Other hopefuls were in the guard’s
barracks, getting changed or just sitting nervously. It was good to see that he
wasn’t the only person anxious about what was soon to occur. A few guards were
lounging on their bunks, and one of them who Kale knew greeted him, wishing
luck and offering a few last words of advice. Everything Kale knew about
wielding an axe and being a guard had been taught to him by the guards he’d
interacted with during his time at the palace. It was strange to think that in
a few hours, if he passed the testing, Kale would be one of them. He couldn’t
help but wonder which of the empty bunks around the room would be his.
“Ey! That lot’s mine; don’t touch
it!” A tall, gangly figure nearby Kale grabbed his blue tunic from the hands of
the squat, heavyset lad who’d been about to put it on. “Couldn’t you see that
this would never fit you?”
“I’m sorry, I . . . I’m sorry.” The
heavyset character glanced down at his toes as if he were ashamed of committing
a major sin.
“Just don’t touch what’s mine.” The
gangly figure was thin to the point of scrawniness, but he was all lean muscle.
There wasn’t enough fat on his body to feed a speckled lizard.
Kale exchanged his loose woolen servant’s
robes for the blue tunic and black trousers of a guard, then pulled the leather
boots overtop and secured their buckles. The tasks were perfunctory, but his
hands trembled a little as they went through the motions.
Then there was nothing to do but
sit on the edge of a bunk and wait.
“So, how’ve you convinced yourself that you were made to be a guard?”
Kale blinked. “I don’t understand.”
The tall gangly figure helped
himself to a seat on the bunk next to Kale. “It’s my observation that unless
people are brutally honest with themselves, they usually invent high, lofty
reasons for what they do. You, like me, want to be a guard: deep down you
probably just want to swing weapons, get women, and feel tough. Plus the pay
isn’t bad. But you probably believe that there’s some high ideology or
principle that gives you a ‘calling’ to this job.”
“To me, it’s more than a job. I
believe that I have a responsibility to protect others.”
“You see?” the lad exclaimed
triumphantly. “A belief! Oh, I’m certain that there’s no chance at all of you
failing this testing. The gods themselves have probably called you to this life
so that you can become a hero and serve them mightily.”
Kale looked at his companion for a
long moment, solemn. “I don’t believe that life is complicated. Actually, there
are only two motivations that make me who I am. All my experiences and natural
instincts come together within them. The first is that I am an idealist.”
The young man scoffed. “I should’ve
known.”
“The second is that I don’t believe
in gods.”
Real surprise swept the cynic’s
face. “Well then, maybe there is something to you after all. But you’ve
forgotten one other thing that’s important to who you are.”
“And what’s that?”
“What name do they call you?”
Kale smiled faintly. “I’m Kale.”
“Kale. Well, I suppose it’s a
pleasure. At least as long as you keep doing interesting things like condemning
your own soul. You may as well know that my name is Ven.”
“My name is Courm,” blurted out the heavyset man who Ven had just yelled at for taking his tunic. He shuffled awkwardly from foot to foot and appeared to be worried he’d offended them.
“My name is Courm,” blurted out the heavyset man who Ven had just yelled at for taking his tunic. He shuffled awkwardly from foot to foot and appeared to be worried he’d offended them.
“Courm?” Kale asked, surprised.
“That’s an unusual name. Is if foreign?”
“No, it’s not! It’s not Shin, I
promise!”
“I didn’t say it was. All Shin have
two syllables in their names, not just the women. But the middle sound in your
name is softer than is common here in Telenine. That’s why I thought it might
be foreign.”
“Well, someone got drunk on his own
knowledge,” Ven muttered. “Ey, you! While we’re making pleasant conversation,
you may as well introduce yourself!” Ven gestured to the man who’d been
standing close by, partially turned away to give the impression that he wasn’t
listening. There were others in the room who seemed to be preparing for the
testing, but all besides the four of them were older and looked as if they were
soldiers trying for rank advancement in the King’s army.
The figure on the outside of the
circle didn’t answer. Instead, he walked away and sat on the opposite bunk. Ven
shrugged his shoulders. “Friendly fellow, that man.”
The door to the barracks swung
open, and as an officer swept through it, all of them hastily stood in respect.
“It’s time,” he said simply, then
turned on his heel and left.
Kale’s heart was a dancer’s drum,
beating furiously as trepidation whirled and spun in his chest.
The hopefuls silently fell into
line, then marched from the barracks. Several guards were waiting on the other
side of the doors with an axe for each of them. This weapon was heavier than
what Kale was used to, which was a worry.
They marched behind the officer,
each man alone in his thoughts and fears. Some of the soldiers had no cause for
worry. For them, this was just a ritual, no different from the sacred protocols
that governed the life of every citizen in civilized Telenine. But then some of
those about to be tested, such as Kale, were depending on this day to provide
them with a future.
Their journey ended back in the courtyard,
where the banquet tables had been moved aside to provide ample space. Thell
flashed Kale an encouraging smile as he caught sight of her.
“Form up!” the officer commanded,
and they spread out from a vertical line to a horizontal one, backs to the throne,
facing the door through which they’d just entered. Another line of blue clad
figures marched through it just as they had, coming from the other barracks.
The two lines faced each other, each individual standing straight as an axe
haft. The officer strolled down the center.
“Forward lunge!”
This was the first command in a
long series. The familiar movements were old friends for Kale, who’d practiced
these stances and procedures a hundred times. But evidently, that wasn’t true
for everyone. As the officer stalked down the ranks calling commands, he would
occasionally motion for someone to leave, dismissing that man’s hopes like
smoke puffed from a pipe.
“Reform!” he finally called, and
the two lines, now made of sweating men, took their places again.
“To the side, at rest.”
The soldiers made their way to the
walls, leaning gratefully against them but not daring to sit without an
explicit command. All were on edge for what they knew would come next.
The officer began calling names in
pairs of two, and weary men left the positions of rest they’d just taken up and
made their ways back to the open floor. Half would be judged now, and half in a
second shift.
Kale’s new acquaintance Courm was
called out. He nervously fell into line opposite the man who had been called
out with him, a strong looking fellow.
“How do you think he’ll do?” Kale
asked Ven. The gangly man guffawed.
“You speak as if there’s some doubt.”
“You speak as if there’s some doubt.”
“You don’t think there is?”
Ven speared him with a sideways
look. “For all I know, he’s a wonderful person and a fantastic cook. But he
doesn’t have the confidence to be a fighter, and he’s not built like one.”
“It’s good to have weight behind
your blows.”
“Sure
it is,” Ven scoffed, “but the kind of weight he has is more likely to slow him
down than give him strength.”
They
watched as the pairs began fighting, two at a time. A cacophony of cheers,
boos, and gasps rose constantly from those invited to the feast as they
witnessed broken ribs, bruised bodies, and men knocked senseless by the hard
wood of an axe haft. Those who were about to endure the same ordeal kept
silent. As each pair finished, the officer presiding over the proceedings
called out whether he approved or rejected the fighters.
“Strange way of testing,” Ven commented.
“Strange way of testing,” Ven commented.
“It’s a
tradition from the days of Renaden’s father. The King’s feasts were near as
legendary then as Renaden’s are now, and one day he decided his guests would
enjoy the entertainment of watching the testing of new officers and guards.”
Ven was
looking at Kale with grudging admiration. “Back in the barracks, you taught us
something we didn’t know about our own language. And you’re at it again. Yet
you claim that you’re looking to
become a guard, not a scholar. How do you know so much?”
Kale
shrugged. “I believe in knowing things. So do my parents. My mother saw to it
that I was educated.”
“Look,”
Ven said sharply, “that man Courm is up next. Mark what I said earlier.”
Despite
what Kale had said, he too thought that Courm lacked the confidence to be much
of a fighter. The squat young man looked horribly frightened as he faced
against his opponent. The captain of the guard yelled for them to begin.
Courm’s
attacker evidently entertained the same thoughts that Ven and Kale had. He
moved in quickly, too quickly, Kale’s
trained eye told him. But in the end, nothing he did could’ve made a difference
to the result.
The
speed of Courm’s strike was incredible. His first blow left the other man’s axe
quivering in his hands. His second batted it aside altogether. He delivered a
third vicious strike to the man’s side, and then, finally, a last brutal sweep
to the knees that ended with the man sprawled on the ground.
Stunned
surprise twitched the corners of Kale’s lips into a smile. He glanced at Ven,
who gaped openly.
“Well, I
still think he’s fat,” Ven stubbornly held.
There
was absolutely no surprise that Courm was accepted to the guard.
“Group
one, at rest. Group two, to the fore.” The officer began calling pairs of
names.
They
pushed themselves from the wall. Kale’s heartbeat was the march of a thundering
army. He fell into line, and as the officer called him, he found himself facing
the man who would crush his dreams unless Kale crushed the dreams of the man. It
was the ill-mannered figure who’d ignored Ven’s greeting in the barracks.
The
fighting began.
Ven
went early on. His movements lacked the power that more strength and weight
would’ve lent him, but he was fast and he was smart. His partner was better by
a margin, and Ven ended up the loser, but the officer admitted them both. That
was how this worked: not by who won, but by the level of competency displayed.
Finally,
Kale stepped forward. It was his time.
Today, he won or lost his dream.
Today, he won or lost his dream.
His
enemy – Kale couldn’t think of him as merely an opponent – struck the first
blow. It was heavy, and Kale knew better than to block it head-on. He made sure
to be out from under the axe-fall, and, even while halting its downward strike,
he allowed some give beneath it. Then he swung in from the side, extending his
weapon enough that only the haft would catch the man’s ribs rather than the blade.
The man
was fast; he stepped back and dropped his axe just in time to clip short Kale’s
attempt.
Kale’s struggle didn’t look like it
was going to be simple. His enemy was skilled.
The two
had briefly separated after their first exchange; now they closed again, using
their axes as quarter staffs. A furious clapping of loud, wooden thwacks bit the air.
It was
time to fight unorthodoxly. Kale warded a blow, then kicked his opponent in the
shin. He felt his boot make solid connection, and the rhythm was thrown off. Then
he drove hard at the man’s center, and for a moment his opponent faltered . . .
but he scrabbled out of it, knocking aside Kale’s attack with a wide, desperate
swing, then throwing himself violently forward.
Both of
them knew that the longer this fight delayed, the worse they looked. Duels do
not exist on a battlefield.
But
now, the other man was within Kale’s defenses. Kale had only one option, and it
was dangerous. They were practically tangled up together, weapons currently
useless at this close distance, but the other man was in a better position than
Kale. A bar of wood smashed into his jaw, and vision frosted over.
But
Kale was already moving. He staggered forward, deliberately putting his
opponent at his back. Any moment, a solid blow might strike him down. It was
all a matter of impossible timing and blind luck.
One heartbeat. Two heartbeats.
Kale
swung around with all the momentum he could muster and whacked aside the blow
that had been falling on him. Then He smashed the pole of his axe into the
other man’s side as hard as he could, catching the man’s arm in the process.
There
was the sickening crunch of breaking bone.
The man
screamed.
Kale
stepped back, dazed, heaving breaths. Medics rushed forward, but Kale wasn’t
thinking about the man he’d just put into agony. He waved aside the medic who
dabbed at his own stinging face. His eyes swung to the officer who would
announce his fight’s outcome.
One of
the nobles had hurried over to the officer and was conferring with him. He kept
glancing at Kale and the screaming man on the ground, and his face was furious,
though Kale had no idea why it should be. The officer appeared uncomfortable,
and he remained so as the noble departed to take his seat once more.
“The
man Nev, formerly a captain in the King’s army, is admitted to the guard upon
healing of his injuries.”
Kale’s
mind buzzed. That man had been a captain switching from the army to the guard?
Kale had just defeated a trained captain?
The
feast-guests were no longer listening; they were back in their drinks until the
next bout of fighting began. But Kale’s dreams hung on the officer’s coming
pronouncement.
“The
man Kale, formerly serving in the King’s palace, is rejected from the guard.”
This is VERY unedited. I didn't think it would be released at all today, but I stayed up till 4 am last night and got it done. It's much longer than any of the previous sections, is less than half of what I wrote last night, and is a third of the total content that I thought this section would contain. Also, I had to swap the order around: originally, other information was going to come previous to this. That might make for some confusion. But I hope it's still worth your time. I haven't enjoyed writing an action sequence so much in quite a while, and I hope you enjoy it, too.
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