The old man was gaining on me - which was impressive. I had set myself a hard pace, but each time I glanced back he was closer. Close enough now that I could see him clearly, a man old enough to be my grandfather.
There was nowhere for me to hide, at least not without being so obvious about it he would suspect some mischief on my part. On the other hand, I doubted he would cause much trouble for me if he saw my green feet beneath the hem of my patched and faded yellow skirt. There was no one else around as far as the eye could see.
The path I was following was a muddy track that wound between heather-clad hills, climbing steadily. I hadn't seen anyone else all day, only that one distant figure that now approached. He was an archer, I noted, a bow in a sheath at his back, and a quiver with a single arrow.
"Hello!" he called cheerfully, slowing to match my pace. He showed no sign of exertion, and seemed indeed as if he were out for a gentle stroll and not a long, weary hike against a bitter wind. "Hello," he repeated, smiling in a friendly manner. "Do you mind if we walk together? I would be grateful for the company."
I hadn't spoken with anyone in days, not since parting from Rosa, and he seemed nice. "I'd like that," I said.
"Where are you headed?" he asked.
"The city."
He raised an eyebrow, intrigued. "There are no cities on this road."
"Which road should I take, then?"
The old man laughed. "This road is as good as any, and as bad. You're a stranger to these parts."
It was phrased as a statement but seemed to demand an answer. I chose to give it. "I'm from the Farm."
He whistled his surprise. "A stranger indeed. Is it true there are no monsters there?"
"The Maze keeps them out."
"The Maze..." He shook his head. "The Maze was built to keep men out, not monsters."
I stared at him in astonishment. "What do you mean?"
Clearly he enjoyed having such an engaged audience, even if it was only the one person. "This is a tale told to me by my father, passed down through generations," he said. "Who can say now how much is true, and how much the embellishments of time? It is difficult for us now to imagine a time when men sailed to the stars and performed such magics that bent and breached the barriers between realms. What is easy for us to imagine, though, is that men have always sought to build barriers between themselves and the unknown."
Indeed. "I have seen many palisades and fortress walls since leaving the Maze."
"Yes," he agreed, "for the world is full of monsters. The satyrs steal our women, the pixies torment all, and there is a most mischievous vine that captures men and grows inside them. But even before the monsters came, there were men who feared the magic of the old world. They built themselves a haven, a place of innocence, and guarded it with a maze."
This was nothing like the stories told in the Farm. "But if the Maze was built before the monsters came, why do our stories say it was built to keep them out?"
"Perhaps because men are monsters," he said with a chuckle, "or perhaps because those who built the Maze used a terrible magic to build it. A magic that protected the Farm by unleashing chaos on the rest of the world."
He stopped suddenly and studied me with a critical eye. "I'd like to give you a gift," he said. "Three gifts, perhaps. I am an old man whose time has come, and this is the last journey I will ever make. My wife died long ago, and my only child is a liar and a thief. He deserves nothing of mine."
I didn't know what to say. What do you say when a strange old man wants to shower you with gifts?
He took a gold chain with a gold medallion from his pocket. "This belonged to my wife, and I would dearly love to see you wear it."
It was a precious gift indeed. In the Farm, gold was a rare and lustrous metal used only for wedding bands. Heavy too, for its size and delicate nature. A peculiar symbol was etched into the medallion, and I traced it curiously with my thumb. I had never worn jewellery before, and I was eager to see how it looked about my neck.
The old man helped, fastening it for me, and the medallion felt both cool and warm against my skin. "My wife was a priestess," he said, "her medallion blessed by the goddess. She knew how to give a man pleasure, and her skill with her mouth made her famous indeed. I would dearly love to feel that again."
Suddenly I wanted it too. I, who had no desire for either men or cocks, wanted nothing more than to kneel before this kind old man and take his cock in my mouth. I didn't question the desire. There on the path, hills and heather in all directions, I knelt and waited patiently for him to drop his trousers and reveal his engorged length.
I had never had a cock in my mouth before, though I remembered too well the taste of the satyrs. Somehow I knew what to do, and the anticipation was delicious. I looked up into his eager eyes as I licked his shaft and sucked lovingly on the head. With tongue and lips I excited him, taking him gradually deeper into my mouth, teasing him in between, humming happily as I did.
The medallion vibrated gently against my chest, as if it too was excited by my mouth. "I'm sorry for tricking you like this," he said. "Only a stranger unfamiliar with the goddess would dare wear such a medallion. How could I resist."