The Title of Temperance (The Adventures of Ichabod Temperance Book 8) (16 page)

BOOK: The Title of Temperance (The Adventures of Ichabod Temperance Book 8)
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      .   .

        .

“Um, I mean, you three, King Arthur, Queen Guenevere, and Sir Launcelot are such good pals and all. You know, like, y’all admire one another so much, and um, I just want y’all to be happy, right? Cause, it’s a shame the way things are what with there, um being this here two-wheeler cart with a third wheel, so to speak, but, um, I didn’t mean to say nothing, you know, um, I was just saying I wished things would work out for everybody is all.”

“Ichabod! Mon Dieu! You have broken your promise and spoken aloud of my secret love for Guenevere!”

“Oh, Ichabod, how beastly! I spoke to you of my feelings for Launcelot in confidence! You have betrayed your Queen! I am ruined!”

“Ichabod, I, your King, didst trust thou to speak my heart to thee in confidence. Oh, what traitorous fiend ye be Ichabod Temperance! Thou hath concealed from me, your knowledge of love between Guenevere and Launcelot. I am crushed, broken, and defeated by thy callous disrespect for me.”

“Oh, my Goodness! I’m sorry! I didn’t mean to! I would never betray any of you! You are all such fine people, I did not have the heart to hurt any of you! Please, don’t be mad at me!”


Silence!
I, Arthur, King of the Britains, do hereby re
scind
your Knighthood and
banish
you from the halls of Camelot
forever
!”

Chapter 18
Ichabod’s Lament

Every time I try

to do what’s right

Misfortune follows me.

Fate pulls a fast one

just for spite

I’m no good, it’s plain to see.

 

I’d sooner drown

than hurt my friends

I love them with all my might.

With my last breath

I would defend

but I’m a failed and dishonoured Knight.

 

Sorrow grows

where I have tread.

Failure flowers at my touch.

Oh, how I wish,

that I were dead,

to hope for that is just too much.

 

“What was I thinking? Me, a Knight of the Round Table. I may as well put on a red kerchief and say I’m Santa Claus. They should have seen through me from the start. I tried to live up to their standards, but I should have known I couldn’t do it. Now the whole kingdom hates me, especially King Arthur, Queen Guenevere, and Sir Launcelot. Even Spyke disappeared when I fell out of favour. Even... even Miss Stephanie has abandoned me.”

Instigator of,

catastrophe,

victim of,

circumstance.

My list of friends,

it atrophies,

It’s the heartbreak of

Temperance.

“I’m so lost and lonesome. I wish I was back home in my world of 1877 with Miss Plumtart, Bolt, and all our friends, but I’m so far back in time, that North America won’t even be discovered for nearly a thousand years. I’ll be one thousand, three hundred and sixty something years old before I see Miss Plumtartt again, if I live that long, which ain’t likely. Oh, golly, I wish something would distract me before I break out in a sad, melancholy song again.”

“Ichabod!”

“Hey, I think I heard a distant voice.”

“Ichabod!”

“Hey, I did!”

“Ichabod!”

“It’s a female voice.”

“Ichabod!”

“It sounds familiar.”

“Ichabod!”

“I think it’s Miss Stephanie!”

“Ichabod!”

“Miss Stephanie came looking for me!”

“Ichabod!”

“I’m over here, Miss Stephanie, Ma’am.”

“Ichabod, there you are! I have been looking all over for you. What are you doing out here in the middle of the forest on a dark and moonless night?”

“I got de-Knighted and run out of the castle, remember?”

“Baughtte Ichabod, that was this morning and much has happened since then.”

“Oh my Goodness, what’s wrong?”

“With your injudicious words, the Court is thrown into chaos! Verily madness reigns! Launcelot has withdrawn from the Round Table and no one knows from whence he has retired. Some fear that he is on his way back to France! The Queen has gone mad in her distraughtte fevers and has also abandoned Camelot. The King is in a funque and will naughtte be roused.”

“This is terrible!”

“Nay, this is the terrible part. The court has completely collapsed. All of King Arthur’s hard work to build an alliance and unite England into a sovereign nation has fallen apart. The Knights have abandoned him.”

“That’s horrible!”

“Nay, this is the horrible part. The Knights were out of their minds at this sudden void of leadership and collapse in their known way of life. The sorceress Morgana, seeing an opportunity, showed great presence of mind and beguiling manner. She has turned many Knights to her favour. She readies a mighty army to assault an abandoned Camelot.”

“That is really bad!”

“Nay, this is what is really bad. Your King is alone and in need of a friend while thou sittest in the woods having a wee pity party for thyself.”

“But I was exiled!”

“That was this morning, this is this evening. Arthur needs you.”

“Oh, my Goodness! Let’s hurry back to Camelot and save King Arthur!”

 

-
 
 
-
 
 
-

 

“Gosh, Miss Stephanie, Camelot is always so loud and lively; it is really strange to approach its fearsome walls and gate while it sits in an uncomfortable silence.”

“Aye, me Icksibod, and so dark. Normally there’d be torchs set to either side of the gate and all along the battlements, baughtte the gloomy castle is as dark as a parsons shadow. Nay a single guard, where there ought to be scores of soldiers marching about.”

“What do we do? I feel funny about just walking right...”

“Huh-lo? Is somebody out there! I challenge, friend or foe?”

“Gee, at this point, I ain’t real sure, sir. What are you?”

“Hunh. I be naughtte sure meself. Go on in, it maketh no difference to me.”

“I’m glad someone was here to guard the place.”

“Oh, I was just leaving. I think I’m the last one out. I would naughtte stick around too long. The Mistress Morgana is said to be marching an indefiable army to take this castle.”

“Thanks, buddy. Come on Miss Stephanie.”

“Harken my Icksi, the howl of winds through empty battlement and deserted castle passage doth sing a morose song. Look there, in the courtyards, where dead leaves form desultory whirlwinds dancing a macabre, sad waltz.”

“Yes, Ma’am, Miss Stephanie Ma’am. Them there mournful moans in this spooky keep are putting me on a trembly edge.”

“Hurry lad, let us quickly make our way to the King.”

“Golly, here we are at the King’s royal bedchamber. Do you think he will be inside?”

“Yes.”

“Should we go in?”

“Yes.”

“Are you waiting on me to go in first?”

“Yes.”

“Do you want to go first?”

“No.”

“I reckon it’s up to me, then, hunh?”

“Yes.”

~knock, knock~
“Hello, Sire? Are you at home? It’s me, Ichabod. Me and Miss Stephanie came by to see you.”

“Ichabod...”

“Sire? Did I hear you speak?”

“Ichabod, is that you?”

“King Arthur, it is I, Ichabod. Are you in here?”

“Ichabod, is that really you, … or it a dream?”

“Sire, where are you? Oh my Goodness, there you are in bed! My King, you ain’t wounded art thee?”

“Ichabod, come to me. Press my hand that I know you are of flesh and naughtte a phantom of my fevered mind.”

“It is me, my King. I am so sorry about what happened this morning, your Majesty.”

“Nay, I was hasty with my words and would have you forgive me.”

“Yessir, Sire.”

“My Court has crumbled. My Knights, my Queen, and my champion have all deserted me.”

“What has happened to you, my King? You were healthy a few hours ago, but now you are as gray as ashe. You seemeth all sunken inneth.”

“My health mirrors that of Britain. Britain falters, therefore, so do I.”

“Sire, you must snap out of it! That mean ol’ Morgana Le Meerrin is making a play to snatch up your position in a go for broke power play. She has finagled, to put it politely, an alliance with many of your former Knights. She will be back to take the castle, throne, and crown. What are we gonna do?”

“Ichabod, I am counting on you. You must save England. You must stop Morgana. I task you with these two things.”

“Two things? I thought this kind of stuff always came in threes.”

“Ah yes, thank you for reminding me, there is something else. You must find for me the Sacred Chalice of Christ. This must be your quest. Find for me, the Holy Grail!

“Um, yessir, um, how do I do that?”

“Find Launcelot, find the Grail.”

“But I ain’t a Knight no more. I don’t really think I’m cut out to be a Knight.”

“I re-instate thee, Sir Ichabod.”

“Oh, Goodness! This is a job for a big hero like you, or Launcelot!”

“You must be a big hero, Ichabod.”

“Sire!”

“...Guenevere,
ooo
oooo
o
o
ooooooooo........”

“Come along, Sir Ichabod, let the king rest.”

“Yes, Ma’am.”

“We shall kindle a fire in our Miss Beemer, and set out in pursuit of Sir Launcelot.”

“That’s a good idea. Hey, there’s Spyke.”

“Ugh, I was hoping you would naughtte notice me skulking in this dark alcove.”

“Hey Spyke, we figure Sir Launcelot is making for the coast so he can sail away back to France. Do you know if Guenevere went with him?”

“No, he left without her. She had the waterworks on full blast when he left though, I can promise you that.”

“Any idea where she is.”

“The scuttlebutt, er, that is, the juicy gossip, I mean what I heard through the grapevine was that she up and ran off to a local convent in a desperate play for attention.”

“Well, you see if you can find her and persuade her to return while we’re off after this Knight that has given us the French kiss-off.”

“I don’t want to go to a convent! It’s full of nuns! I hates nuns! They are the cruelest species on the planet! No, no, anything baughtte nuns!”

“Sorry, Spyke, you gotta do it.”

“Oh all right, but how am I supposed to get there.”

“You can ride Miss Daisy!”

“I beg your pardon.”

“She’s that pretty little horse!”

“I’m scared of horses!”

“But she’s a sweet little horsie!”

“Oh, all right.”

“Thanks, Spykey. Well, I reckon our steamer is ready Miss Stephanie, Ma’am. You and me need to hightail it after Sir Launcelot before he departs for the continent, leaving England, Guenevere and Arthur behind, forever.”

Chapter 19
A Surprise is Prepared

“Now is the time, Morgana! Let us kill Arthur and strike Camelot down!”

“Merlin is right, Morgana! Ichabod is discredited, the Round Table is fractured; splintered into combative factions, and we now are getting reports that Arthur is completely abandoned; sick, weak and alone.”

“You gentlemen are correct. You, Mischa, correctly predicted that Ichabod would be our instrument of Arthur’s destruction, baughtte we never anticipated that it would happen in this confabulation.”

“I will naughtte be at ease until that mouse has been exterminated.”

“We all agree on that; however, I think his time of influence is past.”

“We have a vast army at our behest; why do we delay?”

“Because I say so, Merlin! You men are powerful and wise, baughtte I, Mistress Morgana Le Meerrin have a secret knowledge. I have a secret power. I possess of a piece of Destiny!”

“What is this you speak of, Morgana?”

“You will find out soon enough, Merlin. There is one thing that concerns me. That is Launcelot. He is a powerful Knight and I will be more at ease if I know that his ship has sunk in his channel crossing. Mischa, my dear, could you see to this trivial thing for me, my pet?”

“I am naughtte your pet, however, it will be my pleasure to see to the demise of that ‘Holier than thou’ Jauque-ass.”

“Merlin and I shall take Camelot, slay Arthur, and reveal that which I have kept hidden, but first, I want to change from my slinky, oval face gown into my battle gear.”

“From this time forward, let the Three M Corpouration reign over Britain.”

BOOK: The Title of Temperance (The Adventures of Ichabod Temperance Book 8)
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