- This was written for school too, and I'm really proud of it

Gareth
xxxxxGareth strode forward down the corridor with all the confidence he could muster. King Merari had summoned him yet again — and again, the poor messenger had looked pale and terrified. The king’s rages were becoming more and more perilous, but what could a simple knight do? Merari held all the power.
xxxxx“GAAAAAAREEEEEETH!” A shrill, nerve-grinding shriek ripped through the air as he neared the king’s chambers
xxxxxHurriedly, the knight broke into a run. He was disgusted with Merari’s overbearing, entitled manner, and the way he treated subordinates — which wasn’t a healthy view to hold — but being assigned errands was his only chance of reprieve.
xxxxx“I’m here, my king!” he bellowed, shouldering past the door. It flew back against the wall with a dull thud, and Gareth winced; his emotions were getting ahead of him. Being the polite knight he was, however, he managed to stem the flow of words in his mind.
xxxxxThe king, hair and robes in wild disarray, glanced up from the scroll clenched in a quivering fist. His face was dark with fury.
xxxxx“Gareth,” he growled, “my favourite castle has been destroyed by a dragon, and —”
xxxxx“No!” Gareth lunged forward before he could stop himself, and ground to a halt before the throne. “What about the people? Did — did they escape?” His voice trembled, and he gripped the hilt of his sword like a lifeline; squeezed hard, so hard it hurt, and tried desperately to breathe. Blood welled like scarlet raindrops from his white knuckles. “Are they alive, my king? Is Hazel —”
xxxxx“Yes, yes, they should be fine.” Merari waved a hand dismissively. “But you seem to be missing the point, Sir Gareth. My castle — my Favourite Castle, you understand — is naught but a pile of smouldering rubble!”
xxxxxHe paused, and Gareth could no longer hold his gaze.
xxxxx“Breathe in. Breathe out. Count to ten — and at least try to speak respectfully.” The wise words of his old mum echoed in his mind, and Gareth took a shuddery breath. He gathered the broken, worried pieces of himself, hugged them close, and trusted.
xxxxxMerari didn’t seem overly concerned about his people at the moment, but Gareth knew he must care — he had cared enough to inquire after their well-being. He had cared enough to summon Gareth. He had to care.
xxxxxA good knight would trust his king — Gareth would to trust his king.
xxxxx“A tragedy,” he managed finally, hoping — trusting — it wasn’t so, and Merari scowled.
xxxxx“Indeed it is,” he agreed darkly, “and the beast must be taught a lesson — which is why I’m sending you, my favourite knight. I know you can teach him a lesson.” He sat back in his throne, a smug grin passing over his face as the knight swallowed his pride, lowered his head, and nodded humbly.
xxxxx“Begone, then.”
xxxxxGareth spun on his heel and fled from the room with all his remaining dignity.
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xxxxxWith his heart choking his throat, Gareth dove like an athlete, and rolled as he hit the ground. The fall sent him tumbling uncontrollably down the hillside, and out of range of groping dragon-fire.
xxxxxClimbing to his feet, the knight staggered dizzily for the nearest rocky-outcropping; fear and fury rose like bile from his stomach. He had to find shelter. Had to run, hide, fly. Had to survive.
xxxxxThe dragon was coming.
xxxxxWith a terrible, ear-splitting roar, the mighty beast leapt from its hilltop perch, and, spreading its vermillion wings, shot toward the knight’s hiding-place like the unholy arrow of doom.
xxxxxGareth took a deep, shuddering breath. He would die soon, he knew. But he would see his old mum — and Hazel — and baby Ainsley — (the dragon had killed them all) — so that wasn’t so bad. But if he had to die, he would fight to his last breath — and he would avenge the deaths of his family.
xxxxx‘They will not die for nothing, I will give it scars to remember, it will learn never to attack humans again, and I will die.’
xxxxxA strangled cry tore from the soul of his being, and a tear trickled down his cheek.
xxxxx‘They WILL NOT die for nothing, I will give it SCARS to remember, it will learn NEVER to attack humans again, and I will DIE.’ He repeated the chant in his mind; sung the mantra to his heart, and felt it in every fibre of his being.
xxxxxGareth turned to face the coming monster. He hardened himself; prepared himself; readied himself — but it’s hard to be strong when your heart is crying. Slowly, a second tear followed the first.
xxxxx‘They will not die for nothing — I will give it scars to remember — it will learn my face, my name, my sword — and I will die.’
xxxxxCold steel glittered wickedly in the afternoon sunlight.
xxxxx‘They will not die for nothing — I will give it scars to remember — it will learn my face, my name, my sword — and I will die.’
xxxxxWith an earth-shuddering thud, the mighty dragon landed once more.
xxxxx‘They will not die for nothing — I will give it scars to remember — it will learn my face, my name, my sword — and I will die.’
xxxxxGareth rose to his feet as if in a trance, eyes blind with tears. His heart throbbed like a drum in his chest.
xxxxx‘They will not die for nothing — it will learn my face, my name, my sword — I will die.’
xxxxx“Halt your sword, little warrior!” a deafening voice, old as the hills and strong as the largest tree, rumbling like a landslide, beat at his ears. “I have no wish to — I must —”
xxxxxA throbbing growl rent the air, and Gareth braced himself for the flames sure to come — his mind whirred like a sparrow’s wing.
xxxxx‘How does it speak? Why does it speak? How can this be? Am I mad? I must kill it! But why does it speak? How can this be?’
xxxxx“I do not enjoy this!” The thunderous roar sent Gareth to his knees, and he squeezed his sword-hilt with a death-grip. “I have no wish to eat your kind, knight — I hate it — I hate it!”
xxxxxGareth opened his eyes, terror sucking the air from his lungs. It didn’t make sense — couldn’t be true — didn’t add-up — couldn’t be proved!
xxxxx“You make me sick,” the dragon continued. “So slimy, and squirmy, and too salty, and crunchy-hard metal that gets stuck in my teeth, and you wriggle —” He broke off with a nauseated gag. “But — but I’m trapped.” His voice lowered to the smallest whisper, and Gareth could just barely make out the words, “I’m trapped, little warrior, and you’re the first to listen — I’m begging you, please, you have to help me! King Merari will only grow worse, and cause more deaths if you — don’t — help — me!”
xxxxxThe world tipped from its axis and spun out of control, flipping and twisting wildly as it plunged haphazardly through the cosmos. Gareth’s ears rung like they’d been punched. His breath came short and fast, and the world was a mess of greys and greens. He toppled forward, barely able to catch himself, and lay as if dead. It didn’t add-up — the awful words that echoed and reechoed incessantly in his mind couldn’t be true — couldn’t be true!
xxxxxBut they were there, and they refused to leave; refused to be silenced; refused to be stilled. It didn’t make sense, was the dragon lying? But he knew — oh, he knew all too well — the sound of honest desperation. It was undeniable.
xxxxx...had Merari orchestrated the deaths of his family?
xxxxxSuddenly numb, Gareth pushed himself to his feet and stepped out before the great dragon. He had entered the fight filled to the brim with grief, and rage, and terror — now he was empty, but the pain was rushing back, fast as a flooding river.
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xxxxx“Prove it!” he screamed, ripping the helmet from his head. “Prove it, beast! But you can’t, can you? You can’t! because you’re lying!
xxxxx“It’s not true — please, it can’t be true.” He sank to his knees, lips trembling. He was hot and cold, full of pain yet numb, broken but the only one left — the only one whole. The helmet dropped like a deadweight from his nerveless fingers.
xxxxx“I know, I know — I know.” Creeping carefully across the hill, the dragon gingerly lay his great head beside the knight. “Your king,” he spat, and Gareth’s tears evaporated in a wave of heat, “did the same to me.”
xxxxxDespite his danger, Gareth felt nothing — nothing but pain.
xxxxx“For countless generations,” the beast continued, “dragons and knights have been at war with each other. But why?”
xxxxx“You murder, and pillage, and burn, and —”
xxxxxQuietly, the dragon said, “My people would say the same of you,” and Gareth fell silent. “Never has anyone, dragon, human, or otherwise, tried to learn the others’ language — except me, and it drove me apart from my kind. But it was well I did, for now I can tell you the truth:
xxxxx“For decades, Merari and his predecessors, who were more wicked by far than him, have been ensnaring knights and dragons in a brutal war for naught but their own amusement. When I was young and foolish, Merari’s men tracked me back to our cave, and slaughtered my mate. They were collecting her blood when I arrived, and our egg was nowhere in sight.
xxxxx“I slew them all, little warrior, but it was too late. Merari holds my child hostage. He told me that if I refused to cooperate, he would destroy my only offspring — and thus, I am forced to kill and destroy. You are yet another pawn, forced into the game by pain and hatred.”
xxxxxGareth’s heart sank like a black hole to the toes of his boots. “This has to stop,” he managed, lips taut and bloodless. “We have to stop him.”
xxxxx“I am glad you agree. Let us go. Climb upon my back, little warrior, and I will bear you away to the castle; together, we will end this tyrannous reign.”
xxxxx“No.”
xxxxxThe dragon reared back, and a plume of burnt-meat smoke swept over Gareth in a great, poisonous cloud. Sour bile rose from his stomach.
xxxxx“I won’t,” he continued. Not bravely, not stubbornly, not angrily — the words simply needed to be heard, and they spilled free like water from an overturned bucket. “Merari may have your egg held hostage, but what about my child? The child you killed? Did you ever stop to think that maybe you could give warning? Approach slowly? Give people — innocent people, dragon! — time to escape?”
xxxxxGareth paused for a moment, throat choked with words, words, anger, words, anger-filled-poisonous-words, and ground his teeth to calm the flow.
xxxxx“You were told to destroy a castle, and you murdered. I will not help you with another.” His voice rose and trembled like the quavering song of a dying bird, and his eyes burned hot with tears. “Kill Merari. Reclaim your egg. But leave the castle and inhabitants unharmed, or by the blood of my family, I will kill you.”
xxxxxThe dragon bowed his great head, and silence reigned for an eternity.
xxxxx“Agreed,” it growled eventually. “But if I fail, and Merari does not die, the blame will lie on you.”
xxxxx“Get you gone, coward.”
xxxxxWithout a word, the dragon leapt away, and the knight stood alone.
xxxxxHe was finished.
xxxxxPulling the armour from his body, Gareth dropped to his knees and sobbed for all he’d lost; wept for his shattered world; grieved for the innocents.
xxxxxGareth Painheart was never seen more.