Old man in a black cloaked clasped his
hands and walked through the veil of fog masking the country floor. His boots
sunk into the mud. He no longer prayed, but instead asked himself what would
happen when he died. Visions in the fog provided the fantasy of his bones
popping from white skin. Ribs poking through the mud. Eyes-long
fatigued-barrowing back into his skull. The black cloak flying from a pole
stuck in the mud to mark his grave. Visitorless, not even starving dogs neared
the decay. No maggots devoured. No vultures circled him in wait.
His journey interrupted when from
the fog came the slosh of another trailing into the mud. The old man snorted
hoping that their paths would not interject, but the outline of a goblin
emerged. A small frame, short, bowlegged with wide shoulders with long arms
that hung like lumbersome tree limbs. He wore a white tunic, no pats. His face
round and chubby, curly blonde hair, eyes so big and round they looked like
they were popping from his head. The old man ignored him and passed by, failing
to notice the strange little peasant pull out a knife, lean over behind the old
man- an like a bird instinctively diving to catch prey- his thieving hands had
the instincts and talent to reach into the black coat, find the coin purse, but
it free and disappear into the fog before the old man could turn around.
The old man waited for an endless
morning. He sat near the stump of a blackened tree. The husk and bark laid in
the mud besides it. He sat on the fallen tree, and pulled out his tarots. With
no money for food, he thought, why not see what the future has to offer. He
pulled out the deck from a pocket. Weathered edges, yellowing paper held
together by a single band. He undid the leather strap, and shuffled the cards,
keep the faces away from him, the repeated motley pattern dancing before him.
He laid out the first five cards face down on the stump in the shape of a
cross, then laid four others to the side. Then one across the center. He didn’t
ask his question aloud, but tried to clear his mind. He concentrated on the
sound of dripping branches. The air seemed to crackle. A crow cawed. This land
he walked on had once been a battleground. Swords left stuck in the ground,
suits of armor nesting with rotting skeletons, becoming shelters for rats and
dingy rodents. The creatures grew larger and larger. The rats became the size
of raccoons. Their eyes bleeding red and beady. Their fur black, and teeth long
as a pianist’s fingers. The swords were swung for a town that no longer stood.
Its gate was lost in the fog, burned to bare structural bones, exposed posts
that protected nothing but stacks or ruble long since raided of valuables. Yet
the old man still remained, still kept his shack up beneath the bridge. No one
bothered him, and he bothered no one. The small stream never flooded. The fog
never disturbed him. The rats though, didn’t know their boundaries. Hordes of
them would wander over the bridge and find their way below thinking that they
found some comfortable shelter where they could mate and dig burrows. The even
invaded the old man’s home.
He didn’t live in a shambley shack. He had
been a treasure hunter in his youth, and made a good sum to retire on. The
walls had been mended by his own hands, insulated and studded, cut from Purple
Heart trees, floored with cobble tile. A small pit for fires on the front
porch, with a kitchen, bedroom, reading room, and one chamber full of
memorandums from his day, locked away in a dense walnut chest. A sturdy home,
last into his old age, no damage or infestations until the rats. He awoke to
the squeal of them mating, and nibbling on his walls. Dozens of them, digging
and chewing and mating. He had to get to his chest, kicking and swinging a
broom at the rodents. Inside, he found his torch. A club wrapped in cloth. The
item he had discovered in tombs of oriental ruins. By swinging it, flames ignited
like the tip of a match. A useful tool, but hindering its usefulness was the
amount of smoke it produced. Like a chimney, black clouds filled the home. The rats
scurried away. It took days to clear the soot and ash. That night he had drawn
out his tarot cards. The realization occurred to him. His days of being an
adventurer had ended. Could it be, he asked the tarots, that he still had the strength
to venture forth? But he didn’t read the cards. Didn’t even bother flipping
them up. They felt too heavy.
On the trunk, he flipped over the
center card, representing the present. The Knight of Cups. The illustration in
copper ink composed a winged man on a
horse, carrying a war scarred helmet, as the hooves of the animal linger above
a large pot. The old man read the qualities written in an ancient language
framing the image. Romance, Charm,
Imagination. The knight represents opportunities, new ideas, offers, boredom, a constant need for stimulation, and
a being dissuaded or encouraged to follow dreams.
He flipped the over the future card.
The Papess. The back of a woman in men’s forest wear. A cross bow at her thighs, facing away, and a
shield facing the Old man. In front of her, a tower. Qualities it encompassed.
Love, wisdom, Introspection, Mystery,
subconscious. She both conceals and reveals secrets. A powerful female
influence.
He scratched his beard as he turned
over the past card. The Pope. Knowledge,
Discipline, Deception, Tradition, Religion. A benevolent teacher, beholding a
moral compass.
He turned over the card of hidden
influence. Ten of Swords. The image of a sorrowful man struggling to carry ten
tall, curved blades. Betrayal, Defeat, Ending, Loss. Absolute destruction.
He turned over the last card,
Advice. Death. The image of a devastated soldier standing above a dead knight
pinned to the ground by a spear. In the
soldiers hand, a sash reading: Eternity. The dead knights head spilled from the
armor and peered at the old man, his face twisted, frozen in the final moment
of terror before he died. An arrow stuck from an eye socket. Loss.
Transformation. Goodbye. A cycle will come to an end, the card promises.
The old man sat in contemplation.
Perhaps his legend will die forever. It would explain the mystery of the Papess,
her connection of the knight of cups being that his time as a warrior ends. The
pope stays behind, keeping his tale as a religion, a fairy tale. Influenced by
the struggle of aging, and the inevitable defeat, he should change his ways.
The way? Perhaps the life of an old man waiting for death beneath a bridge.
The cards he found to be vague. It
could also mean that his legend would last forever. The Papess lives, and with
her comes the legend of his life. In the past, The pope collected the knowledge
of the once great adventurer. Influenced not by the threat of his life ending,
but instead the desire to inflict destruction. Perhaps on the rats, perhaps on
the thieve. Death, being the way he solidifies his legend.
He went over the cards over and
over, thinking and drawing alternative possibilities but the two he few up
earliest were the ones that he believed the cards wanted him to know. He packed
up the cards. Wondering about the ambiguity of the cards, maybe their vagueness
makes them fraudulent. Maybe he misread them. The temperature dipped. The old
man collected his cloak to that he would keep him warmer and went into the fog.
He heard something in the distance, and a burning orb danced before him.
Curiously he approached. The sound was a woman singing, her voice muffled by
walls. The orb turned out to be a torch on the outline of a building. Smoke
bellowed from a chimney. The sign swiveled in the wind.
Inside, he found a hall with burning
embers, a bar, and tables. A few patrons, a maid sweeping the floor, and a bard
standing on a stage. A fire place burned by the near wall. Above it, a monument
of a medusa. Furious expression with snakes spreading out in a curtain around
its face. The old men felt agitated at once. This wasn’t the place for him. The
musician was male, though his face was high like a woman’s. He played his own instruments
and when he was done singing he took out a flute and began to whistle into it.
The old man wanted to leave, but he remembered the cards. Change. Opportunities.
Hidden secrets. He had no money, but an idea came to him.
Mervin the drunkard had nowhere else
to go. Worse yet, the bar tender cut him off. So the overweight grain harvester
had to sit, his black teeth aching, and his stomach burning, and his skin red
and itchy. A wound on his leg oozed pus, and it itched all the time, though it
hurt to scratch. He watched a candle burn, wondering if the bar maid would come ask him for food, or
better yet, a drink. That’s when the old man plopped besides the drunkard.
“Greetings.”
“Well met,” Mervin said. The old man
in front of him made his skin crawl His voice was deep, and low as if he hadn’t
spoken aloud in some time. Worst yet though was the fact that he didn’t take
his hood off. A white beard below pale lips and a sharp crooked nose is all he
saw. No one else in the tavern had their hoods up, not even a hat. Besides that
no one but the monastery monks wore black robes. True the torches fire darkened
the walls outside of its aura, and that’s why Mervin didn’t notice the old man.
He had snuck through the dark and situated himself in front of Mervin before
the sober drunkard could even ask who he was, and if it wasn’t an old man he
would’ve barked at him to get away. “What do you want?”
“No need to be curt with me, sir. I
wish only good company, and good fortune.” He pulled the deck of tarots out,
all seventy eight cards bound in a leather strip. “Sir, I may not look it, but
I have the treasures to prove it, but I’ve been all over the world, and have witnessed
all sorts of incredible things.”
“Like what?”
“I’ve seen books so powerful that
untrained readers turn to smoke at sight of the archaic letters. I’ve seen rich
lords fall, and knaves rise to power. Tell me, which are you?”
“I move hay, I harvest. I grind it
in the windmill. No, sir, I’m not a rich man.”
“Would you like me to tell you your
future?”
“You can do that?”
“I have many abilities. Ask me a
question, any question, and I will open a window into the spirit realm sir.”
“Them cards? I don’t believe you.”
“Neither did I. At first. But the cards have shown the truth, if truth
is what you seek.”
“This is some black magic? I knew
you were trouble. No sir, not interested.”
“Very well.” The old man was disappointed.
“You see, I was robbed. I need money for food.”
“I might be a poor farmer, but I’m
not getting involved in any black magic. I’ll buy you food, if you’re starving.
I have plenty since they cut me from the wells.”
“No. I don’t take handouts, but
thank you for the charitability. Now, who here would be interested in black
magic?”
“No one.”
“I very much doubt that. Even you
are curious. I can see it in your eyes.” With that the old man slunk away into
the darkness.
Bart was a sheriff in town once. Still
kept a knife on his side, and enjoyed drinking his spiced cider, rich and alcoholic,
with steam dripping from the lid. His leggings were covered in mud. His face
was riddle in scars. He wore nice clothes, but none knew him to be a good
sheriff. Common belief was that he maintained a luxurious lifestyle on the coin
of people he shook down. In shape, stern faced, eyes sinking in, hair gray.
When the old man appeared before him from the dark he reached for his dagger,
but the old man caught his attention.
“I apologize for intruding. I am a wanderer,
and a fortune teller. If you pay me one pence, I will answer any inquiry you
hold against the universe.”
The sheriff wanted to spit in his
face, but he felt humored by the alcohol. He reached into his pocket and pulled
out a coin.
“That enough?”
“Yes, sir, that’s plenty for me. Ask
a question, any question, and I will project to you an image of your fortunes.”
“What kind of fortunes are we
talking about here?”
“Great mysteries, where the fog
becomes so dense that no one can see through it.”
“I don’t like you talking in
riddles. You better tell me how this works.”
“You ask a question, and the cards
will answer.”
“So I could do this myself?”
“But you don’t know what the cards
mean. I do, and you can trust me sir, I have seen this magic work. These cards
will point you to the right path when you are lost.”
“Very well. I want to know. Will I
ever own land?”
The old man shuffled the cards, and
drew five. One by one he flipped them over, explaining their meanings, and how
they connect to the others. Present, he drew the Six of wands.
“You must be a well-known man in your
community. Even children can recognize you when you ride down the roads. You
must possess leadership skills”
“I used to be the sheriff, I like to
maintain a profile.”
“Of course. This next card is your future.
You have, the Hanged Man.”
“What does that one mean?” The former
sheriff sounded a bit alarmed.
“Surrender.”
“Damn.”
“But let us see what’s in your past… ah,
the Two of Wands. Owning land is something you’ve wanted your whole life hasn’t
it?”
“My father owned land, yes. It was
supposed to be mine.”
“The Two of Wands means you still have
power in your hands. Maybe you’re hard work won’t be in vain. This card is the
influence hidden in your life. The Knight of Swords. I see now. Brave, but
foolish. You may find yourself in trouble, good sir.”
“What should I do?”
“This final card, is advice. The King of
Wands. Perhaps you should deliberate before rushing into a decision.”
“So what will happen?”
“I could lie and say the land will be
rightfully yours, I know of the many tricks that charlatans would play on you,
good man, but I am not one of them. I can read magic text, speak dead
languages, and perform certain magics long forgotten by mortals. The way I read
these cards will not be vague, nor promising. I will tell you exactly what I
see.”
“Tell me, I’m starting to want my coin
back.”
“You will try to reclaim your fathers
land. The family that owns it now, the Lemotts, will not sell it. It’s a small
piece of land, wouldn’t cost you much but it’s all they have. They plan on
passing to the eldest daughter.”
“They WHAT!”
“Calm yourself. It will be after the
eldest brother leaves for a far off war. It will be years until he returns.
Which he will.”
“How did you know the Lemotts owned
that land, stranger?”
“The cards tell me everything. Do you
know what’s going to happen?”
“If they put that girl in charge…”
He slammed a fist into the table.
“You’re going to murder her for the
land, and you will get away with it, until the son arrives. He will kill you in
your sleep. You won’t even know what he looks like.”
“That’s nonsense… I don’t know what game
you’re playing here, but it’s nonsense.”
“You
danced with the spirits, good man, and any tent gypsy would tell you every word
you want to hear, but not me. You know what’s real, and what’s not.”
“Get away from me.” He reached into his
pockets and pulled out piles of coins. “Take it all, just stay away from me. If
you tell anyone we met I will hunt you down like a dog.”
The
old man smiled as he took the dimes. He bought himself a leg of chicken, and
went home. He returned the next day, sat at a table with his cards out. He
asked patrons as they entered to be enthralled and mystified by tarot card readings.
The barmaid put down her broom, a young girl with hair like hay, stiff and
pointy, sat down and placed a few coins down.
“Please, will I ever leave this place?”
“Let us see what the cards tell me. You’re
present, is the Nine of Swords. Yes, you are miserable. The nightmares won’t
stop will they?”
“…No…”
“You’re future, is the Nine of Wands. Interesting…”
“Is it a good thing?”
“It could be. We’ll have to look at the
other cards. Your past, Four of Coins. You poor girl, you’re an orphan aren’t
you?”
“Lucky guess.”
“No. Your father was a banker. Your
mother a prostitute. You were left behind with your uncle, the bartender. Still
doubt me?”
“Please, I have to know…” She choked
back tears.
“This is you’re hidden influence, the
Ace of Coins.”
“What does that mean?”
“Means an opportunity may be on its way.
But lets see, Advice. Ah, the three of coins. It means you will have to
cooperate with someone. Perhaps your uncle. Would you like me to tell you more?”
“No thank you. I’m… a bit scared.”
“Yes, I see. There is something to be
afraid of. I’ll keep it to myself. Be gone.”
It continued for days. The old man
would come in, get maybe one, sometimes two customers. He did this every day,
earning a sum of money that he kept hauled in his home. Many people began to
spread rumors about the Tavern, and the old mystic there. That he used to be
some kind of tomb raider, lived in a shack under a bridge built on a huge pile
of money. That he hauled up an array of magical items. Those are all rumors, be
assured. The mystic that comes into the Tavern, the local holy man dictated, is
a fraud, a heretic, and a servant of evil. The mystic, he claimed, was
responsible for the giant rats and the fog. For the poverty, and the dead men
rotting in the mud. The ex-sheriff agreed, as did the farmer Mervin. They banded
together, a mob of fifty, and surrounded the tavern, demanding the old man give
himself up. He refused to come out, and the tavern patrons fled, the barmaid
fled, and her uncle fled. Torches were put to the Tavern, and it went up in
flames.
The holy man and his flock rejoiced
at the death of the heretic. The next assembly they met in the church. Talk was
about the immense wealth that the barmaid and her uncle had accumulated. No one
seemed to knew where it came from, but after the fire they have four wagons
drawn by eight horses and they were off to the land where the fog doesn’t soak
everything, where corpses long dead don’t litter the ground. As the church
assembled to listen to the holy man speak, no one noticed the infiltration of
rats. First a few. Then hundreds.
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