[
Setting the scene:
the events of this chapter take place before the arrival of Gandalf, Aragorn, and Gimli. Reference is made to Boromir's passage through Rohan on his way to Rivendell.]
20 February 3019 (Third Age), Edoras
The door slammed closed with a heavy thud, catching a corner of the fabric that flowed in her furious wake. The wearer didn't even notice the sharp tug as she departed, wreathed as she was in righteous fury, and a richly embroidered but dust-sullied piece of fabric was clutched, stretched, then released with a sharp, quick tear. Over her angry footsteps she heard no sound. In her thundercloud mood she felt nothing. A few torn silver and white threads waved in the departing swirl of air, the rest pressed tightly between door and frame. Cornered. Trapped.
Naught broke her stride until her hands slammed into the heavy shutters that darkened the only window in her private chambers. Knocking them outward with a furious heave, a latch splintering under the impact, she was finally arrested in her forward motion by the carved sill, tightly grasped by her slender hands, their knuckles white and tense. She leaned forward into the cold morning wind, long blonde hair lashing her face, and looked down, hissing in unchecked anger. She felt as if she might be sick.
Gradually, the nausea subsided, leaving her trembling with frustrated, pointless rage. It was very nearly all she felt these days. Between duty, honor, and expectation she could see no escape. She was caught. Cornered. Trapped.
She'd tried. Oh, how she'd
tried
. Tried to shake the King loose from his incomprehensible self-imposed shackles. Tried to set him...
anyone
...in motion. To no avail. He was so distant, living as one who meekly clocks the surrendering hours until death. On the rare occasions he was emotionally present enough to respond to her directly, all her suggestions were casually dismissed. At other times they were ignored, or perhaps not even heard. Today he'd abruptly sent her away with a cold word, right in the middle of her most passionate entreaty yet. Stunned, she'd had no choice but to turn and stalk angrily away to
anywhere
. She couldn't rage against the King, nor would she cry in front of him or anyone else. She had far too much strength and pride for that.
Her brother, so often afield fighting the ever-escalating skirmishes of these dark days, sympathized with her frustration. And he had his own difficulties, given that his battles were increasingly conducted to the active displeasure of the King.
At least
he's
not ignored
, she thought, bitterly. But despite his sympathy, he offered neither help nor more than token comfort. "I share your frustration, my beloved sister, but while the King remains irresolute, your place is at his side."
Ah, yes. My place.
Involuntarily she cackled, her brittle laughter shattering like ice. The sharpness of it startled a passing stablehand, who stumbled, paused, and glanced up in the direction of her window.
My
place
. No,
she corrected herself,
therein lies the root of it, for the emphasis is on the wrong word. It isn't the place that's the problem, it's me. Or rather, what doesn't dangle between my legs. That's what they
really
mean.
It was rarely said with as much honesty as she'd received from her sibling, but rather laid upon her by euphemism and dismissal. Her uncle the King, all his counselors and coterie, even her own brother, otherwise so often of one mind with her; none could quite see her as anything other than a woman. Of royal lineage she was, and moreover every sinew a warrior to match or surpass any other in the Mark. (She'd tested it often enough, but always in private sparring, as no man would submit to the potential for public humiliation at the blade of a woman...which fact only added to her surety. For though her prowess was no secret, it was often treated as if its mere acknowledgment was somehow shameful or emasculating.)
But with a weapon at least I can control my immediate destiny. Lest I momentarily forget the limitations imposed upon me by my gender, all it takes is the temerity to raise my voice at a Council meeting....
She slammed the sill with a closed fist, sending her still-gaping onlooker scampering away, and turned away from the window.
It's not as if I can forget I'm a woman, and one full-grown.
Though few were so bold as to openly stare โ
except him
, she thought with a shudder โ she could both see and feel the furtive glances and, when it was thought she wasn't paying attention, yearning, even lustful gazes. "Ripe," she'd overheard one half-drunken guard murmur as she'd dismounted a horse, glowing with sweat from a late-evening ride over the grasslands. His humiliation at the flat of her sword had been vehement and quite public, though once again she'd been met with subtle but clear disapproval from the King, and others, with much patronizing nonsense about "the dignity of her position." On that occasion, at least, her brother had forcefully taken her side. Though she was grateful, she was annoyed at the paternalism that informed his support, for his words indicated that he viewed her virtue as a precious commodity in need of external...and masculine...defense.
Dignity! Virtue!
She snorted.
My life is nothing
but
dignity.
A dignity that had, to her mind, become unendurable
in
dignity. She who yearned to ride and fight, who craved
any
opportunity for action, wasted her days as a passive white-clad statue behind the decaying, useless relic that had once been King Thรฉoden, watching her fearless, as yet-untamed people fall into sloth, paranoia, and fear. She, as bold as any warrior but shamed and silenced, was admonished to remain within her gilded and increasingly narrow cage.
She was even denied the cold humiliation of being offered up as some sort of ambassadorial gift, as she'd more than occasionally feared she might. Not that such was an oft-exercised tradition among the Rohirrim. But with the King lacking a daughter and both his son and her brother perpetually absent for battles that promised no end, it seemed only a matter of time before some craven counselor broached the subject. Yet not even in that degrading fashion was she considered worthy of notice.
In any case, to whom might I be offered? With Gondor there's already the most steadfast possible alliance, and there's no need to invite some stranger betwixt my legs to solidify that relationship.
She recalled Boromir, the Steward's eldest son, with a frisson of excitement.
He was so handsome, so bold, so strong and forceful. There was a man who would
take