by Anny Cook
In a little bit, they woke and made slow sleepy love. She nuzzled the soft hair on his chest, rubbing her cheeks against the silky curls before searching out one of his flat nipples. With a sly nip, she brought it to attention, then soothed it with a gentle suck before moving to the other nipple. Her slender fingers continued to toy with them while he captured her mouth, engaging in a leisurely duel of twisting tongues and nibbling fangs.
When her schela clamped down with a particularly tight grasp on his cock, he chuckled and flicked a naughty lick at her ear. “Oh, you liked that, eh?”
She shoved at him until they rolled so that he was on the bottom. Sitting up, she cupped her breasts in her hands, presenting them for his inspection. When he groaned and bucked his hips, thrusting in deeper, she gripped her nipples with forefingers and thumbs and pinched before tugging them to hard points.
Abruptly, he sat up, holding her securely on his lap with one hand planted on her lush buttocks, and took a breast in his mouth, sucking avidly while rubbing the tip of the nipple with his tongue.
“Harder,” she urged breathlessly. He allowed her to feel the edge of his teeth on the tender flesh and she whimpered in response.
“More,” she moaned.
He slipped a finger down in the soft, wet folds that held his cock captive. Then he found the tight rosette farther back and gently poked his fingertip inside.
Jade bounced madly in response. He covered her lips with his, engaging her tongue in a wild thrust and parry even as he added another finger in the tight grasp of her sensitive anus.
She gasped as her body tightened in climax. While throbbing contractions played the length of his cock, her nails dug into his hard, muscular shoulders. Then wrapped in each other’s arms they came together again, not with sound and fury but with tender sweetness. Very slowly, Jade’s schela softened and released Merlyn. Reluctantly, he withdrew and they curled together just for a few more minutes, acutely aware of the passing of time. At last he sighed and said, “If we are to reach Lost Market by dawn, we must get dressed and be on our way.”
“I know.”
“You’re still certain we need to be there?”
She nodded, rubbing her head against his chest. “Yes. I’m pretty sure Wrenna’s man, Traveller, is going to arrive today but that’s not why we need to be there.” Jade hesitated a moment. “Merlyn, I think he’s bringing someone with him.”
Immediately, he reached for the basket of clean clothing and supplies, placing it at his side. He lifted her from his lap, placing her on her knees. “Then we need to get a move on.” He found a clean cloth, wet it from the water bottle and swiftly wiped them both clean.
“Here’s a clean meerlim,” he warned as he placed it in her hands. Plucking a clean pale green sleeveless shera from the basket, he shrugged it over his broad shoulders and slid the two loops over the bone buttons. Next he slipped on his sandals and untied the door flap. With a quick assessing glance around the clearing, he made sure they were still alone before exiting the small hurka with his clean sharda in his hand. It took only a moment to flip the dark green garment around his hips and fasten the tabs. Satisfied that he was ready to face the day, he poked his head back through the hurka door. “Ready?”
“As soon as I locate my other sandal,” she replied.
“Two o’clock from your right knee,” he said absently. “Is that a new meerlim?”
“I don’t know. Why?”
“I don’t remember any of yours in that color. I think this is the new dye Tyger was experimenting with.”
“Oh?” She put on her sandal and with his guiding hand, she ducked through the door and stood up. “What color is it anyway?”
“A deep rose. Very beautiful color with your skin.” He paused and looked at her before continuing in a deeper, gruffer voice. “Of course, you’re most beautiful to me in nothing at all. I love you, Jade.”
Moving into his arms, she rested her head on his shoulder. “I love you, Merlyn. I’ve loved you forever.”
“I should tell you more often. Dai’s always telling you he loves you.”
“Dai is not the father of my children. I love him dearly as our covenant mate but he isn’t the other part of my soul. That would be you. Always you.” She kissed him then in the pearly light of dawn as the birds muttered sleepily in the trees all around them. “Time is running out. We must go.”
Chapter Four
Mystic Valley, Cave at Bonding Circle Five
The cave was filled with a luminous glow when Bish woke. In the soft light, he realized that it was actually much smaller than he’d thought. A flash of movement, caught from the corner of his eye, had him instinctively rolling to protect Trav. He stopped mid-roll as he took in the little old man leaning over Traveller. He had both hands spread out over him and was slowly moving them along Trav’s body as though he could see through the skin with them. The man noticed that he was awake and nodded to him. “Your friend is badly hurt,” he announced. “I’ve called for help to move him.”
“Who are you?” Bishop had never seen anything like this man. He had very long silver hair, arranged in a multitude of small braids, each finished with a jeweled clasp. When he moved, it sounded like a delicate wind chime. His face reminded Bish of a withered apple, except for those bright, twinkling green eyes. Bird eyes, he thought. Except for their color they were exactly like bird eyes. He had some sort of cloth wrapped around his lower body and soft leather sandals. Bish could have coped with all of those things but one thing tilted his sense of reality past casual acceptance. The little man was blue. Even in the strange glowing light, there was no doubt.
“I am Dai.”
“Uh-huh. And who are you when you’re home, Die?” Bish demanded skeptically.
“I am Dai. A healer.” Dai looked directly at Bishop. “Your friend is in need of a healer.” His head came up as he heard people approaching. “Good. Help has arrived and soon your friend will be more comfortable.”
Shoving the blanket away, Bish hurriedly rolled to his feet, suppressing the groans that threatened to pop out anyway. No one was going to move Trav until he talked to somebody that made more sense. Pale daylight revealed a wide fall of water across an opening in the cave wall. Several people appeared from behind the waterfall, all talking at once. When they saw Bish, the babble stopped abruptly as though cut with a knife.
Then the oldest man in the group tilted his head to one side, smiled widely with a scary flash of fangs and said calmly, “Hello, Bishop. Fancy meeting you here.”
Bish knew that voice though he hadn’t heard it in over twenty years. He sat down so suddenly he would have bruises on his backside for a week. He shook his head very slowly and then just stared. “Baron.” His eyes grew round with shock as he really looked at him. Baron’s black hair, shot through with silver streaks now, was arranged like the old man’s hair. He wore a similar soft skirt-like garment with matching vest and the soft sandals.
And Baron’s skin was blue. Bishop struggled to take in the gently pointed ears and the flash of fangs when Baron smiled again. After a minute, he realized that he was opening and closing his mouth like a goldfish but no sound was coming out. He tried again but it came out as a hoarse croak. “Baron.”
Baron came and squatted down next to him, draping his arm across Bish’s shoulder. “Bish, I’m glad to see you.” He gestured for the others to come closer. “This is part of my family. Llyon. Tyger.” Two tall young men with blinding red hair arranged in tight twists on top of their heads gave him a brief polite nod before moving to kneel next to Traveller. “Wrenna.” A petite young woman with locks the color of glorious sunrise streaming down her back smiled shyly at him before joining her brothers. “And two men from our village, Jonas and Mali.” The men nodded politely and then ignored Bishop, edging past him to stand at Trav’s feet. “You remember Jade, don’t you?”
Baron stood and helped Bish to his feet. Bish took in her glowing auburn hair bound up in some kind of braided coronet
arrangement studded with strands of sparkling beads. Not much remained of the unconventional sister-in-law he remembered. Back then Jade had been the epitome of casual celebrity chic with her hair worn down in wild flowing curls. The petite woman standing motionless in front of him was a perfect picture of composed serenity unlike the young Jade who was constantly moving. Her stillness served to emphasis the flurry of movement all around her.
Bishop’s mind leaped from one impossibility to the next always circling back to the fact that they were all undeniably blue. Seeking respite from the weirdness surrounding him, he turned away from the odd strangers, focusing on his brother with a frown. “Baron, why have you never let us know that you were okay?”
“That’s a long story, Bish, and we’ll have plenty of time to tell it later. Why don’t we get this man settled and then we can talk.” He looked down at Trav with a faint smile. “Well, he certainly looks like Dancer.”
“How do you know Dancer?” Bish demanded irritably, tired of all the strange experiences bombarding him.
Llyon and Dai were behind him working with quiet haste to stabilize Traveller while Wrenna knelt near his head. Suddenly, she slumped over with her head resting on his shoulder. Tyger jumped to pull her away but Dai shook his head. “Leave her, Ty. They’re in rapport and it’s better if they’re touching.”
His attention snapped back to Trav, Bishop turned to his brother and demanded, “What’s going on? What is she doing?”
Baron took his arm, leading him away from the group working on Trav. “Wrenna is his mate. She’s helping them stabilize him by linking with him mind to mind. You needn’t worry about him. We certainly wouldn’t want to have to face Dancer if something happened to Traveller!”
“You didn’t answer me before. How do you know Dancer?”
A happy smile crept across his face as Baron replied proudly, “He’s my bond-son.” Noting the panicked look on Bish’s face, he patted his brother’s arm and suggested kindly, “Look! You’re very tired and your friend needs immediate attention. Come with us and I assure you that we will explain everything.”
Llyon and Dai judged that Trav was as prepared for transport as he could be without more extensive healing. With Tyger’s help, Wrenna climbed to her feet and joined her father and Bishop. Taking him by the hand, she suggested, “Why don’t you come with Mama and me, Uncle Bishop? Traveller is your friend?”
“Uh, yeah. He’s Dancer’s brother.” Unsure of how it had happened, he found himself treading along the narrow path behind the waterfall, toward a beautiful jewellike clearing surrounded by a lushly blooming valley. Wrenna led the way with Jade sandwiched securely between her and Bishop. He turned to go back but Jade’s deathly grip on his hand prevented him from leaving. In the early morning light of the clearing, he stopped and frowned at her in puzzlement, suddenly realizing the shocking truth. “My God, you’re blind! What happened?”
Jade lightly squeezed his hand and smiled. “A fall, long ago, Bishop. I’m fine now but as you see, I do need help. Will you lend me your arm until we get back home? Merlyn will be busy taking care of your friend.”
“Who are these people, Jade? Did you know you all have blue skin?”
“I’m blind, Bishop—not deaf. Of course I know we’re blue. It’s part of the adaptation to the valley,” Jade replied calmly. “Why don’t we start back toward the village.”
“What about Traveller?” he demanded stubbornly.
“Traveller will be fine. They will bring him to our house so you’ll see him then.” She tilted her head and queried, “Wrenna? Will you go see if Dancer and Eppie can come later? I know you don’t want to leave Traveller but you should be back by the time they carry him home. Harmony, please go with her.”
Harmony? Bishop looked around for another woman and saw no one. Then the most enormous dog he’d ever seen trotted up to join Wrenna. The dog had beautiful long hair—almost the same shade as Wrenna’s—that nearly brushed the ground. Since Harmony’s head was just below Wrenna’s shoulder, Bishop judged the dog was well over four feet tall.
Wrenna ran a gentle hand over Harmony’s skull. “Come, Harmony. Let’s go tell Dancer and Eppie about Trav’s arrival.” They trotted down the path, leaving Bish in Jade’s clutches. Stubbornly, he refused to move. “What the hell is going on, Jade? Where is this place? Why are all of you blue? And what’s with the fangs and pointy ears? I refuse to go any further until someone explains something to me!” He stared around wildly at his surroundings. “There are things blooming! It’s December. What is this place?”
Behind him, he heard Baron’s low laughter. “Jade, I figured he would be too stubborn to go, unless we explained everything first.” He led Jade back to the stone bench near the calm pool in the clearing. Very reluctantly, Bishop followed, though he didn’t sit down. As Baron talked, Bish wandered around in the cool grass, enjoying the feel of it on his bruised feet. “Bish, there’s no way to explain everything in a few minutes but I’ll give you the quick, short version because we need to take care of Traveller. First of all, you’ve arrived in Mystic Valley. Our village, Lost Market, is located over in that direction, past that belt of trees.” He watched Bish with pleased interest. “You’re doing that goldfish thing again.”
“But—”
“I do vividly remember how we felt when we first arrived but trust me, you’re going to have to accept some things until we have time to give you fuller explanations. Trav’s care comes first. Now! Where was I?” he asked Jade.
“The valley…”
“Oh, yes! There is no way out of this valley—that we’ve been able to locate. A very few people, less than three hundred in the last thousand years, have come through that cave we found you in or one of the other pledging circles. Most of those have been in the last fifty years.”
“What are you talking about? I dragged Trav through the tunnel from hell! Of course after the cave collapsed…”
Baron shook his head. “You probably won’t believe me but the tunnel is gone now. It always disappears as soon as the new arrivals are safely in the cavern.”
Bishop immediately walked away, treading the path behind the waterfall. Shortly, he reappeared with a scared, angry expression on his face. Instead of discussing the tunnel, he asked about something else that was bothering him. “Why does everyone keep calling you Merlyn?”
“Oh, that. When we first came to the valley, there was another man here, much venerated, who was called Baron.” Merlyn shrugged. “It seemed easier to use my middle name. By the time he died, everyone called me Merlyn. It would have been too much trouble to change back.”
Bish started to say something and then thought better of it. Merlyn nodded. “Wise choice. Hmm. Dancer came through the passage at pledging circle three about a month ago and he is bonded with our daughter, Eppie. Jade and I have fourteen children, so you’re an uncle several times over. There are about fifteen hundred people in the valley, mostly in small family clans.” His eyes took on an unfocused look and he stopped talking.
“What? What’s going on?” Bishop demanded sharply.
Merlyn sighed. “Trouble. I had hoped to delay it for a while but Wrenna inadvertently spilled the beans.”
Jade covered her mouth with one hand. “Oh no. I didn’t even think to tell her not to mention Bishop.”
“Well,” Merlyn said grimly, “she did, so now Dancer’s enraged and rightfully so, I suppose. You go with Bishop and Traveller back to the village.” He stood up just as the rest of the group appeared, bearing Traveller on an ingenious stretcher. Bishop noted that his own duct-taped handiwork was left undisturbed. “Llyon, you take care of Traveller. Tyger, see to your Mama. Dai and I will go see Dancer and Eppie. Perhaps we can salvage the situation.”
With growing confusion, Bishop watched the two men trot off in the same direction that Wrenna had gone. The strange turn of events had no sane explanation. His brother and sister-in-law were here—and yet, not here. He couldn’t fathom any process that could tu
rn the skin blue, grow fangs and change the shape of ears. For a wild second he considered the possibility of some alien body snatchers and then realized how silly that sounded.
Their small group was moving along a rough path that ran through a forest. He caught glimpses of strange trees and weird flowering bushes. Very little looked familiar. Then they passed a pale blue domed building. A low stone wall separated the neat yard from the surrounding woods. Blue and green birds about the size of chickens pecked at seeds and worms in the front yard.
“What are those?” he muttered just before tripping over a tree root.
One of the red-haired twins tossed a glance over his shoulder and answered, “Peekies. They lay eggs.”
“Peekies.”
“Think of them as blue or green chickens.” Jade grinned at him, flashing her dainty little fangs, and observed, “Lots of strange stuff, huh?”
“You’re blue, you know.”
“I believe that you mentioned that once or twice.”
“Doesn’t it bother you?”
“Not so much. I’m sure there are worse things.”
“Name one.”
“Being blind.”
There was a long silence. Then Bishop said, “I’m sorry. It’s been a rough couple of days.”
“I believe you.”
They were approaching a scattered group of domes that were situated around a wide green lawn. “How did you find this place, Jade?”
“We arrived the same way you did, Bishop. Actually, we were also greeted by Dai.” A small secret smile flickered across her face. “We were stark naked at the time.”
“I’m not far from that myself,” he groused. “Trav snatched me out of bed in the middle of the night.”
“Really? Why would he do that?”
“Because he lost his mind.”
“Yes, well. That would explain it, I suppose. How did you come to be in the cave?” she asked with irritating calm. He wanted her to be excited or appalled or show some emotion. Instead she acted like strange people dropped in every day.