Chapter 44: To Cast Away Evil
*****
It was the first day of spring.
Jack knew it was the first day because his calendar told him so yet there were other subtle clues about the changing of the seasons. The first clue was the longer days. The sun was starting to come up at an earlier hour and it was setting later in the evening. The cooler weather had long since vanished, replaced by the middling malaise of mild temperatures. Finally, the last of the snows had long since melted into the ground, sparking a new revival in the natural life around the city.
The arrival of spring also meant something else to Jack--an ending to the six months of preparation by all the Allied nations before once again going to war.
It was a day in autumn the prior year when the great war council of the Allied countries assembled and voted to go to war with Bancroft and his Javan hordes after an impassioned speech by Jack's sister, Vera. After that speech, Jack allowed each country to have a six-month grace period to rebuild their forces, stockpile any supplies needed for the war ahead, and get their country on war footing once more.
Jack knew that the prior six months had been extremely productive, at least for Galicia. In those months, new recruits had been inducted into the army, bringing it back up to full strength after the losses suffered in the Fifth Swabian War. Many ships had been revitalized, including the
Destiny
, which had made good on the wounds suffered in the previous war. Lastly, the logistical network of transporting not only the Galician armed forces but those of the combined nations of the West had been put into play, with a mass creation of transport vessels for the moving of men and material.
The reason this network was necessary was for one simple reason. Jack wasn't going to wait for Bancroft to send his fleet to the West. He was determined to go on the offensive against his old mentor, bringing the war from the West to the East. The transport network would need to be sufficient to carry his fleet and his army across the great ocean to land on Java proper.
To say that such an idea was daunting was a total understatement. There was much in consideration for such a task, and Jack had his planners busy for the entire six months orchestrating a cross-ocean invasion. It was a task they were well-prepared to do, and Jack felt comfortable with the plan ahead of them as spring dawned on the country.
In all, Galicia was as prepared as she could be for the war ahead. Jack would see to a few last-minute preparations before the army was due to set sail for the mustering point for all Allied countries--the city of Zarah, in Picardy. Once the city was the center of Swabian strength in Picardy, mostly because of it's excellent harbor and strategic positioning on the eastern reaches of the Western countries. For that reason, Jack selected Zarah as the coming together point before they moved east.
When the great Galician armada set sail at the end of the week, they would have Zarah as their first destination.
Jack was interrupted from his thoughts as he felt a tugging on his leg. He looked down into the precocious blue eyes of his son, John, as the toddler beamed back at him.
"Dada!" said John before raising his arms in the universal signal to be held.
Jack chuckled and grabbed the boy and held him close to him. As of today, John was now a year and a half old. The newborn baby that arrived in Apulia was now running around the Galician Castle as fast as his little stubby legs could carry him. He'd long since reached the phase when it was all his parents could do to keep up with him. Just the previous day, Jack had caught his son trying to scale the side of the staircase that led to one of the upper floors. John had made it nearly five feet off the ground before Jack caught him, but it was hardly the first instance of such behavior (nor the last in Jack's estimate).
John was a handful, and he was becoming more so by the day. He was so much of a handful that most days his three parents went to sleep exhausted after chasing him around throughout the waking hours.
"That boy is going to be the end of me," muttered Kat after one particular instance of him being destructive for no reason whatsoever. "He never stops moving!"
Jack started to laugh. "And to think, he hasn't even entered the terrible twos yet."
Kat gave him a look that said she wanted to melt into the floor.
While John's biological mother wished for some hours of relaxation, his other mother wished for the right to get pregnant at all.
It had now been a little over seven months since Jack and Abigail made the decision to stop taking her birth control pills. Jack had expected a few months of prolonged infertility until her hormone levels recovered, but now that it had been half a year without any signs of pregnancy, he could tell Abigail was starting to fret about her chances of becoming pregnant.
"How come it hasn't happened yet?" she asked that morning, as they laid together sweaty and breathing heavily after another round of sex. "Jack, it's been almost a year and I'm still not pregnant."
Jack pushed up on his side and put his hand under his head. "It's been seven months and that's entirely normal. We knew you wouldn't get pregnant right away. It's just a matter of time."
Abigail curled into his side. "What if I'm the problem though, Jack? What if I can't get pregnant? What if I'm barren or infertile?"
Jack chuckled and kissed her nose lightly. "You're not infertile, Abigail. This is just going to take time. We have to be patient."
She clearly didn't like that answer. "I don't want to wait. I want to be pregnant now."
"Chasing John around the Castle really makes you want to have one of your own, does it?" he asked humorously.
Abigail either didn't get the joke or chose to ignore it. "That's not the point. I've been thinking about this for years now. Three years to be more exact."
Jack nodded. It was now three years ago that they'd met--the first time that Jack boarded the
Destiny
back in Quiller's Cove. His life was never the same when he saw the lovely brunette looking back at him at the top of the gangplank.
"I still want this more than I can even convey into words," she continued. "And I don't get why this isn't happening? I mean look at me! I have so much cum in me that I might as well be filled with nothing else!"
That wasn't quite as much of an overstatement as she would have liked. Jack looked between her legs, where another healthy dollop of cum was now seeping out of her pussy and staining the bed sheets beneath her. Hardly a day had gone by in the last six months where they didn't get to "practice" for making their baby.
"It has to be me," she grunted finally. "I know your swimmers work so the fault has to be with me."
Jack gently caressed her bare shoulder. "Patience, my love. Just be patient for me. Everything will happen when it's supposed to and not a second sooner."
"I don't like being patient," she whined. "Not with something like this."
"Well, you're just going to have to learn," said Jack, kissing her again.
Abigail stopped protesting and slipped out of bed as she started to get dressed for the day. Jack wasn't as quick to follow her, watching as she slipped on her naval uniform one garment at a time. It was always something he enjoyed, watching his women in various states of dressing and undressing. He especially loved the way Abigail's tight trousers gripped her legs and bottom. Mostly, it was the knowledge that some of his cum was still leaking out of her body at this very moment, an ever pleasing thought.
Still, there was another reason why Jack wasn't upset that Abigail wasn't pregnant yet. He knew it would take time but the recent developments with Java put him in no hurry to have a pregnant wife on his hands. When he had first given his acceptance of Abigail stopping her birth control, the war hadn't yet begun. There was still the hope that Bancroft would leave Jack in solitude without a conflict developing between them.
That hope was completely shattered when Bancroft murdered his sister and her family, putting them on the road to war. And even though Jack would now prefer that Abigail wait to get pregnant until they settled the conflict, he had no desire to tell her to wait after she'd already gotten her heart set on the matter.
What made it even worse was that this conflict with Bancroft had every marking of being the final conflict as prophesied. If that was the case, there was still a question of whether Jack would live or die after fighting the final battle. If his death was on the table, there was another very real reason why he didn't want Abigail to get pregnant. He didn't want to consign their child to a life without his/her father.
For those reasons, Jack was secretly content for the process to take as long as necessary. He just hoped that in the process, Abigail wouldn't go nuts with wondering when a seed might finally take hold.
After Abigail was fully dressed and off to naval headquarters, Jack got out of bed and drank his morning coffee on the balcony. It was here that he was interrupted by John as he was contemplating the arrival of spring, but John wasn't the only visitor to the balcony. He looked over to see Kat and Evelyn walking onto the balcony as well.
"There you are," said Kat, relieved at the very sight of him. "We thought you'd be in your study by this hour. Why are you still in our room?"
Jack shrugged. "Just feeling a little sluggish this morning is all. I had a late morning with Abigail and I haven't really started my day yet."
Kat gave him a knowing look. "Must have been a very late morning if Abigail had anything to do with it."
Jack chuckled briefly before giving his grandmother a more sobering look. Despite being married with children, he still disliked any mention of sexual activity around his oldest female relative.
"Don't be embarrassed, Jack," chastised Evelyn playfully. "Don't you remember what I told you the day we met?"
"I do," replied Jack, nodding his head. "You said that kings don't get embarrassed."
"And you still haven't accepted that piece of wisdom yet?"
"I'm sure it will fully process one day," he added lightly.
Evelyn started to chuckle. "We can only hope."
"So what was so important that you needed to find me?" asked Jack, changing the subject. "I didn't think anyone would miss me if I wasn't working already today."
Kat giggled. "Guess again, love. Like everything else, everyone's plans seem to hinge around you."
"Figures," replied Jack sourly.
"Actually today, we were consulting the prophecy that mentions you," said Evelyn. "And we believe we've found something important in one of the more obscure passages."
"How important?" asked Jack with a raised eyebrow. "Something we missed? Or a detail that could help us?"
"Potentially both," answered Evelyn cryptically. "Depending on how you want to interpret it."