The Black Knight

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The Black Knight Page 37

by Sean Christopher Allen


  Eoin struggles internally before finally listening to Alastor. As he stands before the altar, Eoin embarks on his ascent, leaving the Madness behind at long last.

  Alastor is left alone with the girl and the forest of immobile Black Knights, still as the spires around them. One of them finally builds up the courage to attack the girl. She swings her arm as if to strike him, but a power issues forth from her, causing all of the Black Knights to lose their physical form in an instant, bringing about a snow of frozen ash.

  “It has not even been two years since last we met, little one,” Alastor says, “and not only do you look different, I would swear you have even surpassed Morrigan’s power.”

  The Fairy girl walks around Alastor, still on his hands and knees, pulling the swords and blades from the enemies out of his body as a mother might remove splinters from her child.

  “Why do you let them hurt you so?” she asks, ignoring Alastor’s musing.

  “Weapons have never been a threat to me, Fairy.”

  Pulling the last of the swords out, the Fairy girl kneels down before Alastor.

  “I am not speaking of swords and arrows.”

  Alastor sits up, looking into the Fairy girl’s striking green eyes.

  “Then what do you speak of?”

  She places a hand on Alastor’s face, caressing his cheek with the tips of her fingers, then moves her hand down to the center of his chest.

  “Why do you let them hurt you here?”

  “I do not know what you are talking about,” Alastor says as he stands, using his blades to assist him.

  The Fairy girl stands toe to toe with him, staring into his eyes.

  “Like Leon before you, you let them steal the hope and love from your heart. Why do you allow this?”

  Alastor looks away from her, back to the wasteland of the Madness.

  “It is difficult to maintain hope and love when I am faced with what I am to become.”

  “After everything Eoin has taught you, why do you believe you would become one of them?”

  “Father believed what he did about me because of his own sins and, because of what he learned, thought I was unlikely to fall prey. He never knew that from the first time I killed, I felt the corruption eating at me.”

  “So, you then believe that Eoin was wrong about you? That he, and Gawain and so many others died in vain?”

  “I do not know,” Alastor sighs. “I have never known...”

  She places a hand on Alastor’s shoulder, running it down his arm and finally coming to rest on the bracer. Strangely enough, the metal reacts to her touch, changing color from black to silver. She giggles soft and low.

  “Even if you have no faith in yourself, we do. We always have.”

  She removes her hand, causing the metal to revert to its normal state.

  “We?” Alastor asks, returning his focus back to her, having not seen nor felt his bracer change.

  “Very soon, you will know who we are. Very soon, you will know who You are. Your questions will be answered. For now, however, you must see this small part of your destiny through with only that which you have been given.”

  “And here I thought Morrigan and what she said was unnerving.”

  “Go now,” the Fairy girl says with a smile.

  Alastor tries to smile, but he cannot. As he heads for the altar, he stops.

  “I suppose that the next time we meet, you will be older?”

  “If we meet.”

  “Like always. Goodbye, again.”

  “Goodbye.”

  Alastor strides to the altar. He places his hands upon it and, like Eoin, he starts the ascent back to Valkyr. The journey upward gives the Knight plenty of time to reflect upon his life, his fate, his place in the ancient tale. The more he tries to follow the threads of history, the more tangled they become until finally where one begins and another ends is impossible to discern. So lost in this confusion, Alastor does not realize that he has entered again the Valkyr temple until he is suddenly engulfed in fire once more.

  Unlike before, this time there is excruciating pain.

  He falls, writhing.

  Morion, Eoin and Amy all run to his aid, except Alastor cannot hear them over his own screaming. When the fire subsides, he is left in his alternate form, white hair and all, causing Eoin to recoil.

  “That is what he looks like here,” Gawain says, coming beside Eoin. “Why that is, I have only theories.”

  “I would very much like to hear those,” Eoin says slowly, still unsure what to make of the white haired man that looks like his favored son.

  Amy and Morion both help Alastor to stand, each bearing his weight as they carry him into the meeting room within the temple.

  “I am getting sick of this place,” Alastor says as the two women help him to sit down.

  “What do you expect when you are not even supposed to be here?” Gawain asks with a mirthful tone.

  “Supposed to or not, I would think this realm would be a little more accommodating given what I just did.”

  At that moment, a woman enters, wearing a white, hooded robe and carrying a golden scythe, she looking much like the twin gate keepers.

  “Alastor,” she says with a cool, ringing voice, “you have completed a most arduous task worthy of commendation, but now you must rejoin the world of mortality.”

  Alastor stands, nodding in respect of the recognition given to him.

  “How am I to return? My body was gravely poisoned.”

  “The poison has been neutralized. All that remains is to send you back, which must be done outside of this city.”

  “What about Morion and Amelia?” Gawain asks.

  “They too shall leave in like form. Follow me.”

  The hooded woman motions for the three to follow her. As she leads them out, Eoin, still in his silver armor, stops them.

  “May I follow, to see my son off?”

  “Why?” the hooded woman asks, not wanting to know herself, but wanting to discern if Eoin even knows.

  “I do not know when I might see him again. To part so suddenly again I do not feel I can endure.”

  “Admirable. Follow if it is your wish.”

  Morion is the last to leave the room, taking a moment to embrace Rachel and thank her. Gawain stops his daughter at the door.

  “Father?”

  “Keep the story I told you in your heart. Remember Persephone’s last words. Alastor needs you, so be sure to take care of him.”

  Morion kisses her father’s cheek, but does not say goodbye. By the time she exits the temple, the others are already at the city gates. She runs to catch up. They exit the city with no fanfare, the gates closed behind them.

  “Until we all meet again,” the twin gate keepers say in unison to those departing.

  ~-~~-~

  The hooded woman guides them south on the road. Morion and Amy have become good friends over the course of their journey and talk together as if they were simply shopping in Halvard. Alastor looks back to them, noticing Morion’s necklace.

  “Father, there is something I need to ask you,” he whispers.

  “And what might that be?” answers Eoin.

  “I always wanted to, but I never had the courage.”

  “That, son, I do not believe, but ask away.”

  “The necklace you gave Morion. What purpose does it actually serve?”

  Eoin glances back to Morion also, making sure she is preoccupied.

  “It negates the power of the armor,” he says solemnly. “It took all my strength to make it, which was partially why I went into seclusion after that visit to Halvard.”

  “As I suspected. I handled it once and felt... empty. Just being in its proximity made me weaker even. But now I want to hear why you made it.”

  “Your brother had shown a penchant for darkness early in life even before I sent him away and, in spite of all I hoped for, I was afraid you might also. I merely planned accordingly.”

  “Your plan wa
s for her to kill me if I succumbed to Cain’s will?”

  “Yes, Alastor. She is a descendant of the Halvard royal blood that aided Leon, and it would have been her place. The necklace was to make sure she was able to accomplish what I hoped would never be necessary.”

  “A lesser man might become angry knowing that his father planned for his own son’s death, but I am actually quite grateful.”

  “Grateful? How so, Alastor?”

  “You have removed my greatest fear, father.”

  As Alastor says that, he laughs and hangs his head.

  “What is it, Alastor?”

  “Had I known, I would have never asked you to seal the armor.”

  “And I would not have been murdered, right?”

  “Yes.”

  “Be that as it may, I feel that it was better for it to be this way.”

  “Why?”

  “If I did tell you about the necklace, and you did take the path of evil, what would have been the first thing you did before claiming the armor?”

  “I would have...”

  Alastor trails off. He knows what he would have done in that situation, and so does his father. He would have gone to murder Morion himself.

  “And after the threat she posed was removed, you would have come to me, Alastor, wearing that pendant. My father’s actions would have paled in comparison.”

  “Please, do not compare me to grandfather, even theoretically.”

  “I am sorry, but I want you to understand fully why I made the choices I did. Sending you out, having you fight in my name without the armor... I was trying to temper you. I needed some indication of what you were to become.”

  “Did you ever get your indication?”

  “Honestly? Not until you came back from Arkelon with Amelia.”

  “What did she have to do with anything?”

  “It was a sign to me. That you would take Frederic’s daughter as a companion had implications I could not ignore. Coupled with the fact that, even after facing such an overwhelming force and having the curse rage in your veins, you wanted the armor sealed... I knew then that I had accomplished my task in raising you.”

  Alastor takes in his father’s words, but realizes an oddity.

  “Wait, you still did not explain why me traveling with Amelia had any importance.”

  Before Eoin can answer, the hooded woman gathers Alastor, Morion and Amy together in a glade off the road. Amy looks at Eoin, ashamed. He smiles at her like a loving father, giving her a slight bow.

  “Father!” Alastor calls as he tries to stop the hooded woman, but a flash of light blinds all three. Before the world vanishes completely, Alastor can hear his father laugh slightly to himself.

  ~-~~-~

  Amy and Morion discover themselves outside the keep, exactly where they left. As Amy expected, she has reverted to her fallen form. She takes her alternate shape, not wanting to endure her more grotesque self.

  “Amy!” Morion exclaims.

  “What?”

  “You are yourself!?”

  Amy feels her face, then looks at her hair. It is black-brown, not blonde. She no longer has the body of the bard. She alternates forms a few times to make sure it is not a fluke. She cannot suppress a smile and a cheer.

  “I will take this as a gift, I think.”

  They look around and, not seeing Alastor, run into the keep.

  The sun is setting, darkening the land. A welcome sight for the two women, as in the dishonored lands night never falls. Up the spiral stairs they bound until they come at last into Alastor’s room again, where Morrigan and Mikha’el both hold Alastor’s body down as it forcibly pushes out the remnants of the Necromancer’s foul toxin painfully. When all the poison is forced out, Alastor’s body falls back down, sleep and rest coming for him at last, his proper color returning, the dead flesh of his wounds fast healing as the bracers can finally do their work. Mikha’el takes note of the reappeared Morion, and beside her an unfamiliar woman.

  “My Lady? You have been gone only moments. You have succeeded in bringing him back already?”

  “Not exactly,” Morion concedes.

  “But he is back, which is all that matters,” Amy says.

  “And who are you?” Mikha’el asks.

  “It is Amy,” Morrigan says as she cleans Alastor’s body of the toxin remnants and finally pulls the blankets over him. “The real Amy, Amelia, that is. Now that Alastor is safe, I would very much like to know how you regained yourself, not to mention everything else that happened.”

  The four exit Alastor’s room, going to the Cloud Hall, where Morion and Amy recount all that they saw, all they did and all they witnessed while in the dishonored lands.

  ~-~~-~

  The hours have slipped through the hour glass unnoticed as Morrigan and Mikha’el listen attentively, asking questions of every detail. When Amy and Morion’s tale finally comes to an end, none is more affected than the Fairy.

  “It sounds like Alastor never needed our help, but your going was clearly not in vain,” Morrigan says thoughtfully.

  Mikha’el stands, walking out onto the balcony.

  “In case you want some confirmation from me, My Lady,” he speaks, “your father’s story was wholly accurate.”

  “Why did you never come back to Halvard then?”

  “After allowing your mother and my sister to die, I never had the heart to return, even at Eoin’s request.”

  “You did not allow anything to happen. Their deaths were not your fault.”

  “So I have been told, yet the words never alleviate the guilt... the feeling that it was my responsibility and that I failed so horribly at the task.”

  “You should not let this guilt continue, Mikha’el.”

  “Allow me my indulgences, My Lady.”

  Amy comes up behind Mikha’el slowly.

  “Such indulgences can be far worse than the crime that brought the guilt in the first place,” she whispers to him. “Indulge too much, and you will forever regret it.”

  Mikha’el faces her, uncertain of how to respond, so he just nods.

  “How long do you think Alastor will sleep?” Morion asks Morrigan.

  “His soul endured a great hardship. To be pulled into death, then to travel to the Madness and back, facing the horrors there. He could sleep for a hundred years and I would not be surprised.”

  “Is there anything we can do to help him?”

  “No, I am afraid.”

  Morion sinks back into her chair, glad that Alastor is well, but disappointed that there is nothing more she can do for him at this point. That disappointment becomes a small defeat as she remembers the bigger picture.

  “We cannot defeat Lucius and Hector without him, and each hour we give them they solidify their hold. What am I supposed to do?”

  “Have faith that Alastor will awaken soon. Beyond that, there is nothing.”

  “Nothing...” Morion repeats to herself.

  The Queen pushes herself out of her seat and leaves without another word.

  ~-~~-~

  Gently Morion pushes the door to Alastor’s room open. The Knight has not moved since last she saw him. She sits beside him, caressing his forehead. The warmth has reentered to his skin.

  “Who are we, Alastor?”

  The lamp light flickers but stays strong. In the corner of the room is an old chair, covered in dust, not having been used in years from the looks of it. Morion walks over to the chair, cleaning it off then moving it beside Alastor’s bed. She falls into the chair, intent on watching over the Knight for as long as she can.

  ~-~~-~

  The Queen is roused from her sleep. Amy stands over her, shaking her shoulder slightly.

  “Amy? How long have I been asleep?” Morion asks groggily.

  “All night.”

  “Really?”

  “Yep.”

  Morion looks into Amy’s face, seeing that her friend has something to say, but is not saying it.

  “Is so
mething wrong?”

  “No. Morrigan wants to speak with us, up stairs.”

  “About?”

  “She did not say, but I could tell that it was important.”

  Morion reluctantly leaves Alastor, following Amy to the Cloud Hall. As they go up the stairs, Morion can unquestionably see that this was not what is bothering Amy.

  “Amy, what is really upsetting you?”

  “I had... a... dream,” Amy says hesitantly.

  “A dream? What sort of dream?”

  “I saw three woman dancing in a forest around a fire. They were speaking the language that Lucius spoke in private. The same language Alastor spoke when he confronted me and Cale.”

  “Do you know who they were?”

  Amy looks deep into Morion’s eyes, on the verge of some emotional breakdown.

  “One was my mother. One was a pale woman with black hair. I could not see the third. They all had black flowers in their hair.”

  Amy can say no more and continues up the stairs to the Cloud Hall. Morion can do little more than put her hand on Amy’s shoulder in a pathetic attempt to comfort her. Upstairs, on the table is set a platter for Amy and Morion.

  “Please, both of you, sit and eat,” Morrigan says as the two enter.

  Morion does so, although uneasily. Amy refuses the food politely.

  “What did you want to speak with us about?” asks Morion.

  “The time has come to finally tell you both the story into which our lives have all been woven: I am going to tell you the story of Cain, and his son, Alastor the Lesser.”

  “Alastor the Lesser?” Amy and Morion both stammer.

  “The man for whom our Knight is named,” Mikha’el tells them.

  Morion pushes aside the plate of food.

  “By all means, do speak, Morrigan.”

  “The story takes place during the golden age of the Old Kingdom. In fact it starts in the Old Kingdom: the Kingdom of Valachia, where we now sit. The story truly begins many, many years into Cain’s rule of Valachia, just before the All Kingdoms War.”

  Chapter Eighteen

  Antecedent

  Return to Table of Contents

  Alastor, son of Cain, hurries through Valachia castle, coming with all haste into the throne room. Atop the dais stand two chairs, one large and centered, and one smaller, set to the right of the larger. Upon the King’s Throne sits a large man, hair like midnight fire, deep in thought, unaware of Alastor. Cain in the flesh.

  “You called for me, father?” Alastor asks.

  “Ah, yes,” Cain says, raising his eyes to his son. “Alastor. Thank you for coming when I asked.”

  “That is not my name, father.”

 

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