CuRuada Takes Up His Arms
Apr 12th, 2011 by
L Stephen O
“I will take up my arms today,” shouted CuRuada. He pushed through the press of his boy’s troop brothers. Man and boy alike stepped aside as he charged to the fore. There was a heat on him, a heroe’s light that many would remember, CuRuada was not tall, nor thickly muscled, nor had he any beard, but he was, that day, a man, and none could stand in his way.
King Concubar drew himself up proudly, “Do you know the words of the Chief Druid’s vision? The one who takes up arms today will die young.”
“I heard the words, not that they mean anything to me,” said CuRuada, “If I had planned not to take up my arms before hearing them they would lead me to this same decision. I am a warrior, I am a man, better to be remembered for great deeds than to live a long life. Better fame and a name then to die in bed with no teeth. I will take up my arms today.”
Concubar beamed with pride, “So speaks a man.”
“Then you are a fool,” hissed the old druid. he turned his back on king and assembly and walked off with the other druids.
Concubar embraced his son, any who saw might have guessed it, but he was the king facing a war with dire consequences, CuRuada had showed the bravery all his men would need. Perhaps they all were looking to their own courage, they did not know it save Fergus. Concubar called to the assembly, “Let us go to the armory of the Red Branch Warriors, there are men here who would take up their arms!” So saying they all went up to the great hall of the Red Branch.
CuRuada took from the many assembled death dealing spears one thick and strong, too heavy for him, one might have thought, but as he plied it in a most spectacular, hero-like, wonderously martial way it shattered in his hands. “Here, have a go with this spear,” Said Fergus, as he passed his massive, sharp bladed, wound-gouging, monsterous, five pronged spear. So the lad plied it and found it fit for him.
Next CuRuada took in hand one of the fine swords among those that awaited a warrior in the great armory of Ulster. Then he worked his feats, his strikings and his thrustings upon the training butts of the Red Branch and too soon the sword was warped and its hilt crumbling in the fist of CuRuada until it was destroyed. Then King Concubar offered his own long slashing, high hilted, razor sharp, magnificently glittering sword to the boy. CuRuada took it in hand and with brilliance, his hero light plain for all to see, he showed his great skill and found that the great sword of the King of Ulster was fit for his hand.
Then CuRuada made to take down one of the shields from the wall of the great hall of the Red Branch Warriors, but the King, Concubar, cried, “Leave off lad, none of these will stand your rough use, I think.” With a wave he had brought out a strong, bronze banded and painted sheild of ash and oak wood, strong was the boss of iron in the midst of the shield and also it was studded with iron as well. Upon the face of it was emblazoned a red hound chasing a great red deer stag with red branching antlers. “This I had in mind to give you soon, but today it is proper, you are the hound of Ulster now and not the little fellow we called you when first you came.”
Indeed he was not the same boy. Though he was shorter than his fellows, CuRuada had grown from the boy he was into a man of strength at least. With thoughts of war, perhaps there was no-one who remembered that he’d been with them less than a month.
CuRuada moved to the chariots that sat outside the feasting hall of the Red Branch. Before he could test them, Concubar said, “Please CuRuada, will you leave us with but one chariot? Leave off those others. You shall have my chariot and my favorite team as well.”
Several of the other lads of the Boys Troop including Conall, the son of the champion, took up their arms that day. Even Felmid, the lad who’s arm had not fully mended, though he could not hold a sword was swept up in the furvor, “I may not be able to hold a sword, but I can drive as well as any of you with just one arm. I’ll be the Hound’s charioteer. The king’s horses don’t much need the goad anyhow.”
And so it was that Felmid proved his worth to drive Concubar’s own chariot with his best team and with him went CuRuada who astounded the assembly with his feats as Felmid drove magnificently in sweeping turns and slashing dashes with CuRuada howling his warcry running up and down on the tongue of the chariot and casting spears with deadly accuracy.
As so often happens, folk would remember this day as a bright shining, vigorous, heroic, magnificent, and awe-inspiringly brilliant day that all later days paled in comparison too, and its brilliance would make the dark days that fatefully followed from it all the more bleak by comparison.
Armory ,
Beard ,
Bravery ,
Celtic Stories ,
Chief Druid ,
Consequences ,
Courage ,
Curuada ,
CuRuada Takes Up Arms ,
Druids ,
Fame ,
Fool ,
Free Celtic Fiction ,
Free Celtic Stories ,
free fiction ,
Gaellic Legends ,
Hero ,
Heroe ,
Heroes ,
Irish Stories ,
Lad ,
Man And Boy ,
Martial Way ,
Pride ,
S Vision ,
Spear ,
Swords ,
Teeth ,
Tir na Nua ,
Tir na Nua Fiction ,
Warrio ,
Warriors
The Games of Macha
Nov 4th, 2010 by
L Stephen O
A seanachie in brightly colored robes held a crowd of revelers in thrall, “Emain Macha is our home and the seat of our power,” chanted the seanachie motioning to the hill fort above the festival grounds, “Long ago and far away she walked among men and indeed was married to a thoughtless one,” women among the listening crowd nodded their understanding.
The crowd calmed and the storyteller continued, “Foolishly, the king of that older Ulster, forced Macha to run a race against his finest horse, for the boast of her husband, she ran. For her pride she won, for her pain, with child was she, she cursed that king and his men, and for the foolishness of a husband Macha, torn within, bereft of child, pale white and drained of blood, she died . . .”
It was the yearly funeral games of Macha, and a feis, and a fair were ever a part of it. The law was read out, the genealogy of the king was recited, there were stories told by the bards, dancing, tasty treats, good cheer.
CuRuada would not be waylaid, there were things to buy of wonderful craftsmanship and art. For this reason CuRuada had come to the fair. He sought something that would please Emer.
Earlier CuRuada had won praise for his battle feats. He had won the spear caste outright with no rival. Perhaps most gratifying for himself, he had lead the boys troop to the victory in hurling. Though the boys troop won almost every year, there had been cheers on every side for his amazing skill.
From all this glory had come a few purses, money, and there had been no question in CuRuada’s mind what he would do with his winnings. Somewhere among the glittering trifles and baubles was a gift worthy of the woman he loved.
But he despaired, he had been looking diligently for more than an hour and though there were many many beautiful things nothing he saw was a fit gift for Emer.
So it was that Cu stopped his searching and watched a smith at his work. This fellow was different than others, he was short and squat and his hair and beard were black like many a Lokian of the mountains, but what set him apart for CuRuada was his exceptional skill. And there, as the fellow fit the pieces of an ornate brooch together from several seeming unassociated parts, CuRuada saw through the magic of it and he gasped.
At once the smith looked at him with piercing blue eyes a knowing smile on his face, “So young sir, what have you seen?” The voice seemed absurdly deep from a fellow so short, so small.
“I perceive that your work is fine . . .”
“None finer, but what did you SEE,” The smith’s eyes bore into CuRuada’s.
“I saw,” CuRuada struggled to put words to what he had just seen, “That what looks like magic, how the parts fit together as one, is craft.” The dark man nodded but wanted more. Cu continued, “You use no rivet or clasp because each part is rivet and clasp that holds one to another not by magic, but by your craft.”
“Even so,” said the short smith, turning away and rubbing at the assembled brooch. Without looking up the smith said, “I recognize my work on you. That brooch you wear I made for King Concubar.
Cu nodded, “Even so, it was given to my mother by the king and by my mother to me.” The boy saw that the smith looked at him again and would have had more from him, but he could think of nothing else to say.
The smith pondered a moment, shrugged, and casually tossed the beautiful piece on his work bench, “So you’ve come to spy out my secrets, is that it, boy?” His words were challenging, but there was a twinkle in the man’s eye and CuRuada warmed to him.
“Not so, I’m no smith, it is for a gift that I’ve come seeking. You have the best of the best,” At this the boy sighed, “and yet I’ve found nothing yet fit for Emer.”
The little smith tugged at his beard, “No, it is true, you are no smith, but what you are is difficult to say as well.” Again CuRuada began to feel uncomfortable under the smith’s intense gaze. The dark man spoke as if his words were a magic incantation, “I saw you at hurley and the fine work you did with the spear. No smith surely, but no common warrior either are you. You wear a broch made for a king, a prince you must be. Or a god.” Cu blushed, the dark man smiled.
He turned away and ducked down beneath his work bench, “And a fine judge of craftsmanship too . . .” The little man brought out an ornately carved wooden box and with a flourish drew open the cover.
Within was a brooch of surpassing beauty, a true masterwork of the Lokian’s craft. Golden jewel studded and enameled it was, but so much more. For the second time CuRuada gasped, the beautiful spiralings and clever twinings drew the eye deeper and deeper into details smaller and finer.
“You might not be a smith, but you know,” The dark man drew out the brooch and showed Cu the elegant eating knife with a hilt that matched the brooch without being a copy, in fact, as the smith drew them together CuRuada could see that the one was nothing like the other and yet it was its perfect mate, like a duet in jewels, and for the third time the boy gasped.
“beautiful . . .” he breathed reverently.
“Will the gift outshine the gifted?” The Lokian smith asked.
CuRuada blinked stupidly, stunned until he realized that the smith was speaking of Emer. He thought of her and imagined the brooch glittering at her long white throat and how it would look against her hair and the poniard in her elegant hand. “No sir,” said Cu with conviction, “She is the only one who could complete them.”
Nodding, the smith handed the little box to him with a mysterious smile, “And so they shall.”
Bards ,
Baubles ,
Boast ,
Caste ,
Celtic Stories ,
Celtic Tales ,
Cheers ,
Concubar ,
Craftsmanship ,
Crowd ,
Curuada ,
Emain Macha ,
Emer ,
Feats ,
Feis ,
Foolishness ,
Free Celtic Fiction ,
Free Celtic Stories ,
free fiction ,
Funeral Games ,
Games ,
Geneaology ,
Good Cheer ,
Listeners ,
Many Beautiful Things ,
Pride ,
Purses ,
Revelers ,
Robes ,
Seanachie ,
Spear ,
Storyteller ,
Tasty Treats ,
The Gaels of Tir na Nua ,
Thrall ,
Trifles ,
Ulster
Child of Moss part 5
Feb 22nd, 2010 by
L Stephen O
Oatey was faster than she looked. She fairly flew down the ridge and repeated the same attack that had killed the first goat. For some time there was no chance for questions. Lugh kept with the girl and the charging goat and not much more.
“The problem as he saw it ,” Lugh mused, “was too much riding and not enough running .” Still, he was close to her when they burst into another clearing dominated by an unlit bon-fire. The goat looked worse than he did, head down, panting, but not for long. With a deft slash Oatey put the goat out of its misery.
Oatey turned to the stacked wood. Lugh was panting, hands on knees, watching her as she struck a spark in tinder and blew it into flame. She thrust the flame into the wood and the bonfire flared to life. Without hesitation she turned back to the goat. With practiced ease she cut the legs free and threw them, one after another, onto the growing fire. Smoke billowed. “Help me with the body.” Oatey commanded.
Lugh grabbed the blood soaked animal and with Oatey threw it onto the bonfire. “How is this going to kill a giant?”
Oatey stood, bloody to her elbows, hair, sweat matted to her head, and for all that, beautiful. She smiled, “This is for confusion.”
“Wonderful, the giant and I are both confused.”
“We stand over there. The giant is drawn to this, burning meat, destruction of burning. Then he smells us, sees us, comes for us. We run down that defile and as he pursues, mad with hunger and hatred, he dies.” Oatey beamed her pride, “Come, the giant is near.”
Oatey, running like the wind, dashed off with her purpose clearly in mind. Lugh, blowing hard, followed as he could. As he followed he saw that there was indeed a cut in the rock ringed clearing. Oatey slowed and stopped at a sort of edge where the grade turned steeply down. Lugh slowed and was shocked to hear a booming, as of a drum, from his feet as they struck the earth, as if it were hollow.
“A false floor, we can cross, but the giant will break though and his feet will find copper thorns but no better purchase to keep him from falling there.” Oatey grinned mischieviously, “Have a look.”
Oatey pointed down and standing next to her Lugh saw men of the Norfolk standing below. Each of the men was manning a wicked looking pike rigged among the trees in the creek bed below. There were others standing by thick ropes farther into the trees.
Oatey nudged Lugh, “For now we are the bait.” She pointed back toward the fire. “See, he comes.”
The creature was every bit of fourteen feet and frightful in its wrath. It was a man in everything but size and yet this similarity to a man made it seem all the more alien to Lugh. The skin, that had been grey and stone like as it rose from the hillock that had covered it, was now pallid white. Red hair covered its head and a matted beard covered its jaw and chest. The giant howled its rage in deep booming Rus that Lugh knew from his travels.
“Lugh, when I say so, run down the ramp with me. Keep your feet as long as you can. When we hit the soft ground at the base we must roll aside. Do you understand? Oatey searched his eyes and seemed satisfied with his nod. “He is hungry, angry, but he begins to speak. Do you know his words?”
Lugh nodded, “aye, yes, tis Rus. He spouts threats and dark promises.”
“Yes, he is human now, no longer stone. His wits are returning, but we must catch him in his rage. Lugh, you must wait with me until I go, else he may realize the trap. But now he is flesh and we can kill him easily.”
“Oh gods, how can you say easy?”
The giant held in two huge hands an uprooted tree. Most of the branches were torn free and the man thing swung it like a maul with the remains of the root ball, the head of it. With one wild swing he shattered the bonfire, sending its parts across the clearing. Then his eyes fell on the pair. His howl convinced Lugh all the more that this thing was no human.
Oatey’s grasp caused pain, “Wait!” she commanded as the giant charged howling its rage. The giant swung its tree-club into the air and pounded toward them impossibly fast. Its strides ate up the intervening ground and Lugh’s blood ran cold. “Come,” Oatey said and dragged him after.
The track was steep but he had almost made it to the base when he tripped and began to roll. Oatey was already down and rolling toward what Lugh hoped was a soft landing. The impact was was jarring, stunned he tried to figure out which way to roll.
Oatey yelled, “Quickly here.” He scrambled after and was stunned again as he was thrown aside by opening gates buried in the ground. He lay looking up the slope horrified to see the giant stumble and fall.
The tree bound pikes were swinging into position to meet it. Armored men, with copper axes, were boiling out from cover around them. The huge man was pierced shoulder, chest, and gut, but his weight could not be stopped. The pikes shattered, and the creature turned as it fell. Lugh feared he might be crushed, but he was far enough away as the thing went behind the huge doors onto which he and Oatey had fallen.
He looked around for her. Trying to gather himself he clambered to his feet searching for her. She was gone. Armed and armored men were rushing into the defile where the body of the giant had fallen, surely dead with the wounds. He followed expecting that he might find the girl at the center of mayhem.
As he rounded the door, following in the wake of the axe men. He caught a glimpse of the man-thing impaled among a forest of copper clad and barbed spikes. “Easy she’d said, what creature had a chance against her ?” he had the chance to think. The axe men were pushing through the spikes from all sides now. Lugh couldn’t understand the urgency.
Suddenly, the thing moved, pinned as it was through almost every part of its body, the movements were slight and somewhat aimless. A big six-fingered hand rose near Lugh, but only just off the ground as the arm was pierced with many barbed spikes. It smashed down and the arm strained against the piercings. “I’ll eat you all, damn bugs. You’ll pay!” The thing howled its protest. The giant’s face turned to Lugh and its one undamaged eye focused on him. “I’ll pop you like a maggot too Gael boy!”
“The head! Strike off its head!” Oatey cried, she was in the thick of it, moving toward the giant’s shoulders. Lugh saw rage turn to fear on the giants face. It redoubled its efforts as the Norfolk soldiers clambered onto its back. Lugh watched as stroke after stroke bit into the thick corded neck of the giant. Men lost their balance and fell only to rise again and seek to climb up onto the giant. Lugh marvelled at how much damage it absorbed before it grew still, but even then Oatey harangued and cajoled until the head was completely removed.
A ragged cheer went up and injured axe men began to be tended to. None of the injuries that Lugh saw seemed severe. Easy, like she’d said. Lugh expelled a tension filled breath and went looking for the girl.
Bon Fire ,
Bonfire ,
Confusion ,
Defile ,
Elbows ,
Flame ,
Goat ,
Hatred ,
Hesitation ,
Hunger ,
Knees ,
Legs ,
Lugh ,
Misery ,
Moss ,
Oatey ,
Pride ,
Running Like The Wind ,
Sweat ,
Tinder
The Abbot and the Djinn Chp1.1
Oct 29th, 2009 by
L Stephen O
The world was a wet, full-throated, howl. The hermit was at prayer in a stacked stone oratory that did well to stand against nature’s onslaught. The hermit failed utterly to maintain his concentration on the offices. Not that he could have heard his own voice above the wind and the rain, but his mind was roiling with more existential concerns than even mere existence.
Gospels was doubting himself. Self examination is the stock and trade of a hermit, but he had felt the anchorite call so sure and strong only to be cast up not just once, but innumerable times on the same rock, this rock. Far be it from him to question his Lord, but on a clear day his new anchor-hold was within site of his old abbey. Worse yet, in a few weeks, his brothers from that very abbey would come for spiritual retreat to this place and he would have to explain his presence.
Surely this was a lesson in pride, its dangers, its pitfalls, and its inevitable destination, shame. Though he should be in prayer. Though his duty was to praise the creator. Though his life had been rigidly laid out ever since he joined the brethren, tonight he could not give himself to ritual. He felt compelled, as he had felt compelled to enter the coracle, to leave his shelter and go down to the sea.
But heeding that call had cast him here. How could he trust it? The doubt was strong, but the compulsion was stronger. Gospels rose from his knees and walked into the storm. The ferocious blast caught at his clothes, ripping the hood from his head, it lifted him completely from the ground, and then smashing him down hard with his head and shoulders up against the stacked stone of a beehive cell.
In moments he was drenched. The howling wind made a chorus of shrieking across the uneven stacked stone buildings around him. The hard rain was in his eyes, but worst of all, with the wind so strong, he could barely draw breath in it.
He was no stranger to discomfort, but the storm seemed capable of drowning him where he lay. He struggled to gather himself using the support of the wall behind him and managed to get feet below and head toward the gale. He balanced with his body against the wall and with both hands pulled his hood back over his head.
Gospels moved carefully along the rounded beehive cell into the lee of the oratory then crawled to the shelter of that downwind cover. Panting, he paused only a moment, then clinging to the ground and the stacked stone of its wall he made his way around and back into the full force of the wind and rain. “Lord God preserve. . .”
The hermit, bit by tortuous bit, worked his way through a cut and onto the windward face of his stone island seeking the small leather covered boat that had carried him to his solitude. The ocean waves were enormous, they battered the island with concussion that Gospels felt through his whole body as he lay buffeted by the wind. The heaving swells looked tall enough to top the whole island and then they were dashed to foam upon the rock.
“Lord!” cried the monk, “I can’t find it!” He scanned where he thought the little boat should be, but there was nothing familiar there. The wind continued to roar, mixed with that of the sea, but the rain subsided. There was wreckage in the waves, but not the ash frame and hide of his coracle.
“Oh God no,” Gospels saw among the tangled remains of a larger craft than his, a body. The huge wave lifted and lifted, he saw that it was a man, and then the wave struck the island with a boom, sending spray up and obscuring all else.
The sea water cascaded off the island leaving bits of what may have been a boat and there also feebly clutching the rocks, trying to hold to them, was a man. Gospels scrambled down the wet rocks toward the struggling figure only to watch in horror as the sea tore him from the rocks and swallowed him again.
Again the sea rose in a wall and there among the foam was a terrified face for a moment and then all was white. Gospels cried, “Lord Jesus save him. I can not!”
The rushing water receded leaving the man, caught between two rocks by his foot wedged there. Gospels moved closer, but was nearly pulled off the rocks when the next wave turned everything to foam and the wave sucked hungrily at him as it returned. “Jesus, save us!” Gospels took hold of the man’s leg, but couldn’t imagine what he could do to lift him free.
The wave broke over him, lifting him, The only thing that wasn’t water was the man’s leg and he clung to it like it was life, like it was salvation. He was slammed against hardness. Sickeningly he felt the strong pull of the sea dragging him across the roughness of the stone. He spread himself, desperately, seeking some purchase and found here a hand hold and there his foot caught and held, the dead weight of the man struck him but he was not dislodged, with his other hand he clutched at the body.
The Abbott and the Djinn chp 1.2 available HERE
Abbey ,
Abbot ,
Anchorite ,
Beehive ,
Brethren ,
Compulsion ,
Concentration ,
Coracle ,
Djinn ,
Existence ,
Gospels ,
Hard Rain ,
Head And Shoulders ,
Howling Wind ,
Innumerable Times ,
Natures ,
Onslaught ,
Oratory ,
Pitfalls ,
Presense ,
Pride ,
Self Examination ,
Shame ,
Spiritual Retreat ,
Stock Trade ,
Stone Buildings ,
Wind And The Rain ,
Withdrawl
The Red Hand of Courage
Aug 18th, 2009 by
L Stephen O
Two Son’s of the UiNiall, Eremon and Crimthan, were returning from battle training on an island near Alba. These two had always been rivals, brothers they were, and always seeking to best each other and liking it not at all if his brother was viewed as superior in any sense. They had been sent to sharpen their battle skill, but ruth to tell also to see if one might better the other and so be clearly more fit to lead the clan.
The sly one, Crimthan, brought up the subject that runs thick between them, “At some point we will be forced to fight each other if one or the other does not yield.” Then followed a long recitation of all the arguments and counter-arguments that both know well and have heard all their lives, but always they lead to this impasse. “If only there was a way…” The sly fellow mused.
The ship master feared to land his boat lest it be dashed on the rocks and they all be lost, so they ride at anchor on a storm tossed sea. And such a ride, even the sailors, veterans all, looked a bit queasy. The two sons of clan Niall are impatient. Their training and their pride will not let them show anything but exasperation at the delay.
“What if we agree to a race?” Crimthan eyed his brother, gauging him, “First one ashore will rule the clan?”
Eremon sighed, “Truly? A race? Is that a fit way to decide so great a question, I wonder?”
“Isn’t it as good as any? Better than most, for I do not have to raise a hand against you my brother, and you do not have to raise a hand against me.”
“What if we both perish in this fool contest? “ asked the stronger.
“I’m surprised by you, Eremon, I’d have not thought you would give into fear. I’ve never known you to lack courage.” And this he said knowing that whether geas or just willfulness his brother would die rather than have his courage put in doubt.
Eremon growled deep in his throat, “Courage…”
Crimthan fought hard to hide his excitement as Eremon mulled but for a moment, “If we do this fool thing, and I win will you support me? There can be no turning from this course if we decide, this is far too important a thing. I know you think you are wiser than me, but I think you trust yourself too much. I will want your advise, but I do not think you would be the best to rule. Will you swear to support me if I reach shore before you?”
“You know that I will.” Crimthan promised.
“Let us have witnesses then, Ferdiad, Eochaid come witness.”
The witnesses gathered with the brothers, “Let the one who’s right hand touches shore first lead the clan with the full support of the other, setting aside concerns and trusting to fate and blood. Swear it Crimthan as I swear it now before these witnesses, the one who’s hand touches first will rule.”
“I swear it. The one who’s right hand touches first will rule.”
Prepare you then, I will speak to the captain and ask him to carry us closer into shore that we may not both parish for your impatience. Eremon turned to the captain, but his brother was already in motion.
“You should prepare, but as for me I have prepared all my life. Wit should lead bravery. He ran to the rail dropping his cloak, revealing his body stripped for swimming and greased against the cold. With not a word more Crimthan dove into the heaving sea.
The boat approached as Crimthan labored in the waves and for a moment he feared he had miscalculated. Had Eremon taken command and decided to dash the boat on the rocks? It sounded like the kind of direct action that he would favor, but Crimthan didn’t think he would risk so many lives.
The boat turned parallel and the waves crashed over him so all he could do was fight for his life. As he thrashed he felt the sand beneath him, then the wave slammed him into the bottom.
Crimthan struggled out of the surf. His body was numb he was shaking, and his teeth chattered, but that meant nothing. He was elated, he had done it.
“Save my hand!” The shout rang out over the roar of the waves, but the words meant nothing to Crimthan until he staggered out of the surf and saw the ghastly lump, like a fat white spider, on a smear of red.
“That, is the right hand of the chief!” shouted Eremon.
Crimthan crawled to the hand. He’s mad he thought. Crimthan grabbed the cold dead thing and clamored to his feet. An urge to throw the thing into the surf came and just as soon left him, washed away in peals of laughter. Exhausted he collapsed, but couldn’t stop laughing. “I have it!” He laughed and couldn’t gather himself for a moment. “That was a long reach my brother, but I think you will need a new right hand!”
“You always were the wise one, good thing for me I favor the dexter. But a chief ought to have a strong right hand,” Eremon called from the boat.
“I have what you lack my brother,” He waved the grizzly trophy above his head.
“Instruct me. Do I lack wisdom?”
“No, not that. Now I see you are wiser than I am.”
“Surely not courage.”
“No brother, I risked my life to cheat you, but no one can doubt your courage this day.”
“Strength then?”
“You know as do I, you are the stronger.”
“You will have to tell me then, what do I lack?”
“I told you, but perhaps you need ears.” Crimthan could hear his brother Eremon laughing, “You will need a strong right hand, and that I have.”
“Better at my side than at my throat! eh brother?”
And ever after that clan wore the hand gules as a badge of courage.
This is an adaptation or reimagination of a legend that explains the Red Hand on our arms.
LSO
Alba ,
Anchor ,
Brother ,
Courage ,
Doubt ,
Exasperation ,
Excitement ,
Fear ,
Fool ,
Geas ,
Impasse ,
Lead ,
Niall ,
Pride ,
Recitation ,
Rivals ,
Rocks ,
Sailors ,
Ship Master ,
Sly Fellow