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Aim
: Prologue : Game
Specs : Screenshots
Special Preview
Prologue
"Tell me of the histories, Samson," a voice asked, heavy
with maturity and full of self-respect, a commanding yet peaceful
voice. "Histories,
Dafel?" a whispery, ancient voice answered. A bent man with
wispy grey hair and a crooked leg turned to face the middle-aged
warrior. The dark haired knight looked splendid in his half-body
armour, his broad shoulders and huge frame a menacing site to
even the most ardent of enemies. The sun glinted of his nearly
blue armour from the open archway of the towers window opposite
the frail old man who stood with as much self-respect as the knight,
but with a more dishevelled look about him, his hair wiry, his
clothes smudged in dirt.
Samson glared
at the knight's armour and at the interlocked star that was painted
atop the mans heart over his breast plate. He bit back a heated
retort for such armour and what it signified, but Dafel had been
a valued student of his many years ago so deserved his quiet,
respectful tongue, even if he had deserted and left with that
cursed holy-man.
Samson paused
before he spoke then sighed. "Why would a warrior-priest
require knowledge of the histories?" Samson chortled. "Has
your Holy One finally seen the errors of his ways?" There
was no respect in that taunting voice, only contempt and bitter
spitefulness.
"No,
Samson," the armoured man answered with a wry tone. "I
do this for my own sake and not the King's." How could he
explain to Samson why he had left him to serve the priest who
had become King? Samson could be a bitter man at times, wise true
enough, but terribly bitter. Dafel just wished that his master
and Samson would see sense and work together to destroy the evil
that was coming, but then he doubted Samson would ever forgive
his King for the burning of his only love at the stake for being
a witch. That galled at Dafel, there was no truth in it at all,
the only time he had ever seen his mentor - his King - taken revenge
into his own hands.
"Your
own sake!" the old man bellowed. "Hah! You are a fool
Dafel! Your quest will only bring you death!" The old man
mumbled amongst the sound of his shuffling feet as he approached
the open window and gazed out into the blue dome of mid-summer
sky. "Death too us all. It is already too late."
Samson's tower
had been erected upon the highest mountain in the kingdom over
looking its rolling vastness. Clouds normally obscured his view
looking like morning mist draped along the ground only the ground
in this case was miles below. There, not twenty leagues away on
a twin pinnacle like his own and as small as a dolls house was
the Keep of Souls, the house of Dafel's most recent master of
these long fifteen years since Dafel had last come to him for
council, the master who had been a holy-man and now ruler of this
damned kingdom. And how unhappy the kingdom had become.
"Not
until the evil is born and destroyed will I give up my quest.
You taught me that, old man." Dafel said warmly to soften
the insult.
Samson span
on Dafel, that old teasing look about his weathered face that
sent waves of forgotten memories of his lectures rushing through
the warrior-priests mind. "The Evil is among us already,
my boy!"
"But
-" was Dafels shocked, wide-eyed reply. How could the
old man still so easily surprise him after all these years?
"Did
I bring you up to say 'but', Dafel?" the old man didn't wait
for an answer. "The Evil was born not eight years ago."
"Eight
years!" Dafel barked. "Why was I not told! You know
of my oath, you were there those twenty years ago when I made
it in front of you!" Samson did not answer. "Why?"
he almost pleaded.
"I sent
a message to your master weeks before the birth, telling him of
the coming evil and who would bare him. Samson shook his
head sadly before continuing. Dafel, he sent the poor wretch
back whipped and bleeding. He was called a heathen for spreading
such vile, pagan lies and was made as an example to others."
Samson turned from his view out of his window, his usually soft
eyes suddenly hard. "Your master is too wrapped up in his
own self worship of himself to care about the Histories or what
they foretell. He has become a King, Dafel, and as soon as that
happened he was no longer Holy. His eyes are closed to the truth,
the fool, and we will all suffer for it."
"But
the Histories, Samson!" Dafel beseeched.
Samson smiled,
a tight, nasty smile that made Dafel shiver. "Hah! What use
are they to us now? They warned us of this coming evil yet we
have not done anything about it! This New Religion you have joined
has blinded us! The old ways are dying out and being replaced
by ignorance! We all deserve to die just for that. Samson
threw his arms up into the air. We were all sentenced to
death the moment that child was borne and left to live!
He narrowed his eyes. Its mother should have been slaughtered
while it was still in her womb.
There had
been an extra meaning behind the word when Samson had said "mother",
as if he knew something Dafel did not, something terrible. But
then Samson always had secrets and only on rare occasions would
he tell them, so Dafel simply shrugged the uneasy feeling away.
Slowly he rose to his feet, majestically and confidently. "Then
tell me where the child is, Samson, and I will do as the Histories
demand. I will slit the evil child's throat."
Samson suddenly
burst out laughing, jigging on the spot like a fool.
"Whats
so funny, Samson?" Dafel demand hotly. "I see no mirth
in the fate of our world?"
Still smiling
broadly, Samson hobbled away from the window and pushed the large
man in the chest forcing him with surprising strength back into
the seat. "Do you want to know why I laugh, Dafel? Do you
want to know my final revenge over your holy-king? Hah! I can
taste the irony of it all! he levelled his gaze at his former
pupil. The Histories can be ugly, Dafel. People beg to hear
them but when they do, they run away from the truth of it all,
maddened buy what they have learned. I can see that you still
need to know and I hope you are still as strong now as you were
when I taught you.
"I am,"
the warrior-priest replied, still unsure why Samson had laughed
and wary of his answer. Somehow he knew he was not going to like
it.
"The
evil, my boy, is the baby son of your King." Dafel could
only stare back, his mouth agape like a bemused first year apprentice.
"My King...?"
Dafels voice trailed away as he tried to comprehend this
truth. "His son, Emlyn?" He had seen the boy on many
occasions, had even been at his birthing rite to acclaim him as
the future heir. He would make a good king when he came of age,
a good and dutiful husband.
How could
he possibly kill the son of his devoted master and more importantly,
the son of his only sister ... his own nephew?
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