Chapter One:
The Knight Before the Dawn
The Knight Before the Dawn
“It is vital that we turn each and every dark tear into a pearl of wisdom, and find the blessing in every curse.”
Anticipation clawed at Eldarian’s chest as he stared out at the horizon.
“Galad! Dis' here rain chills to da bone, don’t it? E’ery drop be like a wee li’le knife cuttin’ inta ye.” The stablehand, named Todd, smiled up at Eldarian through the blustery night’s weather. Todd was a gray-haired man with missing teeth and wrinkles so deep they formed creases upon his brow. He was simple but had a kind heart and was an extremely hard worker.
Todd placed the hand lantern closer to the taller man’s hood, and shadows danced across his golden features with the movement. “Get some well-deserved rest, Todd.” Eldarian murmured as he slightly turned toward the elder man. “I know some days you rise earlier than I.”
“Ye been waitin’ e’ery night dis month ta see a horse gallopin’ up with no rider, ain’tcha?” Todd’s chapped lips fell into a heavy frown as he looked at Eldarian. Not even the sting of the cold rain could make him flinch as he scrutinized the Dawnknight with a hint of worry.
“Duty,” the knight replied easily, as if it were already on the tip of his tongue.
“Ye ain’t fond of leavin’ a man behind, huh?” Todd hobbled a few steps away to find shelter under the weather-beaten overhang of the stables. He placed the lantern on a nearby hay bale and let the soft glow wash over him.
“No,” Eldarian admitted with a trace of bitterness as he turned back to the road leading out of Beregost. “Especially not one of my own.”
Todd opened his mouth to try and lend some comforting words but they caught in his throat; all that was offered was a wisp of breath that carried upon the wind and scattered in silence. He was in the Amn-Gate war. He understood what it was like to wait on someone that wasn’t coming back, even if you held onto a sliver of hope.
His trembling fingers groped at a pocket on his breast as he pulled out a wooden pipe; with a touch of love and experience he quickly packed it with tobacco and then uttered a word of magic. With satisfaction he watched as a flicker of fire appeared within its bowl and then he placed it to his lips and began to puff.
His gaze turned back on the lone knight in front of him, steeped in all the glory of silence and solitude. The chilled rain met his armor in a succession of harmonious spatters that lent a melody to the untrained ear. The wind tugged against his golden cloak and hood in a fevered dance to rid him of warmth.
And yet . . . there he stood. Still. Statuesque in his poise and determined in his demeanor. Eyes stuck ever to the southern horizon.
Waiting for something that may never come.
“Rumors ‘re startin’ to crop up ‘bout ye regardin’ the simple folk, Commander.” Todd stated between a few puffs of his pipe. The snorts of the nearby horses weren’t enough to fill the silence between them anymore.
“How so?” Came the quiet response from the Dawnknight as one of his golden brows crinkled in contemplation.
“They still got eyes,” Todd stated in colorful reply as his lips curled upward in a minute smile, “they see ye standin’ here night after night. They be superstitious folk. They know yer a paladin. . .” He puffed the last vestiges from his pipe as the nutty, oat-like aroma began to fade.
The gloved fingers on Eldarian’s right hand twitched, briefly. The stablehand took it as a sign to continue.
“They say yer seein’ somethin’ normal folk can’t. They’re thinkin’ trouble be brewin’.” Todd scratched at the wiry stubble on his chin.
A solemn frown found its way onto Eldarian’s lips. His golden-flecked eyes trailed over the horizon for a long time in the darkness before he replied, simple but honest. “There is.”
Hesitation and silence snaked its way between them for a long time before Todd finally pushed himself off the wall of the stable and made to leave. His old bones were beginning to ache from the cold and rain and his mind begged for rest from a hard day’s work.
No farewells were given. He decided it was best to leave the knight to his own thoughts and his solemn duty. Only after Todd had shuffled halfway down the street and almost around a corner had he finally decided to gaze back at the lone Dawnknight for a split second.
His eyes caught the fluttering of a brilliant golden cloak amidst a sea of darkness.