Life stories 04/06/2026 18:56

PART 2: The Boy Who Claimed the Sword

For many years, the royal sword had remained buried inside the ancient stone at the center of Blackthorn Castle’s courtyard, untouched by time, rain, and the pride of men who believed strength alone could decide the fate of a kingdom. It was not an ordinary blade. Its handle was wrapped in dark gold, its steel shone even under the grayest sky, and along its edge were strange engravings so old that no priest, scholar, or king had ever been able to read them.
The legend was simple, but terrifying: whoever pulled the sword from the stone would become the true ruler of the kingdom.That morning, the sky was almost black. Heavy rain fell over the castle walls, turning the courtyard stones into mirrors of mud and stormlight. Hundreds of people had gathered around the stone: knights in wet armor, nobles under velvet cloaks, poor villagers with soaked faces, and children standing on barrels to see above the crowd. Everyone had come to witness the final attempts, because the old king had died without an heir, and the kingdom was already beginning to tear itself apart.
One after another, the strongest men stepped forward.
A knight with silver armor pulled until his gloves tore. A noble lord shouted prayers while his servants held his cloak. A blacksmith wrapped both arms around the sword and nearly collapsed from the effort. None of them moved it even by a breath.
Then came Garron, the giant of the northern hills.
He was taller than any man in the courtyard, with shoulders as wide as a doorway and arms thick as tree trunks. The crowd went silent when he approached, because everyone knew that if anyone could move the sword, it would be him. Garron spat into his palms, gripped the golden handle, bent his knees, and pulled with all the strength in his body. The stone shook beneath his boots, rainwater splashed around him, and the veins in his neck rose like cords.
But the sword did not move.
At last, Garron released it, stumbling backward with disbelief burning in his eyes. He looked at the silent crowd, ashamed and angry, then pointed at the blade and growled, “If I couldn’t pull it out… no one can.”
A heavy murmur spread through the courtyard.
Some people lowered their heads. Others began arguing about which noble family should claim the throne by blood, by gold, or by force. The dream of a true king seemed to die right there in the rain.
And then, from the back of the crowd, a small voice whispered, “Let me try.”
At first, no one even turned.
But when the voice came again, the people parted just enough to reveal a little boy in torn clothes, no older than six. His hair was wet and messy, his feet were bare, and his thin coat looked as if it had been found in a ditch. Yet his face was strangely beautiful, almost noble, with clear eyes that did not carry fear, hunger, or shame. He looked at the sword as if he had known it all his life.
A nobleman laughed. “A beggar child?”
Another man sneered, “The sword has rejected warriors. It will not answer dirt.”
The boy ignored them.
He stepped through the mud toward the stone, each step small but steady. The rain ran down his cheeks, but he did not wipe it away. The giant Garron blocked his path for a moment and looked down at him with a mixture of anger and pity.
“You saw what happened,” Garron said. “Go back before they laugh at you.”
The boy looked up at him calmly.
“They already do.”
Something in those words silenced the giant.
The boy walked past him and reached the stone. The crowd leaned forward. Even the guards on the castle walls turned to watch. The little boy placed his hand on the golden handle, and for one quiet second, nothing happened.
Then he whispered, so softly only the closest people heard him, “I am Arthur… and I will claim you.”
The rain suddenly changed direction.
A cold wind swept through the courtyard, lifting cloaks, bending banners, and carrying the sound of thunder across the castle towers. A faint shimmer ran along the wet steel, not like fire, not like lightning, but like moonlight waking beneath water. The strange engravings on the blade began to glow one by one.
The crowd stopped breathing.
The boy’s small fingers tightened around the handle.
And the sword moved.
Only a little at first.
A gasp passed through the people like a wave.
The boy pulled again, and this time the blade rose higher from the stone, smooth and silent, as if it had never been trapped at all. Nobles fell to their knees. Knights crossed themselves. Garron stared with his mouth open, his great hands shaking.
With one final pull, Arthur lifted the royal sword into the storm.
For a heartbeat, the entire kingdom seemed to bow before him.
Then the castle doors burst open.
An old woman in black robes stepped into the courtyard, supported by two guards. Her face was pale, her eyes filled with terror, and around her neck hung the broken seal of the dead king. Everyone recognized her at once: Queen Elara, the widow who had not spoken in public since the king’s death.
She stared at the boy as if the world itself had betrayed her.
“No…” she whispered. “That is impossible.”
Arthur lowered the sword and looked at her.
The queen began walking toward him, trembling with every step. “Tell me your name again.”
The boy hesitated.
“My name is Arthur.”
The queen reached him, slowly raised her hand, and brushed the wet hair away from his forehead. Beneath the mud and rain, hidden near his temple, was a tiny birthmark shaped like a broken crown.
The queen covered her mouth.
The crowd waited for her to say that he was the lost prince. They expected tears, joy, and the return of the rightful heir.
But instead, the queen stepped back in horror.
She looked at the sword.
Then at the boy.
Then she whispered the words that froze every soul in the courtyard.
“He is not the king’s son.”
The nobles stared in confusion.
Garron took a step forward. “Then who is he?”
The queen’s voice broke as she answered, “He is the child the sword was created to destroy.”
Arthur looked down at the glowing blade in his hand, and for the first time, fear appeared in his eyes.
Because the engravings on the sword were no longer shining in gold.
They had turned black.

Tags:

News in the same category

News Post