Kinda long but gotta share it.

Hugh Niewoehner hughn at ssd.fsi.com
Fri May 23 01:26:54 PDT 1997


--------- Begin forwarded message ----------


London Dying

By the 15th century, the Templar Knights had disappeared, but deep in the
bowels of the British Museum in a case well-sealed and protected lies a
strange memorial to their impact on the city of London.

London of the early 12th century was on its way to becoming an impressive
city, but its life and its blood was the Thames River. Without the river
commerce would grind to a halt as the people of London discovered to their
horror in 1216.

The first ships seemed simply to have disappeared, but the monster wasted
little time in this caution. Soon, many Londoners had seen the gaping maw
licked by flames dragging a hapless crew to its death. It was a fire
salamander, and in the fall of 1216 it was estimated to be 40 feet long with
jaws that gaped 10 feet wide.

By the spring of 1217, the monster was no longer a nuisance, it was a
deadly plague. No boat could navigate the Thames... no raft was small
enough, no ship was large enough to resist the demon of the Thames.
Worse, the beast was growing! The latest reports called it 70 feet long with
jaws opening 15 feet. Our instinct is to discount this absurd growth, and
yet few could impeach its source.

Honorus Prepares

He, our source, enters the story in August of 1217. London had begged,
prayed, blasphemed, and killed in desparate attempts to exorcise or
appease their curse; to no avail. On June 14, four men painted themselves
with the Devil's Cross and proclaimed themselves the Dark Priests of the
Beast. They built a ship and doused it in oil; then, they sailed it down the
river... Dark Priests they may have been, but they died screaming like any
man. On July 28, London sent three virgins (the youngest not yet 13) down
the Thames to the monster. It was thought that this would appease the evil
god: the monster's hunger exceeded even this atrocity.

On August 23, our source received his summons. His given name is lost in his
chosen name: Honorus. He was a Templar Knight and possibly a saint. That
morning, he was commanded to destroy the beast. London in fear and
desparation had turned to their most jealous weapon, the Templars...
warrior-monks who fought with the fierce, perhaps fanatic, frenzy of the
devout. The city had exhausted all other options; the monks were its last
hope, and Honorus was the greatest of the Knights.

The battle was truly a footnote to his preparation... Honorus ventured
into the woods upstream from London. He forsook shelter, clothing,
food, and sleep for four days, meditating on the coming struggle. When
the four days ended, he stalked and killed a stag without weapon or
aid. With the skin of the stag he made clothing; from its flesh he
regained his strength; and with its guts, he lashed five logs into a
raft fit for his purpose.

Battle and Death

Honorus set the raft in motion. He had outfitted himself with the only
item he would use in this fight which had not come out of the forest
with him. A sword of Spanish steel, blue with the sky, lay in his lap.
Soon, he felt the swell of the water disturb his raft: the monster
was coming, yet he sat unmoving.

The beast broke the surface.

No human is perfect; a splinter of the collapsing raft clipped Honorus' left
foot as he leapt into the water. He had timed his jump slightly too late,
but no matter, the injury will not be important until after the battle.

The monster was above the water only momentarily; time enough for Honorus to
drive his sword between two of its scales. The monster thrashed in pain,
turning its exposed flesh from the steaming water. Honorus was lifted from
the water as the beast rolled. He gauged his stroke and leapt, striking the
monster's eye.

Angered and half-blinded, the beast threw Honorus into the river and
grasped him in its immense jaws. Honorus swam quickly past the teeth
into the monster's mouth. Inside, the questing tongue scalded his feet as he
searched for purchase; again, Honorus and we shall ignore this injury for
now.

Once he had braced himself inside the beast's mouth, pushing with all his
strength against the slowly rising tongue, he took aim. Honorus had time to
make only one thrust.

An Interlude: And Who Fought the Battle

When his journal recalls these events, it attributes Honorus' "luck" in this
battle to aid from the Divine. We do not wish to detract from the glory of
God, but surely He will not envy His servant. Is it coincidence that
Honorus' blade struck true to the brain? Honorus had already studied
carefully the anatomy of the salamander a week before he was summoned to
fight the beast. Did Honorus not know that the water's rush against the
beast's exposed flank would cause it such pain? In his journal, "August 24:
And once I am atop the beast and it has rolled from the water, where then to
strike?"

A Solution Breeds More Questions

Two weeks after Honorus was told to lift the curse of London, the beast was
dead. The next day London celebrated Honorus; the town would live becuase of
him.Three days later, gratitude had disappeared.

The body of the beast had lodged itself firmly in the mire less than half a
mile downstream of London. Although it was yet intact (perhaps due to its
incredible armor), it would surely soon rot. While not so great a terror,
the rotting beast would be almost as dangerous as the live beast, attracting
disease and scavengers. No ship could move the carcass. The people of London
called upon Honorus.

Honorus' solution was difficult but practical, and he began as soon as he
had retrieved his sword. He fasted for two days; then, he ate the cooked
meat of the huge salamander and fasted for a third day. When he suffered no
ill effects, Honorus began dissecting the beast. With the help of London,
Honorus soon had all the usable meat and intestines of the dead beast
transformed into sausage.

A Solution Breeds New Solutions

A bizarre solution it was, but a good one. The sausage was soon
discovered to be excellent and to keep easily for very long periods of
time. Even more important, the sausage fast became incredibly popular
throughout England and much of Europe. It began to reestablish the
fame of London's trade after the Hiatus of the Beast.

Still, Honorus has one final contribution to this history... It became
vital that everyone knew from whence the incredible sausage of
London came, and thus we return to Honorus's injuries.

After the battle with the live beast and the crisis of the dead beast,
Honorus took time to recover. Six weeks after he was first summoned,
he was dressing the injuries on his feet. The problems of London were
known to him. As he dipped a strip of paper-like gauze into a healing
salve, he had a thought.

One week later, each sausage shipped from London carried a fascinating
new development: a label. Just as the gauze dried and closed on
Honorus' foot, the parchment around these sausages was attached; and all
would know the fame of London from each link she sold.

A Simple End to a Strange Adventure

In the end, despite all his other feats, it was this idea, the product
label, that survived Honorus. In tribute to this advance, the
British Museum houses the only known surviving label from Honorus'
sausages. And although even the tough gut of the Beast has long since
faded to dust, the label may still be read. If our reader could go to the
Museum and enter the Medieval wing's most treasured collection, she could
still read, in faint letters, the Label of Honor:

It Was The Beast Of Thames, It Was The Wurst Of Thames









More information about the Ansteorra mailing list