The dead of Britannia have always been a restless lot. Why this should be I
do not know, but I have sometimes thought that the vitality of the land
itself is so great, it bestirs the memory of itself even in lifeless
flesh.
Be that as it may, my final tale
concerns itself with a certain town, where the inhabitants of the
graveyard had forgotten their proper decorum. Nor was this a mere
aimless revenant or two, but a veritable plague of lifeless stalkers.
Most every night was disturbed by a squad or company of the dead making
riot, for the creatures did not wander aimlessly, but set themselves
about the business of terror and destruction with a methodical
efficiency that demanded a malign will behind their excursions.
It was obvious to the villagers
that this was not a problem to be dealt with by a few torches and
pitchforks, or a cantrip or two. So they sent to Britain to pray the
King for aid.
Their call was answered most
expeditiously, for Lord British bade none other than Shamino the Ranger,
first hero of Britannia and best and oldest friend to His Majesty, to
deal with the situation.
Shamino soon arrived, and set
immediately about his work with sword, bow and shield. The ranks of the
shambling revenants he quickly reduced to a few small piles of
putrescent but inanimate flesh. With his way thus cleared, he was able
to enter the graveyard itself, where he discovered a newly opened
tunnel, which lead to an ancient catacomb far below.
In that dank and haunted place,
Shamino found the source of the trouble, a lich, an ancient and potent
spirit from the First Age of Darkness. For centuries the evil thing had
lain dormant in its stygian tomb, but of late it had bestirred itself,
and in its ancient malice had begun the current harassment of the living
above.
So Shamino found the thing, and
there he slew it, in a night-long battle of blade and spell. And if you
think I pass over such an epic battle with undue haste, know that it is
merely the prelude to my tale proper.
With the evil wight dead, Shamino
elected to remain in the town for a while, to recover from his battle,
and to insure that the restless evil was indeed put down.
It was well he did, for scarce two
nights after the lich's most recent and final death, a lad of the
village was brought before Shamino in a pitiable state of terror and
nervous exhaustion.
When the lad had calmed enough to
speak at last, he told how he had gone to pass an hour in the graveyard
on a dare, thinking the evil all departed. But he had scarce arrived
when he was set upon, not by crawling corpses, but by a howling cloud of
spirits. He could not understand their gibberings, but so great was the
force of the despair and desperation in their voices that he vouchsafed
he would have far preferred to face an honest undead body.
Shamino was not overly surprised
to discover that the lich's malice had stirred up forces that its
destruction had failed to quell, so he spent the day in preparation, and
that night took himself again to the graveyard, an hour or so before
midnight.
He was through the gate scarcely a
minute when he was set upon by the cloud of ghosts, and the sorrow of
their incoherent wails and moans tore at his very soul. He sensed no
evil in the things, but only a terrible, lonely despair that raked his
soul and mind.
But Shamino was made of sterner
stuff than the village lad, and he shut the howls out of his mind (for
the things had no power to touch him physically), and made certain
preparations. At last through arts that he knew, the spirits were
quieted (albeit temporarily), and held in that place before Shamino.
Then Shamino indicated the first
of the spirits, and bade it, "You there, speak now, and tell me
plainly why you haunt the night."
"In my life," the spirit
sighed, "I was rich, and gloried in my riches, but did nothing to
use them to help those around me, and now I see my life meant
nothing."
"Your pride was great,"
said Shamino, "but where is it now? Look about you, you rest in a
grave no finer than many of the poor folk you ignored. Rest now, and
take comfort in the Humility of death."
And the spirit heard Shamino's
words and, acknowledging them, vanished away.
(Now it may seem odd that a
restless spirit would be banished at a mere word, but Shamino the Ranger
was no common man, and when he spoke on matters of Spirituality, he
spoke with Authority, so that creatures of the supernatural planes might
be compelled by his very words.)
Then the next spirit spoke, and it
said, "In my life I put on airs, telling folk that I was a hero, or
a noble, or possessed skills that were not mine, hoping thereby to find
friendship and fortune. And I see now that everything I gained falsely
was itself false."
"And yet," replied
Shamino, "you still take on the seeming of that which you are not,
for you pass among the living and trouble their lives. Put dishonesty
behind you and be what you are. Rest now in the Honesty of death."
"In my life," said the
third spirit in its turn, "I thought that I was a wolf among men,
and the weak were my prey. I took the little that they had, and thereby
accrued much for myself. But now I mourn, for I was most bitterly
hated."
"Why then do you still
trouble the living?" asked Shamino. You regret your lack of
Compassion in life, but I tell you to rest, and thereby learn Compassion
from death, which ends all pain and sorrow, even thine."
"In my life," the fourth
spirit began, "I ran from danger, while those I cared for stood and
fell. Now I see how much finer it would have been to have died in the
glory and comfort of their companionship, than to have gone on to the
guilty and futile life which I led."
"And you are still
running," said Shamino, not without kindness. "Let rest your
fear, and Valiantly embrace the mystery of death. Your friends and loved
ones await you."
The fifth spirit took up the
litany, saying, "In my life, I stood up in defense of the guilty,
to gain by their friendship, and spoke out against the innocent when so
bidden by my masters. Can there be any payment now for the wrong I
did?"
"You seek restitution for
your deeds, but you flee the judge which all men must face. If you
hunger for Justice, you will find the Justice of death, which is the
proper sentence of all in the end."
"I was a miser in life,"
said the sixth, "And I sat alone with my wealth all my days. I did
nothing of importance to anyone, not even providing honest work to those
whom I might have hired, for I valued my gold above their service. Where
is my gold now?"
"Gold indeed is forever
beyond your reach, but there remains one Sacrifice within your power to
make, and that is to Sacrifice this sad unlife to death, which patiently
awaits your gift."
Now only two spirits remained,
swirling sadly in the moonlight, and at last one was moved to speak.
"In my life, I served a man
who loved me, and valued my service and friendship above all else. I
betrayed him, seeking greater wealth and power. Now I see that I gained
nothing and lost all, for those I came to serve saw me as only the worm
which I was."
"The evil you did was very
great," Shamino said gravely, "And I cannot offer you
absolution. But see now that one final obligation awaits you, which you
have yet to fulfill. Will you not Honorably go through the final veil of
death?
Then only final ghost drifted on
the breeze, and seemed little inclined to speech, until at last Shamino
broke the silence.
"Speak, o spirit, and tell me
of the sin which torments you in your unnatural waking."
"I have not sinned," the
ghost replied, "for I honor the Virtues to the best of my
ability."
"Be that as it may, why then
do you thus linger after your death?" Shamino inquired.
"I am no dead ghost,"
the thing replied, "but have been cast out of my own body by the
evil thing that formerly haunted this place. Pray reunite me with my
body, that I may resume my rightful span of corporeal years."
Now such things are not unknown,
but to the keen sight of Shamino, the difference between a living spirit
and an unliving shade is as clear as the difference between a strong
young oak and an ancient rotting stump.
"You are mistaken,
friend," Shamino said with all gentleness. "You are truly
dead, my word and oath on that. You must now go to your final rest, and
cease to trouble the living."
"You lie," howled the
spirit, "For I move and see and speak. How then can I be dead? I
live! I live!" Then it tried to break free of Shamino's binding and
assail him, but the wards were well-wrought, and the dismissal of the
other spirits had far weakened the ghost's unnatural energies.
Then Shamino knew what kept the
spirit bound to earth, for it is the nature of the Spiritual to see the
reality of things that are hidden from the less gifted. This creature
was most damnably cursed, for its curse was of its own making. Where the
other ghosts had been tormented by the knowledge of their sin, this one
tortured itself by withholding knowledge. The ghost lied to itself,
cowardly running from death, hating itself and its true nature. In this,
it rejected all three of the great Principles, which together compose
the ultimate Virtue of Spirituality.
Shamino stood for awhile,
regarding the pathetic thing, and at last he spoke. "I can do
nothing for you. Go about your existence, if such it can be
called." And he dispelled his wards and left that place forever.
As for the ghost, it haunted the
graveyard thereafter. It no longer had the power to terrorize the
living, but only lurked about, moaning and sighing to itself in the
darkness of the night, and of its own delusion.
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