Joint winner of the 2015 Literature Competition
"For whatsoever from one place doth fall,
Is with the tide unto an other brought:
For there is nothing lost, that may be found, if sought."
- Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene
"I do feel it gone,
But know not how it went."
- William Shakespeare, The Winter's Tale
It was winter in
Broceliande. It is the worst of seasons, when the freezing snow wraps itself
across the cold hard ground like a shroud over a corpse. Families huddle inside
around small fires for warmth and gabble desperate prayers to the Maiden that
they have stockpiled enough supplies to last them until the spring’s thawing.
The sacred pond freezes over and the temple closes its doors for the long rest,
ready to reopen them as soon as the ice cracks and the still waters are once
more revealed to the faithful. It is known that rifts are more common in the
winter. There has never been a Graal who has not despised the winter months,
for oncoming ice always heralds the arrival of more foul intruders from beyond
our simple valley. I hate the winters.
It was winter in
Broceliande, and Madame Lacroix’s youngest child was missing. He was not the
first to disappear that season. The Deschamps’ boy, Henri, had headed off to bring
some food to the ailing Poinard family at his mother’s behest and simply never
arrived. Then there was the Flamberts’ boy, Auguste, who slipped out of his
house in the night to look for his dog. The dog came back, hale and hearty.
Auguste did not.
It was winter in
Broceliande, and I, Theirulf Le Hir, the Graal of Broceliande, was determined
to prevent the loss of another child. We of the Graal Order have protected this
valley and the township in the name of the Water Maiden since time immemorial.
We are warriors, sworn to our goddess, defenders of the townsfolk who cannot
defend themselves from the rift horrors. That winter, I was failing in my duty.
I knew the
disappearances were related to the rifts. That much was obvious given the time
of year, but I had not found the tracks of some horrible beast or seen any
other evidence of such foulness wandering our lands. Looking back on it now, I
was a fool to think outwards, never inwards, but at that time I do not believe I
had ever truly accounted for the potential of evil influence to seep, drop by
drop, upon the hearts of those I protected.
I was tall and
strong then, with, so I have been told, hard features set around sharp green
eyes. What a figure I must cut, heading out into the chill light of the setting
sun, wearing the green-tinged armor of the Graals with my cloak thrown back to
reveal the Order’s sword, Durendal, and a simple hunting dagger strapped to my
waist.
Durendal is,
without any doubt, the oldest object in Broceliande. It is certainly older than
the Graals and most likely came from Bretongyr, the lost paradise lands of
legend. Gwydion, the town’s aged wizard, is unable to decipher the magic that
went into its making, though I feel he knows more than he lets on. I have, on
occasion, found him in the chapterhouse of the Order, simply touching the
weapon and weeping for what we of Broceliande have lost. He shrugs these
moments off as “magically induced fluctuations of spirit” but I know there is
more to it than that. The sword is magical, unerringly sharp with an aura of
succor and strength about it. To the more attuned, it undoubtedly bears
memories of its makers. Of lost Bretongyr.
We Graals only carry
Durendal now. I know our order once used the lance in battle as well. Yet, the
lance, just like horse-mounted combat, has faded from our training. My master
Angevin always assumed that it was the thick woodlands of Broceliande that made
charging on horseback with a lance redundant, if not foolish. In reflection, I
may agree with him, though it is also possible that those who knew the art of
the lance and horse simply died without passing it on to their successors. One
more piece of knowledge taken to the graves of Broceliande. One more piece of
Bretongyr that we will never recover. I apologize, for I have wandered into
melancholy. Back to the winter. Back to my prey.
I set out that evening
to find Jacques Curier, the town’s baker. He’d fallen ill not long after the
seasons changed. According to our wise woman Jeanette, it was an illness like
that of the Poinards, yet far more terrible in its nature. Curier had been
living, bed-ridden, in his house for most of the winter. Naturally, that should
have removed him from my suspicions, but something was not right. One man claimed
he’d seen Curier, shuffling around the house and talking animatedly with cloaked
figures in the night. A huntsman shared a similar story. Spurious rumors or
evil behavior? I was not sure.
Then I had found
the charm. It was a simple thing, three circles of moldering wheat, bound
together and left to rot at the edge of the woods. The edge of the woods very
near the Curier house. It was an evil icon, the foul totem of a dark god. I had
originally seen it in the library of the Graals, in a book that is better left
closed whenever possible, and Gwydion had confirmed my assumption before
burning the thing. It was the symbol of Nurgleth, the foul master of rot, of
despair, of illness. The coincidence was too much to stomach. I did not want to
believe that one of Broceliande’s townsfolk had fallen prey to such entities,
but I was still pragmatic. If Jacques were guilty, I would end his evil,
resident of Broceliande or no. The position of Graal required no less. But
first, I had to find him.
My thoughts
swirled darkly as I approached the Curier house, a brooding, squat affair that
sat on the edge of Broceliande, almost inside the thick woods surrounding the town.
There was a single horse tied to its front, a thin grey mare belonging to Ganelon,
one of Broceliande’s aldermen. The man could not be seen, though I half expected
him to come oozing out of the shadowed doorway at any second, dressed in his
usual gold-trimmed black hunting leathers. I did not like Ganelon. He was slick
as lamp oil and had a heart that was just as black. The presence of his horse
was incriminating, but it did not seal his death warrant. After all, he was
also a judge and militia captain. I thought he might well have been pursuing
his own discreet inquiries in the night.
I could tell
right away that the house was deserted, so I slipped around the back to see if
I could find anything that would lead me to my mark. I spotted the trail of
foulness almost immediately. Something had dripped on the snow, staining it a
sickly brown and rotting the grass underneath. Something vile. Something
diseased. The trail of rot led from the house’s cellar door into the woods.
Alongside it in the snow was a track where something, perhaps the size of a young
pig, had been dragged along. I had my quarry.
In the borders
of the forest, where the dark trees were more spread out, the track was not
difficult to follow. Yet if I worried that, if it continued too far, I would
reach the barrier, the point at which the trees grew together so thick a man
could not squeeze between them. I did not imagine that Curier was capable of
going beyond that strange, natural border, for I think only Gwydion could have
done (and perhaps did) such a thing, but where foul gods are concerned, nothing
can really be too impossible.
The trail led me
to the edge of a rare clearing in the woods illuminated by torches set at equal
intervals around a squat, flat stone. Behind the altar-like rock there was a
rift, a sickly purple-green tear in reality that seemed to pulsate with
anticipation. Two cloaked figures with their backs to me were chanting slowly. On
the stone was the bound, squirming form of Thierry Lacroix. I watched as one of
the cloaked figures drew a long, slender-bladed sword from underneath its dark
robes and approached Thierry. My rage built as the child screamed pitifully. I
remember my righteous anger that Curier and his accomplice would betray
Broceliande and the Maiden so. The cultist’s sword rose for what could only be
a killing blow. I did not hesitate.
Roaring with
wrath, I stormed out of the woods. The two figures whirled at my cry and were
revealed in to me. The first was not surprising. Jacques Curier’s robe slipped
as he turned, showing his naked flesh. Small red sores covered every inch of him,
from his forehead to his feet. He lifted the slimy human skull he held in his
hands and continued chanting as the other figure stepped forward confidently.
Its hood slid
back to reveal the cruel smile of Alderman Ganelon. It was he who held the
sword, a blackened rapier that seemed to weep rust. He said nothing as he
charged me, merely smiled, full of confidence thanks to his cursed weapon. I
will admit that I was actually surprised that Ganelon was there. I had thought
him only capable of just petty injustices, not such great evil. I know now that
the alderman was the master of the pair. He had turned Jacques to Nurgleth,
perhaps even brought about the poor baker’s illness, in order to start a ritual
that would give his dark master a foothold in our valley. I never found Auguste
or Henri Deschamps. I can only assume they were sacrificed as part of the build
up the summoning that I was interrupting. At the time, I knew none of this,
Ganelon was nothing but my foe, a competent, if not deadly, swordsman trained
by some of the most talented militia members. He did not stand a chance.
Graals are
educated in an ancient style that is a sacred secret of our order, a piece of
living history from Bretongyr. Le Art de
L’coullant Espee, the art of the flowing blade, is both beautiful and
deadly in its execution. I was clinical in my fury. My first blow, a broulliard confus, flicked aside his
opening thrust and snapped his vile blade at the hilt. I slid alongside him and
whirled Durendal into a brume sang.
It is a light, precise blow that barely kisses the side of a man’s throat, just
enough to sever the blood channel there. Looking stunned, Ganelon fell to his
knees, gurgling and desperately clutching at the blood spurting out of the slit
in his neck. I think he had expected a better fight, perhaps even victory, but
he was not a true warrior, not a trained Graal. He was outclassed from the
moment I was taken into the Order.
I spun gracefully
away from the mewling alderman and advanced on Jacques. The baker had slipped
round behind me, perhaps trying to escape, which forced me to turn my back on
the rift to confront him.
“It
is over, Curier,” I said firmly, “release that foul icon and submit yourself to
my justice. I will end your suffering.”
But
Curier was staring past me, staring at the rift and shuddering violently.
` “By the Maiden, Curier,
release the icon!” I yelled. I could feel something terrible building in the
air, like lightning in a storm. Shaking in a horrible manner, Curier began to
scream and collapsed to the ground. I have seen many foul sights during my time
as a Graal, but that moment will always remain with me. The small sores that
covered Curier’s body began grow rapidly in size until horrible weeping wounds
occupied every inch of his skin. He was gagging and spitting pus across the
ground and foulness oozed from his body in waves. Curier’s screaming continued
unabated throughout. I almost retched at the sight. But then the screaming
stopped. And the chuckling started.
I turned slowly
to face the rift. The creature that emerged from it was a tall, sickly
green-skinned horror from nightmares. I knew its kind. A plaguebearer, a harbinger
of Nurgleth. Intestine and bone seemed
to sprout from its bulbous, rotting torso and its pus-colored, pupiless eye
stared at me from under a curved, yellowing horn. Upon recollection, I think it
stood at least a head taller than I, broader and undoubtedly stronger. Yet at
the time, I only focused on the thick, rusted falchion it held in its hands.
Burbling with laughter, as if finding amusement in my presence, the beast casually
paced towards me.
I charged to
meet it. I am a Graal. I fear no riftspawn. I met the downward stroke of its horrible
weapon with a broyage rapide. The
blow hit with the force of a sledgehammer and I felt something pop in my left knee
as I absorbed the shock of the strike. Yet, I maintained my footing and whirled
to the side, catching another crushing swing in a strained, formless parry. I
knew I had to end the fight quickly. Even with the strength of Durendal’s
magic, it was obvious I could not endure a drawn-out contest with this beast. I
angled my sword on the next strike, a changer
le cours, deflected the plaguebearer’s sword, and lunged in under its guard.
Grunting with effort, I delivered the floraison
couer, an accurate thrust that drives into the enemy’s chest and bursts his
heart. A swift, sure death stroke that immediately ends a duel.
I sunk Durendal
to the hilt before I realized my terrible error. The creature looked down at
the magical blade buried in its body and bellowed with laughter. It had no
heart. I had miscalculated. I would die for it. Thierry would die for it.
Broceliande would die for it. The plaguebearer delivered a sharp, vicious blow
to my chest that cracked my armor open and sent me flying back across the
clearing to the edge of the torchlight. I slammed into a thick tree trunk and
slid to the ground in a wounded heap.
The plaguebearer
stood before the altar, my sword buried in its body, chuckling to itself in a
sick, wheezing manner as it slowly advanced on me. I dragged myself upright and
at least one broken rib scrape together. The pain nearly dropped me back to the
ground again. Battered and bruised, my armor shattered and rusted, I gritted my
teeth and gazed upon my doom.
Most men would
have broken and run then. I am not most men. I am a Graal. I stood firm. It is
what we are sworn to do. I ignored the screaming pain in my body, drew my
hunting dagger, and charged the rift horror again.
There was a certain
madness to it. Angevin would have called me a fool. But he would have also been
proud. One Graal, charging against the darkness with nothing but his spirit and
courage, defying evil to the end. Such is the heroism our order is made for.
The monster let me come on, chortling all the while. I think it was amused. It
thought me easy prey now. It thought wrong.
I leapt forward as
I neared it and drove the dagger downwards with double-handed grip. Surprised,
the beast tried to swat me away but I had been too quick and it too
lackadaisical. My small blade pierced its bulbous eye, popping it like a rancid
boil, and my armored weight slammed fully into the creature as its chuckling
turned into pained bellowing. As it stumbled backwards, I gripped onto my sword
and pulled. With a howl of effort, I drew Durendal from the squelching grip of
sickly flesh and whirled it around in a mighty swing. It was la riviere separant, the beheading
stroke. The rift monster’s head went sailing away across the clearing, my
now-rusting dagger still embedded in its destroyed eye. Its body staggered for
a second before collapsing and immediately began dissolving into a pile of filth,
maggots, and worms. I spat on it as I turned on the portal once more and
hobbled back towards the prone form of Jacques Curier.
The hideous,
twisted baker had still not released the skull. I doubt he could have, even if
he had wanted too. He stared up at me, his eyes wide with madness and fear. I
wonder to this day if he knew what had been done to him. That he had been made
a conduit for a dark god, his flesh and spirit, and the flesh and spirit of his
young victims, traded to open a portal large enough for just one of Nurgleth’s servants
to come through. A quick thrust downwards with Durendal ended his miserable
existence. I took no pleasure in the act. Upon his death, the skull dissolved
into grime, and the portal began to slowly ebb and fade.
I painfully made
my way to young Thierry, still tied up on the altar stone. He was unconscious as
I went to lift him, but small, three pustule groupings rapidly forming on the
side of his neck stopped me short.
I think I cried
out then. The exposure to the plaguebearer had been too much for him. He lacked
the protection of damnation or the blessing of the Maiden. For the second time
that night, Durendal drove downwards in the mercy stroke. I, Thierulf Le Hir,
had failed to save another child. I had failed in my duty. To this day, I pray
that the Maiden forgive me for that.
Sorrowful, I carefully
wrapped up my heavy burden in my discarded cloak and set off towards
Brocelainde. I would send for Gwydion and the militia to help me purge the
clearing when I got back, but first, I would burn the body of young Thierry.
The Curier house would be his funeral pyre.
It was winter in
Broceliande and I wept as I limped through the snowy, uncaring woods with a
dead child in my arms. I hate the winters.
*****
For my mother, who convinced a 10-year old me to buy Bretonnians instead of Wood Elves because she knew I would like the "King Arthur knights" more. She was, as always, right. Rest in peace.
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