Knightfall: Under The Snail's Banner PT II
by Graham Swanson
Baldwin awoke bound in plate in a field of flowers. Bugs crawled under his armor. The sun
appeared from the ridge of dark clouds and turned the dew on the petals gold. Lilac vapor
seeped from gaps in his armor as he reached out. He stretched his fingers feeling for the
warmth of Fred’s fur. But his fingers only touched more grass.
Baldwin jumped up.
“Fred!” He called out, looking in every direction. “Fred!”
His eyes widened as he scanned the open spaces. He left his weapons and loot behind as he darted around the top of the hill. The snail banner flew over his camp.
“Fred!”
A neigh stretched from the mud pools. Baldwin ran through the grass, kicking flowers to dust, and stomping on snakes as he hurried. Then it saw it stretch before him. Below the cliffs. Up the slopes. Against the ridges. Under young trees.
Hauberks covered in steaming mud. Bent poles gnashed against cages of spikes. Blunted helmets left buried in crumbs from an ancient mountain. Spirits played above the crushed siege towers and splintered weapons. But Baldwin saw many battlefields.
Battles with magic, with guns, with huge monsters that emerged from the ground to eat the moons. Battles won by guile. Battles lost by mistrust. All ended with projectiles in the ground, with starved looters descending from the hills, and the stench of manblood so strong that it clouded the sun. Many shields broke. Many horses collapsed.
This one didn’t have a single bone littering the ground. The spirits raced balls of flame that still permeated in the hanging air. The blood pools didn’t sink into the ashcrest. They turned to chalk that hung over the cusp of the vielpocket.
“Fred!”
The horse neighed from beyond the vielpocket. Baldwin pinched his sword against his belts as he scanned for exit points, then scanned for a route around the cradle of crescent archways and spearholds to the other side. He jumped down a cliff, sprinted across a bridge weakened by so many cracks that he felt the wind push crumbs up through the sandstone. As he crossed what lay beyond appeared from behind the chasm barrier. Up the opposite slope was a stairway.
He held his breath. The stairs were cut into the mountain. Only halfway done. At the top stood a temple with no walls. Only a bathing chamber that never got to shimmer with sacred water. Cinders and shade floated over the top where the ceiling should’ve been.
He heard a big cat nearby. It sat on a wall covered in vines. Baldwin thought it sounded like a cat he knew. A cougar of the wastes. He turned around and saw it recline with long legs, slick fur, murky eyes pulled wide by the hunter’s gaze. He knew better than to draw his knife against it, and he lamented leaving his spear back behind him. However the creature didn’t pounce on him. It studied his armor, but couldn’t be sure if it was the same man under the plate.
“I’ve been here before.” Baldwin thought.
Baldwin began to feel the drain of hunger and thirst as he climbed down and crossed the battlefield. He heard Fred from the top of the stairs. But he no longer hurried. He knew what awaited him. The big cat followed behind him. If he slowed down to pick sandcutters out of his sock it roared at him. If he went a little faster it would run up from behind and close the distance. At the top of the stairs he saw the heap of raw materials. Blocks cut by a saw. Statues of heroes became crystalized in salt. They had been carted to the hilltop, but never mounted.
Wild geese landed on the shoulders of the statues. They hissed at Baldwin.
When he arrived Fred sat comfortably in the bath. It had been filled with silt from decades of exposure. A Witchfaun in a black dress sat in the air. Huge horns adorned her head. Green moss covered her arms and hid her face.
“It still hurts where you wounded me.” she said to him.
“It is my duty.”
“To burn me?”
Baldwin crossed his arms.
“Yes, if it serves the promised land.”
“Is that why you have that horn?”
“I know not of what you speak.”
“You know… the alicorn.”
Baldwin tilted his helmet.
“It was an evil unicorn.”
“It wasn’t evil, you moron. You killed it so no one else could claim to have done it.”
“It could’ve fallen in the hands of an enemy. It’s better this way.”
“What enemy? You were sworn to protect places like this… and when you did that… It’s why our temple was never finished.”
She lowered her legs and she settled over Fred’s back. Silt poured from the great faucet over the bath. Stars shined in the middle of the day. The sun fell on them both, and their shadows met.
“I will fulfill my Oath. That's all there is to it.”
She rode Fred over to Baldwin, and climbed off.
“Does that Oath mean anything now?” She gestured to the wide open world where there were meant to be walls.
Fred stayed with the Witchfaun.
“Until I die again.”
“You didn’t protect the promised land. You amputated it.”
“I did as I was sworn.”
“You can say that. But we remember. This temple remembers.”
She grabbed her broom and jumped off a cliff.
Baldwin rested there.
“I am in an ended world. I will remain as I was sworn. Even if I alone am bound.”
-
Baldwin snuck deep into the trees growing from the thorny vines that ran along the patches of creek water. He came across the faun’s camp. He followed the smoke from her broom, and the scent of her cauldron. Once there he darted out, took her familiar cat, and ran off. He kept the cat cradled in one free arm as he sprinted back to where he left Fred. As he ran he heard a burst of smoke ring within his helmet. A dull ache caused his eyes to swell up, and his ear drums to be swallowed by muffled quakes. He pounded on the side of the helmet where his ears should’ve been. Bright crosses of bloodflame burst from rolling balls of smoke. A haze settled over his eyes until he waved it away with his glove. Then he felt two objects bouncing on his head. His brow lowered against the lense of his visor. He reached up to feel it. Maybe it was just some foliage that got stuck there. Instead he felt something long, soft, and leathery. He could hear creeping steps of a creature deep in the woods. He could hear the patter of mice in the ground. The swoop of cavehawks. He checked in the gleam of his gauntlet.
Rabbit Ears.
Rabbit Ears stuck up from his helmet. He tugged on them. He felt pressure on his ear drum. The sound of wind on the ocean. He could hear the Witchfaun cackle as he rode into the gloom.
-
Baldwin panicked in his armor. If the Legendary Neo found him like this, he would be cast out for impurity. Fred pulled towards camp, but Baldwin fought against the reins. Fred slowed down to a grinding trot.
“No, we must stop first at a grave.”
Fred groaned.
“We must undo this hex before Lord Neo can meet us.”
Fred sighed.
“Come along, Fred. Time is not immortal.”
Fred rolled his eyes, and let Baldwin steer him back to the battlefield. It was for naught, as among the carnage of steel and broken halbards, they didn’t find a single bone. Confused, they rode off to search caves until they discovered a tomb. A body wrapped in a sheet deep within the flooded sinkholes. Pressed deep where no one could find it, but watched over by a ghost.
The ghost welcomed Baldwin and Fred to the tomb, put wreaths of doomflower around their necks to protect their necks to prevent necromancy. Baldwin tore his apart and marched into the tomb.
The way to the body was sealed by a blockade of small boulders. He used a geomany rune to turn the rocks into sand.
The ghost scoffed.
“I thought knights considered magic a heresy.”
He riffled through the drops and deposits, he pressed his armor through a rathole, and came out to the other side. A beam of light descended from the closed ceiling. The air smelled toxic. Wet. Bones of animals that couldn’t escape littered the ground. In a tight space he found a shroud. He pulled it out of its resting place. A tight hole corkscrewed under a narrow tunnel. And he tore it open. He wrenched the skull free, and exited leaving the remains uncovered.
“Could you at least cover me back up?” the ghost asked.
Baldwin ignored him.
He got back on Fred.
“With what’s left of the alicorn, we should be able to undo this.”
Fred neighed in relief.
They slept outside the cave for the night. The ghost floated over him all night. In the morning they rode off for camp. A flash of color flew over the site. The outline of the banner. Baldwin’s heart leapt when he saw its shape high over the hillcrest.
But as it developed from the smoke and gloom in the air, something seemed wrong. The Snail’s Lance was pointed the wrong way. “That’s not right,” he thought. As they rode up the slope, where the dust gave way to grass and flowers, he noticed its shell was upside down. Its crown was upside down. The whole thing was upside down. Desecrated!
He stopped Fred. His rabbit ears picked up a scuffle, and a mild laughter. He charged forward, wide eyes, his heart pounding, his fists tightened around the reigns. He gasped as he saw it fall to the ground. He jumped off Fred who kept running. He landed hard on his knees but he got up despite the pain in his joints and rushed to scoop up the banner.
From the fallen trees he heard familiar voices. They couldn’t stop giggling. He turned to them. Brow lifted, mouth tight, neck muscles swollen.
“Come out. I can hear you. Why have you done this?”
The gnome- the very gnome he left in the sink jumped out. As did a few faces he recognized from the knight encampment from before.
“You fool! The Snail banner hasn’t flown in forever.”
“Who uses snails like that anyway?”
“Yeah, I step on them at night all the time.”
“Real tough. I’m sure you scared lots of enemies with your snail.”
Baldwin was aghast.
“You don’t understand. The snails helped our order defeat the pointy ears when no one else would.”
The Orc in armor appeared. No helmet. Tight white braided hair. Pointy black lips, sharp black ears.
“And for that you brought the Valkyrie's wrath upon us!” He said.
“We didn’t know what the Valkyrie would do. Ryo the Orc philosopher couldn't predict it. Your kind was always being routed by the pointy ears. By defeating them, we cleared the path for your future.”
“My kind was exiled to frozen caves because of your order.”
“You eat people!”
“Yeah, well, people taste good.”
“How about you behold the banner of the new promised land?”
“A new WHAT?” Baldwin fell back on his heels.
“That’s what the rumor is. We’re going to bring this to Neo and find out for ourselves.”
They unfurled a banner with a slick, mean, firebreathing dragon.
“Have you even met a dragon? They have no love for armor or the flesh within.”
“No, but it’s fearsome and inspires confidence. Unlike your snail.”
The Orc stepped forward.
“And can you explain THIS?” He unwrapped a paper scroll and held out the partially ground up alicorn.
Baldwin was silent.
“And why do you have a skull? Who even was that?”
“Necromancy.” He uttered. “I needed it to undo the hex of a witch.”
“You’re worried about witches?”
“Yes, the-”
“We don’t care about witches anymore.”
“What?”
“Not really. We all use magic now. You do too. But we’d never stoop to necromancy.”
“But, my ears-”
“So what? Times have changed. Look around. We’ve all been cursed. We were born cursed.”
Baldwin’s heart pounded. He could feel it pulse in the length of his rabbit ears.
“In my time, knights would draw swords on each other for disrespecting a banner. Temples went to war.”
“But now the temples are gone. You had something to do with that, right?”
Baldwin was silent.
“Times have changed, old man. You’re either with the New Promised Land, or you belong sealed up in a temple catacomb. Lost and forgotten.”
The Orc dropped the alicorn.
They wandered off and left Baldwin alone in his camp. He sat there all night staring at the snail on his banner. He touched the upper tentacles. The sensory pads on the bottom of its body. Snails have no ears. They sense vibration. They ignore the clamor of the world, and focus on what actually moves it.
“Never before has there been a more noble warrior.”
The familiar cat meowed in its sack. Baldwin forgot all about it. He sighed. He used an air rune to fill up a balloon, and he wrote the Faunwitch's name on it, tied it to the cat bag, blew on it, and watched it take off over the veil. His ears picked up the sounds of the cat scratching at the bag. He hoped it wouldn’t tear it open before it reached her. He went to sleep, wrapped in his banner, and in the morning, his ears were back to normal.
-
Baldwin didn’t ride off to meet Neo right away. He rode back to the unfinished temple and the litter on the battlefield where the spirits remained. He spent the remaining season wrapping the fallen suits in funeral shrouds. He finished cutting the stairs into the mountain. And though the statues were damaged, he found one small one, not a hero at all, just a giant sword, the symbol of a lowly huscarl. He mounted it alongside the temple. He shoveled out the dust from the bath, and turned on the faucet tap. Nothing came out. He crawled through the mountains, mended damage to the pipes, opening the valves, sticking water runes inside. When he turned on the faucet again, it dripped. He sighed. Someday, in maybe another lifetime, it would be full again.
-
He spent one last night sleeping in the temple. He drew Fred over to the fire. He rubbed the face of his visor.
“Fred, I’m sorry I turned you from a human into a horse. I didn’t know it was permanent. I needed a horse. It was a mistake.”
The horse neighed and lowered its head on his lap.
In the distance, he heard a company of marching men. They moved in a wedge formation. Towards Neo’s resting place.
A star turned red. The doomstar. It shined upon them. A Valkyrie shot across the night sky and left a ray of light behind her so bright that it turned into a borealis as it burned out.
“We will have to see this New Promised Land for ourselves.”