And so it was that the slave who became a knight, became more still. A leader to his people. Neither callous overseer, nor strict commander. But a true servant of the people. He thought always of the story about the good king. And the man that told him the tale.
His days were spent in service of the people. Moving from one problem to the next. He made time for people every day, no matter what. His office, an open platform in the atrium. A choice made by his predecessor, and not something he would change.
His night were long, cold and lonely. The warmth of his home and wife sorely missed. The grief for fallen comrades bitter and sharp. Some nights he takes a rifle from under his bed. He packs a bag, pulls on his leather coat, and heads up the Vault door. There he goes, and no further. Knowing his place lay here.
There he sits, staring at the Vault door, torn between duty and desire. A man in conflict with himself. Fighting his own war each and every day. And war, war never changes.
The End.
This is not (quite) the end! There's a seven part epilogue to come. I'd like to thank everyone for reading and ask that you share your thoughts, either in a review of even just a comment.