Time
I don’t have any this week. Had to cancel D&D this evening and all! So, here is the next chapter of the Apprentice. Enjoy!
Chapter 6: Gedholdt the Sage
A year passed. I continued to attend the classes of Mr Schpugelmann, irregularly at least. I assisted Mrs Blanintzi in the running of our small household and I did not sleep. For this last I discovered a solution, at least. Not a sleeping draft as you might imagine (such potions are unreliable, at best, and highly addictive at worst) but an infusion which allowed me to resist the ill effects of sleeping little or not at all. No-one suspected that I spent most of the nighttime hours experimenting in my attic laboratory or writing in my journals.
One winter’s day, while out wandering the town, avoiding school, I spied a man I had never seen before. His appearance was striking. His hair was brown and red but turning grey in streaks and he sported a beard which had never experienced the pleasure of being introduced to a comb. His spectacles were so thick that the precise colour of his eyes was not perceptible. He wore a long brown coat punctuated with burn marks and curiously coloured stains and a pair of boots, the soles of which stayed in place, presumably, through the power of wishful thinking alone. Most notably, however, he bore a book; an enormous tome at least two feet long and five inches thick. In fact, he was having some trouble with it, it was so large. The book was flattened against his scrawny chest and he was supporting it with two hands by its spine underneath. I did not know his destination but I would have been surprised to see him make it. This, I took to be an opportunity. Even though, as I indicated previously, my stature was not great, I had spent most of my life to that point as an unpaid farmhand so my arms and back were strong. I jinked across the muddy street, avoiding dung and carriages and hoisted up the left hand side of the great book, smiling up at the scraggly man.
“What do you think you are doing, you little urchin? What do you want with a libram like this? Let go, you diminutive beast!” He cried. There were folks watching and laughing. I laughed too, and answered with, “You misunderstand, Master. I wish only to assist you with the burden of knowledge you bear! Please, Wise Master, allow me the pleasure of helping you.” “Oh, well, perhaps you’re not the scallywag I took you for. Very well, you may continue to hold your side of the “burden of knowledge,” ha! Very droll!” He laughed and so did I.
Arriving at his home he bid me enter. I considered this a formality since he would not have managed the three steps up to his front door on his own with the titanic tome but I said nothing except, “How gracious, Master. I would be honoured.” We shuffled up the steps with some difficulty and two breaks for him to rest and one for him to unlock the Iron bound, thick oak front door. The house was a large, two storey affair, made solidly of granite bricks and long wooden beams. It stood on the edge of the town’s only park, a postage stamp of greenery (mostly weeds) grandly called the Lord Belintzi Memorial Garden and in between the town’s garrison and a blacksmith by the unlikely name of Smitzi. It was a handsome place in a respectable part of town. Inside was a different matter.
Likening the inside of this man’s home to a cave was to be ungenerous to caves and accurate only in the aspect of light and the lack thereof. Comparing it to a library would, perhaps have been more useful but libraries, I was led to believe, had a great deal of order to them whereas the books, papers and leaflets which occupied the lion’s share of space in the house’s interior appeared to do so in a manner that was totally random and inconsiderate of household appropriateness.
“Bring the book over here to the desk,” I followed him, though I could not find the desk he spoke of amongst the general disarray. He momentarily released one hand from its duty holding the book and used it to sweep away a pair of long unrolled scrolls which had contrived to hide the aforementioned desk beneath themselves. A space finally prepared for it, we slid the tome, spine first, up onto the desk and both sighed a long relieved breath. “You must have a cup of tea to revive you after your efforts and by way of thanks. I’m certain I would not have been capable of hefting this monstrous thing all the way home alone.” He exited through a door in the north wall and presently began clattering in the other room. Finally alone with the book I peered through the gloom at the title, written delicately in gold along the spine, and found I could not read it. “Master,” I called. “What is this book? I cannot read its title.” Poking his head back through the doorway he asked, “You can read?” “Of course, Master,” I answered. He shook his head and walked off, muttering into the kitchen again.
He returned momentarily after a kettle’s whistle and the rattle of cups and tray being readied. He served me tea at a table wholly covered in tiny notes which were, in turn, covered in words in a language I did not know. This was the second time in five minutes that I had encountered writing in a foreign tongue and the second time in my life. It was a revelation to me. There was so much to know just in the language I had been born to, but considering all the many languages of the world, there must be just as much to learn from books written in their scripts too. I was fascinated and I asked him about it. “How many languages do you know, Master…?” “You may call me Master Gedholdt. They call me Gedholdt the Sage in this town though so few of the townsfolk ever come seeking my “sage advice” that you would wonder why. I know ten different languages and perhaps thirty different dialects within those. Most of the work I perform in the town is translation; mercantile contracts; letters from abroad; diplomatic missives, that sort of thing. Not my only work, though, no, no, no.” I held my tongue. I could already see that this reclusive, intelligent man would need no prodding to let me in on the secret of his “other” work. Frankly, he could not wait to tell and had been waiting for just such an opportunity to talk to a like-minded individual about it, even if he was a short-arsed eleven-year-old boy. “I work most often for the garrison. They often need my assistance in matters martial and strategic. Though, they have asked me to keep my involvement with them secret I feel that I have no reason to mistrust you, my young scallywag, eh?” “Of course, Master. And it’s Maryk by the way.” “Young Maryk, of course. Well, Maryk, I can see things at a great distance in my mind’s eye through the application of magical spells…” with this he paused and peered at me as though challenging me to refute his preposterous claims. I did no such thing of course. “…and I have the ability to direct troops on the field of battle with no more than a thought. Such powers and more have I gleaned from the ancient writings of the lost Fomorin people whose empire once spanned the continent and was based entirely on the mastery of the magical arts. Theirs is not an easy language to master, not least because it is a dead one but also because of its arcane writing system which requires of the reader an understanding of the magical arts. It is like trying to read sheet music without the benefit of knowledge of musical notation. Impossible.” He sipped his steaming black tea and scrutinised me over his glasses for a moment. “Could you…I mean, excuse the impertinence, Master Gedholdt, but would you teach someone this Fomoron tongue?” I dipped my toe in the water with this question. “You have the look of knowledge-hunger in your eyes, alright. I knew it. I am not surprised by your question. I could be persuaded to impart my years of experience and wisdom to you, young Maryk, but there would be a price…” He arose from his seat, still grasping his teacup, and walked into the centre of the room. I turned in my chair to follow his movements. What might he demand of me? I tried not to think of the possibilities. “I need a… perhaps valet would be the best way to describe the position I have in mind.” He indicated with his teacup, the whole room and inferred the apocalyptic mess. I was to be his cleaner, of course. Valet, ha! “In return, I would be willing to apprentice you. But only…only with the express written consent of your parents.”
Damn. “My parents, Master Gedholdt…are no longer with us.” A technical white lie, at worst. “Indeed? An orphan are you? Well, then, who is your guardian? It is important to me that your presence here is sanctioned by the appropriate adult. You do have one? You certainly don’t have the air of one of those beastly street urchins who congregate in the market square.” “No, Master, not a street urchin. I have a governess. Perhaps she can provide the permission you require,” said I. “Indeed, there we have it. Return tomorrow with a note of permission. I will know if it is a forgery,” he pointed at me. I looked left and right and finally just nodded. “Off you go, then. I have work to do and you must leave. Goodbye.” With that, I was dismissed. I thought about protesting and telling him that as long as I was already there, I might as well make a start on the tidying but he had already been swallowed by an archway in the west wall, his mind made up.
It seemed there was no way around this. If he could, as he insisted, tell a forgery from the genuine article and I did try it anyway Gedholdt would never take me on as an apprentice and apprenticing to him was the only possible way I could advance my knowledge of the magical arts and escape the drudgery of Pitch Springs Elementary School for Boys. There was no way that Mrs Blanintzi would allow it, however. She wanted for me nothing more adventurous than a solid career in the bank or possibly the town hall. A life in leadership held some appeal to me, even at that early age and I thought that perhaps I could make a difference in the lives of everyday people in the town and the countryside if provided the opportunity, but I was driven to learn all I could about the magical arts. In comparison, taxes, town-planning, budgets felt too mundane and unfulfilling. I knew where my potential lay and I did not want anyone to endanger that. No, Mrs Blanintzi could not be allowed to spoil my chance at real knowledge, the knowledge of the Great Fomori Empire. However, my father would support me in this, I was sure of it. By the time I had reached our slender house I had figured out what to do. I sat down to write a letter.
I had to wait longer than the single day Master Gedholdt had envisioned but eventually my permission came. My father’s reply came a week later. He was waist deep in infidels, it seemed, commanding a garrison in a hellish little border town known as Three Towers. I read his news with impatience, never once stopping to think that this letter might very well be the last time I ever heard from him (It was not, but the possibility certainly existed. My father was invincible in my eyes. I never worried that he might come home dead.) Finally he got to his response to my request, an affirmative one! I showed Mrs Blanintzi the letter and told her briefly of its contents before rushing out the door and running all the way to the house by the Lord Belintzi Memorial Garden. When I arrived, I did not stop to knock, I swung the door open and, waving my father’s letter in the air about my head shouted, “I have it! I have it! My father’s permission, Master, it came!” Master Gedholdt turned to me and, puzzled, replied, “Didn’t you say you were an orphan?”
Damn. “Not exactly, Master Gedholdt, you said that. I simply neglected to correct you as I thought it might seem impertinent.” His eyebrows shot up, “Indeed! Impertinent! Well, perhaps it would have been but it would have been not half so impertinent as bursting into a gentleman’s home uninvited and unannounced, eh?” He clicked his finger and waved towards the letter. “Your father is a military man, is he? Well, I’m surprised he didn’t teach you more discipline, then.” “Yes, Master, you’re correct, of course, Master Gedholdt,” I mumbled, head hung low inspecting my brogues. “I am not a school master, lad, and I am not a slave driver either. You will learn a thing or two here, you may count on that but you must watch me closely when I tell you too and note everything. Nothing is unimportant. We shall start with the basics…tomorrow. First, tidy up this dreadful mess, I can’t find a blasted thing.”