MTO C68
by berryChapter 68
In a small courtyard hidden in a secluded corner of Eglence Castle, the coachmen, cooks, footmen, and maids stood in neat rows. They had all gathered here from the early dawn to meet God.
âWith spirit once more! One, two, three, four! Two, two, three, four!â
Saint Michel, the one who conveys Godâs will, stood before the crowd and carried out a sacred rite. In time with his calls, the people raised their hands high toward the heavens or made deep bows.
This rite, begun only a few days ago with a handful of participants, had now swelled so much that the little yard was bursting. Word had spread among the servants that attending Saint Michelâs dawn service made the body light and the mind clear.
âFor the last round, run lightly in place!â
As Michel raised his hands and jogged gently, the people in the courtyard stamped their feet with all their might. Some pressed their hands together as if praying, some cried out Godâs name in wailing supplication. Charlotte and Leon, who had gotten up unusually early and tagged along out of boredom, claimed a corner of the courtyard and bounced in place with great seriousness.
With dozens moving at once, the ground trembled as if in an earthquake. Startled by the uproar, the eagles perched along the battlements flapped away.
Finishing the last movement, Michel clapped, face refreshed.
âGood work today!â
âThank you!â
They wiped sweat and exchanged greetings. A few, still overcome, approached Michel to share how moved they were.
âSaint, todayâs service was the best!â
âHahaâŠâ
It wasnât a âservice.â
If this had to be named, âdawn calisthenicsâ would be apt. Michelâs conscience pricked at having, somehow, deceived people.
Still, it was all for the health of Eglence Castleâs household. If God truly exists, surely God would wish the faithful to be healthy.
Before his flimsy pretense could be exposed, Michel hurried to change the subject.
âBrother Eric, howâs your knee?â
âWell⊠it was fine when you worked it, Saint, but itâs sore again, as if another devil has latched on. A very nasty one, by the feel.â
The elderly coachman, clutching his right knee, confided under Michelâs concern. Michel seated him on a low stretch of wall and kneaded the leg. Charlotte and Leon plopped down on the ground and imitated him at once.
âBegone, demon! Taekwon!â
âHeehee.â
With grave face, Charlotte muttered strange incantations while kneading Leonâs shoulder; he stifled giggles, feet drumming at the tickle. Exorcism play was the childrenâs favorite game lately. Michel smiled at them, then addressed the servant again.
âBrother, you worked yesterday too, didnât you? Didnât I say you should rest for a while?â
âHehâif I rest, who will tend Eglenceâs stables?â
âBrother Barnes is there.â
âItâll be a long while before that boy can carry my share.â
At the mention of the young stablehand, the coachman shook his head firmly. Despite being old enough to raise the castleâs average age by himself, he tackled the hard jobs. Even when Michel told him to cut back to heal the knee, the man could hardly stay idle.
Under Michelâs hands, his face loosened into drowsy relief.
âAnd besides, when the Duke works so hard, how could I rest?â
âDoes he scold you for laziness if you take time off?â
âHow could you say such a thing? Never.â
He flapped his hands anxiously, as if afraid of misinterpretation.
âThe Duke labors diligently for the castle and the fiefâso I want to do my utmost to help.â
Others chimed in one by one.
âTrue enough, everyoneâs been busier since the current Duke came.â
âHe checks everything in the castle himselfâno one can slack. Weâd better work hard to earn praise.â
Though the words seemed like grumbling about more work, their faces were bright.
In the past days talking with the servants, Michel learned they all liked and respected Kaidan. He also learned that sentiment toward the late Duke was not so favorable. The late Duke, they said, was a stern master who did not forgive mistakes; that he sometimes used the cane shocked Michel, who had assumed from Albanâs account that all admired him. As with anyone, the man was judged differently by different people.
By contrast, Kaidan wielded no rod and worked hard to govern; he was popular among the staff. Many had families in Valois and had benefited from his new policies. While his intimidating air and grim rumors made them fear meeting him faceâtoâface, they were glad to work for him.
If only he smiled a little more.
Michel pictured Kaidanâs smile. He was a man whose face changed greatly with a smile: when he smiled quietly, the frost melted into surprising gentleness.
Lately, though, Michel had seen neither the smile nor even the usual sternnessâKaidan was consumed with investigating monsters and works like new walls. He sometimes invited the orphanage to supper, but Michel, minding seven children, found no time to talk.
âIn my view, Eglence folk are all workaholics. For health, rest is more important than exercise. If you donât rest properly, the demon in your knee will only grow stronger.â
âRâreally?â
âReally. If that scares you, rest. Until your knee recovers, no attending morningâcalisthâer, services.â
âGaspâhow can you say such a thingâŠâ
âYou promised me, didnât you?â
Chastened by Michelâs serious tone, the coachman answered gloomily that he understood. Michel gave a light massage to another servant with stiff shoulders, then led the children out of the courtyard.
As they rounded a side wall, he ran into a surprise.
âOh? Taekwon! Good day!â
âTaekwooon!â
Charlotte and Leon, spotting Kaidan, shouted greetings. He nodded, slightly awkward, to the bowing children, then looked to Michel.
âYouâve no mind to rest at all.â
Said by the busiest man in Eglence. Michelâs face lit at the sight of him after days apart.
âGood morning, Brother! Where to so early?â
âThereâs a rumor of a secret gathering under the east tower at dawn. Came to check. Itâs a bit loud to be âsecret.ââ
With Kaidanâs bland remark, the organizerâs eyes quivered wildly.
âDâdid you see?â
âYes.â
ââŠSince when?â
âFrom when you all flattened yourselves to the ground in prayer.â
It wasnât prayer, actually. And yes, some did recite prayers whenever they bent at the waist, but still.
Michel laughed lamely, then, startled, hid his arm behind his backâthe bruise hadnât fully faded. Kaidan had told him to rest until it did; instead, heâd somehow ended up leading mass calisthenics. He hadnât meant to defy orders; it had just⊠happened. Now he was in no position to scold the servants for never resting.
But I truly feel fine.
Luckily, Kaidan didnât seem poised to scold. Michel tested the waters.
âYou shouldâve joined in if you were watching. Wouldâve been great to exercise together.â
âNo thanks. Iâve no taste for spoiling a mood.â
âHow could you say that? Everyone wouldâve loved it if you joined. Right?â
âYes! Come tomorrow!â
At Michelâs prompt, Charlotte answered stoutly; Leon bobbed his head vigorously. Kaidan only huffed a laugh and did not agree.
âBusy?â
âNo. I was just heading back to my room.â
âThen spare a moment?â
At this hour, Barbara and the maids would watch the children anyway, so Michel agreed. After seeing Charlotte and Leon to their room, he followed Kaidanâsecretly hoping, as with the underground vault, for something new.
But the place they reached, to Michelâs mingled anticipation and dread, was the familiar library door.
âWâwhy the library? Do I have to write prayer texts again?â
He froze on the spot. Memories crept up, cold and clammy. Last time, writing prayers had nearly split his brain; repeating that task made him ready to weep. Had God decided to punish him for deceiving people with âexerciseâ? He was about to plead some sudden duty and flee when Kaidan calmly corrected him.
âNo. Iâm going to teach you how to fight monsters.â
Michel looked back and forth between Kaidan and the door. A library felt rather too quiet a place to learn how to battle monsters.
âHere?â
âToday, instead of sword drills, Iâll teach you which monsters live in the North. As I said, to defeat a monster you must know each speciesâ traits. Are you not interested?â
âNo! I am!â
He blurted it reflexively, but suspicion wasnât wholly gone. He hadnât forgotten how Kaidan said he would teach him to write prayers, then locked him in the library to do it alone.
âThis time youâre teaching me yourself, right, Brother Kaidan?â
âYes. Or do you want another teacher?â
âNo. I like learning from you.â
Only then did Michel smile freely. His big eyes narrowed into crescents, round cheekbones lifting with pleasure. Sunlight spilled through the window, warming his face. Kaidan looked down at him in silence for a while.
When he didnât move at all, Michel stopped smiling and looked up in puzzlement. Their eyes met; Kaidan spun on his heel and strode into the library. Michel, without dawdling, scurried after him.