Title: As Rivers of Water
in a
Author: Maggie Honeybite
E-mail: mhoneybite@yahoo.ca
Web page: www.ithilas.com/maggie/maggie.html
Pairing: Gil-galad/Elrond
Rating: R
Warning: m/m slash, wartime themes, angst
Beta: Tehta
Disclaimer: I do not own these characters, nor do I make any profit
from them. Any writing I do is done with a deep respect for Tolkien
and out of an abiding love for his Elves.
Feedback: Would make my day. Constructive
criticism
always welcome.
Archiving: Sure, archive away! Just let me know you're doing it.
Summary: During the siege of the Barad-dûr,
Gil-galad struggles with the burden of leadership and the grim reality
of
war. Elrond helps.
Acknowledgments: Many thanks to Tehta, who rocks, as usual.
SA 3437,
Third year of the siege of the Barad-dûr
A wave of stale, baking-hot air hit
Gil-galad as he entered the tent. Inside
was dim and stuffy, though the closed flaps at least kept out the dust. Longingly he thought of cool stone buildings
and shady trees -- a sight long missed after years in the field.
Peeling off his gloves, he reached to
undo the leather straps of his breastplate.
The side clasp gave him trouble, as usual. He
clenched his teeth, tugged, then yanked. "Curse
it!"
"Oh, give it here." Elrond
reached over and teased the clasp out
of its tangle. "You really ought to
have that fixed, you know. Terrible idea to go out to fight with even the smallest
of your
equipment not in good order. I
told you as much only yesterday."
"I know."
"That's what your squire is for;
you need only tell him." He grasped
Gil-galad's breastplate in both hands, getting ready to lift it free.
"I know, I said."
"And yet you have not--"
"Damn it, Elrond! Must you
go on at me like a scolding mother? I'll
take care of it." Gil-galad shrugged away
from the helping
hands. "In good
time."
"Fine."
Elrond turned, and began unfastening
his own armour and placing it neatly on its stand.
No doubt he would polish it later; he usually
left not even that small a task to his squire, claiming it calmed him
and
helped him think.
Irritated, Gil-galad dropped his
breastplate on his bunk. With the supply
convoy delayed and the enemy's raids increasing in ferocity, he had no
shortage
of concerns to occupy his mind. Only a
pedantic fool would burden him with the matter of a broken leather
strap.
Minutes passed. The silence
in the tent stretched like the
morning before a battle, the stifling air chafing the lungs. A fly buzzed in the far corner.
Standing motionless, Gil-galad traced the
insect's progress: up near the tent
roof, swoop down to the camp table, over near the washstand...
"This heat will be the death of
me," he said quietly.
Silence.
Elrond stood poised like a statue, his
fingers feeling a small dent in his shield.
Gil-galad crossed the width of the
tent. Louder, and in a tone he hoped was
more conciliatory, he said, "This heat--"
"I heard you the first time,
perfectly. I merely had nothing to say
in response."
"Not even that you wished the
blasted heat would hurry up and do its work so that you need no longer
put up
with the childish outbursts of your king?" Gil-galad took a lock of
Elrond's hair between thumb and forefinger, rubbing the strands to feel
their
texture. "Not even that?"
Elrond's eyebrow rose. His
mouth was still stubbornly set, but one
of its corners was beginning to inch upwards.
"Well, perhaps that, yes."
"I see. Awfully
disrespectful of you, I'd say. To think
such things of your lord."
A smile at last: the
crinkles around Elrond's eyes became more
pronounced, black grime marking the tiny lines.
It had been a long and dirty day.
"Perhaps you ought to behave in such a way as to command more
respect, then."
"Does my herald not find me
commanding enough?" Gil-galad hooked a finger in Elrond's belt and
pulled
him closer, staring intently. "Does
he not--"
Elrond's burst of laughter put an end
to the display of command.
Gil-galad frowned. "You
don't think me commanding?"
"On the field, certainly."
"And when we are alone
together?"
Elrond looked at him appraisingly and
made a show of wrinkling his nose.
"You know, for a High King, you do smell rather foul."
"Ha! After a hard day spent
in battle, that should
be no surprise. You aren't in much
better shape yourself: we both need a
wash."
"That we do. I'd call for
water if we could spare
it." Elrond's tone was
wistful. Despite his good humour, no
doubt he missed some of the pleasures of civilization.
"Today we can, I think. The
barrels are still half-full after last
week's rain, and our scouts have already intercepted the supply convoy;
it'll
be here by tomorrow. The soldiers are
getting a double water ration just now.
I daresay we can have a pail for our ablutions."
Elrond's expression softened. His
eyes met Gil-galad's, unguarded and
bright. "Do you think so?"
After centuries spent by Elrond's side,
that look was nothing if not familiar.
And yet, it had lost none of its potency. Once,
it had made Gil-galad long to perform
heroic feats, to show himself strong and worthy of his friend. Now his proofs of love were more
pragmatic. "I'm sure the men will
not begrudge us," he said.
"I'll go round up my squire; he cannot be far."
A few steps outside the tent were
enough to make him grateful for its shelter, stuffy though it was. The fine grey dust permeated everything,
settling on clothes and hair, pushing its way into mouth and nostrils,
scratching the throat.
Around him, camp life went about its
daily business. Soldiers sat in small
groups, some tending to their equipment, some eating stew out of metal
bowls. A ladle scraped against the
bottom of a pot not far off; a portable canteen had just been wheeled
past.
Seeing one of the soldiers rise in
respect, Gil-galad lifted his hand.
"At ease. You deserve your
rest."
The soldier settled back down, his
fellows bowing their heads before the High King. Their
movements bespoke a great fatigue; none
seemed keen to tease their comrades or tell lewd jokes.
They simply sat, quietly and patiently. A
few had bandages over fresh wounds.
Impressed with their equanimity,
Gil-galad moved on. The camp's main
thoroughfare, with its row of medical tents, was only a few steps away. He had barely turned a corner before nearly
colliding with one of the healers.
"My Lord!" The woman took a
step back, startled. Immediately she
appraised him with a
professional eye. "Do you require
assistance?" The question was
automatic, her voice, exhausted. Her
apron was spattered with blood.
"No, I am quite well. Simply
looking for my squire." Gil-galad paused,
taking in the tense lines
of her face. "How are things in
there?"
She looked back at the medical tents
and attempted a smile, which came out looking more like a nervous
twitch. "Lost seven today, so not very
good. And I had to take a leg off. The flesh was poisoned," she explained,
wiping her hands on the stained apron.
"One of Elendil's soldiers?"
"Yes. It sometimes happens
with mortals, when
poison gets into the blood. He behaved
admirably; hardly screamed at all. And
it looks as though he'll live."
"Have you no herbs, then, if you
didn't put him to sleep first?"
"Our supplies are all gone."
"Ah." Gil-galad couldn't
help glancing at her
hands. Fine and long-fingered, in
peacetime they might have mixed sleeping draughts or sorted plants in a
herbarium. Now they routinely performed
tasks which did not bear dwelling on.
"The supply convoy is on its way, with the medicines you
need," he said. "It should
arrive any day now."
She looked relieved. "That
is welcome news. I'll go tell my fellow
healers; they'll be
pleased. Oh -- and I saw your squire
helping with the water rationing only a few moments ago.
He's probably still there." She
bowed her head and hurried off.
The water-rationing tent would have
been hard to miss even for someone unfamiliar with the layout of the
camp. At this time of day it was busier
than a
street market in a port city: hundreds
of soldiers had gathered around it, crowding along the main camp road
in a
disorderly queue.
In front of the tent itself, a handful
of men were measuring the evening ration into flasks and pails, mindful
not to
waste a drop. Many of them were old;
quite a few were boys still too young to fight.
Camp duties were generally not the responsibility of the
fighting
troops.
Gil-galad was just in time to hear
someone deep in the crowd shout, "Hey!
You can't line up here!"
Immediately heads turned as men strained to see what the
commotion was
about; the shout had come a good distance from the head of the queue.
Two soldiers, whose beards marked them
both as Elendil's men, were facing each other.
One pointed at a tall Elven warrior in line beside him and said,
"I
have just as much right as he does!"
"Only the commander of a company
may fetch water for his subordinates.
And he needs written authorization for that," the other
replied. "Where's yours?"
"I fought hard today, and now all
I want is some water. Don't tell me I
need some bloody bureaucratic--"
"You do. Now go back to your
company and let your
commander deal with this, as is proper.
And stop stirring up trouble! No
authorization, no water; that's how it is."
There was a murmur of assent from the
witnesses -- all of whom, Gil-galad noticed, clutched official looking
slips of
parchment in their hands. Grumbling, the
offending soldier turned away, no doubt discouraged by the sight of the
armed
guard surrounding the tent. The
rationing recommenced, more or less in peace.
Gil-galad moved away from the
crowd. Though he had come here to
requisition extra water, he did not think he could in good conscience
do so
now. The men in line were as grimy as
he, and yet they would get barely enough of the precious liquid to
quench their
thirst. A king's privilege hardly seemed
right when measured against the suffering of his subjects.
He had just turned to leave when a
young voice called out, "My Lord!
Do you need me?"
Celunen, Gil-galad's squire, was
awkwardly manoeuvring a large barrel of water through the canvas tent
flaps, sleeves
rolled up and hair falling into his eyes.
Though he would no doubt make a fine warrior one day, for now he
was
still a skinny youth.
"It can wait," Gil-galad
said. "I can see you are needed
here."
"Your water--"
"I'll be in my quarters when you're
through. Just bring the ration there,
all right?"
The walk back through the camp was
slower and more dispiriting than Gil-galad's initial errand. The air felt grittier and unbearably
stifling, and the tents seemed even more tattered by the elements. Soldiers sat talking quietly in small groups,
just as they had before -- but what he had previously taken to be
forbearance
he now read as hopelessness. The horses
stared numbly at the ground, flanks sunken and eyes dull.
By the time he had reached his tent, even the
sight of his newly polished armour failed to lift his spirits.
Elrond was sitting on a low bunk,
fingers manipulating the side clasp on Gil-galad's breastplate. "I think I've almost got it.
Yes... there.
It shouldn't give you any more trouble." He
looked up.
"What's the matter? Couldn't
find Celunen?"
"No, I found him," Gil-galad
said quietly. He moved across the tent
toward the empty washstand, and gripped it with both hands. The metal bowl was dusty: it hadn't been
filled in days.
"Well?"
"He was helping with the water
rationing."
"You found him in the perfect
place, then."
Instead of answering, Gil-galad ran a
finger through the dust, drawing the image of an Elven bow such as his
archers
used in battle. The bow came out
misshapen;
he had never been gifted at the art of sketching. He
rubbed the dust between his thumb and
forefinger, and felt, rather than heard, Elrond approach behind him.
"Come." Elrond's hand rested
on his shoulder. "Speak your mind."
Gil-galad turned his head, looking his
friend in the eye. Elrond's face was
open and free of judgment; no one listened as well as he.
"No bath for us today,"
Gil-galad said. He paused.
"The men were all lined up, so many of
them. All thirsty and tired.
I thought, what right have we..."
"You have many rights. You
are their king."
"I am no less a soldier than
they."
"Yes, and no less
filthy." Elrond smiled
affectionately and gave Gil-galad's shoulder a squeeze.
"You're a good man, Ereinion. It's
why they trust you. They'd follow you
anywhere."
Something in Gil-galad's chest
tightened at those words. The sight of
the weary soldiers was still fresh in his mind.
"And just where am I leading them?
Can you tell me that? Into what
peril?"
Elrond's brows knitted together. He
let go of Gil-galad's shoulder and moved
toward his bunk. Then he sat down and
patted the rough blanket beside him. "Come,
sit."
Gil-galad grudgingly did as he was bid.
"Tell me," Elrond said,
"What choice do we have?"
"Choice?"
"It isn't as though we seek out
peril: it's all around us. Evil has
spread to the extent that it can no longer be ignored.
It is our responsibility to face it and fight
it."
The words were hardly a revelation;
Gil-galad had uttered them himself on more than one occasion. But it was one thing to speak thus within a
small circle of advisors and tacticians, while poring over maps laid
out on his
camp table. It was a whole other thing
to see the effect the siege had had on his men.
"Our situation is hardly
improving." Gil-galad lowered his
head into his hands. "It
is..."
"Far from easy," Elrond
said. "I know."
"It's bordering on hopeless,
actually. The supply convoys are having
difficulties getting through -- and without food, and especially water,
we
cannot go on for long. Sauron's raids
have increased in ferocity and frequency of late. His
fortress is strong, and he, powerful
within it. Our healers are lacking the
materials they need. Our horses are
starving. More soldiers die every day --
both ours and Elendil's -- and those who carry on are..."
Gently, Elrond rested his hand in the
small of Gil-galad's back.
"Those who carry on,"
Gil-galad continued, more quietly, "are exhausted and losing hope. Valar only know how long they will
endure."
"They will endure as long as they
need to."
"Elrond." Gil-galad shifted
until he was facing his
friend. "You and I both know that
the siege may last many more years. And
while enduring hardship is something I do not mind, asking it of others
is a
far greater responsibility."
"Is shouldering responsibility not
the duty of a king?" Elrond asked.
The two of them had discussed duty often enough for Gil-galad to
know
that no answer was required of him now.
Elrond continued, "I went over to the smiths' workshop the other
day, to get some of my equipment repaired.
There I overheard two soldiers talking:
one of Elendil's and one of yours."
"Fraternizing between the two
armies: that's certainly a good
sign. What did they say?"
"One's sword had been badly damaged
-- his reason for being there. He said
that he'd go on fighting with his bare hands if he had to.
The other shared the sentiment. So
I asked them why."
"And?"
Elrond's eyes slid from Gil-galad's
face to a spot in mid-air, somewhere between the bunk and his armour
stand. "One had had his entire
family slaughtered in Eregion. The other
witnessed his wife raped by Orcs. She was
expecting at the time, well into her sixth month. Neither
she nor the child lived through the
ordeal."
Gil-galad felt a familiar pressure
begin to churn in his gut. Not fear, not
sickness: it was more like coils of
anger, tightening and burning, inciting him to deeds of vengeance. He noticed he'd clenched his hand around the
blankets only when Elrond's fingers coaxed open his grip.
"They all have stories,"
Elrond said. "And they will fight
to their last breath, for it is not mere duty which spurs them on. They'll die if they must."
"As will we."
Elrond nodded. "If that's
what is asked of us,
yes."
Spoken out loud, the matter seemed
wonderfully straightforward. It was like
facing one's worst fear and seeing it clearly:
well defined, if undiminished.
Gil-galad felt the tension in his body ease a little. "Well, if you put it that way."
"Sounds almost appealing, doesn't
it?" Elrond said. "I always
find--"
But Gil-galad did not get to enjoy the
full extent of Elrond's wit, for just then a voice outside the tent
shouted,
"My Lord Gil-galad? I've brought
your water."
"Celunen, is that you? Come
in."
The canvas flaps lifted, revealing
dishevelled fair hair and blue eyes staring shyly.
"If I am disturbing you--"
"Don't be ridiculous, lad, you
aren't," Gil-galad said, getting to his feet. "Just
put the flask over here. Wait... hold on a
moment. What's that you've got there?"
The boy flushed to the tips of his ears
as he hefted a full pail and carefully carried it to the washstand. "I know you didn't request it, my
Lord," he said, directing his gaze at the general vicinity of
Gil-galad's
boots. "But, after you had left,
some of the soldiers in line started saying you should get an extra
ration. Soon the whole line was
clamouring for it, so..."
"This was the soldiers'
wish?"
"Yes, my Lord."
"You're sure."
"As Manwë is my witness."
"You didn't simply take the water
on your own initiative, without asking?"
"Oh, no!" The boy looked up,
alarmed. "The chief cook would have had my
head!"
His reaction was so heartfelt that
Gil-galad couldn't help but laugh. The
chief cook's authority -- and wrath -- must have been formidable. "Very well, I believe you.
Thank the soldiers for me. Oh, and,
Celunen?" he added, seeing the
boy move toward the exit. "Are you
thirsty?"
The look of longing on Celunen's face
eloquently answered the question.
Gil-galad unfastened the pail's wooden cover and dipped in a cup. "Here, have a drink."
The boy drank greedily, a few stray
drops running down his chin. "That
was good," he said when he was done, too thrilled to bother with "My
Lord."
"Come back this evening for another,
all right?" Gil-galad said, and watched his young squire bound out of
the
tent.
When the boy was gone, Elrond came
closer. "I told you your men were
loyal to you."
"I never said you were
wrong."
Elrond's eyes strayed to the pail
Celunen had brought. "Pour some into the washbowl, will you?" he
said. "We'll get clean."
"What am I, your
squire?"
Elrond smiled. "You'd make
an awful squire; you're far
too slovenly."
In good spirits, they prepared their
bath. Elrond rummaged under his bunk for
soap while Gil-galad poured four cupfuls into the metal washbowl. It wasn't much, but the sight and sound of
the water made him as eager as a youngster on the eve of his first
major
festival. To feel that cool liquid on
his skin, to have it wash away the dust and grime of battle...
"Don't waste any," Elrond
said solicitously, and handed Gil-galad a cloth. "Use
this."
Quickly they stripped off their tunics,
breeches and boots. Elrond stepped up to
the washstand first, immersed his cloth in the water and wrung out the
excess. Then he slowly ran the damp
fabric down Gil-galad's chest.
It was like seeing the sun after months
spent underground. Gil-galad had the
sudden recollection of his mother's hands gently pressing a compress to
his
scraped cheek. Such kindness water
contained, such freedom, such liquid ease.
"Here, let me." He
dipped his cloth and returned the favour.
The pleasure of the bath was rare, and
so they didn't speak for a while, focusing on the task of their hands
as they
worked their way down each other's bodies.
There were fresh injuries to take stock of:
a large bruise across Elrond's collarbone,
welts on Gil-galad's left shoulder.
These were mapped out with fingers and cloth, and with water --
the
unfamiliar made less foreign, pain neutralized by touch.
It was intimate, but too purposeful to be
erotic.
Not until they were almost clean did
the tenor of their actions change.
Gil-galad had been washing Elrond's stomach when he let his hand
drift
around, and squeezed the cloth he was holding over the small of
Elrond's
back. Water trickled down Elrond's
cleft; he looked up. Gil-galad smiled
then, and pulled him nearer, chest to chest.
"Don't mind me this close
now?" he murmured.
"No."
"I'll have to thank the men
later."
They kissed, leisurely but deeply,
tasting the light tang of salt. Elrond's
body was warm; the exertions of the day lingered in his bones in a
latent
heat. Gil-galad ran his hands down
Elrond's hips and around to his rear, feeling the tension in the tired
muscles. Then he took a half-step back
and squeezed water over Elrond's member.
A few drops of moisture are
nothing. Yet, dormant within them, lies
the power to leave entire continents submerged.
Elrond shivered, shut his eyes and breathed,
"Ereinion." Gil-galad barely
noticed the cloth falling to the ground as he took him in hand.
There was no question of indulging in
slow, lazy stroking. Once ignited,
desire between them flared and raced toward consummation.
It may have been true that death was all
around, that each day was horror and thankless toil, but -- by all the
stars in
the sky -- there was love to be made, here and now.
Elrond's body was pliant under
Gil-galad's touch, his lip curled in pleasure.
"Look at me," Gil-galad said, and when Elrond didn't, pushed
him against the edge of the camp table.
"Look at me. I want--"
"I know what you want."
Soap-slicked hands closed around
Gil-galad's erection. Elrond met his
gaze, and then slowly turned and braced his palms on the table. Gil-galad slid between his thighs.
They had always fit well. From
their early encounters, quick and
passionate in Lindon's freezing winter, through the centuries that
followed,
when fervour had been tempered by patience, their bodies had known how
to accommodate
one another. This time, too, it was as
natural as breathing. Gil-galad drove
his hips forward, Elrond's thighs holding him fast.
Pressed against Elrond's back, with its
shifting play of muscles, he reached for his lover's length and stroked
firmly.
"You do realize..." Elrond
began, but stopped when his breath caught.
"What?"
"Your grip. You grip Aeglos
the same way."
"Too rough?"
"No, I like it. I...
Oh." Elrond's head fell back
onto Gil-galad's shoulder.
"Like that?"
"Yes," Elrond said. After a
while he added, "Just don't
shout the battle cry."
Gil-galad snorted into Elrond's hair
and kept moving. The muscles that
gripped him were strong from hours spent on horseback, the hands that
steadied
them both on the edge of the table were proficient with a sword. What Elrond had said may have seemed
ridiculous, but was true: their actions
here were inextricably linked to those on the battlefield.
That's why it felt so right. They
had trusted one another with their
lives, time and time again; whom else would they trust with each
other's
pleasure?
Shouts of enjoyment were out of the
question, but Elrond's breath was fast and uneven now, and his arms
trembled. Gil-galad gripped harder. A bead of sweat slid down Elrond's neck; he
captured it with his mouth, licked at the salty skin, bit down.
Elrond went rigid. He
clenched his thighs and bucked into
Gil-galad's hand. A muffled groan came
from his throat; Gil-galad felt it resonate on his tongue as he thrust
once more
and lost himself to sensation.
A minute passed. They pulled
apart and leaned against the
table, breathing deeply.
"I'm glad there's some water
left," Elrond said. "We can
hardly leave this tent looking like this."
He ran a finger down the inside of his sticky thigh, frowning.
"Ulmo bless Celunen; he left us
well equipped." Gil-galad reached
for the washbowl. "Here, I'll do
it."
After a while, Elrond said, "I'm
not complaining, you know. About... all
this. I rather like it this way."
Gil-galad wrung out the cloth and bent
again to wash Elrond's stomach. "Really?
Don't miss the feather beds and scented oils?"
"No." Elrond gave him a
sidelong glance. "This way makes the blood
run
fast."
"Up against a table, within
hearing of the whole camp..."
"We were quiet."
"We were." Gil-galad
straightened up. He felt his smile waver. "One day we won't need to be," he
said softly.
"When this war is over, you
mean."
"Yes. When this war is over. We'll have wine and all the water we want,
and peace. And time."
They pressed their foreheads together
for a moment. The tent was quiet; all
that could be heard was their breathing, calm and measured, against the
distant
background of camp clatter.
Gil-galad said, "Unless, of
course, one or both of us--"
"Shh." Elrond placed a hand
across his mouth. "Don't say it. It need not be so."
Gil-galad met his eyes. The
look they exchanged felt like an anchor
dropped in a cherished harbour, a lifeline held by beloved hands. What else was there to do but trust in fate? He nodded.
"When this war is over," he said.
****
Notes:
1) In SA 3434, the army of the Last
Alliance marched south, won the Battle of Dagorlad and besieged the
Barad-dûr.
The siege lasted seven years, until SA 3441,
when Sauron was
finally overthrown. This story takes
place roughly halfway through the siege, which was no piece of cake: "...they laid siege to it for seven
years, and suffered grievous loss by fire and by the darts and bolts of
the
Enemy, and Sauron sent many sorties against them."
(Silmarillion, Of the Rings of Power and the
Third Age) As Mordor is hardly the land
of milk and honey, I have extrapolated that the army of the Last
Alliance
experienced water shortages, and had difficulty supplying provisions
for its
soldiers -- as most medieval armies in siege situations did. I am also assuming that Sauron's
"sorties" occasionally interfered with the supply convoys (as well as
inflicting casualties and messing with morale).
2)
Celunen got his name courtesy of Claudio's Sindarin Name Generator (http://www.elffetish.com/singen.html). The two elements of his name translate as
"source" and "water."
(Clever, no?)
3) Aeglos is, of course, Gil-galad
spear.
4) Manwë — a Vala, Lord of the Breath of Arda.
Ulmo — another Vala, Lord of Waters.
5) This story takes place in the same
universe as "In the Bleak Midwinter," which means that Elrond and
Gil-galad's relationship has been going on for quite some time. Unfortunately, the end of the siege also
marked the end of Gil-galad's life. So
much for "when this war is over" promises. :(
Sometimes, life just isn't fair.
END