The King's Guardess, Plans and Prologue
The King's Guardess is my first attempt at a webtoon novel, ala Korean graphic novels, also known as manhwa. I have a completed the outline for the plot and written probably about five percent of the scenes. I'm planning to do the art myself which means this is a long term project. So I'll be releasing prose versions of the scenes here until the art is complete. These will be easier for me to do than the art versions. These and future art posts will be locked behind a supporter wall, as well as many of the behind the scenes posts, but the prose scenes will not be the definitive version of the story despite them coming out first. I'll try to get out prose versions about once a week. But enough business, let's get down to what matters.
Synopsis: In a medieval historical setting, the kingdom of Orsino, the old king passes away, bringing on the reign of his son Renault, a handsome, young, and fun-loving man, who struggles with his new responsibility. One way in which he tries to handle it is to find out more about the enigmatic Sir Gerard, the younger, shorter, and much more serious sword master of the King's Guard, whom the old king made Renault promise to take care of while his father lay dying. Sir Gerard doesn't want Renault's care and only wants to train him in swordplay, a skill Renault has always ignored. The knight doesn't get close to anyone, because she's actually a woman in hiding.
Prologue:
Sir Gerard, the sword master, stood in the sparring ring, practicing strikes against a wooden dummy and knowing that the king was slowly dying. Tension was thick within the court these days. Whispers ran through the palace of the uncertainty that their state of Orsino was going to survive the change in king regnant, given that Renault, the only heir, was not what most of the court, especially the older members of nobility, considered a serious man.
Sir Gerard was particularly worried, for the kingdom as well as for the position as sword master of the King's Guard, taking out that worry on the dummy, chipping away at its wooden sides. Renault and Sir Gerard had hardly crossed paths before, despite the fact that Renault had been tasked with learning the sword from the sword master six months ago and Sir Gerard having been in the King's Guard for the last six years. Of what Sir Gerard saw of Renault, impressed was not the word one would use to describe the guard's estimation. Renault seemed to enjoy wine, women, song, and games more than learning statecraft, the strategy of war, the diplomacy of state interaction, nor Sir Gerard's prized mastery of the sword. The nobles and knights feared that important positions may be replaced by his cronies, and Sir Gerard was one of those feeling that fear. Being the best sword fighter among the King's Guard was no guarantee of the position.
Given that she was a woman in disguise as a knight, she found her fear completely justified.