Christian Fantasy in History

By: A.B. Timothy

Have you ever thought about what real Christian Fantasy would look like? Did you immediately imagine King Arthur and his Knights of the Round Table? Well, what about everything else?

The Smiting of the Assyrians

The first place we can look for Christian Fantasy is no further than the Bible and all the epic battles of the Old Testament.

One comes to mind that was very fantastical. In 2 Kings 19, the Assyrian army was gathered to war with Jerusalem, and all hope seemed lost, until the angel of the Lord swept down with one mighty strike and slew 185,000 Assyrians.

The Heroism of Christ

Moving forward in history, we can look to the heroism of Christ. All stories throughout time converge on Christ. Time itself is split in two by his coming. B.C. “Before Christ” and A.D. “Anno Domini” (which is, being interpreted, “Year of our Lord”).

His heroism in laying His life down for the sins of the World, paying a debt He did not owe, for unworthy people, laid the foundation for every heroic sacrifice since and was the fulfilment of every heroic sacrifice before.

Constantine the Great

Moving forward in time again, another example of Real Christian Fantasy is Emperor Constantine. This man was the first Christian Emperor of Rome and oversaw the Council of Nicea, but how he got there from paganism is something straight out of a Fantasy Novel.

Before the Battle of Milvian Bridge, in 312 A.D., it is said that Emperor Constantine the Great received a vision from heaven of a cross and the words “In Hoc Signo Vinces,” which means, “In this sign you shall conquer.” He did just that, going on to win the battle and become known as a Great Roman Emperor.

The Salvation of Vienna

Forward again we march through time, this time landing on a legendary battlefield, one that likely inspired the charge of the Rohirrim at the Battle of the Pelennor Fields in “The Return of the King.”

In 1683, the Christian city of Vienna was under siege from the Ottoman Empire, and all hope had been lost. In spite of their hopeless state, the men of Vienna fought on for nearly two months. Until, at last, on September 12, Vienna was freed by a decisive charge by the Polish-Lithuanian Winged Hussars. Who rode with power in their lances and Christ in their hearts.

Conclusion

In conclusion, Christian Fantasy has a unique bend to it, in that it is a subgenre of fantasy with a supreme wealth of historical backing and amazing references to draw from. Time fails me to mention the heroic pursuits of the Crusades, the exploits of the Spanish Conquistadors, or the Christian miracle of even modern wars like the First and Second World Wars. Perhaps this blog will need a sequel at some point.

What is your favorite moment from Christian History that could read like it’s from an Epic Fantasy series but is real!

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The Mad Man of the Tower

Taken from The Shards of Arthur’s Shield

Written & Edited by A.B. Timothy

The room was filled with those same glass instruments Thomas had seen in his dream. They covered arched tables that lined either side of the circular room. Thomas looked around and saw a man in small clothes huddled against the wall near what appeared to be a chest that had been flung open. Thomas recognized the chest and then turned. Across from the chest, there was a table with a dozen books open and strewn about. There was a space in the middle of the books where the sword he had seen in that same dream must have been recently.

Thomas took note that the only sounds were his knightly armor creaking and shifting as he moved, and the sobs of a man in the corner. “You, man, you aren’t the one I saw in my vision. Who are you?” Thomas asked the man huddled in the corner. He was covering his face and weeping.

Thomas heard him say, “I betrayed my king and killed so many of my people. I am nothing, I am dirt, I am the worms beneath the dirt, I am the invisible creatures upon which the worms feast. Oh LORD, GOD, Forgive me.” His ramblings were those of a madman. Not another one. Thomas silently prayed.

“Come to man, the chest is open, you are free. If you wish to atone, start by helping the Lord’s servant in his quest.” Thomas took several steps closer to the man.

“NO!” The man cried. He flung out a hand, and Thomas felt a force of air crash into him. It almost threw him backwards, but he managed to recover his balance before falling. “Don’t come any closer! You are his spirit returned to kill me. Old Friend, I’m sorry, PLEASE HEAR ME, what I did to you, and the weakness of my flesh, they torment me.” He broke into sobs, “plea-e-e-ese.”

“I assure you, I have not come to kill you.” Thomas put his sword away as a sign of trust. “I’ve already killed one man, and watched a good friend die, I don’t intend to suffer the sight of another man’s death, at least not this month.”

“You, aren’t you him? I recognize his spirit in you.” The man uncovered his face and pointed a shaky finger at Thomas. “Arthur, please, return to your place in the West. I-I will join you there once Merline says I have atoned. Go, please.”

“I can’t do that, Lancelot.” Thomas realized who he was speaking with. Arthur’s best friend turned betrayer was the madman of the tower. “I have come for the shard of my shield that resides here.”

“Your shield?” Lancelot clawed at his head, like he was trying to physically pull a memory up from the depths of his mind. “No, no, you can’t have that!” The man was suddenly furious. “I won this piece from you in our battle at Alnwick. It’s my prize!” The man went from mournful sobs to screams of rage in a flash.

Thomas stepped back as the man stood from his cowering state against the wall. As Lancelot rose, he went from wearing rags to being covered in gleaming steel armor. He and Thomas were transported. The room around them fell away, and Lancelot grew distant. The place elongated as it filled with sand and dirt. Above them, the roof disintegrated to reveal a bright grey sky. In the middle of the room was a long railing. At either end of the railing were horses clad in haraldry, one the three bendlets of Lancelot’s own and the other had the mended shield on a field of blue, almost black, speckled with stars. Thomas also realized that his armor had gone from the shining grey of steel to a stained dark black. His Lady Alice’s favor was still on his arm, its decorated white stood out against the black.

Thomas looked to where Noah was standing off to his side and saw that the boy was holding a helmet and a lance. The helmet had a wreath around it that was black and white. He took the helmet and put it on. The first thing he noticed about the jousting helmet was how limiting the field of vision was. He worked through his instincts and mounted his horse before taking the lance from his squire. As he settled into the saddle, he felt a strange extra object hanging from his belt on his backside, a dagger? He did not have time to check.. Noah stepped back, the shock on his face slowly diminishing into acceptance. Thomas looked down the field and saw Lancelot take his helmet and lance from the air.

Thomas mounted his shield onto his shoulder and, when a horn blew, he kicked his horse’s side. The mare started on a trot. Lancelot had begun his own trot. Thomas had to calm his nerves and empty himself again, just as he had done with Sword Breathing. He let the horse, the lance, and the field take all the space in his mind. He called upon some deep instinct, the same that had given him words to say in times past, now guided him as his horse began to gallop.

Thomas lowered his lance and felt the tip strike true. In the same moment, he too was struck in the shoulder with a mighty blow. Both riders were thrown from their horses. The squires ran and found the reins of the horses before they could trample their riders and pulled them off the field.

Thomas was groaning on the ground where he had landed. His shoulder was blackened; he could just tell from the pain, and the air had fled his lungs at the impact. He steadied his breathing first, then began to rise. When he rose from the ground, he found that Lancelot was already on his feet and walking towards him. The knight of legend had lost his helmet, but Thomas’s had remained attached to his head. The difference in fields of vision would be apparent in the fight, so Thomas quickly threw his own away.

The next motion was to take his sword and shield from Noah, who had brought them to him. He flexed his grip on the sword and stood ready for Lancelot’s attack. Lancelot continued marching towards Thomas, now having collected his own sword and shield. Thomas had not realized before, as the mounting of the horses and the joust were so quick, but the stands around the arena were not empty. They were filled with people Thomas recognized: his family and friends from Alnwick and clergy who had ministered to him both in Alnwick and Camelot. Even Jonathan and, strangely enough, Darek. The Steward of Camelot presided over the duel, and his family was there too, including Princess Alice.

Thomas heard the creaking and groaning of Lancelot’s armor as he raised his blade to strike. That warning was enough to allow Thomas to raise his shield. The Mad Knight’s sword bounced off Thomas’s defense.

“Sir Lancelot, you would risk your life for a souvenir? A piece of a shield that does not even belong to you?” Thomas asked.

Lancelot had no words, only striking at Thomas again. This time, the young knight caught his opponent’s blade with his own and carried it around so he could get close and shove the man. Thomas managed to put Lancelot on the back foot. As this old man stumbled back, Thomas saw a vision, no, a memory. He had shoved him like that before. A rage filled his muscles as he began an offensive. “You betray me, then raise an army against me?” Thomas yelled, indignant. “You would rebel against your king who so graciously let you walk, a free man, out of his castle. I could have hung you!” Thomas struck at the old man’s defense. This was not right, this was not him. Thomas was a spectator in his own body, but the pain and the rage felt so real.

He took in a deep breath, sucking in all of the pain, anger, and betrayal. He let them go and saw only a weak, frail old man whose defenses were dwindling. Lancelot had acted on lust, Thomas could recall the story now: Lancelot had bedded Queen Guinevere and emotionally crippled his king. The rage that filled him made sense with that revelation, but it was not made right by it. Forgiveness is The Way. Punishment, by God, inflicted by His church, on both the Queen and the knight, and perhaps a stripping of rank, were due, but death? That was for the Church to decide, not Arthur.

Something broke through his practiced breathing and screamed. “I showed you mercy before, I gave you grace after you sold me for less than even thirty pieces of silver. What did I get, poisoned? Cursed to die away from my beloved home, because of your lusts.”

“Perhaps you had first betrayed your wife, neglected her as her husband, always waging your constant campaigns in the north and against the Saracens. Your wife was cold. I just gave her warmth.” Lancelot pushed back, youth returning to the frail old man.

They went back and forth like that for several minutes. The duel became one of silent ice-cold hate. Thomas knew that this would not end peacefully. He also agreed with Arthur. Lancelot had been given grace twice, and both times he had gone behind Arthur’s back. First to raise an army against him, then, after that army had been crushed, he fled the field of battle, Arthur specifically commanding the archers not to kill him while he fled, and went straight to Merlin in this very tower, only to disappear and never be seen or heard of again. His cowardice and dishonor enraged Arthur. 

Thomas had resigned to the fact that this man must die. He has lived an unnaturally long life, and it must be ended. The pair were in each other’s faces and had been pressing into one another with their shields. Thomas broke away from the press only to grab Lancelot’s shield and twist it off his arm. Even after that, one-handed, the legendary knight kept up his defense. Thomas had his own shield ripped off his arm, the pain leaving him groaning as he fought on with just his sword.

Thomas knew that he alone was no match for Lancelot and was, at that moment, thankful for his spiritual heritage. Arthur’s spirit maintained the combat, Thomas reasoned, as nothing else would have explained it. In the last moments of the duel, Thomas had his sword stripped from him, and he rushed inside Lancelot’s defense to wrestle the older man to the ground. Thomas’s youthful strength and Arthur’s know-how managed to disarm Lancelot and tackle him to the earth. Thomas straddled the knight and began laying punches into the man’s face. His right would strike the hardest, and Thomas knew the heart of Arthur was in those strikes. His left hand would hit almost as hard; those coming from Thomas’s own convictions.

“You betrayed my love for you.” His right fist fell.

“You betrayed the land of my fathers.” His left fist fell.

“You poisoned me.” His right.

“You killed the best of them!” His left.

“You broke my shield.” Right.

“You nearly killed me in the joust.” Left.

With a scream that was produced from centuries of pain, rage, and betrayal, Thomas ripped the dagger from his back and raised it into the sky. Both of his hands held the hilt as the sun glinted off the blade. Together, Thomas and Arthur plunged the knife downward. Thomas fell forward as his dagger sank into the sand where Lancelot had been.

In a blink, the blade was gone, the sand was gone, the arena was gone, and the spectators were gone. The world dimmed as the only sources of light became the tinted glass window of the tower’s room and the torch Noah still held. Thomas was in the middle of the room, kneeling, his fists holding one another as the dagger had vanished from his grip. Thomas looked and found the old knight sitting by the chest again, bloodied and bruised but breathing. The young knight stood to find his sword still at his side. Had the entire duel been an illusion? Clearly not, the old man was full of bruises, and Thomas could feel his own shoulder again, hot with pain from the jousting bruise.

“I have decided you are to die, Lancelot. I will not change my mind now that the dream is over. You are still at my mercy.” Thomas pulled his sword from his scabbard and readied himself to run the old knight through when someone tapped his shoulder.

“Sir Thomas,” It was his squire, Noah, tapping him, “open your eyes, look.”

Thomas blinked hard and saw that the old man had propped himself up against the wall and was holding something out in his hand. “You’re right, of course.” Lancelot coughed up blood. “You were always right, Arthur. All those years ago, your wars were just and true, your bed was cold because your people needed you elsewhere. I conspired against you and betrayed your love and trust. You trusted me with Camelot itself, and I… I failed you. My lusts overwhelmed me, and your wife did not resist me. I do not pretend to know her motives, but you were so benevolent. You let me leave with my head.” He shook that same head and bowed it.

“You are dying, are you not?” Thomas asked softly as he began putting away his sword.

“I am. When I fled the battle of Alnwick and watched my castle burn, Merlin offered me penance after I confessed to him. He told me my penance was to stay in that chest,” He gestured at the chest that was still open near which he had been huddled when Thomas first entered the room, “until the time was right. I offered him the piece of the shield I had taken from you, but he told me to keep it and to only give it to you.” 

“He knew me?” Thomas asked.

“Not by name,” Lancelot explained. “Well, at least he knew you not then. He said that there would come another soul who, like the Baptizer and Elijah, would embody the spirit of Arthur, noble and true. He also said that it would be someone willing to kill me for what I did.”

“That doesn’t sound like Arthur,” Thomas admitted.

“No, it does not.” Lancelot agreed. “But have no shame in that, Thomas, I knew Arthur when he was a lad, he was not always so noble and pious. He killed Sarcens for less than what I did.” Lancelot began spitting up blood. When the fit passed, he spoke again, “Take the shard, boy, and remember the story of Lancelot the Betrayer.”

Thomas reached out and took the shard.

“Become the Arthur Britain needs you to be.” With these words, Lancelot, the four hundred and seventy-three-year-old knight, passed away.

Thomas said a prayer for the man’s soul, hoping that his penance had truly been paid and that his soul could rest with God. “Go with God.” He said. The young knight watched as Lancelot’s body fell to dust in a blink, armor, skin, bones, and blood all just faded into a cloud of dust. At that, he stood with the shard, a much larger wooden piece lined with silver and covered in Celtic decorations, and turned to thank his squire.

“Thank you, Noah. You opened my eyes and saved me from the rage that threatened to consume me. You may yet sit at the round table.” Thomas approached the boy and showed him the shard.

Noah did not even look at the shard as his eyes grew wide, “Really?”

Thomas scruffed the boy’s hair and laughed, “One day, when you’re taller. For now, say a prayer for the dead and let us be off. The Shield of Britain must be mended.”

Announcment: Keeping the Beacon Lit Show

By: A.B. Timothy

Good Day to all! I am happy to announce that I will be starting a weekly podcast-style show on X called “Keeping the Beacon Lit, with A.B. Timothy”. It will be all about how you can stay creative and remain inspired even when the darkness surrounds you.

The First episode will be this week on the 15th at 5 PM Mountain Standard Time!

That is all for today’s blog. Be sure to tune in over on X @ABTimothyAuthor and follow me there to stay in the loop!

November Progress Report!

It’s the 2nd Tuesday in November, you know what that means! Time for a Progress Report!

Social Media Goals

Novel Goals

> X Growth
██████████▓░ 89%
I have reached 102/115 followers on X as of 11/11/25, and am on track to make my goal this month!
> A Weekly Short Story
████░░░░░░ 40%
I have put out two weekly short stories, packaged with the weekly newsletters.
> A Weekly Newsletter
████░░░░░░ 40%
I have put out 2/5 weekly newsletters that will be going out in the month of November!
> Daily Motivational/Non-fiction blogs
████░░░░░░░░░ 33%
I have put out 1 non-fiction blog every day this month except Saturday, the 8th. Putting me at 10/30 for the month.
The Shards of Arthur’s Shield <
██▒░░░░░░ 26%
My goal is 90k words written this month, not all of which will be on TSoAS, but this bar will reflect progress toward that number.
The Early Years of a Great Mage <
██▒░░░░░░ 26%
All my Novel word goals will be consolidated in the 90k plan.
Brothers’ Feud <
██▒░░░░░░ 26%
All my Novel word goals will be consolidated in the 90k plan.

How’s it going?

So far, the only days that I have fallen short of my 3k-4k words/day goal, have been days where I was attending a convention and did not have time to write. I am done with all of my November cons, however, and will be ramping up the production to get my average to 3k words/day, which will end my month with ~90k words written.

It’s all about sticking to it! Feel free to subscribe to this blog to see how my works progress, and also send your email my way so I can get you added to the weekly newsletter.

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NaNoWriMo: The Death of a Friend

By: A.B. Timothy

I, an author in my early twenties, like many my age, wrote my first complete novel with a beginning, middle, and end in the trenches of NaNoWriMo. This event and the organization that sprang up around it also got me involved in my first real writing group in my hometown, and then in my second real writing group online.

For those unfamiliar, NaNoWriMo is short for National Novel Writing Month. The original idea behind it was that local writing groups would set aside the month of November to fire on all cylinders and write 50k words in a month.

It was with great sorrow, I heard of the downfall of the organization around the event. I have been well-informed of the many facets of their downfall, and it makes it even harder to bear. I myself participated in my first NaNoWriMo before I was 18, and to think I could have been targeted (I don’t believe I was, thank goodness), disturbs me.

Then, with the final nail in the coffin of accepting NaNoWriMo submissions written by AI, I knew the organization had to go, but I was not ready to see the idea falter. Thus, I have been pursuing my novel with a similar intensity this month as I have been known to pursue other novels in previous years, during this same month.

I remember my first successful NaNo project was a Sci-Fi Novel I wrote 5 years ago. I was firing on all cylinders for the first week of that project. Now, 5 years later, I just finished a re-outline of that story last month and will be pursuing it sometime late ’26 and into ’27.

Now that NaNoWriMo is no more, many have stood to take its place, but none have been as inspired as the original. I don’t know if I will ever officially participate in this kind of event again, but I hope something crops up to inspire the writers following after me as much as NaNoWriMo inspired me.

A Blog About Blogging

By: A.B. Timothy

“To blog or not to blog,” is a question I remember asking several weeks ago, and today I will be talking about it again.

To Blog

Are you like me? Are you a writer who is looking for a way to up their productivity or their daily output? Well, look no further than the ripcord of writing that is: Blogging.

Blogging is a great way to start or end your writing day. If you start with it, it could translate into great starting momentum for the rest of the words in your actual project to flow from. If you end with it, it could be a great way to gather your thoughts and talk about things that you dealt with during that writing day. Did you struggle with a place name or a character name? Write about it!

Or Not To Blog

Some people don’t want to blog or don’t have the time for it after they just spent all afternoon writing prose. These are totally understandable and reasonable reasons not to blog. Honestly, whatever your reason not to is, it is probably a good enough reason not to, as long as your only excuse isn’t “It’s hard”. Yeah, so is writing! But here you are, writing!

“Do the uncomfortable things, so that when you go back to the things you are comfortable with, you are better at them.” – A.B. Timothy

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Casting an Ever-Wider Net

By: A.B. Timothy

In the pursuit of creativity, the creative must also become either beholden to a larger apperatis, such as a publisher, or they must become beholden to the audience. To catch all of the fish your marketing sea has to offer, you must cast an ever-wider net.

With this goal of a wider net in mind, below I have written some ideas that you could implement to grow your audience. Working under the assumption that you have already established a social media presence.

Free:

Let’s start with some free things you can do.

Asking A.I. for ideas

Something that I have done is I have gone to Grok (X’s A.I. platform), given it my X handle (@ABTimothyAuthor), and asked it for ideas on how I can grow on X and improve my social media presence. I am sure I would have gotten a lot of the same ideas if I had spent an hour googling social media growth strategies, but Grok was able to give me personalized ideas and concepts to try based on what I already post, what I was doing (building an authorial platform), and what my goals were.

Implementing these ideas, I have seen a boost in my follower growth metrics and in my engagements. Not everyone likes to use A.I.

Go Old School

Watch YouTube Videos from Authors who have built a presence on social media, talk to authors on X about how they have seen the growth they have, and read books on influencing people. I say this is all free because you don’t have to buy mentorship programs, you don’t have to buy these books (libraries exist), and heck, you can even watch YouTube for free on whatever platform you are reading this on right now.

Paid:

Let’s look at some ways you could potentially pay to grow.

Verification

Verification on most platforms these days is a paid process where you give the platform (i.e. Instagram, X, or Facebook) money and they repay you with a badge on your profile and an algorithmic incentive. On X, for example, when I sign up for X Premium, my account will not only look more official because of the blue checkmark, but it will also have a higher priority in the system and will be seen by more people as a result (a wider net).

Mentorships

There are content creators out there already who offer paid mentorship programs where they teach you and help you grow. This is not something I have any personal experience with or can give any more guidance on, so tread here carefully.

Do you have any ideas?

Are you a creative with a social media following that is already impressive for your niche? Are you a content creator who has had several viral videos? Let’s talk about how you pulled it off and how you plan to continue the momentum going forward, in the comments below.

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November Targets!

It’s the first Tuesday in November, you know what that means! Time for a Target Post!

Social Media Goals

Novel Goals

> X Growth
I plan to be shooting for 115 followers by the end of November. My goal of 100 by January 1st is on track to be blown out of the water, very cool!
> A Weekly Short Story
I plan to continue the trend, sending out weekly original or edited short stories every week in November
> A Weekly Newsletter
I will have a weekly newsletter put out at 3 PM Arizona Time every Saturday this month.
> Daily Motivational/Non-fiction blogs
Last month, this was tough to keep up with and get my word counts in. With my current word count goals, I… WILL BE GOING EVEN HARDER, RAAAAAHH The daily inspiration must flow!
The Shards of Arthur’s Shield <
I will be shooting for the stars this month. I plan to have the rough draft of Arthur’s Shield done by the end of the month, so I can get the editing process started ASAP.
The Early Years of a Great Mage <
I was able to get my 5k written last month, but with the 3k/day goal on my other project, I have dialed this back to 1k/day(best-case scenario) and 1k/week (worst-cast scenario)
Brothers’ Feud <
I got my outline written! Yippee. I will be fleshing out the World-Building on this as we go when I have the chance

How’s it going?

3,000-4,000 words/day sounds like a lot, but according to my NaNo Archive over on my old Facebook page, I used to kick that number in the but for weeks straight, so here’s to a revival of that youthful fervor.

It’s all about sticking to it! Feel free to subscribe to this blog to see how my works progress, and also send your email my way so I can get you added to the weekly newsletter.

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A Brother’s Death

A Short Story from the “Gifted Cycle” by A.B. Timothy

Richmond, Bodhi, brothers until the very end. One, a stalwart protector of the old crown, a five-century-old monarch, and the traditions she represented; the other, a newly enthroned king of a rebellious union of principalities. There, on the fields of their childhood, nestled between the hills of the Queen’s Spine Mountains of Terra Prima, they stood some hundred feet apart from one another. There along those same hills they had played, they had laughed, they had discussed the mysteries of their reality, and so much more. Now they would have one final discussion, one final battle, though this time, their swords would be very real.

The wind rushed through the grass blades, the sun illumined the field of battle without any needless heat, and the birds had taken up their song, far off, once again. The wind stopped, the sun froze, and the birds went silent as Richmond drew his sword. A heartbeat later, Bodhi had his own blade in his hand. Perfectly matched in their speed, they meet at the heart of the battlefield.

They danced… like the days when the children would dance together to the sound of the birds in the trees, but there was no music to this dance, other than the music of steel meeting steel.

“She loves you… You know.” Richmond’s voice was calm and empathetic to his brother. A frozen stream of white puffed off his tear duct. Richmond watched at least three of the same form around his brother as they danced.

“I know,” Bodhi said, his voice equally calm and empathetic.

“Then why do you not go to her? Be with her? End this war?” Richmond asked.

“My people need me more than I need to be romantically fulfilled by a Terran queen.” Bodhi’s sword sounded on Richmond’s.

“They need you to kill her?” Richmond’s voice rose in offense, the first sign of any emotion in this dance.

“Or her champion… they need me to be the king they crowned, they need a ruler who will put everything he holds dear on the line for his people.”

“Even your own blood?” The double meaning of Richmond’s word caused the first slip in his brother’s guard in the dance that persisted for three minutes. Bodhi caught the slip, and Richmond was only able to scar his cheek with a glancing blow. Taking advantage of this action, which seemed a mistake, would prove fatal for the twenty-year-old swordsman, however, as he felt, between the fourth and fifth ribs, a cold edge of steel enter his chest.

“For my children, I would do anything.” They both sped up to twice as fast as either of them ever had, when Richmond fell to the floor. Blood did not flow; they were in the space between heartbeats, even a beat of their own hearts.

“You have slain me… my brother, but stay with me a while in this place between and hear my heart, hear your brother,” Richmond’s voice was openly sorrowful now, “please.”

“I will stay with you here, for as long as you desire it of me, Richmond.” Bodhi’s voice was stronger than his brother’s, only bolstered, however, by victory.

“Then help me stand and let us dance on the lake of our youth, once again.” Richmond reached up his arm to his brother, who stepped back and hoisted him from the ground. The pair walked south now, away from the heart of death. This was the ultimate fate of their kind: to live the moment of death for all eternity, until they accepted their death.

The pair found their way to the small lake, which had now been converted into a field hospital for the battle, but with the gifts of their time, there was very little blood seeping into the water. Bodhi and Richmond took to stepping across the lake, like they had done in their youth after discovering what they really were. There, they relived memories and danced across the motionless waves of the lake to a music of their own creation, laughing at jokes heard only by themselves and the creator.

Then they rested with their backs propped up by a tree, both picking at the grass beneath them with their eyes afar off. 

“What about that tree?” Richmond asked.

“Oh, the tree where Shona and I kissed… that must have been a lifetime ago,” Bodhi remembered.

“It only feels like a lifetime to us, Bodhi, remember.”

“Ha, yeah, you’re probably right.”

“Whatever happened to you two?” Richmond asked.

“I went off to the army, and she didn’t like that much. She knew about our powers, but she thought she’d never see me again once the government could do its tests. ‘I’d be too important,’ she’d say, ironic. She was right, for all the wrong reasons. I never went back to her, not due to import, but because I was smitten with the empress… then you joined up with me because of your own… gifts. The rest is history.”

“So what happened to us?”

“I’ll chalk the memory loss up to your condition.”

“Humor a dying man, will you?”

“They killed your wife and children… Richy, they killed ‘em dead, ordered you to do it with your own ship.”

“I remember, but duty comes first…”

“Yeah, that’s what you said four years ago.”

“They ordered you to kill your brother… kill ‘em dead, ordered you to do it with your own sword.”

“Oh, come on, Richy, that’s not fair.”

“Isn’t it?” There was a silence that stretched several moments; Richmond broke the silence with a confession. “I love you, Bodhi. You held my heart in your hand our whole childhood, you were my inspiration, my role model, after our father died.”

“I can’t even cry in your death moment,” Bodhi’s voice choked with sobs, “so what are you trying to prove, Richy?”

“I forgive you, Bodhi. I can’t blame you for coming to a conclusion I came to years before. I’m only sorry it took you this long to come to it. How about a pact with your dying brother, hmm? Like a dying wish?”

“What is it, Richy?” He instinctively shoved away the absent tears from his eyes. “In the name of the empress, if it is in my power, I will grant it.”

“End this war… stop the bloodshed, make peace with our queen.” Richmond’s own words were full of sobs now.

“Richy, I can’t—”

“I don’t mean submit to her authority, I only mean make peace.”

“I promise…” He leaned over and hugged his brother on the other side of the tree they had been resting against. “I swear I will see this bloodshed brought to an end, so no brother will ever again have to kill their kin… not while I live.”

“Good… now, I’m ready to go now…” Richmond’s voice was weak and close to giving up, “pull this sword out and… hold me, bubba, please?”

Bodhi could deny his brother nothing now. He stood and walked to his brother’s side of the tree and pulled the sword out, shrinking it once again and putting it on his belt. He fell to his knees and took his brother into his arms and began to sob, kissing his brother’s forehead again and again. “I love you, Richy… I’m so sorry.”

“Know this as I fade now, Bubba… you are forgiven… may you find shelter in her light.” Richmond’s eyes filled first with little white stems of steam, then tears as his heart began to beat again. Bodhi sat there, rocking his brother back and forth, sobbing as he felt the lifeblood pour out of him and stain the grass.

Near a different tree, a line of black was cut in the grass as a split in reality solidified above it. Out from it stepped Her Majesty, Lady Sal of Terra. Her white gloved hand stretched out to Bodhi… “Let us fulfill your brother’s final wish, my lord, let us end this shedding of blood.”

Richmond’s Bubba did not respond; instead, he sat cradling his brother and sobbing into his corpse for an eternity. It took Bodhi much longer to accept his brother’s death.

Happy Halloween, let’s get spooky!

By: A.B. Timothy

Let’s get spooky! Like the title says, I want to prompt you all to write me a spooky short story using your current characters, and enjoy your time celebrating this day if you do. If you finish it today, or just whenever, share it here on WP or on X and and tag me (if on X @ABTimothyAuthor) or tag this post by linking to it!

Stay safe tonight and prepare for November!

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