MTO C65
by berryChapter 65
âThrow it far and high, in an arcâlike a parabola.â
Following the knightâs advice, Michel stepped forward toward the mass of golden eagles. They had already settled back along the crenellations, watching him in utter stillness. For a moment he felt like prey. A chill pricked his skin, yet anticipation sparked for what would come next.
âDinner time!â
With all his strength, Michel hurled the meat skyward. The previous calm shatteredâwings burst open, eagles diving all at once. In the blink of an eye the airborne chunk vanished. Dozens of golden eagles darkened the sky in a stunning spectacle.
âMaster, me next!â
âMe too!â
âI want to try!â
âEâeasy, everyone!â
Seeing Michel feed the eagles, the children erupted. Barbara tried to rein them in, but not alone.
Michel turned to the knights.
âMay the children feed them too?â
âOf course. Whoâs first?â
With permission, they swarmed the bucketsâonly to balk at the bleeding raw meat. Some pinched noses; some gagged at the metallic tang.
âUgh, it stinks.â
âWhat meat is this?â
âBest not to know⊠do you really want to?â
At the ominous reply, Charlotte shook her head furiously and backed away. The othersâ faces went pale, edging back from the buckets. Michel grinned and lifted a piece.
âWhat, no oneâs brave enough to feed the eagles?â
âIâI will.â
Unexpectedly, Max stepped up first, surprising Michel. The twins, Dan and Max, usually avoided unfamiliar situations; typically, Max would watch others throw several times before daring himself.
âGood, Max. Hereâtake it!â
Meat as big as his head made the boyâs arms strain. The eagles rippled, ready to launch.
âProtect Your little lamb, Lord, and clothe him in the full armor of heavenâŠâ
Barbara squeezed her eyes shut in prayer, as if sending Max into battle rather than feeding birds.
Tension gripped Michel too. Trained or not to ignore humansâwould they spare a small child?
The longer Max fussed, the more his nerves showed. He kneaded the meat, studying the eagles. Surely his piece would be saltier than the rest by now.
âHup!â
After the long standoff, he flung it. It flopped to the ground, never taking flight. The eagles, poised to burst skyward, folded their wings, interest fading.
âThey donât care for prey that doesnât move. Hunters to the core,â a knight laughed, tossing the fallen piece highâonly then did the eagles launch.
âItâs okay, Max! Try again!â
âRârightâlike this, throw it up. Whoosh!â
Encouraged by Michel and Barbaraâwho even mimed a throw now that sheâd seen the birds werenât quick to launchâMax picked a smaller hunk this time, easier to hold.
âRemember your kiaiâput your spirit into it!â
Max nodded with grim resolve, gauging the flockâthen:
âAaah!â
His shout rang; the meat arced; the eagles surged.
âEek!â
âMâMax!â
But the birds ignored him, snatching the chunk midair, and Max plopped to the ground, dazed, mouth agape. Michel rushed over.
âYou okay?â
âThâthey ate it.â
âThey did. Well done. Thanks to you, theyâll be very full.â
Maxâs mouth twitched into a smile. He scrambled up without help and scampered back to the bucket.
âMy turn now!â
âThen can I go after?â
With one success, courage returned. The knights offered the buckets, grinning.
âThrow all at once if you like. Theyâre annoyed we kept teasing them with scraps.â
âSister, would you like a try?â
âNâno, watching is plenty.â
No need for Barbara to join; volunteers abounded.
The taekwondo class had quickly become a goldenâeagle feeding session. Michel watched, fond, as the children hurled meat skyward with spirited shouts. Since they would be staying at Eglenceâand were children of Valoisâit would be good to grow used to living alongside the eagles.
âSaint, will you be joining the knight drills again?â
One knight, relieved of feeding by the children, sidled up. Michelâs shoulders slumped.
âIâd love to, but the Duke wonât allow it.â
âHah, understandableâSir Jerard oversees the knight training.â
Michel cocked his head. The phrasing struck oddly. He had assumed the Duke barred him to preserve saintly dignityâbut the knightâs tone suggested it was specifically because of Sir Jerard.
The knight exaggerated a shiver.
âThat day was so tense I thought at last theyâd fight.â
âMe and the Duke?â
âHis Grace and Sir Jerard.â
Michelâs confusion deepened. âAt lastâ implied a longâbrewing friction. Had he made things worse?
âAre they really that at odds?â
âYou must not know.â
The knight elaborated.
âUntil recently, the commander of Eglenceâs knights was the late Duke. Upon succession, His Grace inherited the post. First thing he did was rebuild the corps.â
ââŠRebuild?â
âFew of us remain from the old rosterâSir Jerard among the handful.â
Where did the others go?
Understanding his unspoken question, the knight nodded.
âSir Jerard, then viceâcaptain, resisted the shakeâup. The Commander stripped his rank in response. If Jerard werenât the one who knows the eagleâtraining, heâd have been expelled outright.â
Michelâs jaw hung. Heâd sensed something offâbut this backstory jarred. Taken alone, it painted Kaidan as tyrant.
âThat sounds⊠harsh.â
âFair to think. But the old corps had become a disasterâdrawing pay yet failing at even minor monsters; accidents nonstop. Now, only the Northâs, noâthe continentâsâfinest serve here. The Commander built by merit aloneârank and age be damned.â
The knightâs pride in his corps shone through; he clearly stood with Kaidan.
âAll hearsay to me, mindâonly joined recently.â
Bragging laced his account; new knights outranked the old by skill. Michel only twitched a smile.
âThereâs one more amusing rumor,â the knight added, warming to gossip.
âThey say Sir Jerard taught the Duke the sword.â
âWhat? Truly?â
âJust a rumorâbut a likely one. Their swordwork has a family resemblance.â
The knight enjoyed the tale; Michel hoped it was false. If true, it was brutal: to be deposed by a student one trained, nearly expelledâwhatever the reason, a bitter fate.
Yet Michel also doubted Kaidan would act coldly from pettiness. The man he knewâstern, taciturnâwas not without warmth. In the comic and in life, the Duke of Eglence was kinder than he looked. He must have his reasons.
âPerhaps His Grace kept Sir Jerard not for the eagles, but out of old affection,â the knight mused.
Michelâs slim brows lifted. The manâs tone strayed into disrespect. Whatever else, Jerard was the acting trainer of the corpsâa teacher of knights.
Students should honor their instructors. A lifetime in taekwondo made Michel bristle at a pupil snickering over a master.