Stars of Heaven's
Dome
(Menelrond Eleni)
by Cirdan
Chapter 1: Meeting Under Heaven's Dome
Elrond cursed quietly as his horse refreshed himself. They had ridden hard for
five days and still had farther to ride. They'd unknowingly crossed into woods
that were infested with the servants of Sauron, and the werewolves hunted them
when they rested. Surrocco was skittish. He drank from the stream and allowed
himself to rest but started at every sound. During the first encounter, he'd
been wounded. Elrond was no less anxious. His bow was cocked even as he rested
his weary body. He only had three arrows left. The werewolves had attacked at
every opportunity and forced them to ride circles around the woods. At first,
Elrond had been concerned that Gil-galad's message to Oropher concerning the
Union of Gil-galad and Elendil would be delayed. Now, he feared it would not be
delivered at all.
A werewolf leapt at Elrond from the bushes, but Elrond's arrow flew true to its
mark, and the werewolf died before it hit the ground. Behind the trees, Elrond
heard the baying of more werewolves. He sprung quickly onto his horse and shot
two werewolves that had come forth. It was already too late to ride away though.
A ring of werewolves had formed. They snarled and laughed, for they knew Elrond
to be out of arrows. They slowly approached to feed the fear of their prey. The
werewolves attacked. Surrocco kicked at them and kept the first two at bay, but
more closed in to join their friends. The battle was a blur. Elrond was too
tired to think straight. He defended himself clumsily with his bow as a melee
weapon. A werewolf knocked Elrond from his mount and, before he could stand, the
monster was atop him. Elrond was quick enough to shield his face with his arm.
The dreaded fangs tore into his forearm and nearly snapped it in two. The
werewolf suddenly went limp and fell heavily on top of Elrond. Elrond heard the
whisking of more arrows and thought that reinforcements from Gil-galad had
miraculously appeared, though he knew not how they could have known of his
predicament. The journey to Oropher's was to be long but not dangerous. Elrond
pried the jaws of the dead werewolf open and withdrew his arm. He pushed the
carcass from him, and by the time he stood, the battle was over. Over two dozen
werewolves lay dead. His horse Surrocco was also dead.
Elrond turned to face his rescuers, but the twin elves might as well have been
ghosts. Their clothes were distinctly fashioned from the First Age. Though they
must have been over 3,400 years old, the brown cloaks showed no sign of age.
Underneath, Elrond could see fine red silk with golden embroidery, and the
making of the collars alone was a lost art. The red glow of their wooden bows
was now fading. But most unusual of all was not their First Age raiment but
their faces. Elrond could have easily been their triplet brother. They studied
Elrond's face with just as much interest. The twin brothers looked at each other
then at Elrond again. Wonder filled their bright eyes.
Elrond's caution reminded him of where he was. There would be time enough for
introductions later. "I thank you for saving me, but let us talk elsewhere.
More werewolves may be coming." He hastily wrapped his arm with a strip of
his outer shirt.
The twins looked at each other. One made a low whining sound, and the other
nodded. They three elves began to sprint through the woods, and the twins paced
themselves according to Elrond's needs. Fear was greater than pain though.
Elrond scarcely felt the gaping wound in his arm, and the exhaustion he'd felt
earlier was temporarily overridden by his survival instincts. Once they were
safely hidden in a cave behind a waterfall, Elrond slumped to the floor. His arm
had stopped bleeding. His body had needed the blood to fuel his heart as they'd
run. The venom of the fangs was already coursing through his veins. He'd need
some elanor petals and some hot water. All this registered dimly in Elrond's
mind as he slipped into unconsciousness and delirium.
Elrond woke up several times during his fevered sleep. Always by his bedside was
Elros putting hot compresses to his forehead or wiping his skin with a piece of
cloth. He slipped into darkness again and then awoke to the taste of a floral
paste in his mouth. His brother held a bowl of cool water to his lips. Elrond
drank until his brother drew the bowl away. No, probably best that he didn't
drink too much. Elrond tried to put his hand on his brother's but found that he
could not move. He gave up and let the darkness wash over him once more.
The shadow of death passed over Elrond and at last his dreams were filled with
light. He dreamt of Rivendell and the trees that graced the sanctuary. Elrond
awoke. He found himself in a cave, and the sound of crashing water was close by.
He sat up slowly. His brother murmured something unintelligible and eased him
up. He brought a bowl of cool water to Elrond's lips, and Elrond drank
sparingly. His body was still recovering and should not have been treated to
extremes. Elrond gazed to his right arm and found the werewolf bite neatly
bandaged in bright red cloth. Underneath the bandage, he could feel his skin
closing. The venom had been leached out or he would not have awakened. He turned
back to his brother to face the eyes of a stranger. The memories of his
rescuers, the twin elves in First Age garb, returned to him.
"Thank you for saving my life. I am Elrond Half-Elven, herald to High King
Gil-galad and Lord of Rivendell."
The elf looked at him and replied in a low whine. "Ruscoel," the elf
said slowly at last. He pointed deeper into the cave, where his brother was
preparing food. "Ruscowe. We words not." The words that he chose were
of an arcane but high Sindarin tongue, but he spoke awkwardly and slowly. He
turned to his brother, who was approaching with some fruits and nuts, and whined
like a dog.
Ruscowe laughed and whimpered back t him. Then he burst into wordless song,
vocalizing in high and clear notes. He evoked images before Elrond, and in this
manner did Elrond understand them. Ruscowe offered the food to Elrond and
summoned an image of Elrond accepting the food and eating. Elrond did as he was
bid to do and listened carefully to their songs.
The twins were raised by foxes and had lived with the descendants of their fox
parents for countless years. Of course, they knew they were different, but the
foxes accepted them, especially because they were skilled and helpful in all
things. The years passed and generations of foxes passed before Elrond's eyes.
Then, at last, the generations ended and a whole lineage died out. The brothers
had then wandered westward and come to dwell in these woods. They'd chosen to
live in the cave behind the waterfall because it reminded them of their first
home, a vast dwelling within caves whose walls were decorated with tapestries.
Their fox parents had dwelt in dens, and when they'd outgrown the foxholes,
they'd taken to living in hidden caves near their fox brethren and grown used to
it. Only recently, in the last few days, had werewolves invaded their home.
Elrond put forth his powers of song. He asked where they'd come across their
clothes and weapons. They looked at Elrond with surprise, for they had
apparently not expected Elrond to be able to speak in wordless music and images.
Ruscoel called forth visions of their fox mother bringing a pack back to the
den, and in it were most of the items that they used to this very day, like the
bowl and their flint and steel. Their fox father had brought back the bows at a
later time with the foreknowledge that his elven children would not be able to
hunt with their teeth like foxes. The quivers were enchanted such that arrows
appeared once they'd been used. Ruscoel gestured at his own bright red and
golden clothing. He showed Elrond that the shirtsleeves were too long and the
pants legs had been rolled up.
These fine raiments were not that of just any elf, but Elrond kept that to
himself. The bright clothing was made from very finely woven silk and had
possibly been brought out of the West. The emblem of the House of Feanor
embroidered in the center made it clear that the raiments once belonged to
Maedhros, head of the House of Feanor. Elrond's childhood memories stirred, and
he remembered seeing Maedhros wear the same outfit in the past. Could Maedhros
have purposefully left his pack behind to be found by odd chance by the fox
mother? Elrond remembered the tale of the Second Kinslaying. Maglor had said
that Celegorm's men had left Dior's sons to die in the forest and that Maedhros
had sought long for them but without success. Was it possible that Elured and
Elurin, Elrond's uncles and Elwing's brothers, had lived? And that they were
these same strange elves who had been rescued by foxes? It seemed impossible,
and yet their resemblance to Elrond was too strong to be coincidence. Elrond
needed more time to discover the mystery of his saviors, but he also needed to
deliver Gil-galad's summons to Oropher and return to the war against Sauron.
Elrond had lost his bow and horse in the last encounter with the werewolves. He
would have to travel by foot. The lands should not have been so infested with
the fell servants of Sauron. There was no way of telling if the band of
werewolves was a rare situation. The two elves had already proven that they'd be
excellent bodyguards and, regardless of their identities, they would be assets
to the Union of Gil-galad and Elendil if they could be persuaded to join.
Elrond started by summoning visions of the werewolves that they'd encountered
earlier. He showed them the Dark Lord that controlled these beasts. The shadow
had caused the downfall of Numenor but had not perished. Instead, he'd returned
as a spirit to the east and again assumed control of Barad-dur. Elrond explained
that he needed to travel farther east still, into lands that were possibly
dangerous now that the Dark Lord had returned. He begged the twin elves to join
him on his journey and then return to Lindon, for their skills would be useful
in the war against Sauron and he believed them to be his close kin but needed
more time to discover their pasts.
In his eyes and posture, Ruscoel already agreed. He was about to vocalize his
agreement when his brother stopped him. Ruscowe spoke to Elrond of their fox
mother's prophecy. They'd obviously been left in the forest to die, and she
believed that mingling with elves and returning to their native society would
lead the twins to the Doom that they'd averted. She'd brought her family far
into the southeastern lands to avoid elves and later asked her elven children to
stay with her family of foxes. They'd stayed with their fox brethren and their
descendants because they were the only family the twins had truly known, but
they also remembered the words of their mother. Thus, when the fox lineage had
ended, they'd chosen to dwell in solitude in the forest rather than seek out
their own kind.
Ruscoel admitted that this was all true, but he told his brother, in visions so
that Elrond could also understand, that they'd also obeyed their mother because
they'd known themselves to be long sundered from their kin and unable to
communicate or fit into elven society. What's more, they'd never expected to
find their elven parents' kin. When Ruscoel sang of their parents, Elrond saw
clearly in his mind the images of Dior and Nimloth. He'd seen them in Maglor's
songs about the Second Kinslaying and the ruin of Doriath, when the sons of
Feanor had sought to possess the Silmaril won from Morgoth's crown by Beren and
Luthien. Ruscoel did not hear Elrond's gasp or chose to ignore it. He said to
his brother that no one, not even the animals, would be safe if the Dark Lord
reigned supreme. They should aid Elrond even if it led to the Doom foretold by
their fox mother.
Ruscowe nodded and hummed a soft song of calming, and it was then that Elrond
realized that the two were not twins. They were close in age and looked alike,
but Ruscowe was the older brother. Elrond had been fixed on thoughts of himself
and Elros and so had too easily assumed that Ruscowe and Ruscoel were twins.
Ruscowe sang that he also wanted to escort Elrond through the eastern lands and
join the elves in the fight against the Dark Lord, but he knew his brother to be
impulsive and had simply wanted to make sure that Ruscoel had thought through
his decision. Now that Ruscowe was certain of his brother's resolve, he informed
Elrond that they would, indeed, return to their elven kindred.
Elrond responded with words but did so in song that conjured visions so that he
could be understood. "Thank you. A fortunate star shines above our chance
meeting, and I look forward to your company, my uncles."