Children of the Knight by Michael J. Bowler (book recommendations based on other books txt) š
- Author: Michael J. Bowler
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Have a good life. I love you, too, Jacky. Youāll always be my hero. Never ever forget that.
Your best bud, Mark.
Lanceās eyes welled with grief. āIām sorry, Jack. Iām so sorry. We gotta tell Arthur.ā
Jack nodded but didnāt move. Lance gently put a hand to his friendās bare back to nudge him along, but Jack whirled and enveloped Lance in a crushing hug, sobbing into the smaller boyās tunic, holding on as though fearful of falling. Lance held him and comforted him and allowed the tears to flow. His own regrets filled his heart and pressed him into Jackās body more tightly, almost with desperation. Guilt washed over him in waves of anguish as Jackās tears brushed against his neck and soaked into his tunic like rain.
Lance thought of Mark, of the boyās gentle, shy little smile that had always tickled something deep within him; thought of the way Mark had so readily kept his secret, even from Jack. Heād come to love Mark for that loyalty, that goodness, but had never said it, had never truly made the blond boy a part of him.
So he stood, feeling empty and heartless, clutching tightly to Jack, supporting the boyās profound sorrow, and allowing his friend some time to cry out the pain before they had to go and tell the others about Mark.
In The Hub, there was the usual bustling activity of boys rushing around, grabbing items of clothing, prepping their weapons, gathering supplies for the dayās march. A number of them were polishing armor or swords, while others hung wet laundry on the lines or took dry laundry down, folded it, and passed it out to those just emerging from the sleeping tunnels.
Arthur sat on his throne enjoying a calm moment, tossing a football to a delighted Chris.
Lance and Jack entered soberly, Jack still shirtless and tear-streaked, Lance rumpled and sorrowful and afraid.
āArthur, Markās gone.ā Lance announced.
Arthurās face clouded at once and he handed the football to Chris. āGo on and get ready, Sir Christopher. Weāll be leaving soon.ā
āOkay,ā chirped the small boy. He looked at Jack and saw the boy crying. āItās okay, Jack, I was just playing with Arthur ācause I couldnāt find you. Youāre still the best player I ever saw.ā
Lance nodded to the little boy. āThanks, Chris, but heāll be okay. Go get ready now.ā
āSure, Lance.ā And off he went.
Arthur eyed the two boys with concern. āWhat hath happened to Mark?ā
Lance glanced at Jack, but the older boy remained silent. āHe ran away. We found these letters this morning.ā He held one of them out. āThis one is for you.ā
Arthur slipped out the paper and gazed a moment at the beautiful flowing script. He read the letter aloud,
āDear Arthur,
I never met no one like you. You got me off a drugs, which I was glad about cause they really dragged me down. And I know you love me like a nephew or something. But I love you more than that, see, and it hurts so much to be around you knowing you canāt feel the same way. So I gotta bail, Arthur, anā Iām sorry. Methinks thou hast been the best thing in my life, and the worst. I love you, Arthur, with all my heart. Farewell.
Your errant knight, Markā
Jack broke down, and Lance reached out to enfold him.
Arthur dropped into his throne in shock. āThou didst know of his feelings?ā He looked at both boys. Lance shook his head, but Jack nodded weakly.
āYeah.ā
āForsooth, Sir Jack, why did thou not tell me?ā Arthur exclaimed, his voice tight with emotion. āWhy did Mark not come to me? I would not condemn him for feeling love.ā
āHe was embarrassed, Arthur.ā Jack sniffled. āHe knew you couldnāt love him like he wanted, and he was afraid thatā¦ you might hate him. I told āim you wouldnāt butā¦.ā
Arthur stood resolutely, his expression one of determination. āThis cannot stand. I must find him.ā
āYou canāt, Arthur,ā Lance insisted, still cradling the hopeless Jack. āYou got the crusade ta run and all these other guys to watch over. The needs of the whole company, remember?ā
Arthur sighed deeply, looking like heād suddenly realized the flaw in that philosophy. āThou art right, of course, Sir Lance. But at times like these, it be a difficult precept to hold fast to.ā
Jack pulled his face away from Lanceās comforting shoulder and turned to the king. āIāll go after him,ā he said, releasing Lance and swiping tears away with the back of his hand. āI know the places heād probably go. Iāll find him.ā
āIām going too,ā Lance insisted, and Jack looked over at him, gratitude filling his poignant eyes. āIf thatās all right with you, Arthur?ā
Part of Lance hoped Arthur would say no, that he was much too valuable, that he was needed to lead. The selfish part, he told himself. No one is indispensable to the cause, Arthur had said before. Even me.
The king looked grave, his mind clearly distracted. āOf course, Sir Lance. Anyone can carry the banner.ā
Lance flinched as though heād been slapped and punched at the same time, and the blood drained from his face.
Is that what heād been reduced toābanner carrier? After all he and Arthur had shared?
But Arthur was too distraught to notice Lanceās reaction. āFind him, my knights. That be thy quest. Find the lost sheep and return him to us.ā
Jack padded quickly out of The Hub.
Bowing stiffly to Arthur, Lance haltingly followed.
That same morning, Gibson rose early, had breakfast, dressed casual for a changeājust slacks and a pullover shirt and fancy basketball shoesāand hurried out of his one-bedroom apartment. He had to see Justin, and that was that. His ex-wife, Sandra, told him the boy was gone all day every day with āthat pretty awesome King Arthur guyā and the only time she ever saw him was early in the morning. She didnāt even care that Justin was ditching all or part of school most days, along with hundreds of other teens, to work with Arthur on the clean-ups. That had started another argument.
āHe didnāt do anything in school last year but sell drugs,ā sheād told him pointedly over the phone, āand donāt tell me you had no idea.ā
Actually, he had had no idea, not until heād seen Justin admit it on television that day. How had he so lost touch with his own boy? Hell, he knew some criminals betterān he knew his own kid! Rather than argue, he sighed and said, āI just want to see my son.ā
āGood luck with that,ā Sandra had said and hung up abruptly.
Gibson stood beside his expensive BMW parked outside his former Hancock Park, two-story house and anxiously drummed his fingers on the dark blue roof of the car. Heād thought for weeks what he would say when finally he got together with Justin. Heād practiced, promising to listen and not argue and not lose his temper.
The front door opened, and Justin excitedly leapt down the brickwork stairs and headed for the street. He looks so happy, Gibson thought. I never saw him look happy to be up this early in his life. The boyās hair had grown out, and he looked good, healthy, and content. But then Justin spotted his dad, and the smile dropped, the mood darkened.
Afraid the boy would take off, Gibson said, āāMorning, Justin.ā
Justin frowned and gazed at his father, who stood stiffly with both hands thrust into his pockets. āI got things to do, Dad.ā
āIāve been trying to see you for weeks, son. Please, letās talk a few minutes.ā
Reluctantly, but obviously curious at his nonthreatening tone, Justin strolled over and stood awkwardly before Gibson, shuffling his feet uneasily.
āWow,ā Gibson said with a whistle, āyouāve grown.ā
Justin glanced away. āYeah, thanks.ā
Gibson eyed the boyās attire: long-sleeved, black tunic, the standard brown leather pants and leather boots of Arthurās army. āChanged your look,ā he said conversationally, choosing his words with care so as not to anger the boy. āI like it better than the sagging style,ā and then realized when Justin glared at him that it was a dig. Why did he always do that?
āUh, listen, son, I thought we might do something today after school,ā Gibson tried again, ābut your mom tells me you havenāt been going to school.ā
Justin laughed. āGood one, Dad. You already know Iām not ācause you been seeing me on TV. Mom tole me. So just cut the crap and say whatās on yer mind. I got people waitinā on me.ā
Gibson frowned, his temper rising. āYou mean him, that crazy-ass King Arthur?ā
āYeah, I mean King Arthur, a man who done more for this city in six months than you done your whole life!ā
āYou know thatās unfair, Justin. You know I became a cop to help people, to help kids stay outta gangs and drugs because I saw too many of my friends go down for that. I did it for you, son, and your generation.ā
Justin sneered. āAnd how well did that work out for ya, huh, Dad?ā
Gibson glared at him, and then relented. āI know about the drugs, and Dwayne. I did see that on TV.ā
Justin laughed hollowly. āThat when you finally figured it out? Some cop! I been sellinā for almost a year, Dad, and hanginā with the homies for three. Ever since you left!ā
Gibson didnāt understand. āSon, if you needed moneyā¦,ā he tried lamely.
Justin shook his head in frustration. āNo, Dad, I didnāt need the money. I needed you! But all I heard my whole life was this gang member or that gang member and how Iād better never get involved. Hell, Dad, you knew them gangsters on the street betterān you ever knew me!ā
Gibson tried to interrupt, but Justin put a hand on his chest.
āLet me finish, Dad. Thatās the troubleāyou never let me finish.ā He lowered his hand slowly. āWhen you and mom split, and you kept missing your visits ācause somethinā came up at workāalways an āemergencyā. God, how I hated hearing that!ā His young face blazed with pent-up anger.
āFinally, I figured the only way my dad would pay any attention was if I was a gang member too. Then at least you might arrest me, and Iād get five minutes with you while you booked me! But no, youāre such a fantastic cop, you couldnāt even see the gang member in your own family.ā
He laughed bitterly. āYou know why Arthurās better than you and all the cops and all the mayors and lawmakers put together? Cause all you guys think up are ways to arrest us and lock us up for life after we join gangs or otherwise screw up. Arthurās out there giving us a reason not to do those things.ā
Gibson stood, stunned, for once in his life not angry at being criticized, not even embarrassed if any of the neighbors might be watching. But he did feel ashamed, because he saw the truth in Justinās words. Every single word. Heād wanted so badly to be super cop that heād dropped the ball where it counted most. His son was right, and he was wrong.
āIām sorry, Justin.ā It was practically a whisper. āYouāre right.ā
Justin looked stunned, but smiled cynically. āI know I am.ā
Gibson bristled, recognizing that thread of arrogance as his own DNA in the boy. Sandra never had that quality. He cleared his throat. āSo, uh, youāreā¦ youāre not selling anymore, right?ā
Justinās mouth dropped open in amazement. āNo, Dad, Iām not, ācause I donāt
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