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Author name: Pete Koziar Genre: Fantasy Style: Short story
Title: Hero's Ambush
Submission:
The mighty warrior, Kom, crouched in the bushes just off the road, and caught the faint scent on the wind of a huge cat, maybe even a Jar’belal, the lord of the tigers, the great saber tooth. He said to himself, “I do not hunt alone today.” Then he shook his head sadly and thought, “Look at me, a mighty hero indeed, crouching like a serpent beside the road, hunting a mouse…” He reached into his shirt and gently caressed a leather pouch slung around his neck. He thought, “Adalee, my dearest Adalee. I do this for you, my daughter.” He heard the sound of casual footsteps gently crunching the leaves a little ways down the road. A man of average height walked into view, grasping a rough wooden staff, dressed in the ragged clothing of a poor scholar. A single arrow could have dropped the man and his task would be done, the bargain with the shaman satisfied. Kom entertained the thought for a moment, but rejected it again. He had no idea what the man had done to so upset the shaman, but Kom would not deny him the right to gaze into his killer’s eyes. Before Kom could rise, however, the man stopped, leaned on his staff, looked directly at him, and called out, “Kom Jaror! Who has stolen your bravery? What battle do you find here? A fine, common assassin you have become.” Kom stood slowly and said grimly, “Do you call me a coward?” “I stand, unarmed, before a warrior. You crouch in the bushes, hiding from a peasant such as myself. Which of us is the hero now?” Kom drew his sword slowly and said, “Running will only make this harder for you.” “What does your heart whisper?” “You are trying to trick me into sparing your life, so your words do not matter.” “Do you really think killing me will save your daughter?” “What do you know of my daughter?” “I know the shaman is poisoning her…” “Liar! You lie to save yourself! How can you know that?” “…and, if you kill me, she will recover, but not fully. The shaman will have another task for you to do, and another, and another. Your daughter will live the rest of her life a sickly wraith, and you, a slave.” Kom felt the tension in his fingers as he grasped his sword, and forced himself to relax. “A fairy story to cover your fear.” The peasant laughed and said, “It is you who should be afraid.” Kom snickered and took a step towards the man, who calmly gestured to the trees beside him. After a moment, a massive creature rose slowly out of the shadows, then padded heavily over to the man, and sat calmly down beside him. It was the greatest Jar’belal that Kom had ever seen, its shoulders level with the peasant’s, its fangs a good two feet long, but with its eyes a deep azure, like a hot summer sky at twilight. Kom fought the primordial terror that screamed silently for him to turn and run. Instead, he said, tauntingly, “Why should I be afraid of your tame kitten?” The peasant laughed again and said, “He is no more a tame kitten than I am a peasant scholar. Your shaman is as afraid of me as you are of my friend here.” “The shaman is a man of great power, who fears no man.” “Your shaman is a trickster, who serves shadows who care no more for his life than you do for the insect that bites your arm. I, on the other hand, serve the one true god, master of all.” Kom laughed and said, “There are many who claim their gods are the only true ones. Why is yours any different?” The man sighed and said, “Why don’t people just believe us.” He looked at the great cat sitting next to him and shrugged. The cat replied with an all-too-human smile and a shrug of its own. Kom felt the little hairs rise on the back of his neck. The peasant raised his staff, and it was like a coating of sand gently blew off two precious metal statues, blazing as if lit by the desert sun. The cat creature became the embodiment of all that made his kind terrible, yet noble, the perfect cat from which all others are merely shadows dimly cast. Beside him, the man was a blazing incarnation of wisdom and truth. Kom sank slowly to his knees and said, “My lords…” The man replied, “Get up, Kom. We are just servants of the true God. I am Far’ell, and my companion is Sarfan. Don’t waste your worship on such as us.” Kom still remained on his knees and asked, “Would you heal my daughter?” The man responded, “How much do you love her?” “I love her more than anything. She is all I have. I would do anything to spare her.” “Would you even pledge yourself to follow the true God? Would you sacrifice your own life that she would be spared?” Kom said slowly, “I so pledge.” “Then your life is the price for hers, right now, right here.” “May I at least bid her farewell first?” “No. If even someone as stupid as your shaman could discover that I am not what I seem, I have been too careless. I must leave here now. Freedom or slavery, the choice is set before you.” Kom began to weep, deep wracking convulsive gasps of pain and sorrow, as the thought of his daughter, left all alone, consumed him. Alone, but alive, and healthy. Unable to speak, he simply nodded slowly as he watched his tears crash into the leafy earth. Far’ell waited a few moments, then said softly, “Clasp your sword to your chest. Do not resist. Kom clutched his sword flat against his chest. He looked Far’ell directly in the eyes, and nodded. The man turned to the great cat and motioned towards Kom, ever so gently. The cat padded slowly over to Kom and peered at him for a moment. Kom saw a hint of tenderness in its gaze, then, in a golden blur, the cat struck with its outstretched claw. Kom caught a fleeting glimpse of his own blood pouring out as he toppled forward into blackness. He then found himself, or, rather, that-which-had-been-Kom found itself in something akin to a meadow, in which was a presence of such overpowering glory and beauty that Kom could hardly bear its presence. It said to him, “Your daughter is healed.” Kom said, “Thank you, my lord.” “Will you truly serve me forever?” “Whatever you wish of me, I will do.” Kom perceived that the presence coalesced for a moment into the shape of a man, then it exploded into an incandescent blaze and said, “You have given your life for your daughter, but I have given my life for you. I accept your sacrifice, and give you yet another gift. In me, you have life…” Once again, Kom found himself in utter darkness, then felt the cold, cool crispness of crunchy leaves underneath him. He slowly opened his eyes, and carefully lifted himself up off the leafy ground. He was back in the clearing again. He looked around dazedly, and saw that he was now all alone. The ground around him was soaked in blood, and he realized with a shock that it was his own. He lifted his hand carefully to his throat where the great cat had sliced it, but the skin was soft and unbroken. He picked his sword up from the bloody ground, grabbed a handful of clean leaves from behind him, and slowly cleaned it. He noticed, embedded in the sword as the blood cleaned off, ornate red letters in a language he had never seen. The sword now felt warm, like a living thing. Kom reached up for the leather pouch around his neck, in which he carried a lock of Adalee’s hair. Instead, his fingers found something hard and metallic on a metal chain. He drew it away from his body, and saw a gold and silver figurine of a saber-tooth tiger, with brilliant blue stones for eyes. He told himself it was a trick of the light, but it seemed like the figurine winked at him. Kom stood silently in the dappled sunshine of the clearing. Then, he began to laugh, quietly at first, but quickly building into the thunderous tumult of a mighty warrior, until it subsided, leaving him wiping the tears from his eyes. He sheathed his sword slowly, enjoying the gentle “swoosh” against the leather scabbard. Then he laughed again, a terrifying chuckle, as he thought about the shaman, whose afternoon wasn’t going to turn out exactly as he was expecting.
_________________ Floyd was frozen where he stood. He struggled to breathe, but the air smelled of blood and death and guilt. He tried to formulate a name, to ask, but language was meaningless, and words would not come. He tried to scream but the sound got stuck in his heart, shattered into a million pieces, and scattered to the wind.
In a world without superheroes, who will stand against the forces of evil?
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