Lunthea Maly,
the Fragrant Flower, the Shining Jewel of the East, mourned for its deceased
emperor as it never had before.
Not that Molthisok-Khemkhaeng
Niran was a particularly well-liked leader (in fact, he had raised taxes to
their highest in centuries.) No, Lunthea Maly did not mourn for him. The people
mourned for what they viewed as the loss of their powerful status among the
Eastern countries and those of the continent.
They mourned for their sudden deficit in leadership – for the new
emperor was merely nine years old. On top of that, he liked funny clowns and
had a pet peacock. Oh, how far the great have fallen!
However, the new
emperor, Khemkhaeng-Niran Klahan, was not particularly concerned about his
empire. He knew he was too young to rule properly, but his father had taught
him more than anyone could suspect, except, perhaps, for the emperor’s pet
peacock.
Said peacock had
been invited to every meeting between young Klahan and his father. Niran had
laughed, but his son had refused to allow the peacock to be sent away. So it
stayed. Klahan depended on the peacock to be his constant companion, so
therefore, his uncle, Sepertin Naga, had arranged for the peacock to be sent
away. He did not believe pets to be a great asset to an emperor’s reign.
But Klahan had
stubbornly smuggled his peacock away in his private chambers (which consisted
of forty-two rooms, elaborately gilded and decorated in the style of the Far
East.) Unfortunately, peacocks do not like being shut up where no one can see
their glorious plumage, and this peacock was no exception.
“Klahan,” it
complained one day in the voice that none but the emperor could hear, “I can’t
bear being stuck here for a single more day. I demand that you let me out!”
The emperor
sighed, quite a sad noise for one so young. “I told you, Bangat, my uncle
doesn’t even know you’re still here!”
The peacock
sniffed, which included a sneeze-like sound and a shake of his magnificent
tail. “You’re the only one who can tell me apart from the other peacocks. Just
let me go free with them.” Bangat did not add that he detested the other
peacocks, vain, mute things that they were.
Klahan shut the
book he had been reading with a thump, since it was quite a heavy book. “My
uncle knows things that you don’t know he knows,” he said. “I think he might
even suspect the location of Ay-Ibunda, the Hidden Temple.”
Bangat squawked.
“Impossible!” he cried. “It lies on the Emperor’s Path!”
“Nevertheless,”
Klahan replied, his eyes dark and wise, “he might know. And I cannot risk you
getting sent away. You have taught me more about what it means to be a leader
than even my father.”
Preening his
colorful feathers, Bangat pretended that he had not heard this last compliment,
which, of course, he had. “I’ll blend in, I promise you. Have I not done so for
the last thousand-few years? I have spied on the minions of the Mherking; I
have hidden in the shadows of even He Who Walks Before the Night. Do you doubt
that I can remain unseen in the gardens of Lunthea Maly?”
Klahan opened
his mouth to answer, but at that moment someone knocked on the door.
“Are you in
there, O Great One?” a silky voice asked, though its smooth tone was undercut
with a sharp, razor edge.
With a gulp,
Klahan scooped the peacock up, ignoring his attempts to get away. “It’s my
uncle!” he hissed. “Get out the window, hurry!”
Bangat obeyed
without protesting, though later he would question this. He obeyed no man save
one. Hopping through the window, he spread his useless wings and landed, hard,
in the thorny rosebushes, which had not bloomed since before
Molthisok-Khemkhaeng Niran’s reign. With a curse of “Dragons’ teeth!” he rolled
out of the bush and ruffled his mussed feathers.
Voices drifted
through the window. “Was that your voice I heard earlier, dear nephew? Whom,
may I ask, were you talking to?”
“I wasn’t
talking to anyone,” Klahan responded, his voice once more calm. “I was
practicing my dictation out of my book over there.”
Heavy footsteps
marched across the floor, and then Sepertin Naga said, “Greatest Sonnets of
the Bard Eanrin?”
“Yes. His verses
offer a wide scope for different types of speech.” His voice changed to a
lilting cadence, made sweet by his childlike soprano. “O Gleamdren fair, I
love thee true—”
“I quite
understand,” Sepertin Naga interrupted, his voice a snakelike hiss. “Make sure
you are prepared for your coronation tomorrow. I believe we have secured a
number of funny clowns, as you requested, Glorious One.”
“Excellent,”
Klahan said, upset but unruffled by the interruption. “You may go now.”
The emperor’s
uncle bowed, but asked one more question: “Why is your window open, nephew?”
For the first
time, Klahan’s confidence wavered. “You do not need to know the answer to
that.”
“As you
command.” Bangat heard the footsteps once more, but they receded soon into the
distance.
“Bangat?” Klahan
called, though he did not look out the window. His voice trembled a bit as he
said, “Perhaps it would be best if you stayed outside for the night. He might
come back.”
“Very well. I
agree with you,” Bangat replied. “Shall I see you at the coronation?”
“As long as my
uncle does not see you, you shall.”
“Good.” Bangat
gave his feathers a last preen, then, satisfied with their sheen, strutted off
as only a peacock can. He did not hear Klahan’s shuddering breaths, nor did he
see the shine of tears upon the boy’s face.
“Be safe,
Bangat,” Klahan whispered to the room, which now appeared forlorn to his lonely
eyes. “Stay hidden.”
~~~
“ELEPHANT!”
cried the mad jester, spreading his arms wildly. “My name is Leonard of the
Tongue of Lightning! Why are the trees pink and dripping frogs?”
More like
Leonard of the Tongue of Nonsense, Klahan thought, but his solemn mouth
quirked for a second.
The jester
seemed to notice this, with eyes quicker than they should have been,
considering that he was a brainless idiot. “The cheese fell!” he shouted. “Cake
parties make Eanrin of Rudiobus eat spiders and lizards greet clouds at night!”
So saying, he began dancing quite madly and singing in some strange Westerner
tongue, which made no sense to even those who spoke that language. And after
the jester vowed to eat the crowd, the emperor laughed.
In fact,
everyone in the hall laughed, following their emperor’s lead, including
Sepertin Naga, who did so with a murderous look on his face. Even Bangat,
hidden in the shadows, snorted in a manner that only peacocks can. His snort
was cut short, however, when Klahan spoke.
“You have
pleased me greatly, Leonard of the Tongue of Lightning. Name any desire of your
heart. So long as it is within my power to give, I shall bestow it upon you as
a gift.”
The jester
seemed to ponder these words for a moment. But when he opened his eyes, they
were not the eyes of a madman. “I want…Ay-Ibunda.”
“No,” Bangat
whispered.
“No,” Klahan
said.
And next to the
throne, Sepertin Naga’s smile flickered as he caught sight of a bright feather
sticking out from behind a carved column.
~~~
The clown was
swiftly ejected from the hall as the coronation drew to a close. Bangat watched with trepidation as his young
charge accepted the duties of the emperor. Giving his tail feathers a shake, he
worried over every possible thought that presented itself to his wearied mind.
What if Klahan wasn’t ready to be emperor? Could he manage without his father?
Would Sepertin Naga relinquish his hold over the empire?
Of course he
wouldn’t,
Bangat answered himself. The power-loving fool.
“I’ll go see to
him,” Bangat muttered under his breath. “He needs my help, and the help of my
Prince.” He began strutting down the halls, passing over the intricately inlaid
marble floors without a thought. No one stopped him, for the royal peacocks
were treated with almost as much respect as the emperor and his immediate
family.
When Bangat
reached Klahan’s suite of rooms, he found the boy, still in his imperial robes,
seated in front of a mirror and grimacing. “What are you doing?” Bangat asked,
bewildered.
Klahan swung his
short legs back and forth in the air, since they did not quite reach the
ground. “Practicing the faces the clown made.”
“Why?” Bangat
said. “It’s not befitting to a young man of your—SQUAAWWK!”
“Bangat?” Klahan
swiftly turned around on his cushioned seat, only to meet the blazing eyes of
his uncle.
“So…” Sepertin
Naga said. He looked more snakelike than ever as he grasped the struggling
peacock and smiled thinly at the emperor. “I thought this peacock had left the
palace.”
“I’m not under
orders from you,” Klahan asserted, before suddenly changing direction. “And
that—that’s a different peacock.” He frowned, a hint of panic upon his childish
features.
But Sepertin
Naga smiled. “We both know you only gave one peacock a name, nephew. Now, it is
time for it to leave.”
“No,” Klahan
said in desperation. “I’m the emperor; I’m in charge.”
“Not for long,”
his uncle said, leering. Then he shouted, “Guards! Make sure he does not
leave.” Turning to the boy, who was trembling in anger, he said, “Never cross
me. You may be the emperor in name, but I think we both know who will really be in charge.” He stepped smartly
across the room and slammed the door, Bangat still throttled in his grasp.
“Don’t try to
get away,” Sepertin Naga hissed at the peacock. “I know you’re onto me. Flarn!”
he called. “Give this peacock to that jester. He’s still lingering at the
gates; tell him the emperor has given him a gift.”
A
smartly-dressed servant emerged from the shadows and bowed, taking Bangat, who
hung his head low in shame. To be given to the jester!
My Prince, Bangat thought
desperately. What should I do?
The response
came as soon as he asked the question. Go. I will guide your path, just as I
am attempting to guide the path of the jester.
You are guiding
his path?
Bangat asked, astonishment flooding his body so that he was petrified, unable
to move in the servant’s arm.
He follows
another’s guidance,
the Prince said in the silver voice of the wood thrush, but I believe he
will come to me in the end.
Well, miracles
do happen.
The great doors to the palace opened with a clang, and Bangat was
jerked out of his thoughts. The jester stood outside, his bright clothing
tarnished and an indignant look upon his face.
After the servant, Flarn, managed to convey the message that Bangat was
a gift, the jester took Bangat but immediately dropped him on the filthy ground.
“I say! I really don’t want this!”
He, Bangat thought. I’m obviously a male, not a “this.”
“Your humble gratitude will be conveyed to the Imperial Glory,” the
servant replied stiffly.
“But…but what am I supposed to do with a dragon-eaten peacock?” the
jester asked, clearly mystified.
Dragon-eaten. Interesting choice of words.
“And your wishes for his prosperous and eternal reign. Good night!” the
servant said, though he obviously wished the jester anything but.
“If you’re not a stew by the end of the week, it won’t be my fault. Why
me?” the jester said, looking at Bangat with a famished look in his eyes.
Bangat noticed for the first time how the jester’s ribs stuck out from beneath
his colorful garb.
Stew. No. Bangat flapped his small wings and struggled free of the
jester’s grasp. “Heelp!” he cried. “HEEEELP!”
~~~
Bangat claimed the bed, as was his
right as a knight. The jester, who Bangat had decided was not mad at all,
grumbled, but must have sensed the peacock’s superiority. Unfortunately, he
still seemed to think Bangat was dinner.
Aroused from his restless sleep by a
loud knock, Bangat lifted his plumed head and watched as the jester cursed and
stumbled his way to the door. Therefore, he did not miss the unmistakable fine
clothes of one of Klahan’s personal attendants. It seemed he had come to
retrieve Bangat, whom he compared generously to a Firebird.
What a stroke of fortune! Bangat
hopped off the bed and strutted to the door of the hovel. “Thanks very kindly,”
he said, though he knew both men would only hear squawks. The attendant did,
however, bow. Bangat nodded, accepting this as his due.
“The gift of the reverenced bird was
offered in a symbolic nature,” the attendant said.
Bangat cocked his head. Hadn’t Sepertin Naga wanted him sent away for
good?
“You were not supposed to accept the bird,” continued the man, treating
the jester like the madman he appeared, dressed as he was in a dirtied fool’s
outfit.
The jester swore, obviously upset by
the loss of dinner.
“Your veneration and devotion will
be conveyed to the Imperial Glory…”
“Yes! Free!” Bangat cried.
“And your prayers for his eternal
and prosperous reign.”
The jester scooped Bangat up in a
most undignified manner and thrust him out of the door. Bangat hissed angrily,
but the jester had slammed the door. “Follow me, most noble bird,” said the
servant, bowing again.
Bangat eyed the servant warily. He wore the garb of the emperor’s
attendants, but it was possible he was working for Sepertin Naga.
The man reached down to pick Bangat up, and the peacock made his
decision. Squawking wildly, he ran down the dingy hallway, through the sagging
door, and into the street. Where a pair of hands promptly picked him up.
“Awk! Let me go!”
“Shh,” a familiar boyish voice said. “It’s me.”
Swiveling his head, Bangat gazed into the dark eyes of his young
charge. “Klahan? What are you doing?” He took in the boy’s filthy clothes and
dirtied face. Klahan had done a remarkable job with his disguise, Bangat had to
admit, but that was no excuse for wandering the dangerous streets alone.
“Giving the clown his reward. Just wait here,” Klahan instructed.
“His reward?” Bangat asked. “You don’t mean…the Hidden Temple?”
“Exactly,” Klahan replied brusquely. He set Bangat gently on the
ground, then stepped into the dark building, swiftly vanishing from sight.
“Klahan!” Bangat cried. Muttering darkly to himself, he attempted to
follow the boy emperor, but found he could not continue. The wretched child had
manipulated the Paths in the city, and Bangat sensed that if he took another
step, he would find himself somewhere much less favorable than outside a
squalid apartment.
Then Klahan appeared, followed by the jester, who looked as though all
his hopes and dreams had come true at that moment. Bangat once more remembered
his Prince’s words about guiding the fool, but he sniffed after the manner of
peacocks and began covertly shadowing Klahan’s footsteps.
The Path they walked was very dark. Bangat sensed the evil lying at the
end and wanted to wrench Klahan away, but the voice of the wood thrush said, Never
fear. I am with you.
But are you with them? Bangat asked in response.
Suddenly, the city vanished. They stood, surrounded by swirling mist,
before a sinister gate. Bangat shivered at the sight. Something evil lurked
here.
Calling upon his Prince to protect them all, Bangat hurried through the
gate after the jester and his emperor.
If possible, the inside of the temple was even darker than the outside.
Shadowy figures moved like wraiths in the corner of Bangat’s eye, but he
ignored them as he followed Klahan and the jester.
Then Klahan was alone, the jester having disappeared through a dark and
foul-smelling tunnel.
“Klahan!” Bangat said.
The boy turned, his face wide with surprise and even anger. “What are
you doing here? I told you to wait!”
“And you thought I would?” answered Bangat.
“Well, no.” Klahan wore a sheepish expression, but his eyes were still
sharp and wary as he took in their surroundings. “I don’t like this,” he
murmured.
“No more do I,” Bangat said. “What were you thinking, showing
this fool the Hidden Temple?”
“I needed to know that I could come here. I needed to know that—Quick! On
the floor!”
Bangat dropped to the ground like Klahan, but realized that his large
tail would not lie flat against the ground. Cursing himself, for he had sworn
he would never show the boy, he assumed his man’s shape, a change so natural
that nothing seemed to have changed at all, except for a mortal’s perception.
Klahan stared goggle-eyed, for once at a loss for words. Bangat slapped
a hand over his mouth and hissed, “Quiet! Now, what are you afraid of?”
“My uncle,” Klahan said once he had recovered his voice. “He’s here.”
Once upon a time, Bangat would have sworn to the world that such things
were impossible, then gotten up and proclaimed his existence to any who might
have been watching. But since entering the Prince’s service, he had learned
that impossible things frequently happened, and in such a way that he would
never doubt possibility again.
When the jester fell out of the passage, he seemed dazed, so much so
that he did not even notice Bangat crouching on the floor.
Bangat frowned. How could anyone not notice him? He had blue hair, for
goodness’ sake!
But the emperor replaced the blindfold, all the while looking nervously
around.
“Leave your uncle to me,” Bangat whispered in his charge’s ear.
Klahan nodded, his face full of fear. “Will you escape from this
place?”
Bangat looked down solemnly at the little emperor. “You have a great
destiny, one my Prince wants me to protect. If I do not return to you…well, you
may be certain that will never happen. Trust me.”
“Okay,” Klahan said in an uncharacteristically small voice. He turned
to the jester and began leading him away, though not before glancing back again
at Bangat.
But Bangat had already moved on in search of Sepertin Naga.
~~~
He did not have to search long. The wraithlike monks moved out of
Bangat’s way as he passed, two long, sharp knives in his hands. They were made
of a metal the Near World had never seen, and the monks moved fearfully out of
the way, paving a clear path to Sepertin Naga.
Klahan’s uncle stood with his hands upraised in the darkest chamber of
all. An altar was before him, an altar made of some black stone that gave Bangat
the shivers.
Bangat stepped forward, and his foot skidded across the slippery floor.
Dragons’ teeth! The floor was designed to hinder any attacker before he even
reached his target. Bangat, sheathing his knives, and with the grace of a
Faerie, stood upright soon enough, but not before Sepertin Naga tuned in to the
fact that someone was behind him.
“Why are you here?” he asked. “How have you come to this hidden place?”
“I come in the name of the Prince of the Farthest Shore,” Bangat said,
glad his voice stayed firm, “and under the protection of Khemkhaeng-Niran
Klahan, your emperor. He it was who led me here, but it is I who will be
disposing of you.”
Sepertin Naga turned around. He took in Bangat’s strange, gaudy dress
and shock of blue, feathery hair. “Ah,” he whispered. “I should have known. She
warned me that you weren’t what you seemed to be, you know.”
“She?” Bangat was bewildered, but then he stared at the gruesome
carvings on the wall. Death was portrayed there, in alarming reality, along
with his sister, the Lady Life-in-Death. “I see. Well, she can’t protect you
against me.”
“No?” Sepertin Naga smiled his thin smile, then clapped his hands.
Some unseen force pinned Bangat to the ground. He struggled to free
himself, but his attacker had no hands, nor, it seemed, any bodily features at
all. It was merely a tool to aid in the capture of Sepertin Naga’s enemies.
“Take him to the Mother’s Mouth,” the emperor’s uncle commanded.
Bangat felt himself lifted to his feet. Dragged across the courtyard,
he saw the monks jumbling closer to see him, their bodies more solid now that
they came out of the mist. The unseen servant pulled Bangat all the way across
the courtyard, between the hordes of monks, and beyond, through the dark tunnel
the jester had gone down earlier.
“No,” Bangat moaned, but nothing could help him now.
Then he fell to the floor. Bangat rushed at the place he knew the
doorway to be, but the force was in the way, and Bangat stumbled back.
“So,” a cold voice said, echoing from the back of the chamber, where
darkness wreathed the walls and even Bangat’s clear Faerie gaze could not
penetrate. “The enemy of my brother has sent a champion. Who are you, little
Faerie?”
“I am nothing and nobody,” Bangat said, reaching for his knives.
“Those paltry things will do you no good,” the woman’s voice said, for
it was a woman who spoke, but only just. “Not here in my temple. I sense that
you attempted to kill my faithful servant, Sepertin Naga. By betraying my
purposes, here where I am strongest, you will have to die—unless you swear to
me something.”
“What is it?” Bangat asked, more curious than scared.
“Swear to serve me, and me only,” Life-in-Death told him. “Swear it,
now!”
“I—” Bangat began, unsure of the words. Then the voice of the wood thrush
spoke in his mind.
Do not forget
me! he cried. And Bangat knew what to say.
“I will not,” he said, “for I stand under the Prince of the Farthest Shore.
No Life-in-Death can take me away from his service!”
Life-in-Death screamed in fury, and Bangat felt the force behind him
shudder. Mustering all his paltry strength, he called upon his Prince. Feeling
the surety of life flood back into him, Bangat rammed into the force and broke
through into the tunnel beyond.
He took his peacock’s form for better maneuverability in the cramped
tunnel, then became a man once more after exiting the tunnel, which still
reverberated with Life-in-Death’s screams.
Sepertin Naga gaped at him. “You’re alive?” he gasped.
“Yes,” Bangat agreed. “But you won’t be for much longer.” He
drew his knives and rushed toward the man, whose mouth was now open, but neither
words nor screams issued forth. Raising his right hand, Bangat prepared to
strike Sepertin Naga down, but two voices stopped him.
“Bangat! What are you doing?” Klahan cried as he burst through
Ay-Ibunda’s gates.
You are not a
killer, my dear knight, the Prince told him. Leave
him to me.
Are you sure? Bangat replied.
Do you doubt me?
“No,” Bangat muttered, putting his knives away. “But this wretch—”
Is beloved to me,
just as you are. Leave him be.
Very well, my
Prince.
Bangat cast one last scathing look over his shoulder at Sepertin Naga,
who still lay helpless on the ground. Then he strode over to where Klahan
waited.
“You almost killed him!” Klahan said, a hint of disbelief coloring his
voice, along with an excited undertone. “I thought you were just a peacock!”
“Never base ideas off assumptions,” Bangat growled. “You can make some
very serious mistakes.”
“Speaking of serious,” Klahan said as he clanged the gates shut and locked
them, obscuring Sepertin Naga from view, “I think maybe I should lighten up a
bit. Like that jester, you know?”
His face was so set that Bangat wanted to tell him to put his new
resolution into effect as once. But he satisfied himself in saying, “As long as
you’re not exactly like that jester. Please, don’t make me a stew.”
Klahan stared for a moment, then burst out laughing. “Can you always
stay like this? You’re funnier than when you’re a bird.”
Bangat glared at his young charge, but seeing the expression of mirth
on the emperor’s face, decided to smile. “Maybe. But for now, I think lightening
up is an excellent idea. Your people may like you better for it, you never
know.”
Klahan smiled in return. “Where did you get so wise?”
“My Prince helped me,” said Bangat. He couldn’t resist adding, “Though
I came by most of it naturally.”
“Who’s your Prince?” Klahan asked, frowning. “I thought I was your
emperor.”
“And so you are. But my Prince is greater than any mortal or immortal
ruler.”
“Who is he?” Klahan said in a low, eager voice. “Can you introduce me?”
“I can help you find your way to him,” Bangat said, “but you’ll have to
meet him on your own.”
“Then help me!”
They were well away from the Hidden Temple now. The shadows had
departed, and Bangat felt safer among the familiar bustle of Lunthea Maly. He
crouched and put an arm around Klahan’s shoulder. “I can do that. But first,
make me a promise. Never, just because you’re the emperor, think that you know
better than me all the time.”
Klahan grinned. “Of course not.” Under his breath he muttered, “Maybe
just once in a while.”
“Well, then,” Bangat continued, not hearing the second part. “To start
off with, my Prince is the son of the High King of the Farthest Shore…”
He set off walking again, and Klahan hurried to catch up to his long
strides, eager to learn as much as he could.
And if any citizen of Lunthea Maly thought it odd that their emperor
was wandering around with a stranger with blue hair, then it was none of his
business, really. After all, this new emperor looked to be starting a much
greater reign than that of his father, may he rest in peace. Maybe things would
change. Maybe much for the better.
9 comments:
This was an outstanding story, and I loved that it was told from the peacock's perspective. So great that he was more than he seemed. I loved how you wove the scene with Lionheart into the story so seamlessly, and the humor was outstanding. Great job. God bless you.
Hahaha! Yes! :D
Your prose is top-notch! I enjoyed how you fleshed out the peacock and turned him into a Knight--a twist I definitely did not see coming! You entwined your story beautifully with the events of "Veiled Rose"--great job!
Love this! The tie-ins with Veiled Rose are amazing, and making the peacock a knight is awesome. :-) I love emperor Klahan too.
AWESOME! You captured the personality of Klahan and his uncle perfectly! And it was so cool to see the peacock as a knight of Farthestshore. Wonderful writing and great rise and fall of action!
Thank you all! This was probably, out of all the stories I've ever written, one of the most fun to put to the page. The characters kind of did their own thing--all I did was decide that they were going to be in the story, and then Anne's world took hold of it. :) I now know why so many people love to write Eanrin--these rather self-absorbed, vain Faerie knights are rather fun to write, aren't they?
Love it! Faerie knights are fun characters to read about. Great job delving into one of Goldstone Wood's off the beaten paths other kingdoms!
Well done! I love the idea of the Peacock being a Knight; it fits so very well. And his whole personality... It was wonderful!
And... He has blue hair! *grin*
Wonderful! I had thought of the peacock as a faerie. Making him a Knight of Farthest Shore and the guardian of the young Emperor perfectly confirmed my suspicions! Thank you!
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