A story from the Round Table.
Intense cold still sprinkled the mornings with frost but the days were lengthening and preparations were under way for the annual Spring time festivities.
Gwaine knew it was time to depart on his quest to the castle of the Black Knight. To exonerate himself and his reputation as a chivalrous knight he must face his fate and either absolve himself of the debt of honour he owed or die in the attempt.
As the great warrior contemplated his destiny, staring out of his window at the sparkling landscape beyond the confines of the castle and as if by some natural synchronisation, a raven swooped down, landing boldly on the stone cill, right by the waiting nobleman. The creature glistened in the late winter sunshine, its iridescent feathers catching the rays flashing purples and greens with its agitated, seemingly impatient shuffle from foot to foot on the pale grey stone.
With a flattening of it's body, it thrust forward its fine head and bristling neck ruff, as it shocked the morning air with a full-throated, rasping call which reverberated around the chill castle walls. The great crow revelled in the sound of its voice like a herald trumpeting its deafening unmistakable message.
Gwaine turned to his faithful servant. "Summon the guards."He said with the calm urgency of a general at the approaching clash of arms. "We must prepare to depart."
With an immediate understanding, the consequence of months of anticipation and preparation, Arthur and his master could interpret this arrival no other way. This was the means by which they would find the castle of the Black Knight.
Arthur acknowledged his master's order with a subtle nod of obedience and left the chamber.
Within the hour, a team of sturdy horses had been assembled. Strong pack animals, provisioned for a long journey, mounts for Arthur and each of the Guards and Gwaine's tournament horse, Gwawr.
***
The summoning cries of their avian guide sounded from the Castle gate, trees, rocks, occasional buildings on their road. At dusk it would fall silent and at dawn it would call again to draw them onward, day after day into unfamiliar territory far from the rule of their king. Lakes, rivers, gorges, mountain ranges, broad grassland plains.
Then, one afternoon as they rode, a great fertile valley opened up before them, a sleepily winding river, the criss-cross patterns of fields down in the distance. As they drew nearer, drifting palls of smoke climbed into the still air from occasional farms.
As the sky began to dim, they could see small communities, well kept, prosperous looking villages, the movement of carts, animals and healthy looking, tan-faced people, they heard children at play and farther off, solid and ancient in the clear, chilly evening, the silhouette of a fortress city.
Under the shelter of some deciduous trees, breaking bud with new leaf, a stone's throw from the quiet water of the river, Arthur and the two guards set up their modest camp.
At dawn, there came no call from their raven escort. Just the varied, busy, come-and-go of the native bird life, signalling the Spring with their amorous salutations to potential mates and blustering to potential competitors.
This lack of urgency let the adventurers know that their destination had, at last, been reached.
Preparations would need to be made to present themselves at the castle, now framed against the sky, imposing a craggy permanence on the human landscape below. The centrepiece of the grey-brown citadel, stood proudly on a promontory, rising stately beyond the outer walls.
The silent river glided by, it's chilly waters gave them an opportunity to bathe but their bodies, pale from the past winter quickly turned blueish and they thought of the melting snows in the mountains as they splashed and scrubbed.
A group of 6 red and black liveried riders trotted towards their meagre campsite, one of their number bearing a red pennant with a black motif of the raven.
There was no military escort. they were unarmed. Instead, they bore newly baked bread, which the party could smell before they saw it, cheese, a flask of fresh milk, wood for a fire and a small brazier containing hot embers, all of which they laid with ceremony and silent service before the travellers. The company were well pleased to receive the thoughtful gesture of greeting, warmth and breakfast and the great knight stood forward, saluted with his right hand to his heart and made a gracious bow of gratitude towards them. They, in turn, bowed and left without a word.
The sounds reaching the four visitors were enlivened with traffic along the broad thoroughfare. In the distance, towards the grand city gate, local people began to gather and the bustle of a market grew at the roadside as they broke their fast. Spring flowers sprinkled the river bank. Boats making their way past on the turning tide, lazily paddled upstream.
Gwaine knew that his duty called. The guards had dusted down their garments, Arthur had busied himself with the burnishing of his master's armour. As well as any men might be after months of travel, the hero and his entourage took horse for the city.
Once again riders emerged with pennants and the red and black garb of local soldiers. These figures were tall and proud and marshal but once again they were unarmed. Ten in number, they split from two columns into one with an impressive manoeuvre. Two of their foremost riders road past the travellers, wheeled their horses and took up position at the rear of the party while the others formed a column ahead. All done with precision, as if rehearsed a hundred times and in a manner which could not be mis-construed as hostile. Even now, the visitors moving forward under the great arching gate hardly garnered more than a glance from the busy market traders and their customers. Just as they might expect to come and go at home returning from the hunt.
Once inside the city wall, the business of the day could be seen in the artisan yards and sheds fronting onto the road: Wheelwrights, farriers, blacksmiths' forges, armourers, basket makers. Moving up through spiralling streets of well kept houses, past noisy barracks, the clatter of horses hooves on cobbles towards the castle, it all seemed to Gwaine like an intense experience after so many weeks of travel whilst buzzing through his mind a gnawing anxiety about his submission to the Black Knight.
Even after so much preparation, was he about to be torn open and left crippled and bleeding to death from the insides like so many of the traitors he had interrogated. He must fulfil his obligation but this was not like a combat to the death he knew he would lose. Here, he must submit to the physical magnificence of the Black Knight's sexual prowess and hope that his training had been enough to withstand the onslaught of that herculean organ.
His thoughts were snapped back to the here and now by their entrance through a great portcullis gate and into the Castle courtyard. A parade ground, assembly area for troops and the greeting of friends and allies or a killing ground for the invader. Many huge doorways led away from the central space, defensive positions high in the walls surrounded the visitors, directly ahead of them a plain stone stair led down to their level.
There, a few steps up from the courtyard, stood the figure of a tall, powerful man in a simple black robe, reaching almost to the ground. "A garment more suited to a priest or sorcerer than to a ruler or commander." Thought Gwaine as he recognised the handsome features and impressive stature of the Black Knight. The broad, darkly bearded face broke into a genuine smile of friendship as the eight leading soldiers wheeled their horses away.
As if sensing the surprise at the simplicity of his presentation, The cloaked figure raised his arms and called "Welcome! "