Authors: Mael d'Armor
âSay something.'
She is reluctant to open her mouth. Her recent attempts were not exactly shining successes. But she and Yaouen have just spent the last hour in the dunes, locked in amorous commerce, and she feels splendidly centred.
He tread so softly on her ground this time, as if afraid she might break. It took her some time to find her pace but she was full of soft warmth, and in the end she peaked in one delightful blur. Smooth yet uncontrolled, uplifting, beautifully unfocused. Nothing like the addictive pleasure-ache she vaguely remembers. Nothing like the insatiable hunger. The hollowness that could not be filled. No, a strong, blissful swell that carried her to the crest of the surf, and then, in a single, powerful sweep, flushed her up a sunny strip of sand, breathless and renewed.
She is lying on her back, gazing at the sky. She could almost purr. She tries.
Purr. Purr.
At least she
can
purr.
He rolls on his side then wraps a leg around her to straddle her waist. Bends over and kisses her. She has closed her eyes.
His lips melt away.
âCome on, scaredy cat. Repeat after me: the rain in Spain falls mainly on the plain.'
She looks into his eyes. Damn him. Damn him for having such unforgivably hot eyes. She is drowning in his light. She does not know why she has fallen head over heels like this. She feels like a teenager with her first crush. She used to have a much better grip on herself. She used to be in control of this relationship. Aeons ago. She was so skilled at getting what she wanted from him. She had done so for so long, back before the jump.
But now . . . She is so completely in his thrall. She could lie here forever draped in his aura. Enjoying the sumptuous glow inside her. No heartache. No desire. Just a deep sense of wellbeing. This is new. And slightly surreal. Did â by some twist of fate â her Sandra side soften something in her? Open a door to new, hazy fields?
âViviane?'
â
Oui, pardon
. Here goes then. The rain in Spain,' she ventures, putting on her bravest Eliza Doolittle face.
âExcellent! Falls mainly in the plain.'
âFalls mainly . . . in the plain.'
âBeautiful! Perfect vowels, immaculate diphthongs, not a trace of metaphorical incongruence. Something a bit trickier maybe: If two witches would watch two watches, which witch would watch which watch?'
â
Non, vraiment?
Seriously?'
âSeriously.'
She takes a deep breath and delivers a flawless performance.
âI'm thoroughly impressed. Top marks. Now the clincher. If you get this right, I declare you officially cured.'
âThat's too kind.'
âPicky possums and bossy bears adore gorging on plums and pears but too many purple plums give picky possums big ballooning bums and too many bitter pears give bossy bears bitter nightmares!'
She stifles a giggle.
âI'm not saying that.'
âCome on.'
âI'm not saying that even if you threaten to turn me into a jabuticaba tree. Or a cassabanana.'
âGreat uvula! Perfectly pronounced. You pass.'
She draws him down to her and her lips seek his again. A drug, but so sweet. So fulfilling.
He breaks the kiss.
âYou can have too much of a good thing,' he says. âBesides, you can speak flawless English. I'm done here. I've fulfilled my contract.'
âContract?'
âYou may remember that you yourself insisted we keep our relationship on a strict business footing.'
âYou beast!' she laughs, pushing him off her and throwing the towel at him. âYou can't quote me on that. That's not fair. It was only Sandra speaking. My ghostly half.'
âWhile your more substantial half was busy plotting my downfall, among other things!'
She turns to the swathe of turquoise water before her.
âI've changed, Yaouen. Or you changed something in me. The need has gone. To rule. Control everything. The things I wanted â power, prestige â they've all dissolved in this inner haze. I feel so mellow, so unlike what I've been.'
She brushes some sand off her knees.
âAnd I think I've lost my magic. Some of it. All the black stuff. No, not lost perhaps. Like I've misplaced it and have no desire to find it.'
She meets his gaze.
âWhat did you do to me? I should be terrified, or angry maybe. But all I have inside is this absurd glow. You didn't just bewitch me, did you? I would be devastated if this was only a charm.'
âWho knows?' He smiles cryptically. âLet's just say I smoothed out a few kinks. Realigned a few tangles. Or rather the triskele did.'
She rests her head against his shoulder.
âWhat do you think is happening in Karnag? They must be going nuts.'
âThey are. I checked this morning on my tele-conch â that's a small widget I put together while you were asleep, by the way. Picks up the vibes of anything and anyone anywhere in the world and turns them into holographic images. Very handy.'
He grabs the large shell next to the towel and holds it up to her, looking rather pleased with himself.
âThey can't get over that big hole at Le Manec. Sent the cops to investigate, even the army and a flock of scientists. There are a few theories floating around already. The usual stuff. One old geezer with most of his teeth missing is blaming the Martians. He swears he saw a giant spaceship moving towards the sea. Wonder where he got that idea from. Some geeks are talking about spontaneous earth subsidence. They've started digging up the site but can't explain why there's no trace of the tavern. And there's this quantum physicist who's convinced it's all to do with how energy is made of waves and you can't pinpoint the precise position of an atom. The cromlech and café are still there, he says, but they cannot be seen because their atomic waves have started vibrating too much. He is too clever a bugger by half, if you ask me.'
He waves the conch shell happily, like some juicy fruit found on a long desert trek.
âNo one is thinking of good old magic.'
âSilly them.'
âYeah, that's what I think too. And they haven't got a clue why a bunch of bare-bummed girls with wolf tatts have begun trailing the tourists. A few arrests have been made for lewd behaviour in public. “The stalkers are starkers”, one headline put it.'
âPlease don't rub my nose in it. It wasn't the best plan I ever came up with.'
âYou can say that again.'
âBut don't judge me too harshly. It was only the crazy half of me that concocted this. Besides, the girls have no leaders now, so they have no strategy. They were supposed to get busy at night.'
âThings got more heated in Paris.'
He scans the beach, to check that they are alone. But this neck of the West Australian coastline is almost entirely people-free. Only Morvarc'h is prancing in the distance.
âLook.'
He blows into the conch and images bounce out of it. They are glowing in the low sun, taking on a sepia, old-fashioned polish. A whole mosaic of them, as on a digital news board, twenty feet by ten, but in high relief.
The vignettes are showing scenes of sultry mayhem all over the French capital â people in various stages of undress, heaving and humping in public squares and outdoor cafés; on street corners, bridges, barges and bateaux mouches, on balconies and building tops, in museums and railway stations, on the steps of churches and the doorways of shopping arcades. Everywhere, the dense Parisian traffic has come to a standstill. Cars are swaying to the tempo of passion. Entwined legs are poking out of open van windows. Buttocks are pumping on the backseats of SUVs.
âLet's enlarge one or two. Take your pick.'
She points to a frame slightly left of centre. He snaps his fingers and it pops out in 3D. A chubby man in a grey suit is perched halfway up a flagpole, inches beyond the reach of two admirers with large bosoms and expansive backsides. Curiously, he is clinging to a piece of soap.
âThe Health Minister, I believe. He has been stuck up there for the past hour. Luckily for him, he's found a way to grease up the pole and so far, has evaded direct contact with his P.A. and chief of staff.'
He returns the hologram to its frame and enlarges a new one. This time, women in red Phrygian hats, with dresses pushed up to their breasts, are sixty-nining each other zealously. Around them, a group of men wearing Gavroche caps look on in shock, their drums idle and their French flags frozen.
âThis was a nationalist march against gay marriage. But as you can see, there were some anomalies in the way the flux rippled out from the nude. Those girls couldn't care less about the males.'
Viviane turns to him, worried.
âYou're not going to hate me forever for this, are you?'
âParis has seen worse. Uprisings, revolutions, spates of gruesome decapitations. One more piece of bangarang won't make much difference. Besides, the effect will wear off soon enough. The telluric flow was severed before any lasting damage could be done. People will wake up tomorrow with sore cocks and aching pussies and the worst hangovers of their lives.'
He gives a small chuckle.
âThe press will go wild of course. There are a few film crews in helicopters already recording all this.'
âYou haven't answered my question.'
âThis will do nothing to dispel the reputation of the French as a libertine nation,' he goes on blithely. âBut I'm sure they can survive the exposure. The spin doctors will get busy. They'll find a way to explain this mayhem away. Come up with some clever bullshit. I can see the official statements: First Parisian Attempt to Break World Record for Longest Simultaneous Sex; or Orgasmic Channelling of Collective Grief over Disappearance of Eiffel Tower.'
âPlease Yaouen, tell me.'
âTell you what?'
âYou won't hold this against me forever, will you?'
âWe've just made love in the dunes.'
âWe fucked many times before. That does not mean you don't hate me.'
âWell, your remorse is much appreciated, thanks.'
He is playing hard to get, she can see. But she deserves this. She has been less than an ideal lover. God, that's the understatement of all time.
âPlease look me in the eyes,' she says, slipping a languid hand into his shorts, âand tell me you'll forgive me one day. Really forgive.'
âThat's not fair,' he protests, appraising the wrist sticking out of his shorts. âThis is like bribing the jury. But sure, everyone deserves a second chance. Especially if they have been realigned.'
âRealigned? Ouch,' she says, stopping whatever she was doing. âIt sounded sexier the first time you said it.'
âDon't stop. I was willing to be bribed.'
âYou cheeky man! You really have to work on your romantic skills!'
She throws herself upon him and they have another long tussle on the sand. With lots of kissing and probing and gasping and more probing â too varied and intricate in nature for any words to capture faithfully.
A rather hazy amount of time later, she is lying in disarray on a crumpled-up towel, her hair dripping sand and still heaving hard. He has just rolled off her, leaving her with that warm, deep, satisfied glow.
She stares at a wispy cloud, her lips curled into a dreamy smile. She is beginning to see â to feel â the upside of a mutually beneficial relationship. One in which she can take it slow. Follow the curve. Relinquish control without fear of entrapment. Without fear of her own desires. The time jump thwarted her plans, skewed her ambition, exacerbated the best and worst in her â and almost destroyed her in the end. But she survived, in no small measure thanks to the man beside her.
Her eyes trail a trio of pelicans through the azure.
She'll have to tie up a few loose ends. Sandra's loose ends. Go back to Sydney, hand in her resignation, find a replacement for the Toulouse deal â though that shouldn't be too hard with a little help from Yaouen. The irony is she always had perfect command of French, though Sandra couldn't know. She was always the ideal woman for the job. But you can't keep leading a double life, can you? Nope. Been there done that.
It's odd enough having two sets of memories to draw from. For Sandra wasn't squashed away, as her other half wanted. She is still there, with all she went through, all she lived, twined in the weave of Viviane's mind. Though strangely,
both
her past lives feel less than fully real â like dreams within a dream.
The pelicans have veered to the south. Three dots, close to the horizon.
And then there's Mark. She'll have to break the news to him â some sort of news. As gently as possible. That's going to be tricky. She can visualise the trickiness.
Sorry Mark, I can't go on with you because I'm me again, and a better me, but you should be glad really for one half of me never knew you anyway and the other half wanted to turn you into a Pekingese. And by the way, I'm also Viviane Le Fae, keeper of Excalibur, who time-leaped and has been in a complicated relationship with a wizard, though that relationship seems to have magically de-complicated itself
.
Yes, she can visualise the trickiness all right. Perhaps the gentle approach might not be a wise choice. The bitchy option then?
Hi boyo, got a better offer, so start updating your Facebook status and lose the gut.
Mm . . . Tempting, for that would keep things simple. But after all, not her style.
She turns to Yaouen. He has conjured up two Kir Royales from thin air and is busy sipping one.
âFancy a drink?' he asks, holding up a glass.
âThanks.' She downs half of it, licks her lips and sticks the glass in the sand next to her. As she does so, her eyes stray to her breasts.
âThe triskele had no effect on my boobs.'
âDoes it matter?'
âDon't you think they're too big? I look like a Playboy bunny. Without the fluffy ears.'
She cups her breasts in her hands and lifts them tentatively. They are firm for their size, and boldly determined to lead the way forward â without the slightest aid of a bra. She imagines herself in a business suit, with male colleagues' and clients' eyes alike nailed to her cleavage. The kind of thing that, in Sydney not so long ago, might have worked to her advantage after all. Might have opened a few more doors if used in judicious alliance with her intellect. She smiles at the thought â at how it would have appalled the old Sandra â and then dismisses it. Business fantasies seem irrelevant.
âSeriously, don't you think this is over the top? Literally?'
âNonsense. I think you're perfectly proportioned.'
âI was perfectly proportioned
before
.'
âYou were
ideally
proportioned. Now you're perfectly so.'
She gives him a blank stare.
âI fail to see the difference.'
âThere is none. You look terrific both ways.'
âBut there will be a difference to my clothes. A big one. I won't be able to fit in any of them. Perhaps you could . . .'
âPerhaps I could?'
âMake me smaller again.'
âWhy don't you do it?'
âThis was grey magic. I've lost the connection to that too. I'm a do-gooder. Strictly protector. But it would be a cinch for you.'
âI wouldn't dare. I have no knowledge of mammary spells.'
âLiar.'
He is looking innocently at a passing gull.
âFine. You win for now,' she says. âI'll have to get a new wardrobe.'
âNot a problem. Just say the word and I'll snap my fingers.'
âAnd how exactly can you do that when your fingers are on my nipples?'
âJust making sure they are still sensitive. Breast size may affect that side of things.'
Shit. His caresses feel heavenly. Whorls of pleasure have spiralled deep into her, reawakening her appetite.
âHas it?'
âHas it what?' she half moans, suddenly much less concerned by the size of her breasts.
âMade you less sensitive?'
âBastard.'
She is dissolving and offers her lips. âI thought you cured my addiction.'
âI did.'
âThen how come I want you again? Badly.'
âLet's put it down to the aftershocks.'
âPlease,' she says, letting her hand float to his shorts. âYou don't mind, do you?'
Something is brushing against her fingers. Something far too small and mobile to be his cock.
âHey, what's that?' she says, bringing up her palm to take a close look at the gecko nestled in it. âAnother one of your tricks?'
âMore like a good field operative. This is Agent Gerald.' He presents his own cupped hand to the gecko, which crawls into it.
âAgent Gerald?'
âHe was my eyes in Sydney â besides Jenny. Would get close when she couldn't. He was a regular visitor to your flat. Not the sharpest lizard in the jar but he kept me informed well enough. Or rather I scanned him for info.'
She remembers the little guy. Sandra had tried to catch him once or twice, with the clear intention of chucking him out of her precious space. She feels sorry for that now.
âHe must hate me. I don't think I was particularly nice to him.'
âThat's all right. His brain is too tiny to harbour much resentment. You'll have no trouble winning him over. I thought we might keep him as a mascot.'
He lays the gecko down on the towel.
âAnd I've given him new defence powers. A kind of force field. He shouldn't have to worry about ending up as a black kite's appetiser.'
âSo you watched me for years? I mean Sandra. You knew where I was?'
âI did. I was in Sydney when you landed there, about two weeks after I popped up in Mauritius. I had felt your presence when I broke free and later worked out an approximate trajectory. Time flows work a bit like telluric pathways.'
âDo they? That's something you never taught me.'
âA man has to have a few secrets. Anyway, it wasn't so hard to figure where you might end up, and when. I knew there would be a slight delay since you were not inside the prison â strictly speaking â when the jump occurred. But I hadn't counted on you splitting into two. Nor on one of you staying in Brittany.'
He picks up his glass and gulps down the last of his Kir Royale.
So he had been there when she thought she was alone. When she was battling with her uncertainties. She had tortured her brain for months for elusive shreds of her past. And gone to see a few specialists.
âPlease don't take this badly but why didn't you make a move earlier? It wasn't easy at the start. The amnesia was a challenge.'
âBut also a blessing. You didn't have to cope with adjusting to a new time. And I did help you. Smoothed things out with the authorities. Made sure you were set up comfortably. A little tinkering with official brainwaves goes a long way. English was not a problem for you could already speak it. I just gave it an Aussie polish to help you blend in better.'
He reclines on the towel, propping himself up on both elbows.
âAnd later, when you got your degree, I made sure you landed the right job. And got your promotions faster than a squirrel can scramble up a tree.'
âYou what?'
âI can be persuasive when I want to.'
If Viviane wasn't sitting, she would do so now, with rather less elegance than she might like.
âAre you telling me you're the reason for my â for Sandra's business success?'
âNot the only reason. Your talents are undeniable. But do you honestly think you could have made senior exec as fast as you did, and looking as young as you did?'
She thinks about it for a moment. He is right, of course. There were many other clever women around â and men for that matter â but none had fared so glaringly well in a large outfit by their mid-twenties. She had allowed her confidence, or more accurately her pride, to blind her to that simple truth.
âStill, you never showed yourself to me in all those years.'
âDo you blame me? I didn't fancy being locked up again.'
âHow much of a threat could I be? You knew I had lost my memory.'
âYes, but for how long? I thought it might come back at any time and we'd be back to square one. And I didn't yet trust myself around you. I had to remain invisible. Watch from a distance.'
âI take it you trust yourself now?'
âLook who's fishing.' He smiles. âI suppose I'm a fraction wiser. I have knocked around in the last few years. Learned more about the human heart. About myself. Some of that knowledge has been quite sobering. So many grey areas.'
She looks away. She knows a few things about grey areas. Or brown. Or dark maroon. Or rather she did. She feels so beautifully cleansed and prays her poise will endure.
âSo why did you turn up when you did?'
He puts an arm around her waist.
âMy lovely Miss Curious. You don't need to know everything this instant, do you?'
âPlease.'
âYour trip to France. I thought that might bring back your memories. Which could have implications all around. I wanted to be there before that happened. And by then I felt I should understand your amnesia a bit better. Get to the bottom of it.'
âGet to my bottom, you mean.'
âWho says research has to be boring? Jenny told me she had sensed something in you. An unusual need. An extreme form of yin to your yang persona, is how she put it. It was time to investigate.'
They gaze at the sea in silence. She weaves her fingers into his.
âDo you think we shall ever go back?'
âGo back? You mean to our time?'
She nods.
âDon't you like it here?'
âThe world has changed so much.'
âIt has.'
âI remember the forest.'
âI remember it too.'
âBrocéliande is not what it used to be.'
âIt is not.'
âI'd love to see it again someday. As it was. But I know that's impossible.'
He is silent.
âNo one's found the key to time travel,' she adds.
âYet,' he says.
She turns to him.
âI've picked up a few clues here and there.'
âClues? Where?'
He shrugs.
âAncient philosophies. Mermaid lore. Warp travel. Quantum physics. Everything's there if you know where to look.'
Her hand tightens on his.
âAre you saying . . . ?'
âNope. Not saying anything. Still early days.'
She is beaming.
âI don't mind waiting.'
âGood. You
are
learning.'
She searches for Gerald. Then finds the gecko sunning himself in Yaouen's empty cocktail glass.
âCan I ask you something?'
He puts on a patient look.
âBe my guest.'
She stalls, for she is not sure how to approach this.
âI know what's on your mind,' he says. âJenny. Good old Princess Ahes.'
Her eyes are pinned to his.
âShe already got her second chance. She blew it. She paid the price.'
Viviane's hand drifts to his cheek.
âBut she was a good friend to me, before everything went haywire. In fact, my only friend. And my Breton half did put a mean old charm on her in Vannes. If you had to be harsh on anyone, it should have been me.'
âAll you did was remove the restraints I'd put on her.'
âThat's as may be. But I can't help feeling she got the rough end of the stick. She didn't plan any of this.'
Her finger traces a meandering course to his chest.
âDon't you think she should have been . . . realigned too?' She has whispered the word.
âShe's in the process of.'
Viviane cocks her head.
âI thought she was dead. Or back to haunting the coast as a Mari Morgan.'
He rises to his feet, then turns to her, palm held out in invitation.
âLet me show you something.'