortable, but was also stirred.
When she had looked at him in wonder, Frodo had received the full power of
her luminous green eyes. It was like he had never seen her before, never
realized how startlingly beautiful those eyes and the hobbit lass who
possessed them, were. There had also been an expression in those eyes that
had compelled him, a look that seemed at once to see him completely and to
be searching for more, as if she could not see enough. He would not soon
forget that look.
“Mae, dear,…” Dore pulled the girl’s hands away from Frodo’s and she held
them, palms together. “You rest here a moment, and we will make ready to
leave. I’ll go for Jack and Toby…”
“No…” Mae whispered. She still sounded tearful, but was recovering. “We
won’t leave. I felt faint, but it is past. I will be quite all right with
a bit of rest, really. And I wouldn’t wish to be the cause of missing such
a lovely party.”
“Miss Burrows, are you certain? You looked quite ill just now.” Frodo
glanced at Dore but the older hobbit shook her head uncertainly.
“I will be quite all right, I assure you.” Her voice was sounding
stronger, but she was not looking at him. “I should be far more upset to
find my foolish outburst had been the cause of distress for you and your
guests, Mr. Baggins.”
Dore and Frodo looked at her for a moment, both unsure, till Dore huffed a
bit and nodded. “Well, if that’s the way you’ll want it, child, we’ll
oblige. But I’d dare say, keep your options open. We’ll leave if you ask,
if the fit comes on you again. In the meantime, you rest here, with Mr.
Baggins’ leave of course, till you feel up to coming out.” She looked
inquiringly at Frodo and he nodded confirming. Mae now looked up at him
from where she lay, but winced and looked away quickly, as if the sight of
his face pained her. There was so much sorrow in that look, so much,..pity?
Frodo could not be certain, but the expression seemed piteous, though the
reason for such an expression escaped him. He ushered Dore out of the room
and pulled the door to.
When Mae was alone she sat up on the couch and drew a deep breath. She
knew what she had seen in her dream was not pure fancy, and she knew it as
clearly as if she had lived the experience. Like the little things she had
been predicting, the things that disturbed Dore if she mentioned them, Mae
thought her vision of Frodo must be a vision of some future time. It was
what was to happen, not a dream. Mae had to that point not accepted the
thought that any of these visions were more than guesses, or dreams,
though it had crossed her mind that they might be premonitions. It had
been just too fantastic a notion to be believed. It had been far easier to
dismiss them or not mention them, but her reaction at the door of Bag End
had been real – she could not dismiss that – and her sudden comprehension
of the events and their relevance to Frodo Baggins could also not be
denied. For some unexplainable reason, she had never been more sure of
anything. She looked to the door, pulled to but not shut and saw movement
through the open slit. More guests were arriving. Mae sat, miserable, in
the little room and had no idea what she could possibly do. The dream, or
rather, premonition, was still incomplete. It was not like a story, with a
beginning, middle and end, as proper stories were told, but was a string
of images that flitted through her mind strung together with intensely
strong emotions. She still had no idea of the ‘why’, what it was that was
so dreadfully important that Frodo would one day risk his life for it, but
she knew somehow that it was dreadfully important, and that there was
nothing she could do to stop him. Indeed, what could she even say? Mae had
a pretty good idea of what the folk of the Shire would think if she
started claiming she could tell what the future held. It was certain they
would think the fever had affected her brain. But what about Frodo
Baggins? She ached to warn him, council him, protect him…but she couldn’t
even surely tell from what. And she was certain that if she tried to
explain herself, she would only succeed in making him even more leery of
her. And what if,… despite her certainty, she were wrong? Questions and
doubts whirled in Mae’s head till she felt positively dizzy. She must stop
this before she drove herself mad. She looked to the door and carefully
stood. She needed to do something, anything, to get her mind out of this
turmoil.
Mae pulled the door open to the hall where a couple of guests were
milling. Mr. Bilbo was showing them around Bag End, just as he had done
Mr. Browning. Across the room, Frodo stood, shaking hands with a guest,
but when Mae appeared in the doorway, he looked up and smiled at her. Mae
gasped softly, but it went unheard by those around her.
It was as if Mae had never seen him before. She wondered how on earth she
could have been so blind the first time she had met him. He was standing
at ease with his guests, but obviously trying to gracefully move them on
out to the garden, and glancing her way as if to indicate that he would be
coming over to see her as soon as the guests were out the door. Mae
watched, fascinated, as he gracefully directed one elderly hobbit towards
the front door. He looked so bright compared to all the other hobbits in
the room; so singular and fair. As if he were cut from a completely
different cloth than the common folk surrounding him. Perhaps it was his
youth or energy, Mae could not tell, but she could not keep her eyes off
him. He turned to come towards her. Mae blushed and quickly looked away so
that her expression would not betray her.
“Feeling yourself again?” he asked. Mae swallowed, hoping her own voice
would not waver.
“Oh, yes…” she said softly. “I am so sorry if I upset everyone. I don’t
know what came over me. I feel…” She paused and looked up at him.
“…better.” *How blue his eyes are.*She thought. *How fresh and
fine he is. What force in this world could ask to sacrifice such beauty?*Mae
drew a quick breath, but before Frodo could say anything else, she held
her hand out for him to take. Thinking she wished him to guide her, Frodo
took it. Mae closed her eyes for just a moment as her hand touched his,
but steeled herself and motioned for him to show her to the garden. As
they walked, Mae seemed almost not to see her surroundings, rather
trusting to Frodo to keep her feet where they should be. Her grip on his
hand was not the light touch of social necessity, but firm, like she drew
some strength or knowledge from it. It was a short walk to the garden
patio, through the small gate and to where the guest’s tables were set and
it was over too quickly for Mae. She did not let go his hand immediately
but turned and studied his face, burning it into her mind. Now it was
Frodo’s turn to be taken aback. Her eyes mesmerized him – they looked at
him so openly, he could almost fall into those depths. Frodo gaped and
stuttered a bit, at a loss for what to say, but feeling as if he should
say something. Mae smiled, but kindly – no, Frodo thought, more than
kindly. He felt a bit of alarm as it began to dawn on him what the nature
of his own reaction was beginning to be.
“Excuse me!” he managed to get out. He took back his hand and hurried
towards the garden gate, nearly tripping over a chair on his way, and
catching himself most ungracefully. Over his shoulder he saw that Mae was
still watching him, but unlike the other guests who had noticed it, she
did not laugh at his near fall. Frodo took an unsteady breath and stumbled
up the stairs to the entrance of Bag End. Bilbo was still shaking hands
with guests. Frodo took up his position beside him, but when the older
hobbit spoke to him, it took Frodo a moment to realize he was being
addressed. “What?” he asked still a bit breathless.
“What’s the matter, Frodo?” Bilbo asked. “Were you having difficulties
with some of our guests?”
“NO!” Frodo said quickly. Too quickly. Bilbo looked at him suspiciously.
“I mean,… it was nothing,” Frodo assured him. “I was escorting some of the
ladies to the garden.” Bilbo raised an eyebrow in amusement but said
nothing. Frodo was still too flustered to take notice.
The party was deemed a success by all who attended, for the food was
plentiful and of very high quality and there was ale and good wine that
lasted far into the evening. After the main meal, gifts were presented to
the guests and Dore was thrilled with the soft leather bag she received.
Mae had gotten a small brooch shaped like a butterfly with emerald green
glass in the wings. It was dwarvish work and very lovely. She was
astonished and flattered at the gift, and wondered which of the two
Bagginses had chosen it for her. Frodo, after an initial flustered blush,
avoided Mae all evening. Though it didn’t seem to deter her, he noticed.
She watched him either openly or in sidelong glances from beneath her long
brown lashes. Frodo was worried that by his gift and attention he had
somehow given her a false impression. But what he found even more
disquieting was the growing feeling that perhaps he had unconsciously
wanted to impress this pretty hobbit maid. That thought was what was
making him the most uncomfortable. He had never before had such a visceral
response to anyone nor had he ever felt quite so out of control of his own
feelings. It never crossed his mind that Mae herself might have been to
blame for some of them – being a good gentlehobbit, he took all the
responsibility for her obvious interest upon himself and the guilt he felt
made him completely unable to look at her.
As the guests departed, Frodo made a point of busying himself with
‘goodbyes’ and ‘thank you for comings’, carefully avoiding eye contact
with Mae even when he took his leave of her. She did not seem upset or put
off, but still looked at him openly with thought and wonder. Though
usually a well-spoken lad, he found words failed him utterly when he stood
before her – a fact that Bilbo noted with much more obvious amusement this
time than before. At least the thought of Bilbo being amused at him, took
Frodo’s mind in another direction and he was able to regain some composure
to complete his duties as host gracefully until all the guests had
departed.
Bilbo said nothing concerning Frodo’s behavior, for which Frodo was very
grateful. He wasn’t sure what he would be able to say in response, at any
rate. That night he found sleep didn’t come easily. It was as if the
darkness had given license to his imagination and the thoughts that
drifted unbidden into it fueled his embarrassment. It wasn’t until late in
the night that he drifted off in exhaustion, and if he still dreamed then,
at least he was too tired to remember them.
TBC
Go To Chapter Three
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