David Morrell
The Fifth Profession
© 1990
“I don't understand you,” said Alice. “It's dreadfully confusing.”
“That's the effect of living backwards,” the Queen said kindly. “It always makes one a little giddy at first.”
“Living backwards!” Alice repeated in great astonishment. “I never heard of such a thing!”
“But there's one great advantage in it, that one's memory works both ways.”
“I'm sure
“It's a poor sort of memory that only works backward,” the Queen remarked.
– LEWISCARROLL
The Way of the bodyguard is resolute acceptance of death.
– MIYAMOTOMUSASHI
a seventeenth-century samurai
PROLOGUE. PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE
No single historical event marks the origin of Savage's profession. The skill to which he devoted himself has its antecedents prior to fact in the haze of myth. At the start, there were hunters, then farmers, then with something to be gained by barter, prostitutes and politicians. Given some debate about precedence, those are the first four human endeavors.
But as soon as something can be gained, it must also be protected. Hence Savage's-the
When the Anglo-Saxons invaded Britain four hundred years after Christ, they brought with them a Germanic code of absolute loyalty to a tribal chieftain. In its ultimate interpretation, this code required a chieftain's retainers or
Scandinavian pirates, having raided ports along the eastern coast of Britain, camped on an island that during low tide was linked to the shore by a narrow causeway. The local British chieftain, Birhtnoth, led his faithful
Swords flashed. Blood soaked the causeway. As the battle intensified, one of Birhtnoth's apprentice soldiers turned cowardly and fled. Others supposed that the retreating figure was Birhtnoth himself and fled as well. Only Birhtnoth and his bodyguards remained.
A javelin struck him. He yanked it out and stabbed his assailant. A Viking ax cut off his sword arm. Helpless, he was slashed to pieces. But although Birhtnoth no longer ruled, his faithful
The original Anglo-Saxon document that describes their heroic defeat concludes in this manner:
Godric often let his spear fly, thrusting his slaughter-shaft toward the Vikings. Bravely he advanced among his brethren, hewed and laid low till he died in the struggle. He was not that Godric who ran from the battle.
Those two Godrics represent the principal conflict in Savage's profession. To protect was the mandate of the
In Japan, the equivalent of the
Three
But the remaining
To draw a sword in the
So compulsory was the code of