About
Community
Bad Ideas
Drugs
Ego
Artistic Endeavors
But Can You Dance to It?
Cult of the Dead Cow
Literary Genius
Making Money
No Laughing Matter
On-Line 'Zines
Science Fiction
Self-Improvement
Erotica
Fringe
Society
Technology
register | bbs | search | rss | faq | about
meet up | add to del.icio.us | digg it

Shareware sci- fi

MY LORD AQUITH
By
Yves Barbero


I

My Lord Aquith directs me to place these words on paper.

He insists that I identify myself as the scribe. Men call me Piplerian
Q'Norcail Veni. My Lord Aquith laughs as he rolls my name about his tongue.

"They gave you enough names to rule a country."

I was found forty-four years ago in a field. I came into this world
deformed so my parents abandoned me. This wasn't cruelty but a chance to
give the gods an opportunity to correct their error. They chose to do so
by having Lord Aquith, the elder, my Lord Aquith's father, pass judgement
that I should live. He gave me to the women of the Keep to use according
to their needs and my poor talents.

Each of the eleven women offered the gods a name for me. Denir, the
priest, accepted each name and gave them a form he called, "logical."

Wise Denir saw my eyes and pronounced me fit for education as a scribe.
Denir had a wisdom that spoke of the elder gods although he wore the cloth
of the usurper from the East, the one Patrick brought, the God of Death,
the one they call, Savior Christ.

I fear this god. He has ambition. He states that other gods are false. I
state no god is false who makes himself felt. Denir would have understood.
With a grin, he adopted the cloth of the new god and let the water be
splashed on his face.

"Patrick," Denir once told me, "had men with heavy swords at my baptism. I
didn't want to be called to the bosom of this new god on that day so I
made do with his blessing instead."

"But baptism is powerful," I protested.

"And I am a good Christian, Pip. I didn't take his holy water with a
closed heart. Still, an ocean could not wash from me the ways of my
fathers. I still carry the verse of law and the stories of old. The old
gods have not left me. Christ will simply have to share me with them.

He laughed shamelessly.

Denir was old when I was young. He said he would face this Christ and
mediate his quarrel with the elder gods in the next world. Denir's had no
success as yet, if I may judge from the humorless monks who replaced him.
They have not the poetry or humor of the Druid, nor his learning of the
law. They act without precedent, relying on unknown spirits rather than
the law.

Men no longer know how to behave.

These monks have only scribbling, something, if I serve as an example, any
idiot may learn.

I bless my Lord Aquith that these pages will be secret and I can say my
piece without fear of these dark monks. These men of small learning
despise me as I know their craft without sharing their loyalties. I serve
the elder gods in secret. When they splashed the holy water on me, I was
in this world but a few days and so the baptism was less powerful and did
not hold my soul.

They know but cannot kill me. My Lord Aquith protects me.

Still, the purpose of these pages is not served by my ramblings of the
past. It is the events of recent days that must be set down. I place my
first lines only because my Lord Aquith thinks they will help those who
are to come to under- stand. He has faith that these pages will be found
in an age when we are both dust.

"Even the walls have their lifetimes. There'll be a time when these stones
are removed and the iron chest will once again come before the eyes of men.

"What sort of men will find it?"

"You're curious for a scribe, Pip. I venture they'll be much like us."

"Wiser?"

"I fear not. Cleverer, perhaps, with better tools. But not wiser."

I could see he was having private thoughts as he said it. He broods at
times. I can't presume to understand the meanderings of my betters. He
gives me much freedom in the strokes of this quill. He knows I understand
the limits of his tolerance."

My Lord Aquith was presiding over the festival of the fall. It has always
been a time of joy. For the space of a few days, the drudgery of summer is
replaced by mild weather and there is time for contemplation.

The poets are at their best just before the first snows and will recite
for long hours before the fires of cool eves.

Children born in this season are strong.

If they are boys and survive the winter at their weakest, they become the
good right arm of my Lord Aquith. The common soldiers are always chosen
from this stock.

If they are girls, they will bear many children.

It's a good time under the rule of the elder gods. I don't know what this
Christ will bring. No comforting thoughts, I fear.

The festival was lit by seven huge fires set in the ancient pattern. They
lit the spirited dancing of the young. If the old gods looked on all this
with mirth, the sexless monks from the East viewed the dancing with fierce
and unforgiving glares. But for the will of my Lord Aquith, this ritual
would be forbidden.

I saw the future Lord Aquith standing among the monks, his hair
unnaturally cut with continence as stony as theirs.

May the gods preserve!

The child, who has barely seen six summers, seemed so joyful at birth. Now
he is Christ's. Does a dark generation cloud this Keep?

They say Christ walked the Earth in the guise of man. Could he have been
like his followers? I wonder if his judges were not correct in their
judgement. My Lord Aquith once executed a man who was leading his
followers in a pattern of worship my Lord Aquith thought too rigid. I
asked him why. Did not this man honestly worship the old gods? Surely the
complaints of worthless monks was not reason enough to execute a man?

"You presume to judge my judgement?" He asked in a playful manner. He can
be playful about his deepest feelings.

"I...I did not mean to presume...to give offense. Truly, I sometimes
forget my place."

He laughed. "I don't take offense of your sincere question, Pip. Nor
should I use my office to intimidate a loyal servant. Forgive me!"

"Readily, Sire."

He pondered for a long moment. "There is a type of man who traps himself
in a few ideas. If he also carries the ability to lead others, he becomes
dangerous. He'll challenge my rule, first, then that of the gods."

I didn't completely understand and pressed my Lord Aquith. Had I let it
go, he would have been truly angry with me. He demands honest opinion and
will not tolerate agreement for the sake of ambition or fear of a beating.

"Do you think I was unjust? Answer me honestly, Pip!"

"Forgive me, Lord, but where is the precedent? All law is precedent and
there is none for this."

"I thought you despised Hetter," He said of the executed man.

"I confess my hatred of Hetter. But I cannot see how he threatened you, my
Lord Aquith. He was weak and too ill disposed to command soldiers. My hate
is not sufficient reason for his execution. There must be precedent."

He nodded. "For a crippled fool, Pip, you ask hard questions of me. The
Christians have supplied the precedent. Consider the Christ! At best, he
was a worker of wood, a cabinet maker, a carpenter. A good skill, highly
valued and yet the priests sought his death for leading the people astray.
But now, his followers have the ears of kings and the dear of the people."

My Lord Aquith saw that I finally understood. In the quiet that followed,
we shared the same thoughts.

I watched the young dancers, especially the women, with envy and let my
mind wonder back twenty-five years when I shared the hay with Minia. It
was my only time. She was older by two summers and crippled of mind and, I
think, she was given a coin by the elder Lord Aquith. I was his fool. He
fed me and provided. She was of good disposition.

My Lord Aquith's laughter behind me returned me to the present. "Thinking
of Minia, Pip?"

"Aye, Lord."

"I think of her too. You were not the only one she introduced into the
mysteries. She was cruelly dealt with."

She was fond of throwing rocks at the soldiers, who were expected to
accept them with good humor. Gentle, if playful, demons possessed her. One
knight, who had changed his name to Sir Paul on accepting the Eastern God,
chose to torment her for her graciousness towards men.

Minia would not be tormented. Her kindly demons would not allow it.
Instead, they showed her how to torment Sir Paul with smiles and loose
garments and a grab at certain moments and at certain parts making others,
including my Lord Aquith, laugh at the knight's redness of face.

She was found along the road with her throat cut. The wound bore the mark
of a man who knew his trade.

Denir said, those years ago, that the killer had used her forcefully.

Two nights later, I heard screams from the tower. A man was being whipped.
His name is my Lord Aquith's secret though I know it to be Paul, Knight of
Christ. My Lord Aquith will neither confirm or deny my certain knowledge,
even now, ten years after Sir Paul's death and sixteen since Denir made
his way to the Keep of Christ to mediate for the old gods.

My certain knowledge came from the uncomfortable walk of Sir Paul the next
day. I told Denir of it and he mumbled sadly, "Sir Paul took an oath to
Christ. If it was he who could not control his lust and he who would kill
to hide his weakness in violation of the Christian commandment, his
punishment was soft indeed.

"Why did he not give her a gift of copper? She was playful."

"She also had a tongue and Lord Aquith cannot abide hypocrites. If Paul
took an oath of chastity, as foolish as such an oath is, our Lord Aquith
would expect him to keep it. He murdered her to keep the secret...if it
was he. Oh, that all men were like you, Pip."

My Lord Aquith gave me his cup. "Drink quickly, Pip! There will be another
after that. Soon, we'll all walk as you do!"

His four knights, Sir Cullier, Sir Michael, Sir Malyarn and Sir Asien all
laughed. Only the sour monks kept their silence.

The mead went down roughly and I was quickly drunk.

"Look!" A monk shouted, pointing to the sky. "A sign from heaven!"

We all looked up. The shout came from a truly frightened man.

The stars seemed to be growing and disappearing in silence. The night was
lighted up as if by lightning but the brief daylight was longer than
lightning and there were no clouds or claps or rain.

"The gods battle!" I shouted.

"Aye, Pip!" Sir Malyarn answered nervously.

A monk drew a cross from his belt and held it out. "There is no God but
Christ, heathen!"

Sir Malyarn made the sign as he staggered back, fearfully. I held my
ground. Drink had made me brave. That was foolish. The monks would find an
opportunity to flay me.

"Silence, monk!" My Lord Aquith ordered. "Back to your place!"

The monk retreated but did not replace the cross in his belt.

"What is it, Lord!" Sir Cullier shouted.

"Am I a seer to know the heavens?"

We watched the silent battle. Only the roar of the seven fires could be
heard. Everyone had fallen silent and looked upward.

Soon, it was over.

My Lord Aquith laughed. "Are we to be frightened by the manifestations of
the heavens?" He shouted for all to hear. "The gods, too, have their
quarrels!"

The knights joined in the laughter.

"Dance!" My Lord Aquith ordered. "Be joyful, least we displease the
bountiful gods and they have cause to turn their terrible weapons on us!"

The drum took up their rhythm and the dancing resumed.

My eyes were misted from drink but I saw a silver spear, larger than the
largest horse, pass in front of me, its shaft afire. A clap of thunder
followed it an instant later. It was louder than any thunder I ever heard.
A rough wind made the seven fires sway after the spear. Many fell to the
ground from the force of this momentary storm. Or from fear. Drink and
wind combined to cause of my falling.

I felt my Lord Aquith's firm hand pull me up and with his other hand, he
handed me my cripple's stick.

"What..."

"There's nothing to dread," My Lord Aquith said to my startled cry.

There was a smaller clap of thunder in the distance. The ground shook,
almost knocking me from my feet again but for the strong hand of my Lord
Aquith. In the far, beyond the trees, was a light of unearthly glow.

After a spell, it disappeared.

"Dance!" Came the cheerful command of my Lord Aquith. The drums resumed
their beat and the pipes took up the drone. We watched the young people
dance into the night and disappear into the mounds of hay. Drowsiness was
creeping up on me. In fact, I soon fell asleep in the bliss of mead. Sir
Cullier told me that it was my Lord Aquith, himself, who carried me to my
straw below the kitchen.

I remember the look on my Lord Aquith's face before the slumber of mead
took me into the shadows. It was turned to the spot of the distant glow.
The smile disappeared, a frown formed and the eyes narrowed.

II

The days of September soon ended.

Little happened except that I was beaten one night by two monks as I
stepped from relieving myself. I had taken my cup of mead as was permitted
me on Sundays but I wasn't drunk. Still, I am old and my body seems in a
hurry to relieve itself.

The monk's cowls hid their faces but I knew them to be John and Mark. Of
the five my Lord Aquith is forced to tolerate, it could only be them. I
didn't complain to my Lord Aquith over this trifling incident. It is the
place of cripples to be beaten from time to time.

It's only because Sir Cullier happened upon the scene that my Lord Aquith
learned of the act. Sir Cullier approached the monks and with the back of
his gloved hand, boxed their ears.

Naturally, they fled.

"Cowards!" He shouted after them. He looked down on me. "Who were those
monks?"

"I did not see their faces, Sire!"

A grin appeared on his face. "But you know who they are, little cripple."

I said nothing.

"You fear their retribution? Very well, have it your way!" He kicked my
stick to me and left. It's not that Sir Cullier wanted to show me
kindness. He, himself, has booted my behind when I was slow to react to
his commands. Although he is more playful about it then cruel. Sir Cullier
has a sense of the law and the law leaves punishment as the sole
prerogative of the Lord of the Keep or fathers punishing children.

"How long have these beatings been inflicted on you?" My Lord Aquith
demanded of me the next morning.

"All my life, Sire." I was trembling as I stood before him. Not from fear
of retribution from the monks but because I held back from my Lord Aquith.
He had always looked to me for the Keep's whispers.

Sir Cullier is the shrewdest of my Lord Aquith's four gentlemen at arms.
"He knows who they are, Sire. I offered Pip my protection. I am offended
that he still fears them."

My Lord Aquith's eyes narrowed. "Do you accept Sir Cullier's protection?"

"Yes, Sire." I was trapped.

"Then name the monks!" He boomed.

"John and Mark, my Lord Aquith!" I had little choice in naming them. I
didn't understand why my Lord Aquith made such a display of the incident.
He knew that I was beaten from time to time by the cooks or some soldier.
He never made a fuss over those incidents. But he ordered John and Mark
back to their bishop after giving them twenty lashes each.

In private, I later asked him why. "I am not so important that you would
anger the bishop?"

"You see only the surface, Pip. If you saw more fully, you'd be a better
instrument to me. I am the law, here! If you committed some offense, I,
and only I, must be the instrument of your punishment. The Church presumes
to take my place in ordinary matters. It needs to be taught its place."

"But my Lord Aquith, John and Mark didn't beat me for some offense of the
law but because they despise my learning and my teacher, Denir."

"Aye, that's true. I chose to see it another way since it's of use to my
policy." He grinned. "Think of the benefit it does us both. The bishop
will be more thoughtful because I dared punish his agents and you, little
cripple, are not likely to be beaten again. Twenty lashes to important
monks is something the cooks will remember."

With that, I shared his grin.

It was the third day of October when the woman came before my Lord Aquith.
She came dragging her daughter behind her by the hair. It took two guards
to restrain the daughter, I was later told.

I was sent for after a few questions by my Lord Aquith.

"Pip, take pen and paper and mark down our words!"

A monk, Jeromy, protested. "We may do the task, Sire!"

Jeromy and Martin were left to us after the banishment of Mark and John.
Old Albert, the fifth monk, was in ill health and did not share the
confidence of his younger brothers. They suspected him of being a secret
Druid. He did nothing to contradict their suspicions. He didn't care what
they thought, knowing full well that he'd be in Christ's Keep before many
weeks would pass.

"Silence, monks!" Sir Cullier shouted, placing a hand on his scabbard.

Jeromy knelt before my Lord Aquith. "Sire! This woman speaks of demons and
outworldly fires. Surely, this is the province of the Church?"

"I acknowledge your interest in this matter, monk." My Lord Aquith told
him. "But I want a hand free of bias to write down her words. You are free
to copy Pip's lines later."

Jeromy nodded and resumed his place.

"Speak, women! Tell Pip your name and that of your daughter!"

The old woman spoke. "I've always been called Boutha and my daughter is
Mary. After the Virgin. I tell you, great Lord, that she is the first
child to be named after the Virgin in these parts. I was first in my
village to acknow- ledge the Christ as my Lord and Savior. It was eighteen
years ago when I was heavy with Mary..."

"Yes, yes! Go on, Boutha!" My Lord Aquith gestured impatiently. "I know
you are a woman of true virtue."

Boutha's eyes grew large. I picked up pen and ink.

"It was the night the gods battled. I shared my bed with my husband, Tull.
And Mary slept by the door."

"Why wasn't Mary here with the other young people?"

"She was wed last year."

"Why was she not with her husband?"

"Jos is gone."

"Yes." My Lord Aquith reflected. "I remember now. Was he ever found?"

"No, Sire!" Sir Cullier supplied. "We think he was taken by the bog."

"Or thieving on some southern road!" My Lord Aquith added to general
laughter. "He was a wild one, I recall. Continue, Boutha!"

A horrible shriek came from Mary. It was so sudden that the guards were
taken by surprise and let her go. She ran for mother, striking her cruelly
about the head and shoulders. Surely, she would have slain her mother if
Sir Cullier had not acted swiftly and pulled the girl away.

Mary turned her rage on my Lord Aquith's retainer and bit him on the hand.
Sir Cullier made short work of her. One blow from his free hand and she
fell unconscious.

Jeromy approached my Lord Aquith. "The girl is possessed! It is a Church
matter!"

"Perhaps, monk!" But so far, I am convinced only of a quarrel within her
family. Let the evidence unfold itself! If it reveals concerns belonging
to the Church, I will allow you voice. Until then, you will remain silent!"

Boutha was on her feet. Two marks were on her face and blood came from her
lips.

"Let Boutha be attended to!" My Lord Aquith ordered. Take Mary and lock
her firmly! Pip, attend me!"

I followed My Lord Aquith and Sir Cullier to the chapel behind the great
hall of the Keep.

Jeromy and Martin followed us but Sir Cullier closed the heavy door of the
chapel before they could enter, saying something I could not hear but
which sent the monks angrily away.

My Lord Aquith approached the altar and bowed slightly to the iron cross
with the figure of the Eastern Savior nailed firmly to it. "Forgive me, my
Lord Christ, but these matters concern you not!" He turned the heavy cross
to the wall.

I sensed sarcasm in his words and action. My Lord Aquith turned to Sir
Cullier.

"I would have your counsel, my most honest of retainers!"

My Lord Aquith used the words blunt and honest interchangeably.

"Twenty strokes for the girl, Sire! Ten for striking her mother and ten
for striking me!"

"A fair punishment, Sir Cullier. It will be executed." He rubbed his
bearded chin. "But there is something else I want your thoughts on.
Something of more pressing moment. Do you think demons are involved?"

"I know not, Sire. I know only that when a family is in the midst of
quarrel, large and regrettable claims are made."

My Lord Aquith nodded in agreement. "The curse of such claims is that they
divide villages and, unless wisdom is applied quickly, the wildest of
imaginings come forth and deaths quickly follow. I don't wish to see my
people killing each other." He turned to me. "Your eyes are full of
questions, Pip?"

I shifted nervously.

"Before you arrived at the hall, Pip, wild charges of fire coming from
Mary's finger were spoken. Jeromy and Martin immediately concluded
possession. I look for a more mundane explanation."

With those words, my Lord Aquith produced a metal object from his tunic
and placed it in my hand. "What make you of this?"

I've never seen its like, My Lord!"

It was of polished metal, such as a fine silver but without the weight of
the precious metal. One end was hollow and the other had a grip angled
from the tube and very comfortable to the hand. In the angle between the
grip and the tube was a framed space with a small piece of metal inviting
a finger. I dared not touch it for fear of the magic.

"Boutha called it a wand. Her husband took it from the girl."

Sir Cullier approached me and took the wand. I was pleased to be rid of
it. "It has the feel of a weapon, Sire. Perhaps a small arrow thrown from
the tube but I see no mechanism for winding it and it looks too small to
cause harm unless it involves a poison." Without another thought, sir
Cullier gripped the thing, his finger touching the small metal piece.

Fire, in a long straight path, issued noiselessly from the tube and
touched the metal cross on the altar. The cross glowed briefly, crackling
as it turned a color a smithy sees and fell melted to the stone altar.

Sir Cullier eyes widened. It was the first time I saw surprise on his
face. He examined the thing and carefully avoided pointing it at any body.

My Lord Aquith rubbed the bald spot on his brow thought- fully. "We shall
take care with that." He took the proffered wand from his retainer and
regarded it carefully. "Your guess is correct, Sir Cullier. It is a
weapon. I wonder how it contains the fire?"

"There is a demon within it, Sire!" Sir Cullier offered with heavy breath.

"It's a mindless demon, if he be there." My Lord Aquith observed, inclined
more to curiosity than fear. "It serves whoever pulls the triggering rod.
Perhaps it the same demon which resides in any good bow."

He replaced the wand in his tunic.

"It attacked a symbol of Christ!" I said.

"A sensible choice." My Lord Aquith ventured sarcastically. "But I think
that if it had been pointed at you, it would have attacked you. Are you
afraid, Pip?"

"Aye, my Lord Aquith!"

"You were always sensible with your fears, Pip. Let's go find this demon
of Mary's and see if he is sensible."

We left the next morning.

III

The party was equipped for war. My Lord Aquith and Sir Cullier led on
their chargers, followed by the other retainers. Those of us on foot,
eight soldiers, myself, the woman Boutha, and her daughter with Jeromy and
Martin behind them and four more soldiers to guard our rear, slowed the
procession to a slow walk.

It would take us most of the morning to get to Boutha's village. The roads
were little more than wagon tracks in the country north of the Keep.
Because of the shortness of the journey, we took only what supplies we
could carry and left the carts behind. I wish we had left the monks behind
and even ventured to suggest it to my Lord Aquith. He gave me only a
knowing grin and said nothing to my suggestion as he checked the straps of
his saddle and mounted the war horse.

It was a quiet journey. Mary's hands were tied behind her back with a
stout rope. Another rope at her feet was long enough to allow her to walk
but not so long that she might run away.

The monks mumbled their prayers for her soul as they took unhurried
strides behind her.

The morning fog had lifted and it was getting warm. My bones didn't ache
that day. It was a good sign. I thanked the sprites of the forest softly
so Jeromy could not hear.

After our talk in the chapel, my Lord Aquith, Sir Cullier and myself had
gone to speak to Mary without telling the monks. But for my Lord Aquith's
orders, I would not write the words which followed.

This is Mary's tale.

"The demon is without hair and is covered with bruises. His complexion is
fair, whiter than any man I have ever seen. And he doesn't smell! He has
no hair on his chest or legs..."

"How know you this?" Sir Cullier demanded.

She shrieked, "He is my lover! And such a lover, no woman has ever had! He
is larger than any man I have ever seen!"

She laughed madly and astounded us with descriptions I had never before
heard issue from a woman's mouth. Even the common soldiers, with their
ribald tales, would never speak as she did.

My Lord Aquith listened calmly. He kept his thoughts private. As he often
tells me, silence is an ally. People assume you agree with them if you pay
close heed and say naught.

Finally, my Lord Aquith took out the wand and asked. "How did you get
this?"

"The demon slept and I took it. I saw him chase the men away with it,
using it so the fire burned the ground before them, or the trees around
their heads. I saw him kill a wolf that came into his camp."

"But he let you in his camp?"

"Aye! I am a woman and often consort with the wood sprites. I walk into
the woods with my breasts bared and my tongue licking my lips. Sprites and
men know what that means."

She opened her dress and revealed herself. "I could take all three of you
at once and would..."

"Restore your clothes, girl!" My Lord Aquith said coldly. "We are not
demons or sprites and you hold no appeal for us!"

She laughed and closed her dress. "I know a great secret!" She seemed to
chant it and repeated it three times while doing a dance.

"What is this secret?" My Lord Aquith asked, speaking calmly as a friend
might speak.

"Before the men were the women! Once, we ruled! The old gods speak of it.
We controlled men with our passions! But then came iron. It was given men
by jealous male gods. Men subdued the Great Mother with iron. Iron stays
stiff when men cannot!"

I trembled but took comfort in the wisdom of my Lord Aquith in keeping the
monks from this interrogation. Surely, even my Lord Aquith could not
prevent her burning if the severe monks heard of this.

"Did the demon tell you this?"

She gave a sinister smile. "The demon speaks a tongue only I understand.
He speaks to his iron and the iron comes alive."

"What does he say to his iron?" My Lord Aquith examined his ring of
office, showing no concern, as he spoke. I have seen him do this when he
wished to make as if indifferent.

"That's my secret! It will be my secret! My secret! My Secret!" She
chanted and resumed her dance.

"I think you lie, Mary. You don't speak the demon's tongue. You want only
to increase your importance in our eyes."

She pointed a finger at My Lord Aquith. "I am not a man and care naught
for importance!" She chanted, circling about us in her suggestive dance.
"I am the Earth! Without me, there is no ground for the importance of men
to stand! I've seen the other world! I've seen the other world!"

"Heaven?" Sir Cullier asked.

"Hell!" She shrieked. "It's a far better place! The Great Mother rules
there!"

Calm as ever, my Lord Aquith asked, "Where is this hell?"

"The gate is with my lover. He guards it with his living iron!"

"Why would the Great Mother tolerate a gate of iron to her paradise and
use a male demon, larger than men, as a guard?" My Lord Aquith was fond of
using logic to befuddle.

The girl, Mary, ignored the thrust. "You need only see the camp to see
that it is the gate to Hell! He has cleared the forest with his magic and
fire, dug a trench the length of a hundred men. In the middle, he has
planted a tree of iron. It gleams in the moonlight and small steady fires
issue from its heart. They light and go out without the agency of men.
Demons whisper from the tree. The fires are cold to the touch but light
the tree with more brightness than the moon."

"Tell me more!"

"I don't wish to. Go and ask the demon, yourself, if you dare!"

"Perhaps it is time that I do!"

My Lord Aquith decided that nothing useful could be unearthed from this
evil child and had her locked away for the night. He placed a guard at her
door with instructions that no one should enter save me with her meal. If
Jeromy or Martin came down this passage, they were to be chased away,
preferably with a good swift kick.

The guard my Lord Aquith picked had no trouble understanding.

I returned shortly after with bread and cheese and some mead and entered
the cell to find Mary in the shadows, hiding from me but issuing a cruel
laugh. I placed the bowl and cup on the floor and began walking backwards
so she could not jump out and surprise me. Not that I could do much. She
was a young woman, if frenzied, in good health and could most certainly
tear me apart before the guard could come to aide me.

She suddenly came out of the shadows, naked to the air. She leered at me,
moving her tongue back and forth. I was more than willing to believe she
was possessed by some Christian demon. First, she tempts you and then
requires feelings of guilt because you listened to the temptation. I was
frozen in place for a moment but gathered my senses and ran out of the
cell. To this day, I can still feel a trace of pain in my abused legs.

I closed the door swiftly and dropped the wood in place.

I heard mocking laughter. I had dropped my stick when I ran and knew I
would not see it till the morrow.

The guard, Flanor, looked at me in amazement. He'd never seen me move so
quickly nor my face so drained of color. He'd never been a friend to me
but he had always granted me my peace. He did not mock me and I could not
fault him.

"Did you see the demon?"

I nodded. "Don't open the door for your life's sake!"

He took out some mistletoe and kissed it.

IV

We arrived at the village as the sun was almost directly overhead. It was
deserted. Signs of burned huts were all about.

"It's Mary's work!" Boutha shouted. "She did it with the wand. She burned
her father's hand. It no longer serves him!"

My Lord Aquith rode back to where Boutha stood. "Go and tell the villagers
to come out of hiding. They are under my protection!"

Boutha ran.

In the space of an hour, she had gathered most of the villagers, including
her husband who hid his hand in a crude bandage.

My Lord Aquith looked at Tull and remembered him. Tull was speaker for
this village and met with the Lord of the Keep at least twice a year. But
Tull was a common name for men in these parts and I think that my Lord
Aquith did not know he was this Tull until his eyes rested on him. Since
these pages must be honest on my Lord Aquith's instruction, I must add
that he now often forgets the faces of those he does not see every day. In
others, this is a fault but my Lord Aquith occupies himself with weighty
matters and will not behave as a common man. Although, I hasten to add, he
was not always so grave a man. It is only in the four years since my Lady
Aquith fell from her favorite mount to the next world that he moves into
forgetful moods.

It took the strength of Sir Cullier and four soldiers to stay my Lord
Aquith's sword from the neck of the white mare.

"How fare you, Tull?" My Lord Aquith boomed to the peasant speaker.

"My hand is useless and my daughter is the one who did it." Tull said this
in the same tone as he would argue for his village's share of the harvest.
The sense of righteousness was there but his speech lacked passion.

"I will punish her, Tull. Unless you, as her sire, claim that right for
yourself."

"I will leave the punishment to you, my Lord Aquith. I can't raise a hand
against my own child."

Sir Cullier rode foreword. "Perhaps if you had exercised your paternal
duties, she would not have consorted with demons. She deserves death for
striking her sire!"

Tull lowered his head. "I plead you not to strike her dead, sir knight!"

Sir Cullier looked at my Lord Aquith for judgement.

"Thirty lashes added to the twenty, Sir Cullier!"

"Aye, my Lord!" If Sir Cullier seemed unhappy with this mild sentence, it
was because my Lord Aquith's own law prevented this sentence from being
carried out at once. It would have to be divided over the space of three
days. No more than twenty lashes a day were allowed.

"I want to break the act, not the spirit!" My Lord Aquith had explained in
changing the policy of his father.

My Lord Aquith dismounted. He placed his arm around the speaker. "We will
talk, Tull. Come, Pip!" He looked at Sir Cullier, indicating with his eyes
that his lieutenant should stay outside.

The good knight knew his Lord's tactic. To loosen Tull's tongue, he would
leave most displays of power outside.

I followed them into the mean hut.

"Tell me what occurred here, honest Tull!" My Lord Aquith said as he sat
on a basket of grain.

I placed myself on the dirt floor and took out my inks to write.

"It was the night of the harvest festival. We were satiated as it is your
policy not to count what is eaten that night in your share."

"I know my policies." My Lord Aquith said with mock gravity. "Continue!"

"We had just gone to sleep when we heard a loud noise. It was as daylight
outside. I stepped from the hut, followed by Boutha and Mary. In the
forest was a fire so I gathered the men to go and put out the fire. It was
dry, as you may remember, and we were fearful of its spread.

"We ran to the fire with buckets, hoping against hope that the spring
nearby was not dry. In my heart, I knew it to be dry. But by the time we
arrived, there was no fire. The woods were full of noises, like voices
speaking from invisible places. We were all fearful but I and some brave
lads advanced anyway.

"We came to a place, a clearing that wasn't there before but seemed to be
scooped out by the hand of a giant god. It was black and there were still
small fires about. I ordered the men to put them out.

"As we entered the clearing, we saw a metal tree, smooth and twisted like
no tree should be. It had been uprooted and was lying on its side. Out of
a hole in the tree emerged the demon.

"Fire came from his finger!

"We fled!"

My Lord Aquith nodded. "Very wise. Why didn't you come to me at once?"

"We were fearful that you'd lash us and accuse us of taking sprite herbs
for their powerful dreams."

"As I did four harvests ago?"

"Yes, my Lord. The harvest festivals bring on many strange manifestations."

"What did this demon look like?"

"He has the form of a man. I could see that well in the moonlight. His
coloring was a strange hue like metal and he was naked. Some of the lads
thought he was dressed but that his clothing was tight on his frame. He
had no hair!"

"Continue, Tull!"

"There's little more to tell, my Lord Aquith. It's been the habit of this
village not to inquire too deeply into the affairs of the gods."

"A virtuous habit. Tell me about Mary!"

"She disappeared from the village that night."

A silence followed.

My Lord Aquith let the silence fill the hut. He is skilled at questioning.
After a time, he said. "Tull, I am not seeking to punish. I only punish
deceit and you have offered none as yet. I reward truth, even unpleasant
truth. You know that. Your village has my protection."

"And the priests?"

"I will keep them from you and yours. Did you search for Mary?"

Tull dropped to his knees and blubbered.

"You didn't search for her. Why not? I know you have affection for your
unworthy child."

"The forest controls her. She belongs to the old gods. I'm but a simple
man."

"Perhaps not so simple. Were you not worried that she might be hurt and
need attending?"

"No, my Lord! Food would disappear. We knew it was her."

"Has she done this before?"

He nodded, trembling. "We thought Jos would control her. He was strong.
She drove him away or..."

"...Or killed him." My Lord Aquith supplied. "And since then, no one has
taken a firm hand to her for fear of her magical powers?"

Tull's silence had the look of agreement.

"Tell me about the night she returned with the wand of fire!"

Tull looked around to me.

"Pip is my creature, good Tull. He is sworn to silence and bears no love
for the priests of the Eastern God. Tell me! Hold nothing back!"

"I was asleep. The smell of fire woke me. Then there shouts and strange
sounds. I left my bed to find confusion. In the middle of the confusion,
Mary was shrieking with demonic laughter. At first, I thought the fire
came from a finger. Then I saw the wand. I walked up from behind her and
took hold of the wand. My hand was in pain but I had it and threw it from
her."

"That was courageous, Tull! It was the proper thing to do!"

"I struck my daughter in fury!"

"A fury you didn't know you possessed?"

He nodded. "You know my heart, my Lord. We strapped her to a post. The
next morning, we tied her hands firmly and made knots on her legs so she
could not run away. Boutha brought her to you. Boutha thought it best."

My Lord Aquith rose. "I am glad you are speaker of this village. You have
great wisdom and Boutha is blessing to your house."

"Thank you, my Lord."

"Remove the bandage, Tull. I would examine the wound."

Tull did as he was told. Two fingers were missing and he could not move
the others.

"I've seen such injuries before, Tull! I have applied fires to seal wounds
in battle. You will live to a fine old age. I'll have my smith make you a
hook so you may do honorable labor."

The speaker nodded in gratitude. Such services are beyond his means.

"Lead me to this demon!"

But my Lord, he is a manifestation of the harvest time!"

"Then lead me to the place! He may choose to manifest himself to the Lord
of the Keep."

V

As companions, my Lord Aquith took Sir Cullier, Sir Michael and the
bowman, O'Dounille. He left the rest to guard the village. I went as his
chronicler to the consternation of Jeromy and Martin, who insisted on
coming to protect the interest of the Church.

I thought my Lord Aquith too eager to have them along. He was plotting so
I kept my own counsel.

It was dusk when we arrived at the demon camp. I could sense the fear
amongst us. We heard whispers, voices in a language known only to the
gods. Only my Lord Aquith and Sir Cullier seemed fearless. They had faced
foes from the North, horned men with the faces of bears. I know that the
horns and faces are masks to strike fear into their enemies but it's also
true that the men of the North took on the spirits of the monsters they
killed for their coloring.

"Do you think the demon has another wand?" I asked in a whisper.

"I own more than one sword. He has more than one wand!"

The horses were left behind and we approached with stealth. There was a
bright glow coming from the demon's camp. It didn't come from a campfire.
There was an unnatural air about it.

I saw the unearthly camp, I admit, on my belly with bushes for cover. I've
never been known for my bravery.

The scene was as the Christians describe the world of the damned. Even the
shrubbery at the border of the camp was wilted in poisoned death. What
sort of god kills growing things? The land did seem plowed by some giant
fiery hand. The metal tree was twisted only as an evil entity might
express malice.

The glow was coming from two globes on metal posts.

Then, we saw the demon.

In the eerie light, he seemed naked. But I soon saw that he had clothing.
It fit tightly about his body and he carried a long wand, half the length
of a spear.

I heard voices from behind me. They were whispers.

"Return to the village, Tull! You've served me well."

"Yes, my Lord!" He seemed gladdened by the order.

The whisper of Jeromy next filled my ears. "He is a demon, Lord!"

"Do you propose to fight him, Brother Jeromy, or will you leave that to
me? The choice is yours."

There was silence for a spell.

"Well, Jeromy? Can your Christ conquer this demon?"

He was baiting the monk. I saw his purpose.

"I will cast it out!" Jeromy whispered firmly.

"Well and good, Jeromy. I will bide while you do your work."

I understood the scheme from his tone. My Lord Aquith saw the demon as a
warrior, not a spirit. He was using the demon to rid himself of these
troublesome monks. My Lord Aquith sensed this demon as a Viking spirit
come to threaten the people of the Keep. Not an evil manifestation at all.

My heart fluttered as I saw Jeromy and Martin leave the cover of the trees
and advance, cross in hand.

"Ready yourself, O'Dounille!" My Lord Aquith whispered. "If the Christ
fails us, I would trust the spirit that guides your sure hand!"

He was employing sarcasm again.

O'Dounille said a small prayer to the tree from which his shaft sprang.

The demon saw Jeromy and Martin approach. In a loud voice, they muttered
their Latin, striking more fear in me, I fear, than in the demon. How many
times has my Lord Aquith told me that Latin moves men, not mountains, and
I still tremble at its pronouncement. How foolish of me. Denir said it was
merely another tongue and taught it to me. I scribble it but fear to speak
it. It belongs to the dreaded Savior in its spoken form.

"Stand ready but hold your place, bowman!" My Lord Aquith whispered
conspiratorially. "We must give Brother Jeromy his chance."

The demon turned swiftly at the approach of the dark monks. Perhaps he
mistook them for wild animals, dressed as they were in their brown habits.
Perhaps he knew what they represented. Perhaps he thought the iron cross a
weapon. I cannot tell. He raised his wand and pointed it toward Jeromy.

If Jeromy had stopped, I believe, the creature would not have loosed the
fury of the weapon upon him. He had only chased men away before.

Jeromy's chest burst into flame and the monk was thrown violently back and
clearly killed, his face frozen in astonished death.

Martin dropped his cross and ran.

The demon made no effort to chase him.

"Now, bowman!"

O'Dounille loosed his arrow.

It found its mark in the demon's shoulder. The demon let out a cry and
fell backwards from the force, dropping the long wand. I have never seen
O'Dounille err by so much as an inch. And yet, he only wounded the demon.

Before I could think, my Lord Aquith and Sir Cullier ran to the fallen
creature and prevented him from recovering his wand by placing the blades
of their broadswords to the throat. If the demon moved, he would be dead.

Sir Michael watched where his master couldn't in the event another demon
lurked in the dark.

"Pip!" My Lord Aquith shouted. "Come here!"

I ran to him.

"Look at his eyes, Pip! Is this a demon?"

I stuttered and cleared my throat as I looked at the darting, fearful
eyes. "No, my Lord Aquith! He is a man, misshapen as I am, but a man!"
Indeed, his ears were too small for his head and of an odd shape. His skin
was unnaturally white but the eyes told all. Aside from their red color,
they belonged to a man.

Martin came up. "A demon, Lord Aquith! It is a demon! Strike it dead!"

My Lord Aquith struck Martin with the back of his mailed hand. "You left
your brother and dropped the sign of your god! You feared that the
promised paradise was an empty claim. You have no faith! Among us, you no
longer have a voice! Go back to your bishop and report what happened! Take
care that you report honestly or you will fear my wrath! I promise you,
Martin, that your kind will no longer trouble me.

Martin fled.

"My Lord Aquith," I said. I could no longer restrain myself. "Why did you
not use his own wand against him. You bare it in your tunic?"

He laughed. "Politics, Pip! If I had used the demon's weapon in the sight
of the monks, the Church would charge me and I would burn. Could I resist
the combined force of my enemies if they were given the blessing of the
Church to steal my lands?"

I blinked.

He stooped and looked me directly in the face. "All is politics, my
friend. Even the capture of demons!"

I regarded the now helpless creature. O'Dounille was applying herbs and
bandages to the demon's wound. "You didn't kill by choice?"

Firmly, O'Dounille said, "I never miss!"

Overhearing my query, my Lord Aquith supplied. "If fear of the unknown
were a crime deserving of death, I would have to kill not only this
creature but all of us. This poor individual is only guilty of being in a
strange country where even the elements seem hostile. The bowman obeys my
will."

"And his corruption of Mary?" I stammered.

"I think it was the reverse, Pip! For her crimes, Mary will be lashed and
sent to a nunnery to serve her namesake."

"And Jeromy's death?"

"I engineered that! The sin is on my soul, not this poor demon's. I shall
excuse it as political necessity for my conscience's sake. Jeromy and his
brothers were ready to put people to the torch. I want none of that in my
lands. Undoubtedly, it will cause me some financial pain since the bishop
is a greedy man. He is not like his patron, Patrick, thank the gods, who
was a fanatic. Greed is a useful political tool for curing disputes which
could otherwise become violent."

"At last, we will be free of these troublesome monks!" Sir Cullier added,
still guarding the creature with his exposed blade.

My Lord Aquith placed his hand on the shoulder of his comrade-at-arms. "I
wish that were so, old friend. I venture to guess that these Christians
will plague us again in a few years time."

"Do you judge this creature as faultless, then?" I ventured.

"Merely luckless, Pip! Not faultless! Look at him! He is a wounded soldier
left to die by his retreating fellows. His one crime, in my eyes, is that
he was careless with his weapon and caused my people harm. Had any died at
Mary's hand, he would have died with her on the gallows. But none did so
their lives are saved. The arrow has made his arm useless and is
punishment enough for a warrior."

My Lord Aquith turned to Sir Michael. "Gather a party of villagers and
cover the metal vessel with earth! Until the trees grow back, this place
is forbidden!"

"Aye, Lord!"

"Vessel?" I repeated.

"He was a sailor of the skies using the stars as harbors. Now, he is as
earthbound as we. His people have great knowledge and can create great
works. Still, I don't think they are gods or demons. They have too many of
the same qualities we have. Fear, lust, war and ...despair."

VI

Even as I write these final lines, I look from the window to see the demon
sitting in the courtyard. He is morose and searching the heavens in false
hope. For the last several days, his bonds have been removed and the
guards ignore him. There's no place for him to go.

He eats little and shows no interest in those around him. He makes no
effort to learn our speech and says little in his. If the women hadn't
thrown a blanket over his shoulders, he would have no protection against
the lightly falling snow. When he does speak, the speech is directed at
himself.

He is pitiful and I fear he will soon die.

"He knows he is abandoned." My Lord Aquith says as he looks over my
shoulder. "A man who cannot adjust himself to the situation at hand has
naught but my contempt, Pip. He is less than a man. You, dear Pip, are a
true man. Fate gave you poor legs and a deformed back and you're burdened
with the contempt of the unthinking. Yet, you go on. You serve a useful
life."

He places his hand on my shoulder and walks to the wall to prepare the
mortar which will seal these words and the two demon weapons firmly in the
Keep.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------
(C) Copyright 1987 by Yves Barbero
415-285-4358
1073 Dolores Street
San Francisco, CA 94110

Yes, you are welcome to download this story for your private and
non-commercial use. Yes, please upload this story to other non-commercial
bulletin boards.

Yes, if you enjoyed MY LORD AQUITH and you don't have ten kids to feed,
encourage me to upload other stories by sending me a few bucks to buy
groceries and keep the wolf from the door.

Yes, if you want to make other uses of the story, please contact me for
permission and to make arrangements. It does belong to me.

- THE END -

 
To the best of our knowledge, the text on this page may be freely reproduced and distributed.
If you have any questions about this, please check out our Copyright Policy.

 

totse.com certificate signatures
 
 
About | Advertise | Bad Ideas | Community | Contact Us | Copyright Policy | Drugs | Ego | Erotica
FAQ | Fringe | Link to totse.com | Search | Society | Submissions | Technology
Hot Topics
Simpsons movie!!
blazing saddles SUCKED
Gummo
Hannibal Rising
Who's Your Caddy?
Requiem for a dream
Mobster Movies
Top Ten Movies to Watch on Acid
 
Sponsored Links
 
Ads presented by the
AdBrite Ad Network

 

TSHIRT HELL T-SHIRTS