Chapter 1: Arrival in the Village-1
Chapter 1: Arrival in the Village
Nathaniel struggled to keep his eyes open. Several times he almost fell from the saddle. Only a surge of adrenalin and lightning reflexes, causing his fingers to tighten around the saddle horn, kept him from plummeting to the hard ground.
“How much longer?” he asked, patting his jet-black steed on the neck and provoking a snort and a shake of its head. “You’re just as tired as I am, aren’t you?”
The forest, which had bordered the dirt road on both sides for a good part of their journey, had at last begun to thin. In the distance, he could see a field of golden wheat turned copper by the late afternoon sun. As man and beast drew nearer, Nathaniel noticed a lone tree standing like a sentinel at the centre of the field, its thick trunk twisting into myriad leafy branches.
At first, Nathaniel could see nothing out of the ordinary about the tree. It was a little larger and its trunk a little stouter than those in the forest. He simply put that down to the fact the tree had space to grow, to spread its branches. It was a luxury this tree had that the others in the forest, growing in greater number and in closer proximity to each other, didn’t.
Upon closer inspection, Nathaniel noticed something at the foot of the tree. A man. He had one arm around the tree, but even more bizarre was the fact he appeared to be talking to it. His curiosity piqued, Nathaniel rode his horse to the edge of the field, yet despite the breeze blowing in his favour, he still wasn’t able to catch a single word the man was saying.
He watched the man for some time, wondering what could have prompted such strange behaviour. Did the tree hold some significance for the man? Had it been the scene of a tragedy, or had the man buried a loved one there, forever protected from the elements by the enormous umbrella of its foliage? He could have pondered the mystery for hours without ever learning the truth, and when he realised he’d spent far too much time trespassing on the man’s privacy, he kicked his heels against the horse’s belly and guided it back to the road. With renewed vigour and a flick of the reins, he had the beast galloping towards the nearest village, which, fortunately, was no more than a few miles away.
He rode into the village, drawing the attention of every villager he passed. As a traveller and therefore a stranger in most of the places he visited, he was used to such scrutiny. He located the village inn, dismounted, and tethered his horse. Happy to be out of the saddle, he stretched out his arms in a great sweep and arched his back, relaxing his tired muscles before pushing through the door.
The stink of stale beer and smoke assaulted his nostrils immediately. As for the interior of the inn itself, it was nothing out of the ordinary. The low thatched roof, the exposed beams of oak, and the whitewashed walls stained black with soot from the fireplace and the many candles positioned on sconces around the room were commonplace. The wooden tables were marked and pitted, and the benches had dips where countless pairs of buttocks had worn the wood smooth.
Since the afternoon was now advancing towards evening, there were a dozen or so patrons sitting in pairs and small groups at the tables. Each one had turned their attention to Nathaniel. He doffed his hat and walked through them to the bar.
“Good evening,” he said, greeting the man behind the bar.
The barman was reed-thin and his skin was ruddy and leathery. His cheeks were gaunt and the expression on his face stern.
“Evenin’” he replied, his voice flat and devoid of warmth.
“I wonder if I might have lodgings for myself and my horse for the night?”
The barman frowned and wiped his hands down the front of his stained and tatty apron.
“That’ll be two gold pieces. Three if yer wantin’ supper and breakfast.”
Nathaniel reached into his riding coat and retrieved a small leather pouch with a drawstring.
“Here’s four,” he said, dropping the coins into the barman’s outstretched hand. “Please, ensure my horse is fed and brushed.”
The sight of four gold pieces removed the barman’s frown.
“And I’ll have an ale to relax me,” said Nathaniel. “How much?”
The barman filled a wooden mug with ale and plonked it down in front of Nathaniel.
“This one’s on the house,” he said.
Nathaniel drank half the contents in one breath. When he had slaked his thirst, he put down the mug.
“I wonder,” he said, “if you could answer me a question.”
The barman’s frown returned, and it amused Nathaniel at how rapidly the glee brought by four gold pieces could disappear.
“As I was riding into town I saw a large tree in the middle of a field of wheat. There was a man, a young man, and he seemed to be…talking to the tree.”
The barman’s expression remained unchanged.
Undeterred, Nathaniel continued. “I was wondering if you might know of the young man, or rather, if you could tell me the reason he might be talking to the tree. I imagine there must have been a great tragedy, perhaps a loved one died there or….”
The barman grunted. He rested his knuckles on the bar and leaned across to Nathaniel.
“Around these parts, if we want to know somethin’ about a man, we ask the man himself.” He removed his hands from the bar and stood back. “A man’s business is his own and not for others to concern themselves with.”
Nathaniel nodded once and drank the remainder of his ale in silence. Only when he’d swallowed the final drop did he speak again.
“Thank you for the ale,” he said, managing an uncomfortable smile. “Could I see my room?”
The barman whistled shrilly, drawing not only an amply proportioned woman from a back room, but also the attention of every eye in the inn.
“Agnes, show this man to his room,” he said gruffly. “Then you’d better get back there and fix him some dinner.”
Agnes nodded, and with a flick of her head indicated that Nathaniel should follow her to a short flight of stairs between the bar and the fireplace.
“Where ye headed?” she asked.
“Nowhere in particular,” Nathaniel replied in all honesty.
“I ain’t never been there,” Agnes replied with a giggle.
Nathaniel smiled. At last. A sense of humour.
They arrived at one of four doors on the second floor.
“This is yer room,” said Agnes, pushing the door open. “I’ll send the boy up with some water. Ye can open the window, though I wouldn’t. There’s rats about, ‘specially at night.” She folded down the bedding and fluffed up the pillow. “Will ye be wantin’ yer supper up here or down in the bar?”
Nathaniel didn’t need to think twice. He was tired and in no mood to have every mouthful he ate collectively scrutinized by the villagers.
“Up here, I think.” He smiled at Agnes. “As you can imagine, I’m rather tired.”
Agnes nodded and returned his smile, her cheeks rubicund beneath a thin veneer of grime.
“I would,” she said. “Quieter up here.”
She did a small curtsey and left the room, pulling the door closed behind her. He was pleased to see a brace on each side of the door and a beam leaning against the wall. It was security that would guarantee a peaceful night’s rest.
Dinner arrived a short time later. It wasn’t much, least of all, appetising—a watery stew of grey meat and the odd bit of potato and carrot, accompanied by some bread that looked to have been torn from the loaf.
“Just leave the tray outside yer room,” said the boy, who was as thin and bony as the barman, and couldn’t have been more than eleven or twelve.
After dinner, and after placing his tray outside his room, Nathaniel removed his clothing and climbed into bed. Settling into the lumpy mattress, his body felt heavy, as if even the effort to roll over was now beyond him. The noise from below had been steadily increasing over the course of the evening and he wondered if, despite his exhaustion, he’d ever manage to fall asleep. It turned out not to be a problem. No sooner had the thought faded than the voices became silent and he was dead to the world.