Majutsu-shi no Chikara loosely translates to "Sorcerer's Power"
CHAPTER THIRTEEN: River between Moonbeams
Ginga could scarcely stop herself laughing, even as Damon shivered and cursed roundly. Kuruk watched him bathe in the stream, lit by the waning moon, and gave a
hooom-prrrooo
sound whenever Damon locked eyes with the troll and swore more venomously. Abhilash gave no effort to sparing Damon's manliness or easing his embarrassment. Naenia, meanwhile, looked a mix of proud cat and blushing maiden -- a curious blend belied by the streaks and globs of troll spurt she was also washing off herself. Ginga had only just seen the wide-eyed shock on Naenia's face, mouthfuls of spunk gushing from her lips as the she-ork held onto the mammoth rut-stick with gusto as it bucked and heaved in her arms. Why she'd chosen to fellate Kuruk and further stimulate his tumescence with her arms and breasts, Ginga couldn't fathom... except perhaps that Kuruk now seemed to be able to look away from Damon on occasion and looked at Naenia with something like longing.
"It's not that bad." Naenia burped loudly, dunking herself into the stream and scrubbing her bare breasts thoroughly -- at least to her own satisfaction.
"Never again..." Damon's teeth chattered, but his face was still hot with shame and anger. "I'm never telling anyone... about rutting trolls."
...
Damon spent most of the rest of the night lecturing and cursing Kuruk by turns... trying, however futilely, to get the troll to understand some of his more lucid ranting before sun-up. Kuruk watched and hummed patiently, eagerly listening and watching his master -- distantly hoping for another session of mating that would include him, however briefly. Naenia's mouth and hands had given him expert instruction in how his rutting-club could be used with smaller creatures, but Damon was furious with him... and Kuruk had trouble understanding why.
When the sun shone on South-wold again, Damon looked weary and sickly as though he'd just returned from the Sidero again... even if he was considerably cleaner.
The morning passed in a blur, Akuji mustered provisions into satchels, providing them with "adequate" traveling clothes -- in truth little more than what they were already wearing, along with several more yards of cloth, a handful of needles, small spool of thread, and a small pair of scissors -- and two stout saddle packs that should have been put on an ox or horse. Heavy as they were, Abhilash took a stave and draped the saddle packs over it and likewise set the limb over her shoulder -- counterbalancing effortlessly with one arm. Ginga and Damon were given a spear and hatchet each, several dozen paces of fishing line, with a half-dozen hooks, a couple hollowed gourds for their drinking water or weak wine, and a handful of silver coins, brass buttons, and twice that in copper pence.
All told, their trail rations were half a wheel of cheese, a small wax-sealed clay pot of pickled gerkins and peppers, half a pound of dried goat jerky, a little wooden box of dried cha, and some not-quite-ripe squash that had been saved from their smashed and trampled vines. To cook anything: two small iron pots, and a small granite slab large enough to fry a couple hen's eggs.
They were about to turn their noses north, when Nurcan sounded the meeting bell.
...
"I will not ask you to stay." Nurcan lifted her chin, ignoring Akuji's stony countenance. "We have become practiced grieving our losses, this Spring. We can mourn your leaving with the same tears."
Damon got the distinct impression that only Nurcan felt that way, and Akuji would not meet his eyes. He embraced Nurcan warmly, squeezing her as tightly as she would allow -- even though she hissed and cussed in his ear with a stiff smile.
"Naenia." Damon turned to the she-ork he was leaving behind. "Keep Kuruk out of trouble, and keep my father safe."
"Hmph." She nodded. It was the most she'd said to him since daybreak, even when he'd been trying to get Kuruk to understand the more complex idea of staying with the village.
"Kuruk." Damon walked slowly toward the hulk squatting opposite the crowded villagers still leery of walking too near the behemoth.
Aaaayymonnnn.
the sound shook his guts and his head swam, but Kuruk did not sway or move suddenly from where he sat beside the road.
"Stay with Naenia." Damon, whispering, put his hand on Kuruk's broad ursine snout, willing his thoughts into the troll. "Stay, and guard that which is most precious to me."
If Kuruk understood any better, his answer was to blink several times and exhale something like a sigh... it smelled of peat and moist earth. Damon's last stop was in front of his father.
"Stay away from Renks Cairn." Akuji grumbled, still not looking him in the eyes. "Better if you cut northwest from Meadowbrook, toward the Pilgrim's Road... to Tsuro."
"I will." Damon nodded.
He embraced his father suddenly, not daring to part without making sure he knew.
"I love you, da." he tried not to choke on the words, and could not force himself to say goodbye.
"Set it right." Akuji squeezed him, and Damon's shoulder became wet. "Then come home."
Stepping back, they only nodded to one another.
Ginga's parting from her father and mother was far more verbose -- with wailing, laughing and crying, cursing and oaths and Emarari taking several long pulls at a glass bottle he'd long secreted-away.
"C'mere, mah gehl." Emarari bawled, weeping and sniveling on his daughter's shoulder as she patted and assured him. Lunete was likewise beside herself, near hysterics. The Tanner's were a passionate family, wearing their hearts brazen and rampant. Their youngest child, only just walking and talking, fidgeting and fussing and crying without knowing exactly why Mama and Dada were so upset... not fully grasping that GheeGhaa was leaving and wouldn't be home for supper.
Then Ginga and Damon traded places, consoling the other's parents about their long journey ahead. Emarari slapped Damon's shoulders several times, tight-lipped and nodding to keep himself steady, where Akuji and Ginga shared an awkward silence before hugging silently, closely and stepping away from each other. Lunete gave Damon several choice words, a slap on the side of his head, another choice and much more vulgar couplet punctuated by a punch in the chest before finally wrapping her heavy arms around Damon's ribs and sobbing into his shirt.
Finally, Prende stood before them, barring their path north.
"Remember to practice, Damon." She kissed him. Far from the breathy, passion-filled kisses of a lover, Prende's lips grazed his full of promise and longing. He felt a twinge or twisting in his guts, and took a breath to ignore it. An irritating buzzing seemed to emanate from her.
"I will." He nodded dumbly.
"Ginga, I look forward to your return." Prende smiled warmly, rivaling the midday sun's heat.
Ginga blushed darker from the nymph's kiss, smiling and nodding mute answer.
"Daughter and exile of Sidero." Prende's face was full of wonder and questions, her brilliant eyes shining with laughter and the knowing of the timeless fae. "May you find your freedom."
Abhilash, though she could not stop herself blushing and panting, only nodded once her reply.
So, the three left South-wold, and walked north on the road toward Meadowbrook.
...
"What do I tell Inkar-chief?" Tuwile asked, looking north into the haze of the noon-tide horizon, shouldering his newest burdens wrapped in dun sacks.
"Tell her South-wold is guarded by a troll." Naenia shrugged. "Damon's troll. If she cannot understand, she should not be Chief."
"And you?" Tuwile looked at her with new wariness, having spent nearly two full days with the Betrayer and not felt her presence in his mind even once. "What of you?"
"What of me? I am Naenia, exile of Sidero." she gave another shrug, her eyes lingering on the horizon where Damon had vanished. "My fate is tied to South-wold. To Damon's people."
"The nymph?" Tuwile nodded thoughtfully, though he wasn't certain he fully understood.
"All the women are with young; she will not stay." Naenia lied easily. "Her belly is full, here. Her hunger pulls her away. That is the way of it."
Without so much as a nod or grunt of acknowledgment, Tuwile turned and loped toward the Willow Wood and the game trails that led back to the Sidero, the trussed and bundled corpse of a recently slain human bouncing against his back.
"And you." Naenia turned to Kuruk, squatting obediently beside her in the road. "When did you learn to talk?"