Hunny’s manner had worked its friendly magic on the boy, and
he eagerly answered their questions, feeling liberated to speak about the city
he called home. They walked mostly uphill, and though the street itself was not
terribly steep, the buildings around them rose up higher than in the square. Occasionally
they passed a house that looked more like a keep: iron gates and stone walls;
parapets rather than shake roofs. As they passed one particularly ominous and
ancient complex, Horus spoke up.
“This one belongs to Seamus Delving, in case you ever wanted
to have lunch with the terror of the south sea.” He glanced back at them, “He
actually loves guests. He’s quite the character.” They passed by an iron gate,
flecked with rust. Behind it a
rough-looking man leaned against the wall in the gateway eating an apple. His
musket, bayoneted, primed and cocked, sat beside him. He did not look up as they
passed. Past him could be seen a green lawn on either side of tile walkway
which led up to the house proper, made of much the same dark stone as the
encircling wall.
“The city is full of people like that, if you know where to
look,” Horus went on. “Lots of sailors settle here because they can buy land
and property that would be off-limits to anyone but the gentry or nobility
somewhere else.”
“Was the city always lawless?” Hunny asked as they turned up
another, slightly narrower avenue.
“We’re not lawless, madam. We are kingless, but not lawless.”
“Who writes the laws?” Hunny said.
“God,” Munin cut in. “Or no one.”
Horus smiled and turned back to Munin. “Which god, eh?”
“Depends on the company,” Munin said.
“Nobody here care’s about heretics, sir,” Horus said. “If
you’re worried about that sort of thing. Hell, the prison’s more popular than
the chapel.”
“The Dreamer, then,” Munin said.
“Prometheus,” Horus said with a smile, drawing out the word.
“The dragon god. It’s a good town for that, sir. A very good town indeed. I
believe you will get along with the mistress quite well.”
“Neither of you have yet to answer my question,” Hunny said.
Rone smiled. “You don’t need kings to write laws, love. There
are no kings in the mountains either; at least, we recognize no kingship. We
have laws. They don’t have to be written in stone by a divine ruler to be real.
You don’t need sheriffs and judges to execute them. When people have a need for
a law, it will come to exist, and nobody will question when its justice
manifests itself. The law of kings is made out of the gentry’s displeasure with
the law that is.”
“Well, what law said poor Minneo could be killed because of
a debt? Why doesn’t anyone stop it?” Hunny asked irritably.
“He himself wrote that law,” Horus replied, “Begging your
pardon, madam. He signed a contract to that effect. He agreed to a law that
would bind himself and Madam Porthagan. He chose his law, and the people here
respect that. Now as to whether we’ve ever had
a king; as far as records can go, there’s never been one, though the city was
occupied a few times in the last thousand years or so. There is a legend, if
you like to hear it.”
“Of course,” Hunny said.
“Well the story that gets told around here says that many,
many years ago there was a king in Tyrant’s Gallow, only it wasn’t called Tyrant’s
Gallow back then, it was called Convection, though not on account of the warm
currents that keep the island’s weather pleasant up in this latitude, but
because the King’s family name was Convect. Anyway, this king supposedly lived
in a gold palace. He was also known to consort with wizards, and the island
became a gathering place of sorts for them because of his tolerance and the
distance from the mainland.”
“And now it’s a gathering place for pirates,” Hunny cut in
with a chuckle.
“Begging your pardon, but we don’t tolerate pirates. Privateers, freebooters- they’re a different
sort. Madam Porthagan has put out quite
a few bounties for those foolish enough to prey on her ships, and it’s called
the Gallow for more reasons than the tyrant.”
“Which you were getting to, I assume,” Hunny said.
Horus nodded. “Eventually the Church of the Twelve heard
about the lavish King Convect and his cabal of dark wizards, and raised an army
to put a stop to it. Some tales also say the whole affair was actually the construct
of his older half-brother, who could not take the throne because he was a
bastard and was forced to join the clergy and live a life of poverty.”
“Poverty? Hardly.”
Munin laughed. “When was the last time
you stepped into a church?”
“Never have, actually,” Horus replied. They turned another
corner and saw the great and famous Gallow Bluffs, mottled white and grey,
looming before them. “The church has no
real army, you know, so what really happened was an invasion by a few of the
petty kingdoms of the lowlands, all gone by now of course, at the behest of the
church, and blamed upon the will of the Twelve.
The force was overwhelming, but they were repelled from the harbor by
the power of the wizards and the many inventions they had come to develop over
long years of tolerance. For ten days they fought, and many of the invading
force’s ships were burned. The quest was
on the verge of abandonment by the parties involved, who each held a distrust
of the other.
“One night, the king’s brother took a single boat and rowed
up to a beach outside the city. He was
arrested by the king’s guards, but was taken to see his brother once his true
identity was learned. Everyone thought he had arrived to give the king
strategic information. He feigned to give him the information he sought, but at
the same time secretly poisoned his wine. The king was found dead the next
day.”
“So, would the brother have become king?” Hunny asked.
“Yes, that’s exactly what happened. The king’s advisor
notified him that, as the last surviving member of the Convect family, the
crown had fallen to him, bastard or no. The advisor gave him the king’s crown
and clothed him in lavish clothes. The new king was prepared to end hostilities
with the crippled fleet, but before he could even leave the palace the admirals
and a high priest walked in the front doors.
They had found the streets empty and the canons unmanned. No guards were posted outside the palace
gate. The brother, who now resembled the old king in such a way as to fool his
former allies, was put in chains and dragged outside the palace.
“They hanged him there for high apostasy in front of the
mixed armies of the petty lords in an otherwise deserted street. The palace was
searched, and a writ of succession was found, naming ‘Fontaine’ to be the next
legal heir to the king. The high priest declared it legal and stamped it. Soon
it was discovered, by virtue of a lone soldier that had traveled here before,
that ‘Fontaine’ was merely the high mountain on the island. Needless to say,
that man earned a poor fate for his honesty. Frustrated by the will, and unable
to come to a consensus on who should rule the island, the petty princes began
to argue with one another. Violence broke out and many of the armed men who
came ashore were killed. The last prince, victorious and standing in the town
square on a hill of dead men, declared himself king.
“At that time, the king’s advisor approached. The petty
prince soon found himself surrounded by the city’s wizards, who stood on
balconies and atop buildings surrounding the square, armed with strange guns
and other heretical devices. They destroyed his remaining force with their
forbidden technology, ending the lives of the invading soldiers in seconds. The
advisor then declared the prince a criminal, and the wizards hanged him beside
the new king. The advisor sent a courier to the Arch Priest in Chalandier with
the stamped writ, and the island officially became ruled by the mountain. In essence, free.”
“What happened to the king’s advisor?” Hunny asked.
“He was a wise wizard and had the golden palace rebuilt into
the golden courthouse, of which he became the first chairman. The gold from the
bricks and decor of the king was melted down and used as the monetary base for
a new bank in the same place. It’s all legend though- even the Golden Courthouse’s
records have gaps and limitations. Ah, we’re almost here.”
Thanks for Reading!
-DVS
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