Norland Rex- Part 4

Contents

IV. Gedain

Gatekeeper

Gedain and five riders pressed on in haste for the High Gate, climbing the old mountain wagon trail as it coiled upwards into the foothills of the Norzcarpe. On the third morn, the sky dimmed beneath a veil of gray haze, and ere midday a wet spring snow began to fall, heavy and clinging. Still, they urged their mounts onward, upward, the path softening to mire beneath their steed’s iron shoes. The horses labored, sides heaving, nostrils flaring with mist.

When at last they rose above the shelter of the forest, the winds descended upon them in howls and gusts, as though the mountain itself bid to scour them from its shoulder. One mare slipped, hooves scraping stone, nearly tumbling down the cliff with her rider.

“We must turn back,” shouted one above the wail, clutching reins.

“Onward, you cowards!” Gedain cursed, shielding his eyes from the pelting sleet. “Would a little snow undo you?”

Clods of ice and snow soon crusted their brows and beards. Their cloaks snapped like torn banners in the gale. Blinded, they placed their trust wholly upon the instincts of their groaning steeds. All that day they climbed onward, upward upon the treacherous road, oblivion falling away to their left unseen, marching until the skies dimmed and daytime ended.

Then, without warning, as if by divine command, the wind ceased with the sound of a ghastly shriek. The storm fog lifted, and the frozen mist dissolved, revealing the narrow trail before them. There, in the gray of twilight, rose the High Gate, its ancient bars anchored within the jagged granite cleft, barring a cave black as night. Above it, set in the clearing heavens, burned the Light-Bearer— Vê, brilliant as a diamond set into the firmament just beyond the grasp of the world.

“What is that?” a rider asked, his voice unsteady.

“The Gate, you fool,” Gedain answered.

“No, my lord.” the rider cried, pointing. “There! On the cliff!” They turned as one to the shadows along the rock face. “There it is! Do you see it?”

“Aye. What manner of beast is that?”

“A goat?”

“Aye, a goat,” Gedain answered curtly. “Nevermind it. To The Gate.” Yet even as he spoke, the creature moved, leaping nimbly from stone to stone, skirting ledges where no horse might tread, drawing ever nearer.

“Look! It stands on two legs like man!”

The creature had indeed stood, and this struck terror into the hearts of the riders, for none had ever seen such a creature in all their lives, save for the ones placed into their minds by their cruel grandmothers that they be made to fear the forest.

“It is a faun, a devil,” cried one. “Kill it!”

Two riders spurred forward, drawing their crossbows. Bolts flew and shattered harmlessly upon the icy rocks. They spanned again and shot, missing once more. On the third attempt, one rider fumbled in haste; his horse stumbling, and only by fortune did he not tumble screaming into the abyss. The creature laughed with a low, mirthful sound, and drifted nearer, almost floating among the stones. The riders wheeled their mounts into a tight ring upon the narrow road, swords drawn, knuckles white upon their hilts.

Another bolt flew wide. The creature laughed again, amused. Then it spoke. “Fear me not,” it said, spreading its empty hands. Its eyes were human, bright with amber mischief and knowing, set in the face of a man but with ram’s horns. “As thou seest, I bear no weapon.”

“It is Azarius,” cried a rider. “The Prophet foretold.”

The faun laughed mockingly. “I am not He. He weareth only the likeness of a man.”

“Begone then, devil!”

Devil, thou callest me,” the creature replied. “Yet I am called Veorn. And I know of whom you hunt. He is called Menek. Follow me and I will take you to him…”

The faun pranced between the rocks along the cliff toward the gate, as light as a maiden dancer. Gedain followed, and the others after him, fear-bound yet unwilling to be left behind. Gedain dismounted thereupon, yet with his sword in hand, he approached the gate’s iron bars, thick with rust and years. He shook and pried as the faun watched and laughed from the rocks.

“It is locked,” Gedain remarked. “Tell me who unlocked it for Menek?”

“There is but one key, Gedain of Welf.”

Gedain stiffened. “How knowest thou my name?”

Veorn tilted his horned head. “Oh, thou art known to him. And thou art long expected, my prince.”

“It is a snare,” urged a rider. “We should not linger.”

“Hast thou the key?” Gedain demanded.

“I do not, my prince,” Veorn answered. “Yet the gate was opened for him who passed before thee. And it will be opened for thee as well.”

Gedain pondered, then his eyes hardened upon the faun. “For what price, then?”

The wind stirred above, shrieking through the jagged spires.

“Price?” Veorn asked.

“Aye. Name it.”

“The price be thine honor,” Veorn answered, grinning.

“How wilst though open it without the key? Gedain pressed.”

“Try again,” Veorn urged. “It is old. Rust binds.”

Gedain hesitated a moment. Then he sheathed his blade, set both hands upon the bars, and heaved with all his might. With a groan of rusted metal, the ancient gate lurched free and swung outward upon its hinges.

“Beware, my prince,” Veorn offered. “Once passed, there is no turning back.”

Undaunted, Gedain mounted his steed and spurred him through. Behind him, the others passed as well, one whispering a prayer while Veorn tittered.

Revelation

In the nether depths of Gruen’s keep, where the stone sweats cold and the air lays thick with stench, the failed assassin Joles passed his days awaiting his end. Knowing neither dawn nor dusk, time was measured only by the arrival of hunger and thirst.

At length, Joles was removed from his cell and cast into another, where already lay the Neandilim envoy. They did not speak for the first full day, silence pressing upon them like a third prisoner, until at last Joles, maddened by the hum of flies and the ceaseless drip-drip-drip of water upon stone, broke it.

“Art thou the spy they caught?” He asked, “the Nundi?”

The envoy gave no answer.

Joles pressed. “Tell me,” his voice rasped raw by thirst. “Dost thou think to see thy homeland again?”

At last, the envoy stirred in the shadows. When he spoke, his voice was clear and unhurried, as though the dungeon were but a chamber in some common hall. “If I endure until our host comes, then yes,” he said.“

“Comes to here? To Gruen?” Joles scoffed. “Bafomet will never drive an army o’er the Norzcarpe.”

The Neandilim rustled in the darkness, scraping the stone floor beneath the straw. “Thy name is Joles, correct?” He asked mildly. “Thou art the failed assassin?”

“Yet I failed only because I was betrayed.”

“By whom?”

“I know not. Perhaps Menek, my captain. Perhaps another. I was not trusted with the other names.”

“Oh, but we know their names, my friend.”

Joles rolled his eyes. “Oh? Who are they, then?”

“If I named them,” replied the Neandilim, “thou would yield them and they would lose their greater use. Better for us they remain unknown.” He paused, then added, “Yet thou art correct in one thing…”

“In what?”

“That no army may cross the Norzcarpe in force. Its narrowness is death to invaders.”

“Then how,” Joles demanded, “does thy master mean to come to Gruen?”

The envoy shifted in the shadow. “Any man with sense could answer, were he not blinded by fear. One need only look upon a proper map.”

“I seem to have misplaced my map,” Joles sneered. “Please enlighten me.”

The Nundi grunted. “To conquer the Norlands,” he said, “one must first come north from Gatun, far enough west of the mountains that bar the way.”

“Yet Bafomet does not hold that port.”

“Not yet. First must Varenthor must submit.”

Joles barked in laughter. “Varenthor hath never been taken. It is said the mighty Gargan raised its walls themselves.”

“True,” said the envoy. “And her fleet is stout as well. Yet Varenthor is ruled not by kings, but by a counsel of merchants. And merchants value peace so long as trade flows freely.”

“Then how wilt thou break them? Bribery?”

“Nay. By persuasion.”

“And how would that be wrought?”

A quiet breath. “Have you ever beheld a raptor, Joles?”

Joles did not reply.

The envoy’s voice darkened. “They stand four men tall, black iron scales, their eyes burn as amber set aflame.

“Imagine yourself a trader seeing twenty of them set upon your mercantile roads. Imagine yourself standing on Varenthor’s walls, beholding Bafomet’s host marching with rams and siege towers. Imagine the war drums thundering, banners lifting in the wind… thirty thousand warriors, four thousand cavalry.” The envoy’s voice grew almost reverent. “When our marshals come offering gold and peace, I art certain Varenthor’s gates will open gladly. And they will then call us ally.”

Joles’ mirth withered.

“From thence,” the envoy continued, “our host will sail beneath Varenthor’s colors, cross the bay, and land at Gatun. Its walls are far weaker. It will fall within days, or we’ll merely set it ablaze. Then northward our host will march to Longview.”

“Yes, Longview Castle,” Joles interrupted. “You’ll never take it.”

“Not without the might of raptors swinging our great ram. By them it will fall. Then onward to Dregrove… Fywold… Gruen.”

Joles could hear the envoy grin in the shadows as his voice grew cold.

“Methundor shall thus be sundered, and devoured as one eats a fowl— leg, then wing, then breast… piece by piece.”

A rat darted through the straw. Water beat its slow, hollow rhythm upon stone. The flies hummed in assent.

“The Norlands will muster,” Joles said hoarsely. “They will meet thee at Longview or…”

“No,” said the envoy, his voice softening. “Your reiks will not answer. Not enough of them. You Norland men spend your days devouring one another when you should be forging unity. But thou knowest this well already.”

Joles fell silent.

“There are many others like me, here,” the envoy went on. “Spies, as you call us. We are scattered all throughout your lands. We are watching. Listening. Encouraging suspicion. Turning brother against brother, thegn upon thegn. Yet whether Longview sees a great battle matters little. Your host will be shattered within days, outnumbered thrice or fourfold. Your lines and battlements will fold like sandcastles beneath the tide.” He leaned forward just revealing his brow in the faint glow. “…And when thy army lies broken, Gruen will stand bare. Then we shall come here, to this very dungeon, and I shall walk free. I need only survive until then,” he said softly. “A year, perhaps less. By then, thou, wilt be long dead. Though I pray for thee not slain by the saw.”

“Not so,” Joles snarled. “We shall fight as partisans. From the woods and hills and passes.”

“For a time,” the envoy allowed “Weeks, months at most. Then thy fields will lie untilled. And hunger will gnaw deeper than courage. The fear of a winter without stores will finish what war begins.”

“We will starve before we kneel!”

“No, you will not,” said the envoy gently. “You will kneel when you hear the sobs of your orphaned and hungry children. We have seen this play enacted many times, in many lands. A swift defeat is the kinder fate for thy children.”

“Our children shall never be Nundi slaves.”

“Yes, they will. But they shall live at least and eventually prosper. And in a generation, thy world shall be all dust, replaced with ours… forever. But thou shalt be remembered, Joles. I will see to it. For even though thy plot was foiled, thy deed served us well. Thy boy rex is now frightened, mistrustful, and searching every shadow. He is no leader of men.”

The envoy leaned further into the dim shaft of light, and Joles saw his face which bore the look of certainty. And the spy’s voice then fell to a dark whisper. “…And we have already chosen your rex’s successor.” A pause. “And he is one of thine own.”

Descent

The mist lay thick upon the narrow mountain path as they descended from the High Gate. It clung and soaked through cloak and tunic alike, beading upon beard and lash, until each man rode sodden and shivering. The horses huffed low in their chests, and their hooves beat the stony way with hollow, funereal rhythm. For three days Veorn urged them onward, ever downward, as though drawing them from the world of breath and sun into some unseen Tartarus of haze.

By night came the distant drums of war, low and slow, echoing as from the pulse of the earth itself; and each man dreamed of standing before the dragon. “I fear, sire,” whispered one at last, daring the words only in the thick blackness where no faces could be seen.

“What is it thou fearest?” Gedain answered.

“I fear dying here, my lord.”

Gedain did not pause to ponder. “Then fear thee not,” he said, “for we are already dead.”

By days, which were scarcely more than an illumination of haze, they marched until the dimming made it treacherous on the weathered trail. The further they descended, the thicker the mist and haze grew, dampening even their words and the beats of hooves. There were no sights or calls of bird nor stirring of beast, just five riders and Gedain and their horses, and the fleeting figure of Veorn,  resembling more an apparition than a guide of flesh, leading the way half-seen, half-imagined, in the grey mist ahead.

In the rare moments the veil was lifted, they found themselves threaded within a murky forest of black pines and coiling fern, their tangled trunks and branches wove in and through like a snaring web of dread. And nary a path lay beneath their horse’s hooves, save for the faint, stoney way that found them and pulled them along, as if they were sliding along the scales of some mythic serpent exceeding their comprehension. Above, the sheer, jagged walls of black stone rose, towering upwards ominously on every side, as if Edä herself were slowly closing her jaws upon them.

“Is this our damnation, sire?” asked one.

Gedain gave no answer.

Again, the night’s ink filled with the beat of drums, nearer and louder than the last. And each man, exhausted beyond his ability to reason, resisted sleep both for fear of what lurketh in the darkness, and for what terrors awaited them in their nightmares.

They rose again not knowing the hour, for the fog was so thick one had to near swim through it.

“Where is the river?” Gedain asked Veorn who was rustling unseen in the grey. “Doth not the road followeth its descent?”

“There is no river by this way,” Veorn answered. “Yet this is the road that leadeth unto whom thou seekest.”

“He leadeth us into a trap,” whispered a rider.

Gedain heard yet gave him no heed.

On and on they descended, and on the fifth or sixth day— they had lost count— the setting Sol kindled the haze that enveloped them, like the glowing coals of some vast pyre.

“There!” Veorn shouted, his figure just ahead but unseen. “Dost thou behold it?”

“I see naught but golden glow,” Gedain answered.

“Follow me!”

Veorn’s footfalls faded as the party pressed forward into the gilded haze. The path had nearly vanished beneath them, finally ending, and the mist fell away. Before them, a stone arch framing a corridor of shadows, choked with root and vine. Veorn was gone, neither heard nor seen.

“We go no further, my lord.”

Gedain cast a hardened glare but then softened.

“Abide with the horses, then. If I have not returned by tomorrow’s sunset, leave mine and return to Gruen by way of the High Gate.”

“Listen!” said one. “The drums return.”

“We are lost,” said another, “and may not find the way back.”

“Let you fears be your guide,” Gedain replied.

He dismounted, took the lantern fastened at his saddle and struck flame. And with it in one hand and his sword in the other, he approached the entrance. He hacked and swept away the verdure, then crossed the threshold and was swallowed by the darkness.

Guided by his lantern, Gedain crawled over fallen stones and roots, hearing the echoes of dripping water. Forward he crept, the grey light of the entrance receding behind, down an ancient hewn stair, roots strangling the steps, air guttering his light while humming like a long exhale through the narrow chamber.

A faint blue glow bloomed upon the cavern walls ahead. Then daylight appeared, and Gedain passed through to the other side, into a wild oasis.

Many silent, suspicious faces greeted him there, emerging from the brambles and shadows, men and women alike, clad in hides and furs, each with readied steel or bow. Gedain gazed upward. The skies had parted above with the clouds deepening in the hues of sunset flame. Above, all around, the dense black forest rose, and beyond that, spires of jagged stone thrust heavenward. Gedain felt then that he stood within the very lair of the dragon of his dreams.

He lowered his gaze. Ahead stood a man in a coarse Norland tunic. Gedain approached slowly, knowing his name, yet not his eyes that seemed to be those of another— a more ruthless, silent version… reborn.

Menek.

“What is this place?” Gedain asked.

“The source of truth,” Menek answered.

Gedain sheathed his sword and set down his lantern as the wild folk closed in around him.

“Art thou their leader?”

“No. They brought me hither a fortnight past,” Menek said. “Even as thou wast led.”

“Who then ruleth here?”

“He who is the king.”

Gedain searched the eyes of the wild folk gathered around him. They stared without emotion, as if looking straight through his flesh and bone and directly into his soul.

“Will this king receive me?” Gedain asked.

“Rest,” Menek answered. “He will come for thee soon.”

Vale

Gedain took his rest beside the warmth of a pyre ringed in stones, with its bright tongues of flame dancing up into the wheeling stars. Surrounded by wild folk, their suspicious glares never leaving, weariness nevertheless overtook him and he drifted off into sleep.

He found himself upon a vast and open field, beneath a heavy sky, where many thousands laid slain or mortally wounded, their twisted forms strewn and piled unto the horizons on either hand. It was a place unvisited by him, yet he somehow knew it lay within the steppes of Vellund. He stood alone, sword unsheathed and clotted with blood, horse fallen, lying near. The scent of smoke and filth arose with the sound of wind carrying the groans of the dying strewn upon the plain of pooling blood and mud.

Gedain panned, gazing in horror at the numbers beyond any reckoning. Yet despair did not take hold, but rather there was relief that the Archons[i] of The One had spared him, choosing that he alone still breathed life. As he turned to view the wasteland, a presence emerged from the smoke becoming a visage appearing before him, clad in a golden armor the likes of which he had never seen by forge of man. Tall and slender, its helm bore the likeness of a ram concealing its face. Above, the grim clouds parted, and a halo of Sol’s rays beamed through causing the golden plate to gleam so that Gedain shielded his eyes. Fearful, he fell to his knees. The glorious figure approached and reached forth with shimmering crown of diamond and set it upon Gedain’s brow.

He woke to darkness.

He found the pyre had burned down into glowing coals and the air was but cold shadow. He closed his eyes to fall back asleep but a voice interrupted the hush of deep night.

“You were dreaming,” it said.

Gedain saw the form of a man seated quietly in the shadows beside him. He drew himself up. “Aye, I was,” Gedain answered.

“Was thy dream of the dragon or of the archon?”

“It was of a golden sovereign. Yet it was more like a ghost or a spirit than flesh. It beamed like the fires of Sol at midday, blinding me.”

“Aye,” the voice affirmed from the shadows. “Bafomet hath come to thee in thy dreams. Thou hast been summoned.”

“Bafomet?” Gedain scoffed. “Bafomet is but a legend. A myth to spur False Men by fear.”

The voice lowered. “Oh, I assure thee Bafomet is no myth. I can attest by mine own eyes; the golden archon is yet living flesh, indeed.”

Gedain scoffed. “Bafomet is long dead, many centuries.”

“Aye, yet thou knowest well that the Neandilim are long-lived. Bafomet was with your sage Kethu when they crossed from Vallis, and Kethu yet draws breath. Does he not?”

“He is frail,” Gedain said, uncertain if wake or dream still held him. “He may have passed already for all I know.”

“Kethu is not nurtured by the dragon’s spirit.”

“Who art thou?” Gedain asked.

The voice in the darkness laughed. “What profit is there in who I say I am?”

“Art thou chieftain of these folk?”

“These are thy folk, Gedain. Norlanders all. Tribesmen and bandits and nomads, most from beyond the River Lunde. Some come even from Moorwater Plain and the frozen skirts of Ankenlund. While Methundor’s lords gnaw over boundary stones, these gather here to bleed and fight, to slay the invader ere they come north.”

“If thou beest not their thegn, then who commandeth them?”

He nodded. “Aye, they follow my command, yet I am not their thegn.” He rose. “Come, follow me.”

He took up his torch and led Gedain away from the glow of the dying fire. They followed a rocky footpath into the woods, then upwards, the trail turning back on itself as it climbed a sheer wall of stone. For near an hour they laboured on, until the skies paled in the east with the coming dawn. At last, they reached a high precipice, and the view unfurled before them beneath the newborn light.

The guide was revealed to Gedain in the growing light. He wore no beard. His long locks were the deepest of mahogany red. His eyes were as dark as wet earth, yet about the pupil they wert amber and blue, like Sol within a clear sky. His brow was heavy, yet youth clung to his face, though hardened by trials unspoken. When he spoke, his voice was stern, yet calm and measured, without any affectation.

“Seest thou those mountain spires,” he said, pointing, Sol glinting off the gold ring on his index finger, its red garnet glowing like a fanned ember. “There, those points of black stone?”

Gedain answered, “That must be Edam of Meru?”

“Aye, yet thou hast never seen it?”

“I have not.”

“All men know it by its grandeur at first sight,” he replied, quenching his torch in the dirt. “Look down toward the base, left, where the stream coils. Tell me, what seest thou?”

“I see stone ruins— high columns, arches, curls of smoke… an encampment,” Gedain answered. “And banners! The colors look Neandilim.”

“Aye. They are far off. Your sight is keen.”

“It is but a small host. Why have they come so few in number? It seems insufficient for an invasion.”

“That is no invasion host. That is an expedition. They guard the road from the High Gate, awaiting Norland’s host. The way is narrow. It takes but a few— a thousand men, perhaps— to stop ten thousand. Thus, we have come to foil their design, so that your host might pass through unhindered.” He paused. “Yet they are here for more than just an ambush. Bafomet is among them.”

“I don’t believe it.”

“Go and see for yourself.” He grinned.

“Why else would they come, then?”

“They wait for one man to come.”

“For whom?”

He answered, “One who would be made the Norland King.”

Gedain studied the distant camp. “They search for you, then?”

His voice darkened. “They search for the one who wills to be made. I have no will to be made by anyone.”

Gedain pondered. “They believe this man will ride down there, into their camp, and present himself? Do they expect a fool?”

“It is already known that he will come.”

“Perhaps this fool, riding down there, believing he would be crowned, would then find himself flayed on a rack.”

He smiled thinly. “I am hungry. Let us return to the vale.”

Below, the Norland men shared game and water with Gedain. His guide soon took his leave. Then Menek appeared at his side.

“I must inform you that I shall not return with thee to Gruen,” Menek said.

“Oh?” Gedain responded, hardly feigning surprise. “I see no means by which I might compel thee.”

“My duty is here, now. I have been made the marshal of these men.” Menek continued. “I swear I will not speak against thee for thy part in Cerenid’s undoing.” He went on. “Thou wouldst deny it, anyway, and none would heed my word, regardless.”

“Aye, I would deny it. And they would not heed thee,” Gedain affirmed.

When they had finished, Menek led Gedain back to the cavern mouth where he had entered the vale. “Return to thy riders before they abandon you,” Menek said. “Tell the boy rex that Bafomet hath claimed me. Or tell him aught else, it matters not. Yet do assure him that the High Gate road shall be cleared for his host.”

“I will.”

“Farewell, Gedain.”

Gedain started off but turned. “Tell me, who is the man thou followest?”

Menek grinned, then his voice lowered. “That, my fool, is the Wolvenking. Eleom is his name, son of Cleon Rex and Amarah the Aeonite. And if thou wouldst speak truth, then carry this to Gruen, and to thy boy rex, and unto Kethu if he yet breathes, and to every trembling, fickle lord: If they would live— if they would shatter Bafomet’s host ere it bringeth ruin to their race— that they should come and bend the knee here to Eleom, the one true Norland King.”

Prophet

The spring morning broke bright and clear. The deep blue vault of heaven lay brushed with billowings of the purest white. The streams and rivers swelled with the melting mountain snows. Dandelions burned gold across the pastures, feeding the bees and hummingbirds. Everywhere the air was fresh and sweet, and the land shone green, as though the world itself had drawn a fresh breath.

Upon one such morn, a ragged man appeared, strolling through Gruen’s gate. The folk drew aside, uneased, for he was not clad in any peasant tunic nor craftsman’s coat, but a pelt of thick fur from some uncommon beast, rough and weathered by long years. In his hand he bore a polished staff, fashioned from a long white bone. His hide sandals were crudely fashioned, knotted and tied with sinew. His face was neither old nor young, his long beard and hair the color of damp bark. His eyes were dark, fiery yet not menacing. His hair and skin and face were clean and clear, and his flesh bore no ink of crime or oath.

He passed without haste into the heart of the city and seated himself beside the fountain to rest. And rumour leapt from tongue to tongue like fire in dry grass. Men and women gathered round, then children, then the old, till the plaza filled with bodies and whispers, all come to behold the strange sojourner with their own eyes.

“Who art thou?” voices cried.

He sat in calm, asking only, “Might one of ye share your water?”

A woman stepped forth and offered her costrel and he drank long and deeply. “I pray thou art not some wizard come to bind us with spells?” she said as he drank.

He inclined his head in thanks and returned the vessel. Then rose, and the murmur died away. “Who art thou?” they asked again.

The ragged man scanned their eyes, and each one he looked upon felt as though he peered directly into their souls, and they were discomforted. “Name thyself!”

Sol shone full. The birds gathered still upon the high eaves. A cool breath of air passed through the plaza. Utter silence took hold again as the stranger drew a breath before speaking. “I am called Azarius,” He said at last, “…and many other names besides.”

A thunder of voices rolled through the crowd. Some gestured. Some scoffed. Some prayed. One cried out, “He is a southern spy!” Then another shouted, “Seize Him!”

Yet no hand dared to rise against Him.

“I have come a long road to speak with Kethu the Aeonite. Wouldst thou lead me to him?”

A young girl approached and again the crowd fell silent. “If thou beest Azarius,” she asked, “where art thine antlers? My father sayeth Azarius is a faun of the forest.”

Azarius bowed his head before her. “Thou can seest I have none. I am but a man, not unlike your father.”

She reached out and felt His head, then the fur of His garment. “What hide is this? It is strange.”

“It is cut from the hide of a mastodon.”

“Didst thou slay it?”

“No, little one. I found it long after it had passed. Though its remains were yet a banquet for many birds and wolves, and I had to wait my turn.”

She touched the staff. “And this?”

“I fashioned this from that same beast’s bone.”

“It is also strange.”

“Aye,” He answered softly. “Yet strange things often serve one well.”

Her father pulled her back. “Prove thou art the Immortal Prophet! Cast thyself from the wall and rise again!”

“I may not murder myself,” Azarius replied. “That is forbidden. Yet any among you who must see me rise with thine own eyes may step forth to slay me and then bear witness.”

But no man dared.

Then a warden pressed through the crowd. “Who dost thou claim to be?”

“I said I am Azarius. I have come to speak with Kethu.”

“Come with me,” he ordered. “Make way for us!”

He was led through the plaza and down the cobbled way to the sept, followed by craftsmen, wives, children, and others curious. Word ran ahead of them, and more gathered at their doors and street corners to glimpse the man in hides who named himself immortal.

At last, they arrived at the sept and entered through its tall oaken doors. Azarius was left to stand before the altar, before the high priestess came. “They tell me thou sayest thou art Azarius,” the priestess said. “How can we know this true?”

“Though my word should suffice,” He answered, “there is but one way to know for certain.”

“Resurrection.”

“Aye.”

“And what manner of death dost thou prefer?”

“One that is swift, for though I am immortal, I yet feel pain. And I would keep my body whole, that my remaking be not long delayed.”

“Poison, then?”

“So be it,” He answered. “Then place my body upon the earth so that The One’s life may renew.

No Hemlock could be found and thus they chose drowning. They led Azarius to the courtyard where a large trough for watering horses had been filled.

“There,” said the priestess, “shall that basin serve?”

“Aye. It will suffice,” He answered, as if measuring a horse. “Yet two men must hold me under, for though my spirit is willing, my flesh will resist.”

Two wardens led Azarius to the basin where He removed His hide and stepped into the water to lay Himself beneath its surface. And with a nod of the priestess, the constables held Him under.

A minute passed. His body tensed. Then thrashed. The constables held His limbs while His body strained. His chest heaved and legs kicked, splashing and spilling. Finally, the struggling ceased and the water stilled. They held Him longer, yet He stirred not. Though his eyes were open, His face appeared at peace, and no hint of terror gleamed in His lifeless eyes.

At last, they pulled Him out and carried the body to the sept where it was dried and laid in a corner of the stone floor with His staff and hide cloak. A sentry was posted, and the body was guarded for three days. But no breath of life returned. “It is a fraud,” deemed the priestess at last. “A vagrant seeking a famed death.”

The clouds gathered that morning, and the body was taken from the sept and carted in a small wagon beneath the gloom and drizzle. None gathered for the procession, save for the little girl, for the spectacle was deemed a hoax. Yet her face filled with sadness as the laborers pulled the small wagon through the gate, headed for the burial-field.

The body was laid in a shallow pit. His hands were crossed upon His chest. His bone staff laid at His side. A copper coin was placed over each eye. The drizzle thickened. Distant thunder rumbled. Prayers were muttered by the gravediggers.

Yet just as the laborers were set to pile the dirt and stones, they noticed a stirring in the mud. Then all manner of crawling and slithering of small creatures and roots emerged in the hole. They stared in wonder as the worms and tendrils enveloped and encased the body.

One dropped his shovel and fled to the gate. “Come! Follow me!” he shouted as he neared the wall. “Something is happening. Come!”

Upon hearing this, the reeve and several peasants hastened for the grave. The drizzle had ceased, and the clouds had parted with Sol’s rays shining down on the barrows. The two laborers stood with mouths agape and eyes filled with astonishment. At their feet, a living hand emerged from the pit. And then the other. Terror and wonder seized them all as the face of Azarius, masked in mud and worms and roots, arose from the earth. They watched, frozen in fear as the Immortal pulled himself out of the pit and stood before them, wiping away the worms and roots and mud from His skin.

He gave one copper coin to each laborer who had placed His body in the hole. Then he spoke, “Does anyone have any water? I thirst.”

Deliverance

“Dost mine eyes behold the revenant?” Cerenid asked, gazing down at Azarius from the dais. The Immortal had been bathed and vested in simple crimson robes. The light through the high glass beamed down upon Him, alighting His visage. Cerenid’s crown slipped askew on his brow as he leaned forward to examine the prophet. He set it straight on his head.

“Aye, my Lord,” Azarius answered. “I have been called revenant before.”

“Hast thou come to save us?”

“Nay,” Azarius answered, shaking his head. “I cannot save men from themselves. I come only as a beacon of hope, to be seen… not to compel; to offer my counsel if it be sought or if it be needed.”

“And what would be thy counsel?”

Azarius turned then to those gathered in the hall— reiks and wardens, priests and captains— and his gaze seemed to linger upon each in turn, as though weighing the hidden burden each carried. Some met his eyes, hungry for reassurance. Others looked away, fearing the weight of what they thought he knew.

Turning back to Cerenid He answered, “My council would be this: that the rex muster the Norland host. For the Beast is vulnerable this day, yet by winter’s coming it shall be unassailable, for the High Gate will be barred by snow.”

The high priestess stepped forward, her voice measured but trembling. “The revenant hath been foretold. The hour appointed is now upon us.”

Cerenid continued. “You say you come as a beacon of hope, yet thy counsel is war. Tell me, what hope is there in marching south and leaving our walls and roads undefended?”

“To march means defeat is not certain. Hope in triumph would endure. A rex who seeketh only peace shall inherit only ashes. Thou art not judged by whether thou lovest war, but by whether thou fleest the duty laid before thee. But that is not the only hope of which I truly wish to speak, my lord.”

“Then of what hope do you wish to speak?”

“I speak not to the flesh of men, but to their spirit,” said Azarius, his voice carrying to the highest arches and returning in solemn echo. “All who have ears, let them hear: This life is but a breath drawn and released. A heartbeat, and then it is done.” He paused again to draw the ear of those assembled. “Therefore, despair not at life’s trials or even its ending; for whether thy end be given by sword, or illness, or by long withering, thy spirit abideth still eternal. Some would say, ‘she lived long, many years’, and of others, ‘he died so young, a life cut short’. Yet a long life or a short life is but the measure of the flesh. To thy spirit, which is eternal, no life is measured longer or shorter… for they are all brief. So, fear thee not that which must come for all, for it cometh to all alike— king and serf, priest and bandit. And when thy brief span is spent, thou shalt pass onward, where thy honor shall be weighed and thy reward made known in the life that followeth. Of the eternity of the spirit, I am all the proof thy mortal eyes demand.

“My rex, thy reiks behold this looming strife as a foul curse, a peril to be evaded, a fate to be bargained with. Aye, all good reiks will measure the cost in lives and in the grief o’er loved ones lost. Yet I sayeth unto all who will hear, that that which is eternal cannot be slain by blade or stone. That wounds are indeed the peril of the flesh, yet the flesh is here today and gone tomorrow, nevertheless. Yet as there be wounds that imperil the flesh, so too be there wounds that imperil the soul. To flee from the honour of duty becometh wounds of the soul that fester.

“Thou seest the pure petals of the lovely gillyflower, growing wild on the hill in uncounted numbers. And yet, when one picketh one ere morning, it wilteth by dusk. Such is the nature of mortal life. And though thou might find gillyflowers loveliest of all florae, wouldst thou trade even the dullest pearl for the fairest gillyflower once plucked?

“To all the reiks who fear the call to arms I say: take heed that thou callest not fear by the name of mercy. Though a blade might spill thy blood, a flight from honour wounds thy soul. Fear not defeat in battle, for victory is not thy charge. Thy charge is honour. Regard not this coming peril as a curse, but as a gift— the gift of duty, by which a soul is proven.”

A long silence settled upon the hall, thick as fog. Cerenid shifted upon his seat, the crown weighing upon his brow as he pondered. Then his countenance seemed to brighten, as if his soul had released a great burden. At length, the rex gave voice to his new resolve. “Bring Kethu. And send forth the wardens to summon the council of reiks.”

Azarius inclined his head. “When the reiks and thegns are assembled, my lord, I would address them— if thou wilt permit it.”

Azarius was led to the gardens and bid to wait. There, he listened to the fountain murmurs and breathed the sweetness of the spring flowers newly come into bloom. He waited, almost reposed, bathed in the warm Sol light filtered through the budding leaves. After an hour, two men at last appeared bearing Kethu in a chair. They set him down beside Azarius next to the fountain. Kethu sat slumped, his body nearly wasted. His hair was gone save for wisps of white; his beard patchy and thin. His hands were bent and twisted like the roots of ancient trees, and his skin clung spotted and thin.

“Kethu, canst thou hear me?” Azarius asked.

“Yes,” came the answer, a groan more than a word.

“Knowest thou who I am?”

Kethu stirred faintly.

“It is I, Azarius.”

Kethu strained and pulled his head up. When at last his cloudy eyes opened, they gleamed with recognition, welling as he spoke. “Thou hast returned.”

“As I promised.”

Kethu let out a slow breath. “I am ready, then.”

“I know thou art, my friend.”

Kethu’s brow trembled. “I yet grieve,” he said. “All these centuries… I grieve still.”

“Tomorrow thou shalt grieve no more.”

“I have never ceased despair for Vesther since her passing. And for Arcian, whom I failed as father.”

“Despair not,” said Azarius. “Thou servedst them better than any man could. And thou shalt meet thy beloved again in the next life. By thy honour and theirs, thy new life shall be lived in an age unstained by the suffering endured in this one.”

“My son,” Kethu said, his voice breaking. “He bore the weight of my sin.”

“Thou didst not fail him,” Azarius answered. “And thou shalt yet be his father, and he shall be thy son once again. Thou shalt see him grow to manhood beneath gentler skies.”

Kethu wept in the broken, straining way of old men. “But I betrayed my king,” Kethu lamented, “my brother. For that dishonour, I cannot be redeemed.”

“Thine alms have been given, my friend. Thy debt hath been repaid. Thy spirit stands redeemed before The One.”

“Forgive me,” Kethu cried. “Forgive me, Aeon.”

“Your king and brother forgave thee long ago,” Azarius replied. “And thou shalt meet him again in a city of crystal and silver, where the red Sol riseth over quiet seas. Together, ye shall watch the alloy ships glide in graceful peace. And thou shalt know that Aeon hath forgiven thee.”

Kethu breathed shakily. “Will there be pain… when I pass?”

“No,” said Azarius. “Thou shalt sleep, and dream of a great thirst. And with many others, both friend and foe in life, though no more strife come between ye, thou shalt come upon the River Thol and thy thirst shall be quenched.” Azarius then turned his gaze upon the garden. “Doth this splendid place not call Vallis to mind?”

“Aye,” Kethu smiled. “Yet only as a candle calls a great pyre to memory. I can see Mount Meru, now, in the distance, and the wyvern circling above in the golden sky.”

“What else, my friend?”

“I see Mosul leading a great legion of men, and my father, too. He beckons me. I am just a boy, again.” Kethu’s eyes glazed in memory. “The slow turning Sol moving west to east.”

“Aye,” Azarius affirmed. “A day there like unto a year here.”

“Oh, and the trees. The mighty trees. As tall as mountains on Edä.”

“Their majesty far beyond the grasp of Norland sons.”

At this, Kethu’s countenance dimmed, and his frail voice sank low. “And the dragon. And the Nephilim. No Norland man would credit such things, though I swore them true.”

Azarius darkened. “Soon shall they behold them with their own eyes, my friend.”

“Tell me,” Kethu asked at last, “is Vallis lost forever?”

“No,” Azarius replied. “For it is writ: all that is ruined shall be remade.”

Thus, they sat together in the garden until Sol had fully set, and the saffron twilight yielded to night. Thereafter, two men bore Kethu unto his chamber and laid him alone upon his bed, leaving beside him a single candle, which burned low, guttered, and at last was quenched in the deep hush of night.

Further

Gedain emerged from the cavern into a thickened morning mist. He called out to his riders, and they soon stumbled forth from the fog one by one. “You live!” said one, relieved. “What didst thou find, my lord?”

“Nothing,” Gedain answered, yet his gaze shifted from their eyes as he spoke. Perceiving their doubt he added, “I lost my way in the darkness, and found it again by morning’s light.”

The riders exchanged glances, looking unconvinced, yet none pressed him further. “What shall we do?” asked another. “The mist confounds our bearing.”

“Where is the faun?” Gedain demanded.

“We have not seen him since last night. He hath abandoned us.”

“Nay,” Gedain snapped. “He is near. He watches just beyond, veiled by the fog.” He lifted his voice into the drizzle and haze. “Come forth, faun. Guide us!”

For a breath there was naught but mist. Then a darker shape stirred within it: first the pale curve of horns like unto a ram’s, then the full outline of the creature, seeming to congeal from vapor as a specter drawn into flesh.

“Ahh, there he is,” Gedain remarked. “Lead us.”

“Unto where, my lord?” Veorn answered. “Unto what?”

The men looked to Gedain with hopefulness that he would seek to turn back. “Thou knowest that which I seek.”

The eyes of the riders fell as Veorn’s mouth curled into a sinister grin. “Aye, then. Follow me.”

They mounted and rode single file, descending with the narrow trail. Veorn ever before them, went far enough ahead that his form wavered upon the brink of vanishing into the haze. They rode thus through the day, and the mist did not lift. Then, as the light began to wane, they again heard the distant drums. “Where dost thou lead us, my lord,” a rider ventured, but Gedain gave no answer.

Ever downward they pressed, the drumbeats growing louder as the skies darkened. “Shall we turn back now, my lord,” another asked, fear cracking his voice.

Gedain reined his horse, and again, hopefulness stirred in the rider’s hearts. Yet he did not answer but instead he took hold the hilt and drew his sword a hands breadth from the scabbard, fixing his glare upon the last rider to voice his cowardice.

Veorn returned to them, as Gedain made his threat, and took the lantern from his saddle and struck it alight. Without a word, he turned and advanced ahead into the darkening fog.

None of the riders dared to speak again. They rode into a night without Luna or starlight to guide them, led only by Veorn’s amber lantern glow on the dark trail ahead. The drums pounded, no longer distant but thumping within the chest, as though their own hearts beat in answer. They rode on to the grim rhythm, with only the hoofbeats and panting of their horses to accompany the rudiment of oblivion.

Veorn’s faint light then disappeared entirely. Rustling filled the darkness. Then strange whispers in unknown tongues. Gedain halted the troop to listen. Unseen footfalls crossed the path behind. Their steel rasped free of leather as they drew their swords…

One rider cried out and fell from his mount. The other horses reared and screamed. Gedain’s eyes, blinded by dark, caught a glimpse of a figure sweeping past the lantern glow— there but for a moment, then gone. He lunged, his blade biting naught but shadow.

Footfalls rustled to their sides. Another rider fell, groaning once, then silent. “Where are ye?” Gedain shouted in futility.

The drums thundered, vast and merciless. A rider wheeled to flee uphill, yet he was unhorsed a moment later, falling silent, lifeless. “Stand! Fight with honor!” Gedain roared.

A shape rushed past him, He struck and missed, his face left burning, hot with blood. His eye blinded. “Veorn!” he called. “Where have ye led us?” No reply came. He spurred his horse forward through the chaos, down the path, hurling blind through the night. For perhaps a furlong he rode, galloping, heedless of stone or root. He slowed. The sound of drums had stilled and the night was as silent as a tomb. He felt his face. The right cheek badly gashed and oozing. His right eye seeing naught, unbearable to open it.

He dismounted and slipped into the ferns and bramble, crouching low, holding his face, willing his breath to stillness lest it reveal him. Shivers seized him with the damp cold gnawing to his bone. He pressed a corner of his cape into his wound. He waited long, daring not to stir or flinch, counting neither moments nor hours until at last the darkness thinned and the sky paled in the east.

With dawn came the lifting of the fog. As the daylight took hold, Gedain found himself in a tangle of saplings and moss and pine needles. He waited still, listening, holding the cape to his face. Nothing. When he deemed the light strengthened enough, he rose partway to claim his horse which was yet standing on the trail. But he heard hoofbeats and so sank back into the blind, sword bare in his right hand, left hand still pressing his maimed face and blinded eye. His view obscured, he saw only hooves halting upon the trail, then boots on the path.

“My lord,” whispered a voice. “Art thou in there?”

Gedain crawled out of the bramble.

“Where be the others?” he asked, sheathing his sword shile holding his wound.

“All slain,” the young rider answered, voice hollow. “They lie back upon the path. I fled when I could.” He looked at Gedain with horror in his eyes as Gedain pulled his hand from his cheek. “Thine eye, sir…” Paying no heed, Gedain swung himself into his saddle. “Do we ride back then, sire?” the young rider asked.

Gedain paused to study the rider’s youthful face: the wide eyes— too wide for battle— the narrow shoulders, the beard no more than tawny fleece upon his chin. “I have forgotten thy name,” Gedain said.

“It is Elden, sire. Elden of—”

“Ride home to your mother, Elden,” Gedain cut in. “This is no road for boys.”

Elden swallowed. “I would rather ride with thee, sire.”

Gedain turned his horse toward the descent. “So be it.” Gedain looked ahead, down the trail where Veorn had appeared, then beckoning. Gedain inhaled a deep breath. “Canst thou smell the rot, boy? The end of the road is nigh at hand.”

Terminus

Further, deeper the faun led them. The forest road levelled. The great pines bent their branches over the path like twisted arches of a fallen nave, until the daylight was but shafts of light that broke through the lattice of bough and needle. For hours, none spoke a word, and even the horses tread softly. Finally, Veorn bid them to halt. “I may lead thee no further.”

Before them, they found the full light of day, as if their path lead unto the opening of a dark cavern tunnel. Gedain turned to look once more for the faun, but Veorn had vanished as if mist before Sol. With no word exchanged, Gedain set his heels and rode forward, and Elden followed.

The road emerged onto  a broad field of wildflowers and poppies, climbing a swell ahead. Upon the hill’s crown, stood the silhouette of a warrior. “Raise thy hands,” Gedain called to Elden. Elden complied.

They approached with trepidation, their pace measured and slow. As they neared, the silhouette resolved before their eyes: a sentry, armed with a curved blade such as Gedain recalled only from the old Aeonite frescoes and descriptions of Vallis wars whispered on rainy nights by his grandfather when he was a boy.

Sol shown bright above, yet the air was cool, the breeze faint. Beyond the sentry, a mystery lurked still. The air carried the scent of the poppies and also a deeply foul rot. The sentry drew his blade as they neared. Beyond him, the hill rose further, and there, flanking the road hung the figures of men dead for days, stripped and suspended, grey, bloated forms, bound to wooden frames on either side of the road.

Gedain and Elden reined before the guard. His mail and breastplate bore a dull golden sheen. His cape as black as moonless night. His helm was wrought in the likeness of a dragon, melded to the form of its wearer’s human skull. He spoke no word but bid them onward. They rode into the gauntlet of the dead, brushing close, eyes and oozing wounds pecked away at by the black corvids that croaked and flapped as they rode by.

They climbed the road through the gauntlet towards the crest. Closing upon it, what lay beyond yet obscured, they reined their nervous steeds to a slow, careful tread. Past the hanging dead, their odorous reek clinging to their every breath. Farther. Further. The wildflowers everywhere bursting with colors: pearl and rose. Gold and crimson. Azure and flame. Sol shining bright above, scalding their eyes.

Then the beyond at last revealed itself: the tops of broken columns of towering stone, the remains of flying buttress and grand arch, too elegant, too lofty, too noble to be crafted by the minds and chisels and hammers of any Norland men. They halted at the crest. Below them spread a deep vale, and within it the ruin was laid bare in full: once a mighty temple, now overgrown with softwoods and brambles, encircled by ordered ranks of tents— near on a thousand by best guess.

“The Neandilim host, my lord!” Elden whispered.

“A millenary, perhaps,” Gedain answered. He spurred down the slope, right hand raised, Elden following. At the base they were encircled by a score of warriors in brass and black capes, speaking in strange southern tongue. They closed in upon them and unhorsed them and removed their weapons. Elden was set apart and held.

Gedain was taken onward, the pathway leading through the ruin’s foundations, past grand faces carved in stone, overgrown with crawler vines and roots, past inscriptions etched in archaic and exotic sigils. He gazed up. The columns soared into the heavens, joined by delicate arches near a hundred cubits above.

Through a living trellis of thorn and leaf, he was led at last into a small court enclosed by walls of flowering bramble. A stone fountain murmured at its heart, Sol’s rays shimmering off the pool. Beside it sat a slight figure clad in plain black robes, facing away. It held a type of lute with a long, fretted neck. The fingers struck the strings and dizzying tones filled Gedain’s ear. He could not discern if the figure was a man or a woman. The playing ceased and the figure turned, the face concealed by a plain, golden mask. Their glance met. The sentries forced Gedain down onto his knees. The figure remained still, examining Gedain as he lowered his gaze.

“Thine eye,” it said. “It appeareth lost.”

Gedain felt it with his fingertips. It had become badly swollen and crusted with scabs of dried blood.

“I do not know for certain… perhaps.”

:Hast thou come to be made?” asked the figure, its smooth, almost gentle voice disarming him.

“Made, my lord?” Gedain asked, raising his swollen, blackened face.

The figure turned a peg on the long neck of the lute. “Thy wound,” it said, “It was not my intent that thou be injured. The one who erred hath been punished.”

Gedain nodded.

“There were two paths set before thee,” it continued softly, “and thou hast chosen.”

“Would any man have chosen the other?” Gedain asked.

“The choice was not given to any man.” The figure plucked the drone strings and the tone seemed to give voice to the sunlight rippling on the pool. “What didst thou expect to find here?”

Gedain pondered, finding no answer.

“Let me ask thee: dost thou believe in good and evil, Gedain?”

Beyond the fountain, he noticed something dark, scaled, slithering in the shadow… or perhaps it was just a trick of the light and air.

“I…” he paused for a moment. “I suppose one man’s good is another man’s evil,” he answered. “How dost thou know my name?”

“Thou must knowest this: that all men are savages by their nature.”

Gedain’s gaze lowered as though he was examining himself.

“You agree, then, that a man’s tribe is righteous unto him alone, and that his survival demandeth he must be ready to name all other tribes unrighteous?”

Gedain gave no reply. The fountain rippled. His face throbbed with pain. The figure tilted his gaze upwards.

“Dost thou know who built this temple?”

Gedain thought, eyes still lowered. “The Gargan, I presume.”

“Why dost thou presume that?”

“I don’t know. Perhaps because men lack such craft.”

“Men name them Gargan as children name the ghosts that haunt them. Did Gargan build these or was that a myth told by modern men who gazed upon these magnificent things and sought to soothe the shame of their own crudeness.” It turned as it viewed the high arches above. “No, it was not mythic hands, it was the Thalan[ii]. Wast thou taught of the Thalan… Gedain?”

“Little, my lord.”

“They wert a noble caste of Edä’s men. Yet their flock was culled and scattered by the Great Purgation[iii].”

Gedain’s eye was drawn to the undulating shadows as he listened.

“Thou hast no Thalan in thy blood by the fair look of you.”

He recalled the legends.

“Thou art Hedam through and through. Brutes, yet they were the survivors. Nomads. Scavengers. All the Thalan knowledge was lost to men, turned to dust by wind and ice.” It strummed the lute and the fountain shimmered in response. “Dost thou know why I come for the Norlands?”

Gedain’s gaze rose, returning to the golden mask. “Art thou Bafomet?” he asked, knowing the answer.

“We are unwelcomed in this realm.”

“Ye shall never be welcomed by the Edäm,” Gedain said.

“We agree. Therefore, we must always contend for survival, lest we permit ourselves to be exterminated… like the Thalan.”

“What dost though want with the Norlands,” Gedain demanded. “There is nothing there but forest and flocks. The men are dumb-witted.”

Bafomet’s voice lowered. “We cannot leave you be. There is no stillness among tribes of men. All art either flourishing or decaying. Edä’s men come for us, today, or tomorrow, yet come they will… if we grant thee peace. My tribe is an ancient one. We learned on Vallis that conquest was a matter of survival. To yield… to halt meant to surrender unto death.”

“This is not Vallis.”

“But it is, my prince.” Bafomet replied. “It is Vallis for us.” Bafomet gestured upwards again, unto the towering columns and arches. “Behold these works. These are the expression of exalted man. Such as these shall rise again… through me.”

Bafomet plucked several bars on the lute. Gedain sat listening. At length he drew breath to speak, but Bafomet forestalled him.

“The Norlands hold much of worth— gold, iron, pasture, fertile women. Yet thy lives and wealth are squandered. What is thy art beyond coarse tapestries and whirling dancers? What is thy craft beyond crude walls and hovels? What be the pinnacle of thy music beyond the crank-fiddle dirge? And yet, mark how far thy kin have come since the Aeonites bestowed their knowledge. Now imagine how much farther we might carry thy kind.”

“Why am I here?” Gedain asked. “To serve as thy messenger? To return and bid the Norland reiks and thegns to surrender to your benevolent design?”

“Nay,” said Bafomet calmly. “Thy kind would never bow to any Neandilim governor… not without a ruinous toll of gold and blood.”

“What am I to thee, then?”

“Thou wast chosen. We watched and weighed you many moons, years even. Thou art ruthless, yet vain; pragmatic, yet driven. In thee, charisma is wedded unto ambition. Thou art fit to be made.”

“To be made into what?”

The lute sounded once more. The pool burned with reflected Sol. The shadows stirred and slithered. “To be made the Norland King.”

“We have a rex,” Gedain replied, though reluctance edged his voice. “What dost thou gain by crowning me?”

“Thy rex is weak. He lacketh ambition. He cannot deliver. He cannot unite. Only thou canst deliver your tribe from ruin and set them onto a higher path.”

Gedain tried to remain void of expression, but his unruined eye betrayed him by widening. “How, then?”

“Deliver Cerenid and the other reiks unto me and thy sovereign path shall be cleared.”

Bafomet turned away toward the fountain to pluck fresh notes on the lute while the sentries raised Gedain to his feet. As he was lifted, he saw it within his mind— the crown upon his brow, the host kneeling, the wild men chanting his name— and the thought took hold of him like fever. And the voice in his mind said, If I must kneel today to raise us later, then so be it. And when I drive them out, I will be forever renowned as the one who saved the Norlands.

“What of the boy who rode with me?” He asked. “Shall he return with me?”

Bafomet answered without turning. “It is not needful that I decide his fate.”

Gedain said nothing more, weighing the boy’s fate as he was led away.


[i] Archons of The One are the intermediary gods, inhabiting the physical realm, and the forces of nature, and as voices within the minds of men.

[ii] The Thalan are the fourth named tribe from ‘Dawn of Edä’.   “The Builders of Stone, who cleaved the mountains and laid the foundations of cities.”

[iii] The Great Purgation is the cataclysm of global cooling that destroyed nearly all of mankind on Edä. From ‘Dawn of Edä,’ the Holy Book of the Hedam, v 161-162: Then The One dimmed the light of Sol, and the azure skies of midday turned gray. The warmth withdrew, and the frost of death descended. The seas shrank from the shores, and the rivers were bound in ice. The mountains groaned beneath their burden, and silence reigned across the wilderness. Famine devoured the tribes of men, and violence sprang up among the starving multitudes. Some cried aloud, saying, “What God is this who afflicteth His children with such torment? Hath He not loved us?”

Norland Rex- Part 3

Contents

III. Cerenid

Procession

The host of Gruen plodded southward in a long, mournful procession that stretched near a mile on the old Fywater road. To their left brooded the murky forest, her shadows alive with bird calls and the faint rustling of creatures meek and monstrous. To their right flowed the Fywater, no longer wide and shallow, coursing gently in the open sward of Briganta, but a stony, swirling torrent, an ever-narrowing fermentation tumbling from the highlands. Veiled by the towering wall of evergreens, the foothills unfolded, climbing southwards into the great white peaks beyond.

Near the head of the column creaked the wagon bearing the remains of Ceryd Rex, tightly bound in canvas and wrapped in the banner of Gruen. Cerenid rode behind, silent and grim, while those who rode beside him spoke in hushed laments of “Such a brief rein” and “What a fine rex he would have made.”

Upon the third eve of their slow march, they came upon the village of Wargsdale, which was an arrangement of humble huts and a wood longhouse that served alike as great hall and temple. Within the longhouse they placed the remains of Ceryd and pitched their tents upon the green to take their rest for the evening. Ceryd’s remains were ever guarded, and his face was uncovered so that villagers were permitted to gather to look upon it and mourn as custom bade.

Ceryd, once radiant with youthful command, had become pale and blue about the lips and hollow at the eyes. The villagers filed past to view him with bowed heads, murmuring prayers and fragments of old chants.

O One whose spirit fills each soul,
Guide the dead to River Thol.
Before they drink to cleanse their past…
…Their die of fate be fairly cast.

Cerenid took no meal, nor did he remain long in vigil of his beloved brother. With naught but a nod to his guard, he retired early to the solitude of his tent. But deep in the night he was awoken by the clamor of shouting and the pounding of frantic footfalls. Bursting into the chill air, he beheld flames flickering through the windows of the long house and smoke wisping through its thatch roof against the backdrop of the fire glow. His first thought was of his brother, who lay in state within, and townsfolk attempting to brave the flames to retrieve his remains.

Villagers swarmed about, rushing to and from the well with sloshing buckets, crying out in despair and dread lest their hall be consumed. Cerenid remained at the threshold of his tent, transfixed by the roar and whirl of flame, the glow upon the sweating faces, the heat that rolled across the village green like a boiling wave.

As his gaze followed the figures darting to the well, their path caused him to notice his guard was not at his post and had joined in the desperate commotion. A heartbeat later, he spotted Una emerging from the flames’ glow, approaching, treading with haste, two Blodwins of arms on either side, their flowing cloaks scorched by flame, both drawing their blades.

Fearing their purpose, he stepped back by instinct. But just as he did, a hand clamped hard upon his neck. A dark figure loomed at his flank with a blade already poised to plunge between his ribs.

“Put down your dagger, fool!” Una shouted, her crisp pitch cutting through the din of chaos.

Startled by her command, the would-be assassin twisted to flee, but instead, his face met the weight of a hammer blow, crushing his nose and knocking him to the dirt, blinded and gasping. The Blodwin guards pounced, beating him soundly with mailed fists and booted heels until he lay bloodied and groaning.

“Stand him up,” Una commanded. The assassin was hauled upright between them, swaying like a broken reed. Cerenid watched, frozen by confusion as Una peered into the assassin’s broken face, searching through her memory. Frowning, she took his hand and examined his ring.

“I know thee,” she observed. “Thou art Kaldwin Fy, seventh son of Reik Korbin.” Her voice twisted into scorn. “Are there so few men of talent left in Fywold that your father must must hazard his own brood upon murder?”

Kaldwin answered not, feigning the stupor of a man half-senseless, though his eyes flickered with panicked wit.

From behind came pounding hoofbeats. Three riders approached, each clad in the deep blue capes in the custom of House Fy.  “Unhand him,” barked the foremost. “Deliver unto us the rex, and ye shall live.”

Una laughed with mocking disdain. “Ye shall let me live? Know ye not who I am?”

“We heed no wenches nor weavers,” the rider spat. “Stand aside, woman.”

“Una’s voice dropped to a cool, deadly calm. “Take heed of thy tongue, inbreeder. I am Una, daughter of Mendo, Reik of Dregrove.”

The riders stiffened, though their weapons did not lower. “It matters not,” another snarled. “We came for Cleon’s son, not for thee.” Then another rider spoke, “You should rejoice in our finishing the job your brother started. Hand him over or be cut down.”

Una stepped forward, eyes as ruthless as a dragon’s, reflecting the dancing flames. “Perhaps thou wilt cut me down ere thy blade find the rex. But hear this: should aught befall either of us, House Fy shall have enemies on two borders.”

She gestured to the groaning Kaldwin. “If this witless whelp is the best thy house can muster, I would not wager a single copper that ye last beyond the coming winter. My brother Madrot, hardened like steel by lies, is soon to be the reik to your west. If I fail to return, he shall know the hand that felled me. And my sister, left without a son or heir, would become reikia to your east. Together, they will come down upon Fywold, cut down your house root and branch, fire your town, and salt your fields so nothing living returns.”

A silence followed, broken only by the roar of flames and the cries of villagers dousing the longhouse roof which had caught fire. The riders remained in their saddles, staring, silent.

“Choose thy fate!” Una demanded, drawing her knife.

The Fy riders conferred in harsh whispers, their faces like muddy wights in the glow. At last, the leader jerked his chin. “Kaldwin, come!”

The wounded assassin, nose flattened and bent askew and bleeding, stumbled forward. A rider hauled him up behind his saddle. And with a final glare of thwarted malice, they wheeled their mounts and vanished into the night.

Una sheathed her blade with a weary exhale. “Nephew,” she said softly, “thou must take greater care. The shadow of your father’s deeds follow thee still. And it is yet many leagues to Gruen.”

Return

From her window overlooking the gate, Regent Fia beheld their coming upon the road. She searched for Ceryd among the host, his flaxen hair, his flowing cape, his stern expression, riding high and noble on his mount. Finding him not, she turned and hastened down, clinging to the vain hope that her firstborn was merely delayed.

The old hardwood gates of Gruen creaked open, and the procession from Briganta, by way of Wargsdale, passed through in solemn tread, led by a great black draft horse pulling a wagon. Behind it rode Una and Cerenid, side by side, wan and weary from the long road, their countenances carved in ash and grief. The stopped within Gruen’s walls.

When Fia came upon them, one glance upon their countenances dashed hope to ruin. Stepping to the wagon, unsteadied by shock, she climbed onto it with the aid of a footman. With a trembling hand she pulled back the banner covering a pine box.

“Open it!” she commanded.

The footman bowed. “My Lady, I must warn—”

“I said open it!”

Neither Cerenid nor Una intervened, their faces relinquished to the storm of a mother’s grief.

With a groan of nails and crack of splinters, the footman pried the lid loose and slid it aside. Fia stood firm, looking down upon the remains of her beloved son, seeing only a pile of blackened bones and a skull, finding her champion humbled in fleshless expression. She gasped, then wept in a full flood. Her beautiful child, the wellspring of her pride, the product of her youth, the only goodness to spring from her union with Cleon— the heart of Gruen’s future no longer beat. All hope was extinguished. Though his nature was closer to that of his father’s, in his living face she saw her own. She loved him most between her sons, for only his strength and decisiveness could calm her worry. Now, before her eyes, his noble visage was reduced to a silent shriek of eternal desperation.

Fia descended from the wagon, her limbs unsure and weak. Una dismounted to help her, and there upon the cobbles they embraced with long faces, grief entwined as kin and fate.

The remains of Ceryd Rex were carefully set into a proper coffin and placed on the altar of the temple, remaining there for seven days. Candles burned at every hour and chants echoed through the vaulted hall. On the seventh day he was carried by six sworn men into the catacombs beneath the keep, and there, interred beside the reiks of old.

The golden crown of Methundor Rex was placed by the high priestess upon Cerenid’s head, although it did rest upon his brow askew. And those who attended the crowning whispered: “May The One breathe fire into the pale brother.”

In the moments before his first counsel, Kethu, feeble and withered, was helped to Cerenid’s side at the long table by a servant, and the two sat alone in the antechamber, silent for some time. Then Sol moved through the sky, its rays, at last shone through the window, falling upon and brightening the old Aeonite’s countenance.

Seizing this, Cerenid asked, his voice low and uncertain, “what wouldst thou advise me, steward?”

Kethu pondered long, hands trembling with great age. At last, in a voice as thin and brittle as parchment he whispered, “Always beware the first who cometh making demands rather than offerings. For he hath loyalty neither to thee nor unto Gruen, but only unto himself.”

Soon after, the doors of the chamber swung wide and entered the Master of Coin. Then Captain Menek and Gedain, and after them, Olian with some lesser thegns and reeves. Fia came last, saying no word, acknowledging no man, taking her seat along the wall in cold silence. Absent was Una, her presence forbidden for her allegiance and standing in Dregrove, though Cerenid was not consulted on whether she should be allowed.

Olian took the seat opposing Cerenid, his back to Fia. Menek and Gedain sat on opposite sides of the rex. Throughout the council, Gedain spoke little, sitting with hands folded, eyes never straying far from Cerenid’s face. He watched him as a hawk might watch a rabbit. Once, when Cerenid faltered in speech, Gedain’s eyes glinted, though whether in contempt or calculation none who saw could say.

The matters of state were debated for hours, yet to Cerenid, each word sounded distant, as hollow as some foreign language uttered by haggling merchants. The treachery of the Fys was finally addressed.

“The Fys have never been loyal,” offered the reeve. “I say we finish what your father started, my lord.”

Cerenid nodded without raising his weary eyes, as if it was a mere reflex.

“We have numbers, my lord,” Gedain suggested. “I would gladly lead the host.”

Olian turned to Cerenid, watching for his agreement. Yet no word came. The room fell silent waiting for the rex to speak, but no words came to him.

Kethu coughed as he sputtered back to presence. “The rex tired. Let him rest. We’ll take up this matter tomorrow.”

The council was adjourned. Fia departed first, yet silent, still stricken. The others followed, all save Olian, who lingered until only he and Kethu, fading in his chair, remained with the young rex. Olian stepped close, lowering his voice to a fierce whisper. “My Lord, we must act ere Mendo passes and Madrot becomes reik. Grant me a dozen riders and we shall fall upon him in Dregrove and finish what justice hath not.”

Cerenid frowned, eyes yet lowered.

“My lord?” Olian pressed.

Finally, Cerenid spoke. “Was justice not already rendered?” Would you have my brother’s death be for nought?”

“Nay, my Lord.” Olian’s face flushed deep with vehemence. “That was no justice, but rather a Blodwin contrivance that slew your brother.” His voice raised. “I seek vengeance upon them… for your brother… and to restore the honour of Gruen.” His fist struck the table, making the cups rattle, stirring Kethu awake.

“I will ponder it,” Cerenid answered, almost meekly.

“Yes, my Lord. Ponder it. Yet heed carefully the counsel thou keepest.”

Cerenid raised his eyes to meet Olian’s. “You refer to my aunt?”

Olian’s eyes flashed. “Aye, Una. Though she appears prudent and measured, her loyalty bends to Dregrove, not to Gruen.”

Cerenid straightened and drew a breath. “I assure you I shall ponder it faithfully,” he replied firmly.

Olian probed Cerenid’s eyes for a hint of his leaning. Not finding what he was searching for, he bowed stiffly and withdrew. When the chamber door closed and the footsteps faded, Kethu stirred in his chair and muttered:

“When the door is unlocked, the knaves show their faces.” Then he drifted back into a wheezy sleep.

Hunt

Late in the month of Goldwane, when the last of the leaves clung brown and brittle, and the breath of man and horse smoked pale upon the air, Cerenid rode forth from Gruen with Olian, Gedain and Menek and their squires. A storm was gathering in the north, its grey belly rolling slow like a tide whose shore was formed the high Norzcarpe. This would be the final hunt ere winter laid its bitter snows upon Methundor.

They pursued a great stag that had been seen for many days, foraging in the cedar woods beyond the river. It was an old beast, deep brown and broad of chest, crowned with vast antlers like the branches of a long dead oak. Men said he had survived six winters of chase by hunters and wolves alike, and that no common lord should claim him lest ill fortune come upon him. Thus Menek, Cerenid’s captain guard, declared it fitting quarry for the young rex.

The company rode beneath the distant light of Sol, through woods of black pine and ghostly birch, the frost silvering the roots and dry grass. The hounds worked ahead, their noses low, while Menek searched for sign. Cerenid rode among them with his longbow strung across his saddle. His hands fumbled often with the quiver at his back, and more than once an arrow slipped loose and fell among the leaves.

Gedain smirked, though he tried to hide it. Olian saw it too, and saw also that none offered aid to the noble. Thus, he rode aside Cerenid.

“Here,” Olian said, “let me show you how the quiver ought to be turned for ease of draw.”

Cerenid responded humbly. “I know how to span a bow. It is my hands. They are cold.”

Rebuffed, Olian turned away, seeing Menek who shrugged faintly in response. Even the squires lowered their eyes. It was a small thing, yet Olian marked it— a rex ought not fumble like a child.

They found the first spoor near an freezing stream, ice clinging to the muddy ridges. Menek dismounted, knelt, and placed his gloved hand beside the hoof print. “Here he passed ere dawn,” he said. “See the depth— he is heavy, old, and proud. He runs alone.”

Gedain smiled. “As every rex should runneth.”

Cerenid gave no answer.

They pressed deeper into the wood, and as they rode Gedain fell back aside with Olian and Cerenid. He turned to the rex in his saddle. “What meanest thou to do with thy Nundi prisoner… my lord?”

Olian spat into the brush as they rode. “What should be done, methinks. Hang him high and let the crows learn his name… my lord.”

“Aye,” answered Gedain. “Though I beg thee hold hum until Frostwane, so that the spectacle of a dangling southerner might crown the week of my wedding feast.”

Olian grunted approval. They rode several strides awaiting the rex’s reply. But at last, Cerenid only shook his head.

“No,” he said, as if he feared to say it. “He shall remain in the dungeon to serve his sentence.”

The woods seemed to grow quieter. Then Gedain laughed once, short and sharp.

“No hanging for a spy?”

“No,” Cerenid answered. “No death sentence for merely crossing a border.” His words came as if he might yet convince them of the justice of it. “If he be an envoy, we would be murdering a messenger. And if he be a spy, prison will loosen his tongue with time. Justice should not be confused with appetite.”

Gedain’s face hardened. “Thou soundest like Kethu, now. Are those thy words or his?

“Thou knowest Kethu is also a southerner,” Kethu added. “His thoughts on this are clouded by his loyalty to kin.”

“I would never dare to question Kethu’s loyalty,” Cerenid said. “Others, perhaps.”

“Mercy toward wolves is cruelty toward sheep,” Olian huffed.

Cerenid’s voice remained calm. “And cruelty mistaken for strength is still cruelty.”

No man answered. Even the dogs seemed hushed.

They rode on in silence, but within Olian, something old and bitter stirred. First Madrot was not pursued. Now this. Always softness in the boy rex where iron was needed.

Ahead, Menek suddenly raised a hand. Silence fell. All halted. He pointed. There, through the black trunks and pale mist, stood the great stag, rooting for the last shoots of autumn. He was magnificent— vast of body, winter-thick in hide, his antlers spread like a regal crown. He stood upon a rise above them, proud and still, as though he himself judged the hunters.

Menek turned and whispered. “My lord, come forth. Take the first shot.”

Cerenid dismounted with his longbow, all eyes upon him.

He stepped slowly through the brush, bow in hand, each breath clouding before him. He drew an arrow, nocked it, and raised the bow. The stag lifted its head. For a long moment neither moved. Cerenid held the draw, his arms trembling under the strain. The stag remained. Then something changed in his face. He lowered the bow. The beauty of the creature had stayed his hand.

Olian felt his jaw tighten. Then a hiss. An arrow flashed past Cerenid’s shoulder and struck the stag behind the foreleg. The great beast gave a leap and bounded into the trees. Cerenid turned. It was Gedain who had loosed. Before he could protest Menek shouted.

“Ride!”

The hunt exploded into motion. Hooves thundered over root and stone. Hounds howled and bounded. Branches lashed at cloaks and faces. Ahead, the wounded stag crashed through the forest, leaving blood bright upon the pale trunks of birch and flaxen grass.

Cerenid mounted late and followed, but the others were already far ahead. By the time he caught them, the beast lay fallen in a clearing of dead grass, its legs thrashing weakly. It’s dark eyes glistening with terror. Gedain stood above it, one knee in the mud, driving his hunting blade down through the ribs and into the heart. The stag shuddered once, then was still.

Steam rose from the wound. Cerenid stood silent. Gedain looked up, hands red to the wrist.

“A clean death.”

With practiced hands he opened the belly and drew forth the steaming entrails, laying them upon the frost. Menek stepped forward with a silver cup from his saddlebag. He knelt, filled it with the beast’s dark blood. He rose and offered it to Cerenid.

“Your first kill, my lord. Drink.”

Cerenid stared at the cup. The blood steamed in the cold air. All eyes fell upon him. He reached forth, then withdrew his hand and shook his head.

“It was not my kill.”

Menek looked to Gedain. Gedain took the cup instead and drank deep, the red staining his lips. He handed it back with a sinister, crimson smile.

“The beast careth little whose arrow found him first,” Gedain said. “Laughter followed from Olian and Menek. Cerenid forced a hollowchuckle.

They dressed the stag and bound it for the ride home. By then the sky had darkened fully and the bitter air carried the smell of snow.

Olian rode just behind them, watching. Ahead rode Cerenid— quiet, uncertain, slight in his saddle, looking more a priest than a ruler. Beside him rode Gedain— broad-shouldered, blood-marked. Undaunted. He was admired without effort, with all men speaking to him as though he were already something greater. And in that long ride beneath the coming storm, Olian felt a certainty consume him like a bitter gale. A rex who could not kill would one day fail to defend. Cerenid was too weak to rule. Worse even, he mistook weakness for virtue. Such a rex would surely lead Methundor into ruin. The vultures would soon come to circle.

Olian’s thoughts turned to Avarlon— no justice for her suffering. Then to Madrot, free, his ugly face filled with mocking laughter. Then to the Nundi spy, in chains and yet breathing. And to Kethu, whispering patience while rot spread beneath the floorboards of the realm.

No, he thought. This softness would destroy them all.

His eyes found Gedain riding ahead, and for the first time he did not see merely youthful vanity courting his daughter. He saw a stronger hand for the crown. And there, beneath the blackening sky, with the vultures overhead and winter marching down, Olian decided what he must do.

Vows

The bells would soon begin their summons, and the sept would stir like a hive before swarming. Garlands of ivy and hawthorn were strewn along the beams with white bunting and threads of gold. Files of unlit candles guarded the walls and dais of the otherwise empty hall. Outside, the Rainmere Sol shone cold yet bright, and the bitter winds did gust and whip as winter clung to its final days.

Olian stood in the antechamber adjoining the temple, hands clasped behind his back, jaw grinding as though upon unseen bone. Gedain leaned upon the narrow windowsill, peering through the cloudy glass, his wedding cloak draped upon a chair.

“Tonight,” Olian said low, “or never.”

Gedain nodded faintly. “The guards who matter are with us— Menek, Joles. The rex will dine and drink, then, when he withdraws… I pray he goes swiftly.”

“He will.” Olian paced. “He’s weak. A boy. Such men die easy. Think of it as an act of mercy… mercy for Gruen, for Methundor.”

“There will be chaos…”

“For a fortnight, perhaps. Until the council selects a steward.”

“Dost thou think Fia will leave?” Gedain asked.

“For Dregrove? The council will insist— For her safety, of course, until the conspirators are found, which, of course, they never shall be.”

Gedain stiffened, raising a hand to still Olian’s tongue. He reached for his hilt, then stepped silently to the door. Wrenching it open with sudden force, he burst through, snatching the spy listening just beyond.

“Avarlon!” Olian exclaimed. “Why art thou here?”

Avarlon stood frozen in the doorway, Gedain’s hand clutching her arm, her other hand clutching the ribbon meant for her hair. Her face had gone pale as milk. She stepped forward, her voice thin but steady. “What speak ye of?”

Olian’s expression smoothed. “Daughter, thou shouldst not wander here.”

“We were discussing matters of guard and station,” Gedain explained. “The realm is restless. Thy father frets.”

“Do not lie to me,” Avarlon said. Silence fell. “I heard talk of dying easy and— ”

Olian laughed once, sharply. “Idle speech. Soldiers’ tongues run loose ere ceremony.”

“We spoke of possible dangers,” Gedain added quickly. “Of villains… of Madrot.”

Then something broke at the sound of that name.

“No,” Avarlon whispered. Then she spoke louder. “No more.” They stared as she tried to pull away from Gedain’s grip, her body trembling. “I will not be party to this. I have borne enough blood upon my soul.”

Olian’s brow furrowed. Her eyes filled, yet she did not weep. “I must confess. I can no longer bear the weight upon my conscience.

“What art thou speaking?” Olian asked.

“I… I must tell the truth. No more lies. I lied to thee, father.”

“What didst thou lie, my child?”

“No!” Gedain implored, tightening his grip on Avarlon’s arm, pushing his fingers deep.

“I lied about that night last summer.” She took a long breath. “I was ashamed. I did not know one lie would come to this. Father, Madrot did not force me. He never touched me. He is innocent.”

The words rang like the great iron bell of the sept. Olian staggered as though struck. “No… No, I don’t believe you. Why speak of this now?”

“Avarlon… silence!” Gedain ordered.

“I did lie, father,” she said again. “I lied out of fear. Out of shame. I was with Gedain that night in the stable, not Madrot.”

Gedain’s face drained of color. He opened his mouth to speak but held his tongue.

“It is the truth,” she answered, “Gedain cannot deny it. I lay in the stable with him. And when thou questioned me, I chose the easier sin… to shield him.”

Gedain’s jaw tightened. “Enough!”

“No,” she said fiercely, wrenching her arm free from his grip. “Ceryd died for my sin, my cowardice. I will not let another brother die in silence.”

Olian clenched his fists. “Knowest thou what thou hast done?”

“Yes, I know father. I shall bear it all my days,” she said softly. “But I will not allow further harm.”

For a long moment, silence. Gedain stared at Avarlon. Avarlon stared at her father. Olian stared at the stones of the floor. Beyond the walls, the bells began their peal.

At last Gedain spoke. “She is overwrought. I’ll take her to the south wing. Guarded, she shall say nothing more before the ceremony.”

Olian did not look up from the floor. Avarlon gazed between them, horror dawning in her eyes as she settled on her groom. “You would silence your wife?”

“I would spare thee,” Gedain said firmly. Then he led her away.

#

The chapel filled. The candles flared. Voices rose in chorus. Yet Olian stood rigid beside the altar, sweat cooling upon his spine, eyes seeing nothing, staring into oblivion. The words of the priest washed over him unheard. The ravens gathered in the high bell tower, their voices croaked doom while their talons scratched at stone. Olian’s empty gaze strayed to the high seat, where the boy Cerenid Rex sat. Pale beneath the tilted crown that still seemed too heavy for him despite the passing of a full season. For the first time since mid-winter, when the plot was sworn, Olian felt his grip unbalanced, for he had risked everything, and the two people nearest to him, his daughter and his would-be son in law had lied to him. The heat of rage and desperation flamed within.

Reception

After the feast, the libations flowed like a fountain, and the music filled all ears with drums and the drone of a crank-fiddle, and humming melodies. The reception began to boil into revelry, laughter drowning the conversations. Maidens locked arms and spun, twirling in rhythm, and the lads tested sinew and pride at arm wrestling. Warriors drank deep and boasted loud, and old men sat and watched, reliving their youth through the antics of the young.

At the high table sat the bride and groom, Avarlon and Gedain. But her countenance was troubled and grim. Gedain feigned a continuous grin, false happiness betrayed by his cold, measuring cast of eye. He nudged Avarlon to appear happy, yet she obliged him only for a heartbeat, her face swiftly dissolving back into dread.

Also seated was Cerenid Rex, and his mother Fia, and at the table’s end, his aunt Una Blodwin. The father of the bride, widower Olian, watched as Cerenid clapped along to the rhythm of the song, stopping only to take sips from his silver chalice. Behind the rex stood Menek, his guard’s captain. Olian’s eyes met Menek’s. Menek nodded faintly without turning. Olian scanned back over the room, far to the opposite end, to the doors of the hall. There stood two more guards, emotionless, frozen.

The song changed and amidst the turn, a dancing maiden collided with a servant, causing her to drop her cask. Red wine burst onto a table, splashing a seated thegn, spoiling his tunic and cape. The thegn leapt up with a volley of curses, but the din swallowed his rage.

Olian felt a hand clasp his shoulder. He turned. It was Gedain. He acknowledged him with a nod, then glanced at Avarlon, then back to Gedain again.

Gedain leaned close and murmured, “I’ve spoken to her at length. There is no need to worry. She will be fine.”

“Then bid her to brighten her countenance,” Olian replied, funneling the words to Gedain’s ear. “She looks as though she’s attending a funeral rather than her wedding.”

“I shall soften her with more wine.” Gedain nodded and returned to his seat.

Olian looked again over his shoulder, but Menek was now gone. He then turned to the doors across the hall. The faces of the two guards had changed. He felt droplets of sweat beading upon his brow. He rubbed his neck. He looked at Gedain who was laughing at the thegn who was still tongue-lashing the clumsy servant.

He glanced at Cerenid, his vulnerable, naive face unaware of what fate crept towards him. In his mind, Olian saw the blade driven between the boy’s ribs, his body crumpling. Then he envisaged the future beyond: Fia imprisoned, Una hauled away under guard, Kethu suffocated by a pillow, Menek seated as steward until Gedain could be named rex.

But then his thoughts began to cascade.

Shall I do this?

…Yes, of course. It is already in motion.

What if I am caught? They will saw me for treason!

…Menek will not fail.

But what if he does fail?

…He won’t.

But is this the only way? Perhaps the boy will stiffen with age.

…The realm cannot afford to take that chance.

But am I a murderer? Can I live with myself after?

…Only you can answer that.

Within his thoughts, he saw a future where Gedain was rex and his daughter rexia, gleaming crowns set upon their heads, holding hands beneath rose petal rain, between them, his grandson prince with fair hair. Yet the luster soon became clouded, for he then saw Cerenid, the boy, holding his wound, blood leaking out, gasping for air, begging him to know “why?” as he lay dying. He saw the funeral and the eyes of suspicion upon him. Fia— the mother’s hatred. He saw himself made ugly by torment, immersed in drink to dull it, hiding himself from the eyes of accusation…

No! I cannot do this. I am not a killer nor a traitor. Find Menek, call it off.

…But where is he? Will he reach his assassin in time?

I must Think.

…Look! The rex prepares to leave. There’s no time!

He drained his goblet, then wiped the sweat from his brow. The music blared. The crank-fiddle droned. He rubbed his temples. The drums pounded. The maidens twirled. Gedain laughed. Olian looked upon his daughter— yet unmoving, so fair, yet blank of face, unblinking, as if she were carved in stone…

“Enough,” he muttered to himself. He pushed back from the high table, proceeding past Cerenid toward the edge where Una and Fia sat. She noticed him coming, her eyes following him as he approached.

“I must speak with thee,” he said.

“So speak.”

“In private.”

Her gaze sharpened.

“Concerning what?”

“Concerning a matter most grave.”

Una rose from the table, and together they descended from the dais into the churn of the hall. Gedain’s laughing ended when he saw them together, yet he dared not move from his perch and draw eyes upon himself conspiring with them. They passed into an antechamber where Olian shut the door, the muffled music droning on beyond.

“What is it?” Una asked.

“I… I have come by knowledge that imperils the rex.”

“Then speak to the rex.”

“I fear he would not grasp its weight.”

“Why are you telling me?”

Olian paused to listen at the door, then continued. “Because thou hast proved thy fealty by risking thy life for him. He trusts thee without question.”

Una’s voice cooled. “What is happening, Olian?”

“My lady, I have reason to believe there be a plot against the rex.”

“By whom?”

“There is no time,” Olian pressed. “Only this: I believe the danger comes from within the vanguard. I must intervene, but until I know for certain, we cannot risk him unguarded. Canst thou place thy men with him when he leaves the hall?”

She studied him, eyes narrowing. “How would you come to know all this, Olian?”

“Just… will you have your guards attend to him… please? There’s no time to explain.”

“Of course,” she answered with lowered voice.

Olian opened the door and left the antechamber and then the hall in haste, slipping out into the streets in search of Menek. He dared not to call his name aloud nor ask after him, lest suspicion fall upon himself. He searched one alley, then another, then peered into a tavern thick with smoke and voices. Yet Menek was nowhere to be found.

Returning to the street he saw four of Una’s men leave the hall and take separate positions, blending into the shadows so they would not be conspicuous. Olian searched the next alley, and then the next. It was vain. Menek could be anywhere, biding his time, awaiting the signal from his co-conspirators. At last, Olian returned to the hall, lest his absence be marked.

He saw Gedain’s eyes locked on to him as he re-entered through the doors, following him as he retook his seat.

“What art thou doing… sir?” he demanded.

“Ask nothing more,” Olian answered. “Do not speak to anyone of the plan, no matter what comes this evening.”

Moments later, Cerenid Rex stood, yet the hall took no immediate notice. Seeing their disregard, Olian seized the moment to buy Una time, striking his cup and calling aloud in his booming voice, “Be still! The rex would make a toast!” At last, the hall fell silent.

Cerenid stood, in his uncertain manner, his cup held too tight in his grasp. Curling within himself with narrowing shoulders. He cleared his throat and began.

“I… I will not keep ye long,” he said. “I am yet no orator, nor have I yet learned the weight of speaking as rex.” He cleared his throat.

“I drink first to Gedain and to Avarlon. May thy union be stronger than the tempests that trouble this realm, and may thy hearth know warmth longer than sorrow.”

He paused, searching for words, then went on.

“We walk a road whose length is… is hidden from us. Some are granted many leagues upon it. And then others are called aside without warning… I have learned this… sooner than some.”

His voice steadied. His posture stiffened.

“But when thy journey ends, and thy spirit passeth through the Gate of Tartarus[i] and cometh unto the River Thol, may we all enter our next life with our honour unbroken.”

He raised his cup, and his voice filled the room.

“I drink to love, to duty, and to the road, however short or long it be.”

…And every lord and lady then clinked their goblets and cups, and drank, and shouted, “By The One!” And Cerenid Rex smiled with a nod and then departed the hall, greeted by Una and two of her sergeants at the door.

Plot

Joles was a brawny man of cruel visage. Hi sparse grey hair was closely cropped. His right cheek bore the scar of an arrow that near ended him, the red flesh there deeply furrowed. His arms were scored with tattoos of thorny vines and bones, and skulls. Once he had been a petty bandit, working alone upon Fywater Road, preying on pilgrims too frail to resist. It was there when Menek first espied him, crouched in bracken, measuring his ambush. Joles had ever preferred weaker quarry than guardsmen, and so he let Menek pass. But Menek did not pass, instead calling him forth and offering Joles honest work. In time, Joles became Captain Menek’s chief enforcer, carrying out the nefarious orders passed down from Cleon Rex.

But that first meeting was twenty years past, and Joles, now balding and losing his teeth, knew that his days in the court would soon be ending. The boy rex seemed to have no appetite for midnight justice, and Joles was too ugly for the court or to parade with the high guard, and too old to return to banditry. Yet should Menek rise to steward, his trade and proper life might endure for a few more years. And so Joles was quite willing to trade honor for prosperity.

Joles now sat alone, hiding out within a stable, pondering this change of life with the musk of old straw upon the air. At last he fell asleep, dozing until a hand finally shook him awake.

“He is unguarded,” whispered the voice in the shadows before darting off into the night.

Joles leapt up at once, brushing the straw off his vest, fingers finding the blade at his waist. He hurried out the door and into the street, the way marked by glow beaming from windows and cobblestones lit by moonlight.

As he followed the cobbles toward the keep, his thoughts turned unbidden to old reckonings. How many have I slain? Twenty? No, twenty-four. He tried to name them all as he walked but their faces blurred and names eluded beyond fifteen. But how many had been young men, mere boys like Cerenid? He recalled none.

Cerenid would be easy prey, he thought. The rex was thin and unhardened by trial. If death wasn’t quick, there would be pleas for mercy. But no quarter would be given. Twas Menek who buttered Joles’s bread, not the rex. It was Menek alone to whom he was loyal.

He entered the keep without haste, and the posted guards scarce lifted their gaze. Such was the privilege of long service, that a known man moved freely where strangers would be halted. He noted their names in his memory. They would be dealt with later. The courtyard glimmered in torchlight, her pathways abandoned at the late hour. Joles kept to the shadows along the wall, his pace measured, his breath slow and sure. He had done this many times.

He moved in silence through the garden, swallowed by budding hedges and clipped yews. The fountains murmured softly in the shadows. Somewhere, a drunkard’s singing carried upon the air from beyond the garden wall. But his only witness, save for the doomed guards, was the silhouette of an owl perched on a near branch, slowly turning its head to follow him along the dark path.

Joles crossed the garden unopposed. He reached the inner stair where a guard should have stood but he found only the brazier, its coals burning low. He set his foot upon the first step, paused, felt for his blade, then began the ascent.

The stair wound upward, to his right, in a narrow turn, the stone worn smooth by centuries of passage. He steadied his breathing, climbing slowly in his soft soles so no echo might betray him. The air of the stairwell lay close and stale. Sconces flickered and his shadow danced on the tapestries hung slack upon the wall, their woven kings and battles gazing down in mute judgment as he passed. His fingers strayed again to his blade.

At the landing before the rex’s quarters, the corridor lay utterly still.

No voices.

No sentry.

No light save what bled thinly from the stairwell behind.

He halted there a moment, tightening his hand upon the haft of his knife. He listened long for human voices, for breath, for footfall, for the faintest stir. It was as though the keep itself had drawn a breath and chosen not to cry out. Hearing nothing, he advanced.

Lunge and be done? he pondered. Or slither in and end him quiet? One promised speed but possible alarm, the other patience but the peril of awakening. He chose the latter. He preferred to savor his work.

He carefully pressed his blade though the jamb of the door and lifted the brace behind that barred it. Knowing its weight and balance by feel, he raised the bar off the hook. Holding it with his knife, he eased the door in without the faintest creak. When opened far enough, he reached his free hand in and let the brace down without a sound. He was within.

The hearth lay cold and the chamber was lit only by starlight filtering through the window, but Joles knew his way through the room blind. Across stood the canopy of the rex’s bed, the muslin drawn down to thwart the coming season of flies and night worms. Within its cocoon lay the figure of the rex, turned to the window and back to the door. Hand on blade, the assassin listened, hearing the: slow deliberate breaths of sleep. He crept forward, knife drawn. A faint creak on the floor. He halted. Another silent, careful step. Then another. He reached out to part the curtain. He raised the blade—

And then a force of iron swung into his knee, knocking him to the floor. Hands grabbed his arm and tore loose his blade. Fists rained upon his mouth and ears and face. Boots belted him in his ribs.

They dragged him out of the chamber and into the corridor— three men bearing him, one pressing steel to his throat. New lantern glow filled the stairwell. Two men cloaked in Dregrove colors appeared. Una followed behind them. She halted before Joles, peering upwards into his bloodied face. Defiance, therein, guttered and died, replaced by naked fear.

“Thy plot hath failed, Joles,” she said.

He spat blood. “But not thine, it seems. Have the Blodwins taken Gruen, now?”

“Take him below.”

#

That same night, Cerenid sat beside Kethu in his dim chamber, which the old Aeonite had not left for many weeks. Kethu’s face was pale like linen, and his hair had thinned to mere wisps. His blue-veined, arthritic hands trembled without cease.

“Teacher,” the young rex said softly. “A plot against me was thwarted by Una. Tell me, what is thy counsel?” The rex leaned close to hear Kethu’s faint reply.

Kethu’s eyes stirred, fixing upon Cerenid with a clear gaze, hands yet trembling. “Thou must uncover all who had hand in this,” he whispered. “Joles would not have dared this alone. There is no profit for him in acting alone. His hand was guided.” Kethu paused to draw breath. “Thou must flush the conspirators forth, all of them, or they shall come for thee again and again.”

Sentence

Joles sat with back to cold stone, facing a heavy wooden door. A thin bed of mold-rank straw lay beneath him. Set within the door, a high slot at eye-level for a man of guard height, and another a low square one, just large enough to pass in a pot of foul pottage— or draw out one fouler still. From these two portals leaked the cell’s only dull light, and with it the reek of sour air. Joles kept his face within the meagre beam, lest his sight fade wholly into blindness.

There was sparse measure of time in that pit. The guards spoke no words; their presence known only by the jangle of their keys, the clatter of iron, and the thunder of their fists pounding on doors. The dung-wretches, prisoners spared the depths for base labor, beaten for speaking, came and went in silence, exchanging vessels of sustenance for vessels of filth. At intervals came sudden cries, rupturing the inhuman silence. And always there was the buzz of flies and the scurrying of hidden rats and the scent of rot.

At last, the fists pounded upon Joles’s door. The eye slot darkened. Keys jangled. The lock clinked. The door swung open, and three guards gestured him forth. Joles hauled himself upright, struggled to his feet and stepped forward from the cell, submitting his wrists and ankles to iron.

They led him through the corridor, its torches burning with acrid pitch. Then through an iron gate and up a narrow stair, its stones worn into hollows by a century of shackled footfalls.

At the stairs’ crown, daylight reflected off the walls beyond and through the bars of the last gate. The sentry there unlocked it, and the guards escorted Joles through and down the wider corridor that brightened as it opened into a courtyard.

There stood the reeve with four more guards, two sworn to Gruen and two to Dregrove, standing beside a scaffold fashioned of two upright trunk posts and a cross member. Near it stood Una, flanked by Cerenid, Gedain, and Olian, who himself stood back. To the other side were three hooded figures. One held a hammer and the other two held a long broad saw with deep teeth.

The reeve spoke. “Joles of Peelgrain, thou wert taken in the act of high treason, of seeking the life of thy rex. By the old law, the penalty thereof is death by sawing torment.”

Joles’s shackles were struck away. His garments were stripped, and he was borne to the scaffold and laid upon his back, his limbs bound fast with leather thongs drawn through iron rings. With measured heaves, two guards hoisted him, suspending him inverted between the posts. Pine planks were then nailed into place at hip and flank, then again at chest and shoulder, until his body was held rigid and unmoving. The hooded men set their saw upon a notch upon the uppermost planks, resting the cold steel teeth on Joles’s privy flesh. They did not yet draw.

Una stepped forward. “By the law, sawing is the doom for any who raise hand against the crown. Upon the rex’s mark, the blade shall move.”

The reeve continued, his voice without mercy. “The blade is wrought for timber, not flesh. It doth not cut clean but rendeth. Thou shalt remain alive long, blood pooling in your head, leaving thy senses unbroken while cutting through your bones and tearing out your entrails. Hast thou aught to say before sentence is carried forth?”

Joles feigned bravery but his eyes betrayed the terror gnawing within. They darted from the warden to Una, finally fixing upon Cerenid.

“My lord,” he cried. “I beg thee for thy mercy.”

Cerenid answered, his voice firmer than in the days before. “I will grant thee mercy, the mercy of swift death.”

Joles shuddered.

“But thou must purchase it,” the rex added.

“My lord, I’ve told all I know, already.”

“We…,” the rex stopped to correct himself, “I want Menek. Where hath he fled?”

Joles steadied his breath, forcing calm. “He informed me he would wait for me by the spring beyond the south gate, where the road could be watched and he could escape if needed. I presume he rode away since no word reached him.”

“Rode away to where?”

Joles faltered.

Una raised her hand. “Proceed!”

The executioners tightened their grip on the saw handles, tensing as they prepared the first pull of the blade.

“Wait… wait, My lord!” Joles pleaded. “I… I know where he hath gone. Please. He spoke of it often, long before…”

“Speak!”

“To… to Varenthor, by way of the High Gate. He believed the pass lay open. He always swore he would sell his sword there if Gruen turned upon him. He spoke of it many times.”

“Proceed!” Una urged again.

“Wait,” Cerenid ordered with mercy— or some would say with weakness. “Take him down.”

The hooded guards pried the planks loose. The straps slackened. Joles sagged to the wooden floor of the scaffold. The guards shackled him and bore him away.

Cerenid turned to Gedain. “Take five riders,” he commanded. “Go by way of the High Gate to Varenthor. Find Menek. Bring him back, alive. I must know whose hands stain this plot.”

“Wilt thou givest me the key, my lord?” Gedain asked.

Cerenid pondered. “No. You have no need of it. If the High Gate is locked, Menek did not pass through. And if it is open, thou needeth no key.”

And what of Joles, My Lord?” Gedain asked.

Una’s eyes searched the rex’s countenance for strength. The rex glanced into hers and found it.

“If Menek is returned by the Rainmere new moon, I will have Joles beheaded. If Menek is not brought, Joles will be sawn.”

Mentor

Upon hearing word that the old Aeonite had wakened in clarity, Cerenid went at once to his chamber. He found Kethu propped upright amid his linens, his frame thin as a winter branch, his skin the color of sheep’s wool.

“Teacher,” said Cerenid softly, “thou art awake.”

“Indeed,” Kethu whispered with some effort, his voice no more than heavy breath. “The last bright flare before the wick is spent.”

“I am again in need of thy counsel… if thou art yet able to give it.”

“It is my charge,” Kethu said.

“Gedain has rode out this morn for the High Gate and Varenthor. I want to know if you believe he will find Menek.”

Kethu pondered. “I do think he shall.”

Cerenid clasped his teacher’s hand. “How am I to make Menek name his fellows?”

Kethu coughed, a dry and rattling sound. Then he was still a long while. At last he spoke. “Pain will surely loosen his tongue, yet I doubt truth will follow it. Torture breeds answers shaped to please the ear.” He groaned as he moved in his bed. “What Gedain brings back, or doesn’t, will speak truer than any rack or words.”

“Explain, teacher.”

Kethu caught his breath. “If he returns with his riders and no Menek, thou shalt learn little. But if he returns bearing Menek in chains, then Gedain clears himself of this design.”

“Do you suspect Gedain?”

“You must suspect all men, young rex. Such is the weight that leadens every crown. Yet I do not deem Gedain the mind that spun the web. There is a more subtle spider yet lurking.”

“Who do you believe it is?”

“Oh, the Fys, perchance. Or one nearer still.”

“Olian?” Cerenid offered. “He knew of it firsthand.”

“I will not seed thy thoughts with names. Once sown, they may blind thine eye that tends them.”

“And what if Gedain returns alone?”

Kethu’s gaze sharpened. “Then thou mayest believe his hand was in it. Yet if so, hide thy knowing. Keep him ever near. Men who believe themselves unseen grow careless, and in carelessness Gedain will reveal his master.”

Cerenid walked to the lone window, and gazed out upon the city walls, pale and bright beneath the midday Sol. “There is more,” Cerenid’s voice lowered. “Word has come from Dregrove. Mendo is dead.”

Kethu inclined his head, as though greeting an expected guest.

“I cannot let Una or mother depart to bury their father.”

“Aye, Una’s road is sown with danger. The Fys— Kaldwin at least— will surely lie in ambush.”

“Word comes that they art already intercepting couriers,” Cerenid added. “They know who comes and goes…”

…But then woe filled the lad’s face.

“What else troubles you?” Kethu asked. “Dost thou fearest for Una… or for thyself, also?”

Cerenid’s mouth tightened, and for a breath he bristled. Then the fire passed from his face and he bowed his head.

“I will not lie to thee, teacher. It is for my life that I fear. Most of all, if Una is not beside me. Twice already she has stood between me and death.”

“To fear is to be human,” said Kethu. “Yet fear hath a scent, and the wolves will follow it. Fear drives men to haste, and haste to folly, and folly to ruin.”

“Yet I fear, teacher. How shall I find courage?”

“Try to think of thy danger as though it threatened another. Be not the rex in thine own mind but be another instead— be the keeper of the rex, rather than the rex. Thus, shalt thou seest more clearly.”

“So then Una must go home?”

“Yes, by her time. Yet whether on the morrow, or with the turning of leaves, only she can say.”

“What meanest thou?”

“The Prophet Azarius draweth nigh,” said Kethu. At the utterance of that name, the very air seemed to hush and listen. “He told me this in Golgon, in the far centuries gone, that He would come unto me once more, upon the eve of my departing.”

“And thou dost believe it still?” Cerenid asked.

“I do,” replied Kethu, “though three hundred years have worn away since it was promised. His coming is writ both in thy chronicles and in ours… and in theirs. Why else would the southern spies be hunting for Him here? He is our uniter by prophecy made manifest. His truth shall aid thee in uniting the men of Norland to march.”

“Will Una then lead the men of Dregrove?”

“No,” Kethu answered. “Madrot must bear the host of Dregrove beneath thy banner; and for this cause must Una return thither, to rule in his stead, while the storm of Norland men is loosed.”

“Then Azarius will lead the Norland host.”

“No!” Kethu’s voice strengthened. “When prophets return, it is not as kings or warlords. He is not the leader of men. He is only the shepherd of their souls. Thou art the rex, Cerenid.”

“But they will not follow me, teacher. For I am not yet a man.”

“Then you must become one, quickly. If thou leadest them not, they will slay one another in the field. And if thou remainest here, thou shalt be slain by them. Then shall Bafomet come with his golden host, and Norland shall fall into ash and bondage with nary a blade raised in its defense.”

Cerenid folded his arms, his gaze cast down, the weight of command pressing upon him like stone.

“I know your trouble, Cerenid,” Kethu said, voice softening back into a murmur. “Thy charge is greater than breath or bone. Yet remember, all lives flicker but a handful of heartbeats. Most men pass their span never knowing why they were even born. Thou hast been endowed with a purpose. Cherish that as a precious gift.”

Cerenid breathed deeply, slowly, then nodded, though his hands trembled.

“There is yet one more truth I must give thee,” Kethu said. “It concerns thy brother. He spoke to me of the cave, when ye were boys. He told me what he beheld there.”

Cerenid looked up.

“He saw thee,” Kethu continued. “He saw thee standing alone in single combat. And he saw thee fall.”

“Aye, teacher. That is what he said to me as well.”

“Thou must know this,” Kethu said. “That is why he offered himself in combat at Briganta. He thought to spare thee. And in that choice, a choice made of love, he found his purpose in life.”

“But he died,” Cerenid whispered, “and left his burden unto me.”

“He did not go forth to die, Cerenid,” said Kethu gently. “He went forth to prevail. Yet Madrot unmade his measure with the brutish cunning of his blows.”

A sorrow passed through Cerenid’s eyes, deep and unguarded.

“You must forgive Madrot for this. He did not choose to duel your brother. Your brother chose. In the coming days, thou wilt need Madrot to lead his warriors under your command.”

Cerenid’s face hardened. “I cannot forgive him. Nor can I forgive my brother.”

“Hear me, young rex. One cannot bargain with that which hath already come to pass.” Kethu smiled in kindness. “Thy brother took up his mantle and the world turned as it must. Do not make light of his sacrifice by shrinking from thine own. To refuse thy burden is to lay it upon the dead. Our burdens give our lives their meaning.”

Contents


[i] Tartarus is the name for the underworld, where souls travel after death to be assigned their next life and drink the water of forgetfulness from the River Thol.

Norland Rex- Part 2

Contents

II. Ceryd

Heirs

Two summers passed while Cleon had tarried far from Gruen, and in those seasons did Fia bear and nurse her second son whom she named Cerenid. The babe was slight of form and gentle in spirit, and nursemaids oft did urge him to suckle, worried that his vitality had failed him as his ribs shone like pale ridges. Yet the long nights of his weakness did at last depart, and he endured the winter’s stern trial.

In that third autumn, when the leaves seared to gold and Sol’s bright shafts were softened by the cool breath of northern winds, riders were espied upon the road to Gruen, bearing the banners of Welf. At first, their purpose lay veiled; yet a murmur spread like dusk across the courtyard, that Cleon’s name rode in their errand.

Fia long feared for her sons in Cleon’s absence, sensing the lurking prowl of the ambitious men of court. Only Kethu stood between her and them. And with him were joined all the Aeonites, whose eyes and ears revealed every nascent plot that dared to root in Gruen’s shadows.

Fia’s breast swelled with hope as she stood at her high window overlooking the gate, watching the road to Gruen, eyes eager. The autumn air was crisp and the daylight soft and golden, the banners above fluttering and flapping in promise. In her mind she rehearsed the moment: presenting the young sons to their father, their laughter echoing through the courtyard; a feast in the hall, the cheers of the courtiers, the weight of fear released from her shoulders. Even the wind seemed to carry anticipation of reunion.

But her heart shrank the moment she beheld the riders, for their mounts trod slowly, their banners drooped limp at their sides, the dust on their cloaks telling of a long journey without cheer. Hope faltered with a chill in her limbs as sorrow touched her eyes. With trembling haste, she descended into the square to meet them, and there, before her, stood a covered wagon, its heavy wheels silent, its form wrapped in cords and shadow. The air hung thick with dread.

Her lips parted, yet no word issued forth. She beheld the faces darkened with gloom, brows bowed beneath the weight of duty. In that instant, the golden thread stitching the hope for her sons snapped as though rent by unseen hands. For though she bore no love for the cruel man whose body they delivered, she knew he would protect them and her. Now, in her soul, she knew that her children’s inheritance, and their very lives, were now cast into peril.

“My Queen,” spake the marshal, bowing his head, “we bring unto thee the body of the Rex of Methundor, slain by brigands upon the field near Bogwater.”

Fia advanced to the wagon and reached for the knots of the shroud.

“I beg you, disturb it not, my Queen,” pleaded the marshal. “When we found him, he had lain dead for many months. Thou wouldst not know him, and the sight of his remains ought not be the last memory thou keepest.”

Fia faltered; the cords yet tethered at her fingertips.

“How dost thou know it be him?” she asked.

“By his brooch and boots, and by his ink markings, my Lady. His flesh, though withered, was spared the foul ravages of decay and the beasts that roam those fens. Their hunger, it seems, was stayed by the honour that yet clung to his remains.”

“We were led to his remains by a villager of Modi. It seemeth some kind soul had taken him and laid him in the hollow of a tree, that his dignity might be preserved.”

#

Thus were the sons of Cleon left fatherless and placed under the charge of Kethu the Aeonite, who nurtured them as his own until a steward and husband fitting might be found for their mother.

Under Kethu’s counsel, both sons were schooled for many seasons in the arts of numbers, and the histories of the First True Men. And also in the legends of the Garden Vallis, a realm scarcely whispered of in the Norland-tongue. They learnt of the great dragons: Margathon, the wyvern that flew nigh unto Sol until it was cast down onto the Vallis floor to be remade, and of Bazunan, the most fierce, the finder of the Immortal Man, and also of Ogrennon, the outcast, forever tempting the brittle souls of Edä.

Kethu also had them trained by Aeonite warriors in the disciplines of combat: the wielding of arms in their fluid style— more a dance than smite and parry. And they were taught the craft of tactics and stratagems. And the trusted men of the court taught the boys the hunt, and the keeping of beasts and birds of prey.

Often Kethu and the brothers would find themselves in the garden, near the fountain, and Ceryd would ask the Immigrant to impart his wisdom.

“What are the finest traits of a rex?” young Ceryd once asked.

Kethu’s brow furrowed in thought. “Well,” he said, “there art many ways to cook a goose— braised or boiled, seared or stewed, many other ways besides, each pleasing in their fashion. So too art there many ways to rule. Some rulers art cruel, while others merciful. Some art overt whilst others more subtle. Some art cautious, and others impulsive.”

“Which way dost thou commend, master?”

“If I were forced to choose, I would say to be this: decisive. Once thy mind is made, choose impulse over caution. Fortune is like unto a fair maiden. To keep her, a man must seize her boldly, else she shall slip away and find another.”

Many more summers passed with Ceryd nearing manhood, striding time and again into the ring to face an Aeonite warrior posing with shield. With Sol barely cresting the ramparts, Ceryd would heft his broadsword, its leather-bound hilt once too heavy in his hand, and with a thunderous cry he’d lunge, boots churning the dust of the courtyard.

Finally, after many tries, his blade found its mark, clanging upon the warrior’s helm, sending sparks dancing like those cast from a sharpening stone. He grappled, his arms like coiled rope, to drive the shield aside, and his opponent, at last, dropped one knee and nodded in approval. Ceryd rose, sweat beaded upon his brow, chest heaving, the single victory a culmination of many years of defeat.

“At last,” the prince declared, “a victory.”

“Aye,” said Kethu. “A victory that never could be won without the lessons of so many defeats.”

A fortnight morn later, Ceryd would vault onto a great steed, hoist the javelin, and race down the hill, breaths of beast and lad steaming like fog in the cold air. He struck true, piercing a target at full gallop, and his companions cheered. In that hour he felt the bloodline of his sire— Cleon— rise within him, the drive for dominion tensing in his sinews.

And in those months and years, beneath the vaulted hall of ancient runes, Cerenid sat by lamp-glow, his slender fingers turning a carved stone etched with spiral sigils. The silence of the study held the musty scent of parchment where Kethu tutored him of his forebears’ temptations, of their blasphemies, and of their purgation. Cerenid’s mind was beguiled by the ghastly Nephilim and the glorious Gargan giants. He drank each word his master spoke, troubled naught by swords or shields.

Once, upon the hunt for a mighty stag, the brothers would oft run the hounds a-foot. On one occasion, Cerenid drew nigh to a dog which nosed the trailing scent. Startled, the beast turned and nipped the younger prince’s thumb, rendering flesh pierced and bleeding. Ceryd, seeing the wound, rushed forth and struck the hound upon the muzzle, his blow so strong the beast whined and fled.

Turning to his younger brother Ceryd he said, “Come, let me see it… ‘Tis but a scratch, brother. Show not thy tears, lest they deem thee weak.”

A huntsman rode unto them and asked, “Is the young prince hurt?”

“He is well,” answered Ceryd. “Give thy mind to the chase once more…”

Cavern

The forests of Gruen did offer many adventures unto the young princes, whose clandestine wanderings drew them far into her shadow-choked depths in search of fauns and kobolds and other sprites of childhood fancy. Yet none of these foul creatures were ever encountered, save for those their own minds conjured in the hush of dusk. Often, however, did they return to a cavern veiled by the moss-clad trunk of a fallen pine, where the earth yawned unto guarded secrets older than Methundor itself.

“Shall we descend into yon cavern?” asked Ceryd.

“For what cause?” the younger replied. “Surely naught awaits within but spiders and filth, and perchance an ill-tempered badger.”

“Nevertheless…” said Ceryd, his eyes alight with reckless purpose.

Ceryd drew forth his lantern from his pack, kindling its flame with flint and steel, and slid through the moss-laden portal and down into the shadowy chasm. The golden glow flickered upon stone, but then vanished wholly from Cerenid’s sight, swallowed by the ancient dark.

Cerenid lingered at the cavern’s mouth for what seemed to him an hour’s passage. With their mischief stilled and their boisterous noise absent, the creatures of the forest crept back to their doings. Squirrels darted amidst the boughs, a jay let forth its shrill call, and a doe emerged from the undergrowth of ferns and brambles, browsing as it drew near. The silence weighed heavily upon the young prince, for in all their adventures, they had made such noise as to drive away all animal danger. But now, with no sound save the forest’s own, Cerenid was alone, no longer a vanguard intruder but one consumed within the untamed wild.

He called into the cavern to his brother, half in hope of urging him to return, half to startle away anything lurking nearby. But no answer came. He waited in silence yet longer, until the birds returned, then he called again, but the cavern devoured his voice without echo.

As Sol dipped beyond the towering branches and the shadows deepened, a lone raven alit on a gnarled limb above and let out a ragged caw. It paused, as though awaiting a reply from the forest itself, then cried again, deep and sharp. Now Cerenid dared not raise his own voice, lest he draw unwelcome company. Instead, he slipped into a cluster of ferns and brambles, peering out toward the cavern’s maw. The moss hung there swayed like a tattered curtain, inviting him to enter, yet he felt a tremor seize him.

Twilight pressed in. The forest’s shapes twisted— branches bending into claw-like silhouettes, roots coiling like serpents. Summoning the last of his courage, Cerenid crawled to the cavern’s edge and whispered, “Ceryd… Ceryd… pray come out!” Yet silence again met his plea. He huddled near the shrouded entrance. Again, a raven alighted upon a nearby branch, fixing him with its glinting, black eye. The young prince froze, unmoving. The corvid clicked its beak, croaked, then burst into flight with a rush of beating wings of doom.

Cerenid felt as though the forest itself watched him with one eye from many vantages, each shadow a sentinel, each whisper a warning. The world had grown vast and ancient around him, and he but a trembling child within it.

Unwilling to tarry until night’s monstrous depth, Cerenid mustered the resolve to leave his brother and return home alone. Darkness enfolded the path, and he quickened his pace. Brambles grasped at his tunic. His thoughts filled with visions of kobolds, their amber eyes gleaming from the hollows, their scaley fangs bared as they scampered in pursuit.

A chill washed through him and he quickened his pace. But soon he discerned that some presence did indeed follow him— soft panting, the crunch of leaves, the whisper of padded feet. Wolves! Much as in the tales of the old nursemaids, their shapes flanked him in the dark: pale eyes flashing, near silent save for their breath. Cerenid dared not avert his eyes from the path to look back. Had he stumbled but once, he knew the first bite would fall upon his legs.

At last, wearied beyond endurance, he faltered and collapsed upon the trail, curling tightly upon himself. Darkness surrounded him, and the wolves panted as they circled close, their movements hidden in the forest’s black veil. As fear and despair consumed him, his thoughts turned grim. What pain would their fangs bring first? What fragments of him would remain for his mother to claim and bury?

Yet as his heartbeat pounded from his breast unto his ears, his breath grew steady. His tears ceased. He gazed upward, beholding only the tall silhouettes of pines reaching toward the gray ether. Clutching tightly upon the thorny branches, that he might thwart being dragged off, he prepared to meet his fate.

Then came a voice. “Cerenid!” Still distant but growing louder, his brother’s cry calling through the twilight. Soon, the sound of his footsteps joined his calls. “I’m here, brother! Come forth!”

Cerenid remained huddled upon the ground, too stricken with fear to utter a cry. Yet his brother, guided by his footprints, came upon him and raised him to his feet.

“We must quit the forest ere the night devours us,” quoth he.

“Didst thou seest the wolves, brother?”

“Wolves?” Ceryd scoffed. “You’ve been reading too many books.” He dusted his brother off. “Reserve thy tears, for they shall serve thee better when we face the scourging that awaits us. I’m doubtless they have sought their rex and prince for hours, now.”

Cerenid wiped his streaked cheeks with his sleeve.

“There… good,” said Ceryd with a nod. “I shall tell them thou wast brave.”

“What didst thou behold in the cavern?” Cerenid asked as they made their way home.

At first, Ceryd gave no answer. His eyes remained fixed upon the narrow path ahead. “Nothing, brother,” he said at last, though the unease in his tone betrayed him.

“I do not believe you,” Cerenid said. “Why linger so long in darkness if there was nothing?”

Ceryd froze, a pale silhouette in the fading light. Reluctantly, he yielded. “If thou must know, I found a vein of crystal. It glowed like sapphire fire by my lantern’s light. I sought to loose a shard, but as my fingers touched it, I was… overtaken.” He lifted a hand to his brow, as though the memory itself weighed upon him. His eyes lowered. “A vision pressed upon my mind— vivid as waking, deeper than any dream. It swallowed all my thought.”

“What didst thou see?”

Ceryd’s gaze rose to meet his brother’s, sharp and searching, as though he feared the telling more than he feared the vision itself. “I saw thee, brother…”

“Me?”

“Aye… standing alone in single combat. Yet I could not reach you, nor call to you. For the world would not hear me…”

“And then?”

“And then…” Ceryd’s eyes searched his memory. “And then it was over.”

A silence settled between them, broken only by the whisper of the wind through the pines.

“Tell no one of the cave,” Ceryd murmured, voice low. “If word spreads, many will descend upon it and spoil what lies within.”

And though he spoke no further of it that night, something in Ceryd’s countenance had shifted. A remoteness gathered behind his eyes, as though part of him still wandered the sapphire depths of the cavern. For the crystal had shown him more than any brother should behold— a shadow of doom, laid bare upon the path of fate.

Envoy

Whilst Kethu yet bore the mantle of steward, it had grown plain unto all, aye, even unto those who dared not whisper it, that the twilight of his years had settled upon him— though an Aeonite’s dusk might yet linger for many a season. Thus did the council decree that Ceryd, having surpassed nineteen summers, should ascend the high-seat upon the coming solstice of summer, less than a full season yet to pass.

In the warming breath of mid-spring, the wardens, who had ridden eastward in chase of the knaves and brigands who had slain their rex, returned unto Gruen with a prisoner most foul and foreign of aspect, shut fast within their wagon. Through the main gate they passed where many townsfolk had gathered to cast eyes upon the strange prisoner. The wagon stopped in the square before the keep and the wardens dragged their suspect out and escorted him into the main hall. There, the assembled court, which had been steeped that morn in petty bickerings of thegns over grazing fields and boundary stones, parted as the wardens marched to the dais with their criminal.

Ceryd, the young rex, perked up from his seat where he had been near slumber, lending but half an ear to the tiresome quarrels. “What charge lieth upon this man?” he asked.

“My lord,” answered the reeve, bowing low, “we seized this wretch whilst he filched salted meats from a bondi’s hutch near Clearwater.”

Ceryd looked perplexed. “Why bear a common pilferer all the long road to Gruen?” asked Ceryd. “Hath the local reeve no rod with which to chastise him?”

“Aye, my lord, he hath. And we should ne’er have troubled thee with such refuse, my lord. But whilst the reeve’s justice was laid upon him with stout and honest fists, he fell to muttering in a tongue most strange, my lord.”

Ceryd frowned. “And is the gabbling of fools now counted a crime as well?”

“Nay, my lord. But a wandering Aeonite crone heard him, my lord, and straightway told us the speech was Neandilim-born… my lord.”

At this name, a gasp passed through the hall, and the murmuring swelled.

“A Nundi!” cried one.

“Mercy on us— hell’s brood walketh here!” wailed another.

“Trust not the word of any Aeonite witch!” snarled a third.

Ceryd lifted his hand, and the tumult ebbed.

“My lord,” the Reeve continued, “we questioned him further, fearing lest some southern magic lurked beneath his rags.”

“And what found ye?” asked the rex.

“After much beatings, my lord, he saith naught but pleas for mercy and mutterings that he was an envoy from the south… my lord.”

Ceryd rose and stepped off the dais to approach the two wardens and their prisoner. The wardens gripped their charge firmly, yet the young rex leaned close, studying him. Though clad in goatskins and mired in filth, he found in him a strange, almost affected bearing that clung… like a nobleman sunk into disguise.

“What envoy dresseth in such foul raiment?” Ceryd asked. “And stinketh like a piss-soaked midden?”

“My lord, I caution that these southerners are known to cast spells of—”

“Peace! Let the man speak his own treacheries.”

The prisoner stared at the dust around his own sandals.

“Sire…” he began, “I have come from the city of Goff. Neandilim is the common tongue spoken there.” Eyes still lowered, he continued. “Bandits set upon my company, and I alone escaped, living by guile and by theft. For this I crave thy mercy and shall submit to any justice thou ordainest.”

Ceryd narrowed his eyes. “And what business hath an envoy of Goff so near to Clearwater? ’Tis many leagues from Gruen.”

“My lord, he did sayeth he came by the eastern way,” spake the reeve.

Ceryd looked perplexed. “You say you came perchance by the eastern road, with the Spire of Agzad for thy beacon?” The Rex pondered. “Yet do not the Neandilim tremble at the name of Gargan? Did not their monstrous hands raise that pinnacle in the elder days?”

“I… I lied to them, sire, fearing the wardens would murder me if I spake the truth. We in fact passed by the High Gate, by way of Edam of Meru. I beg your mercy, your highness.”

“Was the gate not locked?”

“We found it opened for us, sire.”

“The Aeonites must have unlocked it,” came a voice in the throng.

“We knew they were traitors all along!” shouted another.

“Loyal to their southern brethren only!”

“Traitors?” Ceryd scoffed, turning to face the crowd. “Traitors who waited three centuries to betray their oaths? Waited ‘till their bones lay mouldered, all even, save for one? Hold thy serpent tongues!” He turned toward the old steward. “Kethu, come forth. I would hear the wisdom of an Aeonite.”

All eyes found the venerable Immigrant slumped in slumber upon his chair. Young Cerenid, seated next to him, touched his arm gently and the ancient’s dark eyes fluttered open.

“Kethu,” Came Ceryd again, “lend me thy counsel.”

Kethu coughed and cleared his throat, then, with a grimace born of age and lingering pain, he rose unsteadily to his feet. Fumbling for his cane, he tottered down three slow steps from the dais and came before the prisoner, who stiffened and set his jaw. Kethu studied him in silence, his cloudy eyes yet sharp with an elder’s cunning. With a gnarled hand he lifted the man’s chin and bade him open his mouth, peering close at teeth and tongue. Then, with neither haste nor shame, he loosened the man’s belt and drew back the filthy cloth at his loins. A rustle swept the hall. Some gasped, others turned away, but Kethu regarded neither their modesty nor their shock. His gaze was keen, searching for the tell-tale sign. At last, he let the cloth fall and straightened with difficulty, leaning upon his cane.

“Yea, he is Neandilim. “Of that there can be no doubt.”

The court gasped once more in chorus.

“My lord, we knew it so,” replied the reeve.

Ceryd was undeterred. “But envoy or spy? Which stands before us? And by what path hath he crossed our borders?”

Before Kethu could answer, Gedain thrust himself forward. “Sire, give him into my hands. Let him feel the bite of fire, and he shall blurt the truth soon enough.”

Earl Olian, a graying thegn with the underbite and snout of an old boar, nodded vehemently at his side. His daughter Avarlon, with a visage as pure and pale as pearl, and whose favor Gedain sought more desperately than honor itself, brightened at her father’s assent.

But Kethu raised his withered hand. “Behold,” he shouted, his voice ringing clearer than it had in years. “If thou torment a man to yield his words, he will indeed prate… he shall prate naught but the very words thou longest most to hear.”

Having heard Kethu’s counsel, Ceryd turned then to Cerenid. “What say you, brother? Shall we yield him to Gedain?”

But Cerenid faltered, glancing between the two men— Gedain’s hungry sneer and Kethu’s troubled, cloudy gaze. “I… know not, brother. Mayhap we should not.”

“Hold a moment please, young rex,” Kethu urged. He then peered deep into the prisoner’s countenance. “Tell me, Neandilim… knowest thou who I am?”

“Aye. Thou art the Steward of Gruen.”

“For a little while longer at least,” Kethu groaned. “But answer me this: some men may scale mountains for bargains and treaties… yet others might venture for the capture of an old legend that yet draweth breath.”

“Thou art indeed a legend, Kethu,” the prisoner whispered with disdain in his voice. “None may deny it. Perhaps others will come for thee.”

Kethu laughed until his laugh turned into a wheeze and then a fit of coughing. When he had caught his breath, he once again looked into the prisoner’s eye.

“Thy brethren need not bother with me. My end draweth nigh. Nor do I refer to myself as legend. Yet I think we both know the legend of whom I speak. He is:

“…the coin that buyeth rebellion! If cast into the deep, who then shall spend it? For thy worth is unrest, thy face remembrance, and thy breath awakeneth defiance in the hearts of men.[i]

And in that heartbeat, as Kethu watched closely, the prisoner’s pupils widened ever so slightly— too slight for the notice of True Men, yet plain enough to the eyes of even an aged Aeonite. It was a reflex betraying the soul.

Voices clamored for justice. “To the dungeons!” they shouted.

“I defer to the young rex,” said Kethu over the din. “My season waneth. His now beginneth.”

All eyes fixed upon Ceryd, he knowing he could not free the man without seeming weak before the ravenous court. At length he sighed and gestured with reluctance. “Let Gedain have him.” And so the wardens dragged the envoy toward the dungeons, his cries to be swallowed by stone and shadow.

Kethu wobbled up the dais and sank upon his seat, and Ceryd then sat again beside him. “What doth all this portend?” asked Ceryd in a low voice.

Kethu whispered, “It portends that the immortal prophet walketh again in our lands.”

“Will Gedain get him to say it?”

“We both know the cruelty that lurketh behind Gedain’s golden locks and comely face,” said Kethu. “He will torment the Nundi nigh unto death, yet the man will give him only assurances.”

“Assurances?”

“Aye. Promises, bargains, temptations. Whatever he believeth Gedain desireth to hear.”

Ceryd’s brow darkened. “And how came he through the High Gate? Do not I alone hold the key?”

Kethu’s gaze grew distant and grim. “Young rex… clearly something did unlock it.”

Joust

When Ceryd had reached the nineteenth year of his age, and the day of his crowning drew nigh, there arose, as though fated, a strife betwixt the house of his sire and the Blodwins of Dregrove. The seed of this enmity sprouted from the deeds of a young nobleman of that lineage, whose pride was the herald of coming discord.

Madrot Blodwin, the youngest child and only son of the House of Dregrove, journeyed unto Gruen for the festivities of Ceryd’s accession, which were ordained upon the day of the summer solstice. He came in the stead of his father, Mendo, Reik of Dregrove, who by age and lingering maladies was sorely enfeebled. Madrot was received with all courtesy due his blood and so took his ease within the halls of the rex, purposing to sojourn in Gruen for a fortnight.

Though scarce past twenty winters, Madrot was harsh of visage. He lacked the grace to charm the hearts of maidens or inspire the deference of men. His red hair hung lank and thin, falling lifeless and straight upon his shoulders. His ruddy complexion bore the stain of roughness and wear beyond his years, and his wild, unruly brows and bulging eyes lent him an aspect most sinister.

Throughout the days of jubilation, contests of arms and feats of manly prowess were proclaimed. Many hundreds gathered within the plaza to behold the spectacle. Madrot, eager to display his mettle, entered three: a bout of grappling, a duel with swords hewn of seasoned ash, and the noble joust. By skill and sinew, he triumphed in the wrestling-pit, yet in sword-play he tasted defeat beneath the steady hand of Ceryd— though some Dregrove kin whispered that it appeared he permitted the rex to win. The third contest, the joust, set him against the handsome and vainglorious Gedain, the heir of the House of Welf.

Sol shone radiant, and the multitude that thronged about the list murmured like a rising stream. Madrot entered first, breast plated in grey steel. Removing his helm, he scanned the assembly to acknowledge their cheers— but found instead that their voices rose only for his rival who entered behind him arrayed in gleaming harness bright as silver. Gedain doffed his helm, unveiling his comely face to the swooning maidens, and grinned with the boldness of one accustomed to such worship. The acclaim swelled and with a flourish, he gestured toward Avarlon who shone surpassingly fair in her silken gown of crimson.

The combatants re-helmed and were led to opposing ends of the arena and their squires brought forth their lances. At the lowering of the pennon, both warriors spurred their coursers. Gedain charged with a flourish of silver, his confidence brimming near to arrogance; Madrot rode straight and measured, like an arrow loosed. Their lances struck. Gedain’s blow rattled upon Madrot’s shield, yet glanced away, while Madrot’s veered off Gedain’s shield to smite his helm in a telling blow, knocking it askew upon his head. A murmur rippled through the crowd. Gedain wrestled vainly with the visor, his curses betraying the sting to his pride. Madrot, circling back, lifted his visor to receive the due honor— but the throng had eyes only for Gedain’s vexation. “Another round!” Gedain cried, his voice sharp with choler. “This time I shall not be confounded by this wretched helm.”

“Certainly,” replied Madrot with calm courtesy. The heralds signaled assent, and the crowd stirred with eager whisperings.

On the second charge, Gedain thundered forward too eagerly; his lance shattered upon Madrot’s shield in a wasteful spray of splinters. Madrot answered with a firm, centered strike to Gedain’s breastplate, denting the metal and near unhorsing him. Gedain reeled, clinging desperately to the saddle as the horse galloped. Gasps broke from the assemblage. In fury he tore the helm from his head and flung it aside, demanding another. His squire darted off at once to retrieve one.

Fia, regent-mother and Madrot’s far elder sister, stood reserved upon the dais, yet a faint and knowing smile betrayed her inward Blodwin pride.

“Once more!” Gedain snarled.

“Art thou certain?” said Madrot. “I have already claimed the victory.”

“To hell with thy victory! Once more!”

Madrot took up his lance anew. Gedain’s squire returned with another helm, but this one was adorned with an extravagant transverse crest of purple-dyed horsehair. Gedain cursed his squire’s choice yet donned it all the same. Subdued laughter rippled through the crowd at the absurd visage of purple plumage.

Avarlon clasped her hands together, her brow knit in dread. The squires stepped back. The murmurs faded to silence. The trumpets blared. The horses leapt. The dust rose like smoke from a smoldering fire. At the moment of meeting, Gedain’s aim wavered again, his lance veering wide. But Madrot’s stroke landed true, a mighty blow beneath the rim of Gedain’s shield. The silver knight was hurled from his saddle like a child’s toy, crashing upon the earth with a thunderous thud. The crowd gasped as one, then all fell still as Gedain rolled about like an armored peacock attempting to regain his breath.

Madrot reined his steed with modest grace and saluted the onlookers, though little of their admiration turned toward him. Only Fia, his sister, whom he barely knew, bestowed him a nod and a proud smile.

Avarlon climbed over the barrier and ran to Gedain’s side. With the aid of his squire, she lifted him, half-conscious and groaning from the dust. He threw his helmet, then found the strength enough to curse and spit upon the steed that had also “betrayed” him.

Ceryd, who watched with Kethu from beneath the awning, turned to him for his thoughts. “What dost thou think of this Blodwin heir, teacher?”

Kethu answered softly, eyes set upon Madrot. “Beware the victor, robbed of triumph by a loser’s vanity.”

Pursuit

Madrot, being a young man of great confidence in arms, fancied that his feats in the contests had won him the admiration of the maidens in attendance— Avarlon most of all, whose silky auburn braids and luminous complexion had bewitched his untutored heart. Yet none I gruen received the ugly prince kindly, nor granted him even the courtesy of feigned interest. Some maidens, themselves enamored of the comely Gedain, averted their eyes or even cast hostile sneers as Madrot strode past, as though he be some base villain deserving of scorn.

Come the eve after the joust, finding himself ignored and nursing a wounded pride, Madrot took to strong drink to dull his thoughts. In his cups he grew foul of temper as he espied Avarlon enthralled in flirtatious discourse with his defeated rival. Gedain, noticing Madrot’s glare, mocked him with a wink of is right eye and held Madrot’s gaze as he whisper to those near, eliciting their laughter and disdainful glances. Stung to the quick, Madrot at last tipped his cup and shouted threats of violence. Such uproar followed that men were forced to lay hands upon him. They subdued the spirited Madrot and led him to his chamber, that he might sleep off the bitterness of his ale-and-wine-fueled wrath.

At dawn, with the weight of shame heavy upon him, Madrot gathered his belongings and slipped away whilst the city still slumbered under the spell of revelry. Upon passage from Gruen’s ramparts, he vowed to the watchman that he would never again set foot in “this shit-stinking midden of scoundrels and whores.”

Yet not two hours after Madrot passed through the gate, Avarlon’s father, Olian, caught his daughter attempting to slip into her chamber unbeknownst while still fully dressed in her finery from the evening before. Olion confronted her, demanding to know why she had not returned home the eve prior. Avarlon, pressed by the boar-faced scowl of her father’s stern inquiry, broke immediately into weeping.

“What aileth thee?” her father asked.

Holding herself, she stammered, “that vile knave Madrot…”

Olian’s brow darkened. “What hath happened?”

“He… he barred me on the path home,” she wept, “and dragged me into a stable and forced himself upon me.” Olian’s visage filled with horror. “Afterward, in shame and terror, I hid within the straw and shadows, crying all night, attempting to muster the courage to come forth and speak of the evil deed.”

Noticing the very fragments of stable straw woven into her disheveled hair, Olian became enraged. Without delay he sought out the steward Kethu, finding him in somber contemplation beside the garden fountain. There, Olian demanded immediate justice, crying that his family’s honor now hung upon the steward’s swift hand. As Ceryd was yet abed, and with time being of the essence, Kethu dispatched three warden-riders to pursue Madrot, bidding them seize him, if need be, by force, and bring him back to Gruen to stand trial.

Within the hour, three wardens thundered through the city gates. Yet Madrot had kept a furious pace, and they did not overtake him until eventide, when at last they espied him on the road, nearing the old stone bridge spanning the Meb.

“Halt!” cried the riders. Madrot drew rein. They approached. “Madrot of Dregrove, son of Mendo,” one shouted as they neared. “Thou art commanded to return with us to Gruen.”

“For what cause?” said Madrot, surprised.

“The steward Kethu so decrees. Turn thy horse else we shall bind thee.”

“My nephew is rex, now. Why is the Immigrant still giving commands?”

“It matters not. Turn thy horse.”

“Is this an arrest, then? What crime is laid against me?”

“The charge is rape,” replied one sternly.

Madrot’s face stiffened. “Who speaks such falsehood?”

“It is none other than the daughter of Thegn Olian, the fair Avarlon.”

“The maiden lies,” Madrot protested.

“Declare thy innocence before the steward when thou dost stand for judgment.”

“Do you take a Blodwin for a fool?” Madrot asked, for he knew, even before the wardens named the charge, that no man in Gruen would ever believe his denial. “I will not return to that shit pile Gruen and submit to the false justice of petty nobles. We all know the treachery of Cleon’s House. Have the rex resolve it with my father.”

“Then shall we take thee by force,” quoth the warden.

“Take me by force?” Madrot scoffed, eyes aflame. “Thou mayest try. Yet I warn thee— I shall never yield. Press me, and there will be blood. But this vow I make: I shall slay but two of thee, leaving the third to bear witness to my mercy.”

The riders laughed as they reached for their swords, but their mirth withered in a heartbeat as Madrot’s steed lunged forward, sowing chaos among their mounts. In the ferment, Madrot lifted the nearest rider’s sword arm with the vambrace upon his own, and with a savage upward arc of his cudgel, he struck temple and ear. The rider toppled from his saddle, lifeless ere he struck the ground.

Without pause, Madrot wheeled and galloped to the river, the two remaining riders in swift pursuit. Upon a clearing beyond the bridge, Madrot turned his steed sharply and awaited them. Within moments they arrived, drawing near with blades unsheathed, approaching from either flank.

Madrot unfastened his shield and raised it high. “Sheathe thy swords and ride away if thou dost value thy lives,” he warned, voice as blunt and cold as winter stone. “I will never submit.”

“Surrender!” cried one. “Now must thou answer for murder as well!”

“Ride away,” Madrot answered, “or I shall answer for two.”

The riders crossed the bridge and spread wide upon the road, swords gleaming. Without further parley, Madrot charged the rider upon his left. Their blades met with a clash. Madrot deflected the stroke with his shield and, with swift precision, drove the dagger-end of his cudgel deep into the rider’s throat. Upon yanking it loose, the rider dropped his sword and, for but an instant, clasped at the fountain of blood spewing from his neck with both fists curled. Then he crumpled. His steed carried him a few faltering steps before he fell off to the side into the grass.

Turning sharply, Madrot faced the last of his pursuers. “’Twere better for thee to ride home than to be carried there. Turn back, fool.”

“I cannot,” the rider answered with grim resolve.

They met in fierce combat, cudgel against sword, shields battered with mighty strokes. The air rang with the sound of clang and thud. On the third exchange, the rider’s blade missed its mark, leaving his wielder’s arm exposed. With a savage swing, Madrot brought down his club upon the rider’s wrist and forearm. A crack sounded through the clearing as the bones shattered. The sword fell from limp fingers with the rider crying out, cradling his mangled limb.

“Learn now to fight left-handed,” Madrot sneered. “Thou’lt be fortunate to keep that arm once the surgeon hath seen it. Go. Ride home and tell my nephew, and that lying whore Avarlon, that I spared thy life.”

“They shall come for thee,” the rider gasped through gritted teeth.

“Speak no more,” Madrot hissed, stepping close, the blade end of his cudgel raised, “lest I take thy tongue as well.”

Council

When word of Madrot’s escape reached Ceryd’s ears, his countenance darkened with a grave and troubled shade. Though his counselors urged him to assert his lordship by dispatching a battalion in pursuit.

“What say you, teacher?” Ceryd asked in private.

Kethu replied, “Haste in wrath oft bringeth folly.”

And so the young rex heeded Kethu’s counsel and stayed his wardens, saying Madrot would be too far ahead to overtake and the mission futile. Instead, the young rex called his council into its chamber to deliberate the matter.

Reeve and wardens and masters assembled, along with Gedain, and prince Cerenid, and the Immigrant. Ceryd bade his mother Fia attend likewise, for who would know the Reik of Dregrove’s mind better than his eldest daughter? They sat about a long oaken table whose tall-backed chairs groaned beneath the weight of age. It was eventide, and the crisp shadows cast by the fading Sol in the windows grew long upon the floor, imparting a somber pall to the chamber.

Olian was first to speak, his outrage unbridled. He smote the table with his fists, crying, “Madrot must be seized and gelded, then hung! If they will not yield him, then I say war! Burn Dregrove to its foundations!” Forgetting Fia was Dregrove’s noble daughter.

The reeve who had sent the warden-riders in pursuit voiced his grief at the loss of two brave men— servants of duty slain without glory. The third rider, though his arm was spared, would unlikely wield a sword with honour again. “Justice!” he demanded.

“Set a bounty upon Madrot’s head. Greed will cause someone to bring him,” urged the Master of Coin.

“Lay siege to their palisade,” added Menek, the captain of the guard. “They will turn him over in less than a fortnight.”

“Let us march on Dregrove at dawn!” thundered Gedain.

Cerenid listened with rapt intensity, while his mother, Fia, hearing all this talk of sieging her home and hanging her brother, sat silent and unmoving, observing all with the cold, glass-eyed stillness of a raven perched upon a barren bough.

When each councilor had shouted his demands, Ceryd turned to Kethu, who had been rubbing his chest and clearing his throat.

“Are you unwell, steward?” the rex asked.

“It is but indigestion, my lord,” Kethu answered faintly.

“Then lend us your wisdom, if you are able.”

Kethu stood, though unsteadily, and tried again to clear his throat. His coughing grew into a harsh fit before he regained his breath. He struggled through his first words.

“My lord… this is indeed a grave predicament. A true test of a rex. The eyes of all the houses are upon you. And as the legends teach us:

Justice lieth upon the edge betwixt cruelty and weakness.”

“Spare us your sermons, Immigrant,” Olian shouted. But Ceryd’s glare silenced him at once.

Kethu continued, though his voice shook. “We have Neandilim spies in our lands now. Whether war cometh to us or we to it, come it shall. If strife arise between the houses, we cannot stand, and Bafomet’s host will devour us one by one.

“There is another matter,” Kethu continued. “The Reik of Dregrove is old and failing. It is said he cannot speak save through his younger daughter, Una. I fear he will not linger long in this life, and he hath but one male heir. I do not believe he will surrender Madrot to prison or hanging… or gelding, as Olian demands.

“But hear this: if Mendo dies before his son’s judgment, Madrot will become reik— and untouchable by law. After that, to make war on the Blodwins, we would surely prevail, but the cost in blood and treasure would be steep indeed.”

“Is there no manner in which to solve this puzzle, Kethu?” Ceryd asked.

Kethu pondered, clutching his robe as though steadying his spirit. “Perhaps… perhaps a tribunal.”

“No!” Olian barked.

Kethu pressed on. “A magistrate from each of the five high houses. Let them convene at a neutral site— maybe in Fywold— and there, weigh Madrot’s guilt.”

“Never, my Rex!” Olian snapped. “We must strike while we—”

But mid-sentence, Kethu gasped sharply and toppled forward, his brow striking the table’s edge before he collapsed to the floor. Cerenid leapt to his side while the others crowded round. The prince pressed a cloth to the gash on the steward’s forehead.

“Does he live, brother?” asked Ceryd standing over, his voice thin with dread.

“He breathes,” Cerenid replied, eyes shimmering with tears.

“Carry him to the physician at once,” Ceryd ordered. “Go, all of you. Leave me.” Cerenid and the council bore Kethu from the chamber. When they were gone, only Ceryd and his mother remained; she had not risen from her seat, nor had her expression changed.

“I am unsure of the path, Mother,” Ceryd confessed.

At last she spoke. “It is true— your grandfather is frail. Una has written to me that he will soon be dead, and Madrot will be reik.”

“Then I must act swiftly.”

“Yes,” she answered. “But not recklessly. My father may be old, but his mind is yet sharp. He will have laid a trap— and not where you would expect to find it. You must not forget his enmity. Your father humiliated him. He stole his daughter, and now Cleon’s house seeks to humble him again from beyond the grave. My father’s life has narrowed unto this single point. He lives now only to taste a final revenge.”

“But I am his grandson,” Ceryd murmured.

“Aye, but Madrot is his son.”

“…And also your brother.”

Fia’s eyes narrowed. “Brother in name only. I never knew him.”

“I cannot permit a rapist and murderer to go free. I would lose all honor in the eyes of the people.”

“Aye, you must act,” Fia replied coldly. “But he who buildeth his honour upon the reverence of the people buildeth upon mud.”

“Now you sound like Kethu,” Ceryd muttered.

Fia remained unreadable, unblinking. “I say this: make a demand for a tribunal. But have them find Madrot innocent. I will see to it my father agrees. Then my father will die in peace knowing Madrot will be reik.”

“And Olian? Will he not poison my well after?”

“Marry his daughter,” Fia replied coldly. “Let her be rexia. She is beautiful and dull— a perfect queen. Olian will be reluctantly appeased.”

“And Gedain? He woos her?”

“You know Gedain is vain. He is no friend to you. If he remains, then Avarlon will fall to him, and you will be disgraced. Send him off on some mission. Or charge him with some offense and have him dishonored. Or better yet— let him be found drowned or kicked in the head by a mule. That is how your father would have handled him.”

“Come now, mother.” Ceryd said, rolling his eyes.

He paced the length of the chamber, the hem of his cloak brushing against the cold stone, halting at last at a narrow window facing east, where the pallor of twilight smoldered with thickening clouds. For a long moment he watched the darkening horizon, as though it might offer counsel where men could not. At length he turned and spoke, his voice scarcely above a breath. “Mother… did you love my father?”

For the first time that eve, the glassy steadiness in her eyes softened, and she seemed to look not at Ceryd, but through him— into some far and haunted memory.

“Cleon was a cruel man,” she said in a low voice, immutable, like a slow-rolling millstone. “He was a ruthless man… violent, unyielding. He never questioned himself, nor did he ever express a regret.” She paused, her fingers tightening upon the arm of her chair. “And yet—” Her breath caught as though the words resisted being spoken. “At times… aye, I did love him. But only when he was away.”

Parlay

Suffice it to say, Dregrove would not simply relinquish its fugitive noble son. Thus, a host was assembled beneath the banners of Gruen and marched forth in grim array; and both sons of Cleon rode with it— Ceryd as rex newly risen, and Cerenid as prince beside him.

Upon the morning of the ninth day of their vigorous march, the host crossed Briganta Bridge, very near the wide confluence where the Caleah meets the shimmering Fywater. The sky lay overcast, but the air stood clear as polished glass, granting sight across the swelling plain. There, beyond the banks, set upon the edge of a long green sweep of undulating grassland, they espied the mustered strength of Reik Mendo— arrayed in distant silence like a wall of stones. Yet this came as no surprise, for scouts had traced the Blodwin movements for many leagues and days.

“Their ground is the higher, my lord,” observed Captain Menek. “But our numbers are the greater.”

No sooner had Menek spoken than a second shimmer of steel crested the horizon to the left of House Dregrove.

“Look south— House Fy joins,” Gedain said, squinting at their banners.

“Now our numbers are even… if they choose to oppose us,” Menek replied.

“First, we parlay,” Ceryd declared. “No blood need be spilt this day.”

Thus, Menek and Olian, Gedain of Welf, their bannermen and their squires, rode forth with the noble brothers Ceryd and Cerenid, to meet these seasoned warriors, accustomed to border strife. The Blodwins sent riders and footmen in equal number to meet them upon the midway of the open field, and with them rode Korbin, the Reik of Fy, and his two sons.

“Thinkest grandfather shall accept our terms?” Cerenid wondered aloud as they rode.

“It is a foregone conclusion,” Ceryd whispered. “Mother hath arranged it.”

The opposing parties converged. Reik Mendo, their grandfather, appeared more withered and greyer than the brothers had imagined. His frail form wavered in the saddle, his marshal on one side and by his younger daughter on the other, ready to steady him if needed. Una, mail-clad though slight of frame, bore her helm beneath one arm; her umber braids spilled forth like tethers of autumn. A deep furrow carved her brow, marking her near thirty winters of iron resolve. Madrot’s gaze found Olian’s first. A long, venomous stare passed between them. Olian ground his teeth, jowls trembling. Then Madrot met Gedain’s glare. Gedain sneered, and Madrot answered with a slow, insolent smirk.

“Lords,” began Ceryd, “we have all ridden far these days. Let this parlay be fruitful, that resolution may follow.”

“Where’s the old Aeonite?” asked the Reik of Fy.

“He was too frail to make the journey,” Ceryd answered.

“You two have grown,” Una remarked softly. “It hath been many years.”

“Indeed, Aunt Una. A long time,” Ceryd said. “I trust you have received our terms.”

“We have received them,” Una replied.

“And House Fy?”

“We have,” said their reik.

“Then the tribunal stands agreed? Will the Fys take Madrot into their custody?” But as Ceryd spoke, a wind rose, fluttering the banners just as Reik Mendo began to mumble. His speech was mere dry, broken utterances, like a creaking hinge. Una leaned close, listening as though his nonsense bore meaning.

“My father hath spoken,” Una said.

“I beg pardon,” said Ceryd. “What did he speak? I could not decipher it.”

“He sayeth he does not accept these terms,” Una answered.

Gedain scoffed. “Does a woman now speak for the Reik of Dregrove?”

Ceryd frowned. “I thought this matter was already decided.”

“My father hath had a change of heart,” Una replied.

“And what would he have, instead?” asked Ceryd. “Let not this day turn to blood.”

Mendo croaked again. Una listened as though interpreting prophecy. “My father demands that the trial be held here, now, upon this field.” Cerenid gazed at his brother, awaiting his reply.

“And how,” Ceryd asked, “shall we contrive that? We lack Reik Tollus, who is yet en route to Fywold. He fulfills the quorum.” Madrot stirred in his saddle. Una straightened.

“My father demands trial by combat, by the old law, here, this day. And so shall the matter be resolved once and for all.”

“This is not what was agreed,” Ceryd protested.

“Nevertheless, my lord…” Una said calmly. “It is my father’s will.”

“Your father risks battle, hundreds dead ere nightfall.”

Mendo mumbled anew. “My father sayeth trial by combat will avert the slaughter… He proposes a contest of noble sons. Madrot, heir to Dregrove will battle Cerenid, prince of Gruen, with justice being deemed the winner.”

Cerenid paled. Then scoffed.

“The prince is no warrior,” Olian bawled. “He’s still a boy. There will be no justice from—”

Ceryd cut him off. “I have already seen this contest in a dire vision. Though my brother be valiant, I will not submit him to the peril I foresaw. Madrot is years older and far stronger at arms.”

“Then the trial is concluded, nephew. The charges withdrawn and bloodshed averted.”

“No!” Olian shouted.

“Aunt Una,” Ceryd said, “I cannot just dismiss such a serious charge.”

Mendo croaked again while Una listened. “If the charges are not withdrawn,” she said, “then a trial must occur. Still, my father risks his own son, his only heir. His peril is great. He demands Gruen match his stake. If there be no trial, then war shall fall upon this field ere sunset.”

Olian’s steed danced anxiously beneath him as he burned in rage. Cerenid’s face drained as though a winter current gripped him. The Fys sat cold and unreadable. Madrot’s sinister smile widened like a blade being drawn. Ceryd stared into Mendo’s clouded eyes, and there, behind the rheum and age, he discerned the glimmer of bright cunning— and beheld the trap. And Mendo knew he knew it. The rex turned to Gedain as if to implore him to stand for his prince, but Gedain’s eyes lowered. Ceryd pondered the tightening of the snare. There was no escape. He could not withdraw the charge without ruining his honour as rex. Yet he could not bid his young brother to stand, for he would surely be slain. And if battle came, hundreds would die that day.

Then a confident grin cut across the young rex’s. “Then I shall stand to fight thy son, grandfather.”

“No, my lord!” protested Menek. We cannot risk the crown.

Ceryd turned upon him, speaking with confidence. “I have bested Madrot before. He is a brute, no match for my training. I shall end this strife today and win both justice and the honor of my men. Else Madrot can submit to my custody and be taken to Gruen for trial.”

Silence fell as all eyes then turned to Madrot. His heavy brow furrowed as he winced his bulging eyes. The wind fluttered. A horse blew. He suppressed the grin that threatened to betray his delight. “I do not submit, my lord,” he said, voice low and stern.

Trial

The wind swept upon the green expanse of Briganta Field beneath a boiling mass of clouds. The hosts stood silent and still in their files, facing each other, their banners gently rippling in the uneasy air.

Madrot rode forth first, astride a tall grey charger, his iron cudgel hanging at his side, its dagger-end unsheathed, glinting like a serpent’s fang. He halted midway between the hosts.

Ceryd rode forth to meet him, stopping at a spear’s length. The two regarded one another across the narrow gulf— bound as uncle and nephew by blood yet made enemies by fate.

At last, Madrot raised his voice. “Greetings, nephew. Shall we embrace?” He opened his arms as though welcoming kin to a hearth.

Ceryd huffed at the mockery. He dismounted, handing his reins to his squire, and strode forward with measured tread. His sword gleamed with the brightness of youth, and his shield bore Cleon’s crest. Though he smiled, it was thin and cold. “An embrace, uncle?” Ceryd answered. “Let our metal be the arms that clasp.”

They saluted, stepped back, and the marshal of Fy called the rite: “By the old law, with blood the price, let justice fall to strength. Let none interfere.”

The duel began.

Ceryd moved with the fluid crawl of a prowling cat, revealing his Aeonite training. He struck first, shield forward, blade arcing toward Madrot’s helm. Madrot reeled beneath the blow, stumbling a pace. A hopeful murmur rippled through Gruen’s ranks.

Cerenid dared a breath.

Gedain’s lip curled.

Across from them, Una and Mendo watched unblinking.

Ceryd pressed the attack, raining steel upon his foe. Madrot’s shield boomed with each strike, ringing like a muffled bell. Step by step the Blodwin heir yielded ground. They squared again. Madrot circled, gaining space. He moved more like a hound, in bursts, seeking advantage, testing for the precise moment to lunge. Ceryd leapt, outflanking him, but his strike glanced only his mail. Madrot repositioned. Ceryd feigned a backhand strike, then spun, cutting at Madrot’s shins. Madrot lurched away, evading the crippling blow, but lost his balance. He frantically rolled as Ceryd speared, just evading ruin.

Then, with a sigh, Madrot relaxed. His tense guard lowered. His breathing steadied. Ceryd’s dance swirled around him like stormwater round a drain.

Ceryd struck downward.

Madrot twisted away.

Ceryd’s blade bit only air.

Then again Ceryd glanced, then missed. And yet again.

Ceryd missed a fourth time but Madrot’s cudgel flashed. It struck Ceryd’s shield with such force that the young rex staggered. Again the cudgel came, hammer first, then dagger-end, each blow precise, frugal.

Ceryd staggered and gasped beneath the weight of it, eyes widening in surprise at the speed and force of the man he once bested in the yard. The hosts watched in stunned quiet.

Ceryd tried to disengage, to regroup, to rebalance and catch his breath, but Madrot pressed him. Ceryd counter-attacked, yet each fluid movement he made was evaded by a quick shift, a short step, and a counter thrust.

A feint left…

A hook of the shield…

A sudden upward strike by Madrot and Ceryd’s sword flew from his grasp, spinning end over end, landing in the grass.

Ceryd, disarmed, turned briefly to locate it.

A desperate cry went up from Gruen’s line. “Yield, my lord!”

Madrot charged, slamming his shield into Ceryd’s breast, driving him backward. Ceryd stumbled, reaching for footing. Madrot bore down again, crashing atop him. The dagger-pike flashed like lightning.

“Yield!” Cerenid screamed.

But there was no time for parry or plea. Madrot drove his iron blade into Ceryd’s throat. The rex coughed once, then blood poured from his neck and mouth. His eyes rolled back as Madrot withdrew the blade. Cerenid shouted, voice cracking, “Brother!”

Thus, the trial was ended.

Reik Mendo urged his steed forward, with Una steadying the reins. His withered face held no glow of triumph. He gazed down at Ceryd, face splattered by his own blood. Mendo’s indecipherable voice croaked across a mournful hush. Una translated.

“My father says, ‘I am sorry, grandson, that thou wert made to bear the sins of thy father.’”

A gasp rose among the gathered warriors, Gruen and Dregrove alike. Cerenid stared in disbelief, the words cutting deeper than any blade. Madrot lowered his weapon, chest heaving, eyes fixed upon Ceryd’s fallen form. His expression was no longer sinister but filled with remorse.

Cerenid rushed to kneel beside his dead brother, lifting his head into his lap. Blood spilled from Ceryd’s mouth and throat, warm upon his hands as he wept. “Please don’t leave me, brother,” he whispered. But Ceryd’s lifeless eyes no longer saw him.

The marshal of Fy stepped forward. “By the old law,” he said, “he who slayeth the rex shall be made rex!”

“That has not been the law for three centuries,” bellowed Olian.

Madrot turned upon them, his voice low but carrying. “I sought justice, not a crown. Let the brother bear it.” He mounted his steed with deliberate calm, then rode slowly back into the ranks of Dregrove.

Behind them, the hosts shifted hands to hilts, old feuds and new wounds trembling on the edge of eruption. Only Una’s voice broke the gathering storm: “Stand down! Stand down all of you!” she cried. “The trial is ended. There is no need for more blood. House Dregrove pledges its allegiance to Cerenid Rex.”

Contents


[i] From ‘Dawn of Edä,’ the Holy Book of the Hedam, v 287:
Then rose Bafomet from the throne of crystal and flame. The voice that issued forth was not of man nor woman, but a mingling of both, a harmony of discord that chilled the soul. “Behold, the coin that buyeth rebellion! If cast into the deep, who then shall spend it? For thy worth is unrest, thy face is remembrance, and thy breath awakeneth defiance in the hearts of men.”

Norland Rex- Part I

Contents

I. Cleon

Bastard

The Norzcarpe forms a mighty wall of jagged granite spires mantled in grinding ice of furlongs[i] depth. A near impenetrable barrier since the purgation of mankind, it had thwarted southern invasion for millennia. But o’er the span of a thousand years, the ice at last withdrew, receding into the high mountain valleys, surrendering the broad northern plain to leaf and beast. And just as the tide of sea returneth, so too returned the tribes of men, guided northward by silent monuments of stone set forth by the forgotten race of giants called Gargan. In time, the Norland kingdoms were reborn. And while their reiks and thegns[ii] gnawed and devoured one another over crowns and titles, the ice, ever warmed by Sol’s radiance, evanesced their great fortification and released at last the Immortal Azarius who had been bound for eons within its frozen vault.

Of these Norland kingdoms, one was named Methundor, which was a land of sylvan plenty, unrolling northward unto Lochlund where the earth cleaves asunder into the swirling, wine-dark tides. West it did stretch as well, for many dozens of leagues[iii], until it reached the treeless Blackmoors and the stony hills of Canac and her gray and sandy shores. Eastward too, it ran, unto the wide River Lunde, famed for the bogs and mire it doth fashion in spring; and many leagues beyond her meanders lay the untamed lands of Ankenlund— wild and desolate— where lonely roads and windswept heaths were trod by few save wolves and woolly beasts of monstrous nature. The snows of winter were harsh beyond measure; yet in their season they melted into crystal rivulets and waterfalls and swift bright streams that wove through her shadowed forests to quench the pastures and fields, nourishing the herds and harvests that were the bounty of Norland men.

This country of Methundor was the hearthstone of Norland’s dominion; yet for all its breadth, the strength of Methundor was nearly one city, Gruen, where all her roads did meet. With bustling markets and bursting granaries, and ancient walls of stone that had withstood the countless batterings and sieges of warring clans, the lord who held Gruen was supreme amongst all the reiks.

When Clendyne Feldric, the elder Reik of Gruen, at last succumbed to a wasting malady of sores and fits and madness, no lawful heir was left to bear his sceptre of dominion; for each of his three noble sons had perished of illness in childhood— some whispering not by nature’s hand, but rather by slow poison. And while many named it a curse and others a mercy, Cleon, the dead reik’s bastard-born, long scorned as an outlaw of ill repute, rose forth from exile. And by bloody force and foul deed he began to lay his claim as heir against all who dared contest him.

To prove his worth before fickle serfs and doubtful lords of Gruen, Cleon first rode against the brigands and highwaymen that had long plagued the merchant roads. And because he had once led their very pack, he knew their haunts and cunning ways. Thus, by guile and ruthless hand, he smote them without mercy and returned to Gruen bearing their severed heads, knotted together by their braids. The serfs hailed Cleon as deliverer and champion of justice, forgetting in haste that he himself had been the wolf preying upon them.

…Such is the nature of men— that they forgive the sins of their champions.

And those who ventured to stand against the bastard realized no justice. Some were found broken upon the cobbles, having fallen from parapets on windless nights; others vanished from their chambers to be later drawn from the river, their eyes wide but their tongues torn out. Fear spread through Gruen’s resistance like a pestilence borne upon bad air, and though Cleon’s name was heralded in public squares, it was cursed by rivals in hushed whispers. For though none dared accuse the renowned vanquisher of bandits, all knew whose cold shadow fell longest across the city walls.

Rumors multiplied like flies upon a carcass, saying that Cleon’s ascent was wrought by dark sorcery. And some even swore he had truck with the immortal Azarius himself— who, the legend held, roamed the moonlit groves beneath the guise of a faun.

Though a brute, Cleon was no fool and did take counsel, not with wraiths or mythic beings, but with a company called The Aeonites, who wert long wanderers out of the far southern climes, hunted refugees of unending war. Strange of visage and close of heart, they moved through Methundor like living shadows, shunning the lamp of notice and speaking in tongues few True Men could parse. And though Aeonite arts and long endurance stirred unease among the common folk, the wise and high-born prized their counsel; for by their craft were their harvests enriched, their ramparts strengthened, and their fortunes multiplied.

The late Clendyne, sire of Cleon, had long shielded these folk from the superstitious scorn of Norland serfs, granting them protection within Gruen’s walls. Among their number was one whom Clendyne had held dearest, a counselor and confidant passed from father to son, and from the father’s father before him. In fact, none in Gruen could recall a day bereft of his presence. Indeed, the oldest records speak of his service stretching back two centuries. This venerable Aeonite was named Kethu the Immigrant, and he came to Gruen in the elder days, when Clendyne’s savage forebears still ruled as chieftains over forest and fen.

It was Kethu who first perceived the shadow of Clendyne’s doom and whispered his portents into courtier ears: “Only the bastard son hath the will to fan the sovereign flame of Methundor. Defend him! And he will drive out the vulture lords that circle gather. Defend him not and they shall strip Gruen’s carcass clean.”

Yet Kethu’s counsel sprang not from love nor loyalty to the bastard, but from his own cunning calculation. For if the Aeonites should be found ill-aligned with whosoever triumphed, their race might be cast into chains or worse. Thus did Kethu weigh the hearts of all contenders and deem Cleon the strongest of will, and therefore the most perilous to oppose. The survival of his Aeonite kin hung upon that thread, and so he wove it fast about Cleon’s throne.

One by one, Kethu lured the bastard’s rivals into snares of their own making— fanning their greed, then exposing them to the guard. Many a noble who had walked boldly through the garden at dawn found his wrists shackled by noon, their charges treason, their sentence swift. The axe. The saw. At Kethu’s word, all the Aeonites conspired together in Cleon’s favor, revealing each secret move his foes devised. Yet this they did not from devotion, but to safeguard their own refuge from southern bondage and murder. For they knew they were but guests within the perilous Norland keep.

And when the time was ripened, Kethu journeyed alone into the shadowed forest to seek out Cleon, and bid him return from his manhunts and wild haunts, to come at last for the throne’s table that had been set before him.

Rebellion

“All hail! All hail! Our reik has come!”

Serf and bondi[iv] crowded along the stoney way leading unto Gruen’s heavy gate. The lords and wardens stood by on the walls, watching with narrowed eyes.

And with the last of his potent rivals slain, Cleon Feldric returned to Gruen in triumph. With guards and clansmen to his left and right, he rode through the gate bearing the last brigands’ head. The townsfolk parting before him, some in awe, others in dread.

At the steps before the keep, the high priest stood, barring the way in, defiant in his indignant expression. “No bastard bandit shall receiveth my blessing.”

Cleon gazed down from his snorting high horse, his glare settling upon the narrow-shouldered priest arrayed in emerald vestments, clutching his silver staff in ringed hand, brow capped by a tall purple mitre heavy with jewels. Cleon scoffed.

Then, lifting the severed bandit’s heads— still weeping their dark draught— he hurled the bundle at the priest. The grisly trophy struck and burst, spattering the holy raiment with black ooze.

Without so much as a pause, Cleon drove his horse forward, bursting through the doors, the iron-shod hooves ringing upon the stones. Those within fled to the alcoves, scattering like startled rats. And when he had ridden well into the hall, he swung down from the saddle and strode to the throne of Clendyne. Thereupon he seated himself, grinned, and stroked his rusty beard.

And none dared protest.

From Cleon’s ascension to Reik of Gruen, there arose great tumult over the mastery of Methundor entire. The four other reiks wrangled over oaths and laws, with each proclaiming himself the rightful rex. The thegns, lords of lesser villages, haggled over field and ford, and set their wardens upon the roads to extort silver tolls from merchants and peasants alike.

Amid this clamor, Kethu, humbly robed and grey of beard, bent near at the side of Cleon’s throne and whispered unto his ear: “Delay is a sharper foe than sword or spell. Strike swiftly, and claim the mantle of rex ere these petty rivals gather strength against thee.”

Thus, Cleon called his wardens before him. “Go forth,” quoth he, “and summon all such men who would be sworn unto Gruen— sellswords hardened by the forest wars, brigands seeking commutation for their crimes, and all the young men shoveling shit in stable and sty who would be lured by the promise of plunder, gold, or vengeance.”

By a fortnight, the retinue had arrayed, grim battalions clad in leather and ringlet mail. They assembled at night, their banner bearing the red fox of House Gruen, lit by lantern glow. The bastard led their evening march from the city walls to the sound of their horses’ iron steps pounding like hail upon stone.

First did Cleon set his course against the House of Fy, keepers of the grainways, whose towers gleamed in polished bronze above. But the bastard’s hope of siege and of compelling surrender was denied him, for when they approached Fywold, they found it emptied of defenders— her gates unbarred and braziers cold. From trembling elders who remained, Cleon learned that Fy’s host had fled, mustering a day’s ride to the west, encamped along the Caleah River’s bend where swift currents shielded them on three sides.

Cleon paced to and fro, stroking his russet beard as he weighed the courses before him. Should he remain and hold the city? Give chase? Divide his strength? At length he sought the counsel of Kethu, and the grey Aeonite was summoned before him.

“Strike not at walls, but at the hearts of men,” said Kethu. “There is naught left in Fy worth the burden of lordship. Ride forth. Break their host at the river bend, and all House Fy shall be brought to its knees.”

Thus Gruen’s brigand host marched forth at dawn and came unto the river bend ere dusk. There Cleon left behind a clamorous company, hurling taunts and curses across the swift waters, that their dull-witted and choleric foes might fix their gaze upon the crossing. The men of Fy, being ever unable to suffer insult in dignity, answered each taunt with an ignoble gesture, or a loosed arrow falling pitifully short, or else by the baring of privy parts or puckerholes, spreading their buttocks as pale as moonlit cheese. Whilst they busied themselves with such noble arts of war, Cleon rode northward, and beneath a shroud of darkness and mist, he forded the Caleah.

His trackers slipped ahead of the host, silent as stalking wolves, to dispatch the scouts of Fy ere alarm could be raised. Through the black evergreens they crept, with the whispering river ever at their side, until at last they came again unto the bend ere cockcrow. At first light, Cleon’s battle horns gave voice, and the helms of Gruen burst from the trees like a swarm of steel and leather hornets. The men of Fy, eyes turned toward the decoy host, found instead death behind them. Their lines broke and their cries drowned in the torrent as they fled into the river’s icy coils. Thus was House Fy brought low and near unto ruin at the Battle of Caleah’s Bend.

The Blodwins, who had marched to join their kinsmen of Fy to halt the bastard reik, were met upon the road by tidings of Cleon’s slaughter. At the bend, they found only corpses and a jeering host across the waters. For three days and nights they hastened home to Dregrove, but ere they arrived, shepherds met them on the road and delivered grim news: Cleon had already fallen upon their undefended town. Their kin taken captive, and their stores seized in the name of the new reik.

Upon the gates of Dregrove they beheld Cleon’s captain, Odax, grim and menacing with his cropped hair and tattooed face, standing upon the parapet with one mailed hand clamped fast about the wrist of Una, youngest daughter of House Blodwin. Her apron was torn, and her face was pale with dread. Drawing her near unto the edge of the wall, so that all below might behold her peril, Odax cried aloud:

“Look ye upon thy child, Reik Mendo! Know this— no harm shall come unto her so long as thou dost bargain in good faith. Such is the mercy of Cleon Rex, first among the reiks of Methundor!”

From below, the Mendo’s voice thundered back, hoarse with wrath. “Rex? Speak not that blasphemy! Cleon is but a bastard whelp— stray seed from a tavern wench, painted in stolen blood and dressed in stolen raiment! Who is he to call himself Rex?”

Odax’s tone was calm as a frosty dawn. “He is rex who hath vanquished all his rivals; he whose host resteth within his enemies’ very halls; he who drinketh their wine from their own cups. Kneel, Mendo, and behold Methundor’s lord.”

Gruen’s steel scraped upon shields along the Dregrove wall. The archers drew, their hands trembling with anticipation.

“And if we lay siege and starve thee out?” cried Reik Mendo. “Surely you can see our force remaineth the greater!”

Odax pressed his blade to Una’s throat so that it creased her skin. “Then thy kin shall perish with us,” he hissed, “and this child shall taste the first pangs. No soul shall leave nor enter Dregrove whilst thou dost cling to thine defiance.”

Mendo’s beard sank. He turned his gaze from the wall, his heart hammering like a smith’s forge. Behind him, beyond the timber ramparts, his household watched in stricken silence— his pregnant wife weeping into her shawl, his elder daughter Fia clutching her mother’s hand. Before him, his host, his loyal guards too ashamed to meet his eyes. Then a single tear cut through the soot upon his cheek while he groaned under his breath.

“Have I kept faith all my days only to purchase my daughter’s lives from a bandit?” he muttered. Then, turning and facing his walls again, he called out, “If I swear fealty, wilt thou depart these ramparts?”

“Aye,” Odax replied with a cruel smile. “But thou shalt provide one thousand sword to uphold the rex’s peace. Five hundred forthwith, and another by the new moon. And let none disguise captains or sergeants as common foot, for any found so shall be taken and flogged without pity.”

“I will have a day to consider this matter,” spake Mendo.

“The reik hath but one hour,” Odax answered. “Then come forth and bend thy knee at this gate. Shouldst thou tarry, thy heirs shall suffer, beginning with this one.” He thrust Una forward, nearly over the edge, her scream rising like a gull above the wind. “Her cries shall ring through Dregrove ere dusk.”

With anguish upon his brow, the Reik of Dregrove stepped forth unto the gate, arrows yet drawn upon him as he came nigh. And with torment upon his graying countenance, the noble knelt and bowed before his own walls. Then Cleon appeared atop the gate, black-crested helm gleaming in the twilight. He gestured and the archers lowered their bows.

“Rise, Reik Mendo,” said Cleon, his voice smooth as oil. “Thou art forgiven. Be thee loyal and none of thy kin shall suffer harm. And in days to come thou shalt find fidelity to thy new rex most profitable.”

As Sol sank, five hundred Dregrove foot cast down their spears before the gate. At dawn, they departed with Cleon’s host, and with them rode sisters Una and Fia Blodwin, both pale and silent, as living oaths of their father’s obedience. The Dregrove people wept, for they knew their beloved lord had bought peace at the cost of his very soul.

The Reik of Dregrove lived, yet his Blodwin name was broken; helpless as his daughters rode beneath the banners of the bandit rex. The tale of Cleon’s “mercy” spread like bitter wind, chilling the hearts of lesser lords. For Cleon bought loyalty not with honor, but with fear. So it was, that Cleon’s peace, though swift and splendid, bore the bitter taste of willow bark upon their tongues.

When the gates of Dregrove were shut behind him, Cleon looked upon the silent road and called his triumph “peace”. Yet all Methundor soon whispered otherwise. For every hearthfire that burned that night, many smoldered with shame and sadness. Seeing resistance futile, the men of Longview and Welf turned back for their homes while the Fys buried their many dead, and plotted their final stand.

Consolidation

The remnants of Fy’s shattered host, those neither drowned nor slain, did gather at the village of Fywold, purposing a final stand in defiance. Yet there they found only weariness and fear, for the townsfolk who had remained had already heard tidings of Cleon’s ruthless triumphs. Many, gathering their hens, their coats, and their ponies, had already fled north and east; and those who abode were either too frail to travel, or too burdened by their wealth to risk it on the road lest they be plundered by brigands scenting doom upon the wind.

Within Fywold’s wooden walls, the days stretched into weeks, and even the gray heavens that withheld their rain seemed to conspire against them. The soldiers of Fy devoured all the bread and eggs, drained the barrels of ale, and turned to butchering the swine and goats. Whosoever dared to protest was met with a cruel beating, and so silence fell heavier than the sinking smoke of hearths just before a storm.

At last Cleon’s host appeared upon the road and the dread of waiting was replaced by tightening fear. The besieged Fymen loosed their final arrows, yet not a one found its mark.

Cleon summoned Kethu again and the Immigrant gave his counsel.

The Immigrant said, “If thy foe is trapped, hungry, and fearful, then time itself becometh thy sharpest blade. Why should a wise man spend the lives of his own when famine and dread will fight in his stead?”

Thus Cleon waited with his host just beyond range, sending no herald, nor parley, nor demand for four full days, filling the minds of the defenders with angst. From the walls, Fy’s men bellowed hollow threats and curses. “Ye all art cowards!” they shouted. “Come and fight like men! We await thee!” But these were the desperate cries of those already broken and were answered only by Cleon’s host making merry upon the bounty of the countryside, and feasting openly within sight of their hungry, cornered foes.

When Cleon perceived their spirits fully broken and their hope extinguished, he sent Odax to address the people of Fywold.

“Listen!” quoth he. “Summer is no season for a siege. The fields ripen for harvest, and the woods teem with game. Lay down thy arms and come forth. Return to thy labor of living.”

“Never!” cried the Fy defenders. “Never shall we yield unto a bastard born!”

“I am deeply saddened to hear this,” Odax retorted, “for thou shalt now burn. And with thee, all who dwell within these wooden walls. Behold these pyres we do build. They are made for thee.”

“Thou wouldst not dare burn these common folk,” came the reply. “The houses of Methundor would rise against thee for such a monstrous deed!”

“Nay, for it shall be by thine own hand,” said Odax. “Mark me well, for if these good folk slay thee in thy sleep to deliver themselves from flame, they shall win the rex’s favor. They outnumber thee tenfold. I bid thee open the gates on their behalf, ere they turn upon thee.” Then Odax bellowed at the townsfolk inside the walls. “Behold! Let it be known that any subject who bringeth the rex’s justice upon a rebel of Fy shall be rewarded with ten silver erlings or two kine.”

At eventide, the pyres were kindled outside the walls, burning so fierce that the townsfolk felt the heat behind the walls. And those within— soldier, subject, maiden, and child— looked on in fear as the glowing embers ascended into the starless ether.

Ere dawn, the gates were opened without contest, and with terror writ upon their weary faces, the soldiers of Fy, scarce two hundred in all, did cast down their arms and shields with clangs and thuds. Then limping forth, many did beg for mercy, while others fell to their knees and muttered prayers unto deafened gods.

Their hands were bound, their ankles knotted together, and thus they marched for three days until they reached the walls of Gruen. There, those few who would not yield nor swear allegiance unto Cleon were strangled by cords, their lives forfeit; the surviving remnant was pressed into the king’s host as the lowest rank of footmen. And so ended the rebellion of House Fy, not with the clash of swords, but with hunger and despair.

By swiftness and deceit, Cleon conquered all the riverlands and made of them his tribute and the reiks of Longview and Welf bent the knee. From that hour forth, the name of Gruen was spoken not only in fear but in reverence, for men saw in Cleon’s victories the hand of destiny— or of some darker, invincible power that watched and willed his rise.

Sisters

The daughters of the House of Dregrove— Fia, the elder, and Una, the younger— were kept by Cleon within the walls of Gruen through that winter. Being but children, Fia thirteen summers, Una but five, they wept each night in longing, holding one another close in their firelit chamber while the winter winds howled and snow streaked across the leaden glass. When their governess entered to tend the flame, she could offer them no comfort; and so, withdrawing in sorrow, she left them to console each other.

When spring came, the sisters were summoned to court that tidings of the Blodwin daughters’ well-keeping might be sent to Dregrove. Their governess brushed and braided their auburn hair and arrayed them in gowns of embroidered linen. They appeared at Cleon’s table many times through that season, shy amid the splendour of the hall of Gruen.

Fia, being of fair countenance, drew the gaze and captured the lust of Cleon; and ere the summer was full, word spread that she would be his bride. When the news was brought to her, her look grew still and proud, as one who steels herself to bear a burden she cannot set down. Fia knew then that many years would pass, if ever, before she might look again upon her Dregrove home.

At the solstice, her father, Reik Mendo, came to Gruen with his lady, their infant son Madrot, and a retinue of servants and guards to witness the royal wedding of his daughter. Little Una wept for joy when she beheld them in the plaza and ran to embrace her mother and father; but Fia lingered apart, distant and silent, her gaze fixed upon the banners that fluttered above the gate. She knew that their embrace, once shared, would waken a grief too deep to quiet, and that its ache would endure long after their departure.

The wedding was held in the castle garden, which was adorned with ribbons and garlands of spring bloom. Beneath a canopy of silk, the guests assembled, lords and thegns, matrons and maidens, merchants and wardens alike, each bearing tribute to the new rexia. Fia stood beside Cleon, fair and still as marble, her eyes downcast as the vows were spoken, her words coming forth flat and as if spoken by another. When the priest proclaimed them joined, trumpets sounded, and a cheer rose from the courtyard; yet many who looked upon the bride saw no joy upon her face, but only her guarded resolve.

That evening, at the feast in the great hall, the Rex of Methundor and his young bride sat upon the high dais, drinking from one cup as was the ancient custom. Yet as Cleon drank, the wine spilt, and crimson droplets stained his vest, a blemish quickly wiped away, though the few who noticed whispered it an omen of ill fate.

Minstrels poured in and sang of peace restored and banners newly united and the air grew thick with perfume and promise. But to Fia, each song sounded like farewell, and each toast a stone laid upon her heart. She smiled as courtesy required, yet her gaze wandered often to the dark in the windows beyond the torches, as though seeking the stars she could no longer see.

That night, amidst the clamor and wine and song, the governess came for Una and led her to her chamber. She dressed her in her nightclothes and tucked her beneath the woolen coverlet. She set a single candle upon the stand and departed, drawing the heavy door closed. In the hush that followed, Una heard the strains of music from below, and the laughter of strangers, and the clink of goblets. Yet to her ears it was no music of celebration, but a dirge. Alone now, comforted only by a single wavering flame, she pressed her face into the pillow and wept until her tears were spent and sleep finally came like mercy at last.

At dawn, the sisters met once more, though only for a fleeting moment. They embraced in the pale morning glow, clinging as if to halt the parting of the world, until their father gently prised Una from Fia’s arms and bore her toward the waiting caravan. From the gate, Una looked back and saw her sister standing alone among the courtiers, her face wan against the rising light. Long years would pass ere she beheld her beloved sister again.

That winter, Fia bore a son, Ceryd, and the house of Gruen rejoiced, though Fia’s heart remained bound to the home she had lost.

Yet the new father found no peace within the bannered halls. The feasts wearied him, the councils dulled him, and the songs of flattery rang hollow in his ears. Each night he walked alone upon the ramparts, gazing eastward beyond the forests where the hills darkened against the snow. In his heart there grew a hunger, an ache for peril, for blood, for the sharpened edge of purpose. He would stand each night beside his sleeping queen, her form growing heavy with his second child, and feel himself a stranger in his own chamber. And so, ere the leaves turned, he gathered Odax and his wardens once more and rode forth from Methundor in search of conquest, leaving Fia and their son, and Gruen behind, to dream of a peace he could neither give nor keep.

Expedition

While Fia was yet nursing Ceryd and heavy with her second child, Cleon set forth upon an expedition into the eastern reaches to secure the marches of Methundor against the stirrings of petty rebellions and the plague of banditry. With a vanguard of forty riders he departed the gates of Gruen, leaving the young queen under the ward of the Immigrant Kethu, counselor of many reiks before.

They rode far into the east, beyond the great spire of Agzad, whose gray pinnacle thrust upward toward the heavens like the point of a spear bursting through the bosom of the earth. And upon the grassy piedmont they encountered many tribes and lawless clans. At first these outlaws took the field against them and were swiftly hewn down. But in the weeks that followed, word spread through the villages and hamlets of Cleon’s black-helmed riders of Gruen, and soon the knaves and miscreants fled at the mere sound of their approach.

Ere autumn’s end, they crossed the River Lunde, and soon after espied a plume of black smoke rising beyond the treeless ridge before them. Forming into array, they rode forth to inquire coming upon an unattended pyre of dried branches and pitch burning beneath a stony eave upon the far side of a ravine. Marking it for a snare, Cleon turned to withdraw— yet behind them upon the western crest appeared a company of near a hundred foot and twenty horse. Their faces were painted in grim array, and each bore pike or hatchet in hand.

Cleon’s riders turned and approached the brigands, halting for Odax to call out.

“Stand aside and let us pass, for we are the host of Methundor’s rex!”

But the strangers yielded not. And from among them stepped forward a man white of hair, his eyes wild and bulging.

He shouted back, “This land is not the rex’s. Methundor endeth at the River. Dismount and lay down thy arms, that we may judge thee for thy crimes.”

Odax called back, “Methundor endeth where we deem it to end. Submit and spare yourselves a journey to Thol[v].”

The brigands laughed. “We will not submit. Lay down thy arms and submit to our judgement,” said the old warrior.

“To judge us for what?” asked Odax.

“For trespass,” came the answer, “and for the murder of our kin who served no lord of thine.”

Odax turned to his liege. “What course, my lord? Surely we shall not disarm and yield to such rabble.”

“Nay,” said Cleon. “No sooner would they have our heads upon their pikes.” He glanced. “Look there, the ravine closeth our path east and north; and to the south the ground riseth into forest, ill-fit for heavy horse. We must break through them here, in the open, and make haste for the river beyond. They have not the riders to o’ertake us once we are past.”

Thus Odax formed them into a line and charged. Downwards they galloped, off their hill, gathering speed, then upward they climbed toward the crest where the rabble held the ridge. Mid-charge the ridge itself betrayed them— the slope steeper than expected, the horses’ hooves slipping on wet stones. Two steeds faltered and tumbled, dragging their riders beneath the boots of men. Only half broke through the tribal line at the first thrust. These rode westward, ascending to the next ridge, and there, turning, they observed their rex still entangled in the fray. Once more they charged back uphill, into the press of foot-soldiers, to rescue their sovereign.

Rebel spearmen pressed them in from both flanks. Steel nicked mail at Cleon’s side; a point gashing him, and he felt the heat of blood. He remained mounted though his horse staggered beneath him.

Odax fought his way alongside— steel flashing, shield knocking aside a spear aimed for Cleon’s throat. With a grunt, Odax caught the shaft in his gauntlet and twisted, dragging the brigand off his horse and giving Cleon space to turn his mount.

Cleon roared and circled, his cape whipping in the flinging mud, the roar of violence and chaos all about him. Eyes wide. Teeth bared. A second spear came at his side; he raised his sword and deflected. The ring of steel, the cry of wounded men, the stink of sweat and shit thickened the air.

Beside him two Gruen riders fell under the crush of foot-soldiers— one left a gash across his brow, the other’s thigh broken by pike. Odax reached for him but Cleon pulled him back.

“Now!” Cleon yelled. “Up the ridge!”

They spurred southward through the melee, off the hill and then ascending again. Few followed. Cleon’s mail was torn, blood slicked his gauntlet, his horse huffed and groaned. He glanced back and saw six rebel riders hard on their heels.

“To the south!” Cleon cried, “into the woods!”

And so they spurred— up the stoney slope until the forest swallowed them. Amidst the trees, stumps and stones, their pace was hindered as the rebel riders drew near. They were separated by paths chosen in haste in the tangled terrain. Cleon, bloodied, pressed onward alone, climbing where the forest thickened, until, at last, only his steed’s blowing and puffing could be heard; no shouts, nor clamor, nor the drumroll thuds of trampling hooves. Alone, he continued westward, the night enfolding him beneath dim stars and ancient evergreens.

At last, when the gray of dawn stole over the eastern sky, Cleon Rex made halt and listened to the hush. Hearing nothing, side aching, he descended, treading a forest ridge downward until he emerged from the shadowy veil into the open.

His eyes swept over the wide, rolling plain below, where mists drifted in the vales. The birds chirped and gentle deer gathered to graze in the dim light. No trace of pursuer met his sight. He felt his wound, deep-gouged though not likely mortal, it still bled.

Feeling assured of solitude, Cleon rode slowly forth from the wooded gloom. Westward he pressed until eventide, following a winding brook of black-stone guiding him towards a hamlet of sod-built huts encircled by a rough palisade of bound pine trunks. The sound of axes cleaving wood blended with dogs barking over the hush of dusk. Upon the barricade stood a lone sentry, his spear planted, cloak stained with mud and sweat.

“Where be my riders?” Cleon muttered before falling from his steed into the cold stream.

Canut

Cleon woke to find himself lying on a sturdy table. Soft beams of low morning Sol spilled in by a single small window cut through the sod wall. A maiden tended to him, her braided hair as dark as midnight silk, her eyes gleaming with the umber hue of polished garnet. She cleansed his wound which he felt was tightly stitched.

“It is not mortal,” came a rough voice from the shadows.

“Where am I?” Cleon asked.

“This hamlet is called Canut,” replied the voice. “Thou didst sleep all night, even while ‘Marah, here, sewed thy flesh.”

Cleon strained to sit, and from the dimness emerged an elder man with a weathered face and a beard streaked in gray. His eyes were like ice on the winter sea.

“And who art thou?” Cleon asked.

“Who art thou?” the man answered.

“A warden,” Cleon said, offering nothing more.

The elder snorted. “You have the face of a brigand and I’d have taken you for one but for your mail and your gold brooch and your rings.”

Cleon then knew the watchman had guessed his station, and so he held his tongue.

“Fear not, Gruen-rider,” the elder said. “We are not disloyal to Methundor in these parts.”

Cleon groaned as he shifted. “We were set upon by a host of rogues,” he said. “More than a hundred of them.”

“Aye, and we have suffered pillage by those same dogs,” spake the elder. “Thus have we raised those ramparts thou sawest outside.”

“Might I seek shelter within thy walls… till my riders return?” Cleon asked, his tone weary.

“That depends,” answered the watchman, stepping fully into the light. “I might wonder what ye be worth to them.”

Amarah winced at the words while Cleon’s gaze locked with the elder’s, each measuring the other. Then the elder’s sternness softened into a grin.

“Heal thyself, Gruen-rider. Thou art safe here with us,” he said before turning and leaving the hutch.

Cleon laid back on the table and turned his eyes to the maiden who was tending him. Her visage passed through the golden beam channeled by the portal, and he found himself entranced.

“Thou art neither of this clan nor of this country,” Cleon murmured.

“I am not,” she answered.

“Thou hast the look of Aeonite blood,” he added, but she did not reply.

In the days that followed, Cleon felt the pain in his side soften, though each step still throbbed like a smith’s hammer striking iron. At every dawn he rose and walked alone among the sod huts and pine ramparts of Canut, his cloak trailing in the mud, building his strength while the brook’s cold foam whispered around his boots. The villagers averted their eyes as he passed, offering only curt nods or muttered breaths. Each afternoon, when Sol’s warmth had waned, he would watch as the grazing beasts were driven within the timber walls and shut fast in their pens. The women gathered their children and prepared their evening meals at twilight, while the men hoisted their mugs, their laughter clattering through the chill air.

Yet Cleon lingered each evening by the hearth where Amarah sat spinning wool— her fingers deftly weaving threads of ash and silver, the unfamiliar loom beside her humming like a placid, otherworldly song. Transfixed by her art that he did not know, he watched the soft rhythm of her hands and the quiet rise and fall of her breath. For an instant, as the fire’s glow flickered between them, it seemed their very spirits touched.

Yet the calm of village life weighed upon him like a mourning shroud: his riders feared slain, his expedition shattered by knaves, the crown of Methundor resting heavy upon his soul. Though fed, and sheltered, and tended, his heart was still astride the wind-lashed ridges where ambition and wildness beckoned. He knew he must return to Gruen to restore his might, yet somehow he lacked the will to depart.

Thus Cleon tarried in Canut, healing and waiting for any surviving rider who might bring his ransom, yet none came. He spent many days with Amarah and lent hand to her toils. He learned she had no husband nor child, though she was of years fit to bear sons of age who would hunt and daughters who would weave. She suggested the superstitions held by the Canut men kept them distant from her, as though sensing something unearthly in her essence.

At length, in the stillness of one moonless night, Amarah came unto Cleon bearing a flickering lamp. She set it softly upon the sill, and in its amber glow her skin shone pale and warm as woven silk. She loosed her braids, letting them fall like dark rivers down her breasts. Then she slipped from her gown and came into his bed. Their forms entwined in silent union, sharing warmth beneath the thatched roof while the wolves howled beyond the village walls.

Departing

The season waxed bitter and the chill winds howled. Each day, Sol burned lower and fainter than the last— until its disk rose no higher than a hand’s breadth above the high spires of the Norzcarpe. Cleon dared not journey unto Gruen in such a season, for the threat of storms loomed, and to be caught in the snows would mean certain death. Amid those lengthening nights, Amarah confessed unto him that she bore his child, yet his heart was not vexed for that reason for he held Amarah dear.

He laboured as a commoner would: gathering wood for the winter fires, tending the horse and cow, and mending Amarah’s humble dwelling. Yet often he spied the villagers’ wary eyes and distant demeanour, and he came to suspect they knew him for the rex and regarded him a baleful presence. Though none dared speak it, he feared they might betray him for coin, bartering with the brigands to take him in the dark of night. Therefore, he fortified the door of Amarah’s hutch, and kept his sword ever at hand, sleeping lightly with one ear set for danger.

Winter fell hard upon the land and the snow lay deep, burying all beneath its frigid mantle. Cleon learned the ceaseless labour of clearing it away. In their sod hovel, they shared their nights with dogs, chickens, and two goats, while cats hunted the vermin which were then cooked over the hearth and fed unto the hounds.

Midwinter passed and the days began to lengthen, but the air remained cold and the snow lingered. Yet the brighter Sol lightened Cleon’s spirit and he oft pondered the day he might depart for Gruen. He planned to bring Amarah with him so that she might bear their child in safety. Yet none could know the babe was his, lest scandal rend apart the fragile alliances. Amarah’s visage bespoke the Aeonites, and so would he entreat them to shelter her and raise the child among their kin. Still the prospect of the babe inheriting his saffron hair troubled his schemes.

Spring finally arrived, and the world turned to mire. Though the air grew warm and Sol climbed ever higher in the firmament, the dampness kept the chill lingering. Morning fog draped the land, and drizzle soaked through cloaks and garments. Amarah, now showing with child, would soon not endure the journey to Gruen. Thus Cleon wished to depart. Yet unwillingly he tarried, wary of springtime storms that might yet imperil them.

One morn, four muddy riders, clad as brigands in their looted leather and stolen capes, approached the gate of Canut, unsheathing no arms save their tongues.

“If thou holdest one naming himself Rex, deliver him unto us,” spake they.

“We know of no man so named!” quoth the gatekeeper. “Be gone, knaves!”

“Should he dwell among thee, thou art wise to surrender him. For him, we shall pay two dozen goats or four cow.”

“If we did harbor such a man, we would not yield him for thy stolen bounty.”

“Be warned! For if we learn he is here, we shall return with greater force to tear through thy walls and claim him,” the brigand replied.

“…And we shall seize thy flocks and thy women besides,” added another.

“Come as thou wilt! Thou hast ne’er breached these walls ere now.”

When the brigands had ridden off, Cleon allowed himself a brief nod of relief to the gatekeeper’s honour. Then, under the witching hour’s moonlight, he gathered provisions with care. With Amarah beside him and his steed bridled and saddled, they crept silently down the lane of Canut. The gatekeeper stepped forward; the heavy wooden gate creaked open, and then shut behind them, the crossbeam thudding softly in the hush of the night.

Under a crescent glow they rode straight west, the village’s torchlight receding until it lay far behind them. Then they turned south, sliding along rivulets and hidden depressions to conceal their tracks. They climbed into the hills and forest, where pine‐needles muffled hoof-beats and mist hugged the ground, for sunrise must not find them exposed on the open steppe. Though the journey was swift, Amarah’s face grew pale as weariness claimed her; yet she pressed on, her breathing shallow, their lives bound to the dark shelter of the trees.

For seven straight nights they rode, and when the dawns came, Cleon tethered his weary horse and crept with Amarah into a hollow of a fallen pine or beneath a stone eave banded by lichens and moss, burrowing deep beneath brittle boughs on a bed of withered needles. With each exhale a haze in the chill, they warmed each other in a slumberous reprieve from the soaking cold.

At last, they neared the Bogwater. ’Twas there Cleon’s keen eye spied a prone figure on the riverbank, encircled by feral hounds. Recognizing the armour and helm of one of his own, he hid Amarah within the woods and spurred his steed toward it. The hounds scattered at his approach. He dismounted to find the lifeless body— then much consumed by decay and ravenous jaws. Turning it, he saw the ruin of the face, stripped to sockets and teeth; yet by the helm he knew the man— the ever-faithful Odax, recently fallen.

Cleon strove mightily to drag the corpse from the water’s edge, purposing to grant it some honour and protection. Yet weak was he, unable to dig a grave in haste, and scant were the smaller stones with which to build a cairn. He laid the body straight, hands folded upon its breast and set the helm upon the ruined visage.

After his horse drank deeply, he turned back unto the hills. Yet as he glanced behind, he beheld three riders gathered upon the eastern ridge. Dark clouds obscured the sun as the brigands began their descent.

Cleon dared not call for Amarah nor turn his gaze toward her, lest he betray her hiding place. Mounting his steed, he braced himself for battle. The brigands did divide, seeking to hem him in; but Cleon charged into their midst. Hooves thundered, and their steeds groaned and blew as they drove toward each other. And with a mighty stroke, Cleon’s sword nearly sundered his foe’s head from his shoulders. The lifeless form fell from the horse into the mire.

The two remaining riders wheeled about, crossing paths, and came at him anew. Cleon spurred his steed downhill toward the leftmost foe. Their horses clashed, casting both men to the ground. Cleon mustered the strength to spring up and fling himself upon his foe. Meeting his enemy’s thrust, he struck off part of his hand. But the other rider yet bore down upon him. Thus, while on one knee and with a swift stroke, Cleon smote the horse’s charging foreleg, and it fell over him, hurling the rider headlong— neck broken upon his landing. Yet Cleon knew that his own leg had been shattered.

The last brigand fled, wailing and clutching his maimed hand as Cleon lay helpless upon the field. Sleet struck his face; the sky hung low and grey. The crippled horse thrashed and screamed. Cleon found he could not even crawl with his ruined leg.

The sound of fleeing hooves faded into the mist. The wind then ceased, and it became utterly calm. He caught his breath and released his bloody sword which fell into the stubble of new grass.

Amarah finally came to him and strove to give him aid, but it was of no avail.

“Thou must ride away,” he said to her.

“I shall not leave thee.”

“Thou must, or all is lost for thee and our child. Call my horse and ride. Take the path through the Durnhal Crags. Keep to the highlands till thou seest the Clearwater. Then follow the river north to Welf. Tell none of my fate. Say only that they must send riders and that thou must be delivered to Gruen to speak with Kethu. Give them this and they will take thee…” He pressed his gold and garnet ring into her trembling hand.

“I shall not leave thee,” she repeated.

“Thou must. Thou must ride away now, forthwith, ere the brigands return.” She embraced him tightly; their lips joining in farewell. “Now go! Seek out Kethu. He is an Aeonite and will protect you.”

She stumbled down the slope unto his steed, turning back thrice, as though she did expect him to rise or call her back. Then she paused, seeing the vision of a black wolf still beneath the pines at the tree line, its fur like shadow, eyes glinting silver.

“Ride away!” Cleon did shout.


Contents

Next Chapter

[i] A furlong is roughly 200 yards.

[ii] Reiks and thegns: Methundor’s feudal structure is reik-based. Among the five reiks, the rex is the first among equals. As Gruen is the most populous, wealthiest, and most influential city, the Reik of Gruen is usually considered the rex (or archduke). A king would transcend the rex as the embodiment of the law, with the reiks submitting to his sovereign will.

The socio-economic hierarchy of Methundor during the march of the Norland Host was:

  • King— (unnamed) sovereign ruler above all reiks, embodiment of law and unity.
  • Rex— foremost reik, usually the Reik of Gruen
  • Reik— ruler of a great city, territory, or petty kingdom
  • Thegn— local chieftain or village lord sworn to a reik
  • Reeve— men who administer the law, estates and collect levies
  • Bondi— free landholder owing taxes, labor, and military service
    Freemen— a broader category including merchants, craftsmen, and Aeonites under charter
  • Serfs / Peasants— unfree or semi-free laborers

[iii] A league is approximately 3 miles.

[iv] Bondi: a free landowner

[v] The River Thol is the theological waterway in the afterlife where, once souls have been assigned their next life, they must drink of its waters to forget their past before re-entering the mortal realm.