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In the aftermath of the battle, they couldn’t afford to spare the proper time nor manpower required to give him the funeral he deserved. As it was, the Company did their best with what they had. He was given his own funeral pyre, away from the others to give them a chance to say goodbye to their friend. Whenever a member of the Company had the time, they would collect logs from a nearby copse of trees that had survived the desolation and the recent battle. It wasn’t the grandest, coming up to the chest of the surrounding dwarves and just large enough to fit his form, but they made sure it was made properly. The mood was predictably somber as a group of dwarves carrying a wooden pallet moved down the parted gathering. Dwalin, Dori, Glóin, and Bifur bore his weight, silently lifting his linen-wrapped body onto the pile of wood. Returning briefly to the group, Dwalin took Sting from his brother and Bifur retrieved a warg carving from his cousin. They solemnly placed their gifts at the base of the pyre and backed away. Dori moved to stand beside his youngest brother and placed a supportive hand on his shoulder, giving him an encouraging nudge. Ori shuffled forward and placed his half-finished courting gift next to Bilbo’s head. He didn’t have much to offer on the road, so he had been working on a drawing of both of his forms. He gave the sketch of the hobbit leaning against his warg form as the two dozed in the sun one last glance before turning away and returning to the comfort of his siblings, not meeting the eyes of anyone in the Company. With no other stepping forward Gandalf fixed them all with a heavy stare before touching the top of his staff to the pyre, setting it ablaze. Days later, when the wizard left Erebor to travel west, a pouch containing some of the ashes was tied to his belt.
The guard responsible for bringing Bilbo down was not reprimanded (at Balin's urging, for the dwarf was just doing his job), so all of Thorin's anger was brought down on Malo, son of Talo. Although the dwarf did not report Thorin's messages to Bilbo incorrectly, he did twist the words to fit his own agenda, leading to the death of a member of the Company. For this offense, Malo was banished from Erebor, forcing him to find his living in a different mountain with the label 'Traitor' following him.
Bilbo’s death was not in vain, for once Thorin was strong enough to rule his kingdom, he commissioned a pair of statues to guard the road leading into Erebor. The proud form of a warg soon sat along the road between Erebor and Dale, the golden silver granite smooth and shining in the sun. Across from the warg, a hobbit stood, a hand on the pommel of his sword and a small smile on his face. The pair stood as a reminder to all those who passed by to go forth with kindness, and to help those around you to the best of your ability. In a further show of goodwill, Thorin wrote a series of letters to the Shire, informing the Thain of the quest that took a hobbit from those safe hills, Bilbo’s fate at the end of said journey, and to extend an invitation to any hobbit-shifters that may be born in the Shire. Should they wish it, as long as a Durin sat on the throne of Erebor, they would find a safe haven within her walls.
As it was, with the birthrate of hobbit-shifters being as low as it was, there were not many who needed to take the dwarf king up on his offer. Those who did, however, would pass by the statues and know they’ve arrived in a place where they would face no judgment for the rest of their days.