“Ahah!” the scribe cried
out triumphantly from underneath the bed. He had shimmied under it in
a last ditch attempt to find a hiding spot that he was certain must
exist in the cleric’s room. “She was clever, but I have bested her
this time!” There was the sound of wood squeaking and then a small
clack of something metal turning and hitting wood. “A classic
mechanism, nothing fancy, but it gets the job done if you think that
people aren’t going to find your spot in the first place.” He
clambered out from underneath the bed, a wound scroll of paper in his
hands.
“Where was it hidden?” I
asked with genuine curiosity. The first place I had thought to look
when we got in the room had been under the bed and I had seen
absolutely nothing of note, not even a clump of dust or stray bit of
rubbish.
“Let me show you,” he
replied with excitement.
Pulling the bed away from the
corner it had been pushed in to, the scribe politely motioned for me
to move from where I stood so he could maneuver both the bed and the
accompanying nightstand far enough from the wall to allow us both to
step into the space they had occupied. Wordlessly he motioned to the
exposed floor and challenged me to try to find where the hiding space
was located.
On first glance, the stonework
floor all looked perfectly normal with all of the rectangular stones
appearing to be reasonably the same color and level with the rest. I
bent at the waist and traced the seams between the stones with my
fingers hoping to find something slightly amiss, perhaps a crack that
was a bit wider than the others. Finding none, I turned my attention
to searching for anything at all that could be considered marginally
out of place and came up empty handed. Even knowing something was
there, it was so well hidden that it eluded me.
Seeing that I was stumped, the
scribe bent down and pointed to a slight spot on one of the stones
that appeared to be just a natural color variation that many of the
other stones had as well. With a push of his finger the spot
depressed slightly into the stone and the same metallic click rang
out, popping up the entire stone from it’s nestled spot in the
floor.
“That seems more than just a
simple hiding spot,” I scoffed. “I couldn’t see how it was any
different at all.”
“You didn’t do the one
thing that would give it away.” He pressed the stone back into
place, then pressed his hand onto it, causing a soft, but notable
squeaky sound of wood rubbing on wood. “It’s just a wooden box
set in a wooden frame with a spring mechanism.”
I was rather worried if that
was considered a fairly simple hiding spot for Church dealings, both
from the perspective that there could be things hidden all over the
castle from all the years that Church members had resided in and
passed through and also it was unnerving that it was a common
practice for them. What exactly did they need to hide so often that
there was a whole culture of how to keep things secret from each
other? Everything I had read and been taught by them so far had
preached trusting that the Church knew what was best and to accept
their guidance for your life, but this told me that they couldn’t
even trust each other.
“Is that it?” I asked as I
pointed towards the parchment in his hand.
I had felt on edge ever since
setting foot in the room, if the cleric ever found out that I had and
especially that I had then searched through everything, I didn’t
want to try to imagine the unique and cruel punishments she would
concoct for me. The sooner we verified we had what we needed and got
out, the better.
“Too dark under there for me
to have looked, so let’s check now.” He untied the small strip of
fabric that kept the document secured and unrolled it slowly, eyes
scanning it over line by line. “It does seem to be some sort of
decree by the Church that mentions your family.”
“Let’s go find somewhere
to sit and go over it then,” I suggested, itching to get out of the
room.
“My study then, we’ll want
to have me make a copy of the document so that we can put this one
back. It’s important not to give away that we’ve found her hiding
spot, she’ll pick a harder one next time.”
Next time. My blood ran cold
thinking of my aunts’ return. I was certain it would happen, I only
hoped that it was far enough away for me to be able to prepare and
hopefully prevent them from even gaining access to castle. I didn’t
want to entertain the idea that she would end up back in this room
with the status quo, I couldn’t imagine going back to what she
called the path of the martyr. While it was happening I could numb
myself to the terrible existence and muddle through, now that I had
some sleep and time to think on my own, I felt sick for what I had
experienced and utterly terrified of it happening again.
In the scribe’s chambers, he
immediately sat at his ink stained desk and got to work, retrieving a
piece of blank parchment from a large stack that started from the
floor and reached nearly to the top of the desk and picking a quill
from a collection kept in a jar on the desk. His eyes flitted back
and forth between the original and the document he was crafting,
ensuring that all words and punctuation was the same. I had no clue
about how long the process would take and felt antsy about finally
knowing how exactly my aunt was able to put a stranglehold on my
kingship, but I only got a few paces in across the floor before my
legs began to wobble with exhaustion and pain began to radiate from
the depths of my bones. I frowned at the idea that the magic hadn’t
been a permanent fix, though I wouldn’t complain too much since it
had given me a few hours of relief. I plopped down into a chair set
up next to a set of shelves completely filled with various documents
stacked and itemized by their purpose and gently massaged the top of
my thighs, wincing at how tattered the muscles felt beneath my
fingertips.
The tale has been taken without authorization; if you see it on Amazon, report the incident.
The scribe had been very
talkative up until this point, seemingly excited to have found
someone who shared a love of written word, but he had gone completely
silent and totally focused on the task at hand. The stark change in
conversation level highlighted just how tired I did feel despite
having woken up from my nap not so long ago, at some point between
our search in the cleric’s room and returning to the study
exhaustion had welled up inside me. I tried to entertain myself by
thumbing through some of the documents on the shelf and felt my
eyelids drooping more and more, my body crying out to catch up on
rest. The content of the documents did not help, most of them were
various deeds held by my family and long standing agreements between
my father and local merchants, important things to keep recorded, but
not exactly the historical recordings or fantastical tales of knights
rescuing fair princesses that I tended to enjoy. I think even at my
most awake and alert I would have found myself fading if this was the
only reading material I had available to me.
“My lord.” A hand shook me
awake and a document that had been still clutched in my sleeping hand
slipped to the floor. “Sorry to wake you, but the copy has been
made and I’ve given it a good thorough read through as well.”
“Wonderful.” Groggily, I
rubbed my eyes and tried to orient myself, despite having fallen
asleep sitting up I felt like I had slept incredibly deeply. My body
felt disconnected and like I was swimming through jelly, the kind of
feeling that makes you have to stop and deeply consider if you are
actually awake or still dreaming. “Shall we go over what’s in the
document then?”
“Yes of course,” he
replied, though he sounded hesitant.
“Is there something wrong?”
My vision had started to clear and the world felt like it was
sharpening around me, the improvement in consciousness made me
realize that he was looking at me with concern.
“Wrong? No, not
necessarily,” he said with a slight shake of his head, “I had
just never seen someone so deeply asleep that I thought they might be
dead. Your chest was barely rising and it took quite a few shakes to
get you to wake up, I had almost thought the worst. It sounds silly
now that I say it aloud, of course you’d be exhausted after all
you’ve been through. Even I down in my little hovel here I’ve
heard of the terrible routine you had been forced into, I’m sure
your body must be desperate for sleep.”
“That must be it,” I
agreed with a nod, “I’m sure a couple days worth of a good
night’s sleep and I’ll be right as rain again.”
“Perhaps some food to help
fuel your recovery would be a good idea as well, I’m a bit peckish
myself, might I suggest we call for a meal while we go over it?”
I agreed to his idea and
waited for him to rummage around his study for the small bronze bell
that would call a servant. It was strange for someone other than a
family member to possess such a bell, it spoke to the importance of a
royal scribe. It also spoke a lot about his personality that it took
him a bit to even find it. Once found, having been tucked away into
the back of one of the desk drawers, he cracked his door and run the
bell for a few seconds, paused to listen for any approaching
footsteps, then run the bell again. It could be a bit of a cat and
mouse situation for a servant to find you if you were not in a room
they typically expected you to be. After a few minutes, a girl
finally appeared, her mousy brown hair done up in two pigtail braids,
she looked remarkably like my nursemaid.
“The heir apparent and I
would like a nice hearty meal drawn up and brought to us when
convenient,” the scribe requested.
The girl nodded, but peered
past him, eyes on me, wide and inquisitive, a flush appeared on her
cheeks that expanded to fill her face. I could recall that my
nursemaid had commented a few times that she had a daughter around my
age, but that she had been living outside the castle with her aunt
since my father was not always keen on having extra children living
in the castle who did not have a specific task assigned to them.
There were plenty of children in the castle, but most of them were
trades of sorts to pay off debts, they would work for a while until
it was decided that the parents’ obligation had been fulfilled. The
nursemaid must have finally weaseled a way for her daughter to work
alongside her.
“I-I’m sorry for staring,”
she finally said. “I just have never met the king before.”
“You still haven’t,” I
said with a light chuckle, “I have not been crowned quite yet.”
“Umm yes of course.” Her
face was a bright crimson. “How silly of me to say that.”
“Think nothing of it.” I
was amused by her reaction, I was used to servants who had been
around me since I was born and were almost immune to the idea that I
was technically future ruler of the kingdom they resided in. They had
deference of course, but they didn’t have the same awe that
peasants outside the castle did. “I assume your mother is my
nursemaid?”
She nodded her head
vigorously. “She has told me so much about you.”
“Mostly good I hope.”
I had an urge to rise and make
the girl’s day by walking over to her and greeting her face to face
and stood from my chair, then promptly tumbled to the floor, my legs
refusing to bear any of my weight. Pain exploded from my legs, sharp
and soul shattering, like several knives were being driven into my
hips. Despite my inclination to hold it in, I let out a loud scream
and scrambled to try to rise again, but my legs felt like dead weight
and wouldn’t respond to my frantic attempts to get them under me.
Icy fear clutched my heart as the pain suddenly vanished and instead
of relief, terror blossomed in my chest as I realized both my legs
from the hips down were completely numb.

