or, once again, Drakmir is not paid enough for this.
Drakmir had never said he understood.
He was a steward; it was his job. An order was given, and he obeyed it.
'Go over the mountains,' Eol had said, 'to the forest. Follow Oropher.'
Eol gave the order and Drakmir obeyed; he organized, he delegated, he reassured and he negotiated. Mornost was emptied, bit by bit, and Eol never followed.
Then the calamity came, and Drakmir knew Eol would not come.
Oropher offered such things, but Drakmir gently refused them. With Selsigil he established Myreneg, in the depths of the Greenwood; and there he waited.
He knew what they said about him, of course. Even those who had known him longest wondered, quietly, about his state of mind. The years passed and Drakmir kept quiet vigil. He never really settled in Myreneg, was never truly Selsigil's steward though he obeyed her every order as he had her father.
Questions remained unasked, unanswered. Deaths were accepted, losses counted.
Nissa did not ask her husband if he wished to speak to an amethyst, to any healer, to Lithwaloth. He knew she worried, and he loved her for it.
Love and duty, these were what he had always strived for; and so Drakmir loved his wife, and he held tight to his duty.
There was a second calamity, and though it was small it ripped out as many hearts; murmurs of children drowned, of bodies washing up like cordwood, of seamen both Man and Elf refusing to raise their sails.
Drakmir heard this and he made ready for a journey.
"I’ll send for you," he told his wife, and Nissa let him go uncertain if she should call herself a widow.
They thought he was mad, but no one stopped him. Selsigil asked he travel in haste, the Masters Millos made sure his travel gear was in good condition. Drakmir rode from Myreneg alone, on a gray horse.
When he reached the harbor, he knew he would be hard pressed to find any boat that would carry him. A black diamond lapel button, with its carved wolf howling, was sufficient to summon that boat.
"Where do you want to go?" The woman asked. Drakmir looked at her with ancient, knowing eyes, and said, "I know the way."
They sailed for a week, and the woman was inches from asking if he was mad, when it came into view.
She swore a round and bloody oath to Osse, and Drakmir Daerdemion said, "There won't be an efficient place to dock."
Still, they could float within the narrowest of the trees. As water gave way to soggy moss and finally to something like damp land, the woman looked at Drakmir and there was fear there.
He held out his hand and he said, "Follow me."
Tying her boat off, she did.
He led her down an old path, the cobbles still cracked from black roots. There were signs, here and there, of people- lost bits of clothing, a broken pail, detritus of a migration and of refugees.
The lights began to glow soft green in the branches and the woman tried to turn back but Drakmir would not let her.
The fortress's doors were open, and inside there were sounds- the sounds of life lived on a bare edge, of the remnants of a kingdom.
In the broad open courtyard surrounded by tents and lean-tos stood a beautiful woman in rough linen and Drakmir's sailor swore again and fell to her knees, sobbing a name. As people emerged from the makeshift shelters Drakmir moved through the crowd like a ghost, like a whisp, like a good Steward.
And sitting on the steps, looking as though he had just woken up, was Eol.
Who smiled at his steward and said, "I seem to have taken on water."
Drakmir followed the line of his eyes to the radiant queen in the rags. "Much," he said, "has happened."
"Now that I don't doubt." From his side Eol pulled a stoneware bottle and popped the cork. "Tell me all about it."
Drakmir Daerdemion took a swig and did.