Lee Hunt Hunt

Born with only one working lung and having had the last rites read to him when almost dying of an influenza-related viral pneumonia, 25-year-old geophysicist Lee Hunt experienced several near-death dreams. The power of communication and the need to both understand and be understood was at the heart of each. He had already found that nothing was more important than being able to cross the distance between people.

Lee’s interests are eclectic. He is an Ironman Triathlete, hiker, traveler, and an enthusiastic sport rock climber. Lee also continues to work as a geophysicist on Carbon Capture and Sequestration projects, and is a writer for BIG-Media.ca.

The dream of understanding and being understood has never left his mind, and Lee pursues this dream in his works of fiction through metaphor. His novels include The Dynamicist Trilogy, Last Worst Hopes and Bed of Rose and Thorns.

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Screenplay Award Category
Sir Ezra wears plate armor to hide his true nature. He is an Elysian Bell, a being of pure and powerful emotions. His secret love for the Queen ended in a night of passion, blood, and her promise to kill him. When the Queen disappears, Ezra must find her, even if it means his death.
Bed of Rose and Thorns
My Submission

Chapter One. Eleven Years Ago

A loud, unwelcome sound, something hard crashing, jolted Sir Ezra. It told of some new act of violence, some new brutality to initiate a fresh breaking of his heart. It was deafeningly loud, even though it came muffled through the door. His eyes moved from the door to the four Knights of Erle who stood opposite to him with their hard eyes, curved swords, and straight allegiance to the man on the other side of the thick wood of the portal. He willed a tremor out of his hands, hands that wanted to reach of their own volition to the door and open it. The trembling warned of a potential that he could not allow to become real. Those hands that always wanted to reach against will and propriety to the woman, the Queen, on the other side of the door, and touch her.

I never have. I never will.

It was a burning pain, a heart-fluttering disturbance, but loving someone so great, so lovely, driven, strong, intelligent … so perfect … was a reward of its own. Honor was said to be a gift that you gave yourself. If so, it was one that Ezra gave himself every time he stopped his hands from reaching out, every time he stopped his lips from speaking forbidden truth, but it was a painful gift. Almost as painful as love. Honor was the gift he needed to give her, more useful than giving her his useless love, because if he kept his honor he could stay here. He could guard her.

I’m the only one. The only one left.

The other Knights of the Queen had been sent away at the Prince of Erle’s insistence. His supposed fear of betrayal.

Ezra had refused to go, was now her only guardian, and his ears strained to hear through his helmet of heavy-gauge steel for any sound she might make. The armor had always been a barrier between Ezra and the world, between him and her, but it was far from the only one. The door to her royal bedchamber was thick oak, an eternity of thickness, but not half as deep as the distance his choice had made between her and him.

There was another crash and now a scream.

Her scream, but different from the others he had heard, those screams of passion and release that had dashed and broken his heart so many times. This scream was of fear, and it was accompanied by a dark undertone he had only heard once before.

“Don’t touch it,” came the flat tones of one of the Knights of Erle.

Ezra had not realized that his hands had moved to the door on their own, that he was beginning to vibrate again, almost imperceptibly for now, that the potential was once more building.

The knights opposite to him all had their hands on their sword hilts, their knuckles white with tension.

They knew. They expected the scream.

Faster than thought, in unity of mind and body, Ezra drew sword, let slip his power, filled the room with a deep, violent bell sound—a sound like ringing thunder—and swung with all the resonant love and strength and ferocity he carried within himself.

Chapter Two. Eleven Years Ago, Later That Night

“It will be war, plain and simple, bloody and violent, the ending of which we cannot know the where or when of,” said Kay, calm and even despite her dark words and rhetorical eloquence.

“What will it take to win?” asked the Queen, her long blonde hair hanging down like drooping flowers around a tired garden. That delicate, limp, arresting fan of hair hid a darkening bruise over one blue eye and puffed lips.

Seeing the injury nearly set Ezra to trembling and chiming once more. But exhaustion aided will this time, and he kept his love and concern for her caged inside. Enough passion had been loosed, enough death delivered, for one night. He was utterly spent. It had taken hours to scour the palace with his one precious ally and hunt down and execute the remaining Knights of Erle. And kill their prince.

His Queen’s husband.

Morning had nearly come before Ezra was able to force open the gates that had been stealthily locked by Erle—locked by armed men in the hours that Ezra had stood guard, ignorant of the unfolding plot—to allow Sir Marigold and everyone else who had been sent away by Erle back into the palace. Some, like Marigold, had never lost sight of the palace walls, while others had been spellbound by the deep-pitched, ominous sounds of thunder coming from the Queen’s home.

The sounds of Ezra’s soul, unleashed.

Kay smiled unhappily. She had been among the first to reenter a secretly emptied castle, though she was no knight. “In war,” she said, “there can only be losers. Though perhaps we can ensure that we lose less than Erle.”

“What can we do?” asked Ezra. He was sitting in a chair in his now ruined plate armor. He should have been standing. In either woman’s presence, he should only ever stand, but he had lost too much blood.

Why am I here?

Ezra knew why. He was the only one who knew what had happened. He was the only one who had, bleeding and half-dead, burst through the Queen’s door to confront her and the Prince of Erle.

No, that wasn’t true. Kay knows. The Queen would have told her some of what had happened while his lacerated hairline, shoulder, hand and thigh, and knee were being sewn up by Sir Marigold, and the broken metal loops dug out of his skin where they had been hammered through plate and chain and soft underlayers from some subset of the numberless blows he had taken.

“You should be dead, idiot,” Marigold had said. “This artery,” she spat while sewing the inside of his upper left thigh, “I don’t know how you didn’t bleed out. It was too close.”

Kay and the Queen would have had plenty of time to talk while his only friend had cursed him, finished sewing the ripped skin closed, helped him hastily to don once more his scrubbed, dented, grievously fatigued armor and return to his apprehensive position beside the Queen.

“There is a way out of war,” said Kay, looking sadly at Ezra. “Perhaps.”

Ezra knew that whatever that way out was, it had already been decided by these two great women. Both ladies were gazing directly at him. He asked, “What must I do?”

As the Queen abruptly looked away, thoughts hidden by bruises and hair he would have died to touch, Kay told him.

***

It felt like death. But death would have been less painful. Death would have been without the broken heart that preceded the end of thought and self.

Honor is a gift I gave myself.

Gone now. I have one gift only left to give.

Love is the gift you give to someone else.

Chapter Three. Redirection

“Don’t fight the steel, Gilbert,” said Ezra, his words echoing from within his own steel helm. “It has a way that it wants to move. Denying that won’t help you in a fight.”

Gilbert paused, sword over his head in position to strike downward on the thick wooden dummy. “My sword has a will?”

He was only thirteen years old, so Ezra tolerated the silly question. It’s my own fault, anyway. “Not exactly. Come to rest, and I’ll lay this out more objectively for you.”

Ezra knew that he could not be perfect, no one could—not even the Queen whom he tried so hard not to think about—but it was important to try to be perfect. And although he held a lie deep inside himself, although he hid his feelings every moment of every day, he knew that the truth should be spoken whenever possible. Even against such romantic half-truths as personifying a weapon. Fairy tales would help no one.

“Your sword has no will. There is no magic in the world.”

None without a cost.

“Magical swords are not real—but momentum, mass, weight, speed, direction are all real things that you must understand and know how to make use of. How you change the direction of your blade is affected by its balance, and your balance by your feet, your shoulders, and your wrists. To move from one direction to another, quickly and with killing force, must be done correctly.”

“Or you will be very unhappy, like our knight and your master, Sir Ezra!” came the bright girlish tones of Rachel, Lady Kristen Province’s youngest daughter, from the edge of the practice ring.

“I’m perfectly happy,” Ezra lied, then regretted letting himself be baited by her. She had been—bit by bit, through her increasingly aggressive attention—forcing his lies to the surface. Rachel was older than Gilbert by more than four years, but about the same height, though she appeared much more the finished of the two. She was a woman, and Gilbert was a boy. She had very long dark hair. Beautiful hair, Ezra had to admit, and was fit and strong in the way of active youth. It was her bright eyes that were the problem now. Eyes that followed him.

Ezra checked that his many layers of armor were strapped tight about himself.

“I see you are dressed for training,” Ezra said to her. These words, at least, he could speak truthfully. She wore long dark hose and one of her old tunics with an additional over-the-shoulder padded piece. “Throw on a vest and a leather skirt and join us.” Though paying attention to her training when he first arrived at the Province estate eleven years past had likely been the mistake that initiated her infatuation with him, he could hardly deny her interest in sword combat now.

It would have been wrong to do so.

He turned back to Gilbert, who was waiting, eyes flickering between Ezra and Rachel. Gilbert had a huge bent nose that would have put some trainers off; it was proof that accidents happened to the boy. And they might happen again. But Ezra had often thought that others jumped too quickly to conclusions. No one knew what might come of the boy, just as being kind to an ignored youngest daughter should never be viewed as a mistake.

Kindness and love are never a mistake.

Ezra still believed that, even if it had resulted in misdirected affection from Rachel and a deeper love in him that he was forced to hide.

“Where were we, Gilbert?” he asked, seeing that Rachel had donned the vest and skirt. “Helm,” he said to her and gestured to the leather-lined helmets on the rack to her right.

“Uh,” Gilbert said, “don’t fight the movement of the metal?”

“Yes.”

“There’s something I don’t understand about that,” the boy said.

“Okay.”

“Well, if there are right and wrong ways of redirecting—”

“Let’s say better and worse, faster or slower,” Ezra said.

“Right. Well, if these ways are known, won’t it make us predictable?”

Ezra did not rush to answer such a good question. The boy might have more potential than I thought. It was a naive question, but also one for a wise master to heed. “It could, Gilbert,” Ezra admitted. “You might say that we can be anticipated and manipulated by our tendencies. The tendencies of physics, scholars would say. But there are enough movements and transitions between movements to confound prediction. Especially once you master the basics and can move on to style and expression.”

“Can we spar?” asked Rachel.

She wants to beat Gilbert in front of me.

“Let’s try a new form first.” An old form came to mind, one he had used once in real combat. “This is called Carried by the Cyclone.”

“Ohhh, I like the sound of it,” said Rachel with a sly edge. Gilbert looked away from her.

“I will demonstrate,” said Ezra. The cyclone form was arguably not well suited to either of his students. It required tremendous amounts of energy and balance, but it was good for building both, and also … it might help him. He had been called out quite accurately by Rachel.

He was unhappy.

He took a long slow breath and deliberately stilled his mind. She had told him he must, all those years ago, and she had been correct. The only escape from the bottomless well he found himself in, the hole in his soul caused by his banishment from her, was to still his mind.

Without judgment, he took in his surroundings. A man who wanted to ride a cyclone should know what was within reach. He was positioned inside a set of stone buildings, in a ring of sand, bounded by a cobbled square with equipment and weapons stacked in wooden shelves and racks. A tall, open building stood adjacent. A few men and women trained inside, Ezra’s older students and members of the household guard, all pupils in one way or another. The shadow of the Province castle fell across the building opposite the square. This was where Lady Kristen and her daughters lived, where the business of the earldom was conducted.

Of all the stone buildings in the compound, Ezra’s private residence was farthest from the castle. It was set apart from the others, nearest to the gate, farthest from people, as Ezra had requested when Lady Kristen had taken him in. This was where he had lived for eleven years, though his idea of home was elsewhere, along with his heart.

Ezra drew his sword and set himself in motion, stepping and thrusting as the form dictated, in a set of movements not unlike a dance, but with a very different meaning. The cyclone form involved many spinning moves, spinning blocks with a special hardened and flattened vambrace, and spinning attacks in which incredible retracted speed and torque were translated into terrific rotational velocity at a suddenly extended sword point.

A stilled mind was one of two things that protected Ezra from the pain and unhappiness of his banishment by the Queen. The other was its diametric opposite and incongruous equivalent: a mind perfectly and fully occupied. Such perfect attention also left no room for pain or obsession.

Only when perfectly still or completely focused, did Ezra escape the fact and consequence that his heart beat only for the woman who had sacrificed him.

He spun his sword in a tight whirl about his wrists, within a spin about his shoulders, within a rotation about his hips. There was a joy in it, an unwinding of tension and a release of kinetic energy. A high-pitched whirring followed the sword’s blurring motion, splitting the quiet morning air. It sounded like a sharp birdcall or the wind of a storm through a pipe.

It was the closest to a chime that Ezra could allow himself, emanating partly from his being and partly from the incredible angular momentum of the sharpened metal. It was an expression of joy in the world, a release of power and freedom, which the man, encased so tightly in layers of metal, so badly needed.

The form built to this release nine times, one for each of the silent, dead gods. Nine times, Ezra split the air, parted its heavy stillness, and brought it to singing life.

Rachel and Gilbert both clapped when he finished, as did the guardsmen who had come out to see what could possibly be producing such a piercing, lonely, haunting sound.

The air shimmers around a knight in armor as he faces a closed and locked castle.