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Wanderings of a Muse: An Anthology, Page 2

R. Stachowiak

Already A Legend

  1In a German prison-palace sat a man with bright reddish-gold hair and eyes the color of a cloudless sky. There were no adornments on his fingers and his clothing lacked any fancy embroidery. It was in this palace that he resided since his capture by his cousin Leopold of Austria. Normally the man had a jolly grin on his face, today though he was pensive. His current predicament was heavy on his mind.

  The weather had forced him to take the more dangerous land route from the crusades back to a kingdom that he really didn't like and the only use he found for it was as revenue. This latest Crusade had been trying on him but at last Christians had more access to the holy land of God.

  Here in this prison-palace he had basic rights and the assurance that his captors would not kill him due to his exalted birth - although his brother John would probably like for him to disappear permanently. His daily routines were not changed. He had one servant girl assigned to him. She had dark hair that was held back with an iridescent pearl net and ancient blue eyes. Never once did she say a word to him and yet Richard got the feeling that every time the woman even glanced his way she said a volumes.

  The raven haired woman always bore him his meals, but never once had she uttered a word, causing him to assume that she was a deaf mute. A fair occupation for such a creature.

  Richard would swear though, that she was not dumb. There was too much intelligence in her aged eyes.

  In a few minutes Richard would once again see the raven haired woman. For the sun was about right for his midday meal.

  Right on time the servant girl came into the room with his noon victuals. This time though, when she looked at him she asked a question, "Tell me Coeur de Lion, which would you prefer - the sword or the scabbard?"

  Her soft voice was melodious. Richard looked surprised at the woman. Without a moment’s hesitation he answered, "The sword Milady. How else were I to defend myself?”

  The dark-haired lady shook her head mournfully and answered, “Than I fear, brave-hearted one, that your demise shall be as sad as Charlemagne’s predecessor.” She ended this statement on a sigh as she set the tray of victuals down.

  “The man you speak of was naught but a myth,” Richard replied haughtily.

  “Arthur was more than myth and fable. But if it is the sword you want than it is the sword you shall get,” she stated with finality. There was a slight sneer on her delicate lips as she turned from him and left the room in something of a temper.

  As the woman left she slammed the heavy wooden door as hard as she could and if Richard could have seen her blue eyes he would have wondered if the woman was mortal or one of the Church’s despicable demons.

  Once outside of the room the woman carefully worked a spell throughout the castle so that she could leave as unnoticed as she had arrived.

  Oh! Why did the men of Constantine have to be so stubborn! Could none of them see that Arthur was right all those years ago? Even now, not a sole believed him and that deplorable fact was the fault of Arthur’s final orders to his Champion. Why did she have to be so successful?

  But there was no use in lamenting the fact that orders had been followed successfully so she’d best get on with the future, else it wouldn’t happen the way that the immortals wanted it to. So if it was Excalibur that the Kings of Albion wanted it was Excalibur that Elaine of the Lake would give them.

  Born of Common Blood

  1It was nearing sunset on a warm summer’s day when someone knocked on the door of the little three room cottage. The villagers down the road didn’t visit the old woman that lived within. The village elders thought that she was off of her somewhat rusty hinges.

  As for the children of the village, they were a different story altogether. They thought she was a bard. The old lady told them stories of Camelot. Of great Lords and Ladies. Even ones of knights in shining armor at tournaments jousting for a lady’s favor.

  She even told them of a time when there was no famine or war. When miracles happened as often as the new dawn, and good deeds were a knight’s daily fare with his lady’s smile as a reward.

  The old woman gave a heavy sigh as she rose from her creaky wooden chair to answer the door. Her dark hair had long sense faded to white and her joints ached with the cold, but she was still as alert as she had been when she was a young maid of twenty.

  Upon opening the door it wasn’t to find a child as she expected. Instead she found an apparent man of the gentry on her doorstep. His long white hair was tied in back with a thong and his blue eyes were shadowed with the wisdom of age. The lines of his face spoke of a hard life filled with adventure. It was obviously a face that spoke volumes to the right person.

  “Seraphim? King’s Champion? Is it truly thee? Has my long search sought thee out on the eve of night,” the man asked. Relief was evident in his gravelly voice as his eyes started to glisten.

  Seraphim, for that was the woman’s name, was shocked. Who was this man? How did he know the truth of her past? Seraphim had thought herself successful in erasing herself from popular memory.

  “Who art thou,” she asked with a slight tremor in her voice that had nothing to do with fear and the frailty of age. While she may have sounded weak, you could almost hear the hidden strength that lay just beneath her surface.

  “Do not you remember the Knight born of common blood,” he asked in a soft, tremulous voice.

  “Born of common blood? Bors? Could it possibly be you that stands at my door?” Confusion was evident in her voice. This couldn’t be Sir Bors. Bors hadn’t been seen since he left on his quest to find the Grail with Perceval and Galahad. Rumors had abounded of his death for years now.

  “It is Milady. Might I beg entrance into your cottage and impose upon your solitude,” he enquired politely.

  “Granted Bors,” Seraphim answered in the same tone. Bors walked humbly into her home. Granted her home was not as grand as the rooms that she had acquired at Castle Camelot, but the cottage was comfortable and it suited her needs perfectly.

  “Please arrange thyself to thy comfort. For I wager that our conversation shall last well into the next sunrise,” Seraphim told him.

  “Indeed Milady. For we have much to tell each other,” Bors agreed. He spoke quietly as though he were afraid to disturb the memories she held. Bors knew that his friend held a temper most powerful and he did not want to be the one to disturb it should it be resting peacefully after all these years.

  Even though his voice was quiet it was serene. Just as it had always been at court, where Arthur and Guinevere presided in days long gone. Seraphim thought she detected a note of weariness in his voice as well. If it were there it would be a first, for Bors wasn’t known to be weary of anything.

  “Before we begin would you care for refreshments?” Seraphim’s tone was polite, yet her eyes shone with merriment.

  “I’ll not turn it down if you’ve a mind to share your precious ale,” he answered her with a slight grin. For in times now past it was almost unheard of for the Lady Champion Seraphim to share any ale or mead that she possessed. It was just something that wasn’t done.

  Seraphim nodded her head as he went into her little kitchen. She returned with two wooden mugs and a jug of ale.

  “Where have you been Bors,” Seraphim asked after she sat down with her ale. There was more than a hint of sorrow in her voice.

  “I shall answer your questions if you shall answer mine, Lady Seraphim.”

  “Name thy question, Sir Bors.”

  “What happened Lady Seraphim?”

  “It fell apart. Her Majesty took to Lancelot’s bed,” Seraphim informed Bors gravely.

  “The stories are true then? The tales that peasants bandy about hold merit,” Bors asked in confusion.

  “They are, my friend. Everything from the betrayal of Mordred and Morgause to that of the king resting on the isle of Avalon,” Seraphim confirmed. Her eyes bright with unshed tears.

  “How? Why?”

  “I do not know. It was a combin
ation of many things. The battle with Lancelot for Guinevere shook the people’s faith in Arthur. Thus opening the door for the traitorous vile that was spread by Mordred and Morgause,

  “Other than that I know nothing more,” Seraphim replied.

  Bors grew upset at the news. This was not what he wanted to hear. Especially not from the only female knight of the Table Round. She was the King’s Champion! Arthur had confided policies of state to her hard head! How could she not know what destroyed the realm?

  “How did you survive? You who were his staunchest supporter and protector, yet there isn’t a tale in all the land that bears your name or presence,” he accused.

  “Tis not what ye think, for you see, I am still bound by orders,” Seraphim stated simply.

  “How is that possible?”

  “Before the final battle, during the last gathering of the Court, I was ordered not to fight in the final battle against Mordred.

  “Arthur gave that order at the beginning of the gathering in front of every surviving knight. I was furious. And I let my anger be known by storming off after he explained his orders.

  “He said that I was to survive so that Camelot would be remembered. My memories are all that exist in the minds of the people,” Seraphim woefully explained as a solitary tear fell down her cheeks.

  “In other words, he left the hardest task to you,” Bors clarified.

  Seraphim nodded her head in agreement. “And you Bors? What happened to your companions, Galahad and Perceval,” Seraphim asked.

  A look of sadness mixed with joy crossed his face before Bors replied, “They are no more Seraphim. Their spirits now grace the halls of the Archangels as they preach the glorious virtues of or Lord. Listen well and I shall tell thee of the holiest adventure of the Knights of the Table Round.

  “Across the blue sea and the land of hot sands there lies serene a hollow hill. Within it stands a glorious stone Cathedral dedicated to our Holy Father and his blessed son. It was protected by a silent order of monks.

  “Before we reached the Cathedral, Galahad joined the ranks of the eternals.

  “Upon reaching the Cathedral, Perceval and I were silently led to the bishop of the Holy Ground for he was the only one permitted to utter a prayer.

  “He told us, Perceval and I, of how his ancestor Joseph came into possession of the Cup of Christ.

  “And then the bishop spoke of Joseph’s long journey from the land of milk and honey.

  “After this he bid us to stay the night. And to receive communion the next day.

  “So we stayed in the simple quarters provided. And truly we intended to stay but a single night. But that night turned into many seasons.

  “Finally one day I awoke for communion to find that I woke alone. For in the night Perceval had ascended the steps of heaven.

  “On that dark dawn the bishop told me of the duty I now held to return to tell the tale of Christ’s Cup.

  “And so I crossed the hot sands of the land of milk and honey only to find that Camelot was no more. Arthur lay with the angels and Guinevere had a reputation as low as that of a cozen holar –a reputation no lady should ever stoop to having. And absolutely no one knew of the Lady Champion Seraphim.

  “Seraphim, I am most sure that when you were charged with keeping Camelot alive in the hearts of the people you were not supposed to erase yourself,” Bors finished.

  “You may be right but it was all I could think of so that they will remember the most important parts,” Seraphim replied.

  “Could you not have saved Her Majesty’s honor,” Bors asked.

  “I tried and tried true. But by the time I started ‘twas already too late. She had been condemned in the eyes of the populace,” Seraphim replied.

  And so the two old friends sat there and talked until the dawn sun dressed the sky in brilliant colors. They talked of recent times and those long gone.

  Come late morning Seraphim knew she had more to add to the legend before she could take her eternal rest.

  So when the children came the next day Seraphim told them a new tale. The tale told that day would forever be remembered as the greatest adventure for Arthur and his Knights.

  It would come to be known as the Quest for the Holy Grail.

  To Roma

  1Sunlight filtered through the arrow slits of what was quickly becoming known as the king’s workroom to the denizens of the castle. The sunlight allowed enough light to see by and a slight breeze to circulate the air of the somewhat stuffy room.

  In the light’s path sat a sturdy wooden table covered with scrolls. The paper was imported from Aegyptus and known as papyrus. It was extremely durable and versatile. The durability of the papyrus was invaluable to the nation,

  Although Khitai was able to produce a cotton blend that was cheaper, it was also more delicate. The papyrus was one of the few extravagances that Arthur allowed his administration this early in his reign.

  Behind the table of scrolls sat a man with reddish brown hair and dancing blue eyes. The man was bent over the table carefully reading a scroll. There was a slight frown on his face as he stared at the scroll.

  After several moments the sound of a man clearing his throat alerted the seated man to the presence of another in this his workroom. The seated man looked up and said, “Sir Gareth, come and sit for I have something of a quest for you.”

  Sir Gareth entered the room and looked warily at the man before saying, “A quest, Your Majesty,” alarm colored Gareth’s voice.

  “Of a sort,” his majesty confirmed with a half-smile on his face. It was a smile that made Gareth nervous.

  With trepidation in his stomach Gareth echoed, “Of a sort?”

  “Yes. I would like for you to make a journey with the Lady Seraphim,” Arthur answered. Gareth could have sworn that he saw amusement in the king’s eyes as he said that.

  Gareth almost sagged in relief. Doing anything with Lady Seraphim was both refreshing and amusing for the fact that it was common knowledge that Seraphim acted like no lady that any knight had ever met.

  It was well known that you could take Lady Seraphim into a tavern and she would encourage one to act with boisterous pride amongst your peers. The Lady Seraphim also tended to act as though she were any other knight. That tended to help with thinking of her as a comrade in arms rather than a damsel in distress.

  “What sort of journey had you in mind, your majesty,” Gareth asked his king.

  “’Twould be naught but a journey across the seas, to the land of Roma,” replied Arthur, his hazel eyes sparkling in mischief.

  “Then thou wish a mission of secrecy,” Gareth questioned. The prospect of traveling in secret with the king’s champion sparked the knight’s interest. Gareth, like all other knights of the table, had never served with a female knight and the king’s chosen champion was a woman. This was a highly unconventional thing to have.

  The danger this trip held for the King’s Champion was great. This much Gareth knew. The danger was primarily because Seraphim was a woman. All in Camelot knew how the Romans tended to treat women.

  Especially given the fact that the primary religion of the Roman conquerors was that of the Christ child. This was a religion that saw women as a frail lot that were to be protected and kept far from the fields of bloodshed.

  And the King’s Champion, the Lady Seraphim, was anything but meek and mild. In many ways Seraphim was more of a knight than some of those that sat at the Table Round. For she truly did believe in and try to live by the ideals that the King had set forth for his Knights. It was rumored that the Lady Seraphim didn’t even know the meaning of the words ‘lip service’. That was something that Gareth found to be extremely true in the few dealings that he had attended with the Lady Knight.

  As Sir Gareth lost himself in his thoughts the king interrupted, “I have every confidence that my Champion can defend herself. Unfortunately, I also know the depths of treachery that the Roman Senate can fall too,” he finished sternly.


  “Understood, Your Majesty. I shall do my utmost to keep faith with the high honor that you have seen fit to bestow upon me,” Gareth finished solemnly.

  Arthur gave an ironic grin as he nodded his head. As Sir Gareth strides were taking him from the room the king intoned, “Oh, and Sir Gareth, remember to tone her temper with an alehouse if need be.”

  Gareth paled at the thought of what could drive the formidable Champion to the alehouses to calm down. With a half bow towards the king, Gareth strode the door shaking his head at the adventure to come.