Date: Fri, 27 Dec 2013 19:54:07 -0500 From: redpatience@Safe-mail.net Subject: The Magpie and the Prince part 3 V. Ticks On the second day after the Paladin uncaged him from the wagon, they reached a dark wall of briars that marked the boundary to the forest of Eom, the ancient and near-impenetrable wood of yew trees so burled and twisted and tower-thick that no saw could cut them. It was so infrequently-crossed that it had served for centuries as a barrier between the kingdom of Chaldicia and the kingdom of Hana. Myths told that it was filled with dark beasts from the time-before-men and crones who rode on giant pestles and ate children alive. Irau never thought he would see the place in-person. Within, it was so dark and tangled that Irau quickly felt his breath growing short. Yellow fungus balls the size of his head grew all over, clinging to the sides of trees. When they poofed clouds of spores, Ten hissed and used his cloak to mask his eyes, mouth, and nose while he ran away from them. "Why are we going through here?" Irau demanded, uncovering his face. "Because we're being followed by an assassin. A living assassin," the Paladin added, noting the color draining from Irau's cheeks. "Nothing with a pulse will follow us in here. Or if it does, it won't last long." "What makes you think we will?" Irau asked derisively. "I've done it a dozen times," Ten said. "And I lived in it for a year, once." "Oh," Irau whispered. At the trigger of Ten's words "nothing with a pulse", the boy could not help but think of coarse groan and wheeze of that monstrous boar. As they tramped down into the hollow of the wood, his skin turned clammy and cold sweat pricked his back. "You are thinking of that creature," Ten whispered. "Yes," Irau confessed. "Let that go. The forest of Eom is ancient and frightening, but the underspirits are powerful here. They will not harm us if we know the ways of supplication. They went to the mightiest tree they could find and offered broken bread, wine, water, and burnt balsam sap for the deities of the wood. Irau had not seen the rite done like this, but it was close enough to his people's practice that he felt more at ease the domain of the spirits. They passed under boughs so dark and dense it seemed that night had fallen; they picked their way through, leading the horse on foot because the roots were so tangled and high that she could not find her way without constant, delicate guidance. At last, they came to a river, or rather a vast lagoon of mossy islands and tall yew trees webbed with streams. They waded through ford after ford of icy water until at last they reached a couple of yews that grew together in a sort of arch. A broad, soft bed of moss grew up around them. Here, they made a shelter and took of their soaked boots. "No fire," Ten whispered, "or we will ruin whatever grace we have with the deities of the place." They feared to talk too much or too loudly, as this too would disturb the forest, but it did not stop Ten from communicating his needs to the boy. "Take off your clothes," the Paladin said flatly. It was not a request. "There are a lot of ticks and leeches here. We need to check each other." Irau felt a chill go up his spine. He suggested that Ten go first. The man shrugged off his cloak and removed his belt heavy with many knives and pouches. Then he shucked his tunic over his head, and his supple black breeches off his legs, until he wore only his wool underclothes, baggy and eaten with holes. He slithered his way out of these as well, and Irau gulped in awe. Ten was a wonder of knotted muscles and lean, long limbs. His body was almost as smooth as Irau's, but his shoulders were broader and he stood at least two heads taller than the boy. His curly black patch of pubic hair, and the weighty member and testicles that dangled beneath them petrified Irau. The boy's cock slid along his leg, swelling uncomfortably between his thigh and the tight hide of his breeches. "Well," Ten said, "check me over. Don't inhale, I won't smell nice." Irau was then obliged to look over the man's whole body for ticks. Ten pulled up his bollocks and straddled the ground so Irau could check in the crevice between his thighs. The boy looked in his armpits and all over before Ten turned and parted his square, muscular buttocks. The boy could not help but catch that pungent smell, not revolting as he expected it to be, but strangely intoxicating. "See anything?" Ten asked. "N-no," Irau whispered, unable to take his eyes off the man's puckered purple anus. Ten knelt abruptly and piled his long hair up on his head. Irau looked over his big muscled shoulders and armpits and back, and then parted Ten's glossy black hair again and again, praying that his stiff erection would go away by the time he finished. "Oh," he said in dismay. "I found one." The grey parasite ballooned at the back of Ten's scalp. "Be careful," Ten urged. "I know how to pull them out, I'm good at it," Irau said. "No, I mean--if it's at all possible, try not to kill it." "What? Why?" "Please," Ten urged. The boy took the back of the man's knife and a flat stick and pried the parasite out, smashing it to death in the process but cleanly removing the head. The Paladin winced and asked where it went. Irau gestured down into the moss and the Knight sat, naked, and cupped his palms at his breast. He whispered a prayer seven times, then blew on the dead insect. "What was that for?" Irau asked. "For it to return in a better place. Alright," the Knight said, standing. "Off with your clothes." Irau suddenly realized he still had much of his erection. "Uh," the boy stammered. "Don't you want to put your clothes on?" "It is chilly," the Paladin smiled. Irau took his clothes off as slowly as he could and by the time Ten had tied his belt back on, the boy's cock was relatively soft. Ten knelt right in front of the boy's groin, grinning. Irau pulled his bollocks out of the way and spread his legs, then turned. He had hardly done so when he felt the man's strong, long fingers part his buttocks for him. A chill of excitement flushed over him and he felt his penis lurch again. "Nothing in there," the Paladin said, "yet." "What?" Irau asked. "Nothing." Ten stood and checked over Irau's shoulders and back before telling him to get his clothes on. "I'll check your hair when you're dressed." Ten sat with his legs out at right angles and invited the boy to sit in front of him. Irau did, and the man squeezed the boy's shoulders before he began to look for vermin. It felt so nice to have the man touching him, close to him, caring for him; Ten preened the boy for a long, long time, perhaps much longer than he needed to necessary, but Irau said nothing. He just enjoyed the sensation of fingers combing through his hair, and rubbing at his scalp, and pulling at his ears. "Now my beard," Ten said. Irau bit his lower lip. It felt awkward, the Paladin jutting his chin up skyward as the boy combed through his facial hair. At last they were finished, and Irau gave the man a rare and uncontrollable smile. "What's that for?" Ten asked. "Nothing," Irau said firmly. They sat close that night, sharing the last of a little brandywine. When night fell they huddled together against the horse, Ten's cloak spread over both of them. The stream brought cold air in draughts, and soon Irau was shivering, his breath showing in dimness of the starlight. "Come here," Ten whispered. He wrapped the boy up in his arms, making a perfect spoon against the back of the lad's knees. This time to both his excitement and his agitation, the man's hand lay on Irau's flat tummy, rubbing it in slow, gentle circles. It felt soothing and nice, but the boy also felt his cock straining against his leather breeches. "Stop," he pleaded weakly. "I'm sorry," Ten whispered. "No, don't. Don't be sorry." VI. The White Conch The boy dreamt, after a while, but dreamt he lay in the same place in that old forest, looking out into the dark. Then, he smelled the stench of rotting flesh. Across the streams, two glowing red eyes opened. Then five. Then ten. Then dozens. The skeletal children he had seen dragging bodies hobbled around in the dark, avoiding the water but trying to find a way across. Irau found himself gasping, elbowing Ten in the ribs. He then realized to his even deeper horror that he was awake. "I see them," Ten whispered. "They found me," the boy wept, "help me kill them, oh please!" "They cannot cross the water," Ten explained, "but neither can we harm them. They would spoil this forest and spread the sickness here, as well. We are not powerless, though." Ten stood, then, and the skeletal band all snapped and champed their jaws at him over and over in a strange, threatening song. A score of them were pulling a long fallen tree over to make a bridge over the water. Ten shouted a single syllable that made Irau's whole body jolt awake and feel invigorated and fearless. It seemed to have had the opposite effect on the creatures, for the red eyes dimmed and some of them seemed to have sunk to their knees. As they regained their strength and continued to heft their wooden bridge into place, the Paladin dug through his saddlebags and removed something. He slipped his fingers into the depths of a sacred white conch, brought it to his lips and blew. It sounded clear and sonorous and made all the fell things across the water hiss and pop like nuts cast into a fire. When the sounding of the conch ended, some were on their knees and others had fallen to the earth. Again, the Paladin blew the conch, and this time white fire erupted all over their bones; the troupe of undead children hissed and fled through the forest away from trumpet after trumpet of the conch, until they had been reduced to powdered bone or driven so far away they would not be able to find their living prey again before dawn. Irau's hands were gripped in front of his chest. He had sat and watched the whole thing on bated breath; the Paladin was all that he claimed and more. He was good, and virtuous, and kind. He was everything Irau had hoped and prayed for. Tears of relief and hope streamed from his face as he looked at the man with new perspective. "How did you do that?" Irau asked. Ten was sitting on the mossy bank, breathing heavily. If the boy could have seen better in the darkness, he would have noticed the man's eyes had gone bloodshot and his hands were shaking. "I do nothing," Ten said weakly, "but use what the magician gives me." VII. Old One Ear Over the next days, the weather grew fair and golden. One morning they wandered through an apple orchard too early for anyone to catch them picking their breakfast from the trees. The grass was wet and Irau's feet were freezing and soaked, but he still felt elated and blissful just to be with Ten. The Paladin was so handsome and sweet, and though he never kept anything secret that Irau wished to know, the combination of his magnificent power and self-abnegating modesty made him more mysterious than anyone the boy had heard of even in songs. When Irau expressed this in halting and embarrassed ways, the Knight only laughed. "I am actually very ordinary." "You lie!" Irau laughed. "You are the right hand of some great wizard. You set the undead on fire with a seashell. You can knock a man dead with your thumb!" the boy exclaimed. His cheeks were rosy in the chill and his eyes sparkled with adoration. "Those are silly tricks," the Paladin said very solemnly. "Wait until you meet the Magician." Irau bit his apple thoughtfully as they crossed onto the highway from the orchard. "How did you come to be this wizard's...Pala--" "Paladin. It's a kind of knight." "Like a warrior?" "It's a silly title. The king of Merouvin gave it to me after--after a battle. It means I'm supposed to be very holy or something. That I never fart." "You don't," the boy giggled, "I haven't heard it once!" Ten's tanned face broke into a smile. "Tell me the story," Irau begged. "Please?" "Very well," Ten agreed. "But only the parts I choose." Ten said he had been about Irau's age. His family was a big one, and they farmed a lonely stretch of gravel between the mountains and the sea. He ate nothing but fish, beets and cabbage until the age of fourteen; he said it was a miracle he wasn't still purple. War came to the kingdom, and he was conscripted into the army of six warlords who besieged the library city of the south. The soothsayers claimed it was a doomed company, however, for the library city was under the protection of a sacred magpie. "The warlords did not believe this, however," Ten said, "and had the soothsayers' tongues cut out." "That's awful," Irau whispered. He paused. "Were they right?" "Yes. The magpie was a magician. He still is. He goes by many names. He's my merciful wizard, you see. He's very old but looks ageless. In fact, I'm beginning to look older than him. He is very powerful. He never competes, but he always accomplishes his aim. At least in part." "But you were his enemy?" Irau asked. "He would say no. He would say that he has no enemies, only many very confused friends." At this memory, the Paladin laughed. "He serves no warlord nor King, nor the bureaucrats of the Library City, nor the Old Gods, nor the new God. He serves the one called the Teacher of the Gods, the Awakened One, the World Nurse, the Protectress of all Beings. Have you ever heard of her?" "No," the boy whispered, "is this your Goddess?" "In many ways, yes. But she is not really a God. She was an ordinary woman who lived many thousands of years ago and saw the truth behind things and taught the way for humanity to become free like her. She can appear as a god, or a goddess, or man or woman, or animal, or even something like a bridge or a jar of medicine. Or a white conch. Anything to succor those who suffer. She is the power that we serve. The teacher we follow." The boy did not really understand, but he liked the idea. "I think I worship the same goddess," he said. "We call her the Mother of the Gods. She's the oldest thing in the world, or rather, we say she was the midwife of the world." "They might be the very same, for all I know," Ten said, and smiled. "Tell me then, about the war," the boy prodded. Ten's face darkened. "Yes," he murmured. The armies were sent to storm the city walls, but Ten's band was sent to attack this Magpie. The warlords were clever enough to know that the soothsayers had at least some grain of truth, so they sent three hundred men to the Tower of the White Deer where this sorcerer lived. It was a very small fortress in the hills behind the library city, a place where the order of the White Palm had a monastery for a hundred years. On the way, the platoon all got lost in fog except for seven soldiers who found themselves at the monastery tower. They broke into a fortress that had no locks, no guards, and no weapons inside. Within, they had found a very young looking man in a room full of books. In spite of the rainy day, his library was filled with sunlight. "What did he look like?" Irau asked. "I was going to say, just be patient," Ten said. "He had long black hair, very wavy, all bound back with a red ribbon. He wore a cloak of powder red thrown back from his shoulders and he had many layers of flowing robes of every shade of gold and blue. And a rainbow-crystal rosary hung around his neck." "Like opal?" the boy asked. "Yes. Except brighter. It actually sheds rainbows, even in the dark. It's called The Simala. The radiant garland. Anyway," Ten said, "he looked up from his books and smiled at me. I had broken into his study with a spear and a shield and five brutes armed with clubs behind me, and he just smiled and called us by our names and asked if we were hungry." Irau laughed. "What did you do?" "We attacked him," Ten said sadly. "Then what?" the boy asked, his eyebrows floating higher and higher. "He beat us senseless, of course" the Paladin said, as if it should be obvious. "What? How? He does not sound like a warrior!" "He's not a warrior. He's a thousand times more dangerous! He's a wizard. He grabbed a willow wand about as long as his arm and--" the knight slapped the boy in the face very softly, but hard enough to surprise him. "He disarmed and caned us all one at a time. Like a mother with naughty children." Irau laughed again. He was utterly enchanted. "Then what?" "Well. The short version? I fell in love," the Paladin said, simply. "With a woman? Where did she come from?" the boy asked in confusion. "No!" the Paladin laughed, looking Irau in the eyes. "I fell in love with a wizard." The boy's mouth made a small circle. "Did you know that men could love men? Or boys?" Ten asked. "I knew that men could use boys," Irau said solemnly, "I did not think--no. I did not know that." "I loved the one-eared sorcerer," Ten said. "I still do." "What did you call him?" Irau asked, stopping in the middle of the road. "One ear. It's one of his names. It's a little secret that one of his ears is missing. He uses an illusion to mask it. I wouldn't usually reveal such things about him, but he told me I should tell you anything you wanted to know about him. That you would need as much knowledge as possible." The boy dug through his pack until he found a wad of brown cloth. He unwrapped it, and held up that withered, blackened thing for the Paladin to see. "We call him the storyteller," the boy said, his face alive with hope and fear, "I was sent away from my people to find him." VIII. More Mysteries If men could love boys, did that turn those boys into women? Did they become weaker or stronger from dipping their cup into the wine of one another? What did each of the Gods think of these things? What did his own Goddess think? What did the local spirits think? What did the ancestors think? Why had he never heard of this in the songs of the Five Kingdoms, or in the songs of his own people? When these men and boys coupled, did it always cost one tears to give the other delight? Were there countries where such loves wed, or grew old, or died together? Were there lovers like this among his own people? The Paladin had seemed so many times to read his thoughts; could he hear all these queries that rang in Irau's head? "Why don't you just ask me?" the Paladin said softly, warming his hands over their fire. "You hear my thoughts?" Irau's face burned with shame. "Only very rarely, actually. When when you are very, very obsessed, or very, very distressed." "So you know what I was just thinking," the boy said. "Not most of it. But even somebody without clairvoyance could see you have questions. So just ask." Irau swallowed, and began his inquisition.