stuff happens here
May. 15th, 2018 10:43 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
A character persuades a king -- via his captain -- that he really can serve as a knight.
Then the character impresses the king and court that he really can serve excellently well as a knight. And even knows a trick or two about their perpetual warlock foes that the current crop of knights didn't know.
Notice the vacuity of that. He could kill a bear, he could break a curse on a forest grove, he could fight some knight who proved, after defeat to be nothing but a suit of empty armor. Details aren't important.
Except that of course they are important because they are needed to convince the reader that he really does impress.
Then the character impresses the king and court that he really can serve excellently well as a knight. And even knows a trick or two about their perpetual warlock foes that the current crop of knights didn't know.
Notice the vacuity of that. He could kill a bear, he could break a curse on a forest grove, he could fight some knight who proved, after defeat to be nothing but a suit of empty armor. Details aren't important.
Except that of course they are important because they are needed to convince the reader that he really does impress.