#72- “To Skathe a Tatar”

“Meagan swallowed, looking at the unsavory collection of people around her bearing limps, pockmarks, warts, and filmed-over eyes. Here she was a goddess of beauty.” —excerpted from Eclipsed by Shadow (Book #1 of ‘The Legend of the Great Horse’ trilogy (p. 201)

The following is an excerpt from “Eclipsed by Shadow”, an award-winning adventure through history — on horseback. Meagan is captive in a medieval village (1240 AD in modern-day Russia) she had tried to warn of impending attack by the Mongolian Horde, who were called ‘Tatars’ by Europeans.

*The odd language is Old English: ‘Bayard’ is medieval slang for horse … Bayard was a bay horse in medieval French poetry, that could magically adjust its size to carry multiple riders.)

Open fields surrounded the town. The horizon blurred into trees and hills, and behind it a dark column of dust rose like black smoke. A troop of knights stood in a loose formation around a band of perhaps twenty Mongolian ponies. Only one nomad sat upright—every other rider lay sideways and motionless across his mount. The Englishman snorted. “Tatar messengers, asking for surrender.” He gave a signal and a call went out. The knights parted ranks to let the single nomad pass. The man galloped away towards the horizon.

“You killed them?” she asked incredulously.

“Oh, ho, yes. For the nones, they die as other men.”

“You can still escape,” Meagan said urgently. “We have to leave now. There might be time to get away.”

“Mayhaps. Or mayhaps I have your rusty bayard carry your body back, what the rats leave.” The Englishman swaggered back to the table. Servants began to rush about, bringing out pitchers and bowls. “I have waited my bread long enough. To gluppen.”

Medieval mealMeagan thought anxiously about rats and her ‘rusty bayard.’ A goblet filled with wine was set before her. She picked it up and drained it.

The man was delighted. “A witful act for a wench, such a draught! There be English in you still! Which be you, North or South?”

“Oh—I was—”

“I hail from South, therebefore. Long live King Henry the Third, if he lives. Could be Henry the Fourth now or Fifth, being I not seen the shores of England for fifteen years, nigh.”

“Long live King Henry,” Meagan said politely. Shaken and afraid, she still watched the approach of a well-cooked duck with interest. The roast was falling off its bones, held in place by carrots and other boiled vegetables surrounding it. She made an effort not to grab.

The Englishman winked. “Aghast are thee, alien, to think we men might pluck a likerous rose as you be?” His eyes wandered over Meagan but kept snapping up like a leashed hound jerked to attention. “Fear not lewid men. The Lord’s word is counsel here.”

Meagan swallowed, looking at the unsavory collection of people around her bearing limps, pockmarks, warts, and filmed-over eyes. Here she was a goddess of beauty.

“Enough the nonsense of surrender! It was not meant, so we talk of other things.” The man took a handful of meat and chewed it, open-mouthed. “How best to skathe a Tatar be a matter. Tell us this.”

Skathe a Tatar? Meagan looked at the man. He wanted to know how to kill a nomad, but how could she make him understand? The coming army was too numerous, too fast and too seasoned. She could say that nomads struck from all sides, setting fires, wheeling away shooting arrows on the attack and the retreat. She could tell this man his city was doomed, but his eyes said the truth would not be welcome.

Copyright © 2008 John Royce

The above excerpt is from “See all Excerpts,” the medieval-era section of Eclipsed by Shadow, and is set in 1240AD. (p. 201 Hbk)

The Legend of the Great Horse trilogy is an adventure through history … each section is about a different time period.

Eclipsed by Shadow (Book #1 of the trilogy) won national awards including the Eric Hoffer Award for best Young Adult Fiction, and the Mom’s Choice Award for best family-friendly Young Adult Fantasy.

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#71- Ingratitude

THE STENCH WAS worse than the nomad camps, worse even than the squalid valleys of Rome. Meagan was pushed along a rutted, muddy street through man- and animal-made puddles, and into a courtyard surrounded by buildings of oversized hewn beams.” – Eclipsed by Shadow (excerpt)

The following is an excerpt from “Eclipsed by Shadow”, an award-winning adventure through history — on horseback.
Meagan has escaped the Mongol hordes of Genghis Khan to save a city in the path of destruction … only to be captured:

THE STENCH WAS worse than the nomad camps, worse even than the squalid valleys of Rome. Meagan was pushed along a rutted, muddy street through man- and animal-made puddles, and into a courtyard surrounded by buildings of oversized hewn beams. She was dragged to a set of stocks mounted along one end of the courtyard. Heavy iron clasped over her head.

“I am trying to save you!” she protested, her face mashed into the beam. Metal burrs sliced small wounds into her neck. “Please listen or we are all going to die! Listen to me!

“Oh ho, ‘tis ferly! Have someone say die?”

Meagan stopped pleading. She was almost sure she had heard English.

A man stepped up and squatted, peering into her face. A blast of noxious breath billowed over her. “So said verily, this Tatar be a she.” The words were thick, beyond the thickest brogue or British cockney she had ever heard. O’s were ah’s and ah’s were o’s—but it was English. “You be of England?” the man exhaled. “Answer.”

“Yes, sir, I—” Meagan’s feet were abruptly swept out from under her. The iron dug into her neck as she scrambled to stand. Shouts and arguing boiled around her.

“Belay!” bellowed the English-speaking man. He crouched near Meagan. “Unwittily said.”

“This is very ungrateful,” she mumbled to the beam. The metal felt imbedded in the back of her skull.

“They not like aliens, these.” The man leaned his breath closer. “It be not them what decides.” He smiled, showing colors of yellow, black and brown. “I was alien beforetimes, and English as you be. Now I be they maister. I be Marshal.” The man nodded to the others. “The Tatar wench be mine. We gluppen and speak.”

Men came forward and released the iron clasps. For the first time Meagan was able to face her captors. Like the nomads they were unwashed, but where the skin of a nomad was clear and smooth, the faces of these men were bearded and blemished. Their clothing was varied and colorful, but it fit less well than the nomads’ clothing and was less well kept. Like their city, these men looked better from a distance.

Excerpted from Eclipsed by Shadow, the award-winning first volume of “The Legend of the Great Horse” trilogy. (Hrdbk pg. 199)

Book II: The Golden Spark is available! Book III announcements coming soon…

Read the 1st Chapter online!

Copyright © 2008 John Royce

#68- Horseback Nation

Mongolian Herd of HorsesWhether hitting a goat skin in a game played like polo or running a spontaneous race, a serious edge underlay the fun. The nomads had given up their lives to the horse and in return had become superhuman. The people could survive for a time without food, but they could not survive without horses. – Eclipsed by Shadow (excerpt)

Sometime, somewhere on the plains…

It fascinated Meagan to watch the horses being summoned each morning. It was usually the same old man who called, and when he cupped his hands and blew his whistle, heads popped up throughout the ranging herd. Some horses came immediately; others took longer, snatching last mouthfuls of grass as they came.

Mongolian Herd of HorsesEach band had its own call, and each foal was trained at its mother’s side as to which call was its own. Meagan practiced her camp’s whistle, imitating the low-to-high pitch. Targa was always one of the first to answer, coming with head high and nostrils flared, snapping impatiently at loafers moving too slowly.

Two things were always in demand: firewood and water. Meagan enjoyed the daily expeditions to hunt for supplies, conducted in slow gallops across vast stretches of plain. She soon found the landscape was not featureless as she had first thought, but rather too subtle for eyes accustomed to manmade structures. She began to notice undulations and colors in the emptiness, and to see the variety and richness of the plains.

Occasional puffs of dust appeared in the landscape, puffs that grew into riders wrapped up like mummies. These were messengers that galloped into and out of the horde, running from horizon to horizon, providing a lifeline of communication to the world. With growing respect, Meagan realized these were not mere wanderers but true nomads. This was a nation on horseback, a laughing, squabbling realm.

Whether hitting a goat skin in a game played like polo or running a spontaneous race, a serious edge underlay the fun. The nomads had given up their lives to the horse and in return had become superhuman. The people could survive for a time without food, but they could not survive without horses. Every rider groomed and fed his mount before taking his own meal, which include dried meat and barbeque, as well as fermented mare’s milk, something Meagan tasted only once.

Excerpted from Eclipsed by Shadow, the award-winning first volume of “The Legend of the Great Horse” trilogy. (Hrdbk pg. 188)

Book II: The Golden Spark is available! Book III announcements coming soon…

Read the 1st Chapter online!

Copyright © 2008 John Royce

#66- Only a Verb, or at best a Noun

MEAGAN FELT HERSELF floating. I must be moving again, she half-dreamed. To somewhere else, another time … maybe I am home. Home! … A fly landed on her nose. It was a horrible disappointment to open her eyes and see people sitting on their mats beside lines of tied horses. – Eclipsed by Shadow (excerpt)

MEAGAN FELT HERSELF floating. I must be moving again, she half-dreamed. To somewhere else, another time … maybe I am home. Home!

Little warponies asleep in the sun...A fly landed on her nose. It was a horrible disappointment to open her eyes and see people sitting on their mats beside lines of tied horses. She and the vast company had ridden the entire day and well into the night. Meagan tried to sit up, but pain shot through every muscle. She was sure she felt a twitch in her eyelids.

She sleepily watched two men arguing. Apparently there was a question of ownership of a certain pony, since both men gripped the animal’s reins and neither would let go. Each took turns yanking the bridle to illustrate his point until the pony soundly bit one of them. Meagan sat up at the man’s cry. The pony looked suddenly familiar.

Painfully she stood and marched up to the men. “Pardon me, but I think there is some mistake. This is my pony, Targa.”

A booming voice made Meagan jump. The bow-legged wake-up man was coming. For once she was happy to see him, for he knew the truth. She expected to be handed the reins; instead, the man led Meagan away by the sleeve to an ancient, decrepit pack pony. “Targ ha!” the man shouted. She had been unceremoniously reassigned to another horse. Disappointingly “Targa” was not even the pony’s name, but only a verb, or at best a noun.

Meagan felt reprimanded for imagining that she, a mere woman, could have claim over property desired by a man. She bent to greet her new horse, though “new” was a description hard to apply to the aged beast. “Are you the Great Horse?” she asked doubtfully. The animal bore her greeting with the interest he would have shown a bundle of sticks.

Excerpted from Eclipsed by Shadow, the award-winning first volume of “The Legend of the Great Horse” trilogy. (Hrdbk pg. 185)

Book II: The Golden Spark is available! Book III announcements coming soon…

Read the 1st Chapter online!

Copyright © 2008 John Royce