6 |
Finding |
He had heard her voice. Faltering. He sat in his bed, his old heart pounding like a drum. Had he heard her voice? In all those centuries they had been parted, not a single day had passed – that he had not thought of her, had not remembered her, had not longed for her. With all of his heart, all of his soul. He missed her still. Her voice. He would always miss her. She was a part of his soul. Without her, he felt lost. How often had he imagined the call of her voice, since he had returned to the circles of this world, where there was air again to carry the sound of her voice. How often had he rushed down to the sea, plunging into the cold waves chasing white gulls. How often had he felt the temptation of rowing across the tides of time to find her white tower. How often had he in loneliness and longing barely stayed the hand on the knife. How often had he been set on acting the fool, as he had been wont to do before, when first he dwelt in Arda, a memory of her had come upon him. A memory of HER. A cocked head, white hair flowing. Knife had stayed in the cupboard. In time it became easier. This time around he was fully human after all. Although he had the feeling that the Valar had messed it up once again. He had not been used to counting the years at first. Well, perhaps not the full capacities. But he was neither pissing himself yet, nor forgetting his name. Nor hers. As if he could ever forget her name! Had that been her voice? He pressed his hand over his heart, trying to calm the frantic pounding in his chest. For the first time in millennia he knew that he was not young anymore, and never would be again. The cry echoed in his ears. He could hear it in the rhythm of his heart, his racing, almost faltering heart. Anguish. Nononononononono. Her cry should be joy! JOY! He was out of the bed and running to the door before he realized what he was doing. He never stopped to think. Dawn colored the eastern sky in pale pastels. He raced across the cool, damp sands of the beach. But this time he was sure. It had been her voice. Her sweet, clear voice. Calling for him. And if he had only imagined it, what the hell. What did it matter, if he made a fool of himself one more time? After all, that was what he was. A fool. After thousands of years. The boat skipped in the rushing of the tide. A beautiful, magical light, pure as the stars. He had ceased noticing the light many years before. His soul was free. Had she, oh, could she be with him, he would at last, at long last be at peace. He left the lighthouse behind him, rowing his small boat far out onto the open sea. Still the cry he had dreamed of, the cry he desired above all other things, echoed in his ears. He answered the cry. In an old man's croaking, breaking voice, he called for her, as he had called for her so many times before. "Elwing!" He called. "My love!" But already his voice was exhausted, rough and breaking, his frail old man's breath almost spent. "Elwing!" There! ELWINGELWINGELWINGELWINGELWINGELWINGELWINGELWINGELWINGELWING! A pain such as he had never felt before exploded in his chest. ELWINGELWINGELWINGELWINGELWINGELWINGELWINGELWINGELWINGELWING! Was she dead she could not be dead how could she be here dead she could not be here she could not be dead how could she be here she must not be dead she must not be dead she has to live she has to live how can she be here how can she be here she must not be dead she has to live! ELWING! He caught slender pale arms in his rough callused hands. A bit withered that mouth. To give life. Golden eyes opened. This time it had not been a dream. |
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