Title: A Fair Fellowship of Young Squires
Author name: After the Rain
Author email: ncorri@email.unc.edu
Author Website: http://www.riddikulus.org/authorLinks/After_The_Rain/
http://www.schnoogle.com/authorLinks/After_The_Rain/
http://www.thedarkarts.org/authorLinks/After_The_Rain/
Author notes: I got the inspiration for this story while writing "How
Severus Snape Learned to Maraud," in which Sir Cadogan meets up with one
of his young listeners many years later. Somehow he acquired a surprising
amount of gravitas, so I decided to try him out as a narrator for a serious
story.
The version of the King Arthur story I've used throughout is that of Sir Thomas
Malory (c. 1405 - c. 1471), a knight prisoner; may his soul have good
deliverance. I have done my best to convey something of Malory's rhythms and
phrasing in modern English, at least when the boys are not interrupting.
A Fair Fellowship of Young Squires
I have been a portrait in Hogwarts Castle ever since my own
time, the time of King Arthur, and over the years I have seen many a young
squire and damsel come and go. They were fair, and merry, and wise in their
day; but for the most part they have all come to dust and shadow, and their
names are not remembered save by God. Yet I remember one small band of squires
in particular, for they were as fair a fellowship as any I have seen. Bright
and quick to laugh they were, and curious, with a taste for exploration that
led them to my corner of the castle when they were only eleven. And they looked
upon one another with the shared faith and friendship that made me think of the
knightly company that was once my own.
These squires were favorites of mine, although I never liked
one of them so well as the others. When I have told you of them all in turn,
you shall hear which one he was and the reason why.
The smallest of them came first, the fair-haired one with a
round face, on a day when his friends had gone off somewhere and left him to
wander about the castle alone. He sat down on the landing of my stairway and
asked me to tell him a tale to while away the time until they returned, for
this child was a dreamer and a weaver of stories.
And I told him of Sir Kay the Seneschal, he who watched his
foster brother Arthur grow taller and braver than himself, year by year, and at
last stood by as the nobles hailed young Arthur as their king. His heart ached
with secret jealousy then, and he had a mocking tongue that often landed him in
trouble with other knights; yet for all that, he loved the brother he served
and in the end he proved as true a knight as any in the land.
Young as he was, the fair-haired squire knew how envy and
admiration sometimes twine together until one can scarcely be separated from
the other. He listened with wide eyes and open mouth until the coming of one of
his friends, the slightly built one with light brown hair.
"Oh, there you are, I've been looking all over for you.
What in the world are you doing?"
"Listening to Sir Cadogan," said the first squire.
"He knows a lot of stories, you see."
The second young squire sat down beside the first. He was a
tucked-in sort of child, one who curled up rather than sprawled, and though it
was early in the day, he seemed relieved to settle down as if his limbs were
tired. He, too, heard my tale in silence, for this one was a listener and a
thinker, careful to consider all sides of a question.
And I told the tale of Sir Percival son of King Pellinore,
who grew up at the edge of a forest with only the birds and the deer for
companions. At last he met two wandering knights one day and left his mother
grieving sorely, for though he loved her well he yearned for the friendship of
other young folk above all. And afterward he traveled to the Holy Land in quest
of the Grail and saw wondrous sights.
And the brown-haired squire cupped his chin in his hands and
leaned forward, for he understood something of loneliness and the compromises
one makes for friendship. The two of them sat in quiet companionship until
another of their friends joined them on the stairway.
This third squire was a well-favored dark-haired child, the
only one of their fellowship who was tall for his age, and he moved with an
easy grace. He was quick and sharp of tongue.
"How come you're listening to that nutter?" he
asked.
"Sir Cadogan isn't a nutter," said the
brown-haired squire reprovingly. "He's just ... moderately eccentric, is all."
"Exactly. That's what normal people call being a
nutter."
The fair-haired child stuck his tongue out at him, and the
brown-haired one looked him over coolly and said, "Define 'normal
people.'"
"People who aren't named Remus
I-Won't-Tell-You-What-The-J-Stands-For Lupin."
"He told me," said the fair-haired squire,
"and it's boring." The dark-haired boy ignored him.
Squire Remus, meanwhile, thought things over and smirked.
"And Sir Cadogan is not named Remus I-Won't-Tell-You-What-The-J-Stands-For
Lupin. Therefore, by your own definition and the rules of logic, he cannot
possibly be a nutter. So there."
The dark-haired boy smacked him, but he sat down beside the
other two all the same. He stretched out his long limbs and I saw at once that I
would have to weave a swift-moving tale to keep his attention, for this boy was
a child of action, bold and eager.
So I told him the story of Sir Gareth of Orkney, the child
of a family steeped in blood and vengeance, and yet he was a virtuous knight who
hated the sins of his kindred and cleaved instead to gentle Sir Lancelot as
though he were his own born brother. He came to the court alone and friendless,
refusing help from his brothers, but his valor and courtesy soon won him
admiration for his own sake; and he slew many giants.
As I spoke, the mockery faded from the tall squire's eyes
and was replaced by a mixture of sorrow and hope. I saw that I had chosen my
tale well. He knew the bitterness of family feeling gone wrong, this one, and
he had great pride in his heart.
They huddled on the stairway and listened, three small heads
bent close together and lost in dreams of a kingdom long vanished, until they
caught sight of the fourth squire, the one with dark untidy hair and glasses.
The others looked up at him when he came and ceased to listen to my tale, so I
fell silent and began another. For this one was a leader, and only one story
would do for him.
I told him of Arthur, the young prince born into a kingdom
torn by civil wars and fostered without knowledge of his birthright. He pulled
the enchanted sword out of the stone and became king of all Britain, and he
fought a long war against five rebellious kings and brought peace and
prosperity to the land, and afterward he married Queen Guinevere. But the great
love of this king's life was not his queen, but his circle of noble knights,
and at the end of his days he was sorrier for their loss than her
faithlessness.
The fourth squire listened, but not so eagerly as the
others, and his attention soon began to wander. There was little I could say to
hold it, for he knew nothing of growing up neglected and overlooked, nor of
fighting against great odds, nor of fearing to lose the one thing he loved
most. He was brilliant, and beloved, and well-favored, and at eleven he had the
air of command. Life had been generous with him.
It was this boy, Squire James, whom I did not like as well
as his friends. The favorites of fortune are never the favorites of
storytellers.
But my words had touched the hearts of the other three, and
after that they were knights. Squire James grew restless and tried to persuade
his friends to play at something else, but for the first time, and perhaps for
the last, his wishes did not carry the day.
The tall squire fashioned a sword from a broken broomstick
and practiced the moves of jousting and tilting, and the brown-haired one
studied the language of chivalry and learned to say "prithee" and
"gramercy" instead of "please" and "thank you"
(for he was a well-mannered child), and the small fair boy, who liked to play a
part and had a gift for comedy, became a succession of dwarves and court fools
and hapless peasants, until the others nearly fell off the staircase laughing.
This last one was more faithful than the others - for
children, as a rule, are fickle. As the weeks and months went by, the two
dark-haired boys began to seek out newer games, and the brown-haired one
sometimes disappeared for days at a time and came back looking as if he had
fought some hard and secret battle, but this small one came every day. And he
listened to me with the hunger of one who needs stories to live, one who must
always have a brave and merry tale on his lips, no matter whether it be false
or true.
And so I came to care more for Squire Peter than for his
friends. I say not that he was the best of them, only that I loved him best.
* * *
He who tells the story of the coming of Arthur must also
tell the story of his passing, as surely as night must follow day and the
blossoms of spring must give way to the withered grass of autumn. The two are
linked, one to the other. It was in the glorious month of May, when every heart
flourishes and burgeons, and men and women rejoice and are glad of summer
coming with its fresh flowers, when that great strife began which did not end
until the flower of chivalry of all the world was destroyed and slain.
But I lie; it began much earlier than that. The coming
together of that knightly fellowship held the seeds of its ruin.
"Hark, my young lords, and I shall tell you a tale of
fate and destruction," I began. "The story ends with the kingdom's
last days, but it begins with the very first great adventure of the Round
Table. This is the story of Balin, the Knight with the Two Swords, and his
brother Balan, whom he loved best of any man in the world."
The small fair-haired boy elbowed the brown-haired one.
"Like us. Brothers." And they edged together, as it was their custom
to do, for these two were closer than their other friends.
"You look not alike," I said.
"We adopted each other," explained the fair-haired
squire.
"We're both only children," said the other,
"and we're not from old pureblood families like they are, so we
made up a family crest - "
"The Not-So-Ancient and Most Ignoble House of Lupin and
Pettigrew - "
"Toujours Poor," added the brown-haired
child.
"That's. Not. Funny," said the tall, dark boy,
scowling, and the other two caught each other's eyes and laughed. But I thought
the brown-haired boy laughed more easily and wore his patched robes with less
discontent than his friend.
The four squires grew quiet as I continued my tale. I told
them how Balin and Balan slew each other in the darkness, and each recognized
his brother with his dying breath. Their fate shadowed the glory days of the
kingdom and echoed on the Day of Destiny when none were spared. On that last
day, every knight of the Round Table was to learn that the hardest battle
follows when kin and friends do battle against each other, and the bitterest
knowledge is the knowledge that comes too late.
"It was all Mordred's fault," said the tall
black-haired squire when I had finished. "He was Arthur's own son and he
betrayed his father. Arthur should have killed him when he had the chance, and
the kingdom wouldn't have fallen."
The brown-haired squire considered this and shook his head.
"It's more complicated," he said. "Mordred couldn't have done it
if people hadn't followed him. Even before Mordred, there were factions
dividing the Round Table. Sir Cadogan said many people were glad to see the
knights fighting among themselves."
"Exactly," I said. "It is not so easy to say,
this was all the work of Mordred the traitor, nor yet of Agravaine the
slanderer, or of Gawaine the hot-headed, or of Lancelot and Guinevere the
adulterers, or of Gaheris and Gareth who would not refuse an unjust order, or
of Morgan the Dark sorceress, or of Morgause the seductress, or of the feuding
families of Orkney and Pellinore, or of King Arthur himself, or of the unknown
knight who drew his sword to slay an adder and touched off the final bloodbath.
There is plenty of blame to go around, and much of it falls upon men and women
who were not so very evil."
The squire with the untidy hair had no patience for shades
of grey. "But Mordred was evil, and without him none of the other
bad things would have happened."
"But -" said the fair-haired squire, and
immediately fell silent, for he was shy of speech and always a little afraid to
disagree with the others.
"Go on," said his brother-by-adoption
encouragingly. "What is it, Peter?"
"I think Arthur made Mordred what he was - and
not just because he was his father. If Arthur hadn't tried to kill him when he
was a baby, and if he hadn't been brought up away from the court, maybe he
wouldn't have turned out evil at all."
"You understand well," I said. I turned to Squire
James. "Even if you would blame it all on Mordred, you must remember that
Mordred was the child of King Arthur's own sin and shame, and shame twists many
a branch that might have grown straight."
Squire James rolled his eyes. "You call that an excuse?
He was an evil, treacherous coward, and who cares how he got that way? I'm
bored, let's practice Quidditch." He got to his feet and ran down the
stairway without a backward look.
But his three friends who remained on the landing bowed
their heads and seemed to understand, for each, in his own way, had tasted the
corrosive power of shame.
And I wondered which of the three would be the betrayer this
time.
-End