The Greywalk
Nov. 29th, 2018 05:00 pmThe Greywalk was no nice place. Thomasin Loma felt the harsh wind that rushed down the mountains and scoured all but the pines and scrub grass away. The howling gusts cut through his coat and the chainmaille padding beneath it, even though he had been overheated no less than thirty minutes earlier in the full glow of the sun. The road north of Castlemont dipped into a valley pinched by high passes before it snaked up a canyon towards Sternwarte. The sunlight could lick the northern gate of Castlemont, but it could scarcely penetrate the valley. A haze settled on the valley floor, making it difficult to see the road ahead except for a few spread out light posts. Thomasin thanked the rattle of his chainmaille for masking the dim whispers that could be heard within the haze; he had to travel to Sternwarte to deliver a package and certainly had no time for nonsense like overthinking the ghost stories he had heard about the Greywalk.
A Paladin must have a focused, pure mind, he reminded himself.
There were no students who vanished into the fog just before they graduated. There were no secret lovers who hid amongst the pines until, spurned by strict rules or foolish partners, they perished during cold winter nights. The official notice sent out by the school said that, no matter the gossip of students, there were no revenants spotted on the road holding bags of teeth collected from students traveling to Sternwarte. It was blasphemy to continue to say that there were teeth in the bag or a corpse garbed in maille holding the bag. The school staff sending the message were, after all, ascended Paladins. Their word was God’s word.
And yet the unmoving figure on the trailhead looked suspiciously like a corpse in armor carrying a burlap sack full of something lumpy. “It doesn’t exist,” Thomasin said aloud to himself as he tried to walk past it, simultaneously cursing himself that he didn’t just use his meager student income to buy the horse ride the long way around to Sternwarte.
“Raashsahaa!” the revenant hissed.
“Well that can’t be good,” Thomasin muttered to himself. “Ho, friend, how do you fare today?”
“HAAHSHA!” it replied, and then it was upon him.
The shield was between them in a blink. Summoning a shield is an easy divine skill, which was handy since Thomasin’s shield was nearly as tall as he was and very heavy. The creature bounced off of the shield before scrabbling at it with sharp, bony fingers and trying to spew acidic saliva into Thomasin’s face.
Seems pretty real, Thomasin thought before bashing the creature’s face with the shield so hard that it reeled back onto the ground. It laid their for a minute before starting to shudder. It was healing from the hit. One of its ankles and many teeth popped off, and it took time for a corpse to reintegrate displaced body parts. Thomasin shrugged and kept walking.
Paladin school was full of tests and trials. Thomasin convinced himself that the Greywalk was one such test of faith, and he was already failing it for even engaging the corpse. If his God found him worthy, wouldn’t his God grant him the safe passage to continue along? Maybe one of the senior students placed the revenant there as a way to relive a hunt that went favorably and forgot to remove the memory incantation? Maybe the mist concealed a stone circle for specter summoning, challenging students to find the higher ground of faith when confronted with a real, very dangerous opponent.
While Thomasin walked away, the creature leapt on his back. It already regenerated! Thomasin stumbled against his own shield with the force; the corpse was surprisingly agile for as heavy as its own body was. The revenant tried to sink its teeth through the scarf and armored collar around Thomasin’s neck, scratching at the Paladin’s chest with flailing arms. Thomasin muttered an incantation for greater strength and used his new power to spin in a circle, throwing the creature off with the momentum of his spin.
“WHUARRAaaasshak!” it cried as it whooshed across the trail and crashed against a rock. Thomasin seized on the moment and leapt forward with his shield, crushing the creature against the stone with all of his body mass.
It was a revenant, so it would regenerate unless killed with flame. Thomasin’s God did not appreciate the idea of open flame, so fire incantations were taboo by nature. There was an incantation for banishing the undead, but Thomasin was only a second year Paladin. As much as Paladin school was a trial, banishment was usually left to senior students.
Thomasin stood up, shook some of the bone debris off of his shield, and continued walking.
“Rrrraaahee!” the second revenant howled as it crashed into him from the side, knocking him over. As he fell towards the earth, Thomasin reflected that the fog had thickened around him to the point where he could not even see the stone against which he had just smashed a corpse. He was also surrounded by seven or eight other revenants.
“Savior, take me!” he cried.
“Really? You’re still going to keep spouting dogma even when your life is on the line?”
A crack like a thunderpeal echoed through the valley floor as a whip of fire lashed out, incinerating all but the revenant that was wheezing into Thomasin’s open mouth. A smouldering human hand reached out and clutched the corpse’s shoulder, spreading flames from the point of contact. The young Paladin’s mouth was full of ash, leaving him coughing and wheezing while he looked at his savior.
“Grandmaster Tarellan!”
She grinned and scooped him off of the ground with one lobstered gauntlet. “I was expecting you at Sternwarte thirty minutes ago. I’d ask you what the delay was, but I can see now that it was foolishness.”
“I was trying to heed the words of Grandmaster Leister, who said there weren’t any revenants in this valley.”
“If one ascended Paladin says there are not revenants and another one saves your life from them, can you still say they aren’t there? Does having too many voices of God in your head all the time get you too befuddled to use some sense and bring a torch?” Tarellan asked, laughing at the inexperience of the young Paladin.
“I don’t…”
“Just give it a bit and you’ll think about it.”
*****
Later, they sipped hot mulled cider in the observatory at Sternwarte. It was getting late and there weren’t any other Paladins left to train for fate-divining, so the Grandmaster took some time to talk to the bewildered student.
“Are you feeling any better about what happened earlier?” she asked. Her face, without a helmet on, was quite old and completely intimidating. A scar on her forehead crossed into the grey mop of her hair, and the heat scarring on her neck vouched for her most famous exploit: that she had fought a dragon. More so, her green eyes stared as if she was about ready to wrestle a terrible, fire breathing beast.
“I’m conflicted. I always try to follow the policy and not assume that the policy is out there to get me, but that was pretty risky.”
“It was only dangerous because you were so committed to the ideal of our order that you forgot the purpose. Our God does not crave a sacrifice,” she said, sternly eyeing the scarf that was shredded where the cadaver’s claws had touched.
“Then why do we make it such a firm ground of right and wrong? I was told it was a grievous sin to stray from the words of our elders,” Thomasin said, rubbing his shaved head with his hand.
“That’s the test. If your loyalty to a human is unwavering, how can your loyalty to your faith withstand scrutiny when you get conflicting human messages. Humans are completely fallible. Take me for example!” Tarellan laughed again. “I let you struggle in that valley to see if you would come up with a novel solution. Instead, you tried to ignore something you knew would eventually regenerate and come after you again.”
“You could have intervened?”
“I should have, but I wanted to see if you could handle the problem yourself.”
“Do you know who put those creatures there?”
“I have some ideas that I’ll mention to the committee of elders back in Castlemont, but I wouldn’t worry yourself about it. It will be awhile before anything like that happens again.”
A silence settled between them until Thomasin realized that the Grandmaster had not once touched the tiny kitchen in one corner of the observatory. There was no way that she could have heated the cider without magic.
"I thought the flame was banned by our scriptures. How is it that you're using fire to heat cider and destroy revenants?"
Grandmaster Tarellan stopped smiling. "Would our God rather have an all-around effective servant or would our God rather have a mentor who would let pupils die due to all of them having too narrow a view of the real world?"
"I guess They would prefer survival."
"To die and let others die is the greatest blasphemy a Paladin can commit. We were given our powers AND access to learning more so that we may more adequately defend. If your faith demands sacrifice, demand more from your faith."
"Do all Grandmasters feel this way?" Thomasin asked.
"No, not at all. Plenty of them will stay only on the road they feel their God put them on. We all feel the weight of our own choices and will, however; why not find a way to diverge from the road that satisfies our divine connection?"
By the time they had finished their ciders, and Thomasin was getting ready to head back, he had nearly dismissed the Grandmaster as a heretical leader, certain that she had been sent to Sternwarte so that she would not interfere with the beliefs of the students at the school.
"Did you bring something for me?" she asked.
"Oh yes! I almost forgot!" he replied, taking out the light, rectangular parcel he had previously carried in his satchel. "Mentor Pursyan asked me to deliver this to you."
"Excellent, I've been waiting for this," she said, grinning in earnest. She unraveled the satchel, revealing several stacks of chocolate chip cookies.
"Grandmaster! You know we're not supposed to eat baked goods! It's blasph-" he cried as she shoved a gooey cookie into his mouth.
"You were forced into it by God's hand," she laughed. "Run on home and tell him I said 'thanks for drawing my attention to this extremely urgent matter.'"
"Mmhmm," he replied, thought the cookie was so delicious that it nearly made him cry.
*****
Many years later, Mentor Loma would often bring cookies and cider to the exorcisms he had to perform. It was a lot of work for families to deal with possessed children, and the gesture always smoothed out the evening and the work that was needed.
The line between black and white was definitely hazy at best, but Thomasin Loma was eager to walk it for those who needed the help.
A Paladin must have a focused, pure mind, he reminded himself.
There were no students who vanished into the fog just before they graduated. There were no secret lovers who hid amongst the pines until, spurned by strict rules or foolish partners, they perished during cold winter nights. The official notice sent out by the school said that, no matter the gossip of students, there were no revenants spotted on the road holding bags of teeth collected from students traveling to Sternwarte. It was blasphemy to continue to say that there were teeth in the bag or a corpse garbed in maille holding the bag. The school staff sending the message were, after all, ascended Paladins. Their word was God’s word.
And yet the unmoving figure on the trailhead looked suspiciously like a corpse in armor carrying a burlap sack full of something lumpy. “It doesn’t exist,” Thomasin said aloud to himself as he tried to walk past it, simultaneously cursing himself that he didn’t just use his meager student income to buy the horse ride the long way around to Sternwarte.
“Raashsahaa!” the revenant hissed.
“Well that can’t be good,” Thomasin muttered to himself. “Ho, friend, how do you fare today?”
“HAAHSHA!” it replied, and then it was upon him.
The shield was between them in a blink. Summoning a shield is an easy divine skill, which was handy since Thomasin’s shield was nearly as tall as he was and very heavy. The creature bounced off of the shield before scrabbling at it with sharp, bony fingers and trying to spew acidic saliva into Thomasin’s face.
Seems pretty real, Thomasin thought before bashing the creature’s face with the shield so hard that it reeled back onto the ground. It laid their for a minute before starting to shudder. It was healing from the hit. One of its ankles and many teeth popped off, and it took time for a corpse to reintegrate displaced body parts. Thomasin shrugged and kept walking.
Paladin school was full of tests and trials. Thomasin convinced himself that the Greywalk was one such test of faith, and he was already failing it for even engaging the corpse. If his God found him worthy, wouldn’t his God grant him the safe passage to continue along? Maybe one of the senior students placed the revenant there as a way to relive a hunt that went favorably and forgot to remove the memory incantation? Maybe the mist concealed a stone circle for specter summoning, challenging students to find the higher ground of faith when confronted with a real, very dangerous opponent.
While Thomasin walked away, the creature leapt on his back. It already regenerated! Thomasin stumbled against his own shield with the force; the corpse was surprisingly agile for as heavy as its own body was. The revenant tried to sink its teeth through the scarf and armored collar around Thomasin’s neck, scratching at the Paladin’s chest with flailing arms. Thomasin muttered an incantation for greater strength and used his new power to spin in a circle, throwing the creature off with the momentum of his spin.
“WHUARRAaaasshak!” it cried as it whooshed across the trail and crashed against a rock. Thomasin seized on the moment and leapt forward with his shield, crushing the creature against the stone with all of his body mass.
It was a revenant, so it would regenerate unless killed with flame. Thomasin’s God did not appreciate the idea of open flame, so fire incantations were taboo by nature. There was an incantation for banishing the undead, but Thomasin was only a second year Paladin. As much as Paladin school was a trial, banishment was usually left to senior students.
Thomasin stood up, shook some of the bone debris off of his shield, and continued walking.
“Rrrraaahee!” the second revenant howled as it crashed into him from the side, knocking him over. As he fell towards the earth, Thomasin reflected that the fog had thickened around him to the point where he could not even see the stone against which he had just smashed a corpse. He was also surrounded by seven or eight other revenants.
“Savior, take me!” he cried.
“Really? You’re still going to keep spouting dogma even when your life is on the line?”
A crack like a thunderpeal echoed through the valley floor as a whip of fire lashed out, incinerating all but the revenant that was wheezing into Thomasin’s open mouth. A smouldering human hand reached out and clutched the corpse’s shoulder, spreading flames from the point of contact. The young Paladin’s mouth was full of ash, leaving him coughing and wheezing while he looked at his savior.
“Grandmaster Tarellan!”
She grinned and scooped him off of the ground with one lobstered gauntlet. “I was expecting you at Sternwarte thirty minutes ago. I’d ask you what the delay was, but I can see now that it was foolishness.”
“I was trying to heed the words of Grandmaster Leister, who said there weren’t any revenants in this valley.”
“If one ascended Paladin says there are not revenants and another one saves your life from them, can you still say they aren’t there? Does having too many voices of God in your head all the time get you too befuddled to use some sense and bring a torch?” Tarellan asked, laughing at the inexperience of the young Paladin.
“I don’t…”
“Just give it a bit and you’ll think about it.”
*****
Later, they sipped hot mulled cider in the observatory at Sternwarte. It was getting late and there weren’t any other Paladins left to train for fate-divining, so the Grandmaster took some time to talk to the bewildered student.
“Are you feeling any better about what happened earlier?” she asked. Her face, without a helmet on, was quite old and completely intimidating. A scar on her forehead crossed into the grey mop of her hair, and the heat scarring on her neck vouched for her most famous exploit: that she had fought a dragon. More so, her green eyes stared as if she was about ready to wrestle a terrible, fire breathing beast.
“I’m conflicted. I always try to follow the policy and not assume that the policy is out there to get me, but that was pretty risky.”
“It was only dangerous because you were so committed to the ideal of our order that you forgot the purpose. Our God does not crave a sacrifice,” she said, sternly eyeing the scarf that was shredded where the cadaver’s claws had touched.
“Then why do we make it such a firm ground of right and wrong? I was told it was a grievous sin to stray from the words of our elders,” Thomasin said, rubbing his shaved head with his hand.
“That’s the test. If your loyalty to a human is unwavering, how can your loyalty to your faith withstand scrutiny when you get conflicting human messages. Humans are completely fallible. Take me for example!” Tarellan laughed again. “I let you struggle in that valley to see if you would come up with a novel solution. Instead, you tried to ignore something you knew would eventually regenerate and come after you again.”
“You could have intervened?”
“I should have, but I wanted to see if you could handle the problem yourself.”
“Do you know who put those creatures there?”
“I have some ideas that I’ll mention to the committee of elders back in Castlemont, but I wouldn’t worry yourself about it. It will be awhile before anything like that happens again.”
A silence settled between them until Thomasin realized that the Grandmaster had not once touched the tiny kitchen in one corner of the observatory. There was no way that she could have heated the cider without magic.
"I thought the flame was banned by our scriptures. How is it that you're using fire to heat cider and destroy revenants?"
Grandmaster Tarellan stopped smiling. "Would our God rather have an all-around effective servant or would our God rather have a mentor who would let pupils die due to all of them having too narrow a view of the real world?"
"I guess They would prefer survival."
"To die and let others die is the greatest blasphemy a Paladin can commit. We were given our powers AND access to learning more so that we may more adequately defend. If your faith demands sacrifice, demand more from your faith."
"Do all Grandmasters feel this way?" Thomasin asked.
"No, not at all. Plenty of them will stay only on the road they feel their God put them on. We all feel the weight of our own choices and will, however; why not find a way to diverge from the road that satisfies our divine connection?"
By the time they had finished their ciders, and Thomasin was getting ready to head back, he had nearly dismissed the Grandmaster as a heretical leader, certain that she had been sent to Sternwarte so that she would not interfere with the beliefs of the students at the school.
"Did you bring something for me?" she asked.
"Oh yes! I almost forgot!" he replied, taking out the light, rectangular parcel he had previously carried in his satchel. "Mentor Pursyan asked me to deliver this to you."
"Excellent, I've been waiting for this," she said, grinning in earnest. She unraveled the satchel, revealing several stacks of chocolate chip cookies.
"Grandmaster! You know we're not supposed to eat baked goods! It's blasph-" he cried as she shoved a gooey cookie into his mouth.
"You were forced into it by God's hand," she laughed. "Run on home and tell him I said 'thanks for drawing my attention to this extremely urgent matter.'"
"Mmhmm," he replied, thought the cookie was so delicious that it nearly made him cry.
*****
Many years later, Mentor Loma would often bring cookies and cider to the exorcisms he had to perform. It was a lot of work for families to deal with possessed children, and the gesture always smoothed out the evening and the work that was needed.
The line between black and white was definitely hazy at best, but Thomasin Loma was eager to walk it for those who needed the help.