A Memory in Hand by Himring

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Fanwork Notes

For the "Start to Finish" challenge.

The prompt (first sentence) used is: 

There was no possibility of taking a walk that day. 

(Charlotte Bronte, Jane Eyre)

 

Warnings: chiefly for a darker background, with hints of the losses of the Dagor Bragollach

Fanwork Information

Summary:

Finduilas  is still trying to settle in in Nargothrond, when she receives a gift from Finrod.

Major Characters: Finduilas, Finrod Felagund

Major Relationships:

Artwork Type: No artwork type listed

Genre: Family, General

Challenges: Start to Finish

Rating: Teens

Warnings: Mature Themes

Chapters: 2 Word Count: 1, 016
Posted on 9 November 2019 Updated on 9 November 2019

This fanwork is complete.

Chapter 1

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There was no possibility of taking a walk that day. That is, it would have been perfectly possible to promenade sedately along the corridors of Nargothrond, admiring her uncle’s carving along the walls and pillars. You could go quite a distance, that way; in fact, if you were feeling really restless, apparently you could have gone on a long trek into the heart of the hill, until all decoration and amenities ceased, and you could explore caves and fissures untouched by the hand of elf or dwarf. Probably Finduilas would do that, one day. It sounded quite interesting, in its way, and possibly even useful.

But that was not what Finduilas would consider a walk. A walk was to saunter down from the castle gates down to the bridge, stopping to lean on the parapet and gaze into the depths of the fast-flowing waters of the river Sirion, then continue to the other side and either turn to the right on the bank or straight on, a short way into the hills…

Well, she had had no opportunity to take a walk like that for quite some time even before Tol Sirion fell, and it was fairly clear she never would again. But the narrow path through the rocks along the river gorge of the Narog would have done, instead, or one of the faint tracks made by wandering goats and discreet hunters across the Talath Dirnen. But neither of those was an option today.

‘The weather is really horrible outside, today, anyway,’ her father had said. It was only by that she had known he felt the same way as she did. One did not complain about such things, of course. For one thing, that would have been really rude to their hosts.

Not that Uncle Finrod would have been pleased to learn that they still considered themselves guests here!

‘Consider this your home, please, my dear,’ he had said to her. ‘It is yours because it is mine, as much as I can make it so.’

That was all very well, but it did not give you a licence to complain because you would have liked to go out and get all wet and dirty in the wind and the rain and you couldn’t, because it was not safe. Not with everything else that was going on, everything else that had happened…

Finduilas blinked as she unexpectedly saw her uncle coming towards her and hurriedly tried to correct her expression, just in case she had allowed herself to slip and look in any way sulky or discontent. She was fairly sure her uncle was meant to be somewhere else right now, on important business. In fact, if she put her mind to it, she would remember what it was, but just now she was distracted.

‘Finduilas, my dear,’ said Finrod. ‘I have a gift for you.’

Finduilas was astonished—not because Finrod was not generous. Her uncle had already heaped gifts on her. She was dressed in his gifts from head to toe. Not that she hadn’t needed his gifts, for she had arrived with little more than she stood in. But what more could there be to give, still!

‘I think,’ said Finrod gently, ‘that you have been sometimes very homesick and trying to be adult and brave and not to show it.’

Finduilas could feel herself looking guilty.

‘You have done really well,’ said Finrod reassuringly. ‘But you are still young. And it is hard to have to be brave all the time and perhaps not entirely good for you…’

His eyes were sad—they were all of them sad now so much of the time—but also very kind.

Finduilas finally put out her hand and Finrod put the gift in it. She had been concentrating so much on his face that she had guessed little of what he held, but it was not large. It was quite heavy in her hand and round and smooth—a small glass ball.

‘Have a look,’ urged Finrod.

Finduilas brought it up to her face.

It was home—Tol Sirion—the island in the river, the castle rising above it, the arch of the bridge, the view of the valley opening out in the background, all very small and very clear. To Finduilas, gazing raptly, it seemed that she could hear faintly the sound of rushing water, the wind in the pines on the slopes, a snatch of song blown across from the castle walls.

Home in a glass ball, whole and safe from what Sauron had done to it and was still doing to it. She looked up at her uncle again. She knew, of course, but it was easy to forget, between times, that it was he who had built Tol Sirion, the first place he had built in Middle-earth, even though he had moved on quite soon to Nargothrond, agreed by everyone to be a greater work by far. But all the details were so accurate, so right—maybe he had made the glass ball, in spare moments between all his much more important business, because he needed to, himself, and only then decided that she was the one who ought to have it.

‘Thank you very much, Uncle,’ she said, holding the ball tightly.

That night she cried herself to sleep, curled up around it.

Tomorrow she would go and explore the caves.

Epilogue

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Finduilas wriggled through the crack. She thought she might be the first person to do so. Few even among the Noldor and Sindar would be slender enough.

‘Hey,’ said an outraged voice.

It did not sound elven. It did not sound like an orc either.

Finduilas considered her options. Cautiously, she peered out of the crack and around.

There was faint daylight on the other side and someone who looked like a dwarf, but not very much at all like Finrod’s friends from Belegost.

‘Who are you and what are you doing here?’

‘I might ask you the same question.’

‘I am Finduilas.’

The short, thin dwarf was already beginning to look less angry and more curious, although still cautious.

‘I am Khim.’

 


Chapter End Notes

The epilogue is not meant to happen right the next day, just to show that she did explore the caves.

I once read a fic in which Finduilas makes friends with Ibun and he shows her a secret back way out of Nargothrond.

It is perhaps a bit more morbid to let her meet Khim, as we know how Khim died... But I liked the idea of Khim of having a bit more of a life before he was shot.


Comments

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The snow globe is a stunning image, but still a horribly sad one--I want one of those! But, the wound might be a little fresh for her to appreciate the gift without feeling even sadder! (Although, it is his kindness and her feeling welcomed and cared for which is most important) I'm just getting over being really sick! Might be that I am the one that is feeling fragile and projecting it onto Finduilas who is also one of those horribly tragic characters. And then you end with Khim! Now there is a happy story (not!). You certainly did engage me. And there is no denying that beautiful as Nargothond was and as much as I would like to imagine exploring it, Finduilas must have been pretty shattered when she arrived there. 

It a good story and definitely elicited a lot of feelings from me--that's what one wants, right?

*I see you did warn! No matter, since you wrote, I would have read it with even a stronger warning! 

Thank you very much for engaging with the story and for your comments, Oshun!

I agree that the gift of the globe is something of a risk, when the pain is still so fresh (Orodreth is clearly taking a different approach). That is why I wanted to bring out that it comes out of a shared grief, in part, and that Finrod has also lost Tol Sirion, although he did not feel about it in quite the same way. I'm glad you feel he is being kind and caring, despite your reservations about his timing! (I do think Elves would make the best snow globes ever, if they went in for them!)

Yes, I think Finduilas would have been shattered when she arrived, especially if she experienced the siege. (I have dodged the question, so far, of whether she has lost her mother and, if so, how recently, but she doesn't seem to be around.)

Khim's fate in canon is not at all a happy one. But I do like the fanon of Finduilas (or anyone else from Nargothrond, really) finding out more about Petty Dwarves and not just being oblivious about them and that does not, I think, have to be an unhappy story in itself.

 

This is quite sweet even though it's sad-- I always like Finrod and Finduilas when they're written well, and you've written them well. But of course there are always shadows creeping around the edges of the light. But of course I should really expect that sort of thing when I go to read Silmfic. All this to say, I liked this a lot!