The quiet sound of the door being opened again woke
Sam from his dreaming. Sunlight was just beginning to touch the tips of
the Misty Mountains far to the east and had yet to reach the rim of the
steep sided valley of Rivendell. Dim light filled the room from the vast
open windows and the sound of dancing water met his ears. He looked up,
rubbing sleep from his eyes and realizing he was half fallen out of the
chair. His back moaned in protest and he felt worse than he had after any
of the nights he’d slept in the wilds. He looked about and noticed Bilbo
had crept in holding a tray upon which a warm breakfast was laid. Oatmeal
and cakes, butter and strawberries, tea and a large glass of milk were
crowded on its surface. He also had a bowl of some thin broth that Sam
surmised was for his master. He wondered if they would be able to feed it
to him.
“Good morning, Mr. Bilbo.” he said softly, not
wishing to either startle the old hobbit or disturb his master.
“And you are up too, Sam!” Bilbo’s worried
expression faded into a smile for a moment and he looked genuinely glad to
see him. “I’ve just brought a few things for you both. The elves would
have gotten to it, but I wanted to come in and see how my lad was doing.”
He set the tray on the table, right where the surgical tools had been set
the night before, and bent to look closely at Frodo. Sam shook his head,
trying to get the unwelcome images of the previous evening’s activities
out of it, and stood stiffly.
“Well, either I was tireder than I felt, or he slept
a deal better than he has in a fortnight. The elves must have done some
good for him.” Sam decided it was probably not the best idea to go into
details of what ‘good’ for both their sakes. He most certainly wished to
forget them. He shuffled over to the bed behind where Bilbo stood and
looked over his shoulder.
Bilbo had Frodo’s cheek cupped in his hand and was
gently stroking it with his thumb. At first, Sam thought Frodo completely
unresponsive, but then he saw the pale brow crease ever so slightly and
Frodo leaned into the caress as if it comforted him. Bilbo said nothing
but continued to stroke the wan cheek, a tender and joyous smile
blossoming on his face. Sam, too, was moved to joy and his eyes watered
with the beginnings of tears. Though his master was still unconscious, he
seemed to know his uncle’s touch and yearned towards it as a child
reaching for the loving arms of a parent. Sam wiped his eyes and fell
back, leaving the two of them alone together, then eased himself silently
out the door.
When he’d found the washroom, and cleaned himself up
for breakfast, Sam returned to find Frodo propped up on several pillows
and Bilbo sitting beside him carefully ladling broth into his mouth. It
was a messy business, for Frodo had not returned to consciousness, but
Bilbo was patient. He had one hand on Frodo’s jaw and would pull it down
to tip a spoonful of the liquid in, and then push it up so that the broth
slid back in his throat and Frodo could swallow it. Bilbo had draped one
of the towels from the night before around his neck to keep the inevitable
spills from dampening the sheets and he talked as he worked, speaking to
Frodo as if the other hobbit were awake and could answer him. Sam crept
over to the tray, picked up the plate of cakes and the butter and hunkered
down in the chair he had slept in to eat them.
“There, that’s a good lad…” Bilbo cooed softly.
“You take this all and you’ll be up and about in no time. Lord Elrond put
things in it to help heal you. Strong elvish medicine – nothing better in
the world, I’d say.” He took a corner of the towel and wiped at a bit of
broth that fell from Frodo’s lax lips. “I haven’t done this for you in
years, my boy.” he continued. “Do you remember just after you came to
live with me and you were so sick? I’d never cared for a young one before
and I was so terribly frightened I would lose you, but we managed, you and
I. Got you back on your feet.” He paused and stroked Frodo’s cheek
again. “Did I ever tell you,” he said in a tender whisper. “How happy it
made me to see you hale and whole again?” He looked so lovingly upon
Frodo’s face that it almost broke Sam’s heart. “If any had come from
Buckland after that to claim you back, I’d have fought ten Smaugs to keep
you….” The old hobbit’s voice was growing husky, but he straightened,
cleared his throat and collected himself. “Now, let’s see if we can
finish this, shall we?”
Sam ate in silence, but managed to consume cakes,
oatmeal, berries and tea before even thinking that Bilbo might have
brought some of the meal for himself. He apologized profusely; blushing
beet red to the collar, but Bilbo just laughed and assured him that he was
welcomed to whatever he could eat (and that was a great deal considering
the past days of hardship and deprivation). Sam was still flustered, but
drank down the glass of milk greedily and wiped his mouth on his cuff.
“Where are Mr. Merry and Master Pippin?” he asked at
last putting the empty dishes back on the tray. Bilbo laughed again.
“They were still abed, when I looked. Though my
guess is they’ve found the kitchens by now and are making themselves known
to the elves who work there. Though I’m certain we’ll see them presently
looking in on young Frodo here.” He paused, smiling happily, seemingly
delighted to be in the company of old friends and kin again. Then Sam
noticed a queer gleam beginning in his eye. “You know, Sam, my lad,” the
old hobbit said strangely. “I left a small trinket in Frodo’s care – a
very plain gold ring. I thought Frodo would be bringing it with him, but
I can’t seem to find it. It seems the elves have taken it away.”
The tone of Bilbo’s voice remained light, but Sam
felt the chill as if the wind had suddenly stolen into the room. “What do
you say?” he asked, and would have opened the wooden box to look, but some
sense warned him that that would be the exactly wrong thing to do.
Bilbo’s face had changed. No longer was he the kindly old gentle hobbit,
caring deeply for his stricken heir, but a hungry, craven thing,
desperately seeking what he had thought was already at hand. “Well, Mr.
Bilbo,” Sam answered quietly trying to keep his own voice carefully
neutral. “After the troubles we’ve had, maybe that’s the best thing for
it, so to speak? Even Mr. Frodo thought it was better left to higher
folk, if you take my meaning, sir.”
Bilbo scrutinized him, seeming to wonder at how much
Sam had been told or guessed but after a moment he sighed and the fit
seemed to have passed. “Yes, yes, of course, you are right. I guess I
just wanted to see the thing again, after all these years.” He looked as
if he would ask another question, but then shook his head, obviously
deciding against it. Sam almost breathed an audible sigh of relief. He
had always considered himself to be a truthful sort. If Mr. Bilbo had
asked outright, he didn’t think he could lie, but something told him that
he dared not tell his old master the ring lay not two feet from him. If
Bilbo thought it was in the hands of the elves, so much the better.