Lotr ✪

He had stood here for three days without sleeping. Not from courage alone, but from a growing dread that tasted like copper on his tongue.

"You should rest, Captain," said a voice from the stair. Madril, his second, climbed up with a torch that fought a losing battle against the fog. "The men speak of a figure on the far shore. A hooded shape that does not move."

Boromir raised his own horn — the great horn of Gondor, banded with silver, cloven once in battle and repaired by the smiths of old. He put it to his lips.

The river moved in silence, darker than the space between stars. Boromir, eldest son of the White Tower, leaned upon his sword and watched the water slide past the piers of Osgiliath. Behind him, the great city groaned under the weight of shadow; before him, the east bank lay clenched in the fist of night. He had stood here for three days without sleeping

For three nights, the eastern shore had whispered. Not in words, but in the way the reeds bent against no wind. In the way the frogs fell silent all at once, as though a great mouth had opened somewhere beneath the mud.

Above them, the stars winked out one by one, as if snuffed by a cold and patient finger.

"Madril," Boromir said quietly, "do you believe in a darkness that thinks?" Madril, his second, climbed up with a torch

"And yet," Boromir turned from the river, and his face was the face of a man who has glimpsed a crack in the world, "something hunts us that does not hunger for meat or gold. It hungers for the sound of a horn that does not answer. For the name of a king that no one sings anymore."

And the Anduin ran black.

"Let them come," he said. "There are still brave men in this broken land." He put it to his lips

The night answered with a thousand pairs of eyes.

And the last watch began.