Monday, December 28, 2015

Happy Holidays and Hero Chapter One.

Wow, the year has flown by, and is nearing a close. I hope everyone had a good holiday. I am back to work, and as promised, here is the first chapter of a short story I am currently working on, hope you enjoy it!

Hero



Chapter One

It was a perfect early summer day, the kind that makes poets want to drone on and on, with stunning cloudless blue skies, a hundred shades of green in the surrounding forest, birds singing in the trees, bees hurrying from flower to flower. The rider on the road took absolutely no notice of the tranquil beauty surrounding him. He was dressed in the panoply of a knight, complete with a coat of arms, but his armor was a little worn, his surcoat a bit frayed. He stared directly ahead, mentally adding up the miles to the next large town, and comparing it with the light weight of his purse. No matter how he added it up, he didn’t have enough silver to make it. He had to find a job, and fast.
  
 His name was Sir Olak of Dald, and he was the youngest son of King Athelard of Dald, a tiny country completely surrounded by high mountains, making it nearly impossible to invade. Not that anyone would want to, Dald was home to a large community of dwarves. With the permission of the Crown, the Dwarves mined the gold and gemstones in the surrounding mountains. They paid a hefty sum in tithe and taxes, and that was enough to comfortably maintain the country, but not any to waste on things like war, or philandering younger sons. And with the allies that the Dwarves could call upon, no one except a madman invaded a country with a Dwarf Enclave.  

 Olak was supposed to be a Hero, with a capital H. As the youngest of 5, he was so far removed from the ‘heir and a spare’ that unless his four older siblings and all their children dropped dead, the closest he’d get to the throne was standing behind it with the rest of his siblings during audience. Since he really didn’t have anything to do growing up other than standing around at court functions, he fell into typical younger son behavior. He spent his days hunting and playing games with his friends and nights drinking, gambling, and as he grew older, seducing the maids and peasants in the castle and surrounding areas. He was given the standard education of a young noble, including arms training. The King, despairing of what to do with the boy, sent him off to be a squire. Barely squeaking by, Olak managed to perform his duties well enough that he finagled a knighthood out of the ancient derelict that his father had apprenticed him to. The old bastard had knighted him after he paid a tavern wench to spend the night with the old drunk. Not the approved way to gain one's knighthood, but Olak figured he was justified. He was expected to become a Knight, after all. Who cared if he really believed in all that junk a Knight was supposed to stand for, it was simply an end to a means. And he figured what the hell, he might even be able to seduce a few more country wenches. They tended to be more impressed by a title of any kind than their worldlier city counterparts. 

 Once he was knighted, it was expected that he go out Questing to become a Hero. The problem was that Olak wasn’t much good at either questing or being a hero. He’d much rather spend his time wenching, drinking and sleeping late in a soft featherbed, but his father had cut off all monetary support once he was knighted. It was expected at this point he make his own way through the world, being a Knight and all. Olak managed to find enough small jobs like finding lost children in the forest, or dealing with a local ‘bandit’ that usually turned out to be some vagabond holding up women and stealing their jewelry. Monetary rewards were usually small, but after the deed was done, he was put up in the best room at the local inn or a guest room in the best house in the village, plied with much food and drink, and willing maidens to warm his bed for the night. The last of those jobs had been some weeks ago, and while he could usually charm a meal out of the local girls, anything else had to be paid for in cold hard cash.  

 The forest thinned as Olak traveled south, turning into pastoral rolling hills, dotted with sheep and cows, separated by hedges from neat little plowed fields full of crops. There was the occasional farmhouse, but no towns on the horizon. His horse, a big dapple gray warhorse named Aman, was middle aged, and not inclined to break out of his ambling walk unless there was a real need. Olak wasn’t sure what he would do about replacing him when the gelding became too old to carry him. He might have to travel back to Dald and beg for one from his father’s royal stables. Not a pleasant prospect to have to deal with the days of lecture from his parents on why he hadn't won a new steed for himself.  
 A crossroad appeared, and Olak rode up to the signpost. There was a town a few miles up the road, and he pulled out his map and consulted it. He had crossed into another country when he left the forest, he was now in the kingdom of Treegan, a place known for its quiet pastoral lifestyle, and not much in the way of Quests. According to the map, there was one sizable town not too far up the road. He put his map back in his belt pouch and nudged Aman into a walk again 

 As the aging warsteed ambled down the road, Olak pondered his existence. He was middling handsome, in a standard princely kind of way. Blue eyes that made the tavern wenches sigh and giggle, thick locks of wavy mid brown hair fell just past his shoulders. He was fairly fit, riding all day and the daily sword practice he did still do kept him that way. Barely eking by and not being able to eat rich foods and drink to excess anymore since he left court kept him slimmed down as well. Probably a good thing, otherwise he'd be round as a ball, like one of his sisters 

 As the leagues slid by, and Olak wondered how long before he could 'retire', and return to Dald, and his former life. Probably not for a long while, he was only 28, and His Royal Father was not one to tolerate idlers. The sister who was slated to take the throne after their father was a bit more charitable, as long as he kept away from court. Maybe he could sweet talk her into a nice little chateau up in the mountains, with a generous stipend. Worth a try anyway.