Isubane’s Echo, Chapter 4: Breckan’s Hold

Image by Gemini

“Hah! There’s nothing like two lads trying to impale each other to bring back memories of old times. Don’t you worry Beldere, I’ll get the lad a lance touched by Thera herself!”  Spikey had a huge grin on his face, and a sly gleam in his eye, as he picked up a random stick from the side of the road and fed the power of Primythera, the planet spirit, directly into the long dead branch. It grew rapidly, straightening and hardening as several soldiers couldn’t help but trade bawdy jests as to the phallic nature of the druid’s creation. Spikey took it in stride, confiding to his swiftmates in a whisper that carried to everyone: “That’s Sully’s little boy over there. Who wants to see Cat thrown from a saddle? Wagers?”  

“You’ll need a horse, Catwright, unless you plan on running at him,” Sergeant Lovine dismounted and handed off the reins. Cat eyed the Sergeant and the Corporals with a sour, resigned expression as they started discussing odds while breaking out snacks and using their packs for chairs. Very few believed he would win the joust, but most thought he would win a sword fight if he wasn’t too incapacitated.

 “Catwright Isubane the Third,” the armored horseman bellowed across the distance, “I challenge you to a duel to the dirt; first one knocked down three times loses! Agreed?” 

“Agreed!” Cat shouted back as he mounted the much smaller rouncey. 

“Take a shield!” Beldere scolded. “You aren’t even wearing any armor. You are putting far too much faith in my ability to put you back together.”

 One of the soldiers handed Cat a full-sized tower shield; it must have weighed over thirty pounds. Even holding it sideways, Cat had to angle it down so he could see over the top. Cat started laughing. “You’re always saying I need to have more faith, Bel.” 

“Ha!” his challenger called over. “That shield is older than my grandfather!” 

“Still not as old as that antique set you’re wearing!” Cat shouted right back. 

“Ha ha! Weight advantage to me! We’ll see how smug you are when I put this lance through that pathetic wooden door and your unprotected ribs.” Beldere raised his head at this, then narrowed his eyes and waved a hand. The steel tip on the lance fell off and bounced off the warhorse’s barding once before unceremoniously thumping to the ground. You could practically see the distraught look through the young Sulwood’s visor. “Watcher’s hairy green balls, Bel, you always have to ruin the fun!” The lance came off his shoulder in one fluid motion, and the enormous destrier surged forward.  

Cat was just taking his lance from Spikey, somewhat distracted by the graphic metaphors being tossed around, and half of the soldiers rolling on the ground in laughter, when he noticed Seleger coming for him. He spurred forward, using every bit of horsemanship he could muster just to get his frightened mount galloping in the right direction. He was basically riding blind as he maneuvered the 12-foot lance into position around the massive shield, almost dropping the weapon in the process. He flattened the shield slightly to see and had to raise it back up a half-second before impact. He felt and heard the shattering of wood. His freshly made lance flexed in his grip as it hit the lower corner of Seleger’s shield and bent instead of shattering for just a split moment. In the next fraction of a second, he was forced sideways and then backward as his lance snapped, his right shoulder popped out of its socket, and the remainder of his opponent’s lance struck him in his left pectoral. Then there was intense pain and a feeling of weightlessness as he flew backward through the air, and landed in a backward roll which brought him smoothly to his feet.  

Cat dropped the remains of the tower shield and reached over to pull his shoulder back into place with an audible crunch. The pain was intense but helped him focus. He didn’t go into shock or pass out as easily now as he did a few years ago. Unfortunately, his right arm would be useless for a while, so he drew his sword left-handed and set his stance as Seleger turned the massive stallion around. Seleger was picking up speed like he intended to just run him down; Cat just set his feet and smiled. At the last moment, the other boy broke off and vaulted from the saddle. 

“I could have taken the easy win, but I don’t want you to hurt my horse.” 

“I wouldn’t hurt your horse.” 

“Yes, you would; you just wouldn’t kill it because you believe all broken bones and stab wounds can be healed.” 

“They can.” 

“You’re too used to having a personal priest to fix all your problems.” Seleger was goading him, trying to get him angry enough to make a stupid mistake. Cat just smiled. 

“Are you going to talk all day, or can we finish this?” 

“Did you see how easily I took you out of the saddle?” Seleger boasted, raising his voice for all to hear. Cat refused to mention that Seleger had started charging before he was even seated. “I’m not even right-handed.” Seleger looked pointedly at Cat’s uselessly dangling right arm. “But you are.” Seleger was very good at getting into his opponent’s head, but that wouldn’t work on him. Cat started striding toward the other boy. 

Seleger was so busy hurling taunts that he barely got his sword up in time to block Cat’s first swing. Seleger was good at swordplay, and he was fully armored, but Cat was relentless. Seleger tired quickly with all the extra weight, and before long, the armor was ringing with the rapid hits from the faster, more nimble fighter. In less than two minutes, Seleger was disarmed and face-first in the dirt. Farmers and other travelers had gathered in a circle with the whooping soldiers to watch the display. Cat noticed the soldiers already shamelessly exchanging coins while Seleger struggled to a sitting position and removed his battered helmet. The ruddy-faced boy grinned up at Catwright as the victor offered his friend, Seleger Sulwood, a hand up. 

“You are still a ruthless bastard” Seleger grunted at Catwright as Beldere healed the shallow wounds and Cat’s dislocated shoulder.

“I seem to remember someone telling me a couple years ago, that I was too soft on the competition”

“Yeah, I meant for you to go harder on them, not me!” Seleger laughed. “It’s good to see you Cat, I haven’t taken a good whooping in a while.

“That armor must be five hundred years old,” Cat said matter-of-factly. 

“What? No, this was my grandfather’s armor; the Sulwoods didn’t all have fancy armor like your old grandpa. Whatever happened to that wondrous artifact? I know your father isn’t using it.”  The Armor of Areyas, his grandfather’s famous suit of Calmahran enchanted armor. Cat had been disappointed it wasn’t in the amulet King Mecre had given him. 

 “I’d guess someone high up in the king’s inner circle is using it,” Cat replied thoughtfully. He knew the armor had been pierced through by the teeth of Isulas, the lizard god of vengeance, but it could supposedly regenerate from any harm.

  “Well, I’d shave my sack with a spoon for armor like that,” Seleger said wistfully.

 “I’m not sure which is harder to believe,” Cat said straight-faced, “all the stories about that armor, or that you actually have hair on your sack.” 

“Ha, You should assume everything is true until proven otherwise!” Seleger replied airily. Cat wasn’t sure if the boy was being serious, or just flexing his strange sense of humor. Seleger vaulted back into his saddle with the ease of someone who was definitely not wearing fifty pounds of steel and leather. “You were early, by the way; I meant to meet you further out. Those old soldiers are quicker than I thought.” 

“Did Adenide tell you I was coming?” 

“That’s High Wild Warden or Master Adenide, Sage of the Six Moons,” Beldere interjected reverently. 

Seleger ignored the correction. “Yes. Did you know yours could talk over distances?” Seleger eyed the young priest suspiciously. 

“I suspected, I suppose, but at least he hasn’t been in my head yet as far as I can tell.” Cat also glanced at Beldere. 

“Speaking to another priest is much easier. You would have to let me in; I’m not strong enough to force a connection.” Cat heard the unspoken ‘yet’ quite clearly. 

“Well, I formally welcome you and your small army to the delightful town of Breckan’s Hold. May it not bore you to tears before we head on to Osenvale.” 

“We?” Cat inquired. 

“Yes, I am coming with you, and perhaps I shall bring my own entourage. We could conquer the city and divide up the spoils and the ladies between us.” Seleger gave Cat a significant look, and Cat just rolled his eyes.

A group of riders approached from the west as the party entered the outskirts of Breckan’s Hold from the east. Cat recognized Seleger’s father, retired Lieutenant Colonel Dain Sulwood, atop a monstrous gray war bear. A half-dozen other riders in the brown and grey livery of house Sulwood accompanied the Lord of Breckan’s Hold, The few horses in Cat’s party danced and shied away from the great bear. Even the shinnocmyr and Garreth’s great boar seemed cautious, while the horses of house Sulwood’s soldiers and Seleger’s own beast, seemed unconcerned. 

Dain had served with his father through the ongoing border wars as a quad commander and then second in command of Sapphire Company. Catwright had met the man a few times over the years. He was a solid military man in his early forties, with a touch of gray in his dark hair. 

Dain nodded at Catwright and Beldere. “Welcome to Breckan’s Hold. We have a domestic disturbance out at the Bailer farm; Seleger, you will accompany me. Catwright, you can come if you like; it may prove instructional. The rest of you can continue to the Hold if you wish; accommodations have been prepared for all of you, and the tavern has stocked extra brew.” He looked pointedly at the soldiers.

“Aw, why’re you looking at me, Sully?” Spikey drawled with a mock-hurt expression.

“Ain’t gotta tell me twice,” Gemma was first to guide her mount around the crowd and toward the town center.

“Take my horse,” Sergeant Lovine said to Cat, handing him the reins of the recovered rouncey. “It’s unseemly for you to be jogging behind Lord Sulwood’s retinue like some poor beggar.”

With no further objections, Seleger, Catwright, and Beldere followed Dain down a southward-branching road into the more rural farmlands. The soldiers spread out with three in the front and three in the rear. Beldere must have learned the trick of calming their two horses, for suddenly they all stopped fidgeting and trotted closer behind the great bear. Dain called the bear Feingar and talked to it as if it understood him perfectly. Its shoulder was level with the eyes of Seleger’s warhorse, and it could have carried six people easily if needed. The bear ignored the trio and forged ahead with a ground-eating pace that forced the horses to canter to keep up.

“So what’s happening with the Bailer’s?” Seleger asked.

“A merchant came into town about an hour ago saying he heard a girl crying and a man yelling, so I decided to go check it out myself. This isn’t the first time I’ve heard about trouble out this way, but the soldiers I sent a few months ago didn’t find anything amiss. The kids have been sick a lot though, and missing weeks of school.

Catwright smelled the farmstead before he saw the cottage through the trees. The acrid stench of pig feces clogged the air. The bear whuffed in annoyance as they approached the house. A shaggy-haired, obese man sat on the front steps, cradling a bottle of spirits. Beldere dismounted, wide-eyed, before anyone could speak, and walked briskly toward the home. Dain noted the priest’s concern and snapped a question as he slid down Feingar’s flank: “Dernus, what happened here?”

The fat man looked up with bleary eyes, saw the priest stalking toward him, and stood abruptly. “Hey, what’re you about?” The almost three-hundred-pound man flew aside into the mud at a gesture from Beldere, who continued to advance up the short steps. Cat and Seleger vaulted from their mounts, excited to see what had Beldere so worked up.

The inside of the house was a mess, but that was not what captured the party’s attention. At the base of a broken chair, sprawled on a moldy blanket, was a filthy, pale, and sickly-looking little girl dressed in rags. Cat was almost surprised to see her draw breath. She had at least one broken arm, and her bruised face was contorted in pain, even though she appeared to be unconscious.

“Call for Master Adenide…” Dain started.

“There is no need,” Catwright stated soberly. He could feel Beldere gathering his magic. The girl might be dead long before the master got there, but Beldere could heal her. Cat had been in bad shape before, but his wounds were almost always treated immediately. This poor girl must have been suffering for days. She had the look of someone with untreated internal damage.

The girl gasped as the magic of Neador’s faith took hold. She floated several inches above the floor; her bones fused together, her flesh knitted closed, bruises faded, and scars disappeared. Beldere then cleared the blood from her body with the same magic and repaired her torn clothing, revealing a pale, brown-haired girl of nine or ten years. She sobbed softly. The whole miracle took less than a minute.

“You have come far, young priest, from when I last saw you,” Dain said slowly. “I doubt Master Adenide could have been so thorough.”

“I have had considerable practice,” Beldere glanced at Catwright.

“I grant you right of sentence for Dernus Bailer; what would Neador’s judgment be?”

Beldere sighed heavily, the weight of responsibility evident. Cat knew that Neador himself did not judge, but the wisdom of his priests was considered beyond reproach. “What can you tell me of the family?”

“They came from the north a few years ago,” Dain stated, “from the borderlands. A neighboring town had been sacked by Grulken, so they decided it was time to move somewhere better protected, even if it meant paying some taxes. Dernus was always the angry type and likes to drink and gamble.”

“The mother?” Beldere asked.

Dain just shrugged. In Mecre, it was not uncommon for women to separate from the fathers of their children if they had a druidic calling, but in the borderlands, men and women usually stayed together for extra security.

“She was killed in the borderlands,” came a slurred call from the doorway. Dernus stood there swaying. The little girl became stiff and silent, her fear evident. The boys and Dain did not move; they had seen him coming. He was not a fighting man, and they were not intimidated. “When the Grulken sacked Bolgerton, she was there with her sister, and they were all slaughtered.” He spat the words, far more angry than sad.

Dernus suddenly halted mid-sway and became silent, eyes wide. Beldere approached the large man, the priest’s voice as cold as Cat had ever heard it. “Dernus Bailer, you are a damaged man. I cannot heal the wound in your mind, but I can make sure you do not harm others. You will continue to work as a pig farmer, tithing one-tenth of all your earnings to the Sulwood estate. Your children shall become wards of the Sulwoods. If you wish to see them, they must agree to the meeting. No matter how much anger you have, you will never lay a hand upon them or anyone unless it be in self-defense or the defense of Breckan’s Hold.”

“Yes, Priest of Neador, I’ll obey,” Dernus droned in reply. Cat and Seleger looked at each other with dumbfounded expressions. The compulsion was one of the most frightening things Catwright had ever seen. Could Beldere do that to him? Had he already done it? Dernus staggered into an adjoining room, looking tired and confused.

Dain kneeled down in front of the girl, her hollow expression focused. “Bethyn, where is your brother?”

“I…I dunno,” she squeaked.

“He is in the sty,” Beldere said.

Dain wrinkled his nose. “Alive?”

“Sleeping,” the priest confirmed.

The pigsty was a short wooden building not far from the main house. As they approached, the reek was oppressive, even in the crisp autumn air. “Chatwick, are you in there?” Dain shouted into the entrance.

A scrawny boy of perhaps thirteen or fourteen years slid through the muck, scrambling to his feet and almost falling again in his haste. “S..sorry, my lords, I wasn’t sleepin’ or nothin’; I was just checkin’ that all the piglets was still there.” The accent was of the rural borderlands, thicker than his father’s or sister’s. His clothes were covered in pig feces and mud; even the stringy blonde mop on his head was matted with brown on one side. Seleger did not try to hide his wide grin. Cat smiled in spite of himself; even with all he had been through, he could not imagine finding comfort in such a hiding place.

“Your father has forfeited his right of parentage,” Dain said without preamble. “You and your sister shall become wards of the Sulwood house.”

The boy’s face sobered as he considered the words; for a moment, Cat thought he would refuse. Chatwick’s face brightened suddenly. “Ol’ da finally went too far, I reckon. That mean I don’t have to shovel shit no more? Seems like a lucky day for me. What do I do? I can cook, ya know, an’ I’m pretty fierce with a spade!”

Seleger chuckled. “Father, with your permission, I think I’d like to take Chatwick as my squire.”

Dain had a bemused expression. “Or a page, more like; young Chatwick has not been raised as a soldier. I shall grant your request, if Chatwick is willing?”

“A man could do much worse than page to a Sulwood,” Chatwick grinned and tried to stand proud, raising his chin and puffing out his chest. “It would be my honor!” It might have come across better if he weren’t ankle-deep in filth.

After a thorough cleaning, with aid from Beldere, Seleger had his new page coax Bethyn out of the house and onto a horse behind Catwright. Chatwick couldn’t resist running his hands down the flanks of the great bear as he passed. Feingar, for his part, gave a small snort and a look that suggested the boy’s hands were not clean enough for such liberties.

“We do not fondle another’s mount without their permission,” Seleger chided gently. “There are men who would cut you down for such an affront; a different war bear might even take you for a snack.”

“Someday I will ride a great bear like Feingar!” Chatwick spoke prophetically, without the least bit of apology or humility, as he climbed up behind Seleger. 

The town of Breckan’s Hold was the same picturesque small gathering of well constructed wooden houses Catwright remembered from two years past. The homes were interspersed by occasional rock walls and ruined stone structures from a fortress that fell hundreds of years ago during the war of the dead. Cat did not remember the name of the fort or the battle, but was sure he had learned about it at some point. 

They made their way slowly to the Sulwood manor. Many townspeople waved or called a greeting to Dain and Seleger, for they were adored by the folk. Dain stopped and conversed with many of them, exchanging pleasantries and deftly deflecting or answering inquiries with a precision that left Catwright in awe. The art of conversation and politics was something not well covered in his education thus far.

Although only a couple of hours had passed since they had diverged from the rest of the party on the road, the sun was low in the sky as they entered the sturdy wooden gates of the Sulwood estate. The small courtyard was lush with vegetation, including a variety of colorful flowers Cat was pretty sure would not normally grow this late in the year. Lady Natalia Sulwood greeted them at the entrance in a long forest green gown. An emerald necklace around her neck brought out her sparkling eyes as she beamed at them. Her curly brown hair framed striking features. She was not quite a decade younger than Dain, yet still old enough to have three children, two of whom were already adults. She herself could have easily passed for Dain’s daughter. Such was the way of those who practiced advanced druidcraft, Cat thought, they don’t seem to age the way the rest of us do.

“Greetings husband, Seleger, and oh Catwright it has been too long, you boys are so tall I have to look up at you now.” She hugged all three of them warmly, before turning to the children. “Now who are these little darlings?”

“Chatwick and Bethyn Bailer, Neador has seen fit to grant us two new wards.” he nodded toward Beldere. “I’ll explain the circumstances at dinner my dear.”

“Priest Beldere, you have grown as well, I see maturity and sorrow in your eyes far beyond your years. Pray take whatever succor you desire from this house. A Voice of the Watcher is ever welcome here. We have prepared rooms for you, but I know master Adelade has requested your presence in the Grotto of Whispers and has quarters for you there as well.”

“I thank you for your hospitality, Lady Sulwood. I beg your leave, so that I may be off to the Grotto at once.” Beldere looked uncomfortable and excited at the same time.

“Off you go then dear, best not to keep the Master waiting.”

Beldere made cursory farewells to the others and then virtually ran out the door. Natalia greeted the children warmly and sent them off with a servant for a tour of the grounds and dinner with some of the other children of the manor. Cat and Selger were asked to freshen up before an intimate meal with Lord and Lady Sulwood.

The meal was sumptuous compared to what Cat was used to, but not extravagant by Sulwood standards. They were not true wealthy nobles, but compared to his father or any normal soldiers, they were well off indeed. They spoke at length about local politics, the assumption being that Catwright would be interested since he might someday run a village or town of his own someday. In truth he found it difficult to focus, his mind drifting into imaginary future adventures. The responsibilities that Dain and Natalia embraced with such fervor held little interest for the sixteen year old boy.

Seleger seemed to embrace the conversation well enough, asking about the families he knew or what trade goods they would seek in return for their larger than normal harvest this year. 

“What are your plans while in Osenvale, Catwright?” The conversation had become a background murmur until he caught Natalia’s voice speaking his name.

“Uh, I’m sorry…” He fumbled. She repeated her question, more slowly.

“If Selly’s going with you I would know your general plans, where you’ll be staying, and how long.” Her voice was sweet and cordial with a not so subtle hint of demand.

“Well,” Cat started slowly, as Seleger stifled a laugh. “We’re going for the festival, and the tournament.” He paused. “I haven’t really thought too far beyond that. As for where we’re staying, I hadn’t really thought about it. I figured Sergeant Lovine would know a place.”

“I’m sure he would indeed, a hovel with pallets for beds above a brothel no doubt.” Seleger didn’t hold back his laugh this time. The lady’s mischievously stern face swept the room. “Well you needn’t worry, I will arrange a place, for I shall be going with you.”

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