Once a King
Part 28: I (Skryba) meet Pawel.
It was an unremarkable event. Nothing that night presaged the relationship that would develop. As I had explained earlier, I knew of Pawel. I knew of his reputation and the rumors about him. He had been a regular, irregular visitor to the village over a period of years. Or, should I say seasons, as he tended to be here when the weather was too awful for military campaigns. He disappeared as March approached.
I was at the only tavern/inn tavern-inn the town had...the business I was to discuss was passed out on the table in front of me. I had barely sipped my pint, and the 'client' was already several sheets to the wind. I was startled, when the inert client was un-chaired, falling limply to the floor, yet remaining unconscious.
"You are too fine a man to waste time on a drunken farmer, who only seeks to sell his pigs for more money in a faraway place." This comment on my livelihood was met by a scowl of displeasure from me. The unconscious client's business could keep Hilda and I warm and well-fed over the better part of the winter.
My scowl was met by his signature "Ha, ha!" I had eyes on Pawel for the first time, face to face.
"I know you, Skryba, YOU will write my story. YOU will make me live forever...or at least, until some fucking war burns all the libraries...Ha ha."
Then he was gone...a whirlwind of a man...a madman, I thought.
I did not see him again that season...they—the famous 'they' of many stories. The Unnamed THEY—said he was hired by a great Captain to fight in some Eastern war...or was it a Northern war? There were always wars. Men like Pawel, were in constant demand. Oh, one could raise peasant levies...but then who would grow the crops to feed the elite. Besides...these seasoned professionals were good for nothing else...expensive, but they did not die in vast numbers, as did the peasant levies and often they supplied their own weapons....
After the season was over, and the foe presumably defeated, or not...but the mercenaries were paid and sent away, so they did not cause trouble in the land of the noble, or king, or lord, whoever paid for the war.
Dispersed, they took their wages with them and enriched other, but still peaceful, lands.
I saw Pawel just as he returned...mounted on a rather-peaceful-and-dull mare. I was in the street, the high road of the village...Pawel did not stop...he yelled over his shoulder..."I have not forgotten you, Skryba...my story still grows..." then he spun his horse around, and with a sober eye...an eye that would NOT be sober for several months, he vowed, "I will have you memorialize me...before this savage calling of mine is the end of me. But I must fuck and drink and sleep to forget the horror, so I can tell you glorious lies. Ha Ha!"
I did not speak to Pawel again for several weeks. His 'fucking and drinking' were private, and caused no scandal in the village. But I would hear the details when I was 'engaged' by him finally.
This time, I was returning home, from the very same tavern—well, it was the only one in town. Through the gathering gloom, I spied emerging into the light that spilled from a small shop still open at this late hour, in violation of town rules, a small figure on horseback.
Before I could make out who the rider was, there was that unmistakable voice...unmistakable because his accent was so strange.
"Skryba...I have NOT forgotten...I will be at your door tomorrow at dawn."