Yorkshire, 1165
Horse and rider crested the hill, casting a stark silhouette
against the pale haze of sky. The morning mist curled undecidedly in the valley
below them. The lightest touch of breeze would scatter the damp wisps, but the
dawn offered only chill stillness. Shrouded in this half-light the ruin would
have remained hidden from a casual observer, but the rider’s appearance was far
from mere chance. Every column and every corbel of that place was indelibly carved
upon his memory.
The horse tossed its head with an abrupt whinny, stamping
its feet restlessly as the rider’s agitation communicated itself to the beast.
With great deliberation John Archer unfurled the fists which had tightened
about the reins. Even now the ghosts of this place had the wherewithal to
insidiously reach beneath the surface of his composure. Impatiently he dashed the cool clamminess
from his forehead with a soiled sleeve, refusing to show the wraiths of his
past any further weakness.
He paused, admiring the once familiar landscape
distrustfully and noting the changes wrought by the passing of seasons. He knew
himself to be equally altered. Any youthful softness had been tempered and
hardened like iron in the two decades since he had fled this land. He had
travelled to the edges of the civilised world only to discover that it was not
so easy to elude the questions which remained unanswered. It was for this
reason that he had returned. He would seek the truth, no matter the cost, in
order to finally extinguish the demons of that night.
A flutter of wind stirred against his cheek allowing him
finally to perceive the catalyst for his pilgrimage with the clarity of fresh
observance, rather than that of childish remembrances. The ruin had left its
sprawling footprint embedded upon the land. The ground was uneven where nature
had begun to consume the foundations of a once great architectural achievement.
Here and there walls stretched upwards in past glory, only to be terminated by
crumbling decay. Everything of value had been stripped by the monks for their new
house, leaving the pathetic empty shell to the mercy of local scavengers.
John felt a stab of unexpected pity for the fate of the once
proud building. He could remember his own awe at the first glimpse of his new
home as an oblate of barely seven years old. He had been given to the
Benedictines so that they could fashion him into an educated clerk, in order to
be of future use to his wealthy half-brothers. The monks had been well
recompensed for their schooling of a bastard child by the lands his father had
granted them. When circumstances forced him to flee from the monastery he had
not even considered returning to his family. United in blood he had always felt
they shared few other bonds. Instead the bow slung with careless ease over one
shoulder and the name by which he had chosen to identify himself were
indications of the alternative life he had forged.
It was, however, time to leave this place. He sent one last
lingering glance towards the ruins, recognising the sadness and emptiness which
echoed in the deserted valley. He had needed to confront the monster that his
memories had created from the ashes of that night, but he knew now that he
would not find the answers he sought here. Wheeling his horse around he spurred
them southwards, in pursuit of the one man who knew the truth.
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