Subject: But now you made me write more.
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Posted on: 2014-01-06 15:22:00 UTC

Elrond stood staring out of the window, his back to the door. "Ringbearer," the Lord of Imladris said, not turning. "Thank you for coming."

"Lord Elrond," Frodo said from the door, "your counsel is invaluable to me, and you - I mean - you have been a great-"

"I understand, Frodo." Elrond turned, a small smile on his face. "Many years ago, I myself was... overawed, shall we say, by the presence of my elders. When the Last Alliance marched against Sauron, it seemed as if every king in the world rode with us. Isildur of Arnor and Anárion of Gondor were ever at the forefront on the plains, but in the forests of Wilderland Amdír of Lothlórien and Oropher of Greenwood - or later his son, Thranduil - broke the trail. Even the Dwarves joined us, and Durin's folk and Durin's leadership brought us safely through the Misty Mountains. And the grandeur of our army!" Frodo realised that Elrond's mind was far away, walking in the living memory of the elves. "Lindon was emptied - under Círdan, every last vestige of the great realms of old marched to war. And, yes, there was I - I with my small household out of Rivendell, thrust into the service of the High Kings. Gil-Galad and Elendil - names that echo in my thoughts even now."

In Frodo's mind's eye, visions of the armies of old flared in brilliant colour - but painted in broad strokes, like the work of an artist who had never witnessed the muster. "I wish... I wish I could have seen it," he murmured.

Elrond seemed to snap back to the present. "Do you?" he asked sadly. "I wish I had not had to. And more than that... I wish we had completed our task, that this meeting might never have happened." He sighed, and looked out of the window again, towards the west. "But the Powers do not grant wishes, Frodo. In this task, in this Middle-earth, we must find our own path."

Beyond the Elf Lord's shadow, Frodo could see a single star gleaming in the evening sky - Eärendil, the Evening Star. "But not without light to guide us," he said suddenly.

Elrond smiled. "Indeed," he said. "And that is why I have called you here: guidance. You must have companions on your quest, to guide and guard you and Samwise. Gandalf, indeed, has already agreed to lead your company, and for the others..."

The Lord of Imladris looked once again towards the evening star. "Ten lords and kings faced Sauron and could not defeat him," he said. "Perhaps ten walkers, with no armies at their back, can succeed where we failed. And as the Last Alliance brought together all the Free Peoples of Middle-earth, so shall the Fellowship of the Ring consist of representatives of all those whose hopes rest on you. For Men..."




(Don't pox the movieverse - it has its own merits. But it also has far fewer barriers to a Tenth Walker)

The problem with making ten by including Sauron in the Nazgul is that we're talking about the Enemy's servants - not the Enemy himself. Elrond specifically says 'set against' - even though it never happens, it's clear he expected the Fellowship to have to face the Nazgul together again. Five Ringwraiths had already attacked Aragorn and the hobbits at Weathertop - probably where the idea came from.

The easiest way to make ten Nazgul is simply to... make ten Nazgul. There's no real reason for Men to only have nine rings, and 'ten' scans just as well. Alternately, you could make it one of the dwarven rings, which Sauron had given to a man - that could work (and if I was doing it, I'd make the man in question Eärnur, the last King of Gondor; this may go in the story).

As for making the OC contribute to the plot - you have to accept that you're going to be making stuff up. The Nine Walkers drive their own plot - a tenth would have their own effects. A random Rivendell elf would, even without changing anything else, mean there were four, not three, left to consider going after Merry and Pippin - and with two elves, the right choice would be to send them into Rohan at high speed, while Aragorn and Gimli... probably went straight to Gondor.

What you can't do, as I said elsewhere, is write a story which consists of the LotR story happening, 'And Morwen was there also'. That's not a story, that's a rewriting of the script. The only reason to do it is to get the OC's thoughts and reactions on paper - and there's a wide enough variety of people in the story that you should rather use one who's there.

Oh, or to sleep with Legolas, of course. And how about a story where Legolas and your OC get together... and then stay in Lorien, leaving the remaining seven Walkers to head down Anduin without them?

hS

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