The squad moved cautiously through the dense forest, their steps muffled by the thick carpet of moss and fallen leaves. The air was heavy with the earthy scent of damp wood, and the occasional call of a bird echoed through the trees, sharp and fleeting. It was late afternoon, but the canopy overhead turned the light into a dim green haze, making everything feel closer and more suffocating.
Thordur kept his bow in hand, his fingers brushing the fletching of an arrow, a steadying habit he had developed over the years in the field. Haldir led the squad ahead of him, his sharp eyes flicking between the trees, scanning for any signs of movement. Gamil walked just behind Thordur, his shield slung across his back, his boots crunching softly against the forest floor. At the rear, Azrak trailed, his sword in hand, the blade wobbling slightly as he fought to keep his grip steady. His eyes darted nervously to every shifting shadow and every gust of wind rustling the leaves.
It was Ungoránë, though, who held Thordur’s attention. He moved just ahead, his dark cloak blending with the underbrush. His steps were nearly silent but not unnaturally so; the occasional scrape of his boot against stone or the faint rustle of a branch made him feel less spectral and more grounded. Ungoránë paused often, his head tilting slightly as if listening for something beyond the range of Thordur’s hearing. His movements weren’t as fluid as a phantom’s but carried an efficiency born of years of necessity—an instinct sharpened by trial and error. He crouched low to brush the moss from a rock or pressed a hand lightly to a tree trunk, the subtle gestures of a man reading his surroundings like a book.
Still, there was a quiet intensity about him that unsettled Thordur. Ungoránë had the air of someone who trusted the forest more than the men walking beside him, as though he found solace in its secrets. It wasn’t that Ungoránë seemed fearless—Thordur had seen fear before, and it was absent here. No, it was something else—a grim focus, perhaps, or a weariness that left no room for hesitation.
He’s not fearless, Thordur thought, watching the way Ungoránë glanced back over his shoulder before slipping between the shadows of two trees. He’s just tired of caring about what happens.
Ahead, Ungoránë raised a hand, signaling for the squad to halt. Thordur stiffened, his heart leaping slightly at the sudden motion. Haldir stopped immediately, his body tensing as his hand fell to the hilt of his sword. The forest held its breath momentarily, the oppressive quiet settling over them like a heavy shroud.
Ungoránë turned his head slightly, his voice low and barely above a whisper. “Something’s wrong.”
It wasn’t dramatic, nor was it meant to be. Thordur didn’t even think Ungoránë was trying to sound ominous. It was just a statement of fact, spoken with the weight of someone who had been in enough ambushes to recognize the silence that preceded them.
Thordur frowned, his fingers tightening around his bow. He says it like it’s weather. It’s as if he’s just pointing out that it might rain.
“Keep your eyes open,” Haldir muttered, his voice like the scrape of steel against stone. “And stay close.”
The squad moved forward again, slower now, their steps even more cautious. Thordur’s gaze flicked between the trees, his mind spinning. Ungoránë wasn’t wrong—something about the forest felt off. It wasn’t just quiet; it was watchful as if the trees were waiting for something to happen.
Thordur’s eyes found Ungoránë again. The man crouched low, his shortsword drawn now, the edge catching the dim light. Ungoránë didn’t move like a man expecting a fight; he moved like a man resigned to it, his body braced, his hand steady, his expression unreadable.
He’s no shadow, Thordur thought, his chest tightening—just a man who is too good at hiding what’s broken.
Thordur glanced ahead at Haldir, who gestured for the group to slow down. The forest grew thicker here, the trees pressing closer together, their gnarled roots twisting across the path like veins. The air felt heavy, with an almost unnatural stillness, and Thordur’s hand tightened spontaneously on his bow. Something wasn’t right. He noticed Ungoránë had slowed too, his movements deliberate, his sharp eyes scanning the shadows.
Then Ungoránë stopped.
Thordur, following closely behind, barely caught himself from walking into him. He hissed under his breath, “What is it?” His gaze shifted toward the shadowy figure, who stood unnaturally still, like a statue carved from the night itself. Ungoránë didn’t answer. His head tilted slightly as if straining to catch a sound just out of reach. His lips moved, forming words too faint for Thordur to hear.
“What?” Thordur repeated, sharper this time, his voice barely above a whisper.
Silence. Ungoránë remained fixed in place, his posture taut with an unreadable tension. Frustration prickled at Thordur’s nerves, but before he could say anything more, Ungoránë was gone.
The space he’d occupied was empty. The underbrush showed no signs of disturbance. It was as if he had dissolved into the shadows themselves, leaving only silence behind.
Thordur’s stomach tightened, a knot of confusion and unease coiling deep within him. Did he run off? Into the trees? His mind churned, replaying the last few seconds and searching for an explanation. The squad was still moving cautiously ahead, unaware of Ungoránë’s sudden disappearance. A sound shattered the stillness before Thordur could decide whether to alert Haldir.
A guttural roar, low and raw, tore through the forest.
Branches clattered as they snapped, followed by heavy footfalls pounding against the earth. The roar was unmistakable—a battle cry, primal and bloodthirsty. Thordur’s blood turned cold as he heard it answered by more voices, harsh and snarling, from all around.
Chaos erupted.
The forest roared to life around them, the clash of steel and guttural cries of orcs shredding the quiet like an axe through bark. The orcs burst from the trees, their blackened blades glinting in the muted light. Haldir shouted, his sword flashing as he stepped forward to meet the charge. “Ambush!” Haldir’s voice rang clear over the chaos, sharp and commanding. Haldir’s blade flashed like a shard of sunlight through the canopy as he drove it deep into an orc’s chest, twisting before yanking it free. Blood spattered across his tabard, but he didn’t flinch. He turned, already striking again, his movements forming a deadly rhythm. Gamil roared in response, raising his shield just in time to deflect the downward swing of an axe.
Thordur’s hand moved reflexively, drawing and releasing an arrow in a single fluid motion.
The shaft struck true, burying itself deep in the throat of an orc mid-charge. It fell in a heap, but the shadows were alive with more. Behind him, Azrak’s voice rang out, high-pitched and panicked. “They’re everywhere!”
Thordur spun to see the boy fending off a snarling orc, his sword trembling in his grasp. Another arrow left Thordur’s bow, striking the orc in the side and buying Azrak a moment to regain his footing. The squad formed a loose line, each man fighting desperately to hold back the overwhelming tide of enemies.
But even as Thordur loosed arrow after arrow, his thoughts raced back to Ungoránë. Where had he gone? And why had he left without a word?
To Thordur’s left, Gamil was a battering ram of flesh and steel. With a sickening thud, his shield cracked into the nearest orc, sending the creature sprawling backward into its kin. He stepped forward without hesitation, his sword cutting a clean arc through the air and biting into another enemy’s gut. The orc crumpled, and Gamil stepped into the space it left behind, planting his shield to block another attack.
Azrak, standing just behind Gamil, was as pale as new snow. His knuckles whitened around the hilt of his blade as he swung it wildly, desperation edging every motion. One swing struck home, grazing an orc’s arm, but it wasn’t enough to slow the creature. Azrak stumbled back, his foot catching on a root, but Gamil shifted to cover him, his shield smashing into the snarling orc.
“Azrak! Keep your footing, damn it!” Gamil barked, his tone more teacher than that of a commander.
Thordur’s fingers found another arrow, and the motion, so practiced, felt reflexive. He nocked, aimed, and released, the string thrumming against his fingertips. The arrow struck an orc in the shoulder, staggering it just as it raised its blade toward Gamil’s unprotected flank.
“Gamil, to your left!” Thordur called, already drawing another arrow. Gamil caught the warning in time, turning with a roar as his shield connected with the wounded orc’s chest. He shoved it backward, following up with a brutal stab that silenced its snarling cries.
The orcs kept coming, pouring from the trees as if summoned by the forest. They were everywhere—jagged, blackened blades glinting in the dappled sunlight, teeth bared in feral grins. Thordur’s gaze darted across the chaos, his mind racing. For every orc they struck down, two more seemed to appear, their momentum pressing the squad tighter into the clearing.
Haldir held the line with a precision that bordered on the impossible. Each swing of his sword was a study in efficiency, a deadly arc that found its mark without fail. But even he was tiring; the orcs sensed his slowing pace and pressed harder.
“We’re not holding on much longer!” Thordur shouted, his voice cracking over the din. He loosed another arrow and another, his arm burning from the strain.
Then, out of the corner of his eye, Thordur saw movement—fast, fluid, and unmistakable—Ungoránë.
He emerged from the underbrush like a shadow slipping through cracks in the light, his dark cloak swirling around him. The longsword in his right hand gleamed faintly in the fractured sunlight, its edge already darkened with blood. In his left hand, a shorter blade moved like an extension of his arm, precise and unrelenting.
Ungoránë struck without hesitation, driving the shortsword deep into the back of an orc that had turned to bark orders. The creature staggered forward, choking on its snarl, but Ungoránë didn’t wait for it to fall. He pivoted, his longsword slashing across the chest of another orc—not deep enough to kill, but enough to make the beast howl in pain and wheel toward him.
Before the wounded orc could retaliate, Ungoránë ducked low, his shortsword slicing across the back of its knee. It crumpled with a guttural scream, clutching its ruined leg. The sound sent ripples of unease through the horde, their formation faltering as heads turned toward this new threat.
Thordur’s breath caught as he loosed another arrow, his target falling with a wet thud. What in the name of the Valar is he doing back there? The thought was sharp and skeptical, but it was quickly swallowed by something closer to awe—or disbelief.
Ungoránë moved with terrifying efficiency, his blades a blur of silver and red. An orc lunged at him with a jagged axe, but he stepped aside with an almost effortless fluidity. His longsword came up, the blade’s flat smashing into the side of the orc’s head, dazing it. As it staggered, he lifted the shortsword in a quick, brutal arc, severing its weapon arm at the elbow. The orc howled, clutching its stump, but Ungoránë was already moving, fading back into the chaos.
The orcs hesitated, their guttural cries mingling with confusion as they turned to face this ghost. Ungoránë didn’t strike to kill every time. A slashed thigh here, a shattered shoulder there—enough to maim and make the creatures turn their attention to him and away from the squad. The calculated violence fractured their ranks, confusion rippling outward.
Thordur saw the opening before anyone else. The orcs’ attention was now divided, their tight formation crumbling as they tried to deal with the squad and the phantom cutting through their rear.
“Haldir!” Thordur shouted, his voice cutting through the chaos. “He’s breaking them!”
Haldir’s sharp gaze flicked toward Ungoránë for the briefest moment, his lips curling into something like a grim smile. “Press forward! Now!”
The rallying cry galvanized the squad. Gamil surged ahead with a roar, his shield smashing into the nearest orc like a battering ram. The impact sent the creature sprawling, and Gamil finished it with a swift thrust of his sword.
Azrak, encouraged by the sudden shift in momentum, found his footing. His strikes, once wild and hesitant, became more deliberate. He parried an orc’s blade, twisting his weapon into an upward strike that sent the creature reeling.
Thordur, his bowstring humming with tension, loosed another arrow, taking down an orc that had turned to flee. He glanced back at Ungoránë, now a whirlwind of steel and shadow. Ungoránë’s longsword came down in a powerful diagonal strike, biting deeply into the shoulder of the nearest orc. As the creature staggered backward, his grip on the weapon shifted seamlessly—one hand releasing to free his left arm. His shortsword darted forward in the same fluid motion, his movements precise and controlled. The blade slipped under the next orc’s guard, slicing across its exposed belly before it had time to react.
The orcs panicked. They roared and snarled, but the confusion was palpable. Some tried to rally, barking guttural commands, but Ungoránë cut them down with cold precision before their voices could rise above the din. The tide was turning; the squad was pushing forward against the faltering enemy.
For a moment, Thordur paused, his bow lowering slightly as he watched Ungoránë fight. Reckless. Insane. The thought came unbidden, but then another followed: effective. He’s giving us the chance to win.
“Thordur!” Gamil’s voice snapped him back to the present. “Keep shooting, or I’ll use you as my shield!”
Thordur smirked faintly, drawing another arrow. “Don’t get ahead of yourself, Gamil. I’d make a terrible shield.”
As he loosed the arrow and it found its mark, he couldn’t help but glance back at Ungoránë, who seemed more shadow than man, his blades carving chaos into the orc’s ranks. For the first time, Thordur wondered if there might be more to this Shadow Wanderer than madness.
Thordur caught sight of Ungoránë again, his movements more methodical than fluid, though no less effective. There was nothing surreal about the way he fought—not like a ghost, but like a man who had practiced each strike a thousand times. He darted between orcs, his cloak billowing as he moved, and his breath was visible in the cold air. His longsword came down hard, cleaving into an orc’s shoulder, enough force to make Ungoránë stumble slightly as he wrenched it free. His shortsword followed with a quick slash that caught another orc across the thigh, dropping it to one knee.
Ungoránë adjusted his stance, shifting his weight as he sidestepped an incoming blow. His movements were no longer elegant but were grimly efficient. His breathing was ragged, and his strikes were precise yet deliberate, each a calculated risk.
For a moment, their eyes met across the chaos. Ungoránë’s face was pale, smeared with dirt and blood; his expression was hard to read—focused, yes, but not detached. There was something raw there, something desperate.
Then he was gone again, ducking behind the towering bulk of a fallen orc and out of sight, his dark cloak folding into the shadows.
The squad pushed forward, their renewed assault forcing the remaining orcs into retreat. The snarls and guttural cries faded as the creatures fled into the trees, leaving the forest heavy with the stench of blood and sweat. Thordur lowered his bow, his hands trembling as he scanned the area.
“Everyone accounted for?” Haldir’s voice cut through the stillness, rough yet steady.
“Here,” Gamil grunted, leaning on his shield, a fresh cut streaking blood down his arm. Azrak raised his hand shakily, his sword still clutched in a white-knuckled grip. The rest of the squad called out, but Thordur’s gaze darted to the trees where he had last seen Ungoránë.
He appeared moments later, stepping into the clearing with his weapons in hand. He didn’t look triumphant, only tired. His torn cloak billowed as his chest rose and fell while he surveyed the squad. Without a word, he cleaned his blades on the cloak of a fallen orc and sheathed them.
The battle’s aftermath settled over the squad like a heavy fog. Orc bodies littered the ground, their black blood soaking into the forest floor. The squad was alive—battered and bloodied but alive. That alone should have been cause for relief. Yet, the tension remained, crackling in the air like an unseen storm.
“Ungoránë!” Haldir’s voice sliced through the quiet, sharp, and commanding. The squad fell silent as the captain strode toward him, his expression a storm cloud of barely contained fury.
Ungoránë crouched over a fallen orc, tugging a dagger free from its belt. He didn’t flinch at the sound of his name or stand. He simply wiped the blade clean on the orc’s tattered cloak, his movements methodical.
“What the hell were you thinking?” Haldir demanded, coming to a stop just short of Ungoránë. His sword was still drawn, the blade glinting dully in the weak light. “You ran off. Disappeared. You don’t do that. Not here. Not ever.”
Ungoránë stood slowly, his expression calm, almost detached. He met Haldir’s furious gaze with a quietness that only seemed to stoke the captain’s anger.
“You put us all at risk,” Haldir continued, his voice rising. “We didn’t know where you were, what you were doing. I could have ordered a retreat; for all I knew, you were dead. And what for? So you could play the lone hero?”
Ungoránë said nothing, his face a mask of indifference. The silence stretched thick and heavy until Haldir stepped closer, his voice dropping to a dangerous growl. “Do you even understand what you’ve done?”
Ungoránë’s eyes flickered momentarily with something—perhaps guilt or something more profound, more challenging to name. But he didn’t defend himself. He didn’t argue or explain. He simply said, “I saw an opening.”
“An opening?” Haldir echoed, incredulous. He threw up his hands. “An opening doesn’t mean you abandon the squad! You don’t get to make those decisions alone.”
Still, Ungoránë didn’t reply. He stood there, silent and unyielding, his gray eyes fixed somewhere just past Haldir’s shoulder. It was as though the words were bouncing off him, unable to penetrate.
Thordur watched from a few paces away, his chest still heaving from the fight. He couldn’t deny that Ungoránë’s actions had turned the tide. The orcs had been confused, faltering, their focus divided. The squad had taken full advantage of the chaos, cutting through the enemy and forcing their retreat. But that didn’t erase the recklessness of what Ungoránë had done. It didn’t make it right.
He’s not a hero, Thordur thought, studying Ungoránë’s stoic face. He’s something else. But what?
Haldir let out a sharp breath, shaking his head. “You’re lucky we came out of this alive,” he said, his voice quieter now but no less harsh. “Do that again, and you won’t be so lucky. None of us will.”
With that, the captain turned away, barking orders to the rest of the squad to regroup and move out. Ungoránë remained where he was, his hands resting lightly at his sides, his shortsword and dagger still streaked with dark blood.
Thordur hesitated, then stepped closer, lowering his voice so only Ungoránë could hear. “What were you thinking back there?”
For a moment, Ungoránë didn’t respond. When he did, his voice was low, almost too quiet to hear. “I wasn’t.”
Thordur frowned, unsure how to take that answer. It wasn’t defiance, nor was it regret. It was just a statement, plain and unadorned as if Ungoránë himself weren’t sure what had driven him.
Thordur shook his head and stepped back, falling into line with the rest of the squad as they prepared to move. But his eyes lingered on Ungoránë, the question circling in his mind like a restless bird. Whatever had driven him into the fray wasn’t for glory or strategy; it was something else—something Thordur couldn’t quite put into words.
And maybe that was what unsettled him most of all.