Eobald the Younger, formerly King of Tretovortania, pulled at his burlap robe to discreetly get at a particularly insistent shoulder itch. When he grunted, the abbot glared at him, and Eobald cast his eyes to the dirt path in shame. To his dirty, dirt endirted feet, covered in so much dirt and so little silk.
“Be at peace, child,” said the abbot. His abbot now, because now the former king was a current Aspirant Listener of the Gentlest Wind. “The time will soon come. For now, comfort yourself with the sacred song of the swan.”
As if on cue, one of the wretched hell birds honked, and where the abbot closed his eyes in some kind of divine bliss, a bone rumbling tremor ran down Eobald’s spine. Why they were sacred he had no idea. They had ponds dedicated to them all over the monastery grounds, and the bloody bog vultures never shut up about it. It was ha-honk ha-honk HONK! all day and night with them.
And they were nasty. He covered his right hand with his left, remembering the last time he was on feeding duty. One of the blasted shithawks came right at him, trying to tear his fingers off. Ended up stealing all the bread and his feeding bowl too.
“Isn’t that divine?” asked the abbot.
Eobald gave him a tight-lipped grin and nodded.
“Well, we’ll have time enough for contemplating their divine song later,” said the abbot. He motioned to the round wattle-and-daub visitors’ hut at the edge of the monastery. “I believe you have a visitor.”
It was all Eobald could do to refrain from sprinting into the hut. Inside he found a plain wooden table with two plain wooden chairs, a beat up copper teapot and a pair of the cracked clay bowls that passed for teacups in the monastery. And as the windows had neither glass nor shutters, the squawking of the swans tore through the hut. But most important was the man sitting on the other side of the table – a dashing young chap, in glorious silk attire dyed rich yellow and blue, and wearing a golden crown so encrusted with gems it splattered rainbows on all the walls from the sunlight it reflected.
Randalfric the Conqueror, current King of Tretovortania and Her Territories.
Eobald’s son.
“Your Majesty,” said the abbot, bowing painfully low and painfully slow, really squeezing out every last ounce of protocol, which they didn’t otherwise have much cause to practice in the monastery. Eobald felt his whole body tense as he resisted tapping his foot. “As per your request, might I present the young Aspirant, Eobald Swan-Witness.”
Eobald bit his tongue, and as soon as Randalfric gave the slightest motion, he dove into the chair opposite his son.
“Aspirant,” said the abbot, dragging the word out. He produced a tiny silver bell. “When I ring this bell, I shall suspend your vow of silence.”
Eobald nodded eagerly. The abbot raised the bell, and Eobald felt the tension starting to leave his body. The abbot raised the bell a little higher, a little slower, and the tension hesitated. The abbot raised the bell just a smidge higher yet at a surprisingly even slower pace, and the tension came back with friends.
Finally, just as Eobald feared he was going to snap – a bone, the table, the abbot himself – the bell emitted a gentle silver tinkling.
Eobald let out a ragged breath.
The abbot smiled, and bowed to Randalfric. “You have one hour,” he told Eobald. “Then you’re on cleaning duty. The statues of the saints are just drenched in birdshit, and they’ve been baking in the sun all day.” Then he departed.
The men rose and hugged.
“Father!”
“Son! Oh, by the Holy Mountain, is it good to see you. And is it ever good to talk again!”
Randalfric slapped him on the shoulder. “A vow of silence! My own father! Incredible!”
“Yes, it’s true. They… they do that here. Apparently.”
“You have no idea how proud we all are of you back home,” said Randalfric. “Eobald the Younger, the man who not only conquered Lagmarnia, but who also brought peace to the Six Valleys, and who united the Unruly Dukes. A man who conquered the realms of men, and then threw himself at the feet of the gods, to learn of their infinite wisdom!”
“I… yes…”
“A living saint! Did you know, that’s what they call you?”
“No, we don’t get much news in the monastery…”
“And to think, Uncle Bradovic called you mad! He said – What kind of a man would willingly give up the crown of Tretovortania!? What kind of lunatic would trade a life of luxury and riches and power and feasting, for a life of porridge and hard labour high in the mountains!?”
“Hmm…”
“I’ll tell you what kind of a man – my father! A man who saw past the petty illusions we surround ourselves with in daily life, and who sought something deeper, something greater. A connection with the infinite wisdom of reality!”
“Er, yes, well…”
“And I admit – with not a shred of shame – I could not do the same! For I am weak, father. I am too used to being swaddled in the trappings of power, and luxury, and – oh, right! And to give up women! Wow! I don’t think I could ever do that, even for all the grace of the gods.”
Eobald groaned.
“I admit all this is beyond me. But, I am proud – proud – to stand anywhere near your enlightened shadow. Your selfless pursuit of perfection inspires us all, and serves as an example to all Tretovortanians.”
Eobald swallowed a lump. “…Super.”
“But listen to me prattling on like a wee babe, about the foolishness of courtly things, when you have transcended such trivial concerns.”
“Well, actually–”
“Is it true you can hear the gods speak to you through the songs of the swans?”
They both turned their attention to the window, where a hu-HRAWNK! echoed from the ponds. Eobald felt his skin shiver, bunching up at his neck. He shook it off with a sharp hiss of breath.
“Yeah, they’re, um,” he said, and then he clicked his tongue a couple times. “Very enlightening. Hey, listen, actually I would like to hear what’s going on back at home. As I said, we don’t really get news here, and I worry about you.”
“Oh, Dad! Worry? About me!? But that’s absurd. I learned from the very best king ever.”
“Yeah, but, you know a king doesn’t rule alone, right? Like, maybe you need someone to advise you…”
“Ha!” said Randalfric. Then he laughed for emphasis. “I am nearly drowning in advisors. Sages, mystics, and wisemen pour in from all corners of the world to advise me. Philosophers and wizards fight for my attention. I can’t take three steps in my palace without bumping into a scholar with yet another insightful economic treatise for me to review.”
“Oh…” Eobald bit his lip. “But, oh! That’s all good and all, but a king could really benefit from the advice of another king – you know, someone who’s gone through the same things. Like when I was younger, Porselfaust the Turgid tutored me in–”
Randalfric waved him off with a chuckle. “All too true, father, all too true! And funny you bring it up, because I happen to have recently founded a Council of Kings, where myself and the other monarchs of the Six Valleys come together precisely for such purposes.”
“…ah.”
“I have learned so much from my peers! Truly, the world is much better when we cooperate instead of trying to murder each other on the battlefield. It opens the door for us combining our forces, to murder foreigners on the battlefield.”
“Yes, well…”
Randalfric produced a goblet cut from a single diamond, and then a hip flask made of gold, and poured.
Eobald’s eyes widened. He grabbed one of the crappy clay bowls and scattered the tea against the wall, and held it out to his son.
Randalfric tipped his flask to the bowl, but snapped it back before anything came out.
“A-ha!” he said. “Almost got me! A test of faith, from my own father. Ah, but I know monks foreswear the baser liquors of the world too, and I will not commit a folly by pouring such an affront for you.”
“Great,” said Eobald, lowering his bowl. “Thanks.”
“I’ve learned well, haven’t I? I told you, your selfless quest has inspired us all.”
“Yep,” said Eobald, and then he sighed. “Well, listen son, being a king is hard work.”
Randalfric shrugged. “I don’t know. Maybe?”
“Yeah, no, it is, trust me. I used to be one.”
“Yeah, but, like, I don’t know. Mostly it’s just telling other people to do stuff, and then they do it.”
“Yeah, but, ‘Heavy is the head that wears the crown’ and all that.”
“It’s actually quite comfortable.”
“I don’t mean – listen. There’s no shame in passing the torch on.”
“What? To little Frandalfric? But he’s barely seen his fifth summer yet. I think he’s got a long time before he needs to worry about the crown.”
“Yeah, to him, or, you know…”
“What?”
“You could pass the torch backwards?” Eobald finished, pantomiming receiving a torch.
“I don’t follow.”
“Like – or maybe, if you ever wanted a break from being a king. Like, there’s options.”
“Like a vacation?”
“Yeah! Then you could maybe appoint someone to run things. Someone with experience?”
“Uncle Bradovic?”
“No! Not Uncle Bradovic. Someone else.”
“I don’t know. I like kinging around.”
“I mean, it might seem that way, but it’s easy to get buried in work, son. And then your family life suffers, and your health is affected. A break is a good thing every now and then.”
“Hmm. I never thought of it that way.”
“Yeah! Taking a break is a good idea. Maybe even retiring altogether, and leaving someone else in charge?”
Randalfric scratched his chin. “Come to think of it, I haven’t seen too much of my wife lately, nor had any time to visit the summer palace with the kids. Maybe… maybe I am missing out.”
“Right!”
“But anyone else I’d appoint would just suffer the same fate.”
“Well, I’m sure I could manage–”
“I suppose I could abolish the crown altogether and institute a democracy?”
“NO!” said Eobald. “No no no no no! Why would you even say that!?”
“Well, I don’t know, maybe the head is heavy that bears the crown. Maybe it’s an inherently unjust system–”
“–Son,” said Eobald, draping his arm over his son’s shoulder. “Listen. Listen. All you need to do, right?”
“Right?”
“Is find someone – someone who might be very close – who knows how to manage the kingdom, right? And just… abdicate.”
“Abdicate?”
Eobald nodded.
“But who would be qualified? Someone who is very close?”
Eobald nodded again, making hand gestures to draw his son’s reasoning out. Randalfric frowned, deep in thought.
“Come on, son. Someone very close, right now. Someone like…”
“Someone like…” Then his eyes suddenly lit up. “Oh! You mean someone like–”
The silver bell tinkled again, and the brightness in Randalfric’s eyes gave way to dull glaze.
“Time’s up!” said the abbot.
“What was I saying?” Randalfric said. “Oh well, must not have been important.” He clapped Eobald on the shoulder again. “Good chat, dad! I’ll think about that democracy idea of yours. See you next year!”
With a swoosh of his silk cape, Randalfric departed the visitors’ centre. Eobald’s jaw worked soundlessly up and down, and then he grunted when the abbot shoved a bucket and mop in his hands.
“Time to clean!” sang the abbot. “You know our motto: enlightenment comes from enlabourment. Chop chop!”
Eobald shuffled out of the visitor centre, passing the serene ponds and carefully cultivated gardens, walking the paths that countless enlightened masters walked before him, ever seeking wisdom in the dulcet hwa-RAWNK! of the divine songs of the swans.
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80 comments
Once I read “ To his dirty, dirt endirted feet, covered in so much dirt and so little silk” I knew this was going to be a good read. It’s so great to see an author who is able to have this much fun with language!
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Thanks, Levi! Yeah, I definitely had fun with it :) I also enjoy when writers play around with the language - I've seen some real creativity come from that. I appreciate the feedback!
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Let it be so; thy truth, then, be thy dower: For, by the sacred radiance of the sun, The mysteries of Hecate, and the night; By all the operation of the orbs From whom we do exist, and cease to be; Here I disclaim all my paternal care, Propinquity and property of blood, And as a stranger to my heart and me Hold thee, from this, for ever. (Shakespeare, King Lear, Act I, Scene I ) And look how that turned out? But you're in good company with the plot line. I also saw a swan take a piece out of a guy on the golf course. Vicious creatures.
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I've not had had the actual pleasure of meeting a swan, and I'll admit I was channeling some encounters with geese here, but I have heard stories :) Still, maybe ending up feeding them at a monastery is a little preferable to King Lear's fate :) Thanks for reading, Jack!
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Poor old Eobald. I wonder why he abdicated the kingship. Perhaps it was too hard and he was looking for an easier life, and a life of silent contemplation seemed to fit the bill. He certainly seems to regret his life choices. And how thick does his son seem? I bet that there is a democracy in no time. Love it.
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I'd like to think “it seemed like a good idea at the time,” or maybe a monk sold him on the whole enlightenment idea as the next big challenge. And then perhaps he rushed in and overcommitted :) Thanks for reading, Michelle!
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Congratulations on the short list. A fitting swan song paving the way for your future endeavours. If you ever need a beta, I’m only a click away…
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Thanks, Michelle! A ways away from that yet, but I'll keep it in mind :) Likewise, if you ever need a read, you can reach me at przywara.michal@gmail.com.
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I don't know if you're planning on writing a book, but I think your humor would really lend itself to a P. G. Wodehouse-esque adventure/comedy of errors. (If you haven't experienced Wodehouse, I'd recommend the audiobooks of the Jeeves series narrated by Jonathan Cecil. The humor in those books has made me laugh until I cry.) You have an effortless way of making the ordinary become extraordinary. (Why does "extraordinary" not mean extra boring?) I hope this isn't the complete end of your stories on here, Michał. It's always a treat to see w...
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I've not read Wodehouse (yet) but I have seen some of the Jeeves TV adaptation with Fry and Laurie. I'll put those audiobooks on my list :) I am planning a novel(s) and have been “working” on one for a long time now. One of the reasons for taking a break from Reedsy is to free up some time to actually work on these other projects. I wouldn't go so far as to say anything is a complete end though :) Thanks for reading, Kailani! I've looked forward to both your stories and your feedback too :)
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I saw some of the Jeeves show too. It's pretty accurate, but the books are so much more funny because half the humor is in the narration. The Code of the Woosters might be a good place to start, since you don't have to read them in order; my personal favorite is Joy in the Morning. The whole "working on a book for years" is something I can relate to. My first book is over a decade old and unfinished. In my defense, I was a teenager when I started, so I had to grow up AND discover what kind of writer I am. But the end is finally near. Of c...
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Randalfric, Eobald the Younger, Tretovortania - What are these names? Lmao. Your mind is truly something wild. 'And they were nasty. He covered his right hand with his left, remembering the last time he was on feeding duty.' - I liked this part because, so often something is portrayed... you know like "pretty birds" or whatever but the underbelly is actually the ugly reality. You do this so casually through out a lot of stories I've read of yours. A humorous way to call out something is not as it appears on the surface. A neat trick. Wh...
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Half the fun of fantasy is coming up with the names :) Although Eobald at least I think I might have stolen from Old English. Well, “swan song” is kind of right in this case, just like “penultimate” was last week. After 104 weeks in a row, I'm taking a break from Reedsy. Writing for it, at least - there's still lots to read after all, and it'll be a while before I kick the yellow-dot addiction. But other writing projects keep getting deferred and it's time I gave them attention. But yeah, I enjoy chatting with you. A shame they don't hav...
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I mean, you’ve earned it after 104. 😭 I still have plenty stories left from you on here to fill the void for awhile. Be free. Write something great!
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Congrats! Way to end on a high note
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Who knew swans had flaws? Such enlightenment! Congrats on the shortlist. What a way to end your perfect run. Will miss your insight greatly. Best of success with any of your work. You have amazing talent. I ,too, have been promising myself a break to focus back on that novel pursuit of getting my novel published. Hard to pull away from the talented writers I find here.
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Thanks, Mary! I've never met a swan before, but I've heard them compared to geese. And geese I've met :)
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LOL - that poor man.
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“It seemed like a good idea at the time” I'm sure :) No mulligans on abdications though :)
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Hahahahahaha ! You and your humour. I loved it, as usual, Michal. I wanted to shake Eobald and tell him "Just be direct!" As usual, brilliant job with the flow. I was craving for more and more of the story as it went on. Great imagery too. Brilliant job!
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Thanks, Stella! Yeah, I think he had some second thoughts about his new career choice :) I'm glad you enjoyed it!
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2 months are up. Post a new one please.
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Hey Dustin, thanks for reading! If you mean, favourite part writing this story - then it's exploring that feeling of “I think I've made a huge mistake/f'd up my life” but then being stuck with it, due to social and familial pressures. Certainly not a pleasant feeling, but fun to explore, and I suspect this former king has a habit of rushing into things and then regretting it later. If you mean on Reedsy in general, probably the challenge of hitting a new prompt every week, rain or shine, whether it's a theme I knew well or had no idea ho...
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