Wine of the Gods 03: The Black Goats (16 page)

BOOK: Wine of the Gods 03: The Black Goats
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He threw himself down on the hard bed that was the best this little village could produce and continued to stare angrily at the ceiling.

Because he could not speak ill of the man.

Because he could not disobey the man.

Because he had now given his daughter to the man.

The daughter he had thought to make princess and then queen, the biddable girl that would have influenced her
prince in directions advantageous to him, now bulged with the baby of some damned unknown wizard.

Th
ere was a flurry of activity outside. He stepped to the window and looked out, but it was only the Lord Raide's companions despoiling another maid. Damn them. They wouldn't be bidden either. The three brothers, Oran, Ondu and Orgaphos, this time. They tended to hunt in a pack. Mon Sant and Neet were loners.

What was he going to do? The king ha
d sent troops after him, and there was nowhere to go except Auralia, or maybe off to some island somewhere.

He rather liked the sound of islands, himself. He cast another look out the window as the shrieks rose higher. Now two of the brothers were holding the girl and laughing while a huge black goat mounted her. He'd feel sorry for her, if he wasn't feeling so sorry for himself.

The shrieks turned to sobs, and the men were still laughing. Pack of sadists. Old gods, what was he to do?

Chapter  Twelve
Late Fall
1352
Somewhere in the New Lands

 

Lefty put one foot in front of the other and kept the wind on his left. That was as good as he could do for steering. The snow was so thick and blowing so hard he couldn't see a thing. He'd finally just closed his eyes, wrapped himself, head and all in the bison hide and walked. And walked.
This first storm had taken him by surprise, both in its early arrival and its ferocity. He knew the flats stretched for three days behind him. He could only hope for something, anything, to break the wind somewhere in front of him. Or if the wind would stop, and let the snow lie, he could build a snow house. But this howling whiteout . . .the ground failed to exist underneath his foot. He threw himself backwards, releasing the bison hide as he frantically grabbed the edge, kicked and found a foot hold, another handhold. He scrambled gratefully down the rough wall, so relieved by the absence of the wind that the icy rock didn't bother him, until he almost slipped. He edged out of his pack, and turned around to sit on a thin ledge. He warmed his hands in his armpits while he looked around. The snow was falling straight down, once it dropped below the lip of the wall. As he sat with his back to the wall, it curved outward to his left, blocking the north wind. A rubble filled slope started about ten feet below him. He took a deep breath and smelled the sulfur. He'd found another hot spring. He dropped his pack, grabbed icy rock and scrambled down to the rubble. A brown thing lurking in the snow and rocks turned out to be the bison hide. The rubble leveled out, the snow started getting wetter, and finally, soaked to the bone, he found the fumarole in a small pond of steaming water. There was a slight breeze through the canyon, so he moved upwind, wrapped the bison hide around him and laid down on the warm rock until he was thawed. He was still soaking wet, as the snow melted several feet above his head and rained down on him. But he was thawed enough to trust his fingers to test the water. He jerked back.
Very
hot. He sat in the rain under his damp smelly hide for a few more minutes, then  reluctantly pushed himself to his feet to look around.

The steaming pool overflowed and trickled down to another, also with a fumarole bubbling under it. The cliffs closed in then, and he followed another hot rill down to a third, larger, pond. This one had ice on the far rim, and on the left a slab of cliff had fallen and lodged at an angle, creating something resembling shelter. It was dry underneath it.

Lefty shucked his pack and looked at the angular, rough, tilted floor. "Home sweet home."

He looked out through the rain. Something large stirred the waters of the pond. "And tomorrows dinner!"

He started moving rubble to level the floor.

 

***

 

Answer knitted quietly in the corner, keeping an eye on the girls.

One of the magewives was brewing tea. They gave up their names, when they married. The mages pretended they were the opposites and equals of the witches, but try and find a man who could live without a woman! So they pretended the magewives were non-persons, switching them about indifferently. The witches took a great deal of amusement, watching the nameless women manage the arrangements right under their "betters" noses. Fool men thought that because the magewives' magic was subtle it was
weak
, a powerless shadow of their own. Silly sods might find out some day.

Generally the men were possessive of their children, and kept track of who sired which child.

Gisele had certainly thrown a beehive into that house!

But these two.
They are too young for this!

Juli and Fava paced, encouraging each other, reassuring each other that the babies would be fine. Paced wasn't perhaps the right word, they were both so huge. Their mothers, large with child themselves, were worried, but old Lady Gisele had just patted their tummies and started laughing. Answer wasn't sure how reassuring that was, but no doubt she'd find out soon enough. The babies were coming. It was two weeks early, but not early enough to worry anyone, given the sheer density of magical ability in the valley.

It was the custom to have two midwives for every birth, a witch and a magewife. Gisele was a last resort. Once, just once,
she
had sent for the Sheep Man. Answer smiled a bit in memory. That had been for Curious's birth; the mother, Zero, had been sixty-four years old. She sincerely hoped
she
wouldn't need the Sheep Man.
Gisele and her fertility spells. I'll never underestimate her again!

The two girls were healthy, but so young.
Not mature enough in body or mind
. They were leaning on each other for support, making it hard to tell which one was having the contraction, or maybe they both were. She could hear a whispered, "It'll be fine. The babies will be fine," and wondered uneasily why they were so worried. Mages had some rather nasty ideas about how to concentrate power in their children. They literally were a bunch of inbred . . . she hoped their own fathers hadn't . . . no, some things were beyond even mages.

"Oh, oh!" Water rilled, and then poured, down the legs of one of the girls. Fava.

"There now. " She rose and pulled clean linens from the waiting pile. "Your water's broken, it won't be long now."

Fava's contractions were coming hard and fast now, so Answer guided her to the birthing stool. "Just sit and try to relax, it'll be a little while yet, as
it's your first."

"And only!" she grunted, then bearing down. Juli hovered, grasping Fava's hands as she yelled. "Nnnngh! 

Answer took a quick look and then grabbed more linen. "It's coming fast," she called to the magewife.

"Nnnggh! I hate this! Damn it, I'm never never never going to even
kiss
a boy ever again! Nnnngggh! Ahhhh!"

The tiny boy slipped into Answer's waiting hands. "Oh, he's just beautiful! Look at all that black hair!" The baby gasped and protested his eviction into the cold with a healthy wail.

"Ahhggh! Black hair?" the girl whimpered. Her own hair was light brown with golden highlights. Answer shrugged away the question of the father. After all, despite what the mages thought, the father didn't really matter. "Nnnngggh! Why isn't it stopping?" the girl pleaded.

"Now, we talked about the afterbirth, Fava." The magewife tied the cord and cut it, then took the baby in her arms.

"Nnnngh!"

Answer probed the girl's tummy gently. "Ah, I should have guessed. Twins."

"What! Ahhhggh!" She panted. "Twins? Two babies? Nnnngh!"

"Yes, and here comes the second. Give us a good long push now."

"Nnnnnnggggghhhhh!"

"It's a girl. Another beauty!"

"Black hair?" the girl whimpered.

"Umm,
light-colored fuzz, right now." Juli wheezed, clutching her own belly, now, water dripping down her legs.

The magewife
shook her head. "You two always did do everything together. I might have known you'd both deliver the same night."

Fava's womb expelled the afterbirth with a few more contractions, then the magewife tucked her into the waiting bed, rubbing her tummy, no doubt with some blood magic to help.

She broke off to assist as Answer helped Juli deliver a wrinkled little red-headed boy.

Juli took a breather, touching the thin red curls gently. "Oh my. Ahhh!"

The magewife and Answer traded looks.

"Oh, surely not!"

Juli's second baby arrived minutes later. A beautiful black-haired girl.

Mothers and babies finally all cleaned up, ministered to and fed, Answer breathed a sigh of relief and stretched. "It's going to be every bit as bad come the Winter Solstice. Eighteen babies are due right then." She patted her own tummy. A hundred and twenty years old. Gisele had a lot to answer for. Answer had drunk a glass of that wine before the sheer mass of spells registered with her. She'd left the party in a dignified fashion, fighting spells all the way home. Then Delight practically dragged the Auld Wulf into the house and Happy had followed them in and they'd all three just . . . pounced. The poor god had had a tough time escaping. Eventually.

The magewife nodded, and rubbed her own distended abdomen. "I hope we space them out. I'd hate to have to ask the Sheep Man to come deliver a dozen babies or so, no matter how many lambs he pulls every year."

Answer nodded. She could hear the girls—the mothers—whispering to each other as they rested, each with two babes beside them.

"Your redhead must be Bran's" Fava was saying. "And my little girl is either Oscar's or Bran's."

Both girls stared down at the babies. Neither of them said a thing about the black-haired
pair. Hmmm.

The magewife heard as well, her lips thinning. "Those girls! We tried to make them wait, but they went off on their own. We gave them . . . but as we all found out it didn't work. We figured it was Bran and Oscar, no doubt why they cleared out."

"Well, they've delivered safely, so all's well."

"Except for the matter of husbands. And since Bran's a redhead and Oscar's blond, the question of who the
other
father or fathers are is still open. They must have had a
fine
orgy, but they refuse to talk about it. They refused to consider the husbands we arranged for them, and now with
four
babies! The compass isn't going to like this at all."

Answer frowned. "That's right. None of your men will support a mother and her children unless they get sex regularly from the woman. Hmph. Well, rather than me say something about you lot, perhaps I should suggest it's time for a new house in the village. The girls can assist each other, and no doubt it will all work out in the end."

The magewife frowned. "Well, as they didn't marry into our compass, that may be for the best. I'll mention it as a solution to the problem."

 

Two weeks later, Answer found Never pacing the floor.

"Probably a false alarm." Her granddaughter stopped and took long slow controlled breaths. "Or maybe not."

Rustle was born minutes past midnight on the Solstice, the first of thirteen witch daughters and eight mage babies born over the next two weeks. Justice had twins, and even Answer delivered without complications.

 

***

 

To Oscar's regret, schooling was cut short as the King sent more people south to deal with Duke Rivolte. 'Nothing is more important than your schooling . . . ' his old teacher's words echoed in his mind.
Nothing but a better watch for sneak attacks and assassins
. He sighed and tried to close his mind to the past.

Oscar and Bran mostly acted as couriers, and hadn't yet seen a real battle. The Duke had packed up his f
amily and retreated from Royal wrath as his troops were defeated. Seeing the size of the duke's estates, Oscar was astonished that the Duke would risk so much for what seemed a small advancement for a daughter. And according to the retainers who had fled the duke, rather than abandon their king and country, the duke had married that daughter to a new adviser.

"Some foreigner they say. Auralian? Veronian?" Colonel Rufi Negue paced.

The colonel's uncle, General Kersh Negue, sat down stiffly. There had been mention of him taking over the duke's estates and properties. A gift from the king as he resisted retirement. "From what the servants all say about how this 'Lord Raide' and his associates behaved, I expect they're Auralian. Perverts, the lot of them."

"I have their descriptions, sir. I'll hang them all before bringing the duke back to answer to the king."

The general nodded. "I've sent a dispatch to the king. I'm not sure but that the old magician needs to look into matters down here. So if anything uncanny happens, send couriers both here and the city, in case Selano is here, close to hand."

His scribe finished writing, the general read the sheets over quickly, signed and sealed the two notes. Oscar dropped them into his couriers' pouch and saluted.

He loved being on the road. Riding free and far.

 

***

 

Never juggled Rustle and watched wistfully as the two working triads started the foundations of the new house.

The spate of babies and Particular's and Opinion's awakenings had scrambled the Triads.
  Experiencing their daughters grasping power for the first time had bunmped Idea and kindly up to the level of the Full Moon. So Never and Justice were the only Sisters of the Half Moon, but Likely and Mostly would be joining them in another few weeks when they gave birth. Then the new members of the oversized Triad would have to practice working together as the youngsters trained their new skills.

It had been fun, working the powers to raise the new Dry Goods store. Today she could only watch.

The Triad of the Full Moon, witches whose daughters had grasped power, was well up to the basic work of excavating the basement of the new house.  The soil and accompanying rocks poured out of the square in a smooth reverse avalanche, the dirt settling in a larger square around the perimeter, the rocks pirouetting to return to the hole in the ground.

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