The following is fiction. No sexual acts occur between humans under the age of 18.
If you haven't been reading this series, don't bother with this. It explains why things happened the way they did.
And there's no sex, so don't hold your breath waiting for it.
*****
I stood up as the couple approached. Vholes was clad in a ragged breechclout and Anna was wearing a short doeskin tunic. She carried a pack on her back, but it wasn't an ordinary burden-basket. It looked more like a cradle-board.
I ducked into the guest house. "You need to get out here now, Jenniferβ"
My lovely wife was sitting on the edge of our bed with her legs spread wide. Mary Louise was squatting in front of her, apparently examining her pussy.
"Get out, Jack!" Jennifer squealed.
"No, really. There's someone coming, and...I'm pretty sure it's your mother."
I ducked back out and stood up. Anna recognized me and ran into my outstretched arms.
"Oh, Jacky! You really made it!"
She lifted her radiantly beautiful face to me and I kissed her lips tenderly.
She shrugged out of her backpack and held it up to me. It was a cradle-board. And there was a baby laced into it.
Jennifer came out of the guest house with Mary Louise close behind her. They were both dressed in pretty doeskin tunics.
"Mom?" Jennifer gasped. "Oh my God, Mom!"
She ran to Anna and embraced her. Anna handed the cradle-board to me and took Jennifer in her arms. "I've missed you, Sweetie. But everything is OK now. Don't cry."
"But I was so worried! And you missed my wedding..." Jennifer sobbed into Anna's blond hair.
I looked at the baby in the cradle basket I was holding. Little brown child with blue-ringed black irises. Kind of cute, if you liked that sort of thing.
Tommy stooped to look into the baby's face and offered it his finger. It pursed its lips and looked back at him solemnly. "Kind of looks like you, Dude. Strange-looking eyes on the little toad, though."
The women were involved in a group hug, sobbing and babbling all at the same time. Vholes slithered over and stood next to Tommy and me.
"A little addition to the family, what?" Vholes grinned. "Children are always a benefit to the clan."
"How did you find Anna so quickly?" I asked. "And where did the baby come from?"
Vholes waived his bony hand. "I'd rather answer all your questions at once. Perhaps we should go inside while the women become reacquainted? I shall require a pot of hot water...I fear that I am rather fatigued."
We crawled into the hut and sat cross-legged around the fire pit. Vholes quickly assembled a small pyramid of sticks over a wad of dry tinder and struck sparks into it. He soon had it glowing brightly.
He warmed his hands over the tiny fire and carefully added more sticks. "Would that it did not take so long to heat water here," he said. "Some of the conveniences of other worlds are sorely missed."
"I could probably bum some water from the cook shack in town," Tommy offered.
"That would be most welcome, Master Thomas," Vholes said gratefully. "We will await your return before going into specifics."
After Tommy had left Vholes said to me, "Did the initial marital exchange go well for you, Master Jack? Any problems?"
"It was spectacular," I grinned.
"I would imagine so. When souls have merged, the subsequent joinder of bodies tends to be...well, as you say, spectacular." His bony face softened in the firelight, and I thought I saw a thin smile of fond remembrance cross his lips.
"Pardon me if I rest my eyes, and my souls, for a few moments, Jack. Perhaps you wish to do the same. I expect you had a rather...active...night."
I rested my hands on my knees and stared into the fire. Secrets seemed to hide within its glowing core, and the leaping tongues of flame sought to provide clues to the mystery, but I could not decipher them. I closed my eyes and let my mind open to the faint voices of my souls.
Tommy came back in with a large gourd full of hot water. "I came as quickly as I could," he explained, "but nobody had anything really hot so I had to waitβ"
The women crowded in behind him, joyous smiles on their tear-stained faces. Mary Louise carried the baby, crooning to it, and making it grizzle happily. Anna took the cradle-board and hung it on a post where it could see her before sitting down next to Vholes and leaning her head on his shoulder.
Tommy and Mary Louise sat down close together and Jennifer sat close to me, hugging my arm.
Vholes added herbs to the pot of water and tossed a pinch onto the fire as well. "So where to begin," he said wearily. "It is difficult to know, when there is no true beginning. All life is a circle, as is our world, and the paths of the sun and moon. They rise, they fall, we live, we die, and then it all starts again. Matter and energy are conserved, as are souls and consciousness. The plant and animal people know this well, and accept it without question. We humans, perhaps, are not so wise."
He stirred the pot with a twig. "Philosophers have debated the meaning and mechanism of this since the earliest appearance of humans on this planet. And it has been the same on many others. In the world where we all once lived, physicists search for a single unified theory of the universe, but perhaps Descartes had already found it when he succinctly stated, '
cogito ergo sum
;' 'I think, therefore I am.'"