253 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
253 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
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fable.txt
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Ben Blumenberg
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Reality Software
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P.O. Box 105
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Waldoboro, Me 04572
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June 26, 1992
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___________
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August 23, 4036
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My dearest,
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Finally, my semi-annual allotment of message units has
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arrived. Will I be glad when this expedition is over! It has
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been the most frustating, unproductive and unpublishable field
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experience of my career. The Tlaidas are the most self-
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contained, taciturn, and uncommunicative people I have ever
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encountered. We have been on this god-forsaken arid rock for
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over two years and have not seen any evidence of ritual or
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religous thought. A culture devoid of the metaphysical impulse
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is beyond my comprehension and, indeed, would run counter to all
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known theories of societal development.
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Well, all may not be lost. Recently, I did learn that the
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Tlaidas possess a philosophy of sorts, whose principles are
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embodied in a series of Fables. Needless to say, they would not
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elaborate and would certainly not condescend to tell a thoroughly
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frustated Terran anthropologist a tale or two. Then, just this
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past week, an event occurred which might be the beginning of a
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breakthrough. Last night, Antaanak, my one and only friend among
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the Tlaidas knocked on the door shortly after the second moon had
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set and asked if he could talk to me. He looked sad and upset as
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he thrust a worn, rolled manuscript into my hands. He said it
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was a Fable and he wished it transported off planet for perusal,
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enjoyment and study. Antaanak believes that if the Tlaidas have
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anything to give to other peoples, it is their Fables. They
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possess no sculptural or pictorial art, no mineral wealth and
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only the most rudimentary of technologies. The violent dust
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storms, which are almost a nightly occurrence here during the
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summer, forced Antaanak to wait until dawn before leaving.
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After thrusting the parchment into my hands and making me
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swear eternal oaths not to reveal the means by which I came to
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own it, he lapsed into gloomy silence. Apparently, it is a crime
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punishable by torture and mutilation to give or tell a Fable to
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an offworlder. Antaanak's is convinced that the Tlaidas must end
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their self imposed, eon-old isolation and begin to communicate
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the only thing they have of any value and so he has exposed
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himself to enormous risk. He has committed the most heinous
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crime of his culture. Antaanak is mortally afraid that if the
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Tlaidas persist in their ways, they will slowly, irrevokably rot
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from narcissistic, fear-ridden egocentricity until they are
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totally consumed by fear, hatred and madness. I agree
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completely.
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To think that such noble hands may have provided me with the
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opportunity to achieve tenure at the University! Guard this old
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manscript with your life, my dear, your very life!
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I miss you more than words can convey. Unitl we meet, may
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the tears of Earth stain the stars forever.
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With boundless love,
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Arik
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_________________________________________________________________
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THE FABLE
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Once upon a time in a galaxy far, far away from here, there
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lived a king. This king was good man and he ruled his realm on a
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sun drenched, but fertile planet, with fairness, justice and
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love. His peasants were truly free men and women. They laughed
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and sang and their crops were lush and bountiful. The women of
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the land were famed for their beauty, intelligence, smiles and
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happy, healthy children. Peace was upon the land and had been so
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long as the king had ruled, which was as long as anyone could
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remember. No enemies from within, without or above trouble this
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fair land. The king maintained no army and few soldiers. His
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several knights seemed jovial and good natured fellows who spent
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most of their time pulling carts and wagons from ditches, helping
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old men and women draw water from the well, and teaching young
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boys and girls how to use the bow and hunt.
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But it was apparent to all that the king was not happy. In
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contrast to his subjects, he was never observed to smile or
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laugh. Almost daily accompanied by some of his knights, he would
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visit a village or field and inquire of those he met about their
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hopes, failures, successes and expectations. His polite manner
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was never aloof or condescending, but was noticeably reserved
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and somewhat cold. The impression that he left upon his subjects
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was not that he did not care for them, but that he carried a
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sadness within; a pain and a nightmare which could not be erased.
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Many inhabitants of the land perceived this quality and privately
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grieved for him. Why could he who ruled this kingdom of peace
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and love not be at peace and in love?
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After dinner in the villages or on hot lazy summer
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afternoons or by the fire in winter, conversation often turned to
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the mystery of the king's torment. Had he been a great villain
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or assassin in some other time or place? Had he lost a loved son
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or daughter? But where was his lady? In all the numberless
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years of the king's rule, no one could ever remember him having a
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woman by his side or showing the slightest interest in a woman
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for the particular qualities of her sex. Had his heart been
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destroyed by the loss of his one true love? A few of the crueler
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minds in the kingdom suggested that perhaps he kept a woman
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chained in his castle on whom all sorts of unspeakable acts were
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committed. The same few fools were also heard to say that
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perhaps the king's lust exploded upon his men at arms or the
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beasts in his stable. Such voices were rare in the land,
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however, for virtually all loved, if slightly feared, their good,
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wise and self tormented king.
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Then one spring, the rains did not fall. Such a thing had
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not occurred within the memory af any living man or woman. The
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ground turned to powder and dust and the seed died for lack of
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water. Some attempts were made to irrigate the fields from
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rivers and wells but the task was hopeless. The rains had always
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fallen and the people had never prepared themselves for, or even
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dared imagine, their absence. By early summer the heat was
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unbearable, the rivers had dwindled to mere tiny creaks and many
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wells had run dry. Babes and young children began to die as
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their mother's breasts ran dry. Strang and unknown diseases
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began to strike the weak, the old and the young. Cries of
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unquenchable grief assailed the stillness of the night as loved
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ones died in a land that seemed to have lost its soul.
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During this time of death, the king was strangely absent.
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After the first few days of unbearable heat and dryness had made
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their appearance, he retreated to his castle and did not re-
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emerge to continue his daily contacts with the people. The
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drawbridge over the castle moat was drawn up and what were now
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stern and uncaring knights turned away all who inquired with
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clipped, abrupt relies. The kingdom's inhabitants resented the
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king's absence, his seeming lack of caring during this time of
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crisis for those whom he had so diligently looked after during
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times of plenty. Some began to wonder if the king had cursed his
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subjects for the drought or some unknown and unspeakable offense
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that he imagined they had committed. But search in their hearts
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as they may, they could discover no grievous wrong acted out upon
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the king or themselves. Besides, was not the king a mortal man?
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Surely, the calamity upon them now could only come from the hands
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of the gods.
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As summer waned, the heat and aridity became, incredibly,
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even more extreme. More of the young and old died and some of
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the young, strong and beautiful went mad. Summer did not merge
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into fall and all hope of respite from the death heat dwindled.
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Then, one furnace ridden day, the dragon appeared.
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Many who were too tired or weak to raise their heads noticed
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only a momemtary darkening of the mid-day sky. Those who did
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look up were both horrified and fascinated, awestruck and
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immobilized with fear. Now they were terrorized by a beast of
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unimaginable proportions that filled half the sky and blotted out
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the accursed orb of catastrophe itself. The dragon was as long
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as a wheat field and covered with blood red scales from the end
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of its snout to the tip of its long pointed tail. The beast's
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hideous tongue was black, four enormous limbs ended in gleaming
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white talons, two pairs of cobalt blue wings of a strangely
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delicate structure rose form its back, and its absurd light grey
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eyes were hypnotic and terrifying.
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The dragon circled the sun three times and came to rest in
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an enormous shrivelled field that lay directly in front of the
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king's castle. The dragon settled itself slowly, adjusting its
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wings and limbs several times as it found its most comfortable
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resting position, belched several long tongues of green flame and
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not a little smoke, and then quietly closed its eyes and went to
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sleep.
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The populace huddled in their villages consumed by an
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apotheosis of fear. Few dared venture out. Many died for want of
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water and food rather than expose themselves to the dragon. The
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great creature, however, seemed oblivious to all and neither ate
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nor drank, neither moved nor stirred. and was never seen to open
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its terrifying, light, grey eyes. Only a faint plume of white
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smoke that occasionally escaped from its tiny slitted nostrils,
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signalled to all that this awesome, uncontrollable force was not
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dead, but slumbered and waited for something - the gods only knew
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what.
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The drought went on into the late fall with no slackening of
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heat and dust, no slackening of death and madness. Through it
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all, the dragon still slept almost all the time never moving, but
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now occasionally opened one light, grey eye to briefly survey the
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castle. An occasional villager would venture to the edge of the
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field where the dragon slept, but most gave the great beast a
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wide berth.
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The one suffocating, hot, still, breathless day that was
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identical to the hundreds that had preceded it, the great door to
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the castle swung open. The drawbridge was lowered over the dried
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out moat and the king rode forth on his favorite black stallion.
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He was alone and dressed in a black tunic crossed by a red sash
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and at his waist hung a glistening, silver, battle sword. The
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king slowly cantered across the field and stopped his horse a few
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yards from the great creature's nose. He dismounted and knelt on
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the ground. Drawing the great sword from its scabbard, he placed
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it upon the earth. The king then bowed his head until it touched
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the scorched grass and said in a loud, clear voice, "I am here
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Cassandra. Do with me what you will."
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The dragons right forelimb flashed out and raked the king's
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body from head to toe. An eruption of crimson flowed over the
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earth. The king died instantly without a sound. The dragon
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stirred, opened its eyes and stretched its legs and tail. It
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belched one long tongue of crimson flame and black smoke and
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launched itself into the air. One swift pass over the sun and it
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was gone.
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Hours passed and the blazing sun coagulated the king's life
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and he ceased to bleed. One by one, the villagers and knights
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came onto the field to stare. They could scarcely believe that
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their good, wise, compassionate and mysterious king was dead. At
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sundown, they buried him in the field in an unmarked grave.
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The next day, it rained.
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