House of Halik -
part one
I
A young man and his large, muscular
friend exited the Public House laughing at a joke only they had
heard. The young man wore a short, trimmed beard but his hair had
been allowed to go a bit wild. The larger fellow, his hair was
trimmed and his beard was taken care of but longer, denoting his age.
After exiting the establishment they
found another man lying on the curb, obviously too intoxicated to
even get up and go home.
“Would you lookee here, Dostin. If
mine eyes are right, I spy Jon Halik, lying on the ground
insensible.” He said, then gave a loud laugh.
“He does resemble Mister Halik, sir.”
The large man said. “Perhaps we should help him go home before it
gets too late.”
“No.” The young man said, “If'n
he wants to sleep out under the stars and get pissed on, then he has
that right, Dostin.”
Dostin closed his eyes in resignation
as the younger man began unfastening the buttons on the front of his
pants. “The House of Halik has fallen on hard times, let us not
deprive them of the full experience of this poverty.”
Dostin looked away, disgusted. His hand
dropped to the hilt of the sword at his waist as he scanned for any
enemy that might attack his master. But it was dark outside and most
everyone was already at home sleeping.
“The bum doesn't even react.” The
young man, rearing a leg back and delivering a kick to the prone
man's stomach, eliciting a groan. “That's better. The Halik lives,
Dostin, you are my witness.”
“Master Avnar, let us get back to the
House before the brawgs show up.” Dostin said, the pack of wild
brawgs would likely attack anyone caught outside.
“Jon Halik will be fine, the brawgs
won't attack one of their own kind.” Master Avnar said, laughing at
his own wit. The old boast by a younger Jon Halik that he could fight
like a brawg was just bragging, besides he lost more fights than he
had ever won.
“We shouldn't leave him here.”
Dostin said, but the public house was closing.
Master Avnar waved a hand in the air
and sighed. “Look, we'll just get the wallman Diggs to fetch him
home.”
“Very good, master.” The big man
said as they walked toward the middle of the walled village where a
tower stood at the intersection of the four great houses. The wallman
came out and looked down at them from his perch.
“What are you doing out here?
Do not you know what time it be?”
The stout older man with a gray-streaked beard to the top of his
stomach called to them.
“It
is I, Dostin, man of his Master Avnar of House Avnar.” Dostin
responded. “Jon Halik lays inebriated in front of the public house
near the east wall. You would be a credit to the order of the wall if
you would fetch him home.”
As
annoyed as wallman Diggs was, it was his job. He had his post at the
center of the village specifically to guard and assist the great
houses. Halik was no longer quite so great but it had been in recent
memory. Diggs climbed down from the tower and proceeded to do as
told.
“If
the brawgs come over the wall while I am carrying him, I will let
them have him and escape.” The old man told himself with a laugh.
When he found the drunken Jon Halik, he adjusted the strap on his
weapon, slinging it to his back. Then he picked up Halik as if he
weighed what a small child would.
“You
smell like a latrine.” The wallman told the unconscious form as he
carried him. “What is your father going to think about this? You
have a child, man. You aren't a young prawn any longer. Pull it
together.”
Diggs
found the formerly majestic front gate of the House of Halik where
only one torch was burning instead of the customary eight of the old
days. Once upon a time this House would have fielded its own army of
guards, now the gate was unguarded.
Diggs
lowered the man to the ground and then pulled the cord that would
ring a bell inside. He waited for any kind of sign that they had
heard. He was only going to do this one more time, and then get back
to his tower. He reached his hand toward the cord for another yank
when one side of the great double-door opened.
“What
is it?” A feminine voice inquired.
“Jon
Halik, he's passed out and all.” Diggs said. The gate opened a bit
more and a small girl rushed to the man on the ground. Her hair was
in a long tail behind her and she was wearing a thick white bed gown
to her ankles. Diggs didn't remember her name.
“Father!”
She said, “Spending all day getting drunk again, I see.”
“Shall
I ferry him to his bed?” Diggs asked.
“No.”
The girl answered, “We'll handle it from here.”
Diggs
turned to leave but stopped and looked back. “Just get him inside
before any brawgs show up.”
“Yes.”
The girl said. Diggs slowly shook his head and walked back to his
watch tower. One upon a time Jon Halik looked like a sure thing to
become a Baron. Winning that title would have saved his family from
their present misfortune. Now they lived in a large house, full of
history and grandeur that the people alive there could not live up
to.
After
returning to his tower he pulled his weapon and checked the settings.
Yes, if the brawgs somehow got past the outer wall and showed up he
could get some of them. His energy weapon was good for a couple
hundred yards, and it had a quarter charge.
Halik,
he still had some respect for the name after all.
The
girl ran through the dark corridors of House Halik after hearing the
voice of her grandfather, and found him sitting up in bed. He was
looking far older than his years and his silver beard was unkempt.
“Where
is my son?” The old man demanded.
“He
is sleeping, he was not feeling well, grandfather.” The girl said,
meekly.
“My
son needs to be at my side when word from Brevick has been received.”
The man said with some finality.
“Yes,
grandfather. But there are no ships from Brevick waiting for port.”
the girl said.
“There
will be. The message will come soon enough.” The Halik patriarch
boomed, “I will need my son here with me.”
Seri
was a filial granddaughter. It was impossible for her to argue with
the men of the house, even her own father. She mentally kicked
herself for thinking like that. With everyone else looking down on
him and thinking him a failure, she very well should not.
“Yes,
grandfather.” She responded. “He shall.”
With
that she took her leave. Outside of the door she leaned against a
wall and took deep breaths, it had gone better than expected. It was
thought that grandfather Halik was senile and that he did not truly
understand the present misfortunes of House Halik. That he was still
living the glory days of years past.
If
grandfather said there would be a message from Brevick, then there
would be. Possibly he had the timing misjudged but that message would
arrive eventually. He had the sight. His visions had been more
precise and timely when he was younger, but always he had the sight.
Seri's
father had not inherited the sight. This had been quite shocking to
grandfather. As shocking as losing two other sons in their infancy
had been. The House Halik was hanging by a thread and there were no
sons of Jon Halik to make things right. Her father had tried to
produce a son, he had spread his seed to no avail. Seri had quite a
few half-sisters out there somewhere.
“What
could possibly be so important from Brevick?” She muttered as she
navigated the tight, dark labyrinth of the House. Why was grandfather
so worked up over it? If he had told them anything more they wouldn't
be so anxious about it.
Once
upon a time House Halik had owned properties on Brevick, but those
had been lost along with everything else. Instead of a great House
receiving treasure and goods from other worlds, today they could
hardly afford enough torches for the night. Instead of a small army
of guards and their own starships, they had fallen to this. Seri kept
a blade strapped to her leg in her own house.
Upon
entering her suite she locked the door and threw off the bedclothes
she wore. It was itchy and stifling hot. Seri would rather it be
winter where she could at least be comfortable under a pile of
blankets. The House once had a cooling system but hadn't worked since
Seri could remember, the house was two centuries old after all.
It
was nearly noon before Master Avnar woke up, washed up and gone
downstairs for his first meal of the day. Dostin was waiting in the
corridor outside the bedroom and followed him as a loyal bodygiard
should.
“Good
morning Master Avnar.” Dostin said pleasantly.
The
young man stopped and looked at his servant with an appalled look on
his face. “Can you say that again without the sunny disposition? It
was so sweet I won't need honey in my tea.”
Dostin
nodded and in a deep growl, as if grief would overtake him he said,
“Good morning, Master Avnar.”
“Appropriately
funereal.” The younger man said, satisfied, as they started their
quest for the dining room once more. “The worst part of it, is that
it's not noon yet. I hate mornings.”
“Yes
sir.” Dostin said, in a deep gravelly voice to play along.
Finally
they found the kitchen empty. The young man crossed his arms. “Who
is going to make breakfast since the cook seems to have gone
missing?”
“Shall
I?” Dostin offered.
Again
the young man waved a hand. “No, no. I shall do this myself.”
Dostin
feigned shock.
Master
Avnar sliced two pieces of bread and laid them on a metal platter.
Then he laid three strips of raw bacon nearby, finally he cracked an
egg right in the center. He picked up the platter and carried it to
the table as Dostin followed, rolling his eyes.
When
the metal platter hit the table, the bread was toasted, the egg was
fried and the bacon was cooked nicely. Master Avnar liked to show off
his power like this, even if Dostin was the only audience.
“I
forgot the coffee.” Master Avnar said, and quickly there was water
and crushed coffee beans in front of him. Dostin had seen this
coming. It was a regular routine for his master after all.
“Have
you eaten, Dostin?” Master Avnar asked absently as he spooned some
eggs into his mouth.
“Hours
ago, sir.”
“Any
news? Please tell me that it's no longer morning.”
“A
few minutes of morning still remain, sir.” Dostin informed him. “As
for news, there was a crippled ship that made port this morning.
Seems as if most of its systems were out and there were signs of
battle damage.”
“Battle
damage?” Mater Avnar asked, perking up. “Where did this ship
originate?”
“Brevick,
sir.”
Avnar
nodded. “I shall have to inquire of this further.”
“Yes
sir.”
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