The Dragon's Champion

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by Sam Ferguson




  The Dragon’s Champion

  by

  Sam Ferguson

  This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this book are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

  THE DRAGON’S CHAMPION

  Copyright © 2013 by Sam Ferguson

  All Rights Reserved

  To my wife and children,

  my inspiration to become more than I am.

  Table of Contents

  The Dragon’s Champion

  by

  Sam Ferguson

  CHAPTER 1

  CHAPTER 2

  CHAPTER 3

  CHAPTER 4

  CHAPTER 5

  CHAPTER 6

  CHAPTER 7

  CHAPTER 8

  CHAPTER 9

  CHAPTER 10

  CHAPTER 11

  CHAPTER 12

  CHAPTER 13

  About the Author

  CHAPTER 1

  Erik sat alone. The other apprentices huddled together on the far side of the hall. He heard them laughing and jeering. He heard the clickity-clack of the dice rolling across the floor.

  “Hey, Erik, won’t you join us?” one of the older boys teased.

  “He can’t,” another apprentice put in. “His master won’t let him.”

  Erik rose from his seat and laid his waster, a wooden long sword, on the cold, stone table in front of him. “There is one game that my master does let me play,” he said. The others fell silent for several moments. Erik knew that no one would accept his challenge. They were afraid of him.

  Awkwardly, the others turned back to their game of dice. Erik ate the rest of his thick, meaty stew alone, as he always did. He was more than ready to return to his studies by the time the bell chimed, signaling the end of the meal period.

  He carried his waster, as Master Lepkin had instructed him, by the hilt and launched a practice strike at imaginary enemies every three paces. He hated shadow fighting while walking for two reasons. The first was the teasing and scorn it earned him from the other apprentices. The second was that it slowed him down so much that he was always late to his next class. As a result of his tardiness Erik had received more demerit points than any other apprentice in the history of Kuldiga Academy, but then he was also the first apprentice that Master Lepkin had ever tutored.

  The significance of being Master Lepkin’s chosen apprentice was usually lost on Erik, except for the few times when he had seen Lepkin’s flaming sword. The weapon was more magnificent than anything Erik had ever seen. The long, curved blade was forged of black, Telarian steel –the only metal strong enough to survive the Dragon’s Flame enchantment. It was said that Master Lepkin had once wielded the sword against three hundred men in defending Gelleirt monastery from Tarthun raiders.

  Erik had asked Master Lepkin to tell the tale many times, but Lepkin always refused. In fact, Master Lepkin hardly spoke at all, except to give Erik new chores or instructions. Erik found his master’s silence both aggravating and mysterious. At times he felt despondent because of the solitude forced upon him by his master’s silence. It accentuated the separation between him and the other apprentices. Perhaps that was why Erik had challenged the others to a game of swordplay. He had never done anything like that before.

  Erik finished his three hundredth practice strike just before he reached Master Lepkin’s door. He slipped his waster into the frog, a leather loop on his belt, and pushed the heavy, oak door open. He spied his master standing at the far end of the chamber looking out the window. Erik assumed that his master was watching the birds, or at least he was certain that’s what Lepkin would say he was doing if Erik asked.

  “I heard that you drew your sword during lunch today,” Lepkin said.

  Erik froze. He wasn’t sure how to respond. He was almost as unnerved by Lepkin’s speech as he was at the thought of how many demerits this would cost him.

  “Yes, Master Lepkin, I did,” Erik replied.

  “Unsupervised swordplay is forbidden,” Lepkin reminded him. “I heard that you told the others that I allowed such games when you challenged them, is that true?”

  “Yes it is,” Erik said.

  Master Lepkin turned to face Erik. His face was hard, lined with a scar on his left cheek that ran from his jaw-bone up to the top of his cheek-bone. The only other marks on him were the crow’s feet caused by years patrolling the sun-washed borderlands for Tarthuns. Despite the wrinkles, Lepkin’s blue eyes were fierce and piercing, sparkling with the hard experience of battle. His mouth was straight, giving no hint of smile or frown, nor did it open to utter any words. Master Lepkin arched one eyebrow. It was the signal that he expected a more elaborate answer.

  “They were teasing me again because I’m not allowed to play dice with them,” Erik explained.

  “Close the door and come in,” Lepkin instructed. “It is time to explain a few things.”

  Erik obediently closed the door and hurried to sit in a wooden chair opposite a large, high-backed arm chair. A small, round table separated the two chairs, and was usually covered with books that Master Lepkin was studying. Today only one book lay atop the wooden surface. Erik recognized the characters along the spine as those of the Peish language, the language of the dwarves, but he could not read them. He was curious to know why this book was of such importance as to occupy Master Lepkin’s reading table by itself, but now was not the time to ask. The apprentice waited silently as his master approached and sat in the other chair.

  “The others tease you because they do not understand you,” Lepkin began. “Your rules are different than theirs. Your methods of study are peculiar to them. Even the other masters cannot comprehend the reasons behind your actions.” Lepkin leaned back in his chair and crossed his right leg over his left knee. He looked up to a tapestry on the wall and breathed in loudly. His eyes traced the pictorial representation of his battle at Gelleirt monastery. For a brief moment Erik was struck by the notion that Lepkin would finally talk about the event.

  “Were there really three hundred raiders at the monastery?” Erik asked, trying to shroud his excitement in reverence and respect.

  “We are not talking about that today,” Lepkin replied.

  “Oh, I just thought…” Erik’s words trailed off and he shifted uneasily in his chair.

  “Never mind about that,” Lepkin said with a nod toward the tapestry. “I want to know if you understand why your regimen is so different from the other Apprentices of the Sword here at Kuldiga Academy.”

  Erik furrowed his brow and thought for a moment. “I don’t know,” he said after a while. “I assumed that swordplay was forbidden for our own safety, of course, but I don’t understand all of your rules, Master.”

  “Well,” Lepkin began. “You are partially right about the swordplay, but we will discuss that last. First I should explain that I chose you for a very specific purpose. I will only train one apprentice during my time here at Kuldiga Academy, and that apprentice is you.”

  “Why me?” Erik asked hesitantly.

  “Because you understand things that the others cannot, and because you possess skills and talents that others do not.”

  “But, I’m no one special,” Erik protested. “I’m not even a true-born noble.”

  Lepkin uncrossed his leg and leaned forward. His eyes gazed directly into Erik’s. “You may see this as a disadvantage, another difference that separates you from the others, but I see it otherwise. Your background is the foundation of your talents, knowledge, and understanding.” Lepkin smiled, ever so slightly from the right corner of his mouth. “Your youth as an orphan taught you to be self-dependent. You learned many harsh realities of the
world. But, unlike many other orphans, you were adopted by a nobleman. He and his family have showed you compassion, empathy, charity, and trust. These are things that all legendary heroes understand. The ability to function in the harsh world while showing compassion to others is a rare gift. It is this that sets you apart from the others. This is why I chose you.”

  “But why do I have all of these restrictions?” Erik asked. “If I’m already better than the others--” Erik was cut off.

  “I didn’t say you were better, I said you were different.” Lepkin’s smile disappeared and he sat back in his chair. “Pride is a vice that is also common among legendary heroes,” Lepkin explained. “That is why I give you the rules you have. The other masters say that I forbid you to play dice because I despise gambling. They think I make you practice sword-strikes as you walk to train your sword-arm for battle. They say that I am silent because I want to instill respect in you. These are all half-truths. There are more important reasons for my methods.” Lepkin shook his head and glanced to the empty fireplace.

  “What are the reasons?” Erik asked.

  Lepkin arched his eyebrow and looked back at his apprentice. Erik fought the urge to look away from his master’s gaze. Internally he was squirming around like a basket of snakes, but he forced himself to keep his composure, despite being extremely uncomfortable.

  “Your innate knowledge and understanding of loneliness and compassion are not enough. As I said, it is only a foundation. I will build upon this foundation, and together we will create a warrior out of you, worthy of the Bard’s sonnets and the people’s admiration. I forbid dice games because I want you to understand what it is to feel alone and cast out. For this is the only way to instill in you a lasting empathy for those that society scorns. Remember the leper is as worthy of protection by the knight’s blade as any princess.”

  Erik nodded thoughtfully. It was beginning to make sense to him.

  “You practice sword-strikes as you walk so that others may judge you for it. This will give you wisdom when you judge others so that you will seek to look beyond the physical and judge not by what the world esteems, but by truth and empathy. Remember that no matter how vile the monster, it was still created for a purpose. People often fear what they do not understand. A knight must learn to discern for himself what is evil and what is not.”

  “Like the Gelshon Witch Trials,” Erik said as it clicked for him. “The women were burned as witches based only on the color of their eyes.”

  “Exactly,” Lepkin nodded. “At that time it was believed that women with green eyes were the offspring of demons, imbued with dark powers. Now the people of Gelshon know it is not so, but imagine the lives that were lost until Sir Roderik arrived and stopped the trials.”

  “The other boys assumed many things about me because of my rules,” Erik noted.

  “Not the least of which, I’m sure, was the assumption that you are learning special sword techniques that make you superior to them. The others fear you because of this, but that will change today.”

  “What do you mean?” Erik asked.

  “An Apprentice of the Sword must choose his words carefully, for his word is his bond. This lesson must be learned if you wish to attain knighthood in the Order of Kelteshteg.” Master Lepkin rose to his feet and walked to a wooden chest that lay on the stone floor. He pulled a key from the right pocket of his robe and turned it over in his hand. “During lunch, you made an open challenge to many of the other apprentices. Now you will follow through and duel each of them, starting with the youngest.”

  “I can’t fight all of them,” Erik protested.

  Lepkin arched his brow and scowled. “You will follow through with your words. The other apprentices will assemble in the courtyard.”

  “Yes, master,” Erik said. He dropped his gaze to the floor and slumped forward in his chair. How was he supposed to beat all of them? Some of the boys were years older than him.

  “I have some training armor here,” Lepkin announced. He opened the wooden chest and flipped the lid up to reveal old, brown leather pads. Erik shuddered as he watched Master Lepkin pull out each piece. First came the large, apron-like chest pad. It had a hole for Erik’s head and the back and front panels could be tied together at the sides so that it remained in place. Then Lepkin pulled out a chainmail shirt, made of Feather-steel, a special, lightweight metal designed specifically to protect apprentices at Kuldiga Academy while sparring with wasters. Lepkin also removed leather leggings, padded boots with shin guards, padded gloves, and a barbute helmet from the chest.

  “Master, I can’t beat all of them,” Erik said. The words were almost inaudible, for he feared that he would anger Lepkin.

  “I did not say that you had to beat everyone,” Lepkin replied with a shrug. “I said that you will duel each of them.”

  Erik nodded as though he understood but his expression revealed that he didn’t.

  “Do you know why I am quiet?” Master Lepkin asked. He tossed the chest pads over to Erik and motioned for him to get ready. “Before today, I haven’t spoken to you more than a sentence or two at a time and those were either instructions or criticisms. The other masters will say that I behaved that way to instill in you a sense of respect, or even to make you fear me, but that is not so. I talked little in order to create silence. For you must learn to listen, and you can’t listen –truly listen- unless there is silence. So start listening to everything around you, then you will come to understand your surroundings.”

  Erik nodded and began suiting up. He could appreciate what his master was saying, but it didn’t ease his nerves at all. Within minutes, he was fully suited in his training armor and on his way to the courtyard. Every three steps, he swung his sword at an imaginary foe. This time however, he imagined the other apprentices’ faces as he sliced the air. Master Lepkin walked slowly behind him, reading a book.

  The walk to the courtyard was painfully slow, thanks to the practice swings, giving Erik plenty of time to think about what might go wrong while he dueled with ninety-seven apprentices. He tried not to dwell on the fact that well over thirty of them were older than him by several years. It seemed to Erik that nothing would overcome the building dread inside of his churning stomach. He was wrong.

  As he and Master Lepkin entered the courtyard a chorus of laughter erupted around him.

  “Look at his training armor, it’s so old!” someone shouted.

  “Look at his funny walk, he’s like a fat stork,” another added.

  “More like a pig walking on its back legs,” someone shouted.

  Each outburst gave rise to more laughter. Erik forced his eyes to focus on his shadow foes, instead of the fingers pointing at him. Erik wished he could turn and run, but somehow his feet kept dragging him closer to the center of the courtyard, and every third step his arm swung his waster. Soon the crowd was shouting a cadence, counting off each step until he swung his sword and then they all roared with laughter.

  Erik numbed himself to the crowd and continued on. He felt anger rise in him for a moment, but he tucked it away for later. He would need his strength for his duels. He imagined that he was Master Lepkin during the battle at Gelleirt monastery. The fantasy helped him focus on his practice swings until he reached the center of the courtyard, where he stopped and waited.

  The crowd died down immediately, as though they were overcome by a magic spell. Erik stood silent, watching Master Orres, Headmaster of Kuldiga Academy. The man was older than Master Lepkin by some twenty years. Amid the scars on his face were the wrinkles of age. Time had also turned Master Orres’ hair white as the snow, but he was no delicate has-been. Even at the age of sixty-seven his muscles were taut and powerful. His shoulders were square, his arms were large, and his chest was barrel like and solid as stone. Every time Erik saw Master Orres, the apprentice remembered watching Master Orres demonstrate his strength by participating in, and winning, the summer Strongman Games. Erik had been amazed when Master Orres dominated much young
er men in cable throwing, wrestling, and stone lifting.

  Yet today, despite Master Orres’ authority, and sheer physical presence, he did not speak to Erik or the gathered crowd without Master Lepkin’s nod of approval.

  “You have the floor,” Lepkin told Orres after a polite bow.

  “Thank you, Master Lepkin,” Orres replied. His voice was so deep that Erik swore he felt vibrations in his chest when Orres spoke. “At the request of Master Lepkin, we have gathered all students here to witness his apprentice, Erik Lokton, adopted son of Lord Lokton, honor an open challenge that he issued to the other Apprentices of the Sword.”

  A murmur ran through the crowd. Master Orres raised his hand to silence them, but pockets of students in the crowd continued to gossip. That is, until Master Lepkin crossed his arms and cleared his throat loudly. Then they were all silent.

  “Now,” Master Orres continued. “We have invited all students of Kuldiga Academy to attend. I wish to acknowledge the presence of each and every department, and welcome them. First, let me welcome the Apprentices of the Hand, we are glad to have our healers-in-training here at this event. Let me welcome the Apprentices of the Way, we will be happy to have our priests-in-training pray for Erik’s safety as he battles each of the other ninety-seven Apprentices of the Sword!”

  The crowd laughed and snickered. Erik looked up to Master Lepkin, but his master remained stone-faced and silent.

  “I would also like to welcome our students of alchemy, the Apprentices of the Snake; our rangers-in-training, the Apprentices of the Arrow; our soon-to-be wizards, the Apprentices of the Staff; and our budding scholars-to-be, the Apprentices of the Eye. I hope all of you enjoy today’s spectacle.” Master Orres bowed a few times in response to the cheers of the crowd.

  After a few moments Master Orres brought Erik’s first opponent, a boy about fourteen years old, to the center of the courtyard. Orres checked the boy’s training armor, yanking on it and smacking it, before raising his arm to silence the crowd again.

 

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