I know it took a long time to get Chapter 11 out—and you do have my sincerest apologies for that.
I also revised Chapter 10, adding a bit more story to it to flesh it out better. Life happens. So do rewrites (I think I must have made two dozen). Author perfectionism is a disease, I know.
That said, I do hope you enjoy this set of chapters. :D Thank you, from the bottom of my heart, for the stars and comments. Your kindnesses do my kinky little heart so much good.
*****
Chapter 10 — Otherworldly solution
Buhawi and Tala wandered off to another clearing that, obviously, served as a kitchen of sorts, though not one Tala understood at all (not that she understood kitchens much, really).
A stump wider than her girth and Buhawi's combined made a counter-cum-butcher's chopping block and four clay wood stoves stood in a straight line along the flattened top of a massive fallen log across it.
Here and there were beautifully hand-shaped pieces of unglazed terracotta pottery of varying sizes, what her people called
palayok
. These were used to cook traditional Filipino dishes like the oxtail and vegetable stew called
kare-kare
and the tamarind-broth based
sinigang
, as well as sweets like
leche flan, ube halaya
and the multi-colored and sticky
sapin-sapin
rice cakes in banana leaves.
Some of the pottery were sitting open, lined with fragrant leaves: Leeks, lemongrass, pandan. Others were bare, but capped with lids sculpted with handles were shaped like the
Sarimanok
or the
Ibong Adarna
.
"What do you feel like having, Babaylan mine?" Buhawi's equilibrium was back and his question was good-natured and upbeat. "I can't cook as well as my
Inay
does, but I can whip up some pretty good dishes, like
dinuguan
stew from razorback boar blood and meat or deer tapa. I can even make
puto
rice cakes from scratch and steam them in this," he said pointing to an unusual layered set of two
palayok
.
"I'm not much of a cook, Buhawi," Tala said hesitantly, holding onto the sheet she'd wrapped about her body, sarong-style, for modesty's sake. "You just go ahead and cook. I won't be picky about what I eat."
"I guess this means that I am the appointed cook, then," Buhawi said on a grin. "Perhaps I can get
Inay
to part with some of her recipes, then." He proceeded to prepare garlic, bird's eye chilies, red onions and ripe little native tomatoes for a saute, chucking the sliced condiments into little wooden bowls, whistling as he worked.
Tala settled herself on a bench across the kitchen work areas that had formed from smooth gemelina saplings that had been overlaid with fat square cushions upholstered in silk.
Oh, I could get so used to this
, she thought to herself.
It is so nice to watch a ripped, gorgeous man cook in nothing but those thin cotton pants that hug his gorgeous ass. Now, time to go over the
Bestiario
again. Maybe I missed something...
Tala had taken Beatriz's journal out of the folds of the bedsheets, where she'd spotted it before heading to the kitchen clearing. The book seemed to have a strong enough connection to her that it was with her when everything else in her bag was back in the land of the Taga-Lupa.
***
A shadow slid behind a huge balete tree, its tail whipping swiftly into the shadows cast by the trunk. A low snicker carried on the wind, but Buhawi was too busy making a feast for his Baylan and Tala was doggedly trying to find even the slimmest guide to taking the third hair in the
Bestiario
. It passed them undetected, even in the quite of the glade.
A horse's head, huge and malevolent, black as the deepest night, peeked slowly around the craggy bark of the ancient balete. Red eyes gleamed, shrouded by the moss and the masses of aerial roots hanging from the trunk and low branches of the tree as a huge Tikbalang, bigger even than Buhawi, hunkered down with predatory patience.
Soon, soon, it will be time to move
. The malevolent creature behind the balete tree grinned as it watched the witch and her Tikbalang move to a picnic blanket laid on the forest floor to eat the
dinuguan
stew and steamed rice Buhawi had prepared.
They think they've found their way. They think they will triumph. It will be so sweet to take that victory right out of their reach.
The shadow Tikbalang, for that is all he was, shadow sifting out all that is light, a featureless
maligno
eroded by time.
I'll let them enjoy this meal. Even the condemned get to eat what they will before the end.
The creature phased in and out, flickering from opaque to translucent, once, twice, a third time. Then he gained full solidity bearing an ornate bow double-nocked with barb-tipped arrows that dripped red venom from their pointed tips to the fastenings of their flights, sighting his unsuspecting prey.
***
"That
dinuguan
was delicious," Tala said as she curled into Buhawi's body. "And the
puto
... fluffy, light, but so beautifully done. You have to give me the recipe."
"Give you the recipe?" Buhawi cocked his left brow up at Tala as he pulled her closer to him. "Witch, after you take the third hair, you'll probably be calling me in at all hours to cook you that puto you like so much." He rubbed her belly slowly. "Then you'll be my fat wife—eventually, after all those rice cakes."
Tala gave Buhawi a filthy look, one that made him laugh again. She pursed her lips and pulled away from him as she rose gracefully from the ground, all legs and hips working and look-Ma-no hands.
Fat wife my ass.
Buhawi stood up and pulled Tala into a hug, his mouth opening to reassure her that he'd still find her sexy, a few more pounds notwithstanding, when his words were cut off by a searing pain in his arm. Just feet from them, two bloody arrows thudded into the forest floor. Arrows that had left deep gashes in Buhawi's arm and on Tala's shoulder.
Fire was spreading over his skin as he heard Tala's gasp of pain. Then she screamed, her agony making her keen through clenched teeth, gripping him to stay upright. They both broke out in sudden, cold sweats and the agony was seeping into their very bones.
A shadow detatched itself from the huge balete tree to Buhawi's left. A tall, menacing umbra with red eyes and a long, flickering tail. A Tikbalang unlike any other seen by Buhawi or his kind stalked across the space between them and Buhawi moved between it and his Baylan almost by instinct.
"I see the prince of the Tikbalang is not yet immortal," the shadow spoke, smoke snorting out of its flared nostrils, its voice both sharp and raspy. "Nor is the Baylan."
"Who are you and what did you do?" Buhawi's query trembled. His body was tense and awash with sweat and flaring, sharp pains that caused his muscles to sieze and shake as he struggled to support Tala.
Tala was trying to keep her feet under her, but her vision was blurring.
Must stay awake. Can't pass out.
She uttered incantations for healing under her breath, clasping Buhawi's hand tightly in hers as she willed herself into a conduit for whichever deity answered her prayers for her incantations to work.
"Don't worry yourself overmuch, Princeling," the shadow Tikbalang chuckled. "The poison is slow-acting. You have just enough time to finish your quest. Though I wouldn't dally, were I you. The poison is lethal, after all. Blood from a
tiyanak
's first kill always is. Especially if you manage to kill the
tiyanak.
"
Tiyanak. Tiyanak blood. Herodes!
Tala closed her eyes, willing herself to remember the
Bestiario
's passage about the
tiyanak
and its poisonous blood: