Time To
Be
A day in the life of Sam and Frodo
Rating: R
Warning: This fic contains much angst.
Watery sunshine sifts through the
window as Frodo lifts open an eyelid, his mind still fogged from sleep. The
nattering of early morning insects lifts to his ear, and the scent of rain
wanders in from the half-opened window.
He lies still for a moment, weighing each breath in his chest, before letting
it go with a soft hmm.
Warm and time-caressed skin touches Frodo's hand like a blanket on a cold
night: Sam's arm, cosy in the downy coverlet. Sam's breaths come even, in and
out, in and out, kissing the curls of hair tucked beneath Frodo's ear. Frodo
wets his lips with his tongue, a hasty flick, studying his beloved. Sam's hair
is now entirely grey, like puffs of silver cloud, his skin wrinkled by time's
heavy tread, his once stout body more fat than muscle.
But Frodo wouldn't have it any other way.
Frodo doesn't care what Sam looks like, he knows he looks the same. Where once were earth-coloured curls are now grey hairs, where once was
smooth skin is now creased flesh, parchment-like to the touch.
The sea outside crashes to shore, breaking to white foam,
before taking in another deep breath.
He leans forward, bed and limbs creaking, to kiss Sam awake.
For a moment nothing happens; Sam sleeps soundly these days, nestled in dreams.
Then his cheek twitches, and his eyelashes flicker, and now moist lips part.
Eyelids open to reveal brown eyes, now slightly cloudy, but full of everything
Frodo loves.
"Sam," he whispers, and it's more a gentle sigh than a word.
Sam shifts, toenails dragging across Frodo's calf. Frodo watches Sam, watches
those brown eyes, that face, waits, waits...
It happens; Sam remembers. Briefly his eyes close, but before
they do Frodo captures a look of quiet fear. Teeth grasp at lipflesh for a trice, and a throat moves to swallow. Frodo
smiles, understands.
"Sam," he says again, not for reassurance, but just to delight in the
sound. Sam. Sam. Sam.
"Frodo," Sam says; he, too, is rejoicing at the sound.
Frodo takes Sam hand, tracing the paper-like skin and arthritic joints. He
wants to say something special, but all he says is: "It's cloudy today,
Sam-dear."
"Aye," Sam spells out. "'Tis no bother. It will be sunny this
afternoon, I reckon." In all their years away -- how
long? Frodo sometimes wonders -- Sam still has a thick Hobbiton
accent, a bit of home in this faery land.
Frodo laughs; it comes out hoarse in his sleep-dry throat.
"Why do you laugh?" Sam's fingers tighten around Frodo's.
"I'm happy," Frodo answers. "And I love you."
Sam replies with a kiss to Frodo's nose, and says nothing. He doesn't need to:
Frodo knows every time Sam looks at him what the answer will be.
On an impulse Frodo takes Sam's cheeks in his hands and kisses him deeply,
tender-hot, like they had done many times in the years after Sam arrived at the
Tol. Sam purrs low, kissing Frodo back. Sam tastes the same, always the same:
fresh-made tea and pipeweed smoke. A velvet tongue tickles Frodo's, and he
breaks away, giggling.
"Reckon we're like a brace o' tweeners," says Sam, face swept with a
blush. "But I can't say that weren't a good wake-up."
"No." Frodo rests his thumb on the curve of Sam's lips. "It was
perfect."
Sam settles his head on Frodo's shoulder, a hand playing absently at Frodo's
nape. Now that Frodo is sitting half up, he can see clouds rolling about in the
sky, and the seam, far away, where the sea and sky brush. Out further, beyond
the sundering seas, lies the Shire: The Brandywine snapping the banks of
Buckland, The Ivy Bush jolly and noisy, Bag End
embracing plump-faced hobbit-children in its arms. Frodo's breast stirs, but he
has no regrets.
Frodo's eye catches a rock sitting on the table next to the bed. It's
water-worn, smooth and brown, the colour of coffee. Bilbo gave it to Frodo the
night they first arrived at the Tol. They had had a party; Gandalf had
fashioned firecrackers and the elves prepared a traditional feast of seasoned
fish and clear, cold draughts that had the faintest tang of the sea. The night
had worn on, with golden lamps rippling light over the speckled sand and the
elves singing in their crisp, high voices. But Frodo was weary, and he walked down
the beach alone, and found that Bilbo had also left the party. Then Bilbo
pressed the rock into Frodo's hand, and it met Frodo's skin warm and wet, like
a kiss. Keep this, Frodo, and you will remember me, Bilbo had said, and
when he raised his head Frodo saw lamplight brushing the glimmers in Bilbo's
eyes.
"We'd be wanting some breakfast," Sam breaks Frodo's thoughts,
"afore we go."
"Yes." Sam braces his hands on the mattress, slowly and surely, then lifts himself off the bed, feet meeting the floor with
a soft thud. His skin is bare; there's no need for nightclothes at the Tol: the
nights are never chill, not even in the grip of winter. It's as if the wind
knows when they are cold, and all Frodo has to do is push open the window and a
warm breeze will flow in, smoothing the goosepimples
from their skin.
Sam tugs on a plush ruby robe, tightening the belt around his ample waist. A
soft smile resolves itself on Sam's mouth, and he pulls on the coverlet twisted
around Frodo's chest. "'Twould be so that I have
to drag you out of bed," Sam says with a fond shake of the head.
"You've changed naught, Frodo Baggins."
Indignation flares two fiery-red spots on Frodo's cheeks, but he chuckles.
"I was just about to rise!" he protests.
"Aye, that's what you would tell Mr. Bilbo," smiles Sam. "Come
on!" The coverlet draws over Frodo and into Sam's hands, where it's
quickly folded and laid on the floor. Frodo watches, quiet, and when Sam's done
his gaze wanders the curves of Frodo's skin. There's no blaze of heat awakening
in Sam's eyes, nor even a sigh, as he looks upon Frodo's body. They have looked
at each other so many times, perhaps as many times as there are grains of sand
on the beach, and though desire has not faltered, it has made way for gentle
love.
"You're lovely," Sam states simply. "I wanted to tell you, even
after all this time."
"You too," murmurs Frodo, catching Sam's fingers. "I think I
always thought that."
Sam's head tilts. "Yes."
Frodo quickly dresses while Sam starts the breakfast. He finds his best
clothes: green velvet and silk, and glinting gold buttons. As Frodo is leaving
the room, he spots a shaft of golden sunlight from the corner of his eye
pouring onto Bilbo's rock, but when he looks back only grey light is falling.
His forehead creases, and after a thought he picks up the rock and drops it
into his pocket. I have not forgotten you, Uncle Bilbo, he thinks, nor
could I ever, not after all you have done for me.
Sam has cooked plump, orange-red tomatoes; thick sausages; and boiled eggs for
breakfast. He's enjoying a bite of runny egg yolk when Frodo wanders in.
"Your favourite breakfast," says Sam around a finger as he wipes a
dash of bright yellow yolk from his lips.
Frodo sits down and cuts a wedge of tomato, takes a mouthful and sighs.
"Delicious, Sam," he acknowledges.
They finish the meal and clean the dishes, stacking the crocks neatly in the
cupboards. Sam and Frodo fill their packs with provisions for their journey:
cheese wheels, a flask of wine, a loaf of sliced bread, slivers of ham, apples
and a rug to lie on. They're silent as they move about the smial, wrapped in
their own thoughts. Frodo smiles at the portrait of him and Sam above the
hearth, painted by an elf friend of theirs. Often Frodo remembers the day when
the elf sat them down and painted them. It is Frodo's fondest memory, a perfect
day. He and Sam had visited Bilbo, enjoying a delicious lunch and telling
stories long into the afternoon. After, they had decided to walk along the
beach, holding hands as they listened to the swell crash to shore. It was there
that they met an elf artist, who delighted in painting them. Frodo had thought
Sam had never looked more beautiful, with the sunlight twining in his greying
hair, setting it to glinting silver, and a flush blossoming on his cheeks from
the wind and sun. Later, when the elf had given Frodo the finished painting, he
and Sam had found a cave in the clutches of a water-eroded cliff. The cave
walls were rough to the touch, made of sandstone, hard and orange-brown. But the
floor was layered in soft sand, deposited by a recent storm, and the dying rays
of the sun fluttered over the cave's walls, giving a bit of light. Carefully
Frodo had laid down the painting, and he sheltered Sam's body with his own, and
they made love slowly till the moon drew silvery tongues of light over their
bare skin.
"Are you ready?" Sam's voice steals into Frodo's thoughts. He has his
pack slung over his shoulder, and he's dressed in his best clothes, as fine as
Frodo's and similar, though fashioned in a deep brown colour of soil and all
things earthy.
"Yes," Frodo answers. "I was just remembering..."
"Aye, so many memories." Sam studies the
painting. "Good and bad."
"What is good without bad?" Frodo wonders aloud. Sam glances at him
quick. "Would we know good if it weren't for
evil?"
Sam swings his head from side to side. "I don't rightly know," he
says, "though I know that if some bad things didn't
happen, some good things wouldn't happen neither."
Frodo remembers the Ring, and the pain after his
return to the Shire, and the first difficult years of healing at the Tol. And
then he remembers kissing Sam's eager mouth when Sam stepped off the ship, and
knows Sam is right.
Sam slips an arm around Frodo's waist, and touches his lips to Frodo's cheek.
"Let's go, love. There's much to do."
Frodo leans into Sam's kiss, sweeps a gaze over the room where they first made
love and sighs in resignation. "Yes, Sam."
A lush garden of asters and daisies and love-in-a-mists and nasturtiums curls
around their smial, and bright sprays of wildflowers dapple the grass, bending
in the sighing breeze. Though Sam's eyes moisten as he looks at the coloured
flowers and vegetable patch, the tears only begin to slide as he drops to his
knees before a gathering of yellow, star-shaped flowers. "Elanor,"
Sam breathes, digging fingers into the black soil.
"Take one," suggests Frodo. "Put it in your pocket, near your
heart."
Sam takes a flower between his old brown fingers, tugging gently till it tears
from the stem and lies in his hand. He smiles, raises the petals to his mouth,
and puts the blossom in his shirt pocket.
"You were surprised to find elanor flowers growing here," reminisces Frodo. "You asked the elves if you could
have a single flower, and they gave you a seedling of your own."
Sam gazes at the small flower. "She wanted to come; she told me once. But
after I gave her the book I snuck away when night came. She knew where I was
going." Sam hangs his head and is silent. Frodo lays a hand on Sam's
shoulder. Sam had never told him that story in all their years at the Tol.
Grief burns Frodo's throat, hot and heavy, as he kneels next to Sam.
"I am sorry," Frodo whispers.
"I'm not," Sam breaks his silence.
Frodo wonders at this, and Sam dusts a puffball from Frodo's breeches. If some bad things didn't happen, some good things wouldn't
happen neither.
The sea is rough, tossing and foaming as the wind whips over it. Sand falls
over Frodo's feet as he walks, clinging to the dark tufts of fur. Gulls cry as
they negotiate the wind, bobbing into the water to catch a fish. Frodo watches
as a wet gull lifts from the water, a sparkle of silver in its beak. It glides
out to sea, becoming smaller and smaller, till it is only a speck of white on
the horizon.
Sam's hand holds Frodo's steady, righting him if he stumbles over a stray stone
or shell. The beach is littered with shells: heart-shaped clamshells, hollow
tubes and graceful spirals vacated by the tiny creatures that carry their homes
on their backs. Drifts of black seaweed fan out over the dunes, and the hard
remains of cuttlefish lie half buried in the sand.
Tangy, salt-heavy wind grabs Frodo's and Sam's hair, lashing it over their
brows. Thick, labouring clouds jumble across the sky, and soon a light mist
begins to fall upon them. Frodo laughs at first, and Sam with him, as the cool
spray wets their lips and age-dry skin. But soon the mist turns to quickening
raindrops, and the water blinds Frodo's eyes.
Frodo squints through the watery veil, and can make out a hollow in a looming
cliff not far away. "Our cave!" he shouts, and stumbling and cursing
they duck into the cave's warmth, tossing their heads to scatter the rain from
their hair. They discard their packs, and Sam lays out a rug to sit on.
"I suppose we ought to have our lunch here," says Sam. "I know
you were hoping to eat on the beach."
"I think this is even better," replies Frodo, searching his pack for
food. "This is our special place."
The rain plinks onto the sandstone outside the cave, and draws a silver curtain
across the cave's mouth. Inside the cave it is dark, shadows haunting the gravelly walls. Sam pulls a candle from his pack, lights it
with a match and lays it to one side so it won't be tipped over. The candle
wavers in a slow dance, throwing light about, flaring sparks in Sam's
thoughtful eyes.
They feast on the food they have packed till their bellies are full, though
making sure there is enough for a comfortable dinner. Frodo lets the dark taste
of the wine roll around in his mouth, savouring it, enjoying the buzz in his
head after his second glass. After eating, Sam and Frodo rest side by side on
the blanket, dozing as the rain continues to sing outside the cave. Frodo
dreams of an echoing hall, crowded with silent elves, and of a river of
glittering stars weaving across a black sky.
When he awakes Sam is smoking on his pipe, staring hard outside. It is still
raining, though now it's a light mizzle. The candle has sunk low,
lumps of melted beeswax surround its feet. Frodo takes his own pipe,
cream-white and laced with elvish devices. From a
pouch Frodo takes a pinch of Old Toby, tamps it into the bowl of his pipe and
lights it up. He puffs, smiling at the familiar sweetness of the smoke wafting
in the air. They've been saving this pipeweed for many years; although weed for
smoking grows in abundance in the forests at the centre of the Tol, it is not
as fair as Old Toby. It's not from home.
The pipeweed smoked, Sam and Frodo pack the pipes and food away into their
packs. Their fingertips caress as they both put their glasses into Sam's pack.
"Sam..." Frodo breathes. "Shall we?"
"We shall," answers Sam, touching their lips together.
Slowly they undress each other, laying lamb-soft kisses on cool, bare skin.
Shaking fingers slip buttons through buttonholes, candlelight seeking the
creases of shadowed skin. Between them heat flares, and Frodo feels the first tendrils of aching pull at his nerve
endings. When bare, they lie pressed together on the blanket, soothing kisses
over breeze-chilled skin. Slow-waking desire gradually comes upon them; many
years ago they would fall into bed and make love in hasty, passionate throes,
but now their lovemaking is steady, thoughtful, their bodies taking time to
respond.
"My dearest Sam," Frodo murmurs, placing fingers
over Sam's lips. "My sweet." Tears
collect in Sam's eyes. "Hush, don't cry," says Frodo. "Let us
make love."
Frodo nibbles Sam's shoulder, rubbing his body against Sam's to create warm
friction. Sam sighs low, and takes to holding Frodo's ears between his lips and
whispering hushed lovesounds to Frodo's neck.
Raindrops patter the smooth rocks as Frodo memorizes the soft lines of Sam's
back, and the way Sam's lightly furred chest tickles at his skin. When Frodo
feels Sam is ready, he rolls atop him, straddling Sam at the waist. Suddenly a
stab of sunlight penetrates the cave mouth, running fluid gilt across the floor
and over Sam's face.
Sam's face.
The candle jumps and is blown out, but Sam watches Frodo, eyes calm and
waiting. Like the ebb and flow of a tide, Frodo begins an unhurried rocking on
Sam's belly, drifting his thoughts like a piece of netting being tossed about
in the sea. He can see Sam running around Bag End's garden, squealing as his
fist holds a gathering of flowers. He sees Sam's grimy face as they climb on
their hands and knees like babes up the Mountain. He sees the sea-spray cling
to Sam's curls as the star-white ship crests wave after wave as it sails into
the harbour. And now, now, he sees his Sam, one and whole and ready.
Back and forth Frodo moves, one hand braced on Sam's chest, throwing his head
back to sob to the holes in the cave's roof, carved by flushing water. Sam is
breathing in rough gasps, lifting his old hips to brush Frodo's backside; and a
hand grasps Frodo's, and they hold tight.
Biting at wet lipflesh, Frodo looks down, sees his
shadow grazing Sam's chest, watches Sam's eyes grow black-smoky as he falls.
Frodo closes his eyes, concentrates, smells brine and, amid the raw panting,
hears the heavy sigh of the waves. He moans Sam's name, relishing it, tasting
it.
Sam's sweetly close, Frodo can tell by the way he arches his back, the way he
grinds himself against Frodo's own aching. Frodo slides them together, so much
love and wanting desperate to be released, cherishing every moment of blessed
oh-so-closeness.
It is Frodo who first comes, his cry blending with a gull's as it swoops down
the cliff face. Sam follows, shattering the air with an ahh!
Frodo sinks to Sam's side, kisses away the salty tears on Sam's cheeks, and
weary to his very bones, falls to sleep with his mouth pressed to Sam's brow.
When they awake the sun is hovering about the horizon, dipping tentatively into
the sea. Quickly they dress and pack up, and, sharing a kiss, hurry from the
cave and step onto the sun-warmed sand. They leave the spent candle to rest in
the dark cave till the springtide rushes in and sweeps it out to the ocean,
when the moon is bloated and full.
They pass an outthrusting finger of land,
calcium-white, and laced with tiny shells and other strange patterns. A phalanx
of birds flies over their heads, squawking and dripping guano onto the sand.
The tide is creeping up the beach, lapping closer and closer, and the water shimmers liquid amber as the sun slowly slips beneath the
world.
"Up here," Frodo says, gesturing to Sam. Sam nods, swings his pack
and follows Frodo up the dunes, through the thick streamers of beach grass and
prickly grey-green plants.
It is situated in a hollow of soft-swaying flowers, and wreathed in dark rocks
that glitter with jewels when sun or star light catches them at the right
angle. Deep purples and fern greens and blood reds vein the rocks, cut deep
from the earth under the tall mountain of Taniquetil in Valinor. Frodo drops to his knees
before a smooth rock at the rock circle's centre, runs his fingers over elegant
etchings of Tengwar and moves his lips in silence. The rock in Frodo's pocket
suddenly pushes against his thigh, and almost he thinks it's alive and smiling
at him. I have not forgotten you, my dearest Bilbo. I don't think I have
ever told you how much I appreciated all you have done for me. I know you
always wished for my happiness, and I love you for it. Do not fear that since
you have passed I have been unhappy. Sam is here now, you know, and we are
happy. I wish you could have seen him again, but I know you were weary, and
ready to leave on your next adventure.
"Sam," Frodo whispers, finding Sam's hand.
"I had hoped I wouldn't cry."
"Now, listen," says Sam, and he's crying too, "remember what an
old friend told us once: I will not say: do not weep; for not all tears are
an evil."
They weep quietly on each other's shoulders, and finger smooth stone, and lay
coloured flowers around the stone's base. At last Sam tugs Frodo, and Frodo
touches the stone with his lips, and they leave the hollow as the stars begin
to be born in the pale violet sky.
Sam and Frodo slip through the forest like moonlight-limned ghosts. The trees
twist around them, grey limbed and jumping with shadows. They clutch each
other's hands, weaving between glimmering bushes till they reach a
grass-covered hillock. Again Sam lays out a rug, and they sit upon it and eat
the rest of the food in their packs.
With nary a shake Frodo pours the last of the wine; he and Sam solemnly clink
glasses and drink till not a drop is left to swallow.
Sam is quiet, head tilted to look at the stars strewn in glittering puddles
above. His hand wanders to his pocket, stroking at something inside. "She
is gone," he whispers, head nudging his breast. "I knew for a while
now, but I never wanted to face it."
Frodo cups Sam's face. "It won't be long," he soothes, and Sam nods.
The wind begins to pick up, lifting the corners of the rug. Frodo and Sam lie
down, wrapped in each other's arms, kissing, just kissing and kissing over and
over. Sam trembles beneath Frodo's hand; he is frightened.
"Shh, my dear," says Frodo, brushing Sam's
mouth with his lips. "I'll be here, always I'll be here."
"I love you, Frodo," Sam says, sniffling.
"I love you, Sam. My dear. My
dear. Oh, my dear." Frodo tightens his
grip on Sam's, pushing his face into the crook of Sam's neck. Sam buries a sob
on Frodo's shoulder.
"Always, Frodo, always," says Sam fiercely, answering Frodo with an
open-mouthed kiss.
Frodo looks deep into earth-coloured eyes, knows it is time.
"Forever," he says.
For a breath Sam is quiet, and the world treads beneath them.
"Forever," he repeats. "I am ready, dear. Goodbye."
"No." Frodo's voice is strangely strong. "Say rather hello."
For one last time Frodo's heart beats next to Sam's, and Sam's stops next to
his, and breath ceases to leave his lips. And he
beholds a curtain of silver-water, and slowly it falls back, and he sees a lush
green land rolling beneath a swift sunrise.
~end~