Bedtime Story (5 page)

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Authors: Robert J. Wiersema

BOOK: Bedtime Story
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He sat up slowly, listening to the faint sound of his parents’ voices as they rose up the stairs, drifted through the partly open door.

After a few moments, the voices grew louder, not really shouting but definitely upset. It was impossible to ignore them, to tune them out. He couldn’t make out actual words, just a texture of voices raised in anger.

Biting his lip, he stood up and walked across the room, careful to be quiet. He closed his door fully, and darted back to bed in the dark, pulling the covers up to his chin and burying his head in the pillow.

He could barely hear the voices, now.

I’m not gonna cry
, he told himself.
I’m not gonna cry
.

The narrow staircase was dim with the light from my desk lamp, which I left on from four in the morning until I went to bed. In the shadows of the small kitchen, I filled a glass with vodka from the bottle in my freezer. I set the glass on top of the morning’s pages and sat down at my desk.

Why did it always have to go so bad so fast?

I pulled my cigarettes out of my pocket and set my lighter on the desk next to this morning’s work. The engraving caught the light. After tapping a cigarette out, I put it to my lips, savouring the feel of it there, its light presence.

For a long time, I had allowed myself a single cigarette each day, just before I turned in. It was a holdover from my days as a smoker, and was supposed to be a reward, a way of recognizing a good day’s work, a capstone to a productive time. Now, I was smoking compulsively again, my hands shaking as I flicked the lighter, as I held the flame to the paper waiting for that subtle crackle.

As I drew in the first smooth lungful of smoke, I ran my thumb across the lettering on the lighter.

C
OASTAL
D
RIFT
C
HRISTOPHER
J. K
NOX
S
PRING 2000

The Zippo had been a gift from my Canadian editor. He had lit my cigar with it at the launch party for my first book, then handed it to me with a broad grin and an arm draped drunkenly across my shoulders.

“To the first of many,” he had toasted me.

“Right,” I muttered to the memory, throwing the lighter onto the desk and taking a healthy swallow of the icy vodka. It chilled all the way down, and when the burn hit my stomach I shivered.

That had been a perfect night: my life was on track, unfolding as I had always dreamed it would. My novel was just out, and already on the best-seller lists. Jacqui and I had just bought the house, and every time I met her eye across the crowded bar, she smiled. The future was wide open.

And this was where it all led: me sitting in what once had been my office over the garage, trying to ignore the bed in the tiny adjoining room. There had been no more books, no more launch parties. And, over the last couple of years, precious few of those smiles from across the room.

I sat quietly for a moment, watching the shadows of the smoke play along the desk in the pool of golden light. As I opened David’s book to where I had left off—since I had started reading it, I’d been sneaking in a few pages whenever time allowed, and when it didn’t—I deliberately kept my back turned to the bookcase next to the desk, the top shelf with the different editions of
Coastal Drift
, the second shelf stuffed with
bulging notebooks, stacks of loose-leaf, battered files. Ten years in the life, waiting for a match.

It felt like the floor had tilted beneath his feet. Matthias couldn’t think, could barely breathe, with the Queen so close to him, holding his hand, staring into his eyes.

“Let us sit,” she said, turning him toward a cluster of divans and chairs against the wall.

“That’s better,” she said, a smile of comfort softening her face as she settled on a divan. “Sit.”

“Yes, Your Majesty,” Matthias said as he sat, not sure of how to speak.

“Comfort is a fine, fine thing,” she said, almost to herself. “Save for the price that must be paid.”

Her smile disappeared as she looked at Matthias again. “Five days ago, the watchtowers fell. Three of them. All under cover of a single night. The Berok have taken them.”

Matthias stole a glance at Captain Bream; the man’s face was hard and still.

“Our most feared enemy is at the borders of the kingdom, less than two days’ ride from the city. From this castle—” She broke off as handmaidens entered the room with wine.

Matthias’s mind reeled: the Berok?

Matthias and Bream waited while the maidens tasted from each cup before serving them, and then until the Queen had taken a sip before they drank. The wine was cool and strong.

“The King has brought you here today,” the Queen said, “because we think you can help.”

Matthias bit back a protest. He knew only tavern fighting, and all he knew of the Berok were the stories his mother had told him when he was a boy. The country to the north was the stuff of myths and children’s stories, of blood-thirsty warriors and epic betrayals. Surely there was nothing he could do. He drowned the words he was tempted to say with another swallow of wine, knowing better than to argue with the Queen.

“I know you believe there is nothing you have to offer,” she said, seeming to read his thoughts and expression. “But others think differently. Loren,” she called, barely raising her voice.

From a doorway at the far end of the room a man appeared, a long, grey beard falling to the middle of his chest. Within the folds of his tattered robes, Matthias could see he carried a large, leather-bound book.

“Loren is an historian and a scholar. One of the King’s most trusted advisers,” the Queen said, not even glancing at the man as he took his place beside her. “He has been working in the libraries, both in the castle here and at the monastery,” the Queen said. “He has found some startling information.”

The monastery: the old man was one of the Brotherhood.

“I am a translator,” Loren said in a thin voice, “of the ancient texts. When I learned of the attacks on the watchtowers, I was reminded of a manuscript that I translated, some years ago. Not a book. Private papers, from the reign of King Harkness.”

“And why did it remind you of that?” the Queen prompted.

“Because of when the attacks happened,” he explained. “On a night when the moon was swallowed by the dark.”

Matthias remembered the night, almost a week before, when he had stood outside the tavern next to Arian as the moon seemed to disappear momentarily into the night sky. He sat forward to listen more closely to the translator.

“There is a prophecy,” the old man said. “In those scrolls. A prophecy which I am only now beginning to understand. It is mostly fragments, scattered within another text.” He opened the book in his hand, balancing it carefully as he turned the pages. “It begins:

The fall of man shall come
,
As a fall comes to all things
.
The mighty walls of Colcott shall crack
And bleed
On the night the moon dies in the sky.”

The old man looked up from the book and fixed his eyes on Matthias. “There is more. Much more. And it concerns the boy.”

“Me?” Matthias asked, before he could stop himself.

“You,” the translator said.

“But—”

The old man shook his head, and Matthias closed his mouth. Loren continued speaking, but Matthias barely heard him over the rushing in his ears. It
couldn’t
be him. He was … nobody.

“Hidden as it was, the prophecy has long puzzled scholars. But the confluence of events, the attack on the watchtowers on the night of the disappearing moon …” His voice trailed off. “I believe I know what it means.”

Matthias shifted, uncomfortable in his chair.

“The prophecy describes a treasure, a relic so powerful that it was hidden away before the time of King Harkness. A relic that will save this kingdom. The Sunstone.”

“A sunstone?” Matthias asked. It was the symbol of the kingdom, on every flag, every gate, and sewn onto the shoulder of Bream’s tunic.

“Not
a
sunstone,” the scholar corrected. “The Sunstone. The first Sunstone, carried into battle by Stephen the Bold, before he was the First King.”

There was a long moment of silence before the captain said, “That’s just a myth. A children’s story.”

“It’s much more than that,” the old man said. “Do you know why the Sunstone is the symbol of our kingdom? Not because it was Stephen’s sigil, but because of what it could do. What it
did
, in our darkest hour.”

“What could it do?” Matthias heard himself asking.

“It is believed the stone held great power. How else to explain the victory at Corindor Field, when the brave five hundred broke the army of the Berok, more than ten thousand strong, turning them back and forging this kingdom in blood and iron?”

Matthias recognized the last few words from a poem that every child was taught, the chronicle of the founding of the kingdom.

“Tactics,” the captain said. “Bravery. Loyalty. As battles have always been fought and won.”

“You would believe that, of course,” the old man said. “But the truth is much stranger. The truth is that Stephen rode into battle with the Sunstone, the first Sunstone, on his breast, and a magus at his side.”

“Are you talking about magic?” Matthias asked.

“Indeed I am. A magic so powerful it can render an army unbreakable. A magic so powerful that King Stephen, even in the flush of victory, could see its dangers. After Corindor Field, he ordered the Sunstone hidden where no one, not even he, could find it. He entrusted his dearest friend Gafilair, the first of the Brotherhood to be paired with the king, the first high mage, to hide the stone. To wrap it in mysteries and magics such that no man could ever find it.

“The magus did as the new king instructed, hiding the stone away where it would remain for more than a thousand years, until the kingdom once again was in such grave danger that the stone’s powers would be its only salvation.”

“If it is hidden so well—” Captain Bream began.

“There is one who can find it,” the scholar said. “
That
is the reason for the prophecy. That the Brothers of Gafilair, his heirs and followers, might follow the signs, might find the right person at the right time to recover the stone and return it to the King. The clues to finding the stone are in here,” he said, gesturing to the book. “As is the information we needed to find the one who could retrieve it.”

“Me?” Matthias asked incredulously.

The captain nodded.

“Captain Bream has selected a troop of his finest men,” the Queen said. “His most loyal and true. You will ride out with them to find the Sunstone, and bring it back that it might protect the kingdom once more. Loren will ride with you to decipher the signs left by the first high magus.”

“But it can’t be me,” Matthias blurted.

The magus spoke slowly: “There are signs, portents, in this book. We have studied them. Studied you. The signs of your birth. Your parentage. There is enough for us to be sure.”

“Matthias,” the Queen said. “You’ll ride out at dawn in three days’ time. You’ll be well cared-for, well protected. And when you return with the Sunstone, you will receive a hero’s welcome. Do you understand?”

He nodded slowly. “Yes, Your Majesty.”

He had no choice.

“Come,” she said. “The importance of this journey cannot be overstated.”

The Queen led the three men around the stone platform at the end of the room, to a double door hidden behind a tapestry. The captain opened the door, and stepped back to allow the Queen to enter. Matthias followed.

In the centre of the room stood a huge bed. The man lying on it was tiny, and clearly sick, his skin yellow and waxy, his hair missing in patches. He lay facing the door, considering his guests with pale, milky eyes.

Loren took several steps toward the bed before falling to his knee. “Your Majesty,” he said, almost in a whisper.

Matthias looked at the Queen.

“This,” she said, “is why we need the Sunstone so badly.”

The crumpled figure on the bed raised a shaky hand. “Loren,” he said weakly. “Loren, my friend.”

The mage rose to his feet and stepped to the bedside. The King took his hand.

“Have you found the boy?”

Matthias could feel his heart in his throat.

“I have, Your Majesty. He’s here.”

The King’s eyes searched the room, and prompted by a gentle push from the Queen, Matthias stepped to the old man’s side.

“This is him?” the King asked.

“It is, Your Majesty.”

A weak smile came to the King’s face as he took Matthias’s hand. The King’s grip was sticky and cool, and Matthias tried to breathe mostly through his mouth; the air near the bed was sweet and acrid with the smells of sickness.

“Yes, so it is,” the King said, as if finally able to see him. “It is all yours to do now,” he said to Matthias. He winced and strained with each word. “The future of the kingdom is in your hands.”

Dumbstruck, Matthias nodded. The King’s grip tightened, then fell away. His eyes sank shut. For a moment, Matthias’s hand hung in the
air where the King had held it. But then a rough, wet breath brought a sense of relief. The King was only sleeping.

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