DargonZine | Volume 14, Number 3 |
t was a cold day in Dargon. The new year had brought with it winds
from across the frozen forests to the east. While those soon died, the
temperatures dropped steadily, clearing the streets as people fled to
the warmth of family hearths. Those who went outdoors, hurrying from
building to building, did so because of compelling need.
One of the few people on the streets was leading a roan mare. He
was a tall young man, just past his seventeenth birthday, his frame
hidden underneath a thick woolen cloak. On most days, he would take time
to admire the houses along Murson Street, their dark oak framing and
shutters contrasting with the white washed daub of the walls. He admired
the way they stood together in neat rows, so different from the
randomness of his home village. But today his head was bowed within his
fur-lined cloak, hurrying past.
His name was Reynaud, a son of Gautier Journai, a minor knight in
the foot hills of the Darst Mountains. Yet he was the youngest of three
sons and had always felt superfluous, rather like a spare wheel kept in
a barn. It was a feeling that was reinforced on his sixth birthday when
he learned that he was pledged to the Heart's Hope Monastery in Fennell.
His brothers had watched with sympathy as he rode off on a cart, only
accompanied over the paths and rough roads to Fennell by a wool merchant
the boy barely knew. It had been a sad day for him.
Despite his initial fear and loneliness, his stay at the monastery
had not been unpleasant. The monks had been generally kind when he first
arrived, especially Prior Yaroslav, allowing the young boy to become
accustomed to the place. Reynaud had been taught his lettering by the
master scrivener and the ways of the Cyruzhians by the novice master. He
was a quick learn with the pen, and only one partially paralyzed novice
was considered a better scribe. When not in the scriptorum, he had
worked in the fields that fed the monastery, weeding while younger, then
helping to plant and hoe. Despite the dull routine of farming, he had
enjoyed its physical exertion, and he had always slept long and hard. He
also enjoyed the outdoors, with the sun beaming down on him, and he
found that the winters were hard because his work was shifted indoors.
However, Reynaud was not content with being a monk, worshipping the
God of the Stevene in quiet contemplation. He found the teachings of the
Stevene distant and hard to grasp. Also, the first tome he was given to
copy solo was a history of the Great Houses War, and he found himself
enamored by the great deeds, especially of the knights at Balkura. While
he had enjoyed the work, both in the scriptorum and in the fields, he
found himself restless during the prayers. As the years went by, he had
found this restlessness and dissatisfaction growing, and he yearned to
perform great feats, which he could not do in the confines of a
monastery. Then he heard of his eldest brother's death, and his resolve
to leave Heart's Hope stiffened. He had approached the abbot, and, upon
denying the truth of the teachings of Stevene, he was released and
returned home.
However, Reynaud had found that life with his family was not much
better than with the Cyruzhians. Sir Gautier, who had never had much use
for his youngest son, had been crushed by the death of his heir, and had
taken refuge in the powerful local mead. Reynaud's mother spent her time
taking care of her husband, while Reynaud's other brother had taken over
the running of the fief. In addition, the lands of the Journais were
isolated, far from excitement or power. They were also poor, and the
scribe skills Reynaud had learned in Fennell were of little use. So,
after less than six months, Reynaud found himself leaving his home for
the second time in his life, this time by his own decision and heading
north, for the ducal seat.
The first few sennights in Dargon had not been pleasant. With the
little money he had been able to bring with him, he had only been able
to afford a cheap room off Layman Street, between Main and Travellers.
In a short time, he had realized that the only work he could find,
either as a longshoreman on the docks or as a minor clerk for a small
merchant, was unacceptable to his ambitions. Yet after only one
fortnight, his funds had become so alarmingly low that he had feared
that he would be forced into either distasteful work or returning to the
isolation of his home. Then he had come to the attention of Lord Harald Mertien,
castellan of Dessow.
Dessow was a small yet wealthy manor, nearly two bells travel east
of the town. It was part of the patrimony of Anabel Mertien, the
Baroness of Drugai, the head of one of Dargon's more powerful baronial
families. She kept the manor as a place to stay when she visited her
liege, and she had appointed her cousin Harald to see to its upkeep.
Since Reynaud had entered into Harald's service, he had become
accustomed to the opulent way in which the manor was kept, although he
was in awe of its elegance when he first visited.
Yet, somehow, there was something wrong in Reynaud's life. He had
been at Dessow for over a year, and he had found himself sinking into
luxury. His food was plentiful and filling, his bed was no longer a hard
wooden plank, and, more importantly, he had been introduced to some of
the important people in the duchy. He needed to do no physical work, not
even working out with Lord Harald's men at arms, and his normally thin
frame was starting to expand in the middle. He spent the last winter
safely ensconced within the warm confines of the manor. And, despite all
this, there was a sense of something missing. He often thought about it,
hoping that naming the problem would help him overcome it, but he had
not yet been successful.
Thus Reynaud found himself riding into town on a cold Deber
morning, picking up some supplies for Lord Harald. They were luxuries: a
silver necklace with rubies made by Nila the silversmith; two bottles of
wine from Lederia; tin boxes of cinnamon and mace from Farevlin; a sack
of melons from the south, which had been rather expensively and
carefully shipped to Dargon for Harald; a box filled with tiny grytol
eggs from near Mt. Voldronnai; and lastly a large number of sable pelts.
Lord Harald waited for these items at Dessow, for Baroness Anabel would
be arriving in a fortnight to meet with the duke and had ordered a feast
to be prepared. The necklace and a warm cloak made with the furs were to
be gifts to her from the lord.
After a year of rarely leaving the comfort of Dessow, he found that
he was very cold, and he still had over two bells of riding left to
reach Dessow. His brief time within the various shops to pick up his
items had done little to warm him, so he made for the Spirit's Haven,
the closest tavern. As he hurried along, he looked back at his mount,
wishing that he knew more about horses. Despite being born to a knight,
he lacked much of a noble's upbringing, knowing how to ride them but
little else when it came to the animals.
As he walked the streets, he was of two minds about this
assignment. He had taken it partly as an excuse to leave the confines of
the manor, and mostly because he wanted to show Lord Harald that he was
worthy of trust. Harald had actually tried to talk the young man out of
going, saying that it could be done the next day and it was too cold,
but Reynaud insisted. Yet a part of him regretted that. Yes, he had been
born in the foothills of the Darst, but he had been so young when he was
sent to the monastery. There, while the life had been hard and spartan,
it was never terribly harsh, and winter's fierceness had always been
tempered by solid walls and plentiful braziers. Yet the thought of the
heroes about whom he had read, whom the elements never bothered,
inspired the young man. Thus he looked only for a brief warming.
He shortly reached the tavern. Rather than wait for someone to
emerge and see to his horse, he hitched it himself, then walked inside
and went up to the bar. The cold had even penetrated the haven of the
inn's walls, forcing the few patrons out of the padded booths and away
from the tables, into a knot of benches and chairs around the roaring
fire. May, the owner, was one of those by the fire, and she left the
group as Reynaud approached the bar, her greeting adding a hint of
warmth to the room. Reynaud ordered a hot spiced wine, and she gathered
a pewter flagon and gestured him over to the fire. She filled the flagon
from a cauldron placed next to the flames, then handed it to the young
man and took several copper coins in return. As the heat from the liquid
penetrated his gloves and the scent from the spiced wine rose to his
nose, Reynaud smiled.
As he began to sip at the wine, he saw May looking at him. He
looked back and she said, "I'm sorry, lad, but I can't remember yer
name. But ... les see. Yes. Yer the new man at Dessow, straight?"
Reynaud nodded. "Yes, mistress May," he began, but she interrupted
him.
"No need to for the fancy titles here, friend," she said with a
gentle smile. "Just call me May."
He returned her smile. "As you wish, May," he said. "My name is
Reynaud Journai and I do indeed work for Lord Harald. He sent me in to
town for some items. I just stopped in to warm up before returning."
She looked disturbed by this. "Back? Ya sure?" When Reynaud nodded,
May shook her head. "Don't do it, lad. Stay here tonight."
Reynaud gave a brief laugh. "It's only a couple of bells away. I'll
be fine," he said as he drank his wine.
Once again May shook her head and said, "There's a storm comin',
lad, and a biggun. Ya shouldn't be out tonight."
Still smiling, Reynaud finished his wine and got up. "I come from
the mountains, mist--, uh, May. I've dealt with snows before." He handed
the mug back to her and went to the door.
"Get indoors if a west wind rises, lad!" she called as Reynaud went
out the door.
Reynaud smiled as he flipped his hood over his head and mounted his
horse. He was humored by the concern of the innkeeper, despite its
misconception. He was confident in his ability to withstand any storm.
After all, he came from the mountains.
As he left confines of the town and ventured to the fields that
surrounded it, the wind began to pick up. It came from off the ocean,
from the west.
The storm started less than half a bell later, the snow appearing
from nowhere. He was shocked by its suddenness, having never known one
to rise so quickly. He continued onward, however, still confident that
the growing storm could not hinder him. Yet as he rode on, and his cloak
became saturated, and the sleet turned to snow, doubts began to enter
his mind.
The cold, he quickly determined, was the worst part, immense and
unending. His cloak hung heavily upon him, its dampness robbing him of
warmth. The wind, while stopped by the mass of the otherwise useless
cloak, whirled the snow as it howled through the trees, obscuring the
road and blowing the flakes under his hood. The sky of the aging day was
blocked by the thick clouds of the storm, bringing a twilight darkness
on the land bells early. His horse plodded along the track, its head
bowed, walking by rote along a well travelled path, the sound of its
hooffalls deadened by the snow and covered by the wind.
Eventually, the cold became numbing. His blood felt sluggish, as if
it were molasses. He lost track of time and distance. He even forgot why
he needed to go forward, just that it was necessary. With the wind
stinging his eyes and filling his ears, visions began to form.
He saw his father, tall, proud and indifferent, putting a six year
old boy on a cart to go to Fennell, while the boy's eldest brother,
tall, proud and sympathetic, watched. He saw himself, in the robes of a
Cyruzhian oblate, listening to the abbot tell of that same brother,
drowned off some far shore in defense of the kingdom. He saw his father
a few years later, slouching and vacant in his chair wearing a
mead-stained tunic, Reynaud's other brother by his side. He saw himself
standing in the streets of Dargon with a dagger bleeding in his hand,
one man laying by his feet, a fat man in fancy dress leaning against the
wall. He saw his first look at the main hall of Dessow, its dark wood
lit by high windows of colored glass and covered by embroidered
hangings. He saw himself riding on a cold day, laughing at the advice of
a kindly innkeeper.
Reynaud suddenly returned to reality, blinking at the snow that was
falling directly on his face, and he was confused as to why he was no
longer moving. Then he realized that he was lying on his back, which
hurt. He stood up and saw his horse, a darker form in the swirling
whiteness. As he approached it, he noticed that it was kneeling, which
his numbed mind knew was not right but could not understand why, and he
heard its whinnying over the wind. He tried to grip the bridle, but
found that he needed to use both hands to force his stiff fingers around
the leather straps. He turned around and started to walk, plodding his
way through the rapidly growing white cover. The hand which held the
bridle went backwards as he walked, then he felt a tug which caused him
to stumble slightly as his arm fell back to his side. He knew that the
tug was important, but not why, and he continued on. The thought that he
might never again be warm flashed briefly through his mind before it and
all others were driven away by the wind.
His daze was broken when he saw a line of light in the darkness. He
stood and stared at it for a moment, wondering how it made such a sharp
bend. Then he realized that he was looking at the edge of a door. The
sun must not have yet set, for as he looked, he could see the silhouette
of a hut or cabin by the side of the road. May's advice, to get indoors,
came back to him suddenly. He stumbled over to the hut and banged on the
door. There was no answer at first, and he banged harder, his knees
starting to give out. He was looking down, wondering where the strength
of his legs had gone, when it opened.
The door opened just enough for someone to peer out, and Reynaud
took a step back in alarm. A short female, her head apparently one with
her shoulders, looked at him. Her face seemed oddly distorted, one half
of her a flickering red, the other cloaked in darkness. Wild hair, dark
mostly but occasionally with the same reddish glow that covered her
face, was pushed back by the wind that entered through the opened door,
but otherwise she seemed unaffected. She looked at Reynaud, her one eye
flashing redly, before turning to look further inside.
"It's a boy," she called, her voice barely audible over the moaning
of the storm. He was relieved, for when she turned and spoke, he
realized that it was an old woman with a hunched back who stood inside.
An indistinct response could be heard from within. The woman turned back
and looked at Reynaud with an unfriendly grimace on her half-face. She
snorted then opened the door, gesturing him inside.
Reynaud stumbled in as the woman closed the door, and he reached up
to throw back his hood, only to find that it must have fallen back much
earlier. The room was dark but for a fire in the middle of the floor.
Beside it lay an old man, his legs stretched out to one side, bundled up
tightly against the wind that seeped through the walls, only his
wrinkled face showing, lit by the flickering flames. Reynaud turned and
looked at the woman as she walked to the man and stood behind him. Her
face no longer seemed distorted, just covered with wrinkles. The man
gestured to the fire.
"Sit, my friend," he said, his voice soft in the sound of the wind
as it whipped outside the walls. "There is a spare pallet by the door.
Please pull it to the fire, sit, and take our hospitality." The man
turned up and handed a wooden bowl to the woman. "Odilia, give the boy
some stew."
The woman snorted again, but lifted an iron pot off the edge of the
fire. She filled the bowl from it and handed the stew to Reynaud as he
pulled the pallet near to the fire. Sitting on the pallet, he placed the
bowl on the ground to remove his gloves. The heat from the bowl was a
welcome burning on his frozen fingers, and he leaned over to feel the
steam bathe his face. The bowl was filled with a thin gruel, occasional
lumps of soggy vegetables floating. He drank it quickly, scooping the
vegetables into his mouth with his fingers, relishing the taste that
brought memories of the warming room of the abbey and of his home. After
finishing his stew, he vaguely heard a voice asking him if he would like
some more. He nodded and a pot poured more of the gruel into the bowl.
Once again, he quickly ate it down, then fell into a peaceful, warm
sleep.
Reynaud awoke wondering why he was lying in chilly and damp clothes
upon a poorly made pallet of wool stuffed with straw. He sat up and
looked around at a room that was not the outer chamber of Lord Harald's
at Dessow. This was a simple hut made of wattle and daub over a crude
frame of wood, rather dark as there were no windows. The floor was bare
dirt, rather than the pine planks he was used to. A fire was burning low
in the center of the room, not too far from where he lay. Then it came
back him, the memory of the storm he had so foolishly tried to travel
through. He looked across the fire and saw another pallet and the old
man who sat upon it, one leg sticking out to the side, covered in a
blanket.
"Greetings, m'lord," said the man. "I see you are awake. Allow me
to introduce myself. I am Jon and my wife," he gestured to the form
lying behind him, "is called Odilia. Let me once again offer you the
comfort of our hut."
Reynaud looked around again. While he was warmer now, and his brain
was not filled with the numbness of the night before, he was still
sluggish with cold. Memories of the night began to return, seen as
through a fog. He had sat by the fire, a bowl of watery stew in his
hands. The old lady had opened the door to his banging. He remembered
walking through the storm, leading ...
"My horse," he said, suddenly. "Where is my horse?"
The old man looked confused. "Horse? Odilia said nothing about a
horse, m'lord."
Reynaud, his limbs still stiff, arose. "I need to find my horse,"
he said.
"M'lord," Jon said, shaking his head slightly, "the storm still
blows. If you left a horse out all night ... I'm afraid it will be too
late for it."
Reynaud stopped and thought about it, realizing that the old man
was probably right. The wind still blew outside, and he could feel the
occasional gust shake the walls, and the air outside the aura of the
fire was frigid. In addition, he remembered trying to lead the horse
after he fell, but that it did not follow him. It had been on its knees
when he last saw it. He cursed his own lack of consideration for the
beast, because he realized that it must have been lamed somehow, or its
leg broken in an unnoticed hole. No horse could survive a night in the
storm if it could not move.
He shook his head, trying to clear his mind from the fog of cold
and sleep. "You saved my life. Let me make you some breakfast," he said
slowly. But as he looked around, he could see no sign of grains or
roots. He turned to Jon and asked, "Where is your food?"
The old man looked uneasy. "You ate the last when you came," he
said. When Reynaud stared at him, not understanding, Jon pulled the
blanket from his leg, which although bound between two wooden splints
was still crooked. "It was crushed last Sy by a falling tree, and the
healer from the village doubts I will ever use it again. I was unable to
work the harvest, and although my neighbors helped, we were barely able
to bring in enough for the rent. My son-in-law was supposed to come
today with some food and to hew some wood for us, but with the storm
..."
Reynaud looked at Jon, who was sitting with his head bowed. He
understood what this couple had sacrificed for him. Silently, he turned
toward the door, lifting his hood over his head. He knew he should
speak, should explain to the old man what he was going to do, but he
could not think of the words. Instead, he opened the door and walked
out.
The blizzard still blew, although not so fiercely, filling the
landscape and air with white. While the wind howled, its ferocity was
lessened. It had also warmed slightly, and it was no longer the same
bitter cold that had so numbed his mind the night before.
The hut was on the side of the road, and he tried to orient
himself, forcing his mind to go over his stumbling to the door the night
before. He decided that Dargon was to the left, as was his horse. He
looked but could not see it, and he realized that he had only a limited
idea of where his horse might be. He took a look at the hut, then
ventured off to his left, dragging his feet through the snow which had
risen to the level of his upper calf.
The snow cover rose and fell gently, flattening out the landscape,
and he only found his horse when his foot slipped on its frozen hide.
After he picked himself out of the snow, he began digging, clearing the
snow from his fallen mount. It took quite a while until he saw the brown
of its hair. The time and effort it had taken to expose that little
patch made him stop and think.
He had originally planned to take the saddle bags off the carcass,
but he realized that the amount of work needed for that was prohibitive,
especially as the small patch he had cleared off was begining to be
filled in. Instead, he searched for the bags and, once having found
them, cleared them off. The horse lay on its side, and only one bag was
available to him, but he managed to undo its straps with his cold
fingers. He removed his cloak and lay it on the snow, then moved the
contents from the bag to the cloak. A small sack which covered two large
spheres was the first out and onto the middle of the cloak, followed by
several sable pelts. Then came a wooden box, which Reynaud handled
carefully, knowing it contained the grytol eggs. He realized that the
bottles of wine were unfortunately contained in the other bag and
probably had been smashed when the poor beast fell. The other bag also
contained the necklace and the spices, but their metal boxes might have
survived; determining that would have required uncovering and moving the
whole horse. With a relieved sigh, he picked up the bundle of his cloak
and trudged back to the hut.
The woman, Odilia, had woken up while he was out and had placed
some scraps of wood on the fire. Somewhere, she had found some grasses
and herbs and was busy boiling them. She said nothing, although she
looked suspiciously at him. He returned her silence as he walked over,
placing his bundle next to her. He unwrapped it and handed about half of
the furs to her and then tossed the rest to Jon. They looked surprised
and left them were they fell, although Odilia did reach out to feel the
fine fur. Reynaud lifted the wooden box, then opened it and removed six
small eggs, blue and mottled with greens and yellows. Although he was
disappointed to see the shells cracked as the eggs had frozen, he still
handed them to the startled woman. Her eyes widened as she saw them, and
she carefully laid them one by one on the furs that were on the floor.
Reynaud closed the box and set it aside, then raised the sack to remove
one of the melons. He handed it, with its light green rind, to the old
woman, who handled it just as delicately as she did the eggs. Finally,
he handed Odilia his dagger, saying, "In case you need something to cut
it with."
Then he turned to Jon, whose face was also amazed at the food he
had never before seen. "Good man, where is the wood?" Reynaud asked.
Jon continued to look at the eggs for a moment before responding.
"A tree fell a sennight ago, out beyond the field in back. I have been
told by the bailiff that the wood is mine." He smiled briefly and
gestured to his twisted leg, "As payment for the way it crushed my leg."
Then he pointed to a corner of the hut. "I have an ax over there."
Reynaud nodded and retrieved the ax. It was an old tool with a
cast-iron head crudely lashed into a split cleft of an old oak stick.
The handle was well worn and smooth, the balance slightly off. Reynaud
hefted it silently, nodded again, then went outside.
Even after only the brief time he had spent in the hut, the storm
was noticably lessened, with the wind reduced to a whisper from the
shrieking gale of the night before. Still, the snow fell heavily and had
risen above his knees. He found that he was unable to lift his legs
above the surface, and he didn't as much walk across the field as plow a
path through the snow. It was tiring work, and he found that he needed
to stop partway across so he could catch his breath. Standing there, the
intensity of the silence caused him to throw his hood back and look
around.
Reynaud had only seen snowstorms in their aftermath, mostly passing
them in the abbey's warming room with the monks and his fellow students.
He was shocked by the muted beauty that was within a storm while it
blew. The field was covered with a white blanket, which smoothed any
imperfections and was itself only broken by the path he had created from
the hut. Tree branches, which on his way to town only the day before had
been dark skeletons sticking out at odd angles from rough trunks, were
gracefully curved lines of brown, highlighting the thick swaths of snow
which bent toward the ground. The air itself was filled with white
flakes, as if he was looking through a layer of cotton gauze. Much to
his surprise, he saw a flicker of movement, and a small brown bird flew
from the sheltering branches of one tree to another.
One winter in Fennell, when he had emerged after a storm to the
sun's light glistening painfully on the clean snow, an older monk had
remarked that it was like the love God had for people, too beautiful to
look upon; that sort of remoteness was one reason Reynaud could not
fully believe in the teachings of the Stevene. However, being in the
midst of this storm felt right to him, as if he was surrounded by the
world. It was harsh, as the cold in his bones told him, but the beauty
was there if looked for.
Then he remembered his task. Not far in the distance he saw a long
ridge in the snow, at the edge of the field, with branches poking
through the snow cover. Replacing his hood and bending his head, he
trudged his way toward it, his legs plowing through the slowly rising
snow. At the ridge, he began kicking at it, shaking the snow off of the
branches of the fallen tree. He worked his way up and down the tree
until the entire length was exposed. Then he took the ax and began to
hack the branches off, tossing them to one side in a pile.
When he had a nice pile built up, he gathered a large armful and
trudged his way to the hut. He entered and dropped them to one side of
the fire. Odilia said nothing but nodded, bringing some closer to the
small flames to dry them out slightly before adding them. Jon offered a
large slice of the melon, but Reynaud politely declined and went back
outside.
He spent the rest of the day at the tree. After finishing clearing
off the branches, he used the ax on the trunk, starting with the top and
working his way down, hacking large chunks out. He worked his way
through the day, not paying attention to what might have been the
tolling of bells from the town, muffled by the falling snow. It was hard
work, raising the heavy iron head up then bringing it down on the frozen
wood. He felt his shoulders and arms, unaccustomed to work by a year at
Dessow, burn. Occasionally, he would reach down and fill his mouth with
snow, allowing it to melt and flow down his throat. Every so often, he
stopped and hauled another armful of wood to the cottage, placing them
in the corner which Jon indicated before returning to the tree.
As he worked, he felt a certain peace settle upon him. He felt
himself fall into a rhythm, chopping then splitting the wood. The burn
in his arms began to fade into the background. When he dropped off his
third pile, Jon again offered him some of the meager food, but Reynaud
again silently declined. It took him a while to understand why he
declined, especially when he realized that he had not eaten anything
since the night before. As the ax came down on the frozen wood, he
realized that despite the cold, the hard work, the hunger, he was
feeling good. Or maybe it was because of the work that he felt that way.
It brought him back to the days in the monastery, and how he felt after
a long day of working in the fields, or after one of the fasts. And he
understood what he had been missing since coming to Dargon.
Reynaud kept on working until it became too dark for him to see.
Then he gathered one last armload and walked to the hut. When he reached
it, he heard the Dargon bell toll ten times in the distance, and he
realized that the snow had stopped. He smiled and went through the door,
depositing the wood on the small pile. The old man once again offered
Reynaud what seemed to be the last slice of the melon, but again he
shook his head, too tired to speak. Smiling, he lay down on the pallet
and watched the fire until he fell asleep.
He awoke the next morning to the sounds of pounding on the door. He
rolled over to see Odilia walking over to open it. Bright light poured
through the door as she squinted to see who was outside.
"Good woman," came a familiar voice, "I am looking for one of my
men. He went to the city before the storm, and probably stayed there
during the blizzard. But he is little more than a boy, and he might have
foolishly decided to brave the storm. I wonder if you have seen him."
Odilia glanced at Reynaud, but said nothing. The young man nodded
and arose.
"My Lord Harald," Reynaud called as he went to the door, "I am
here."
When he reached it, he needed to blink, as the morning sunlight
gleamed brightly off the snow. He saw the silhouette of his lord, a
portly man whose build was covered by a cloak that draped around him.
The man stepped inside, showing that his black hair was tinged with grey
and his cloak was a dark crimson wool, lined with white fur, with a
woolen tunic of red, trimmed in gold thread underneath. Lord Harald Mertien
removed his leather riding gloves and laid a hand on the younger
man's shoulder.
"My boy, why did you not stay in town when the snow came down?"
"I'm sorry, m'lord. It had not yet started when I left. I found
myself caught in the middle of the storm, and I think the cold was
beginning to affect me. I was not thinking clearly. When my horse
stumbled, I left it there, and started walking. I was lucky in that I
found this hut and that these two, Jon and his wife Odilia, took me in."
"Where is she, Reynaud? Where is your horse?"
"Not far down the road," he said, pointing down the road toward
town. "I'm afraid it's dead, lord."
Harald looked at the young man thoughtfully, his meaty fingers
stroking his ample chin. "Why did you not return yesterday? The storm
stopped shortly after midday. Even with the heavy snow, it should have
taken no more than two bells to reach the manor."
"I couldn't, my lord. These people," Reynaud said, gesturing to the
couple sitting on their pallet, holding each other and staring at the
lord who was visiting their hut, "saved my life, but they were running
out of food and fuel. I stayed to cut some wood for their fire."
Harald's eyes narrowed. "And food?"
"I, I gave them some of the provisions I picked up for you, my
lord," Reynaud said, bowing his head. "I gave them the eggs and one of
the melons. I also gave them some of the furs." When Harald stayed
silent, he continued, "My lord, Jon, the old man, his leg is broken and
..."
Harald still said nothing, but looked around the dark cottage. His
eyes passed over the small fire, the two old peasants who sat in awe of
their new visitor, and before returning to Reynaud. He looked at the
young man for a long time.
"Grytol eggs are quite a delicacy, young Reynaud," he said slowly.
"Did you enjoy them?"
Reynaud looked slightly confused, then shook his head. "No, my
lord. I ... well, I have not eaten since the night before last. As I
said, I gave the food to the peasants. I have had plenty to eat before
and will have more later. But they ...?"
Harald nodded, then turned and looked at Jon and Odilia. "Do you
know who I am?"
Jon nodded, saying, "Yes, m'lord. You are Lord Harald of Dessow. We
live on your estate."
Again the castellan nodded. He backed up and gestured outside.
Another man entered, large and solid, wearing a cloak of similar color
to Harald's, beneath which protruded the tip of a leather scabbard. "You
will need to return the furs," Harald said to Jon. Then he turned to the
new man. "Albin, Reynaud's horse is laying in the road, towards the
city. When we arrive at the manor, gather some men and return here. I
want the saddle bags returned, as well as the furs that these two have
been given. More importantly, I want the carcass butchered and the meat
taken to the nearest smoke house. The meat is to be given to this
couple." As Albin started to leave, Harald said, "Oh, and make sure that
when you return today that you bring a ten pound cask of wheat. Come,
friend Reynaud. Let us go home."
As the couple called out their thanks and blessings to their lord,
Reynaud ran back to his pallet and picked up the bag which held the
other melon then followed his lord outside, slightly confused. A sleigh
pulled by two large horses was in the road, with a third man sitting on
the driver's bench. He had seen it in Dessow's carriage house before,
but never outside it, for it was only used when sufficient snow lay on
the ground. Albin climbed into the back, as did Harald and Reynaud. As
the driver began to shout orders at the horses, turning the sleigh
around, Reynaud leaned over and spoke.
"My lord, I only gave one of the melons. Here is the other. Also,
the spices and the necklace are in the saddle bags under the horse. I am
afraid that the wines were in the same bag, and are probably broken. I
am sorry that I gave your other delicacies to the peasants. They were
not mine to give."
Harald took the bag, hefting the melon's weight, then gave him a
smile and patted his knee. "Ah, young Reynaud, there is no need to
worry. When you first came into my attention, you told me that you
wished to be a great man, and I saw then that you have the seed of one
within you, although it has lain dormant since your arrival. By giving
those eggs and that melon to the ones who saved your life, and by
staying a day longer than necessary to cut their wood, you showed both
generosity and gratitude. Both are the signs of great men. You must
never forget that."
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