The Fairy Ring
In the L&D Suite, at the Winter Solstice
"She's dilated to 8 cm and mostly effaced. Contractions are strong, about 3 minutes apart," said the nurse. "She seems delirious."
"She into transition now. She's likely to be a little out of it. Or a lot. Did she bring a focal point? Where's her labor coach?" asked the charge nurse. "Oh, you'd better notify Dr. Weems that she's in transition."
"Weems sent her husband out to get some supper. He hadn't eaten yet today -- the fool brought a couple of packages of mint cookies.," said the first nurse as she shook her head. She looked around and found a ceramic replica of a mushroom. "Here's her focal point." She set the mushroom where it was easily visible.
"That looks like a fly agaric -- they're mildly poisonous, and supposed to be psychoactive. The things these women bring in as focal points amaze me. I'd like to know the story behind that, but there's no point in asking now."
"Why do you know about mushrooms, Connie?"
"My husband's a connoisseur. We go 'shroom hunting in season. I'm always a little nervous about eating wild mushrooms --"
--o--
A conference room, near the Winter Solstice of the previous year
The fertility specialist breezed into the room in his lab coat with a thick manila file folder in his hands. "Mrs Adams, Mr Adams, I'm afraid I have bad news and better news. We've got the results of the fertility workups back. Mr Adams, we already knew your viable sperm count is low, but we've been working around that. Mrs Adams, your fallopian tubes are scarred -- that was the purpose of the dye study. I don't think there's any way for you to get pregnant naturally. Worse, if you
were
to get pregnant, the most likely result is an ectopic pregnancy.
"I'm afraid the only option is
in vitro
fertilization and implantation. That has a reasonable success rate. I think that we can get her knocked up and deliver a baby within a year or eighteen months."
"My tubes are scarred? How could that happen?" asked Joy.
"Most usually pelvic inflammatory disease. It's a curse of our time."
"So, in vitro fertilization is our only choice?"
"I'm afraid so. And you should talk to your gynecologist about having a tubal ligation. Ectopic pregnancies are a medical emergency."
The news came as complete shock to both of them. They discussed the problem. Andy said, "There is another option, you know. We could sign up and adopt a baby."
"You know how I feel about adoption, Andy." Tears began welling up in Joy's eyes, "I want to have a baby. I want
your
baby. I don't want someone else's, I don't want to use a surrogate. I guess we have to do it artificially."
"It's your call, Joy. Harvesting eggs is no picnic. The drugs -- you know the drill."
"I know the drill," she agreed. Joy sounded resigned to reality.
"I'm not trying to dodge responsibility in this. I love you Joy; I love you with all my heart. I want to be a dad. It's less important to me how it happens than that it does happen. I love you. You want my baby. We do what we have to do."
--o--
In the L&D Suite
Joy thrashed around after an intense contraction. "God, that was awful. Where's the crone?"
The nurse sat down next to Joy. "Who? Is that your husband? We've sent out a page for him." "No. He's Andy. Where is the crone? She's supposed to be here!"
--o--
A root cellar, shortly after the New Year
Joy waited in the root cellar for the witch to appear. The walls were covered by tapestries and the ceiling was covered by bundles of drying herbs. There was a single small table in the center of the room with two chairs. The wise-woman appeared in the room suddenly. Joy had been alone. Now she and the crone were in the room together. The crone asked her to sit at the table. On the table was a quartz crystal nearly half a meter long mounted on a rosewood plinth. It was flanked by three crystal spheres: one of amethyst, one of citrine and one of a black mineral Joy could not identify.
The wise-woman asked, "What can I do for you?"
Joy was silent. At last she spoke, as tears spilled down her cheeks, "I want a baby. The doctors say --"
The wise-woman spat on the dirt floor. "Doctors. What do doctors know of such things? This is why you are here, no?"
"-- I can't have a baby without --"
"I ask again: what do doctors know of such things? If you want a baby, you can have a baby. You must listen to my instructions, though."
"I can have a baby?"
"Of course. You are a woman, of course you can have a baby. But you must do as I tell you," said the wise-woman again.
"I'll do anything," said Joy.
"Don't do anything, just do as I tell you, Joy."
"Of course. What must I do?"
"Listen carefully to my next words. Heed them." Joy began to speak, but the wise-woman hushed her. "Listen, don't speak." The wise-woman closed her eyes and began swaying in her chair. Soon after she began to chant slowly.
In the forest deep lives a fairies' ring
Surrounding lightning forked pine
Wearing caps of crimson fine
At winter's close, in the spring
When the sun crosses equality's line
There you must consume the fruit of the ring
With your husband.
Clothed in cloth of the sky
Find yourself in his embrace
Nurture his seed within your warmth
But there you mustn't stay
For those whose fruit you stole
Will steal in turn your babe
And in her place a cuckoo leave.
As she chanted, Joy took her words down verbatim. After completing her song, the wise-woman swayed a while longer, and ceased and opened her eyes. She looked at Joy, and asked, "Did you hear me?"
"Yes. I don't understand but I noted what you said." Joy offered the notebook to the woman. "It wasn't much as poetry goes."
"People have no memory today," the wise-woman commented, "and if you want poetry, commission a poet." She read the verse. "It seems clear to me. Do you know what a faerie ring is?"
"No."
"It is a ring of mushrooms. I know this ring: it surrounds a pine killed by a lightning strike. It is a mixture of fly agaric and penny bun mushrooms. Fly agaric has a red cap: the line about the caps of crimson refers to them." She got up and went to a shelf and returned with some dried mushrooms. "You can see the red color on the caps. They are mildly poisonous.
"At the spring equinox you and your husband are to have relations in the center of the ring after eating the fly agaric. Afterwards, you must leave. If you don't, the faeries may steal your baby and leave one of theirs in its place. You
might
appease them with an offering of mushrooms, but I wouldn't count on it." She handed Joy the mushrooms. "Reconstitute these in water, and chop them finely."
"You said they are poisonous!"
"
Mildly