Title: Purple takes Gold
Author Name: Keiliss
Contact Email: scrapcat21@gmail.com
Beta Name: Red Lasbelin
Main Characters: Ereinion, Turgon, Namo
Rating: PG
Genre: drama
Word Count: 2,306
Summary: “… and they passed then to the halls of Mandos, there to find peace
and healing from their travail.”
Original Request: Ereinion, Turgon, purple and gold
****
“Mage to herald four.”
The walls of Mandos stretched off into the distance, fading into a kind of
misty amorphousness. People came and went or sat talking in small groups,
but it never felt crowded and was so quiet that the distant ripple of
flowing water could always be heard. Ereinion assumed the sound was meant to
be soothing, but in fact it was working his last nerve. He wondered if there
was any point in complaining to their host. He suspected not.
He studied the board, which resembled a chess board but wasn’t. Rather like
the game itself which, despite its purple and gold pieces, was close enough
to chess to confuse the unwary. He pushed an amethyst figure on an octagonal
base firmly across several squares. “Warrior to minion three,” he responded.
Turgon blinked at him in confusion. “You can’t do that, it’s against the
rules.”
Ereinion frowned. “No, it’s not. It’s a warrior, you move it in a straight
line? Which I did?”
“Yes, yes, but you can’t move a piece into danger. Look, I can take it with
that one – and that one…”
“If I want to put one of my pieces in danger, that’s my business, right?”
Ereinion wished they at least had the illusion of being able to eat and
drink, because a good cup of something red, full-bodied and grape-related
was just what he needed right about now.
“You have to protect your pieces.” Turgon was getting agitated, tapping his
fingers on the table at the edge of the board.
“No,” Ereinion told him equably. “What you have to do is win the game.
You’re going to lose a few pieces along the way, best you be the one to
decide which, wouldn’t you think?”
Turgon shook his head fiercely. “No, that’s not the way. The way is to keep
your pieces safe. See? I have a ring of defenders along the outside of my
territory, and they will cut down anyone who tries to reach the vulnerable
pieces.”
“The mage isn’t vulnerable,” Ereinion snorted. “He can move to any square on
the board, take out any piece that catches his fancy. He’s wasted, stuck
away in that corner. He should be out there leading by example.”
Turgon carefully moved a gold warrior to close up a gap he had just noticed.
“He is very powerful, yes,” he concurred. “That is why she needs to stay
where he is as a last line of defense for the queen.”
Ereinion propped his elbows on the table’s edge and rested his chin
broodingly on interlinked fingers. He studied the board again for a while,
then looked across at his uncle. “So let me get this right. You could send
your army to wipe out my pieces and capture my queen, but instead you
maintain a defensive line and just move them backwards and forwards. You’re
keeping the important ones safe but not inflicting any damage on the enemy.
You plan to win this – how? Hoping I’ll get tired and go lie down? This is
Mandos - we’re dead, we don’t get tired.” Not physically, anyway. Mentally
now, some people could be what you might call wearying.
Turgon looked outraged. “Who do you think you are talking to? Mind your
tongue. I will win this in my own time and in my own way. Nothing hasty or
ill-conceived. “
Ereinion pulled a face and moved his hand over first one and then another of
his pieces. They were spread out over the board, some at considerable risk,
some just left in odd places at the conclusion of unsuccessful attempts to
breach the defensive ring around the opposing queen. “I’m talking to my
father’s brother, one adult to another, in fact one king to another. Wasn’t
aware I had to do the ‘please, sir, excuse me, sir’ thing. Haven’t done that
since I was a boy and Círdan was in one of his fussy moods.”
He spotted a piece off to the side of the board and settled on it
triumphantly. This one used a combination of three moves, two squares along,
one down, one diagonally, and had taken him a while to master. Moments
later, one of Turgon’s minions had been taken. “Check,” Ereinion said
cheerfully. There were other terms used in this game, but he and Turgon had
settled on the accustomed check and checkmate as being comfortable in their
familiarity.
“What? No. No, no, no!” Turgon’s eyes darted frantically about the board,
looking for a counter that refused to present itself. “No, that’s not right.
I had that whole side covered, how is that possible…?”
“Easy to overlook something,” Ereinion said. “You just need to remember that
and improvise when the time comes.”
The former king of Gondolin was muttering away to himself, agitated. Finally
he made the obvious move, which was to place the mage where he could
threaten the warrior. Ereinion’s eyebrow twitched. “You sure you want to do
that?” he asked. “You can reverse that and do something else if you want.
We’ve got – plenty of time.”
“Oh yes, reverse it and your warrior will be right there next to my queen.”
Ereinion shrugged. “Yes, so? It has to move four squares, remember. Just
keep an eye on it. This gives you a chance to expand out of that corner, you
know.”
Which was about as helpful as he was prepared to be.
Turgon looked at him uncertainly, his deep blue eyes troubled, then gave his
neat, dark head a miniscule shake and sat back from the board. “I know what
I’m doing,” he declared stiffly. “Rather safe than sorry.”
Ereinion, whose eyes were also blue but far lighter and whose dark hair hung
in a disordered, almost-curly mane, sighed and looked down at his somewhat
shorter uncle. “Have it your way then.”
It was over quickly: Ereinion moved an innocuous piece a few squares, giving
every appearance of trying to buy time while he did some thinking, Turgon
hurriedly used his mage to take the warrior, and Ereinion smiled at him just
a touch smugly, resting his fingertips atop his unnoticed herald. “Check,”
he said, indicating the line that stretched from the herald to his
opponent’s queen. “In fact, checkmate.”
Turgon looked from the board to him in horror. “You can’t do that!” he
stated. “You can’t do that. It’s – it’s not fair! I did it all right. I kept
them all safe. You can’t do that!”
* * * * *
To house all the dead of both the first and second born, the Halls of Mandos
must have been huge, yet somehow Ereinion had no trouble getting where he
needed to go. There were no signposts, no landmarks, but a few twists and
turns down quiet, blue-carpeted, cream walled passages, and he was outside
what he thought of as Lord Námo’s office.
Being far from stupid, he was well aware the room was designed for his
benefit and not its inhabitant. No doubt it looked very different to the
elegant, black haired Vala who sat on the far side of the desk reading from
a stack of tastefully illuminated sheets of parchment. The single chair for
guests was upholstered in soft green leather, and it fitted Ereinion
exactly. He sprawled down into it without waiting to be invited.
“That’s it,” he said flatly with a dismissive hand gesture. “I’ve done my
best, but I’ve had enough now.”
Námo said nothing, although he put down the pen he was holding and professed
a look of polite interest.
“It’s always the same,” Ereinion grumbled. “Offer him a game of whatever
takes his fancy, set it up, start playing, and the longer we go on, the more
defensive and cautious he becomes – like a bunny that’s too scared to leave
its warren. And pompous. And full of it!”
“Yes, yes,” Námo said. “We discussed this before you began mentoring him. It
takes time for a soul to work through the baggage accumulated in life and to
accept its lessons or recover from its hurts. When – Gondolin? – was
overrun…”
“…the shock tipped the balance of his already shaky mental health and he
hasn’t recovered yet. Yes. I know. Even though he’s been here for well over
four thousand years as we measured it in Middle-earth. Which is a damn long
time, let me add.”
Námo shrugged delicately, the merest shifting of shoulders under perfectly
tailored cloth. “Some cases take longer than others. We – I thought that
perhaps spending time with a kinsman, one whose approach to combat was…
somewhat different than his, might help him see there are more ways than one
to solve a problem, and that mistakes are there to be learned from, not
hidden behind.”
“Wasn’t it your brother Ulmo who told him to go hide inside the mountains
like that?” Ereinion growled, irritated. “Do you have any idea how much
damage that did to the stature of the high kingship? It was years before
people took me seriously.”
Námo gave him a sharp look. “My brother might have suggested a safe haven,
but at no time did he suggest blocking all escape routes. That was Turgon’s
own act of unsurpassed brilliance.”
“Whatever,” Ereinion snapped. “Anyhow, watching Uncle trying to wiggle free
of the obvious is starting to wear a bit thin. How much longer do I have to
stay here? I lived a decent kind of life, I died trying to sort out one of
your renegades, don’t see why I’m stuck here helping someone whose actions
at Alqualondé were – open to question.”
Námo considered his nails, buffed one briefly against his sleeve, then
looked up out of eyes blacker than night’s pit. “You wish to leave?”
His voice was flat, inflexionless. An elf made of sterner stuff would have
flinched and backed down, but Ereinion Gil-galad had faced Sauron with
nothing but a spear – well, there’d been a sword at his belt, but he’d had
no chance to get his hand to it before there was a flare of blinding light
and then… nothingness. He stared back, an eyebrow raised in a manner that
his former aides would have recognised as preface to a bitingly sarcastic
outburst, worthy of Elrond or even Erestor.
The Vala glared at him, before rising and stalking through to an inner
room. Ereinion waited. Námo returned with a sheet of parchment in his hand.
Resuming his seat behind the desk, he started reading. “Lived for just under
three thousand, six hundred years… not very long for an eternal being, is
it? he asked, glancing up.
“You want to compare that to the average life expectancy of the male side of
my family?” Ereinion retorted dryly.
“Quite. King in Exile, born in Middle-earth… half Sindar?” Eyes flicked
across Ereinion. “Yes, the hair. Fought Sauron and his minions, departed
corporality due to an attempt to…” Námo stopped, read some more. “Oh, I
never noticed this part before. You ran at that lunatic Sauron with a spear
and you were – surprised to find yourself here? Really?” Námo’s face took on
a nostalgic expression. He was almost smiling. “I remember him from the old
days – all glide and purr and steel claws. And that hair!”
Ereinion cleared his throat and looked pointedly at the file Námo was meant
to be reading. The Vala shrugged and resumed skimming the details. “Been an
exemplary guest, assisted in the rehabilitation of at least two fëar…”
“Ecthelion, right? Where is he anyhow? Haven’t seen him around in…” Time
moved at a different rate for the dead, he remembered. “For ages,” he
concluded hastily.
“We had him rehoused some time ago,” Námo replied. “Placed him with a very
nice couple in Tirion to get him started again before reuniting him with his
former family.”
Ereinion had been leaning forward, trying to read the file upside down. Now
he glared. “Nice for him. Now, when can I…?”
“You? Oh you can go now if you’d like. There seems to be a suggestion that
you be rehoused in the shortest time decent, a request in my wife’s hand, in
fact. She gets these little fancies now and then,” he confided with a fond
look. He dipped his pen while he was speaking, signed neatly, then held out
the sheet casually.
Rich cream parchment, solid black ink - Erestor would like it, Ereinion
thought vaguely. “What do I do with this?”
“Nothing at all. I thought you might want to take a look before you leave.
You’ll sleep now, and when you wake, I believe you will experience something
normally described as a ‘crashing headache’. Someone will look after you –
you have an extensive family, some of whom are former guests here. Thank you
for your help with your uncle. It has been a pleasure working with you.”
He smiled and made a small gesture with his fingers, and Ereinion slid back
in his chair, eyes closing. Námo leaned over to retrieve the parchment which
he set down neatly on the pile containing business already attended to.
The figure in the ‘chair’ began to fade as the fëa was drawn to its new
although entirely familiar home. Námo leaned back, linked his hands behind
his head and closed his eyes. Who should he send along next to test Turgon’s
acting skills, he wondered. The Noldo seemed quite enthusiastic about
expiating the guilt he carried from Alqualondé by helping others work
through the veracity or otherwise of the choices that had led them here.
Gil-galad had not taken much time at all, he appeared to have a commendable
grasp on the principle of throwing the dice with the full knowledge that the
risk might not pay off. Refreshing really.
Not for the first time, Námo wondered if the moment had not perhaps come to
let Turgon loose on his uncle Fëanor.
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