Not Like This

Not like this,
it wasn't meant to be like this:
    rain, wind, water, night,
    King Xau staggering
    out of the churning river
    beside a staggering, stricken horse,
    the horse's foreleg spurting blood,
    skin hanging in ribbons;
    Atun examining the mare
    by wavering torchlight,
    shaking his head;
    the look the king gave him then.
 
Like this,
it was meant to be like this:
    Atun, one of King Xau's guards,
    accompanying king, queen, princeling
    on a state visit to Ritany,
    his bow ready but unneeded,
    the arrow of his life
    flown straight.
 
Not like this:
    their visit to Ritany
    coinciding with its worst flood
    in three hundred years;
    refugees struggling mile on mile to the ford,
    but the river fickle, furious, fast,
    too powerful to cross
    even at the ford,
    the Ritan army overmatched,
    King Xau and his guards
    trying to help.
 
How the world should be:
    as it was, seven years ago,
    when eighteen hundred wild horses
    followed the king from the hills
    of the horse country,
    and Atun, twelve years old,
    prostrated himself on the ground;
    the leader of the horse lords
    bowing so low to Xau
    his braid brushed the dirt;
    the greatest day of Atun's life,
    though he did nothing
    but watch.
 
Not as it was at dawn:
    the Ritan commander eyeing
    Atun's braid, Atun's silver armbands
    as though Atun were a savage.
    The Ritan cavalry, Xau's guards
    trying to persuade horses
    into the ford's foaming fury.
    Failing.
 
Nor as it was at noon:
    supports shearing, splitting, splintering,
    the army's attempt to build
    a wooden bridge over the river.
    Failed.
 
Perhaps this, an hour after dawn:
    sixty horses followed the king
    into the churning water;
    stood, stoic, one in front of another
    --a chain across the ford--
    people wading along that chain to safety.
 
And then, repeated all day into night:
    Xau leading spent horses from the river
    into Atun's care (the horses exhausted, cold)
    while others tended the king (exhausted, cold)
    before Xau led fresh horses into the river,
    staying with them, speaking to them.
    Over and over, six times over,
    and each time the king put his hand
    on Atun's shoulder and thanked him,
    and Atun (weary, shivering, rain running
    down his braid, down his back)
    filled then with pride.
 
But not like this,
it wasn't meant to be like this:
    rain, wind, water, night
    when the king staggered out
    beside the torn horse.
    Only the stricken horse
    and the two of them then,
    all else shadows, torchlight, wind.
    Shadows that shouted
    that there were other horses,
    that the king must rest,
    that did not understand;
    what the horses had given must be honored.
    Atun inspected the horse's leg,
    shook his head,
    offered his sword to the king.
    The shadows shouted,
    the king swayed on his feet,
    but Atun steadied him
    so Xau could raise the sword.
    The horse's neck divided on the blade.
    Shadows. Water. Wind. Blood.

(First published in Apex Magazine)