Gonji: Red Blade from the East

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by Rypel, T. C.


  It was an eerie, emotional retinue that sloshed to the lowland cemetery beneath weeping skies, as the bell tower tolled its dirge.

  After the dead had been laid to rest, Gonji joined Wilf and Garth for a midday meal. Strom was typically absent, having elected to eat with his sheep in the hills, while Lorenz had traveled to the castle with Milorad in an effort to gain audience with the king.

  The widow of one of Rorka’s soldiers, named Magda, ate with them, along with her two small children. The remainder of the castle refugees had already found shelter elsewhere, and these three would be leaving for new lodgings provided by the city that afternoon.

  They ate in virtual silence, listening to the pattering raindrops, lost in private thoughts. Wilf, in particular, seemed rather moody, and Gonji decided the young smith was rankled by the abrupt dismissal the other night.

  About the time Magda and her children were leaving, Lorenz arrived and shook his head in mute answer to the question before it could be asked:

  “No. I’m afraid Flavio’s heartbroken. I had told him what to expect; so had Milorad. But we went. And we never got past the barbican. Mord appeared at the gatehouse and ordered us away, saying that King Klann has no desire to see anyone from the city. And that was that.”

  Gonji groaned inside. Disappointment was mounting for him lately. Either Julian had said to hell with his suggestion or this King Klann was one hell of a recluse. And that disappointment brought another to mind.

  He had been hovering near Flavio as much as possible, trying to wheedle the bodyguard position out of him without being outright importunate. No go. Gonji was getting worried, having jumped the gun and already informed Julian that he had in fact been hired by the Elder. He decided that had best be the next order of business this day. The triple funeral had placed everyone in a pliant mood. Maybe the time was right to try Flavio again.

  “All right if I tag along with you today?” Wilf asked as he mounted up. “There won’t be much work done this afternoon. I’ll try not to cramp your style.”

  Gonji laughed. “Be my guest, friend.”

  They trotted off to the city’s Ministry of Government and Finance.

  At the Ministry they found Flavio, Milorad, and a few others seated around a long table, dolefully drinking ale and wine. By Flavio’s dour countenance, Gonji judged that Milorad’s bad news still echoed in the hall.

  After a few tipped goblets and a hasty judgment of just the right moment of attack—Flavio having fallen into a rare public display of maudlin sentimentality—Gonji eased the Council Elder into a small anteroom and launched the first salvo:

  “Master Flavio, you have yet to answer my desperate request—no-no, don’t dismiss me with a sigh! You’re denying me a chance at meaningful duty, something I thrive on, and you’re making a serious mistake by not following the military protocol bandits like this Klann expect. And look at my purse: a fox could make his home in here! My garments are running threadbare, and I’m forced to live off the good graces of others. That alone is nearly enough justification for me to slit my belly. No, dozo—please—I know you’ve suffered enough morbidity for one day—I didn’t mean that. But the fact remains that this Europe is killing me by small increments. I remind you again—pardon my indelicacy—that Tralayn’s eulogy today might have been a trifle shorter, and the cemetery poorer by one, had I not risked my life in the forest. But then you’d all still have no closure about the fate of the boy, Mark. But...I’m treading like an oaf again on fragile ground. Forgive me....”

  So Gonji went, on and on. He decided that his gesticulation was worthy of the precision of a Noh player on the gentle stages of Japan; his delivery the match of any great European thespian. And in the end, whether by the Elder’s entrapment in his cups or the vindication of Gonji’s judgment, the samurai won out:

  “You’ve just hired yourself the finest bodyguard in all Europe....”

  Lorenz Gundersen arrived at the Ministry, and after momentary bewilderment and a brief argument over the wisdom of the appointment—Flavio choosing the event as an entrenchment against the recent challenges to his authority—he reluctantly paid Gonji a month’s advance on the handsome wage of a bodyguard to a chief magistrate.

  Just as they were completing the business of Gonji’s hiring, the Llorm emissary arrived from Castle Lenska, bearing the surprising news of the impending banquet.

  Excited turmoil and cheers of triumph shattered the mawkish, funereal atmosphere of the Ministry as Flavio read the order aloud in disbelief. Self-appointed runners dashed out to spread the news.

  Two days hence King Klann would throw a banquet in Castle Lenska’s great hall, to which four officials from Vedun were invited. Two were specified: the Council Elder and, curiously enough, the city’s chief blacksmith.

  Garth and Tralayn were sent for.

  In the animated discussion that followed the reading of the order, Gonji saw Flavio’s puzzled expression and realized they must be sharing the same thought: Only hours ago Klann had rejected any meeting. Such apparent capriciousness by the king boded ill, to say the least. An alarm rang in Gonji’s head, a memory of something half-heard striving to surface. It was submerged again as he took keen interest in the delegate selection.

  “I must go, and Garth has been requested,” Flavio was saying. “Certainly Milorad should be along, as our expert on politics and protocol. Lorenz, would you like to be the fourth?”

  “No, not me,” the Executor of the Exchequer answered, brushing lint from his doublet. “I’ve been there and foster no special love for the place. Besides which, I’m quite busy here. It will have to be Michael.”

  “Michael, hmmm.” Flavio seemed unsure, something troubling him. “Perhaps not. Perhaps Tralayn would be the better choice.”

  “Not Tralayn,” Milorad advised. “Her acid tongue would surely cause strife.”

  Flavio stroked his beard absently. Gonji cleared his throat twice before he gained their attention.

  “Have you forgotten your bodyguard so soon? You promised I’d get to see this fabled castle,” Gonji said, knowing full well that Flavio had promised no such thing, but rambling on, “I think I ought to be the fourth.”

  Flavio pondered the request.

  “You wouldn’t have to take...those, would you?” Milorad asked, gingerly indicating Gonji’s swords.

  “My swords go everywhere with me, my friend. And I am, after all, the bodyguard to the Elder.”

  Flavio seemed to be weighing the issue on mental scales. “Would you give me your word that you’d incite no trouble?”

  “Of course—unless someone tried to harm you.”

  “The soldiers may not allow you into the castle.”

  “Should they object, I’ll back out without protest.” Gonji’s sense of integrity winced a bit.

  Flavio nodded and smiled. “It’s settled then. You may be the fourth member of the party.”

  “Great!” Wilf cried. “You can search out Genya for me, find out if she’s all right. Master Flavio, you’re sure the order called for the chief blacksmith? I mean, I couldn’t go in my father’s stead?”

  Flavio shook his head sympathetically. “I’m afraid it’s very specific.”

  Garth and Tralayn arrived together, stepping in out of the steady drizzle. Garth slapped his wet cap against his leg. Tralayn, her jade robes covered now with a black mantelet, seemed to have defied the very elements: She appeared hardly to have been touched by the rain at all.

  Both were informed of the sudden castle invitation and were similarly taciturn about its portent, Garth dismissing his required participation with a glum joke about the tippling habits of the castle blacksmith, and Tralayn disdaining the entire affair as an exercise in futility: “Except insofar as studying the enemy,” she declared, to Flavio’s discomfiture.

  “Klann is not our enemy,” the Elder corrected.

  “I said nothing of Klann....”

  Just then Michael and Lydia Benedetto hurried in out of the rain, breath
less at the news, both still dressed in their mourning garb. Michael struggled to maintain his dignity when told that he would not be attending the banquet, but his evident humiliation, coupled with his almost comic physical state—the broken nose now flanked by matching black eyes—caused most of those present to look away from him self-consciously.

  Something venomous passed subtly between husband and wife when Flavio finished reciting his embarrassingly weak reasons for Michael’s exclusion: his need to rest and recover, to administrate in Vedun during Flavio’s absence, and so forth. And when the couple left quietly moments later, it was clear that there was tension between them.

  When they had gone, Gonji felt the need to drive off the bleak spirit that had pervaded the group over Michael’s loss of face. He flamboyantly proposed a toast to Castle Lenska and the bright promise of the coming meeting with King Klann the Invincible.

  There were cries of “aye” and cheers of genuine warmth and camaraderie, and cups thrust forward in the hope of peaceful coexistence and all manner of good fortune for the city of Vedun.

  * * * *

  And so it was that Sabatake Gonji-no-Sadowara sat again on that beautiful hillside overlooking verdant meadows and lush pastureland, neatly cultivated lowlands and lovingly pruned orchards, and was struck by a sense of wonder and a thrill of destiny in fulfillment. Had he really been in Vedun only a few days? So much had happened. He had risen from the rank and file to positions of influence in Europe before but...never so swiftly.

  And am I now near to what I’ve sought for so very long? he wondered.

  The conviction that he was defied rational arguments to the contrary. And such strong feelings had seldom betrayed him in the past. Soon, too, he would meet this elusive King Klann face to face. He would visit the fabled aerie of Castle Lenska the Unassailable—which had been so easily assailed. He would again no doubt descry the foul wyvern, the beast that dispensed filthy death from the skies. Would it remember him? Would it finish the job it had inexplicably eschewed on that first mad night in the city?

  If it was to be, it would be. That was karma.

  Wilf wearied of the two empty-hand and sword kata he had been practicing. He sat down heavily beside Gonji, breathing in gulps and sweating with the cleansing exertion, refusing to complain of his evident aches.

  Gonji suddenly became aware that he was learning to love this sturdy young German shepherd with the affection he could never tender any of his tormenting half-kin. He thought of Tatsuya, the rival brother he had been forced to kill in the fateful duel, and of Reiko, and of love gone cold; then he felt the yearning warmth as he thought of the gentle, sloe-eyed mute girl, and of the fair-haired and willful councilman’s wife. Then came the nostalgic pang for cherry blossoms and sake and tea and the million details of social propriety that celebrated the beauty and mystery of life. For Japan, and repudiated heritage....

  And then his new-found brother was speaking in respectful tones, almost as if having read his mind, recounting Gonji’s whirlwind escapades of the past several days.

  “And now you’ve become personal bodyguard to Master Flavio,” Wilf concluded, shaking his head as if bedazzled, “included with the delegation to the banquet.”

  The son of the most noble daimyo Sabatake Todohiro stood and faced the east. He turned slowly, marveling at the vast and distant beauty of the encircling Carpathian peaks, which belted the territory like a long-ago echo of the ancient walls of Vedun.

  “Hai,” he breathed at last, “and that, Wilfred-san, is how a man of the East brings order and harmony to the chaos of barbarian Europe.”

  Then Wilf watched him climb the slope to their tethered steeds, up through the sparse pines to a point where a vermilion sun lay engorged on the hilltops, where, from Wilf’s vantage, Gonji’s form went awash in the bloody glow.

  THE END

  of Book One of The Deathwind Trilogy

  THE DEATHWIND TRILOGY CHARACTER INDEX

  Alain Paille, an artist and poet; Vedun’s antic genius

  Aldo Monetto, a biller; friend of Karl Gerhard

  Anna Vargo, wife of Flavio’s counselor Milorad

  Anton, the Gray Knight, last retainer of Baron Rorka

  Anton Torok, a lorimer

  Baron Ernst Christophe Rorka, deposed baron of the province

  Ben-Draba, King Klann’s Field Commander

  Boris Kamarovsky, a wood craftsman; friend of Strom Gundersen

  Captain Sianno, a Llorm officer under King Klann

  Danko, a tanner

  Eduardo, young leader of a band of street urchins

  Esteban, second-in-command of King Klann’s 3rd Free Company

  Father Dobret, itinerant priest; confidant of Simon Sardonis

  Flavio, Council Elder of Vedun

  Francisco Navárez, Captain of the 3rd Free Company

  Galioto, a farmer and dairy stockman

  Garth Gundersen, chief blacksmith of Vedun

  General Gorkin, King Klann’s castellan

  Genya, servant at Castle Lenska; beloved of Wilfred Gundersen

  Giacomo Battaglia (Jocko), cook for the 3rd Free Company

  Giselle, beloved of Janos Agardy

  Gola the Butcher, a mercenary

  Gonji Sabatake-no-Sadowara, an itinerant samurai on a quest through Europe

  Goodwin, an English merchant

  Gornick, a farmer

  Greta, betrothed of Jiri Szabo

  Gutschmidt, owner of the Provender Inn

  Hawkes, an English mercenary with the 3rd Free Company

  Helena, a young deaf-mute

  Hildegarde, a Nordic warrior-woman; a former bandit

  Ignace Obradek, a blind wagoner

  Ivar, Llorm lieutenant under Captain Julian Kel’Tekeli

  Jacob Neriah, a traveling merchant

  Jana Torok, daughter of Anton

  Janos Agardy, a clubfooted militiaman; a romantic poet

  Jiri Szabo, a young militiaman; betrothed of Greta

  Julian Kel’Tekeli, captain of free companions in the occupying army in Vedun

  Karl Gerhard, a brilliant archer, fletcher and hunter; friend of Aldo Monetto

  Klann the Invincible, mysterious enchanted king who has invaded Vedun

  Klaus, an oafish militiaman

  Kovacs, a lorimer; father of Lottie

  Lady Gorkin, wife of the castellan

  Lady Thorvald, a mistress of the king

  Lancaster, an English merchant; companion of Goodwin

  Lorenz Gundersen, eldest son of Garth; Vedun’s Chancellor of the Exchequer

  Lottie Kovacs, a castle servant; lover of Richard

  Luba, a vicious mercenary

  Lydia Benedetto, wife of councilor Michael

  Mark Benedetto, young brother of Michael

  Michael Benedetto, protégé of Council Elder Flavio

  Miklos Zarek, a fisherman

  Milorad Vargo, Flavio’s friend and advisor; husband of Anna

  Mongols (Ling and Hu San), antagonists of Gonji with the 3rd Free Company

  Mord, King Klann’s sorcerer

  Nikolai Nagy, a hostler; friend of Stefan Berenyi

  Old Gort, ancient gatekeeper of Vedun

  Paolo Sauvini, a wagoner; apprentice to Ignace Obradek

  Phlegor, a militant craft-guild leader

  Radetzky, a foster

  Richard, a castle baker; lover of Lottie Kovacs

  Riemann, a German highwayman with the 3rd Free Company

  Roric Amsgard, chief provisioner of Vedun; a former Austrian soldier

  Salavar the Slayer, vicious, legendary mercenary

  Simon Sardonis, mysterious loner sojourning near Vedun

  Sophia, mother of Helena

  Stanek, a mercenary under Julian

  Stefan Berenyi, a hostler; friend and co-worker of Nikolai Nagy

  Strom Gundersen, a shepherd; youngest son of Garth

  Sylva Monetto, wife of Aldo

  Tadeusz, a militiaman

  Tiva, a l
ittle girl in Eduardo’s bunch

  Tralayn, prophetess and councilor in Vedun

  Tumo, a cretin giant with Klann’s army

  Vaclav, father of Tiva

  Verrico, Vedun’s surgeon

  Vlad Dobroczy, a farmer; rival of Wilfred Gundersen

  Wilfred Gundersen, middle son of Garth; a smith, lover of Genya

  William Eddings, an English sundrier in Vedun

  Wolverangue, a powerful demon invoked by Mord

  Wyvern, a ghastly flying serpent; a familiar of Mord

  Yuschak, a farmer

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  T. C. RYPEL—“Ted,” to all who admit to knowing him—is a writer who has divided most of his existence between northeast Ohio and the darker regions of his imagination. He has tilted with the fantastic, in fiction and nonfiction, in most forms that wouldn’t surprise you—novels, film criticism, screenplays—but some that surprise even him. (Would you believe, Irish drinking-ballad lyrics for a Ripley’s Believe It or Not endeavor?)

  Gonji is the work for which he is best known, chronicling the historical-fantasy, European sword-and-sorcery adventures of a demon-stalked, metaphysically questing, halfbreed samurai, Gonji Sabatake. A popular adventure-fantasy series in the 1980s, Gonji was curtailed by the original publisher’s cancellation of its entire fantasy line. Now that the series has been revived in new stories, foreign reprints, audiobooks, and the present Borgo Press reissue, Rypel plans to bring a long-promised closure to Gonji’s relentless quest across monster-infested medieval Europe and into strange and unexpected worlds beyond.

 

 

 


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