The Adventures of Sagramore
Fayremounte
By Indy and Chris Silva
In the year of our Lord 1215, in
the shire of Nottingham, in the forest of Sherwood, in the Castle Cerridwyn,
within the rafters of its southwest tower resigned a bat known as Edmund
Fayremounte. He had lived happily for some years with his family near Wales, but
Edmund was above all things a dreamer and his dreams craved action and
adventure. So he had left them and come to this castle, seeking the things that
his little heart so wanted to
find.
Edmund was gentle in his
ways, but like all bats of the realm ready to defend home and hearth when
necessary. His dreaming made him curious, particularly when it came to the
actions of his fellow-lodger, a human. Terwin Ermighty was a scholar and
teacher, assigned by the Saxon lord of the castle, Sir Wexton, to teach his boys
Sir Corrin and his younger brother Vincent. The boys jokingly nicknamed him
“Terwin the Mighty”, to mock his slight build and gangly appearance. Edmund
would keep a discreet distance during Terwin’s lessons, but reveled in the
classes that dealt with training to be a knight. It was just the thing for him,
but the best times were when Terwin would pull out an ancient book and read of
the exploits of the Knights of the Round
Table.
It was from these wondrous
stories that Edmund decided to change his name, and thus he took the title of
Sagramore. Knights were a needful thing at the moment. Prince John was making
life as unpleasant as a bad ruler can. The country folk were oppressed, and the
Saxons were already talking of revolt if Richard the Lion-Hearted did not return
home soon from the
Crusades.
Possibly the only person
unconcerned about the rumblings of war around him was Terwin. The boys had
already had their morning lessons, and Terwin was now free to spend his
afternoon in his favorite way—going into the forest to perform his scientific
experiments. The lively fellow carried a box full of supplies and hopes,
Sagramore on his tail. When Terwin chanced to look up he saw the little
bat-flying overhead and instantly greeted him, for he'd noticed the bat tended
to stay near him for some
reason.
“Hail, my little friend!”
Terwin said, his voice a little deeper than his frame might indicate. “I see you
have an interest in science this day. Well, perhaps you will have something to
see worth your while!”
Terwin
was a bundle of energy, and began assembling a very strange-looking collection
of wood, iron and cloth. Sagramore found a nearby tree limb and sat down to
watch. He could understand his friend perfectly well, but Terwin could not
understand him. That frustrated Sagramore no end, even though he knew the reason
for it. His thoughts were broken by Terwin shouting in delighted
triumph.
“Hah! Now that's
what I call a weapon!”
Sagramore
watched with interest as Terwin with some effort hefted the contraption on his
back. It was a small catapult, the wooden arm extending from the back of the
armless armored top that Terwin wore, giving him the look of wearing a large
metal vest. A large iron spring did the work, while a small rope in Terwin's
hand was meant to release the latch that held the catapult in place. He was all
smiles until he realized he'd forgotten to load his weapon, so he bent over to
grab a particularly large rock he'd selected. The poor fellow didn't mean to
keep hold of the rope, but his mind was elsewhere and the catapult arm came up
from behind and delivered a solid blow to the back of his
head
“Terwin!” Sagramore
shouted. “Oh bodkins, he's knocked himself out
again.”
Sagramore flew down to
check on his friend, who, thanks to his resilient nature, recovered pretty soon.
He was in as good a humor as ever, determined to let nothing stop him. He
addressed himself to Sagramore, who had alighted in the grass next to
him.
“I'm quite all right, quite
all right! Don't worry my little friend, this time I'll get it right!” Terwin
said with resolve. Sagramore shook his head. “If only you could.” Sagramore flew
back to his observation branch as Terwin managed—in what surely had to be a
painful backwards stretch—to get the head-sized rock into his catapult and again
set the spring. At that moment, Maid Mary Anne rode into view of the hidden
glen. The ward of good King Richard was a kind and intuitive girl, and tended to
be liked by everyone. She had come upon Terwin once by accident in this very
meadow and that one meeting was amusing enough to keep her coming back for more.
Terwin waved enthusiastically to
her.
“You're just in time! Watch,
as I advance the science of weaponry a hundred
years!”
Maid Mary Anne knew what
that meant, and she rode up quickly, hoping to stop him. Terwin would not be
daunted and he knelt down, ducked his head and pulled the rope. Neither
Sagramore nor the young maid could either be blamed for laughing at what
followed. The powerful force of the weapon threw Terwin into a roll, and off he
went like a runaway barrel! The arm mercifully broke on the first roll, but that
allowed him to roll all the way into Sherwood Pond. The young lady left her
horse at the water's edge and honestly tried to stifle her laughter.
Honestly!
“Terwin, are you okay?”
the young maid asked, giggling. “Forsooth, you must be more careful!” Terwin
stood up, soaked through and through. His mind really wasn't on what his friend
had said, even if she was beautiful and a member of the royal house.
“Something about the design is
flawed, but I'm not sure just what it is. I was so certain the portable catapult
would work! Maybe if I used a smaller spring...” Terwin mused, taking the
remains of the catapult off his back. Maid Mary Anne helped him, shaking her
head. “Well, do we need more destructive weapons,
Terwin?”
Terwin sat down on the
grass, dripping. “According to Sir Wexton we do. He says that we Saxons need
every advantage we can get, what with Prince John on the throne. I was hoping to
provide a weapon that would make the fighting a little safer. Arrows are such
nasty things.”
Sagramore instantly
recognized Maid Mary Anne, and flew down near her. She was a progressive woman
for her day, or so Sagramore thought, since she actually seemed to like bats.
She pointed up at him as he flittered overhead. “Ah, I see your little friend
has come to greet me. Hello, little bat, have you joined Terwin today to try to
keep him out of trouble?”
“You know
the odds of that happening, m'lady,” Sagramore
replied.
Terwin gathered his
broken weapon and his box, following Maid Mary Anne to Nottingham Castle—the
home of the odious Prince John and the similarly-endowed Sheriff of Nottingham.
Terwin stopped at the edge of the woods, for the penalty for a lowly Saxon like
himself to be seen in the company of the fair maid would be imprisonment at
least.
“Here I fear we must part
company, Maid Mary Anne,” Terwin said, bowing. “I was fain to come this close,
seeing as my bright clothes are a clear indicator of my
presence.”
“I pray for the day when
King Richard will return and then you may grant us a visit at the castle,
Terwin. Your little friend is even welcome,” the maid said, waving to Sagramore.
“Farewell, Terwin. Perhaps our paths will cross again soon and good bye, little
winged friend.”
The two friends bid
her farewell, and began the trek back to the Cerridwyn Castle. After a hearty
supper, Terwin read to Sir Wexton’s sons of the exploits of Sir Lancelot of the
Lake while Sagramore listened and sighed wistfully. When the teacher retired to
his turret, he took up a small candleholder that held the only light he had to
see by, save the moonlight. He looked to the rafters, and saw his friend hanging
there.
“Well, if not today perhaps
tomorrow, eh my friend?”
Terwin
blew out the candle and once Sagramore knew he was asleep, he flew out into the
night. This was his time to pursue his own wishes, and the first one was to fly
across to the northwest turret. There resided his friend Iris, a female bat he'd
befriended on coming to the castle. She was always glad to see him come, and
Sagramore was grateful to have someone to speak with. She flew out to meet him,
and they hovered there in the night
air.
“Iris, you really should try
flying during the daytime!” Sagramore said, his natural enthusiasm taking over.
“Terwin's latest effort was one of his most unique. I just know he'll succeed
soon!” Iris’ eyes flashed a look of disbelief. “You are certainly a strange
sort, Sagramore, keeping company with a human and flying during the
day.”
“Oh, but it's so exciting,
Iris! One day, I'll get to be a knight as well, and defeat ogres and dragons and
save fair maidens from danger!” Sagramore swiped his wings through the air as if
he was holding a sword. “Think of it, Iris! Sir Sagramore Fayremounte. Not bad,
what?”
“Silly bat,” Iris chided,
though with a tone of caring. “There are no such things as dragons and ogres!
Humans are bad enough as it is. We certainly don't need anything else to bother
us.”
“Well, maybe there aren't any
anymore, but there's still enemies to fight!” Sagramore countered. “Someday
Iris, I'm going to get my chance to prove myself. Until then, would milady
accompany me on a quest for some food?” Iris giggled. “I would be honored to
join such a distinguished knight on his quest...for
food.”
So the night passed,
with the two bats in each other's company. Sagramore slept from dawn to
afternoon, when he knew yet another experiment would be underway. However, when
he flew down to find his friend he didn't see Terwin at the outer gate as usual.
Sagramore flew to the sundial, and checked the time. He wasn't late, but the
sun's shadow moved on a half hour longer without any sign of his
friend.
Sagramore flew into the
main castle, a place he usually tried to avoid. Bats were seen by many as
unclean creatures at the time, and such was the case for the Saxon knight Sir
Wexton and his sons. He was careful to keep to the shadows, and used his
echolocation to hunt for trouble. When he heard voices in one particular room,
Sagramore flew in. Terwin was here, along with the regular residents of the
castle, and also several strangers who appeared to be in a meeting of some
sort.
“And I tell you, we must
attack Prince John!” one man shouted, dressed in knightly armor. Sir Wexton, a
rather husky fellow, stood up. “Attack Nottingham Castle? Gadzooks, Sir Bevill,
you'd need an army!”
“Or a
miracle,” Vincent, Sir Wexton’s younger son,
added.
Terwin cleared his throat
and spoke up. “Pardon the intrusion, but perhaps science could aid us in finding
a way. Now, if we could just…”
“Oh,
balderdash!” Sir Wexton said, a rebuke he usually reserved for Terwin. “Keep
your ideas to yourself, Terwin. This is a job for warriors, not
teachers!”
“But sir, if I might...”
Terwin began.
Corrin, Sir Wexton’s
other son, elbowed his younger brother. “Terwin, the only men you could lead are
merry ones! Haw, haw, haw!” Terwin rose and bowed to Sir Wexton and the others,
then left. Sagramore listened for a while more, but knew his friend was
depressed and frustrated, so he left in time to meet
Terwin.
Terwin returned to his
tower, where he pulled out a piece of parchment. He was glad to see his winged
friend was there for him when he looked. “At least you don't laugh at me. I know
they mean no harm by it, of course. They just don't understand that there are
things science can do that a man cannot by brute force. If only I had a way of
showing them!”
The learned scholar
began writing some notes, but soon the heat of the day made him drowsy and he
nodded off. Sagramore realized he had an opportunity. Terwin usually never left
his quill pens out, and through diligent following of his reading, the intrepid
bat had learned to read. Now, he crept up and took the pen. Once he'd stowed it
away safely, he acquired a piece of parchment for himself and dipped the pen in
the small inkwell Terwin used.
It
was slow going at first, for quill pens aren't made for bats to use. Still, he
worked the writing utensil in his wings until he found a way to control it. Then
it was simply a matter of forming the letters he remembered. The scrawl was
terrible at first, but after an afternoon's practice he began to improve. That
night, he was all excitement when he flew to meet
Iris.
“Guess what? I can write
now!” Sagramore said, flying fast circles around his confused friend. “I've got
my own pen and everything! Now, I'll be able to write messages to my friend
Terwin and he can understand me. Isn't that
marvelous?”
Iris was not a trusting
soul. “Do you not think it might be dangerous to reveal that to him? Humans
would surely react strangely if they knew we could communicate with
them.”
“Well, Terwin's not an
ordinary human,” Sagramore said. “He's quite clever, and I think he could handle
that. Still, I don't think I'd reveal it to him right away. I could write him a
message or two and see how he reacts. I just wish I had something worth telling
him about.” Sagramore flew down to a nearby oak, and lay on the branch, putting
his wings under his chin in
frustration.
Iris flew down and
alighted in front of him. “I found some old human rubbish in a cave a few miles
from here last year. Maybe he would be interested in that, if he is so
interested in strange
things.”
Sagramore instantly perked
up. “Take me there! It sounds like the chance for a quest!” Iris rolled her
eyes. She was used to Sagramore’s bursts of idealism, but they weighed on her at
times. “I'll show you, but it's just some old moldering
parchments.”
Together, they
flew through the moonlight. The cave was well-hidden, just the kind a bat would
choose. The inside was dry and well-kept, as if the last person to be there had
taken great care with it. The parchments turned out to be old scrolls made of
vellum. Gingerly, Sagramore opened one of them. It cracked some on the sides,
but the writing on the skin
remained.
“It's hard to read. I'd
better take it outside and use the moonlight.” Sagramore did so, and
read:
Concoction for dragon's
bane
1 part lizard
skins
1 part yellow
earth
1 part burned
wood
1 part
saltpeter
1 part swamp
moss
Mix fully. Catches fire
instantly.
Sagramore looked over at Iris
smugly. “See, someone knew there were dragons!” Iris crossed her wings
and pursed her lips. “Well, so there might have been once, but not anymore. Just
remember, we fly and dragons fly and there’s no telling what they
eat.”
“They were supposed to be
huge creatures, so I'd doubt a bat or two would satisfy them. Let's look at the
other scrolls,” Sagramore said, continuing into the small cave. Most of them
were concoctions of various sorts, but none of them as interesting as the
first—that is until he came upon one half-hidden behind a stone that had given
way over time. Sagramore pulled it free, excited that he might learn the
location of some hidden treasure. He pushed the vellum open and read:
Since the days of the ancients,
man and animal have not spoken. However, divine providence has made the ability
available to a select few of us who guard the secret. Know now that there exists
a type of snake coloured white in the caves under this hillock. Consuming the
smallest portion of one of these snakes will give the eater the ability to
communicate with animals. Woe be to him who uses this secret unwisely or
foolishly! It has made many a man powerful, but has led to many more men's ruin.
Think long before acting, because once it is done, it is
done.
Merlin
Iris snorted. “What nonsense!
Eating a snake is supposed to make humans intelligent enough to communicate with
we animals? Everyone knows all you have to do
is...”
“Yes, I know, but it is
understandable they’d think that. It’s probably the only way they would accept
that it could be done. Still, I think humans may be more intelligent than we
animals in some ways. It would be fun to find out if it worked. I'd love to talk
with Terwin. Yes, why
not!”
Sagramore put the vellum back
where he found it, and made sure no one was looking before he left the small
cave. Iris was right behind him, flabbergasted at his suggestion. “What are you
going to do? Catch a snake?”
“No,
I'm going to help my friend. Terwin needs a way into Nottingham Castle, and
maybe the white snake and dragon's bane can
help.”
“Well, I don't like humans.
But if he's your friend, I guess I'll
help.”
“Thanks, Iris,” Sagramore
said. “First, we've got to get him to the cave and I can only think of one
way.”
Sagramore and Iris flew
back to Cerridwyn Castle and entered the rafters of Terwin's abode. He was still
asleep, so they worked quietly. Sagramore painstakingly wrote a letter and once
the ink was dry he flew down and placed it on Terwin's chest. In the morning,
Terwin awoke and found to his surprise that someone had left him a note.
Terwin,
Proceed
half a league north of the castle to a hillock covered with wildflowers and
hemlock. Near the top, you will discover a small cave. Crawl in, and there you
will discover a possible answer to entering Nottingham Castle. Act quickly, or
the knowledge may fall into the hands of
another.
An ally to the
Saxons
Terwin looked out his window,
hoping for a glimpse of the person who had left him this strange note. Once the
boys' morning training was over, he unfolded the cryptic letter and read it
again in privacy—that is save for Sagramore and Iris who had watched his every
move.
“I hope this works,” Iris
said. “But why are you getting involved in human affairs?” Sagramore kept his
eyes on Terwin. “I've always been fascinated by humans, and besides Terwin's
stories are the things that stirred me to change my name. I think we'd make a
great team!”
Terwin heard some
rustling in the tree above him, and saw the two bats. “Well my friend, I see you
have a companion this day! That is good, for no one should remain alone forever.
Now, what to do about this note? If it is true, I should get me thence
immediately. If a trap, I should be caught and perhaps hanged or
worse.”
“Maybe we should help him
out, he's having second thoughts,” Iris suggested. Sagramore flew down and
flitted around his head, then started north. “Ah, you think I should go?” Terwin
asked. “Well then, I shall! But I had best be wary, lest the sheriff's men
suspect me of mischief.”
The
three of them traveled back to the hill, and it was not long before Terwin found
the promised cave and the scrolls of vellum. He had immediately seen the
possibilities in the dragon's bane, and was fascinated by the mention of the
white snake. “A white snake that gives one the power of interlocution with
animals? Truly, if Merlin wrote this, it would explain his legendary title of
magician to the court of King Arthur! Perhaps there is something to this tale,
but I saw no caves upon ascending this hillock. Perhaps the entrance is on the
other side.”
Terwin walked over the
hillock and down the other side, Sagramore and Iris following. There seemed to
be nothing but tall grass at first, then Terwin took a few steps and it was as
if the ground swallowed him
up.
“Terwin!” Sagramore
shouted as the bats flew over to where the teacher had fallen, and found a
moss-lined hole that led into the
ground.
“We must see if he is
well!” Iris said, and Sagramore nodded worriedly, flying inside. They followed
him down, and after numerous twists and turns the hole opened up into a
subterranean cave system. There was enough light coming through cracks in the
rocks above to give Terwin the ability to see, but just barely. He groped his
way along until he heard a splash and his foot stepped in something
wet.
“An underground
stream!”
Terwin strained his eyes
to see in the gloomy light, and noticed a sudden flashing in the water. Then
there were two. Then three. Terwin blinked, amazed. “The white snake, eels! Of
course, they are albinos. They must be indigenous only to this underground cave.
At least that much of the story rings true. Now for the
rest.”
Terwin was agile, and soon
managed to catch one of the slippery eels in his hands. He held it by its neck
and proceeded on. Sagramore and Iris were flying near to him, using their
echolocation, and saw the exit long before Terwin did. It was a giant boulder,
rolled up in front of the cave's opening. However, Terwin found he could climb
over the boulder and fit between it and the lip of the cave's mouth. The bats
followed him out, and Terwin found he was in a secluded thicket in Sherwood
Forest.
“Bodkins!” Terwin
exclaimed. “This would make a grand hiding place if ever I needed one. Now, for
the snake.” Terwin built a small fire right there, careful to conceal its
presence. He prepared the eel and cooked it over the open flame. When it was
ready, Terwin cut off a slice.
“We
shall see...”
Terwin ate the slice,
and then saw Sagramore flying above him. “My friend, can you understand me?”
Sagramore hesitated, so Iris prodded him. “Go on, Sagramore! Say something to
him and see if he hears
you.”
Terwin blinked, and turned
toward Iris. “Gadzooks, I believe I heard you! Say something more!” Iris looked
at Sagramore, then back at Terwin. “Hello Terwin, I'm Iris. Can you understand me? Say something to
your friend, Sagramore! You're the one who brought him here and showed him how
to talk to us.”
Terwin blinked
again, then fainted.
“Something
tells me he could, Iris,” Sagramore said. “The white snake worked!” The bats
waited until Terwin roused again, then flew down to him. “Terwin, are you all
right?”
Terwin rubbed his head
where it had hit the ground. “I believe so, I thought...wait, did you speak?”
Sagramore nodded. “Yes, I did. I was the one that wrote you the
letter.”
Terwin could scarcely
believe what he was hearing. “You can write? Do all animals have the
abilities you and your friend Iris do? And what's your name
again?”
“It's Sagramore, and yes
all animals can understand people. I found the scrolls and decided to help you,
because you're my friend.”
Terwin
smiled at this. “Thank you, Sagramore. I’ve always sensed you were my ally. We
will have to keep this ability you have helped me gain a secret, as Merlin
warned us. I could just imagine what the superstitious people would make of my
abilities. They'd likely boil me in
oil!”
“Doubtless they would, my
friend,” Sagramore said. “We know of the Saxons' need to gain entry to the
castle and rid the land of the scourge of John. We will aid you in your quest,
Terwin. The Saxons need a leader, and you could be that
leader!”
Terwin stared at them,
incredulous. “Me! I'm not a leader of men! Farm animals condescend to me.” Iris
spread her wings in emphasis. “Well, of course! Farm animals are always snooty,
thinking they're so important. But you don't look much like a
leader.”
Sagramore studied the
scrawny teacher for a minute. “No, he doesn't. That's got to be our first task.
Terwin, we've got to make you look like a leader! And we've especially got to be
sure no one would recognize you who's seen you before. You'll need different
garments, and a new name.”
Terwin
hung his head, his voice lowering. “I don't know. Even if I'm in disguise,
people will still treat me with the same indifference that they always treat me
with. It's not as if the clothes make the
man.”
Sagramore flew down to
Terwin's eye level. “Odd bodkins, man! Now is no time for timidity! Everyone has
the ability to be more than he is. Already, you have learned that you could
speak with animals. Not everyone has that. You are intelligent for a human. You
have creativity and resourcefulness. Now all you need do is be confident, and
men will follow you!”
Terwin gave
out a laugh. “Where will I find men foolish enough join me and merrily wage a
war on those Norman dogs?” Sagramore pointed back in the direction of the
castle. “I heard the Saxon knights speaking in Sir Wexton's castle after you
left the room. The siege is already planned, but they are ill-organized and need
someone they can trust and believe in. They need you, Terwin! And more
important, Maid Mary Anne needs
you.”
Terwin’s look was pure
frustration. “But she's a high born lady of quality and I'll be just an
outlaw...” Sagramore knew he was just making excuses. “So she's got class? So
what? I have seen the way she gazes on you when you were not looking. She likes
you, Terwin. She may even love you. Love levels all ranks, you
know.”
Terwin stared up at him.
Maid Mary Anne, love him? That was too much, even to hope for. “This is all to
much for me—talking bats, storming the castle. I'm a teacher, not Julius
Caesar!”
“Julius who?” Iris
asked.
Sagramore wasn't going to
give up. He pointed over the hill in the opposite direction, where the turrets
of Nottingham Castle lay in the distance. “Terwin, they need a man who knows the
things you know. They need a teacher, to organize and discipline them. They are
good men, but they need a disciplined mind leading them. Without you, I fear
their lives may well be forfeit and with them any chance for this country.
Please, my friend!”
Terwin got a
far-off look in his eyes. “To live the life of a mighty man of valor...to be
looked up and admired by the people. Well,
maybe...”
“And don't forget Maid
Mary Anne!” Iris interjected. “I bet she'd be really grateful to you for beating
up on that knave of a human!” Sagramore smiled at his human companion. “It's
what you've always dreamed of. What we've both always dreamed of. Now's
your chance!”
Terwin looked over in
the direction of Nottingham Castle again. “ If I win the favor of King Richard,
I could get knighted. Having a title would make me of sufficient status to wed a
lady of Maid Mary Anne's
rank.”
“Once he gets back, that
is,” Sagramore said. “First, you've got to get into that castle, and that's the
tough part. You'd need a battering ram to even dent
it!”
Terwin nodded. “And all the
while the enemy will be raining death and destruction down upon our heads. We'll
need a way in. If only there were a way to attack from a distance, but with
enough force to open the door—like a giant crossbow to break the door down. But
there is no weapon yet of such power. We'd need to find a way to sneak in and
open the gates from within. We need a Trojan
horse.”
Sagramore thought on it a
moment. “Perhaps you could disguise yourself as something or somebody that could
go into the castle. Like a monk,
perhaps.”
“But I am known at the
castle,” Terwin argued. “Even a monk’s robes may not hide me well. Perhaps I
could appeal to the woodland creatures to help. Those villains would never
suspect an animal of such
things.”
“Perhaps, but even they
could not keep it open long. No, we need a way to open the gates and keep them
open.” Sagramore remembered the other vellum. “Terwin, what about the dragon's
bane? I should think that Merlin would not have taken the time to write that
down if it were not a powerful concoction. Are those ingredients difficult to
find?”
Terwin re-read the list.
“The only problem is finding lizard skin. Did he mean dragon skin or just the
skin of any reptile? There are few such creatures in all of
England.”
“The list does not seem
to specify,” Sagramore said. “We will help you find some lizards. We bats are
good at hunting, particularly at night when the lizards would be out. Sundown is
already nearing. Start collecting the other items, and we will locate the
lizards for you.”
Terwin wasn’t
optimistic. “It will be dangerous, for only by trial and error will we know of
what volume of each substance to use, and to make enough to force our way into a
castle will be quite substantial.” Sagramore flew back up into the air. “Then it
is fortunate we have someone like you to run the tests! Once we know the
proportions, we can rally the woodland animals to help us. That is, if this
dragon's bane proves useful.”
“It
had better,” Terwin said. “Who knows what carnage will befall me if I make a
mistake? Go, my friends. Soon history will be written and only time will tell in
whose hand it will be written, mine or Prince
John's.”
Iris rose up to join
Sagramore. “Does he always talk so
dramatic?”
“Yes, but he is my
friend. Now, on with the task!”
As
night fell, the two bats were in their element. Echolocation allowed them to
track the movements of everything that moved along the ground, and after some
searching they found what they were after. Terwin meanwhile had managed to find
the other ingredients and had them ready at his meadow, where he had lit a large
torch and stuck it into the ground. Night was as good a time as any to run this
experiment, for any curiosity would likely be overcome by the simplistic fear of
the peasantry.
Terwin brightened
when he saw the bats coming. They each had several lizards by their tails, and
Terwin eagerly accepted them. “There,” Sagramore said, “You'd better try a small
amount of each first, in case the effects are
harmful.”
Terwin began mixing tiny
amounts of the substance. When he had a mixture formed in a pestle, he took a
blade of dry grass and lit it from the torch and then touched the burning blade
to the powder. A small fireball erupted from the
container.
“Merlin was a genius!”
Terwin shouted, his face full of joy and wonder. Even Iris was impressed. “It's
beautiful!” Sagramore smiled and nodded. “Amazing. Who would ever have thought
that such substances would burn that way? I wonder what a larger amount of them
would do? Perhaps you should make a small hole this time and put the items in
there, in case there's a big
fire.”
Terwin was eager to explore
the possibilities of this new substance and quickly set to work making a greater
amount. “You had better go farther back. This will be even bigger.” Sagramore
and Iris flew up into the air and away from the immediate area. Terwin decided
to use a blade of tallgrass this time, so as to give himself time to get away.
He took a short blade of grass and lit it from the torch, then touched it to the
long fuse. Terwin ran, stumbled, then got up and looked back as the fuse found
its target. In a thundering explosion, the dragon's bane erupted in a large ball
of flame. Terwin stood there, transfixed. There was now a crater where the hole
had been.
“We now have our secret
weapon that will send those Norman vermin running for their lives! All of Saxony
will be in your debt, Sagramore!” Terwin
said.
“And yours, Terwin. I'll get
word to the animals to round up more of the items once you show me what they all
are and where they can be found. Now, we must come up with a new name and
disguise for you. You should strike fear into evildoers and stand as a symbol
for good in the eyes of the
oppressed.”
Terwin thought about
it. “I suppose we could raid the castle sewing room and perhaps make an outfit.
I have a little skill with tailoring, so we shall see what we can do.”
The three of them set about
it, returning to Castle Cerridwyn. The sewing room was unoccupied, so they
decided to remain there and try different combinations. Sagramore and Iris both
advised, and soon they had their first costume—a top and bottom of dark purple
with a matching silk cape and large-brimmed hat. Terwin cut a purple mask that
covered his eyes and slipped it on with the purple
outfit.
Terwin pulled the cape up
to his face with a dramatic flourish. “I am the terror that strikes in the
night! I am the Saxon who vexes the Normans! What do you
think?”
Iris frowned. “Methinks you
look more like a bandit than a leader. Perhaps something more bold and
fear-provoking.”
More work produced
a costume of gray with a bat symbol on the chest and a blue cape and cowl.
Sagramore smiled admiringly at the suit. “The bat sure helps. Hey, you're a
bat-man!” Terwin pondered the costume for a while. “No. No one will be
intimidated by a hero dressed as a bat. We'll need to try something different.
Perhaps something that could more boldly represent the Saxon
cause.”
More experimenting and
sewing brought forth a suit that was powder blue with red boots and cape, with a
large "S" affixed on the chest. Iris managed to hide most of her laughter.
“Well, the Saxons are sure to notice that!” Terwin looked in the mirror, and
particularly at his uncovered head. “But there’s nothing to cover the face!
They'll know who I am. Perhaps if I wore a pair of spectacles they wouldn't
recognize me.”
“I can’t say I’ve
ever heard of spectacles, but that sounds to be too mild-mannered an
appearance,” Sagramore said. We will try again.” This time, they came up with a
costume of lincoln green with a hat to match. “I like that,” Iris said. “You
would blend in easily to the
greenwood.”
“And the costume makes
you look different itself. Look in yon mirror,” Sagramore suggested. Terwin
frowned at the effect. “This isn't a good costume. I simply look like a robbing
hood rather than a great hero.” Sagramore studied his friend for another few
moments then smiled. “It's perfect! And you have just provided the perfect name
as well—Robin Hood. Just because you look like a robber doesn't mean you have to
act like one.”
“Right,” Iris added.
“You can rob from those who have a lot and give it to everyone else who doesn't
have anything. Then you'd be seen as a good guy fighting for the
peasants.”
Terwin looked back at
the mirror, and the look was skeptical. “I don't know. The redistribution of
wealth to the peasants could have negative long term effects to the feudal order
of the world.” Sagramore flew up and perched on his shoulder. “Call it positive
image-making then. Besides, Prince John's taxing the heart and soul out of the
humans. It should be their money anyway, so robbing from the rich to feed the
poor's not so bad a policy.”
The
green-clad teacher shrugged. “Okay. I mean, what's the worst that could happen?
It's not like the peasants would ever demand the right to own the land they work
on or anything like that.”
With his
name and costume in place, Terwin returned to the meadow before dawn with a
horse and cart that was holding a large empty wine cask to put the dragon's bane
in. There, the bats assembled all the animals of Sherwood Forest they could
round up. Once Terwin showed them what to get and where to find it, they readily
agreed and worked till past sunup. Terwin carefully measured out the amounts,
but then things hit a snag. There simply weren't enough lizard skins to go
around.
Terwin was crestfallen, and
felt that their grandiose plans would fail. In his frustration he kicked the
torch and it fell over into the latest batch of dragon's bane without the lizard
skins. It flamed up heartily, and Terwin's spirits rose with the flames as he
quickly isolated the small fire from the other materials around
him.
“Egad! It still works!” Terwin
shouted. Sagramore stroked his chin with his wingtip, thinking out loud. “Merlin
must have added the skins in without knowing they weren't needed. I'm sure all
the lizards in the forest are breathing easier now. Come Terwin, we must get
these materials loaded in the cart and soon! If what we heard was right, the
siege will happen this very
night!”
Terwin would have to work
hard to put together more of these substances and the daunting task was taxing
his confidence. “Maybe we should just leave warfare for the
professionals.”
At
that moment, the sound of men laughing and singing more than slightly off-key
came from over yon hill. A group of Saxon yeomen appeared, who apparently had
toasted their success in the coming siege a bit too often at the local grog
house. When they saw Terwin in his lincoln green outfit, the wine cask and the
animals, they all stopped and stared. One of them raised a hand in
greeting.
“Hail there, colorful
one! What sort of enterprise be this? And have you wine in that fair cask for
loyal men of King
Richard?”
Sagramore flew down next
to Terwin's ear. “Terwin, these men are loyal to the king! If you stand up and
explain what you're doing, they'll help you. Just remember, sound like a leader.
And remember, you're Robin Hood
now!
Terwin cleared his throat and
tried to talk deeper than usual. “Uh, no, stout yeoman. Soon this cask will
contain a source of victory for our people over those Norman dogs! I have a
secret weapon that will give us victory, but I alone cannot bring success. I
need the help of some brave men to give us victory. Are you with
me?”
The yeomen looked at each
other, and shrugged and laughed. However, they came over if only to get a better
look at this green-bedecked fellow. The one who had waved and spoken with Terwin
came over, wearing mostly red. “How now, green one? A secret weapon? Faith, a
yeoman like William Scarlet only helps a man who proves his boastings! Show me
the power of this weapon, and if sound I follow. So say you
all?”
The men with him nodded, and
turned their eyes to Terwin. Fortunately, Terwin was able to put together enough
dragon's bane from the remnants in the containers he had mixed them together
with. After setting his concoction far away from the others, he set it off and
waited for the reaction.
The grass
blade fuse laced with powder hissed on its way to the target, then the mixture
exploded in a huge glowing fireball and again left a generous crater. The men
were no longer tipsy, so say the least. “Shades of thunder!” William said.
“Forsooth, you are a mighty wizard. We follow you, and willingly! Tell us then,
who do we follow?”
“Uh,” Terwin
stammered, then looked to Sagramore who made a motion of pulling a hood over his
head. “Oh. Robin Hood!” William motioned to the others, and they all knelt
around him. “Ah, a grand title. We drank to our success this day, but we feared
defeat. Now, with you to aid us against Prince John, we can prevail! We are
Robin Hood's men, then!”
Quickly,
William introduced Terwin to the others—John Little, Allan-A-Dale, March the
miller's son, and four others. They were all stouthearted men, and ready for the
battle to come.
“What are your
orders, Robin?” Scarlet asked. Terwin pointed to the bowls, holding the
remainders of his dragon’s bane. “Brave William, we need to gather the
ingredients we need for this mighty powder and we've not much time. Then we need
to get it to the castle without being destroyed by the
Normans.”
Terwin showed the list of
ingredients to William and told him likely places to find each one—save the
lizard skins, of course. William pursed his lips. “It will take time, but we
will fill that cask full by sundown or perish
trying!”
John Little walked up.
“Clerics are allowed inside the castle. The Friar of Fountain's Abbey is
friendly to the King. I will fetch him and bring him hence. Perchance he can
supply us with a few more robes. With your permission,
Robin?”
Terwin looked around for a
few moments and then remembered that he was Robin. “Yes, good idea. We can
perhaps sneak the cask in right under their noses, or perhaps we could float it
in the moat, right up to the edge of the
castle.”
“Verily, a grand plan!”
John Little said. “Your magic powder should be able to gain us quick entry. But
you will also need weapons, will you not? I shall bring a sword and a bow and
quiver for you!” Terwin was about to hesitate at this, but Sagramore stopped him
and whispered into his ear. “Accept them, or they'll think you're not willing to
fight at their side. Tell him, ‘I would be honored, and I will lead us in our
brave fight, Little John’.”
Terwin
put his fists on his hips, remembering to keep his voice deep and strong. “I
would be honored, and I will lead us in our brave fight, Little John…uh, I mean
John Little.” John Little was about to turn and go, when his brain registered
Terwin’s mistake of copying Sagramore's slip of the
tongue.
“Little John...faith, it
has a fine sound when you say it. Little John it is then!” William grinned at
his friend. “Little is it? If little you are, I would hate to see your big
brother!” The men laughed at this, and already a camaraderie was developing
among them.
“Aye, and we the merry
men will take them both!” Allan-a-Dale said. William gestured at the men with
his hand. “Aye! Robin Hood's merry men are we! So let us merrily be off and do
what must be done this day!”
Terwin
joined in the laughter, then turned to William. “Since names are changing, could
I call you Will? I don’t really like William.” William considered it. “Faith,
Will is a boy’s name, but content would I be to be named Will Scarlet if it
means following the mighty Robin Hood into victory!” Terwin nodded. “Very well,
Will Scarlet it is then.”
The
men split up, laughing still. Terwin went with Will Scarlet and they gathered up
the saltpeter—that is, once they had “appropriated” a couple of barrels to put
it in. When they returned, they found the other men bringing the rest of the
ingredients, also in appropriated containers. Terwin began measuring out the
amounts, and sent the men out for more while he directed the filling of the
barrels. It was a constant process of digging and hauling, but with all of them
they got it done. The sun was just going below the horizon when Little John
returned with the friar.
“Bless my
soul, what is all this?” the friar asked. “A group of yeomen and a green-clad
stranger are to storm the castle? Surely, you will need these disguises.” The
friar and Little John had brought robes for them all, and now they put them on
save for Terwin. This was at Sagramore's
request.
“It's time to go, Terwin,”
Sagramore said. “The Saxons will soon be surrounding Nottingham Castle, and
you'll need their cooperation. If they can divert the Norman arrowmen on the
turrets once you near the drawbridge, they will have no way to stop you once the
deception is found out.”
Terwin
turned to the Friar of Fountain’s Abbey, who was known as Tuck. “Friar Tuck, it
would be good to know that we have the blessing of a man of the church. Perhaps
you could ask for a blessing on our little adventure?” The Friar nodded, and all
the men knelt. “Oh gracious omnipresent God, we beseech Thee to give success to
our night's venture. Thou knowest that Prince John favors the Normans, and has
not paid his indulgences to the Church as any good son of the Church would.
Therefore let him be struck from the throne and let our good and noble King
Richard return to once again rule with wisdom and charity. En nom de Patrie, et
Filos, et Spiritum Sanctum.
Amen.”
With the cart in tow and the
cask on it full of dragon's bane, the bold warriors proceeded onward to
Nottingham Castle. The siege had already begun. Sir Wexton's men stormed the
walls with ladders, trying to scale the dizzying heights. The Norman soldiers
threw stones at them or tipped their ladders so that they fell into the cold
waters of the moat. The Saxon arrowmen tried to provide them cover, but they
were chiefly peasants and knew nothing of the proper ways of taking a castle.
The Saxons were thrown back, and in disgust they retreated to the nearby
woods.
Sir Wexton sat against a yew
tree, dejected. “We stand no chance against John's men as we are! We have no
unity or skill as the Normans do. I fear it is
hopeless.”
That was the moment
Terwin had been waiting for. With an explosion and fireball that froze the
hearts of all the Saxons, he appeared, followed by his men. In the dark, only
the firelight illuminated Terwin and it gave him a commanding appearance in his
costume. Sir Wexton and the others
stood.
“Who are you, who come among
us so mysteriously?” Sir Wexton asked. “Do you come to join us or mock at our
failure?” Terwin looked the crestfallen knight in the eyes. “I am Robin Hood, a
friend to all Saxons! I have come to force Prince John from the throne. I am
here to provide a way into the castle, for you and your
men.”
Sir Wexton approached him,
uncertain. “I pray you do not jest, for if you bring the miracle we have so
besought God for, we will follow you to perdition! What is this way?” William
stepped forward, fealty to Terwin driving him. “Our leader is a mighty wizard!
The fire he made is small compared to the fire that awaits the Normans. We have
brought his magic earth that will thunder and flame and tear a breach in the
castle for us to enter. We have all seen it, and we know it can be
done!”
Sir Wexton and the other
Saxon knights conferenced for a minute. “Very well. We will fight with you, for
our only other choice is to leave in dishonor. What must we
do?”
While the humans spoke
together, Sagramore and Iris had been reconnoitering the castle, making sure of
the layout and where Prince John and Maid Mary Anne were. Sagramore looked over
at his companion. “Iris, I've always dreamed of a moment like this. Isn't it
exciting?”
“I have to admit,
animals don't have anything like this, but maybe that's a good thing,” Iris
said. “All this death and destruction. But I suppose that our helping will save
lives by ending the
conflict.”
“It's more than that!”
Sagramore said, the excitement evident in his voice. “It's fighting for honor
and justice—all that a knight could ask for!” Sagramore flew away from the
castle and then stopped. “Iris, I want you to stay here. Once I advise Terwin,
I'm going to do what I can to distract the
arrowmen.”
Iris was hesitant to
leave him. “Perhaps if we got the whole colony to join in we could bother them
so much they couldn't shoot straight!” Sagramore considered it. “Yes…yes! Go and
get them while I go to Terwin. But Iris, I don't want you to attack with
them...” Iris stared at him, incredulous. “How can you talk of honor and then
ask me to sit out the battle! If the others in the colony will be willing to
risk their lives, how could I stand by and do
nothing?”
Sagramore looked into her
sweet face, which was now indignant. He'd been wanting to tell her for some
time, but he'd hoped to wait until he could muster up the courage and maybe not
feel the sting of rejection so badly if she spurned him. Still, he didn't want
her fighting. “Iris, I do not have time for long explanations. I care for you
deeply, and I have ever since I've known you. If something were to happen to
you...it would break my
heart.”
Iris blinked a few times,
absorbing what he’d said, then a smile broke out on her face. “I have... similar
feelings for you as well. I would be heartbroken if harm were to come to you.
Perhaps we should stay together for this fight.” Sagramore's heart sang, and he
hugged her quickly. “Very well, Iris. Come with me, and we'll warn Terwin
together then rally the
colony!”
The two bats headed
for Terwin, who was already discussing the tactics with Sir Wexton and his own
men. Sagramore perched on a limb of the tree above Terwin. “Don't look up,
Terwin, but Iris and I are here. There are two castle guards behind the main
drawbridge and the arrowmen are all on alert. We're going to help distract the
guards, but the Saxon arrowmen need to attack as one. Get them to all fire as
one, and make it harder for the Normans to
reply.”
“And Maid Mary Anne's in
her room in the north turret,” Iris said. “Prince John's in the throne
room.”
Terwin relayed the
information, saying his “spy network” has given him eyes on the inside of the
castle. “Soon, we shall free our land from the Normans and King Richard will
again be our true king. Long live the
king!”
“Long live the king!” Sir
Wexton echoed, raising his
sword.
All the men echoed the
exclamation, swords raised. Soon, three hundred Saxons readied their bows,
surrounding the castle's sides excepting the one where the drawbridge was. The
gate was of course closed, and the Normans were on high alert. When they saw the
cart approaching, an arrowman raised his hand on the
parapet.
“Hail! Advance and be
recognized!”
Ten men in monk's
robes advanced, with two driving a cart holding a wine cask. Friar Tuck stood
from his seat next to Terwin and spoke. “It is I, Friar Tuck of the Fountain’s
Abbey. My order brings a gift for the noble Prince John, a cask of fine wine so
that he and his brave knights may add many toasts of victory to their sup this
night!”
The arrowman saw the size
of the cask, and fortunately for the Saxon cause they had chosen this man’s
weakness. The idea of a taste of that good aged wine appealed to him, and the
drawbridge came down. The cart proceeded slowly, the monks in no hurry. The
portcullis closed behind them, and the arrowman and his comrades came down.
“Now, methinks we will exact a toll from that cask ere we allow it to pass
by...”
Terwin and the others
removed their robes, save for Friar Tuck, and drew their swords. Little John
shouted, “Nay, the toll we shall exact from you! Now, Robin!” Terwin stood at
the rear of the cask where the makeshift fuse lay, a torch in his hand. “Long
live King Richard!”
Terwin lit the
fuse and ran. Sword fights had already broken out, but at a word from Terwin
they ran as well. The confused soldiers stood there, then they saw the fuse
heading for the cask and figured perhaps there could be some danger and started
backing away. With a deafening explosion, the cask of dragon's bane had its
desired effect. The portcullis was destroyed, and the drawbridge was singed but
otherwise okay. The guards had been blown about fifty feet back by the blast,
and were unconscious—as were several of the merry
men.
Their leader was not, though.
Terwin had known to take cover, and now he emerged and rallied his remaining
conscious men. “Yeomen, hold while I call the others!” The yeomen cheered and
waited as Terwin ran down the drawbridge. A few arrows tried to stop him, but
then the bats came. The leather-winged warriors got in the faces of the
arrowmen, while the Saxons fired as one and the Normans were pushed
back.
Sagramore rallied his troops.
“Hold them while the humans get inside! Attack, my brothers!” Sagramore bit an
ear of one of the arrowmen, throwing off his aim, while Iris blinded his eyes.
“It's working, Sagramore!” Iris said. “Here come the
knights!”
The Saxon knights
appeared on their horses, shields and armor ready. Terwin stood at the head of
the drawbridge, urging them on. “Come, on to victory!” The knights stormed
forward, Terwin with them. Some of the court guards from inside were fighting
the yeomen, but now they retreated at the sight of the charging knights. As one,
the Saxons fought forward to the throne room. Prince John's knights came forward
and the fight was on in earnest. Terwin followed them, and saw Maid Mary Anne
enter the room, drawn by the
noise
“Get back, quickly!” Terwin
shouted. He had seen the battle coming her way, and not being able to reach her
in time he grabbed his bow and drew an arrow. He was a fair shot, but now he had
to be better than fair. He nocked his arrow and let it fly, hitting an advancing
Norman in the leg. Terwin ran and pulled her behind some large
furniture.
Maid Mary Anne was in
shock at first, but now she got a look at the man who had saved her. “Terwin?”
she asked, amazed. Terwin kept his eyes on the fighting. “No time to explain
right now! Stay down, and pray we
succeed!”
Terwin knew his men
needed him, so he returned to the fray. The Saxon knights were winning, and
Prince John knew it. He left the throne and started to exit when suddenly the
crown left his head. An arrow had struck it from his head and now it hung on the
wall. John reached for it, and an arrow pinned his arm to the wall. He looked
for source, and saw a man clothed in lincoln green, with an arrow ready to
fly.
“Hold!” Prince John shouted.
“Hold all, I yield! This archer has the eyes of a falcon!” With Prince John's
surrender, all fighting immediately ceased. The Saxons cheered as one, and
Prince John's head hung in defeat. Sagramore and Iris had flown inside with the
others, and now Terwin's friend rested on his
shoulder.
“That was amazing,
Terwin!” Sagramore said. “I had no idea you were such a fine shot!” Terwin
smiled slightly and whispered, “Not really, Sagramore. I was aiming for his
shoulder and his cape.” The yeomen picked him up and tossed him in the air.
“Hail, Robin Hood! Hail, Robin
Hood!”
The Saxon knights turned
to thank Terwin as well when a few more men entered the castle. They turned to
battle, but instead they all knelt. It was King Richard, the
Lion-Hearted!
“Rise, loyal men,”
the king said. “My ransom to the king of Austria was paid two weeks hence, and
now I stand with you again. And who is the one we heard being hailed as we
approached?” Sir Wexton approached quickly. “Sire, this nobleman and great
warrior known to us as Robin Hood has turned defeat into victory this night, and
forced your brother from the throne! Behold, he shot the crown from his
traitorous head!”
Richard saw the
arrow on the wall holding his crown, and went over and reclaimed it. “A fine
shot indeed! Robin Hood, approach.” The crowd parted, that there was only a
straight line lined by the Saxons between Terwin and Richard. Terwin had managed
to keep his head throughout the fighting, but now that it was over he was
suddenly struck that everyone was looking at him and his king was beckoning him
forward.
His feet tried to move,
but they wouldn't obey. Sagramore flew up to his ear. “For pity's sake, move! Go
and kneel before Richard. He wants to thank you for what you did!” Terwin
quickly made his way to the king and knelt before him. “I am your humble
servant, my king.”
Richard withdrew
his sword from its scabbard as he addressed the crowd. “A realm is a place
fraught with danger and those who would usurp its good graces for their own
ends. But there are also men of valiance and honor who place their own lives
aside for the good of their people. Today, one such man kneels in my presence,
but it is I who should kneel to him! However, I am king so the best I can do is
to honor him in this way.”
Richard
touched the sword's flat blade to Terwin's shoulder. “I dub thee Sir Robin, and
I make you Earl of Sherwood and Nottingham and further Baron of Locksley. From
this day forth, you are Sir Robin of Locksley and a trusted friend to the
crown.”
Terwin's men shouted with
joy, and shouts of "Sir Robin" went forth through the crowd. Terwin, now Sir
Robin in title, had not noticed in his nervousness that someone else had joined
the king on his platform. Now he looked over and saw Maid Mary Anne smiling at
him. It didn't escape the king
either.
“Rise, Sir Robin,” Richard
said, turning to Maid Mary Anne. “Do you hold feelings for this hero of the
realm?” The maid nodded, his eyes not leaving him. “Yes, sire. I have loved him
ever since I first saw him in a meadow, long
ago.”
Terwin was totally shocked by
this, more than anything. Further to his shock, his answer was immediate. “And I
have loved her from afar for so long. But I was unworthy to profess those
feelings...until now.” Richard took the hand of the maid and walked her down to
the man she loved. “Then my command is that you take her hand in marriage, my
Lord Earl. You will be swift to obey this order, I
trust?”
“As your majesty commands,”
Terwin said, smiling. “We'll be married as soon as possible, if Maid Mary Anne
doesn't object.” Maid Mary Anne didn't object. In fact, she turned his face to
her and smooched him then and there. The crowd shouted its
approval.
“Very good,” Richard
said. “The ceremony will be arranged as soon as is proper to attend to it well.
My thanks again to you, Sir Robin, for your timely rescue. You will be a legend
in this country as long as men have memory!” Terwin suddenly felt bad about
being dishonest to his king. “Your majesty, if I may impose upon you for a
moment in private?”
Richard eyed
him curiously. “Of course. Excuse us good knights, Maid Mary Anne.” Richard and
Terwin went into the king's private chambers. “You appear troubled, Sir Robin.
What can this king do for the man who has restored his throne to
him?”
Terwin took off his hat. “I
am in truth not named Robin Hood. I am Terwin Ermighty, a humble teacher. I am
not a man of fame or nobility that would deserve the honors you have bestowed on
me or the hand of maid Mary
Anne.”
Richard looked at the man a
few moments, then smiled and put his hand on his shoulder. “What you just did
proves you are worthy, Terwin. You could have kept your own counsel on this and
said nothing, and perhaps no one would have been the wiser. An honest man is a
rare commodity in any kingdom. Still, as I hear it, you were the one who made it
possible to breach the castle gates. You were the one who rallied the arrowmen
to fire as one. And you led your men to victory! Perhaps you were a humble
educator before this day, but you are more than what you realize. So are we all,
if we but stand against injustice. You are Sir Robin of Locksley, and there is
no other.”
Terwin withdrew a scroll
and handed it to the king. “Your highness, on this parchment is the formula for
the weapon that gave us victory. It is a mighty weapon and one that should only
be used wisely.” Richard accepted the scroll, and read it. “Indeed, if Merlin is
behind this it must be powerful indeed. Then it will be placed where it is
secure, and used only when needed. Come, Sir Robin. Your lady and the kingdom
await us both.”
They returned to
the throne room, where all fell silent to hear King Richard. “Our good Sir Robin
has given me another assurance that our kingdom will be safe. I have decided to
make him my ambassador, and he will also oversee the system of education in our
kingdom. He is a wise and learned man, and all my subjects deserve to profit
from such a valiant and brave servant of the
realm!”
The crowd cheered
again, and Richard indicated it was time for Terwin to leave with Maid Mary
Anne. The king waved farewell, as he, escorted by his loyal men, exited and
headed for the Castle of Locksley, which was now his. Overhead, Sagramore was
all smiles as he spoke to Iris. “It's more than I could have dreamed it would be
like! A great battle, Terwin an earl, baron and knight, with the hand of the
Lady Mary Anne besides! And we bats aided the cause of justice with courage and
might. It's been a glorious day, has it
not?”
Iris smiled at him. “Indeed
it is, Sagramore. I would not have dreamed that so ugly a conflict could have
had so happy an ending. I can't see any way it could have ended better, except
for one.” Sagramore blushed slightly. “I can think of one. Darling Iris, would
you be mine, to fly at my side and live as my wife?” Iris giggled in the most
adorable way and smiled at him. “I was hoping you'd pick up on my not-so-subtle
hint.
Of course I will accept,
Sagramore.”
They landed on a nearby
oak tree and embraced each other, lost for some time in their mutual love. When
Sagramore looked around again, he saw that everyone was gone. “We'd better be
heading for Locksley Castle. I'm sure Terwin will be looking for us, and I have
a feeling he'll need advice in the days to come. He's capable, but it never
hurts to have friends to remind him of
that.”
Iris flew beside Sagramore,
thinking, “It's too bad that human history won't record our part in these
events. So no one will ever know
the whole story.” Sagramore nodded. “Perhaps it is best that way. My thinking is
that humans for the most part were not meant to know they could speak with us.
Some day, perhaps in the far future, it will be different. For now, the secret
must remain a secret.”
Sagramore
flew off with his bride-to-be at his side. They were married along with Terwin
and Maid Mary Anne at a grand ceremony hosted by the king and officiated by the
Archbishop of Canterbury. Both couples had large families, many of whom would
distinguish themselves in battle and in name. The exploit of Sir Robin of
Locksley was hailed and sung and told and retold throughout the realm until as
King Richard said he became a legend. The legend grew with the years, but
neither Terwin nor Mary Anne or the king denied them. Legends are made by people
to inspire people, and so it was that the tales of Robin Hood and his merrie men
grew and expanded year after year.
Additional personal note of
Sagramore, written late in his
life:
While human and animal
did the deed, I never harbored any animosity for my anonymity. Terwin more than
made up for that. My wife and children were well cared-for. Terwin and I spent
many happy years together, and now at the twilight of my time he has said that
when I pass on that the best part of himself will pass with me. I believe it,
for no human and animal could be closer than we two.
Terwin has never revealed the
secret to anyone save Maid Mary Anne, and indeed he waited ten years before
telling her. She is a friend and ally to animal-kind, and has promised to teach
her children to always respect our presence in the
castle.
There is much I could tell
you of our times together, but suffice it to say they were as honorable as that
memorable day at Nottingham Castle. This record I leave to my posterity, that
they may know that the name Fayremounte holds the honor they should expect. My
son Uldred carries on the tradition begun by me of naming ourselves after the
famed Knights of the Round Table, and he says he also intends to ask his
betrothed to accept the floral name of Violet in honor of Iris. I hope he will,
for traditions such as those will remind the family of its own history and the
role of honor I would ask every Fayremounte to uphold. I bid the reader Godspeed
and long life.
Sagramore
Fayremounte, 3-10-1280
Sagramore Fayremounte and Iris are original creations of Indy.
Terwin Ermighty, Sir Wexton, Sir Corrin, and Vincent are original creations of
Chris Silva and Indy. Maid Mary Anne is of course an offshoot of Maid Marian,
and Robin Hood's one cool dude, along with his merry men.
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