Centaur Love
IX
First off I want to say thank you to taco1085 for willing to accept the Herculean task of editing my hot garbage. Please everyone give him a thumbs up for taking on this task. Second, I want to thank you the readers for following my story, without you Mathew and Felicia's story would never come to light. As in all previous stories and errors are mine, no one person can catch 'em all. (PokΓ©mon pun) All characters are over the age of eighteen. I am going with a centaur's age like humans.
Mathew woke with an itch he could not scratch. Sitting up he looked at Felicia as she tried to itch her sides on a stall still asleep. He watched her step back and rub her ass against the wall then tried the other side of her sleeping stall. Watching her do the scratch dance made him laugh. She woke up looking at him then growled at him, "Stop it, I think I got infested with fleas!"
This made Mathew laugh even harder, "No love, you don't have fleas. Just lock down the farm's heritage link and it will go away."
Felicia gave him a dirty look, and then mentally shut the link. She shook her shoulders, then her flanks. "Better, what was that?"
"Someone is writing in our book." He slipped his flip-flops on and walked into the front room, opening the magic room. The book was automatically turned to the Magic Emporium's page as they wrote in it. His order was ready to ship. He took the quill and wrote back ready to receive. Taking the beacon stone to the magic circle, he put in two mana in it and activated the beacon spell. Then he laid the beacon stone on the edge of the circle. He walked over to the centaur trench and leaned back to pee.
Felicia came out and saw a naked Mathew peeing on the temporary trench they had made for her use until they modified the bathroom. She liked having the inside bathroom, not having to run out in the mornings to go. It would be even better during the winter not having to run out in the cold like that. But seeing Mathew use the slit trench, while she used the bathroom made her laugh in irony. When he was done, he went to the barn to feed and let the horses out. Felicia watched as he worked, he was losing his tan lines. And tanning where he wore clothes.
Mathew was raking the pens when a small clap of thunder shook the barn. Mathew set the rake aside and walked over with Felicia to get the paniers. They struggled to put the new frame on the wall of the barn next to the old one. Then each of them carried a panier to the house. Each bag was made of two pieces of leather; a waterproofed outer piece, and a thick hard-boiled, inner piece. Both were sewn together with a silver wire mesh in between. The silver mesh held the reduction spell. Each panier closed with a bright silver zipper that a water-resistant spell applied to it.
Taking one bag, they stuffed it into the other along with his Gladstone bag and Felicia's saddlebags. Zipping up and sliding into the closet nice and neat. Felicia went into the kitchen while Mathew went to finish caring for the horses. After a quick shower, he joined Felicia in the kitchen for breakfast. Mathew was just finishing washing the last two breakfast pots, as Felicia was making enough dough for nine or ten loaves of bread, when he mentally heard his name called out, on the Elven heritage.
He opened his link < This Mathew Lindrose. >
< Good Morning Mathew, this is Master Sexitorius, I have your houseguest just about ready to deliver. >
Mathew and Felicia laughed. Felicia closed her eyes, concentrating on the link, < Good Morning Master Sexitorius, will you and Maddie both becoming? >
She could feel his smile, < I do not think she was planning on it, but I can ask her. >
< Well let her know I was planning on bacon and tomato on fresh sliced bread for lunch. >
< Gods above child, do not be shouting that, you will have the whole elven nation at your door want 'in some. Give us an extra minute or two while I send Maddie to the store for a small keg of dark ale that goes good with bacon on toast, and tell that of yours mate to make a tub of ice! >
Felicia laughed, < I will Master Sexitorius. >
Mathew looked at the bag of fresh vegetables they brought home last night. The tomato plants were the first to produce every year. Mathew's mother always bottled as much as she could for the winter. They had to steam them today or tomorrow since they only had two days before they left for Midvale. Felicia noticed his look at the bags of tomatoes, "Just store them on the bottom of the bread cabinet, and we will press them when we get back from Midvale. The spell will hold them fresh until then."
Mathew looked at Felicia not believing it. Felicia nodded yes, Maddie told me they have bigger insulated cabinets in Woodsheart that are airtight and can keep produce cooler in stasis that can hold fresh fruit throughout winter. And most winter tubers fresh all summer"
"Imagine having fresh strawberries or fresh cantaloupe during the winter. Or never having to eat stewed vegetables again."
"We can ask Maddie to inquire about one for us. Then I can bake less often but still serve fresh bread every night with dinner. Pointing to several bowls of mix, I was going to make trail bread for our trip to Midvale."
Mathew nodded, thinking she was making her sourdough bread, but saw she was mixing up two different recipes. "As much as I like seeing you naked, I think you need to dress if we are having company, human, or elven."
Felicia looked down, and grinned, "I guess you're right."
"Do we need to clean the second bedroom?"
"I dusted it last night when I looked in."
"Good!" Mathew said, and then went to get dressed. He then went to the barn and pulled down a half barrel. Instead of filling it with water from the hand pump; he thought he would try pulling water from the air with a forced cold air funnel that he thought about reading in Tiberius's book. His thoughts were to create a cold ball into a cone and force the air into the narrow section, increasing its pressure, and then as the cooled, high-pressure air expanded in the wider section, he would be able to pull the water from the vapor. In theory, it sounded good, in practice, it did not produce enough.