Showing posts with label Master Orran. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Master Orran. Show all posts

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Story #318 - White Smoke

White Smoke


Orran Genald wasn’t happy about lighting the white smoke brazier, but his opinion counted for little. He had been given a direct order by the Council, and he would comply.

“Joyous day to you, Master!” A fresh-faced young novice said as Orran strode by and he frowned in response. Though it was not fair to take out his displeasure on students of Grace, fairness had nothing to do with his mood. The council had made a mistake, he was sure, but convincing them seemed an impossible task.

By the time he had reached the tall smoke tower in the center of the palace, Orran’s mood had darkened to near black. For the last six months he had been fighting a war of words with men he knew – good men – who seemed to be caught under the sway of a sudden contender for Rennor’s throne. Vacant over the last two hundred years, the golden chair required only that a claimant of the realm step forth and prove their linage.

Ichtol Marbeza had appeared in the city a year ago as a noble merchant and began quickly making friends of Rennor’s elite. Within four months a potential link to the Kings of old was spoken in whispers and soon Ichtol was declaring his candidacy for the throne. At first, Orran and the others on the Council had been skeptical but almost overnight all of its members became convinced of Ichtol’s claim. Something didn’t sit well with Orran, but he couldn’t put his finger on exactly what or explain his misgivings to the council.

Hefting the globe of powder in his hand, he considered “losing” it outside a narrow window and letting it fall to the river below. The crushed crystal used to mark the rising of a new King was difficult to obtain and if the brazier did not burn those in the city would never accept Ichtol’s authority – no matter what the council said.

“I trust you will not fail the council,” a voice said from behind him and Orran spun, clutching the white orb to his chest. He had done nothing wrong!

“Tomas,” he grated in reply, frown deepening. The blond-haired knight and his armored companions had arrived not long after Ichtol’s declaration of his lineage and few had left his side since. Tomas was the worst of the lot – loud and boorish and with no respect for the local women. At first Orran had hoped to glean something of the larger man’s reason for supporting the new King with such fervor, but the man was rotten to the core and being around him was an exercise in frustration.

“I am doing my duty as ordered by the council,” he said once it became apparent that Tomas was not simply going to slither back into deepening evening shadows like the snake he was. “What are you doing here?”

“Making sure that all of our new King’s subjects are doing as they have been told,” Tomas smiled and reached out a meaty hand for Orran’s shoulder, but a raised arm and muttered words of Grace in return pushed the Knight back.

“You would dare?” Tomas’ eyes were narrowed and his face was red. “I thought your Grace prevented you from such rash action!”

“I am bound to fight the forces of darkness and its minion, the Awl,” Orran intoned, the familiar oath giving him a measure of peace, “and your soul is as black as any I have ever seen.”

Tomas laughed, a hollow sound, but his eyes did not share in the mirth. “Hardly a good enough reason, Master. Now climb – we will see this brazier lit together.”

There was no tactful way to refuse; Tomas had been granted status as Captain of the guard, a position that gave him free run of the palace. At best, Orran could pretend the puffed-up knight was not three steps behind him. The sixty-five prayers of Grace served to calm him as steps slipped by and he had almost forgotten his shadow when Tomas spoke again in a whisper.

“Blood oath,” he said, voice strained.

Orran turned but Tomas merely flashed another sly grin.

“Tainted,” the voice came almost as soon as Orran had turned around. “Don’t look.” He didn’t, and Tomas went on in a violent rush of words. “Hard to speak. Compelled. Ancient rituals; Ichtol. Tainted blood oath.” There was the sound of heavy breathing, as if the Knight had endured hours of battle in full armor. “Awl.” The last came through clenched teeth – a word of undying hatred.

“What are you saying?” Orran didn’t stop climbing and didn’t try to meet Tomas’ eyes again. “Have you been compelled to this action?”

“Yes.” The word was faint, but there could be no mistake in its sound.

They arrived at the brazier, and Orran moved quickly to the north window and stretched out a hand, ready to drop his white cargo to the paving stones below.

“No!” Tomas had him by the arm and hauled him into the middle of the room before he could loose his fist. “You cannot! The monster will kill us all!”

“I will not acknowledge a false King!” Orran bellowed. “Grace does not permit it!”

“Damn your Grace,” Tomas’ face and neck were red and veins along both muscled arms stood out sharply in sunlight. “Awl has his eye on this place, Orran – and wants Ichtol to be King. If you do not light the brazier, Servants will be sent to slaughter everyone in the city.”

“We must stop him!” Orran was desperate.

“We cannot. Your only hope is to fight him from within, to see to it that his decisions are always questioned and that power is never freely given.”

“You overestimate me, Tomas!” he cried. “And what will you do to save the people of Rennor should we let this thing come to pass?”

“Nothing.” The big knight slumped forward and released his grip. “I am bound.”

Orran appealed to Grace – a desperate, whining thing that brought no answer. On unsteady feet he moved forward and dropped the orb down into smoldering fire, then watched as white smoke began to billow.

Long live the King.


- D

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Story #316 - Black Smoke

Black Smoke


Black smoke from the city told Garrin Tor the king was dead. For three days he and the other defenders had been pressed at every turn, desperate to keep the Servants of Awl away from the walls and out of the streets. No matter how hard they fought or how many they killed, more streamed in from the river - it took Master Orran scrying for the better part of a day to discover that summoning portals were what the gaping-mawed beasts had been pouring through.

Garrin dove under the swing of another monster and then hefted the imbued axe that Orran had given him at the city gates. Attacking the portals had been a necessity, but there was little question that those who undertook the mission had only the slightest chance of survival. Volunteering had been his only choice - one man was as nothing unless he wore the crown.

Despair tore at him as the realization of that crown's defeat came crashing down. Even should the city stand it would be without its greatest leader - who could possibly replace the King?

A scream to his right pulled Garrin's attention from the portal. Beset by six of the hideous servants, Sir Tomas was laying about with his broad head axe, eyes wide and teeth bared. Clearly he too had seen the cuing smoke that signaled their failure, but refused to let it lay him low. Garrin felt a surge of shame - Tomas was the captain of the King’s guards for a reason, and aside from his prowess in combat he had always possesed an indomitable will, one that hadn’t made him any friends within Rennor’s shining walls but made him an implacable figure of stalwart authority. Raising the axe in his fist, Garrin bellowed out a challenge as well – if Tomas wouldn’t yield, neither would he.

Only moments passed and the last of the beasts facing the blond-haired captain were down. Charging forward, Garrin swung his pulsing blue weapon at anything that moved, hacking and slashing his way through ranks of Servants to reach their portal. With a mighty heave he cast the axe into its swirling blue fire, and just as Orran had promised it collapsed in on itself, the Servants around it howling as they did the same.

“We did it, Sir Tomas!” Garrin called, but there was no answer from the burly guard captain. Turning, he saw an armored figure running hard away, blond hair streaming and chunks of plated steel coming off with every other step.

“I’m free!” Tomas bellowed. “He’s dead! I’m finally free!”

Garrin felt fear rise in his chest – one portal was down but three others still stood, each pouring out twisted beasts to scour the landscape – the other squads had not been so successful. A pack of Servants advanced on Garrin and he drew his short sword, but for every claw swipe he turned another made it through and soon he was wavering, desperately trying to stay on his feet. Blurred visions of mounted men filled his eyes before the world went black.

***

The blacksmith certainly didn’t look anything like the man Garrin remembered, but that was also true of the man he saw when he looked in the mirror. Only timely intervention by the cavalry band and the quick action of Orran had saved his life after being swarmed under by Servants, and both his nose and jaw had never been the same. Once healed Garrin found staying in the city too painful to bear and was consumed by a singular desire that drove him into the countryside – find and punish Tomas.

“Sir Tomas.” There was no point in being coy – whispers and rumors had led him this far and despite the man’s short dark hair and easy smile, Garrin was certain he’d found the focus of his years-long search.

“I’m beggin’ yer pardon?” The big man looked up but his hands continued to move over the piece of iron he held. “Topin’s the name – blacksmith here.”

“Blacksmith for the last ten months, or so I hear.” Garrin shot back. “No one in town seems to know where you came from or anything about you beyond the fact you work with metal.” He took a step closer to the large man, hoping to find some telltale sign of Tomas’ identity.

“I’ma private man – problem, yer lordship?” The speech was all wrong – that much was for certain. No peasant spoke so strangely.

“I’m not a Lord, Tomas – you know that. My name is Garrin, and you abandoned me outside of Rennor the day of the King’s death.” There was a hint of movement from the larger man, a recoiling from his tool bench that Garrin could easily see. “Does my mentioning the King bother you, Tomas?” The flinch came again, more pronounced.

“Why did you abandon your post? Why did you leave me to die? What kind of man are you?!”

“I’m free!” Tomas roared, knocking his iron to the floor and throwing both arms into the air. “Free to do as I please and I don’t need you here ruining it, Garrin – what do you want?”

“To know why!”

Tomas sighed, body deflating as his anger ran out. “What did you really know about the King, Garrin?” He said with a grimace.

“I knew enough,” Garrin bit off the words. “He spoke to me only once, but his leadership – his compassion – were unquestioned. Rennor had never seen a better ruler.”

“No,” Tomas said softly, “though that’s what he wanted you to think. The Servants attacked Rennor because the King refused to honor his end of the bargain with Awl – a bargain that put him on the throne and gave him a contingent of palace guards bound by tainted blood oaths.”

“You!” Garrin hissed. “This is all your fault.”

“Believe as you wish, Garrin,” Tomas bowed his head. “Kill me or let me go – it does not matter. You now know the truth; Rennor’s king was in league with the very beasts that sacked its walls, and held us all captive.”


- D