The very first memory Hurk has as a child was the sound of a horse and the sight of a starry night.
He must have been wrapped up in a blanket and placed in a sack on the saddle. The night sky that was visible from the small opening of the sack was sparkling with many stars. The inside of the sack was warm but the night air was chilly and he must have instinctively whimpered. The faint sound of conversation stopped and a pair of hands entered the sack. There the big hands carefully picked up the baby in to a gentle embrace. It was dark and the only source of light was from a faint campfire so he couldn’t make out the face of the man who held him. He only remembers seeing the full moon above the horizon of the endless plains. He must have fallen asleep at that moment.
When he woke up, Hurk was alone.
There were many orphans from the battlefield like Hurk. But he was different. Hurk looked different among those with black hair and yellow skin. Many people considered him to be a monster of some sort and avoided him believing that he brought bad luck.
And being an orphan was already bad enough. As they were shunned from those around them, they had to live day by day scrounging whatever they can like rats. Hurk wandered with other orphans with their crude gruel bowls to any place that had food, doing random errands for leftovers. Hurk has no choice but to travel the most dangerous places of the battlefield. At other times he would dart between harsh mercenaries picking up scraps of food lying around. But this wasn’t even an option when rations were low and at times like this he would attempt to quell his hunger with water and go to sleep in his dirty bedding early.
Hurk would sometimes dream of the man who coaxed him that winter night would come to him saying “Son, I have returned”. A man who looks foreign to this land just as he is. But it was just a dream and once he woke, hunger would wrack his whole body again.
It was not long until Hurk would start to set traps to catch snakes and mice. He must have been good with his hands because his crude traps would always bring results. And soon he was making traps for birds and started catching sparrows and, when lucky, bigger birds such as crows. But this was all for naught for most of his catches would be taken away by bigger kids and Hurk would go hungry just as before.
It was after two days of starving he finally able to catch a small robin. With the dead bird in his arms, he was gathering twigs for a fire when someone grabbed him from behind. Then Hurk was was thrown to the ground. When he looked back, he saw a group of boys smirking at him. It was the big kid who was the head of a group of orphans named Pock, for his face was pockmarked with acne. Hurk already had several of his catches stolen from this boy. The boys searched Hurk as he backed up. The only thing they found was the mangled remains of the robin which was mashed up due to Hurk’s fall on the ground. One of them threw the carcass down with disgust and stomped on it. That’s when Hurk lost it. He found the strength to push back the boys pinning him down and charged towards Pock and delivered a blow to his greasy face. Pock, who was not expecting anything like this to happen, took the full hit to his jaw and fell down.
Now this is not a heroic of one boy beating down a whole group by himself. The other boys soon regained their composure and beat Hurk sensless. But after that incident, the other kids started to avoid stealing from Hurk. It was better to find an easier target than facing Hurk and his stubbornness.
It was not long before Hurk started to grow rapidly. When he began to acknowledge that he was looking down on others he was already the tallest among the orphans. And he also realized how strong he was when he knocked down Pock, who had been bullying him, with a single punch.
When he was about fourteen or fifteen he could have passed for an adult. He started to get bored of playing with the orphans and started to hang out with mercenaries. He would run errands for them, listen to their stories, and spend countless hours at the smith looking at the blacksmith pounding metal. The middle aged took a liking for Hurk despite his strange appearance. He must have been impressed by Hurk's craftsmanship shown by being able to imitate his works just by learning over his shoulder. When the blacksmith offered to take him in as a apprentice, Hurk was barely able to contain his joy.
At that time, Hurk firmly believed that being a blacksmith was his life’s calling. He would spend his days as a apprentice and one day become a blacksmith with his own shop. It wasn’t that far-fetched of a dream for the blacksmith would constantly tell Hurk that he intended to pass over the smith one day.
And the days have been peaceful. Until the smith got in trouble with a mercenary.
The sword that the mercenary wanted to fix was beyond repair. The blade was cracked and any attempt to mend it would almost certainly break it and the metal used for it was of low quality so forging a new blade out of it was out of question as well. The blacksmith returned the blade telling the mercenary that it would be better for him to buy a new one. But the mercenary started to cause a ruckus claiming that the blacksmith was lying in an attempt to sell more of his merchandise. While the blacksmith was looking at the scene, giving up any chance of selling anything for that day, Hurk offered to kick the troublemaker out. By this time Hurk was a strapping young man who people took as a mercenary or warrior more than a apprentice. A rag-tag mercenary would be no problem for him. But the blacksmith told Hurk to stand down and went to close the door to the smith. At that moment, shouting that he had no intentions to let him off easy, the mercenary grabbed the blacksmith and pushed him to the ground. Hurk lost his temper and started to beat the mercenary. Although he was caught off-gaurd, the mercenary was no match against Hurk in the first place. As Hurk helped the blacksmith back up to his feet and back in to the smith he shook his head at Hurk's brazenness yet, with a smile.
The next morning the blacksmith told Hurk to fetch some coal for the furnace was almost out. The coal shop was a good distance away from the smith and when Hurk returned with his stocked wheelbarrow it was already noon. But there was a crowd gathered around the smith. Grumbling about how the commotion would interfere with sales, he pushed through the ground and then stopped mid-track.
The smith was in shambles. The light in the furnace was long out and there were broken pieces of furniture everywhere. One of the support was almost broken and the smith was in danger of collapsing. But most importantly, the blacksmith was nowhere in sight. Hurk started to question people in the crowd in his panic and one of the onlookers told him that a group of mercenaries came and thrashed the place. The blacksmith was badly beaten but still breathing and was taken to the town healer. At this, Hurk started to run to the healer’s hut.
Comments
Let me know if official source/translation exists
Sources:
Part 1: http://worldwidegamewatchers.com/post/54318519269
Part 2: http://worldwidegamewatchers.com/post/54320312643
Part 3: http://worldwidegamewatchers.com/post/54322832327
Part 4: http://worldwidegamewatchers.com/post/54742457135
Part 5: http://worldwidegamewatchers.com/post/54898552413
Part 6: http://worldwidegamewatchers.com/post/54899535979
good ol' internalized colonialism