CRR-ACKKK!
BOOOOMMM!
Although it had been storming endlessly for ten days, the sky-splitting sight and sound of lightning and thunder continued to wrench screams from the shivering mass huddled in the Gathering Place.
As the most solidly-built structure in the settlement, it was the only building which had been able to withstand nature's merciless assault. When it stopped raining -- if it stopped raining -- the Clan would have to completely rebuild. With winter coming, their supplies largely washed away, how were their people going to survive?
"Clan Leader! Everyone!" someone screeched from outside.
"RUUUNNN!"
Rushing to the flap shielding them from the nightmare which had become their world, they lifted the hide and saw to their horror a massive wave of liquid earth rolling toward them at great speed. Once-mighty trees churned in splinters while enormous stones tossed around as tiny pebbles, all of them victims of the saturated ground roiling violently down the hill.
With terrified shrieks the people mobbed the entryway, frantic to escape, but in their panic few managed to squeeze their way out, the opening plugged with struggling bodies. Ultimately, it did not matter, for an instant later the mudslide swallowed the Camp and everything in it before continuing on its destructive course.
With a jolt the old woman sat up in the cold dark, heart racing.
Placing a trembling hand on her chest, she took a deep breath, trying to slow her pulse. Having calmed her body sufficiently to move, she rose from the furs on legs shaky from age and distress, coaxing a fresh flame from the banked fire in the hearth before hanging a pot over it for tea. It would still be quite some time before the sun returned, but the Spiritwalker knew that, like the two previous nights, she would be getting no more sleep.
~*~*~
In the dim light of her dwelling, Veba sat on the sleeping platform sponging her bruises with a soft skin dipped in an infusion of healing herbs the Spiritwalker had given her. Though it was nearly midmorning before the woman had risen from the furs, she felt as though she had not slept at all. But she had a job to do, and by sleeping late she had already disobeyed the shaman. She could not risk defying him altogether. She had learned the agonizing consequences of disappointing him.
Gulping the remaining contents of her cup, Veba paused in her ministrations to prepare herself another dose of the medicinal tea he had also prescribed. He told her its purpose was to reduce her pain and help heal her wounds from the inside. She had no idea if the mixture of herbs and other ingredients actually healed her body, but she had noticed it significantly numbed the pain. In fact, it worked so well she used it throughout the day, even though he had intended it only for occasional use.
The spiritual leader had been surprised when she returned to him for a fresh supply, not expecting her to request more for several more days. And though she feared he might become angry with her for running out so quickly, the medicine eased her suffering so effectively she thought it worth the risk. To her relief, he was not angry at all, giving her an even greater quantity, and suggested she increase the dose.
The tea made it difficult to concentrate, and sapped some of her energy, but within that fog she found blessed peace, a place without pain, or fear. While it did not heal her confusion, as long as she consumed it in regular intervals she discovered it really did not matter; she simply did not care about understanding anymore. As far as she was concerned, that was good enough.
After the Clan returned from the fish hunt, Veba made her first mistake, or perhaps more accurately, her first mistake after making the foolish decision to couple with Letan at the lake. Despite her nonchalant response to the Toolmaker the next day, their rough encounter had injured the woman; not enough to cause permanent damage, but enough that it would take many days to heal, and enough that the Spiritwalker would certainly notice.
Instead of reporting to him the night of their return as she had been instructed, Veba decided to spend the night drinking fermented beverages with some of her female friends. She planned to tell him they had gotten carried away and passed out, not waking until the next morning. But the real reason she stayed away was that she hoped one more night would heal the tears at the entrance of her rear passage just a little more, thereby making the injury less obvious to the shaman.
It had been a grievous error.
Her second mistake was that instead of going to see him immediately the next morning, so that her explanation might actually appear credible, she again avoided him. Too worried he would be able to figure out she evaded him on purpose, she also assumed that since their relationship was supposed to be a secret, he would not wish her to visit him during the daytime. As it turned out, that evening the Spiritwalker visited her dwelling himself, just to make sure she was not, once more, "too ill" to meet with him; from the look in his eyes she knew she dare not sidestep him again. So after the Camp grew quiet that night, Veba crept to the Ceremonial Hut, sick with dread.
Naturally her aberrant behavior only increased his suspicions, and as if he were already aware of the reason for her absence the night before, he immediately stripped her naked and strung her up, opening her body wide for inspection.
"The lashes seemed to have healed nicely. Good," he observed, running his fingertips lightly over her breasts, pausing to pinch her nipples between his fingers and twisting them until she cried out. "I am glad to see that four days without pleasures has not dulled their responsiveness; if anything, they seem more sensitive."
Prolonging her torment, the shaman slowly examined the rest of her body, even peering inside of her mouth, scrutinizing her everywhere except one area. Finally his fingers peeled open the entrance to her womanhood.
Placing the tip of his thumb above the hood covering her pleasure node, he pulled up, exposing the tiny organ to his gaze. With his other hand he penetrated her opening with three fingers while he blew a stream of warm breath on the nerve bundle.
"Why, Veba, your body does not leak its fluids for me as it did only a few days before," he noted with dismay as he pumped his digits in her drier-than-usual passage. "It