This is the first time I've submitted a story for a contest. It's much shorter than my usual lengthy rambles. Hope you'll enjoy it.
Submitted on Friday the 13th ....
***
- "You idiot! You never think!" said my father.
Actually, he shouted it. He was absolutely right. Sleeping with the Duke's niece wasn't very bright, for the son of an innkeeper. Getting her pregnant certainly qualified as idiotic.
"You'll have to run." said my father. "Far away."
- "For how long?" I asked. "When can I come back?"
- "Never, you moron!" he shouted. Then he rubbed a hand over his eyes. "Look, Amyalos - I'll write a letter to your uncle. He'll know where you can go."
Mother wrapped up a cheese and a loaf of bread, while father painstakingly scratched out the letters. I got my sheepskin and a stout walking stick.
I left at dawn. It took three days to reach my uncle, who lived in the Vale of Ifnia - the northernmost corner of the Duchy. He was a bit surprised to see me, but he welcomed me warmly. He read father's letter immediately.
- "You idiot!" he shouted. "You can't stay here."
Uncle looked me over, as if he was inspecting a hog.
"Strong. Stupid ... you wouldn't last a week in the town." he said. "Ha! I know!"
Uncle explained to me where I had to go.
- "Really?" I said.
- "It's the only place they won't come looking for you." he assured me.
- "How long do I have to stay there?" I asked.
- "Until the Day of Souls." said Uncle. "The Duke is in the habit of granting amnesties on the Day of Souls. He might be prepared to forgive your ... transgression."
- "That's the day after tomorrow." I said.
- "Not
this
year, stupid." he said. "He doesn't even know that she's pregnant yet. Next year. Better yet, wait two years. Then you can come back."
That was how I found myself headed north, into the hills around Mount Pagida. I had heard stories about the mountain: it sounded like a place you wouldn't want to go - but I couldn't remember why.
I walked, and walked. The further north I went, the poorer were the farms. I split wood, repaired a stone wall, or did other simple tasks to earn my bread. It was growing colder, and it wasn't very pleasant sleeping outside.
The work delayed me, so it wasn't until the Day of Souls that I entered the forest on the fringes of Mount Pagida. The route was easy to follow - I certainly wasn't tempted to leave the path. The woods looked dark, and ominous.
It was late in the day when I reached the end of the forest. There was a simple hut next to the path. A man sat on a crude bench, just outside the door. He rubbed at his eyes as he saw me.
- "Are you real?" he asked.
- "Of course I am." I replied. "Are you?"
- "What? Wait - Demas! Come see this!"
A second man came out of the hut. "Don't shout!" he shouted.
Both men looked a little worse for wear. That was to be expected, I suppose, if they had been celebrating the Eve of Souls last night. They were brothers, named Demas and Hurc, and it took them some time to understand what I wanted.
- "It's not all that complicated." I said. "I just want work, and a place to stay."
- "Just a moment." said Hurc - or Demas. I wasn't quite sure which one was which. They stepped away for a moment, to confer. I took the opportunity to look around. Their hut was fairly crude. It could certainly have used a woman's touch.
The forest was daunting, but from here, the view of the mountain was spectacular.
- "There's work." said Demas - or Hurc. "Just follow the path until you reach the inn. It's only two miles. Adrie will help you out. He's our brother."
I thanked them, and hurried on, to reach the inn before dark. It was the first building I came to. I had only seen a few inns before this - but the inn on Mount Pagida was easily the smallest, and the shabbiest. It had no signboard, no trough for watering horses, and only a few windows - all of them shuttered.
There were only two people inside: a big, heavy-set man, and a dark-haired girl.
- "What do you want?" said the man. He was gruff - almost angry.
- "If you are Adrie," I said, "then your brothers suggested that I might find work, and a place to stay here."
- "Did they?" he said. "Well, well ..."
***
Adrie grudgingly let me sleep in the wood shed that night. The next day, he found enough work to keep me busy from dawn to dusk. His brothers arrived, and the three of them ate and drank while I finished chopping wood.
By the time I came in, Adrie's mood seemed to have changed.
- "Amyalos, my boy. Come have a drink." he said. "Elpida! A drink for our friend. And bring more food!"
The girl scurried about, while Adrie treated me to a gap-toothed grin.
"I think we may be able to make an arrangement." he said. "How long were you thinking of staying, Amyalos?"
- "I don't know." I answered. "For the year, maybe. Or maybe two."
- "Is that so?" said Adrie. He glanced at his brothers. "Well ... I'll tell you what. If I get you anything you want, would you be willing to stay here for a year? Until, say ... next Day of Souls?"
Anything I wanted? By the Gods, these mountain men were simpletons.
- "I want steady work - and a place to stay. I know the business of running of an inn." I said. I got that the impression that Adrie would grant me anything I asked. "And I'll sleep inside - not in the shed."
The brothers accepted my conditions immediately. They were all grinning as we shook hands on it.
***
That night, I was awoken by a sudden sound. It came from inside the inn. I heard a thump, and then another. I got up from my bed, and noticed light under my door. Someone was in the common room.
It was Adrie. He was fucking the girl. He had thrown her skirts up, almost over her head, and was slamming into her roughly, from behind. I couldn't see the girl's face.
It was none of my business, so I went back to bed.
The next night, I heard them at it again. This time, though, I heard the sound of a blow - a slap, really, like when an open hand strikes bare skin. I also heard the girl cry out. That was enough. I climbed out of bed, and went into the common room.
- "Stop that!" I shouted. It was only at that moment that I realized it might have been unwise to confront Adrie while he was fucking. He was my employer, after all; what if he kicked me out? I hadn't planned ahead. I had no idea what to do if he said no.
But Adrie stopped. He didn't look happy about it, but he released the girl, and stepped away from her.
- "If you say so." he said.
There were no more noises that night.
In the morning, I found the girl sleeping on the floor, just outside my door. She woke up the moment I opened it.
- "What are you doing here?" I asked. "That can't be very comfortable."
The girl looked up at me. She had long, dark hair, which needed a wash. Her eyes were pretty. She might have been passably attractive, if it weren't for her square jaw, the bruises, and the badly broken nose.
She was scrawny, too - underfed, probably. There were bruises on upper arms, as well.
- "Did Adrie hurt you?" I asked.
She nodded, looking up at me with those lovely eyes. "He uses me." she said.
- "You don't want him to?"
She shook her head.
That wouldn't do. I went looking for the innkeeper.
- "Adrie," I said, "you shouldn't be forcing that poor girl against her will. That's hardly honourable - it has to stop."
- "Honourable." he repeated. It occurred to me then - again, a bit late - that it might not be wise to address my employer in this manner. He was looking at me oddly, almost as if I had two heads. Or perhaps he had never been spoken to in this way.
But he nodded once. "Alright. If you say so."
And that was that. The girl came to thank me after supper.
- "You're quite welcome." I said. "I'm sorry I didn't arrive sooner."
That remark earned me a shy smile from the girl.
"What's your name?" I asked.
- "Elpida." she said.
- "That's a lovely name." I said.
- "Do you want me?" she asked, out of nowhere.
I gave her a second look. I hadn't been with a woman since ... the Duke's niece. And one never knew when opportunity would knock again. Still, I would have preferred that she be ... a little fresher.