Nrfleherder Valley was a strange place. On the darkest, cloudiest days when rain soaked the rest of the country, the sky above the valley was blue and clear. It was conveniently situated above the river Nrfle, an easy week's ride from the capital and a day's row by boat from the coast. But tax collectors, invading armies, and door-to-door salesmen never seemed to be able to find the place. They always found themselves back where they started, confused and travel-stained. But visiting minstrels, traveling confectioneries, and Santa Clause always arrived, and sometimes more often than they intended.
The river Nrfle sprang from a small, button-like pool in the north that was very hard to find. It ran south through a deep cleft through the middle of the town and valley. Around the edges, a double line of mountain ranges ringed the outside. The people who lived there were spirited and happy. Their smiles made them seem young, the ground was so fertile, crops grew themselves, and everyone was healthy and fit from climbing up and down the steep cleft every day to fetch water. If they had any complaint, it was that there were too few men.
The dearth of men had become so bad that they had to court and marry multiple brides each because there weren't enough to go around. To make up for all the extra effort on their behalf, wives doted on their husbands, hardly letting them do any housework. Every generation of men overcame the demographic handicap with grit and determination, so there was never any shortage of young people ready to get married and carry on their way of life. The fields and streets were full of them dancing, playing games, and copulating. The most adventurous of them searched for the hidden pool to the north. They rarely found it, but everyone had a good time anyway.
The village's mayor was a large man who sometimes seemed old and occasionally young but was always energetic. He was very handsome, very charming, and very rich, but he never married. The oldest residents claimed he had been the mayor when they were children. But no one believed them because the mayor was sprightly and their eyesight was terrible. He spent his day traveling from houses, to farms, to shops advising and visiting with his constituents. He was an eccentric man, and, what's worse, his eccentricity was catching.
For example, many years ago, on a typically bright Tuesday morning, he stopped by the Guilden's dairy farm and chatted with the estate patriarch, Stratton Guilden. They stood looking into the barn where Stratton's wives and daughters were busy filling pail after pail with thick, wholesome milk. The cows lowed to each other conversationally.
"Hard work, is it?" Asked the mayor.
"Aye," said Stratton. He was a laconic man,
"I imagine you milk cows because they produce the most milk?" asked the mayor.
Stratton blinked; he hadn't thought about it. "I s'pose," he replied.
"Big animals," said the Mayor watching Stratton's youngest daughter, Emma, almost twenty, nearly tip over a pail trying to lug it around. She was wearing overalls and chewing on a stalk of hay. For festival days, she had a beautiful blue and white Dirdle she'd sewn herself.
"Yup," said Stratton confidently from more familiar footing.
"Lots of work to get them in here every day?" Asked the mayor.
"Yup," said Stratton.
"You know, the midwife told me our women produce milk as well," said the Mayor. Stratton looked at him sidelong. "No, it's true," insisted the Mayor. He whispered, "I've seen it with my own eyes."
Stratton shuffled a step away. It was a bizarre thing for the mayor not to have known about.
"It just seems," said the mayor, "you do a lot of work to bring in extra teats."
Stratton furrowed his brow, trying to find some words. Failing, he said, "hrmph." He noticed how healthy, ruddy, and well-endowed Emma was. The observation felt unusual, but turning it over, he couldn't find anything wrong with it.
"A bit strange," said the mayor, "drinking milk for calves. I wonder who did it first."
The mayor visited the farmer and milkmaids every day for a week, leaving them feeling confused and troubled each time. But they could hardly turn away the mayor, especially after he brought the maids special valuable potions from his private cellar. "To help milk production," he told them, which is what milkmaids are all about.
No one was sure exactly how it happened, but by the following Tuesday, the cows were scheduled for a holiday, and the maids had volunteered to take their place. When the mayor arrived, Emma and her sisters were each in a stall as farmer Stratton rushed around, wondering how he would have time to milk his wives and daughters.
"Good girl," Stratton said to Emma as the mayor arrived. "Just lean your chest into the stanchion; I'll take care of the rest."
"Very sensible setup," said the mayor from the door to the stall. "You have a fine milking farm."
The farmer felt resentful of the mayor, although he couldn't pinpoint why. Emma leaned forward with her ample bosom ready for milking and feeling it was embarrassing for the mayor to be there. But after all the potions she'd accepted, she knew it would be rude to ask him to leave.
"You look sore full," said the mayor cheerfully to Emma.