home

search

Ballad of Perrameir

  Burning embers lay

  in the heart

  of the town's torch,

  A massive tower

  pierced shadow

  with its scorch.

  A town of vice and pain,

  Of lies and strain,

  Bellow was its name,

  And darkness was its claim to fame.

  In the shallow hall

  of Saint Gregory's church,

  A demonic painting

  on the wall

  did perch.

  Though just a painting

  in sight alone,

  The evil within

  would show the town sins

  which they never atoned.

  Their eyes filled with horror,

  and their hearts fled from their souls.

  The very mention of sin

  drove the people

  to find new goals.

  “THEY ARE THE SINNER! I SAW HIM CHEAT ON HIS WIFE!”

  They would say

  as they slayed the man

  whose heart filled with strife.

  “ I AM AT NO FAULT OF MINE OWN;

  IT WAS THE CHILD;

  THE DEVIL MADE ME KILL!”

  They blamed the lame,

  the insane,

  and the ill.

  Nothing was satisfactory;

  they had to know

  they were sinless.

  For the Demon in the painting

  was simply monstrous.

  One day,

  upon the break of twilight,

  A soldier came to town,

  an infamous, unsightly blight.

  He was as skinny as a twig,

  though his arms were like branches.

  His neck hunched out,

  and his sleeves were covered in patches.

  His dented armor shined

  with a dark, smoky gray,

  The same to his hair,

  which flowed down

  like thin grape vines in May.

  A squarish helmet

  sat loosely

  upon his bony head.

  And one might ask,

  “What's behind his shiny mask?”

  Well, it's an unsightly look,

  and many would say

  he looked dead,

  With a single eye

  in the middle

  of where his face should be,

  And no tongue

  to taste the salty sea,

  Nor ears

  for the chirping of the robin.

  Truly, he was a soul

  deeply pained

  and forgotten.

  But that did not distract his quest,

  For he would not rest till he smote the darkness

  from the world’s chest.

  Many in the town

  saw this knight

  as a salutation to their problem,

  So, they ushered him

  to the center of the town,

  showing him their unlit torch column.

  They explained,

  “DEAR KNIGHT, WE BEG OF THEE TO RELIGHT!

  OUR HOMES HAVE EMPTIED AND OUR TRUST HAS WANED.

  WE KNOW THAT IT'S THE DEMON TO BLAME,

  BUT NONE ARE BRAVE ENOUGH TO STOP IT.”

  The words fell beside the soldier;

  he knew not the tongue of man,

  For he only communicated

  through writing

  and sleight of hand.

  The villagers were puzzled

  at his seemingly stern gaze.

  As he pulled out a leather notebook,

  labeled with the name P.R. Paze.

  He began writing,

  sloppily though,

  The words in his head,

  Stolen story; please report.

  even if his handwriting was so-so.

  He wrote, “I have no voice nor hearing;

  please bring me to your lord,

  much is to be discussed.”

  He took off his helmet,

  much to the people’s disgust.

  “ANOTHER DEMON, THIS ONE IN DISGUISE!”

  A farmer man

  began to rise,

  And in his ignorance

  he surmised that he would kill

  the knight with one eye.

  He charged the soldier

  with the rage of a bull, but swiftly he fell

  as the knight drew his tool.

  The people looked in shock

  as before them lay the body

  of a man who mere minutes ago was breathing.

  Now he did not,

  for his body was too busy bleeding.

  The knight, now enraged,

  pointed to a young lad

  in the middle of the crowd.

  He pointed at the page

  and made the boy read aloud,

  “I am a knight of no evil,

  nor a devil to curse.

  I am but a man,

  not a product of a villain's plan.

  I come to help

  and to slay the things which bind you.

  So do not be afraid,

  for I am human too.”

  The Townsfolk brought him

  to the town hall,

  Where he came upon the mayor,

  Garson Mall.

  Though communication was difficult,

  The knight now knew

  where to look

  for this item of the occult.

  So, travel he did

  to the top of town’s hill,

  Past the bakery,

  Shops, and mill.

  He came face to face

  with an old cathedral,

  The walls disgraced

  with bones and a horse skull.

  This holy place

  had seen better days,

  But hopefully the knight

  could bring back the godly rays.

  Entering into the blasphemous church,

  He saw a painting of a devil,

  skin like birch.

  As he wandered closer,

  whispers seemed to enter his mind,

  Not so auditorily,

  but like a voice in your head, unkind.

  “THEY SUFFERED WHEN YOU STRUCK THEM;

  YOUR WARS WERE FOR NOT.

  YOU ARE NO KNIGHT OF HONOR;

  I SEE RIGHT THROUGH YOUR PLOT!

  BUT I INVITE YOU TO TRY, DEAR SOLDIER.

  KILL THE DEMON

  WHO TEMPTS

  THE YOUNG AND OLDER.

  MAY YOU BURN LIKE THE SKIN ON MY BONES.

  WHEN I CUT YOU DOWN,

  LET THIS VALLEY BE FILLED

  WITH YOUR SCREAMS AND MOANS!”

  Suddenly, the devil jumped from the painting,

  slashing the knight.

  But with confidence

  and without fear or fright,

  He stood his ground

  from this devilish hound.

  It leaped towards him

  like a lion to prey,

  But for this demon,

  there was hell to pay.

  He lunged his blade into its head,

  filling it with light.

  He bled that devil

  and pierced its body

  with all his might.

  The painting lit on fire,

  as all the monster’s spite and err

  left his mouth, screaming curses

  at the top of his lungs.

  But the knight could not hear

  a single of these tongues.

  After the battle had ended

  and the air went still,

  He brought down the body

  of his fresh kill.

  The people rejoiced

  and looked to their torch

  to find its fire,

  But only ash and soot

  remained upon the pyre.

  “THE TORCH SHOULD HAVE BEEN LIT!”

  They screamed in panic.

  “THIS WASN'T SUPPOSED TO HAPPEN!

  YOU SAID YOU'D SAVE US!

  YOU HYPOCRITE!”

  The people chanted and yelled;

  they wanted his head.

  But this made the knight realize

  there was a loose thread.

  The demon truly harbored

  no power over these folks.

  They brought this

  and snuffed their torch,

  feeding on its lying yolks.

  He walked towards the end of town

  but stood at the edge

  and signed to them.

  And while they did not understand,

  their fates were grim.

  “As long as you keep a lie

  in your heart and mind,

  that torch will never light.

  Your towns and your souls

  have been cast

  into eternal night.

  And while you weep

  your final tear,

  Remember these words were signed

  by the fallen knight, Perrameir.”

  So never again

  was he seen

  in the town of Bellow,

  For now it’s a pile of rubble

  and broken hearts,

  not one woman or fellow.

  But one thing remains

  in the middle of the town,

  pointing towards the sky:

  The torch is ever empty,

  forever left to die.

Recommended Popular Novels