1021 lines
49 KiB
Plaintext
1021 lines
49 KiB
Plaintext
MY LORD AQUITH
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By
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Yves Barbero
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I
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My Lord Aquith directs me to place these words on paper.
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He insists that I identify myself as the scribe. Men call
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me Piplerian Q'Norcail Veni. My Lord Aquith laughs as he
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rolls my name about his tongue.
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"They gave you enough names to rule a country."
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I was found forty-four years ago in a field. I came into
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this world deformed so my parents abandoned me. This wasn't
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cruelty but a chance to give the gods an opportunity to
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correct their error. They chose to do so by having Lord
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Aquith, the elder, my Lord Aquith's father, pass judgement
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that I should live. He gave me to the women of the Keep to
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use according to their needs and my poor talents.
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Each of the eleven women offered the gods a name for me.
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Denir, the priest, accepted each name and gave them a form he
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called, "logical."
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Wise Denir saw my eyes and pronounced me fit for
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education as a scribe. Denir had a wisdom that spoke of the
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elder gods although he wore the cloth of the usurper from the
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East, the one Patrick brought, the God of Death, the one they
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call, Savior Christ.
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I fear this god. He has ambition. He states that other
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gods are false. I state no god is false who makes himself
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felt. Denir would have understood. With a grin, he adopted
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the cloth of the new god and let the water be splashed on his
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face.
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"Patrick," Denir once told me, "had men with heavy swords
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at my baptism. I didn't want to be called to the bosom of
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this new god on that day so I made do with his blessing
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instead."
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"But baptism is powerful," I protested.
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"And I am a good Christian, Pip. I didn't take his holy
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water with a closed heart. Still, an ocean could not wash
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from me the ways of my fathers. I still carry the verse of
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law and the stories of old. The old gods have not left me.
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Christ will simply have to share me with them.
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He laughed shamelessly.
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Denir was old when I was young. He said he would face
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this Christ and mediate his quarrel with the elder gods in
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the next world. Denir's had no success as yet, if I may judge
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from the humorless monks who replaced him. They have not the
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poetry or humor of the Druid, nor his learning of the law.
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They act without precedent, relying on unknown spirits rather
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than the law.
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Men no longer know how to behave.
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These monks have only scribbling, something, if I serve
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as an example, any idiot may learn.
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I bless my Lord Aquith that these pages will be secret
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and I can say my piece without fear of these dark monks.
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These men of small learning despise me as I know their craft
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without sharing their loyalties. I serve the elder gods in
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secret. When they splashed the holy water on me, I was in
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this world but a few days and so the baptism was less
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powerful and did not hold my soul.
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They know but cannot kill me. My Lord Aquith protects me.
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Still, the purpose of these pages is not served by my
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ramblings of the past. It is the events of recent days that
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must be set down. I place my first lines only because my Lord
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Aquith thinks they will help those who are to come to under-
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stand. He has faith that these pages will be found in an
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age when we are both dust.
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"Even the walls have their lifetimes. There'll be a time
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when these stones are removed and the iron chest will once
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again come before the eyes of men.
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"What sort of men will find it?"
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"You're curious for a scribe, Pip. I venture they'll be
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much like us."
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"Wiser?"
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"I fear not. Cleverer, perhaps, with better tools. But
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not wiser."
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I could see he was having private thoughts as he said it.
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He broods at times. I can't presume to understand the
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meanderings of my betters. He gives me much freedom in the
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strokes of this quill. He knows I understand the limits of
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his tolerance."
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My Lord Aquith was presiding over the festival of the
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fall. It has always been a time of joy. For the space of a
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few days, the drudgery of summer is replaced by mild weather
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and there is time for contemplation.
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The poets are at their best just before the first snows
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and will recite for long hours before the fires of cool eves.
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Children born in this season are strong.
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If they are boys and survive the winter at their weakest,
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they become the good right arm of my Lord Aquith. The common
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soldiers are always chosen from this stock.
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If they are girls, they will bear many children.
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It's a good time under the rule of the elder gods. I
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don't know what this Christ will bring. No comforting
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thoughts, I fear.
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The festival was lit by seven huge fires set in the
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ancient pattern. They lit the spirited dancing of the young.
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If the old gods looked on all this with mirth, the sexless
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monks from the East viewed the dancing with fierce and
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unforgiving glares. But for the will of my Lord Aquith, this
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ritual would be forbidden.
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I saw the future Lord Aquith standing among the monks,
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his hair unnaturally cut with continence as stony as theirs.
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May the gods preserve!
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The child, who has barely seen six summers, seemed so
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joyful at birth. Now he is Christ's. Does a dark generation
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cloud this Keep?
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They say Christ walked the Earth in the guise of man.
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Could he have been like his followers? I wonder if his judges
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were not correct in their judgement. My Lord Aquith once
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executed a man who was leading his followers in a pattern of
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worship my Lord Aquith thought too rigid. I asked him why.
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Did not this man honestly worship the old gods? Surely the
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complaints of worthless monks was not reason enough to
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execute a man?
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"You presume to judge my judgement?" He asked in a
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playful manner. He can be playful about his deepest feelings.
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"I...I did not mean to presume...to give offense. Truly,
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I sometimes forget my place."
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He laughed. "I don't take offense of your sincere
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question, Pip. Nor should I use my office to intimidate a
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loyal servant. Forgive me!"
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"Readily, Sire."
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He pondered for a long moment. "There is a type of man
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who traps himself in a few ideas. If he also carries the
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ability to lead others, he becomes dangerous. He'll challenge
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my rule, first, then that of the gods."
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I didn't completely understand and pressed my Lord
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Aquith. Had I let it go, he would have been truly angry with
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me. He demands honest opinion and will not tolerate agreement
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for the sake of ambition or fear of a beating.
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"Do you think I was unjust? Answer me honestly, Pip!"
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"Forgive me, Lord, but where is the precedent? All law
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is precedent and there is none for this."
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"I thought you despised Hetter," He said of the executed
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man.
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"I confess my hatred of Hetter. But I cannot see how he
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threatened you, my Lord Aquith. He was weak and too ill
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disposed to command soldiers. My hate is not sufficient
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reason for his execution. There must be precedent."
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He nodded. "For a crippled fool, Pip, you ask hard
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questions of me. The Christians have supplied the precedent.
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Consider the Christ! At best, he was a worker of wood,
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a cabinet maker, a carpenter. A good skill, highly valued and
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yet the priests sought his death for leading the people
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astray. But now, his followers have the ears of kings and
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the dear of the people."
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My Lord Aquith saw that I finally understood. In the
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quiet that followed, we shared the same thoughts.
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I watched the young dancers, especially the women, with
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envy and let my mind wonder back twenty-five years when I
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shared the hay with Minia. It was my only time. She was older
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by two summers and crippled of mind and, I think, she was
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given a coin by the elder Lord Aquith. I was his fool. He
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fed me and provided. She was of good disposition.
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My Lord Aquith's laughter behind me returned me to the
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present. "Thinking of Minia, Pip?"
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"Aye, Lord."
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"I think of her too. You were not the only one she
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introduced into the mysteries. She was cruelly dealt with."
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She was fond of throwing rocks at the soldiers, who were
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expected to accept them with good humor. Gentle, if playful,
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demons possessed her. One knight, who had changed his name to
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Sir Paul on accepting the Eastern God, chose to torment her
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for her graciousness towards men.
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Minia would not be tormented. Her kindly demons would
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not allow it. Instead, they showed her how to torment Sir
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Paul with smiles and loose garments and a grab at certain
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moments and at certain parts making others, including my
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Lord Aquith, laugh at the knight's redness of face.
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She was found along the road with her throat cut. The
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wound bore the mark of a man who knew his trade.
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Denir said, those years ago, that the killer had used her
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forcefully.
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Two nights later, I heard screams from the tower. A man
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was being whipped. His name is my Lord Aquith's secret though
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I know it to be Paul, Knight of Christ. My Lord Aquith will
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neither confirm or deny my certain knowledge, even now, ten
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years after Sir Paul's death and sixteen since Denir made his
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way to the Keep of Christ to mediate for the old gods.
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My certain knowledge came from the uncomfortable walk
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of Sir Paul the next day. I told Denir of it and he mumbled
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sadly, "Sir Paul took an oath to Christ. If it was he who
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could not control his lust and he who would kill to hide his
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weakness in violation of the Christian commandment, his
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punishment was soft indeed.
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"Why did he not give her a gift of copper? She was
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playful."
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"She also had a tongue and Lord Aquith cannot abide
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hypocrites. If Paul took an oath of chastity, as foolish as
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such an oath is, our Lord Aquith would expect him to keep it.
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He murdered her to keep the secret...if it was he. Oh, that
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all men were like you, Pip."
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My Lord Aquith gave me his cup. "Drink quickly, Pip!
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There will be another after that. Soon, we'll all walk as
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you do!"
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His four knights, Sir Cullier, Sir Michael, Sir Malyarn
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and Sir Asien all laughed. Only the sour monks kept their
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silence.
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The mead went down roughly and I was quickly drunk.
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"Look!" A monk shouted, pointing to the sky. "A sign from
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heaven!"
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We all looked up. The shout came from a truly frightened
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man.
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The stars seemed to be growing and disappearing in
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silence. The night was lighted up as if by lightning but the
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brief daylight was longer than lightning and there were no
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clouds or claps or rain.
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"The gods battle!" I shouted.
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"Aye, Pip!" Sir Malyarn answered nervously.
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A monk drew a cross from his belt and held it out. "There
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is no God but Christ, heathen!"
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Sir Malyarn made the sign as he staggered back,
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fearfully. I held my ground. Drink had made me brave. That
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was foolish. The monks would find an opportunity to flay me.
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"Silence, monk!" My Lord Aquith ordered. "Back to your
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place!"
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The monk retreated but did not replace the cross in his
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belt.
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"What is it, Lord!" Sir Cullier shouted.
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"Am I a seer to know the heavens?"
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We watched the silent battle. Only the roar of the seven
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fires could be heard. Everyone had fallen silent and looked
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upward.
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Soon, it was over.
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My Lord Aquith laughed. "Are we to be frightened by the
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manifestations of the heavens?" He shouted for all to hear.
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"The gods, too, have their quarrels!"
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The knights joined in the laughter.
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"Dance!" My Lord Aquith ordered. "Be joyful, least we
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displease the bountiful gods and they have cause to turn
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their terrible weapons on us!"
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The drum took up their rhythm and the dancing resumed.
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My eyes were misted from drink but I saw a silver spear,
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larger than the largest horse, pass in front of me, its shaft
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afire. A clap of thunder followed it an instant later. It was
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louder than any thunder I ever heard. A rough wind made the
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seven fires sway after the spear. Many fell to the ground
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from the force of this momentary storm. Or from fear. Drink
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and wind combined to cause of my falling.
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I felt my Lord Aquith's firm hand pull me up and with his
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other hand, he handed me my cripple's stick.
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"What..."
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"There's nothing to dread," My Lord Aquith said to my
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startled cry.
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There was a smaller clap of thunder in the distance. The
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ground shook, almost knocking me from my feet again but for
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the strong hand of my Lord Aquith. In the far, beyond the
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trees, was a light of unearthly glow.
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After a spell, it disappeared.
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"Dance!" Came the cheerful command of my Lord Aquith.
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The drums resumed their beat and the pipes took up the drone.
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We watched the young people dance into the night and
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disappear into the mounds of hay. Drowsiness was creeping
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up on me. In fact, I soon fell asleep in the bliss of mead.
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Sir Cullier told me that it was my Lord Aquith, himself, who
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carried me to my straw below the kitchen.
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I remember the look on my Lord Aquith's face before the
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slumber of mead took me into the shadows. It was turned to
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the spot of the distant glow. The smile disappeared, a frown
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formed and the eyes narrowed.
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II
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The days of September soon ended.
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Little happened except that I was beaten one night by
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two monks as I stepped from relieving myself. I had taken my
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cup of mead as was permitted me on Sundays but I wasn't
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drunk. Still, I am old and my body seems in a hurry to
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relieve itself.
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The monk's cowls hid their faces but I knew them to be
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John and Mark. Of the five my Lord Aquith is forced to
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tolerate, it could only be them. I didn't complain to my Lord
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Aquith over this trifling incident. It is the place of
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cripples to be beaten from time to time.
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It's only because Sir Cullier happened upon the scene
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that my Lord Aquith learned of the act. Sir Cullier
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approached the monks and with the back of his gloved hand,
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boxed their ears.
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Naturally, they fled.
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"Cowards!" He shouted after them. He looked down on me.
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"Who were those monks?"
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"I did not see their faces, Sire!"
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A grin appeared on his face. "But you know who they are,
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little cripple."
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I said nothing.
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"You fear their retribution? Very well, have it your
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way!" He kicked my stick to me and left. It's not that Sir
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Cullier wanted to show me kindness. He, himself, has booted
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my behind when I was slow to react to his commands. Although
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he is more playful about it then cruel. Sir Cullier has a
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sense of the law and the law leaves punishment as the sole
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prerogative of the Lord of the Keep or fathers punishing
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children.
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"How long have these beatings been inflicted on you?"
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My Lord Aquith demanded of me the next morning.
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"All my life, Sire." I was trembling as I stood before
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him. Not from fear of retribution from the monks but because
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I held back from my Lord Aquith. He had always looked to me
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for the Keep's whispers.
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Sir Cullier is the shrewdest of my Lord Aquith's four
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gentlemen at arms. "He knows who they are, Sire. I offered
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Pip my protection. I am offended that he still fears them."
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My Lord Aquith's eyes narrowed. "Do you accept Sir
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Cullier's protection?"
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"Yes, Sire." I was trapped.
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"Then name the monks!" He boomed.
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"John and Mark, my Lord Aquith!" I had little choice in
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naming them. I didn't understand why my Lord Aquith made such
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a display of the incident. He knew that I was beaten from
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time to time by the cooks or some soldier. He never made a
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fuss over those incidents. But he ordered John and Mark back
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to their bishop after giving them twenty lashes each.
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In private, I later asked him why. "I am not so important
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that you would anger the bishop?"
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"You see only the surface, Pip. If you saw more fully,
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you'd be a better instrument to me. I am the law, here! If
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you committed some offense, I, and only I, must be the
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instrument of your punishment. The Church presumes to take
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my place in ordinary matters. It needs to be taught its
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place."
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"But my Lord Aquith, John and Mark didn't beat me for
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some offense of the law but because they despise my learning
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and my teacher, Denir."
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"Aye, that's true. I chose to see it another way since
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it's of use to my policy." He grinned. "Think of the benefit
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it does us both. The bishop will be more thoughtful because
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I dared punish his agents and you, little cripple, are not
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likely to be beaten again. Twenty lashes to important monks
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is something the cooks will remember."
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With that, I shared his grin.
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It was the third day of October when the woman came
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before my Lord Aquith. She came dragging her daughter behind
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her by the hair. It took two guards to restrain the daughter,
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I was later told.
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I was sent for after a few questions by my Lord Aquith.
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"Pip, take pen and paper and mark down our words!"
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A monk, Jeromy, protested. "We may do the task, Sire!"
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Jeromy and Martin were left to us after the banishment
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of Mark and John. Old Albert, the fifth monk, was in ill
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health and did not share the confidence of his younger
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brothers. They suspected him of being a secret Druid. He did
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nothing to contradict their suspicions. He didn't care what
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they thought, knowing full well that he'd be in Christ's Keep
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before many weeks would pass.
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"Silence, monks!" Sir Cullier shouted, placing a hand on
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his scabbard.
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Jeromy knelt before my Lord Aquith. "Sire! This woman
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speaks of demons and out worldly fires. Surely, this is the
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province of the Church?"
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"I acknowledge your interest in this matter, monk." My
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Lord Aquith told him. "But I want a hand free of bias to
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write down her words. You are free to copy Pip's lines
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later."
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Jeromy nodded and resumed his place.
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"Speak, women! Tell Pip your name and that of your
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daughter!"
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The old woman spoke. "I've always been called Boutha and
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my daughter is Mary. After the Virgin. I tell you, great
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Lord, that she is the first child to be named after the
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Virgin in these parts. I was first in my village to acknow-
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ledge the Christ as my Lord and Savior. It was eighteen years
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ago when I was heavy with Mary..."
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"Yes, yes! Go on, Boutha!" My Lord Aquith gestured
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impatiently. "I know you are a woman of true virtue."
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Boutha's eyes grew large. I picked up pen and ink.
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"It was the night the gods battled. I shared my bed with
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my husband, Tull. And Mary slept by the door."
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"Why wasn't Mary here with the other young people?"
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"She was wed last year."
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"Why was she not with her husband?"
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"Jos is gone."
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"Yes." My Lord Aquith reflected. "I remember now. Was he
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ever found?"
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"No, Sire!" Sir Cullier supplied. "We think he was taken
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by the bog."
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"Or thieving on some southern road!" My Lord Aquith added
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to general laughter. "He was a wild one, I recall. Continue,
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Boutha!"
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A horrible shriek came from Mary. It was so sudden that
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the guards were taken by surprise and let her go. She ran for
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mother, striking her cruelly about the head and shoulders.
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Surely, she would have slain her mother if Sir Cullier had
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not acted swiftly and pulled the girl away.
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Mary turned her rage on my Lord Aquith's retainer and bit
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him on the hand. Sir Cullier made short work of her. One blow
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from his free hand and she fell unconscious.
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Jeromy approached my Lord Aquith. "The girl is possessed!
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It is a Church matter!"
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"Perhaps, monk!" But so far, I am convinced only of a
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quarrel within her family. Let the evidence unfold itself!
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If it reveals concerns belonging to the Church, I will allow
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you voice. Until then, you will remain silent!"
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Boutha was on her feet. Two marks were on her face and
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blood came from her lips.
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"Let Boutha be attended to!" My Lord Aquith ordered. Take
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Mary and lock her firmly! Pip, attend me!"
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I followed My Lord Aquith and Sir Cullier to the chapel
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behind the great hall of the Keep.
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Jeromy and Martin followed us but Sir Cullier closed the
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heavy door of the chapel before they could enter, saying
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something I could not hear but which sent the monks angrily
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away.
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My Lord Aquith approached the altar and bowed slightly to
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the iron cross with the figure of the Eastern Savior nailed
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firmly to it. "Forgive me, my Lord Christ, but these matters
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concern you not!" He turned the heavy cross to the wall.
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I sensed sarcasm in his words and action. My Lord Aquith
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turned to Sir Cullier.
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"I would have your counsel, my most honest of retainers!"
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My Lord Aquith used the words blunt and honest
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interchangeably.
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"Twenty strokes for the girl, Sire! Ten for striking her
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mother and ten for striking me!"
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"A fair punishment, Sir Cullier. It will be executed." He
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rubbed his bearded chin. "But there is something else I want
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your thoughts on. Something of more pressing moment. Do you
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think demons are involved?"
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"I know not, Sire. I know only that when a family is in
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the midst of quarrel, large and regrettable claims are made."
|
|
My Lord Aquith nodded in agreement. "The curse of such
|
|
claims is that they divide villages and, unless wisdom is
|
|
applied quickly, the wildest of imaginings come forth and
|
|
deaths quickly follow. I don't wish to see my people killing
|
|
each other." He turned to me. "Your eyes are full of
|
|
questions, Pip?"
|
|
I shifted nervously.
|
|
"Before you arrived at the hall, Pip, wild charges of
|
|
fire coming from Mary's finger were spoken. Jeromy and Martin
|
|
immediately concluded possession. I look for a more mundane
|
|
explanation."
|
|
With those words, my Lord Aquith produced a metal object
|
|
from his tunic and placed it in my hand. "What make you of
|
|
this?"
|
|
I've never seen its like, My Lord!"
|
|
It was of polished metal, such as a fine silver but
|
|
without the weight of the precious metal. One end was hollow
|
|
and the other had a grip angled from the tube and very
|
|
comfortable to the hand. In the angle between the grip and
|
|
the tube was a framed space with a small piece of metal
|
|
inviting a finger. I dared not touch it for fear of the
|
|
magic.
|
|
"Boutha called it a wand. Her husband took it from the
|
|
girl."
|
|
Sir Cullier approached me and took the wand. I was
|
|
pleased to be rid of it. "It has the feel of a weapon, Sire.
|
|
Perhaps a small arrow thrown from the tube but I see no
|
|
mechanism for winding it and it looks too small to cause
|
|
harm unless it involves a poison." Without another thought,
|
|
sir Cullier gripped the thing, his finger touching the small
|
|
metal piece.
|
|
Fire, in a long straight path, issued noiselessly from
|
|
the tube and touched the metal cross on the altar. The cross
|
|
glowed briefly, crackling as it turned a color a smithy sees
|
|
and fell melted to the stone altar.
|
|
Sir Cullier eyes widened. It was the first time I saw
|
|
surprise on his face. He examined the thing and carefully
|
|
avoided pointing it at any body.
|
|
My Lord Aquith rubbed the bald spot on his brow thought-
|
|
fully. "We shall take care with that." He took the proffered
|
|
wand from his retainer and regarded it carefully. "Your guess
|
|
is correct, Sir Cullier. It is a weapon. I wonder how it
|
|
contains the fire?"
|
|
"There is a demon within it, Sire!" Sir Cullier offered
|
|
with heavy breath.
|
|
"It's a mindless demon, if he be there." My Lord Aquith
|
|
observed, inclined more to curiosity than fear. "It serves
|
|
whoever pulls the triggering rod. Perhaps it the same demon
|
|
which resides in any good bow."
|
|
He replaced the wand in his tunic.
|
|
"It attacked a symbol of Christ!" I said.
|
|
"A sensible choice." My Lord Aquith ventured
|
|
sarcastically. "But I think that if it had been pointed at
|
|
you, it would have attacked you. Are you afraid, Pip?"
|
|
"Aye, my Lord Aquith!"
|
|
"You were always sensible with your fears, Pip. Let's
|
|
go find this demon of Mary's and see if he is sensible."
|
|
We left the next morning.
|
|
|
|
III
|
|
|
|
The party was equipped for war. My Lord Aquith and Sir
|
|
Cullier led on their chargers, followed by the other
|
|
retainers. Those of us on foot, eight soldiers, myself, the
|
|
woman Boutha, and her daughter with Jeromy and Martin behind
|
|
them and four more soldiers to guard our rear, slowed the
|
|
procession to a slow walk.
|
|
It would take us most of the morning to get to Boutha's
|
|
village. The roads were little more than wagon tracks in the
|
|
country north of the Keep. Because of the shortness of the
|
|
journey, we took only what supplies we could carry and left
|
|
the carts behind. I wish we had left the monks behind and
|
|
even ventured to suggest it to my Lord Aquith. He gave me
|
|
only a knowing grin and said nothing to my suggestion as he
|
|
checked the straps of his saddle and mounted the war horse.
|
|
It was a quiet journey. Mary's hands were tied behind her
|
|
back with a stout rope. Another rope at her feet was long
|
|
enough to allow her to walk but not so long that she might
|
|
run away.
|
|
The monks mumbled their prayers for her soul as they took
|
|
unhurried strides behind her.
|
|
The morning fog had lifted and it was getting warm. My
|
|
bones didn't ache that day. It was a good sign. I thanked the
|
|
sprites of the forest softly so Jeromy could not hear.
|
|
After our talk in the chapel, my Lord Aquith, Sir Cullier
|
|
and myself had gone to speak to Mary without telling the
|
|
monks. But for my Lord Aquith's orders, I would not write the
|
|
words which followed.
|
|
This is Mary's tale.
|
|
"The demon is without hair and is covered with bruises.
|
|
His complexion is fair, whiter than any man I have ever
|
|
seen. And he doesn't smell! He has no hair on his chest or
|
|
legs..."
|
|
"How know you this?" Sir Cullier demanded.
|
|
She shrieked, "He is my lover! And such a lover, no woman
|
|
has ever had! He is larger than any man I have ever seen!"
|
|
She laughed madly and astounded us with descriptions I
|
|
had never before heard issue from a woman's mouth. Even the
|
|
common soldiers, with their ribald tales, would never speak
|
|
as she did.
|
|
My Lord Aquith listened calmly. He kept his thoughts
|
|
private. As he often tells me, silence is an ally. People
|
|
assume you agree with them if you pay close heed and say
|
|
naught.
|
|
Finally, my Lord Aquith took out the wand and asked. "How
|
|
did you get this?"
|
|
"The demon slept and I took it. I saw him chase the men
|
|
away with it, using it so the fire burned the ground before
|
|
them, or the trees around their heads. I saw him kill a wolf
|
|
that came into his camp."
|
|
"But he let you in his camp?"
|
|
"Aye! I am a woman and often consort with the wood
|
|
sprites. I walk into the woods with my breasts bared and my
|
|
tongue licking my lips. Sprites and men know what that
|
|
means."
|
|
She opened her dress and revealed herself. "I could take
|
|
all three of you at once and would..."
|
|
"Restore your clothes, girl!" My Lord Aquith said coldly.
|
|
"We are not demons or sprites and you hold no appeal for us!"
|
|
She laughed and closed her dress. "I know a great
|
|
secret!" She seemed to chant it and repeated it three times
|
|
while doing a dance.
|
|
"What is this secret?" My Lord Aquith asked, speaking
|
|
calmly as a friend might speak.
|
|
"Before the men were the women! Once, we ruled! The old
|
|
gods speak of it. We controlled men with our passions! But
|
|
then came iron. It was given men by jealous male gods. Men
|
|
subdued the Great Mother with iron. Iron stays stiff when
|
|
men cannot!"
|
|
I trembled but took comfort in the wisdom of my Lord
|
|
Aquith in keeping the monks from this interrogation. Surely,
|
|
even my Lord Aquith could not prevent her burning if the
|
|
severe monks heard of this.
|
|
"Did the demon tell you this?"
|
|
She gave a sinister smile. "The demon speaks a tongue
|
|
only I understand. He speaks to his iron and the iron comes
|
|
alive."
|
|
"What does he say to his iron?" My Lord Aquith examined
|
|
his ring of office, showing no concern, as he spoke. I have
|
|
seen him do this when he wished to make as if indifferent.
|
|
"That's my secret! It will be my secret! My secret! My
|
|
Secret!" She chanted and resumed her dance.
|
|
"I think you lie, Mary. You don't speak the demon's
|
|
tongue. You want only to increase your importance in our
|
|
eyes."
|
|
She pointed a finger at My Lord Aquith. "I am not a man
|
|
and care naught for importance!" She chanted, circling about
|
|
us in her suggestive dance. "I am the Earth! Without me,
|
|
there is no ground for the importance of men to stand! I've
|
|
seen the other world! I've seen the other world!"
|
|
"Heaven?" Sir Cullier asked.
|
|
"Hell!" She shrieked. "It's a far better place! The Great
|
|
Mother rules there!"
|
|
Calm as ever, my Lord Aquith asked, "Where is this hell?"
|
|
"The gate is with my lover. He guards it with his living
|
|
iron!"
|
|
"Why would the Great Mother tolerate a gate of iron to
|
|
her paradise and use a male demon, larger than men, as a
|
|
guard?" My Lord Aquith was fond of using logic to befuddle.
|
|
The girl, Mary, ignored the thrust. "You need only see
|
|
the camp to see that it is the gate to Hell! He has cleared
|
|
the forest with his magic and fire, dug a trench the length
|
|
of a hundred men. In the middle, he has planted a tree of
|
|
iron. It gleams in the moonlight and small steady fires issue
|
|
from its heart. They light and go out without the agency of
|
|
men. Demons whisper from the tree. The fires are cold to the
|
|
touch but light the tree with more brightness than the moon."
|
|
"Tell me more!"
|
|
"I don't wish to. Go and ask the demon, yourself, if you
|
|
dare!"
|
|
"Perhaps it is time that I do!"
|
|
My Lord Aquith decided that nothing useful could be
|
|
unearthed from this evil child and had her locked away for
|
|
the night. He placed a guard at her door with instructions
|
|
that no one should enter save me with her meal. If Jeromy or
|
|
Martin came down this passage, they were to be chased away,
|
|
preferably with a good swift kick.
|
|
The guard my Lord Aquith picked had no trouble
|
|
understanding.
|
|
I returned shortly after with bread and cheese and some
|
|
mead and entered the cell to find Mary in the shadows, hiding
|
|
from me but issuing a cruel laugh. I placed the bowl and cup
|
|
on the floor and began walking backwards so she could not
|
|
jump out and surprise me. Not that I could do much. She was
|
|
a young woman, if frenzied, in good health and could most
|
|
certainly tear me apart before the guard could come to aide
|
|
me.
|
|
She suddenly came out of the shadows, naked to the air.
|
|
She leered at me, moving her tongue back and forth. I was
|
|
more than willing to believe she was possessed by some
|
|
Christian demon. First, she tempts you and then requires
|
|
feelings of guilt because you listened to the temptation. I
|
|
was frozen in place for a moment but gathered my senses and
|
|
ran out of the cell. To this day, I can still feel a trace
|
|
of pain in my abused legs.
|
|
I closed the door swiftly and dropped the wood in place.
|
|
I heard mocking laughter. I had dropped my stick when
|
|
I ran and knew I would not see it till the morrow.
|
|
The guard, Flanor, looked at me in amazement. He'd never
|
|
seen me move so quickly nor my face so drained of color. He'd
|
|
never been a friend to me but he had always granted me my
|
|
peace. He did not mock me and I could not fault him.
|
|
"Did you see the demon?"
|
|
I nodded. "Don't open the door for your life's sake!"
|
|
He took out some mistletoe and kissed it.
|
|
|
|
IV
|
|
|
|
We arrived at the village as the sun was almost directly
|
|
overhead. It was deserted. Signs of burned huts were all
|
|
about.
|
|
"It's Mary's work!" Boutha shouted. "She did it with the
|
|
wand. She burned her father's hand. It no longer serves him!"
|
|
My Lord Aquith rode back to where Boutha stood. "Go and
|
|
tell the villagers to come out of hiding. They are under my
|
|
protection!"
|
|
Boutha ran.
|
|
In the space of an hour, she had gathered most of the
|
|
villagers, including her husband who hid his hand in a
|
|
crude bandage.
|
|
My Lord Aquith looked at Tull and remembered him. Tull
|
|
was speaker for this village and met with the Lord of the
|
|
Keep at least twice a year. But Tull was a common name for
|
|
men in these parts and I think that my Lord Aquith did not
|
|
know he was this Tull until his eyes rested on him. Since
|
|
these pages must be honest on my Lord Aquith's instruction,
|
|
I must add that he now often forgets the faces of those he
|
|
does not see every day. In others, this is a fault but my
|
|
Lord Aquith occupies himself with weighty matters and will
|
|
not behave as a common man. Although, I hasten to add, he
|
|
was not always so grave a man. It is only in the four years
|
|
since my Lady Aquith fell from her favorite mount to the
|
|
next world that he moves into forgetful moods.
|
|
It took the strength of Sir Cullier and four soldiers
|
|
to stay my Lord Aquith's sword from the neck of the white
|
|
mare.
|
|
"How fare you, Tull?" My Lord Aquith boomed to the
|
|
peasant speaker.
|
|
"My hand is useless and my daughter is the one who did
|
|
it." Tull said this in the same tone as he would argue for
|
|
his village's share of the harvest. The sense of
|
|
righteousness was there but his speech lacked passion.
|
|
"I will punish her, Tull. Unless you, as her sire, claim
|
|
that right for yourself."
|
|
"I will leave the punishment to you, my Lord Aquith. I
|
|
can't raise a hand against my own child."
|
|
Sir Cullier rode foreword. "Perhaps if you had exercised
|
|
your paternal duties, she would not have consorted with
|
|
demons. She deserves death for striking her sire!"
|
|
Tull lowered his head. "I plead you not to strike her
|
|
dead, sir knight!"
|
|
Sir Cullier looked at my Lord Aquith for judgement.
|
|
"Thirty lashes added to the twenty, Sir Cullier!"
|
|
"Aye, my Lord!" If Sir Cullier seemed unhappy with this
|
|
mild sentence, it was because my Lord Aquith's own law
|
|
prevented this sentence from being carried out at once. It
|
|
would have to be divided over the space of three days. No
|
|
more than twenty lashes a day were allowed.
|
|
"I want to break the act, not the spirit!" My Lord Aquith
|
|
had explained in changing the policy of his father.
|
|
My Lord Aquith dismounted. He placed his arm around the
|
|
speaker. "We will talk, Tull. Come, Pip!" He looked at Sir
|
|
Cullier, indicating with his eyes that his lieutenant should
|
|
stay outside.
|
|
The good knight knew his Lord's tactic. To loosen Tull's
|
|
tongue, he would leave most displays of power outside.
|
|
I followed them into the mean hut.
|
|
"Tell me what occurred here, honest Tull!" My Lord Aquith
|
|
said as he sat on a basket of grain.
|
|
I placed myself on the dirt floor and took out my inks
|
|
to write.
|
|
"It was the night of the harvest festival. We were
|
|
satiated as it is your policy not to count what is eaten that
|
|
night in your share."
|
|
"I know my policies." My Lord Aquith said with mock
|
|
gravity. "Continue!"
|
|
"We had just gone to sleep when we heard a loud noise.
|
|
It was as daylight outside. I stepped from the hut, followed
|
|
by Boutha and Mary. In the forest was a fire so I gathered
|
|
the men to go and put out the fire. It was dry, as you may
|
|
remember, and we were fearful of its spread.
|
|
"We ran to the fire with buckets, hoping against hope
|
|
that the spring nearby was not dry. In my heart, I knew it
|
|
to be dry. But by the time we arrived, there was no fire. The
|
|
woods were full of noises, like voices speaking from
|
|
invisible places. We were all fearful but I and some brave
|
|
lads advanced anyway.
|
|
"We came to a place, a clearing that wasn't there before
|
|
but seemed to be scooped out by the hand of a giant god. It
|
|
was black and there were still small fires about. I ordered
|
|
the men to put them out.
|
|
"As we entered the clearing, we saw a metal tree, smooth
|
|
and twisted like no tree should be. It had been uprooted and
|
|
was lying on its side. Out of a hole in the tree emerged the
|
|
demon.
|
|
"Fire came from his finger!
|
|
"We fled!"
|
|
My Lord Aquith nodded. "Very wise. Why didn't you come
|
|
to me at once?"
|
|
"We were fearful that you'd lash us and accuse us of
|
|
taking sprite herbs for their powerful dreams."
|
|
"As I did four harvests ago?"
|
|
"Yes, my Lord. The harvest festivals bring on many
|
|
strange manifestations."
|
|
"What did this demon look like?"
|
|
"He has the form of a man. I could see that well in the
|
|
moonlight. His coloring was a strange hue like metal and he
|
|
was naked. Some of the lads thought he was dressed but that
|
|
his clothing was tight on his frame. He had no hair!"
|
|
"Continue, Tull!"
|
|
"There's little more to tell, my Lord Aquith. It's been
|
|
the habit of this village not to inquire too deeply into the
|
|
affairs of the gods."
|
|
"A virtuous habit. Tell me about Mary!"
|
|
"She disappeared from the village that night."
|
|
A silence followed.
|
|
My Lord Aquith let the silence fill the hut. He is
|
|
skilled at questioning. After a time, he said. "Tull, I am
|
|
not seeking to punish. I only punish deceit and you have
|
|
offered none as yet. I reward truth, even unpleasant truth.
|
|
You know that. Your village has my protection."
|
|
"And the priests?"
|
|
"I will keep them from you and yours. Did you search for
|
|
Mary?"
|
|
Tull dropped to his knees and blubbered.
|
|
"You didn't search for her. Why not? I know you have
|
|
affection for your unworthy child."
|
|
"The forest controls her. She belongs to the old gods.
|
|
I'm but a simple man."
|
|
"Perhaps not so simple. Were you not worried that she
|
|
might be hurt and need attending?"
|
|
"No, my Lord! Food would disappear. We knew it was her."
|
|
"Has she done this before?"
|
|
He nodded, trembling. "We thought Jos would control her.
|
|
He was strong. She drove him away or..."
|
|
"...Or killed him." My Lord Aquith supplied. "And since
|
|
then, no one has taken a firm hand to her for fear of her
|
|
magical powers?"
|
|
Tull's silence had the look of agreement.
|
|
"Tell me about the night she returned with the wand of
|
|
fire!"
|
|
Tull looked around to me.
|
|
"Pip is my creature, good Tull. He is sworn to silence
|
|
and bears no love for the priests of the Eastern God. Tell
|
|
me! Hold nothing back!"
|
|
"I was asleep. The smell of fire woke me. Then there
|
|
shouts and strange sounds. I left my bed to find confusion.
|
|
In the middle of the confusion, Mary was shrieking with
|
|
demonic laughter. At first, I thought the fire came from
|
|
a finger. Then I saw the wand. I walked up from behind her
|
|
and took hold of the wand. My hand was in pain but I had it
|
|
and threw it from her."
|
|
"That was courageous, Tull! It was the proper thing to
|
|
do!"
|
|
"I struck my daughter in fury!"
|
|
"A fury you didn't know you possessed?"
|
|
He nodded. "You know my heart, my Lord. We strapped her
|
|
to a post. The next morning, we tied her hands firmly and
|
|
made knots on her legs so she could not run away. Boutha
|
|
brought her to you. Boutha thought it best."
|
|
My Lord Aquith rose. "I am glad you are speaker of this
|
|
village. You have great wisdom and Boutha is blessing to your
|
|
house."
|
|
"Thank you, my Lord."
|
|
"Remove the bandage, Tull. I would examine the wound."
|
|
Tull did as he was told. Two fingers were missing and he
|
|
could not move the others.
|
|
"I've seen such injuries before, Tull! I have applied
|
|
fires to seal wounds in battle. You will live to a fine old
|
|
age. I'll have my smith make you a hook so you may do
|
|
honorable labor."
|
|
The speaker nodded in gratitude. Such services are
|
|
beyond his means.
|
|
"Lead me to this demon!"
|
|
But my Lord, he is a manifestation of the harvest time!"
|
|
"Then lead me to the place! He may choose to manifest
|
|
himself to the Lord of the Keep."
|
|
|
|
V
|
|
|
|
As companions, my Lord Aquith took Sir Cullier, Sir
|
|
Michael and the bowman, O'Dounille. He left the rest to guard
|
|
the village. I went as his chronicler to the consternation of
|
|
Jeromy and Martin, who insisted on coming to protect the
|
|
interest of the Church.
|
|
I thought my Lord Aquith too eager to have them along.
|
|
He was plotting so I kept my own counsel.
|
|
It was dusk when we arrived at the demon camp. I could
|
|
sense the fear amongst us. We heard whispers, voices in a
|
|
language known only to the gods. Only my Lord Aquith and Sir
|
|
Cullier seemed fearless. They had faced foes from the North,
|
|
horned men with the faces of bears. I know that the horns and
|
|
faces are masks to strike fear into their enemies but
|
|
it's also true that the men of the North took on the spirits
|
|
of the monsters they killed for their coloring.
|
|
"Do you think the demon has another wand?" I asked in a
|
|
whisper.
|
|
"I own more than one sword. He has more than one wand!"
|
|
The horses were left behind and we approached with
|
|
stealth. There was a bright glow coming from the demon's
|
|
camp. It didn't come from a campfire. There was an unnatural
|
|
air about it.
|
|
I saw the unearthly camp, I admit, on my belly with
|
|
bushes for cover. I've never been known for my bravery.
|
|
The scene was as the Christians describe the world of the
|
|
damned. Even the shrubbery at the border of the camp was
|
|
wilted in poisoned death. What sort of god kills growing
|
|
things? The land did seem plowed by some giant fiery hand.
|
|
The metal tree was twisted only as an evil entity might
|
|
express malice.
|
|
The glow was coming from two globes on metal posts.
|
|
Then, we saw the demon.
|
|
In the eerie light, he seemed naked. But I soon saw that
|
|
he had clothing. It fit tightly about his body and he carried
|
|
a long wand, half the length of a spear.
|
|
I heard voices from behind me. They were whispers.
|
|
"Return to the village, Tull! You've served me well."
|
|
"Yes, my Lord!" He seemed gladdened by the order.
|
|
The whisper of Jeromy next filled my ears. "He is a
|
|
demon, Lord!"
|
|
"Do you propose to fight him, Brother Jeromy, or will you
|
|
leave that to me? The choice is yours."
|
|
There was silence for a spell.
|
|
"Well, Jeromy? Can your Christ conquer this demon?"
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He was baiting the monk. I saw his purpose.
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"I will cast it out!" Jeromy whispered firmly.
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"Well and good, Jeromy. I will bide while you do your
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work."
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I understood the scheme from his tone. My Lord Aquith
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saw the demon as a warrior, not a spirit. He was using the
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demon to rid himself of these troublesome monks. My Lord
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Aquith sensed this demon as a Viking spirit come to threaten
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the people of the Keep. Not an evil manifestation at all.
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My heart fluttered as I saw Jeromy and Martin leave the
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cover of the trees and advance, cross in hand.
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"Ready yourself, O'Dounille!" My Lord Aquith whispered.
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"If the Christ fails us, I would trust the spirit that guides
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your sure hand!"
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He was employing sarcasm again.
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O'Dounille said a small prayer to the tree from which his
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shaft sprang.
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The demon saw Jeromy and Martin approach. In a loud
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voice, they muttered their Latin, striking more fear in me,
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I fear, than in the demon. How many times has my Lord Aquith
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told me that Latin moves men, not mountains, and I still
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tremble at its pronouncement. How foolish of me. Denir said
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it was merely another tongue and taught it to me. I scribble
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it but fear to speak it. It belongs to the dreaded Savior in
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its spoken form.
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"Stand ready but hold your place, bowman!" My Lord Aquith
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whispered conspiratorially. "We must give Brother Jeromy his
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chance."
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The demon turned swiftly at the approach of the dark
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monks. Perhaps he mistook them for wild animals, dressed as
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they were in their brown habits. Perhaps he knew what they
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|
represented. Perhaps he thought the iron cross a weapon. I
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|
cannot tell. He raised his wand and pointed it toward Jeromy.
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If Jeromy had stopped, I believe, the creature would not
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have loosed the fury of the weapon upon him. He had only
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|
chased men away before.
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Jeromy's chest burst into flame and the monk was thrown
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violently back and clearly killed, his face frozen in
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astonished death.
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|
Martin dropped his cross and ran.
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The demon made no effort to chase him.
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"Now, bowman!"
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O'Dounille loosed his arrow.
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It found its mark in the demon's shoulder. The demon let
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out a cry and fell backwards from the force, dropping the
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long wand. I have never seen O'Dounille err by so much as an
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inch. And yet, he only wounded the demon.
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Before I could think, my Lord Aquith and Sir Cullier
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|
ran to the fallen creature and prevented him from recovering
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|
his wand by placing the blades of their broadswords to the
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|
throat. If the demon moved, he would be dead.
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|
Sir Michael watched where his master couldn't in the
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event another demon lurked in the dark.
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"Pip!" My Lord Aquith shouted. "Come here!"
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I ran to him.
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"Look at his eyes, Pip! Is this a demon?"
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I stuttered and cleared my throat as I looked at the
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darting, fearful eyes. "No, my Lord Aquith! He is a man,
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|
misshapen as I am, but a man!" Indeed, his ears were too
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|
small for his head and of an odd shape. His skin was
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|
unnaturally white but the eyes told all. Aside from their red
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color, they belonged to a man.
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|
Martin came up. "A demon, Lord Aquith! It is a demon!
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Strike it dead!"
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My Lord Aquith struck Martin with the back of his mailed
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hand. "You left your brother and dropped the sign of your
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god! You feared that the promised paradise was an empty
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|
claim. You have no faith! Among us, you no longer have a
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|
voice! Go back to your bishop and report what happened! Take
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|
care that you report honestly or you will fear my wrath! I
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|
promise you, Martin, that your kind will no longer trouble
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me.
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|
Martin fled.
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"My Lord Aquith," I said. I could no longer restrain
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|
myself. "Why did you not use his own wand against him. You
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|
bear it in your tunic?"
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|
He laughed. "Politics, Pip! If I had used the demon's
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|
weapon in the sight of the monks, the Church would charge me
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|
and I would burn. Could I resist the combined force of my
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|
enemies if they were given the blessing of the Church to
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|
steal my lands?"
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|
I blinked.
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|
He stooped and looked me directly in the face. "All is
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|
politics, my friend. Even the capture of demons!"
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|
I regarded the now helpless creature. O'Dounille was
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|
applying herbs and bandages to the demon's wound. "You didn't
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|
kill by choice?"
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|
Firmly, O'Dounille said, "I never miss!"
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|
Overhearing my query, my Lord Aquith supplied. "If fear
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|
of the unknown were a crime deserving of death, I would have
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|
to kill not only this creature but all of us. This poor
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|
individual is only guilty of being in a strange country where
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|
even the elements seem hostile. The bowman obeys my will."
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|
"And his corruption of Mary?" I stammered.
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|
"I think it was the reverse, Pip! For her crimes, Mary
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|
will be lashed and sent to a nunnery to serve her namesake."
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|
"And Jeromy's death?"
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|
"I engineered that! The sin is on my soul, not this poor
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|
demon's. I shall excuse it as political necessity for my
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|
conscience's sake. Jeromy and his brothers were ready to put
|
|
people to the torch. I want none of that in my lands.
|
|
Undoubtedly, it will cause me some financial pain since the
|
|
bishop is a greedy man. He is not like his patron, Patrick,
|
|
thank the gods, who was a fanatic. Greed is a useful
|
|
political tool for curing disputes which could otherwise
|
|
become violent."
|
|
"At last, we will be free of these troublesome monks!"
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|
Sir Cullier added, still guarding the creature with his
|
|
exposed blade.
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|
My Lord Aquith placed his hand on the shoulder of his
|
|
comrade-at-arms. "I wish that were so, old friend. I venture
|
|
to guess that these Christians will plague us again in a few
|
|
years time."
|
|
"Do you judge this creature as faultless, then?" I
|
|
ventured.
|
|
"Merely luckless, Pip! Not faultless! Look at him! He
|
|
is a wounded soldier left to die by his retreating fellows.
|
|
His one crime, in my eyes, is that he was careless with his
|
|
weapon and caused my people harm. Had any died at Mary's
|
|
hand, he would have died with her on the gallows. But none
|
|
did so their lives are saved. The arrow has made his arm
|
|
useless and is punishment enough for a warrior."
|
|
My Lord Aquith turned to Sir Michael. "Gather a party
|
|
of villagers and cover the metal vessel with earth! Until
|
|
the trees grow back, this place is forbidden!"
|
|
"Aye, Lord!"
|
|
"Vessel?" I repeated.
|
|
"He was a sailor of the skies using the stars as harbors.
|
|
Now, he is as earthbound as we. His people have great
|
|
knowledge and can create great works. Still, I don't think
|
|
they are gods or demons. They have too many of the same
|
|
qualities we have. Fear, lust, war and ...despair."
|
|
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|
VI
|
|
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|
Even as I write these final lines, I look from the window
|
|
to see the demon sitting in the courtyard. He is morose and
|
|
searching the heavens in false hope. For the last several
|
|
days, his bonds have been removed and the guards ignore him.
|
|
There's no place for him to go.
|
|
He eats little and shows no interest in those around him.
|
|
He makes no effort to learn our speech and says little in
|
|
his. If the women hadn't thrown a blanket over his shoulders,
|
|
he would have no protection against the lightly falling snow.
|
|
When he does speak, the speech is directed at himself.
|
|
He is pitiful and I fear he will soon die.
|
|
"He knows he is abandoned." My Lord Aquith says as he
|
|
looks over my shoulder. "A man who cannot adjust himself to
|
|
the situation at hand has naught but my contempt, Pip. He is
|
|
less than a man. You, dear Pip, are a true man. Fate gave you
|
|
poor legs and a deformed back and you're burdened with the
|
|
contempt of the unthinking. Yet, you go on. You serve a
|
|
useful life."
|
|
He places his hand on my shoulder and walks to the wall
|
|
to prepare the mortar which will seal these words and the two
|
|
demon weapons firmly in the Keep.
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(C) Copyright 1987 by Yves Barbero 415-285-4358
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1073 Dolores Street
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San Francisco, CA 94110
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Yes, you are welcome to download this story for your private
|
|
and non-commercial use.
|
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|
|
Yes, please upload this story to other non-commercial
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bulletin boards.
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Yes, if you enjoyed MY LORD AQUITH and you don't have ten
|
|
kids to feed, encourage me to upload other stories by
|
|
sending me a few bucks to buy groceries and keep the
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|
wolf from the door.
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|
Yes, if you want to make other uses of the story, please
|
|
contact me for permission and to make arrangements.
|
|
It does belong to me.
|
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- THE END - |