Blood and Dreams: Lost Years II (25 page)

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Authors: Richard Monaco

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Mythology & Folk Tales, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Historical, #Sword & Sorcery, #Fairy Tales

BOOK: Blood and Dreams: Lost Years II
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JESCHUTE

 

I went back inside after the children were safe. I supposed they were safe. Where was I going to go except to find another nunnery? Well, I had business here first. I had to help my husband. Someone had to.

There was one guard. My friend who’d once loved me. He was biting into a sausage in the shelter of the archway. His stare was pale and tired. “Don’t go back there,” he said.

“I must,” I told him.

“I’m leaving,” he said. “You can come with me. It’s hopeless here.”

“Yes,” I said. “But not yet. Let me pass.”

“I should stop you, lady.”

“Yes. Let me pass instead.” He did. I ran back to the throne room, but by the time I arrived, all was chaos. The place was full of smoke, and men were fleeing, screaming. Sir Parsival flashed past me, spinning, flailing long chains and cutting men down like a reaper. He was stark naked. His chains hit flesh, armor, pillars, and walls alike as if he weren’t aiming. He vanished back into the billows where the others struggled to get away and ran blindly into one another and (I glimpsed as the stinging, choking smoke gusted open and closed) struck blows at one another in blind panic, as if all the battles in the world had been sucked into this little hall.

Gagging, I slipped along one wall trying to find Orilus. Parsival reeled past me, insanely howling (what had they done to him?) his flesh flapping in strips, laced with blood like a fiend from a fever dream. He smote stone and flesh alike, raising sparks and screams like some blind outpouring of hell’s justice. He nearly struck my skull as I crouched on. I saw dim flames across the hall. All the hangings were on fire. I realized they’d been torturing him, and he must have burst his chains and upset the torches.

My husband, my poor, twisted husband whom I had loved so long would fall to the blond fool, or knight, angel or devil, at long last. Hate had blown him here like a wind. Hate was the fire and smoke.

I never found my husband. I groped and stumbled and would have died from the fumes if I hadn’t staggered out the rear archway and fallen down a short stair into cool, fresh air. I lay by an open door, and when I recovered, I went out and went away, this time, without looking back.

 

LAYLA

 

… and then the cage was gone and there was just sunlight …

 

PARSIVAL

 

I must have run out the front door, because suddenly I was home in bright daylight. I remember the light melting the dark cyclone that had nearly sucked my soul away. I remembered hitting the wet ground.

I woke up, and it was warm and bright. The pools in the mudruts were steaming. I was comfortable when my eyes opened. The sun was strong, and I just lay on my back, weary and shaky. I wasn’t worried. I knew the darkness had swallowed my enemies and I’d been reprieved again. I didn’t know why, but I wasn’t asking the wrong questions yet.

I felt, while I lay there, that I was safe at last, that I would be able to stay home. But once I moved, stirred my limbs and sat up, illusions vanished and I knew it wasn’t over. Everything hurt. Chains hung from my wrists, battered, twisted and bloodstained. The puddles around me were tinted with my blood. Still too much blood for anything to be over. I sat there naked in the deserted yard and winced and let the sun stun me a little more.

The pools steamed, they thinned and vanished like the lost threads of all the lost dreams I’d been tangled in. I stood up. It wasn’t easy. I swayed a little. But that was all right; I’d have a little time, a little relief before the dark or smoke or killers or dreamers or fools caught up with me again. I’d stay home as long as I could and love them all as well as I might. I’d try. I swore it.

Curls of smoke still unwound from the side windowslits and the main door. The smoke looped and hooked into the pure blue sky until the high breezes unwound the dark tangles of stain, thinned the puffs . . . unraveled the last strands until there was nothing…

Then I went to free my wife.

 

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Blood and Dreams
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AFTERWORD

 

When I was eighteen, I fell in love with Richard Monaco. It happened at a bookstore, along the back wall of the sci-fi fantasy section of Oxford Too Books in Atlanta, Georgia. Ask anybody who reads and lived in the metro area in the 1980’s, and they’ll all tell you, this was the best damned used bookstore on the planet. There was nothing you couldn’t get there. If they didn’t have it, they would the next time you came.

And they had a coffee shop before Barnes & Noble so much as purchased its first bean.

Anyway, there I was in the stacks with a fistful of store credit burning a hole in my pocket. I’m kind of an obsessive reader. When I get interested in a topic, I read only that topic until I’ve exhausted the material or, more frequently, encounter a new obsession.

In the fall of my eighteenth year, I was hooked on King Arthur and was looking for a good Arthurian novel. I had long since read Malory, had recently plowed through T. H. White, and would, within the week, finish Bradley’s
The
Mists
of
Avalon
. I knew if I didn’t find a new book soon, I’d finish
Mists
and, like some heroin addict without his fix, suffer the painful chills and palsy of withdrawal. I might even be forced to read
Excaliber
! by John Jakes (and nobody wants that).

Then I found it, sitting on a table where someone had been browsing while finishing their coffee (as evidenced by the empty, brown-stained Styrofoam cup):
Parsival
or
a
Knight’s
Tale
by Richard Monaco. They tell you never to judge a book by its cover, but that is exactly what I did. The cover illustration was all one watercolored line drawing that wrapped around the spine to the back. On the front was a fairly intimidating red knight riding through the forest pursued on the back cover by this bumpkin looking kid on a sway-backed horse that looked like it would keel over dead if you blew on it hard enough. What it looked like was a comic book illustration, and it got my attention immediately. Seriously, the book was beautiful. It was the first paperback edition, so it had the same cover art as the hardback.

Stop reading right now and go look it up.

The fact that, based on the title, it focused on a character other than Arthur, Guinevere, Lancelot, or Merlin was also a nice change of pace. I replaced the empty Styrofoam cup with my own full cup, sat down, and started reading.

I was only going to read the first page or so, flip around and read other passages to see if I liked it, but the next thing I knew, the bookstore was getting ready to close, my coffee was cold, and I had read at least a quarter of the book. I noted that it was the first book in a trilogy (followed by
The
Grail
War
, and
The
Final
Quest
). I went to its place on the shelves and saw to my delight that all three books were available (and all three covers were done by the same artist, another bonus).

I bought them, went home, and read them immediately, even before finishing
Mists
, something I very rarely do. I enjoyed them so much that for years, I carried
Parsival
in my satchel in case I decided to read it on the spur of the moment (a precaution that came in handy much more than once).

A few years later, I discovered a fourth
Parsival
book in the same store:
Blood
and
Dreams
, the one you’re holding in your hands now.

Decades later, I would meet Monaco when I wrote him out of the blue to ask about an unpublished fifth
Parsival
book I heard about online. He admitted to me while we were preparing this fifth book,
The
Quest
for
Avalon
, ready for publication that he always disliked the fourth book in the series. “It was never meant to be a novel,” he explained. “It was a one-off short story I had written for a magazine, and my publishers browbeat me into expanding it.”

Though I now feel
Blood
and
Dreams
is as good as any of the other
Parsival
books, I had to admit I felt the same way when I first read it, for in many ways, this book has little in common with its predecessors beyond character names, and the multiple points-of-view narration:

The original cover art, which to be fair, Monaco had no say in, was not nearly as intriguing as the covers of its predecessors. In fact, had it not been a follow-up to Monaco’s trilogy, I’d never have given the book a second glance: The cover (which I hope this new edition improves on) seemed to be drawn with sidewalk chalk and depicted a generic crown in the lower right corner and, inexplicably, a wolf’s head in the upper left.

Rather than writing a sequel or prequel to his trilogy, a trilogy that for all intents and purposes is about as complete as it possibly could be, Monaco writes an interquel.
Blood
and
Dreams
takes place in the years between the first book and the second. Broaditch has not yet left his family in search of his former charge so he is necessarily absent (though Monaco provides a worthy substitute in the character of Veers, Beef’s father). Lohengrin, Parsival’s son, while still just a moody and discontented teenaged boy, is in the process of growing into the self-centered knight he will be by the time
The
Grail
War
begins. And a middle-aged Parsival, finding marriage, family, and duty to his king somewhat less than his youthful imagination promised, has not yet withdrawn from the world into the Irish monastery we find him in as
The
Grail
War
opens.

Perhaps the most noticeable difference between this volume and its predecessors is the first person narration. While the narrative points-of-view are still split as in the original trilogy, this tale allows each character to tell his or her own story. A device I originally found off-putting but have come to appreciate as much as (and sometimes more than) the original third-person split narrative. This new narration allows Monaco to blend the plots of fantasy/medieval romance with the cynicism of the hardboiled/noir (a literary device he uses to much greater effect in his hardboiled samurai epic,
Dead
Blossoms
:
The
Third
Geisha
), something Raymond Chandler attempts in the Phillip Marlowe stories, but that Monaco perfects here.

Despite these differences,
Blood
and
Dreams
is still clearly a worthy successor to its predecessors as Monaco continues to explore the themes he set up in the original novel. As with its predecessors, this book deals with far more than just a retelling of the Holy Grail story. It uses the Percival legend to examine man's conflict between his duty to his family, his country, and himself. The relationship between Parsival and his wife, Layla, brings up questions of marital fidelity, both physical and emotional, and Parsival’s estranged relationship with his son Lohengrin (which reaches its climax in later volumes) becomes a frank look at how even the best of us can, through our own self-absorption, fail as parents despite all our best intentions.

These are the very themes that drew me to Monaco’s original series and that continue to draw me to his other works. Monaco’s genius lies in his ability to masterfully take archetypal stories and mold them into metaphors for modern dilemmas. Pick a book at random and you will see it, though I recommend
Dead
Blossoms
:
The
Third
Geisha
and his 1987 novel
Unto
the
Beast
(soon to be re-released by Venture Press) as the next best examples after the
Parsival
books.

One final note for those of you who, like me, are obsessed with narrative chronology: Besides the original Parsival trilogy, there are now two other Parsival books:
Blood
and
Dreams
and
The
Quest
for
Avalon
. These last two make a duology of interquels to the original series, and both books take place during the lost years between the first two volumes of the trilogy (hence the name of the duology series).
The
Quest
for
Avalon
begins immediately after
Parsival
or
a
Knight’s
Tale
, and
Blood
and
Dreams
occurs some time shortly before
The
Grail
War
. While both novels stand on their own, if you haven’t yet read
The
Quest
for
Avalon
, then do yourself a favor and fix that soon.

I fell in love with Richard Monaco at eighteen, and at thirty-eight he became my friend and mentor when I wrote him out of the blue to ask about that unpublished fifth
Parsival
novel (
The
Quest
for
Avalon
). Since then, we have worked together to bring two of his new novels (
The
Quest
for
Avalon
and
Dead
Blossoms
:
The
Third
Geisha
) into print, re-release his older novels (
Blood
and
Dreams
is just the beginning, we have plans for more), and to release three of my own fictional works (a collection of interrelated stories:
Emily’s
Stitches
:
The
Confessions
of
Thomas
Calloway
and
Other
Stories
and the first two novellasin a series of Westerns retelling the Arthur legends:
Guns
of
the
Waste
Land
I
:
Departure
and
Diversion
). I would like to thank Richard for all of his help and inspiration over the last few years, but mostly for asking me to write this afterword and allowing me to browbeat him into giving
Blood
and
Dreams
another chance. I hope my nagging paid off for you, the readers.

 

Leverett Butts

 

 

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