Read Ranger's Apprentice 1 & 2 Bindup Online
Authors: John Flanagan
Later that afternoon, after all the noise and celebrations had died down, Will sat alone on the tiny verandah of Halt's small cottage. In his hand, he held a small bronze amulet, shaped like an oak leaf, with a steel chain threaded through a ring at the top.
âIt's our symbol,' his teacher had explained as he handed it to him after the events at the castle. âThe Rangers' equivalent of a coat of arms.'
Then he had fumbled inside his own collar and produced an identically shaped oak leaf, on a chain around his neck. The shape was identical, but the colour was different. The oak leaf Halt wore was made of silver.
âBronze is the apprentice colour,' Halt had told him. âWhen you finish your training, you'll receive a silver oak leaf like this one. We all wear them in the Ranger Corps, either silver or bronze.' He had looked away from the boy for a few minutes, then had added, his voice a little husky, âStrictly speaking, you shouldn't receive it until you've
passed your first Assessment. But I doubt anyone will argue about it, the way things have turned out.'
Now the curiously shaped piece of metal gleamed dully in Will's hand as he thought of the decision he'd made. It seemed so strange to him that he had voluntarily given up the one thing that he had spent most of his life hoping for: the chance to go through Battleschool and take his place as a knight in Castle Redmont's army.
He twirled the bronze oak leaf on its chain around his index finger, letting it wind right up to the finger, then spiral loose again. He sighed deeply. Life could be so complicated. Deep within himself, he felt he had made the right decision. And yet, way down deeper still, there was a tiny thread of doubt.
With a start, he realised that there was someone standing beside him. It was Halt, he recognised as he turned quickly. The Ranger stooped and sat beside the boy on the rough pine planking of the narrow verandah. Before them, the low sun of the late afternoon filtered through the luminous green leaves of the forest, the light seeming to dance and gyrate as the light breeze stirred the leaves.
âA big day,' he said softly and Will nodded.
âAnd a big decision that you made,' the Ranger said, after several more minutes' silence between them. This time, Will turned to face him.
âHalt, did I make the right decision?' he asked finally, the anguish clear in his voice. Halt placed his elbows on his knees and leaned forward a little, squinting into the dappled glare through the trees.
âAs far as I'm concerned, yes. I chose you as an apprentice and I can see all the potential you have to be a
Ranger. I've even come to almost enjoy having you around and getting under my feet,' he added, with the barest hint of a smile. âBut my feelings, my wishes, aren't important in this. The right decision for you is the one you want most.'
âI always wanted to become a knight,' Will said, then realised, with a sense of surprise, that he'd phrased the statement in the past tense. And yet he knew that a part of him still wanted it.
âIt is possible, of course,' said Halt quietly, âto want to do two different things at the same time. Then it just becomes a choice of knowing which one you want most.'
Not for the first time, Will felt that Halt had some way of reading his mind.
âIf you can sum it up in one thought, what's the main reason you feel a little disappointed that you refused the Baron's offer?' Halt continued.
Will considered the question. âI guess â¦' he said slowly, âI feel that by turning down Battleschool, I'm somehow letting my father down.'
Halt's eyebrows shot up in surprise. âYour father?' he repeated and Will nodded.
âHe was a mighty warrior,' he told the Ranger, âA knight. He died at Hackham Heath, fighting the Wargals â a hero.'
âYou know all this, do you?' Halt asked him and Will nodded. This was the dream that had sustained him through the long, lonely years of never knowing who he was or what he was meant to be. The dream had become reality for him now.
âHe was a man any son would be proud of,' he said finally, and Halt nodded.
âThat's certainly true.'
There was something in his voice that made Will hesitate. Halt wasn't simply agreeing out of politeness. Will turned quickly to him, realising the full implications of the Ranger's words.
âYou knew him, Halt? You knew my father?'
There was a light of hope in the boy's eyes that cried out for the truth and the Ranger nodded soberly.
âYes. I did. I didn't know him for long. But I think I could say I knew him well. And you're right. You can be extremely proud of him.'
âHe was a mighty warrior, wasn't he?' said Will.
âHe was a soldier,' Halt agreed, âand a brave fighter.'
âI knew it!' Will said happily, âHe was a great knight!'
âA sergeant,' Halt said softly, and not unkindly.
Will's jaw hung open, the next words he had been about to say frozen in his throat. Finally, he managed, in a confused voice:
âA sergeant?'
Halt nodded. He could see the disappointment in the boy's eyes and he put an arm around his shoulders.
âDon't judge a man's quality by his position in life, Will. Your father, Daniel, was a loyal and brave soldier. He didn't have the opportunity to go to Battleschool because he began life as a farmer. But, if he had, he would have been one of the greatest of knights.'
âBut he â¦' the boy began sadly. The Ranger stopped him, continuing in that same kind, soft, compelling voice.
âBecause without taking any of the vows or the special training that knights have, he lived up to the highest ideals of knighthood and chivalry and valour. It was actually a few days after the battle at Hackham Heath, while
Morgarath and his Wargals were fighting their way back to Three Step Pass. A sudden counterattack took us by surprise and your father saw a comrade surrounded by a troop of Wargals. The man was on the ground and was within a second of being cut to pieces when your father took a hand.'
The light in the boy's eyes had begin to shine again.
âHe did?' Will asked, his lips just framing the words, and Halt nodded.
âHe did. He left the safety of the battle line and leapt forward, armed only with a spear. He stood over his injured comrade and protected him from the Wargals. He killed one with the spear, then another smashed the head of the spear, leaving Daniel with only a spear shaft. So he used it like a quarterstaff and knocked down two others â left, right! Just like that!'
He flicked his hand to left and right to demonstrate. Will's eyes were intent on him now, seeing the battle as the Ranger described it.
âHe was wounded then, as the spear shaft broke under another attack. It would have been enough to kill most men. But he simply took the sword from one of the Wargals he'd killed and struck down three more, all the time bleeding from a massive wound in his side.'
âThree of them?' Will asked.
âThree. He had the speed of a leopard. And remember, as a spearman, he had never really trained with the sword.'
He paused, remembering that day so long ago.
âYou know, of course, that there is almost nothing that Wargals fear? They're called the Unminded Ones and once they begin a battle, they almost always finish it.
â
Almost
always. This was one of the few times I saw Wargals afraid. As your father struck out to either side, still standing over his wounded comrade, they began to back away. Slowly at first. Then they ran. They simply turned and ran.
âI have never seen any other man, no knight, no mighty warrior, who could send Wargals running in fear. Your father did. He may have been a sergeant, Will, but he was the mightiest warrior I ever had the privilege to watch. Then, as the Wargals retreated, he sank down on one knee beside the man he'd been protecting, still trying to shield him, even though he knew he was dying himself.
âHe had taken half a dozen wounds. But it was probably the first that killed him.'
âAnd was his friend saved?' Will asked in a small voice.
Halt looked a little puzzled. âHis friend?' he asked.
âThe man he protected,' Will explained. âDid he survive?'
Somehow, he thought it would have been a tragedy if his father's valiant attempt had been unsuccessful.
âThey weren't friends,' said Halt. âUp until that moment, he had never laid eyes on the other man.' He paused, then added, âNor I on him.'
The significance of those last four words sank deep into Will's consciousness.
âYou?'
he whispered. âYou were the man he saved?'
Halt nodded. âAs I said, I only knew him for a few minutes. But he did more for me than any other man, before or since. As he was dying, he told me of his wife, and how she was back at their farm alone, with a baby due any day. He begged me to see that she was looked after.'
Will looked at the grim, bearded face he had grown to know so well. There was a deep sadness in Halt's eyes as he remembered that day.
âI was too late to save your mother. It was a difficult birth and she died shortly after you were born. But I brought you back here and Baron Arald agreed that you should be brought up in the Ward â until you were old enough to become my apprentice.'
âBut all those years, you never â¦' Will stopped, lost for words. Halt smiled grimly at him.
âI never let on that I had placed you in the Ward? No. Think about it, Will. People are ⦠strange about Rangers. How would they have reacted to you as you grew up? Wondering what sort of strange creature you were? We decided it would be better if nobody knew of my interest in you.'
Will nodded. Halt was right, of course. Life as a ward had been difficult enough. It would have been far more so if people had known he was somehow connected to Halt.
âSo you took me as your apprentice because of my father?' said Will. But this time Halt shook his head.
âNo. I made sure you were looked after because of your father. I chose you because you showed you had the abilities and the skills that were needed. And you also seem to have inherited some of your father's courage.'
There was a long, long silence between them as Will absorbed the story of his father's amazing battle. Somehow, the truth was more stirring, more inspiring than any fantasy he could have made up over the years to sustain himself. Eventually, Halt stood up to go and he smiled
gratefully up at the grizzled figure, now silhouetted against the sky as the last light of day died.
âI think my father would be glad I chose the way I did,' he said, slipping the bronze oak leaf on its chain over his head. Halt merely nodded once, then turned away and went inside the cottage, leaving his apprentice to his own thoughts.
Will sat quietly for some minutes. Almost unthinkingly, his hand went to touch the bronze oakleaf symbol hanging at his throat. Faintly, the evening breeze carried the sounds of the Battleschool drill yard to him, and the nonstop hammering and clanking from the armoury that had been going on, night and day, for the past week. They were the sounds of Castle Redmont preparing for the coming war.
Yet strangely, for the first time in his life, he felt at peace.