Fall 1st, 512 AV
The stage has been set, our protagonist, Sighard Beleld, sits, mired in the gloomy smoke of the Rearing Stallion and beneath the weighty presence of an ale, slipped marginally between two, bubbling lips. The jade of his eyes have lost their luster and the gain of his presence has deluded into the hulking slump of a boy pressed against the cherry oak countertop—or was it pine? He smiles as he allows his reddened fingertips to flow against the surface and the feel, to –feel-, the presence of creases and age in the wood. Here, he thought, here is an honest wood that’s attested to a life of purity and resolve. It did not have to lie to maintain its worth, nor did it have to cheat to regain its honor. To be the wood would be simple and less twisted than I. Sighard was drunk, and ambivalent. On the exterior, he presented the shining example of his family name, what dressed head to toe in armor that dignified the Beleld. To him, it was a hollow shell that endeavored to hide the swirling maelstrom of doubt and pity inside. It was a plague that resolved to settle itself through. . .
“Drink—bartender. . . drink,” wept the stumbling words of Sighard who shook his empty pewter mug angrily into the air. He received only indignation, the crowing of a few angered patrons and a bumbling barkeep that skillfully ignored the requests of the plastered and the criminally insane. Even the awkward jingle of spinning coin, as it pressed itself neatly onto the counter did not turn the head of the rotund, aproned individual. The sum of the boy’s efforts had earned him this lack of respect, although it had not always been this way.
There was a time, not at all too distant in the past where the ideals of chivalry coalesced into a sort of cult following that stimulated the young boy and drove him to excellence. It was at youth, when he was protected from the cruel realities of the world, and not yet driven into the meat of the human experience that he was at his finest. He was a natural, in many ways, to become one of the greatest ideological knights Syliras had ever seen, but he did not account for the grave amount of pressure that eventually drew him to dire straits.
The vicissitude of Sighard’s life experiences presented him with a series of morally grey challenges that both pressured his temperament and put his ideals into question until they seemed all but broken. The boy—soon to become man slowly devolved into one who blindly followed the shamble of his dream and became of a hollow vessel of such. In turn he favored alcohol to ease this imbalance of his conscience, and found it as a means of escape, if only temporarily of the pressures of both the Syliran Knights and familial expectations.
His father Darald—wait father? Sighard woke in a daze to the visceral jarring of his head and the resulting spinning sensation that followed. He felt a presence on his pauldron and a familiar face gestated in his peripheral.
“Your father. . . father. . . Bronze Woods. . . training. . . time,” spoke the phantasm of a man that shook the young boy vigorously. Absent of senses, the young man struggled to seize rationalization as his frame heaved forth from the table, a heavy swing of plated legs jarred unceremoniously on the floor below with a grating clatter and the world spun about, a chromatic diffusion of the dimly lit colors that comprised the Rearing Stallion.
“How could I forget. . . Father will be sore. . .” Sighard bellowed in long drawn tones that contain the subtlest slur. His gaze lolled heavily and bobbed along the knight that stood dutifully across from him with his arms crossed. He was a bald man with a beard peppered with gray. He’d a look of pity that disappeared as he turned to leave, his departure marked by the precision of his clattering, rhythmic step. The boy fumbled to grasp his cloak, cast idly off to the side and drew it about him before delving into the night after the man.
The cold was a sobering, bitter mistress which drafted from the creases in the stones and assuaged the man of his delusion by the prodding of its icy fingers. The divinity of its howl followed the boy as he staggered purposefully along the empty streets, uttering a “clack, clack, clack” that turned more than a curious head as the heavily cloaked figured rambled to himself along the winding passageways that lead to the gate of the place.
“A bit late for the woods, eh?” Inquired the gatekeeper who minded his partisan a bit too thoughtfully as he sized Sighard up and down with practiced bob of his head. “What be the purpose of this venture?”
“Business.” Sighard responded coarsely and with a visceral thrusting of his palms splayed open his cloak to reveal his armaments, clearly emblazoned with the insignia of the knights. The gesture, acutely presented did press the guard back uneasily but he called for the winch and allowed the boy to amble off into the night, along a dusty trail that penetrated the clawlike labyrinth of the woods.