that. A lover of darkness. Yes! Of darkness. For if a man may be defined by what he does, you may think of him as simply an agent, Alfred. An agent of darkness.â
His cell phone rang. I jumped a little. I donât know if it was my jumping or the ringing of the phone, but one of the men by the door jammed his hand inside his coat pocket, then slowly took it out again when Mr. Samson began to talk.
âYes. . . . When? . . . Are you certain?â He listened for a long time. In the early-morning light his face looked old, with deep shadow-filled creases. I wondered how old Bernard Samson was. I wondered if he was telling me the truth. I wondered what exactly he was telling me.
âVery well,â he said into the phone, and flipped it closed. He sat next to me again.
âIâm afraid I havenât much time, Alfred. Things are moving very quickly and time is our enemy now. Weâve tapped every resource at our disposal, but he has had time, too much time, to slip through the net. The rest of your questions, quickly.â
âI just want to know whatâs so special about this sword; why three guys dressed like monks with black swords tried to kill me for it; and most of all I want to know why my uncle is dead.â
âYour uncle died to send a message, Alfred. To me. To you. To those men you met last night. He died as a warning and a promise that more will die should we oppose Mogart. Iâm afraid we can fully trust that message, Alfred: More people will die before this is over.â
âBefore what is over? Why donât you just talk plain to me, Mr. Samson? Iâm really tired and I feel really bad. I felt bad from the first about this deal and I tried to talk Uncle Farrell out of it, but he wouldnât listen, and now I feel really bad.â
He patted my hand, looked at his watch, and then said, âThe sword you took from my office, did you notice anything unusual about it?â
I didnât say anything.
âYou fought those men with it. Have you ever fought with a sword, Alfred?â
âNot a real one. A play one, when I was a kid.â
âYet, despite your total lack of expertise, you were able to best three very accomplished swordsmen, were you not?â
âYes. Who were they? They donât work for Mr. Myersâ or Mogart, or whatever his name is, do they?â
âNo.â
âSo they work for you.â
âThey work for no man, Alfred. They are part of an ancient and secret order, bound by a sacred vow to keep safe the sword until its master comes to claim it. Yes, they should have killed you for refusing to give it to them, but they are not murderers or thieves.â
âNo, I guess that would be Mr. Mogart and me.â
âThey are knights, Alfred, or at least thatâs what we would call them, if there were such things in this dark age.â
âMr. Samson, are you ever going to tell me what this is all about? I thought you had to go.â I felt like I was shrinking to the size of a pencil lead, which wasnât a very comfortable feeling for someone my size.
âLong ago, Alfred,â Mr. Samson said. âLong ago there was a man who united the greatest kingdom the world had ever known. This kingdom was not great in lands or armies, but great in the vision it gave humankind, that justice, honor, and truth were within our grasp, not in some world to come, but here, in the world of mortal men. That king departed, but his vision remained. We are the guardians of that vision, for what we guard is the last physical embodiment of it.â
âYou mean the sword?â
âThe sword is in this world, Alfred, but it is not of this world. Forged before the foundations of the earth, not by mortal hands, it is the True Sword, Alfred, the Sword of Kings. In another time it was known as Caliburn. You may know it by its other name, the sword Excalibur.â
âYouâre talking about King Arthur,
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