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Copyright Oggbashan July 2019
The author asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.
This is a work of fiction. The events described here are imaginary; the settings and characters are fictitious and are not intended to represent specific places or living persons. It is set in a fantasy country.
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Chapter One - Ralph
Before Gerald asked me to be his Best Man he wanted to know if I could ride a horse and use a sword. I thought that he was asking a stupid question. He knew that I could because I play the part of a Cavalier cavalryman in English Civil War re-enactments. What he wanted to know was whether I really knew how or did I just pretend? What would I be like against a real swordsman or cavalryman?
I felt slightly insulted. A horse doesn't care if the rider is pretending to charge or really charging. The skill required is the same. As for the swordsmanship, he knew that I have won several trophies for regional fencing competitions.
If he weren't a good friend I would have felt seriously annoyed that he continued to query my skills. We have known each other for about five years but neither of us has spoken about our past lives. It was unusual for Gerald to doubt my abilities, or his own. He also rides as a cavalryman and he has been my opponent in several fencing displays for re-enactments.
We seem to be closely matched. He has won a few of our bouts; I have won a few. Recently I have won all of them since Gerald has been involved with Irina. He hasn't been practising his swordsmanship as much as I have and he doesn't realise that I don't try my best when we put on a display. Those bouts are staged and I let him win some.
Eventually he accepted that we were probably better trained and skilled than a 17th century cavalryman would be. Apart from the training which included knowledge gained since the 17th century, our equipment was better made from modern materials. Our horses were better bred and properly kept, unlikely for a 17th century Army horse.
Only then did he ask me to be his Best Man.
"Ralph," he said, "I want you to be my Best Man. Before you agree, I have to explain what that means in Irina's country."
Irina comes from a remote, mountainous rural area of one of those former Communist states in Eastern Europe. She came to England first as an Au Pair and stayed to become a student of English and Modern European History. She met Gerald at a student dance and they ended up discussing the impact of the Electors of Hanover all night.
"Irina is the elder daughter. Her parents have no sons and only one other daughter. Irina is their heiress and they have substantial lands. Her husband will be a significant person in their community. Many people in her home village resent me. They wanted Irina to marry a local man. When we announced our engagement one of her disappointed suitors challenged me to a duel. Irina's parents managed to get him to agree to a fencing match instead of a duel. Apart from buttons on the foils there was little difference. I won easily."
"So you should have," I said.
"Yes, perhaps, but my opponent was serious. So was the result. If I hadn't won, our engagement might have been still-born. Irina's parents couldn't have withstood pressure from their community if I had lost."
"What does that have to do with me?"
"They still have the custom of bride-capture. You and I have to kidnap Irina from her parents' house and take her to the church."
"What!"
"You heard. Normally it would be a light-hearted romp with no serious intent. Unfortunately for me the locals are still unhappy. Irina will come with me willingly but her champion will defend her against my Best Man -- you."
"I am beginning to worry about this, Gerald. I have to fight a local champion. What if I lose?"
"The wedding won't happen."
"Ouch! That is a heavy responsibility. How do we fight?"
"With sabres. Sharp sabres. Normally that would be on horseback and the Champion and Best Man would clash their sword together a few times for effect before the Champion concedes. However..."
"Come on, Gerald, out with it!"
"This fight will be real until first blood."
I sighed. Gerald continued hurriedly.
"It will be fought on horseback in a makeshift flat arena. Fighting on horseback has too many variables otherwise. There hasn't been a real fight for decades so the whole village will be watching to make sure it is real, not faked."
"So I have to fight until first blood. If I lose you don't marry. If I win I will have injured a village champion. Neither of us will be popular, will we?"
"No, Ralph. Unless you can disarm him and force him to concede."
"Easier said than done, Gerald. You know that."
"I can't see any other way that Irina and I can get married with the village's consent."
"Thanks a bundle."
"That's why I hesitated before asking you and questioned your swordsmanship. There is no one else I could ask to do so much."
"Anything else I have to do? The usual Best Man stuff?"
"Yes, but..."
"I don't like the sound of that 'but', Gerald."
"There is more before the wedding and Irina needs you after the wedding..."
"Irina needs me AFTER the wedding? For what?"
"She'll have to explain. I don't know what she wants. It is something to do with local traditions on Saint Basilla's Day, the day we will marry. All I know is that Irina thinks it is important..."
"And before the wedding?"
"You might enjoy that part, Ralph. If you win the duel..."
"Don't you mean when?"
"WHEN you win the duel, you have to volunteer to be a hostage for the bride. The bridesmaids keep hold of you to ensure that I take Irina to the church and not to anywhere else. When Irina and I arrive at the church the bridesmaids release you to join me."
"That doesn't sound too bad."
"It shouldn't be unless you have seriously injured the bride's champion. If you have the bridesmaids might -- I don't know what they might do."
"Great! If I wound the champion the bridesmaids might torture me. Are you sure I'm the right man for the task? Wouldn't a screen hero be better?"
"You are my best choice. Even without all this, I'd still want you as my Best Man, Ralph."
I agreed to be Gerald's Best Man. I hope I know what I am doing. I've been practising my sabre work and riding as often as I can. I'm confident about the sabre. I'm not convinced that my horsemanship is as good as I'd want it to be for fast riding unfamiliar mountain tracks possibly on snow, but I won't have to. The horsemanship will be in a prepared arena and snow is unlikely in August. I'll have three days before the contest, set for two days before Saint Basilla's Day, to practise. Gerald and I are both taller than any local man is likely to be so our reach in a sword fight is greater.
I know more than Ralph thinks I do about Irina's country but I had never bothered to find out about the wedding customs. I had been too busy fighting in a messy war. I been on secondment from the British Army to assist the legitimate government of a recent NATO ally, as had my fiancΓ©e Harriet who was still with their army.
Chapter Two -- Gerald
Ralph was the only person I could choose to be my Best Man. Apart from being a friend, he is the scariest man I know and I needed someone seriously brave to face what the Best Man would have to do in Irina's village. Ralph had been a soldier and has killed. He has killed with a rifle, with artillery, and also hand to hand with guerrillas in the Balkans. He rarely spoke about his experiences of war. I heard more from his army colleagues who thought he was invincible.
When I went with Irina to ask her parents' permission I thought I knew what was expected of me. I have a reasonable income from my own company and I can support Irina in a better style than she or her parents could. I didn't expect to have to demonstrate horsemanship nor to have to use a sword.
I was judged passable as a horseman. The challenge to a duel was worrying. I hadn't faced an opponent who really wanted to injure me despite the shielded tips of the epΓ©es. All my contests had been under controlled conditions wearing padding and fencer's masks. That contest was in the open air on uneven ground with no protection at all.
Jacob was a suitor for Irina's younger sister and the village's best swordsman. The village elders had agreed to the bout to prove my mettle. Jacob had expected a quick win over a decadent Westerner. For the first few passes I was uneasy. I had been told that Jacob was the best and swordplay was a common pastime. His attacks had been swift and violent, startling me into an automatic defence. After the first five minutes I was confident enough to attack. He parried my feint and left himself wide open for the real thrust.
Jacob looked down at the button pressing hard over his heart. He couldn't believe that I had penetrated his guard. He wanted a rematch. The village elders forbade it. Irina explained later that the elders had seen that Jacob was outclassed and a further bout could have been embarrassing.
Now Jacob had been chosen as the Bride's Champion. The bride has no say in the choice made by the elders. Usually they pick a second-rate swordsman so that the groom's Best Man isn't too hard pressed. They honoured me by selecting the village's best. I had to match Jacob with a champion of my own or lose Irina.
Irina's bridesmaids were her friends yet they too felt the slight to the village. Irina wasn't sure how they would react when Ralph defeated the Bride's Champion. Jacob was popular and was expected, eventually, to marry Irina's younger sister, Sophia, the chief bridesmaid. All he had to do was acquire a few fields more land to be a possible son-in-law.
I couldn't let Jacob be seriously injured by my champion nor could my champion lose. Ralph had to be Best Man, if I could persuade him.
I was relieved when he agreed. I left the other Best Man Duties until later. If Ralph didn't win, unlikely as that was, the other duties didn't matter.