Note: For a long time I thought, I wouldn't write an incest story. As you see, now I ended up writing one after all. Since this isn't a category I usually write for, it might not be a "typical" incest story. First of all, the emphasis of my story is not on the sex, for me, eroticism lies also in imagining the situation that leads to sex, the consequences, the way the characters think and feel - so if you are mainly looking for a hot story with a lot of sex, this might not be the right one for you.
There are religious references in the title of this story and also in the story itself - it is not my intension to offend anyone with them, and should I have done so, I apologize.
I hope you enjoy the story, and of course comments and ideas are always appreciated.
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Agnus Dei, qui tollis peccata mundi, miserere nobis...
I feel a tiny smile play around my lips, for just a moment, before I regain composure and force my face back into the seriousness that suits the situation,
my
situation. I think I manage in time -- no one has seen me smile, and my eyes look closed, though they are opened just the tiniest bit so I can see the white shimmer of my hands.
I like the
Agnus Dei
, I have liked it since I was a little girl. It reminds me of how Robert told me it was about me when I was not old enough to understand anything yet. Once, for example, he was holding my hand as we walked by a church where they were singing,
Agnus Dei, qui tollis peccata mundi, miserere nobis
. He said "Psht, listen Agnes, they are singing about you."
Later, when he was a bit older, he didn't say that anymore, and then I too already knew what they were singing; but I remember. Maybe I shouldn't. It's probably blasphemous or at the very least silly, but I can't help thinking back to that day, and how he held my hand tightly in his, and how he smiled at me and said, "They're singing about you." I can't help smiling just a little bit when I think of that. And I always think of it when I am in church and praying, when I should have a serious expression and my eyes closed, and it always makes me smile and open my eyes a little bit to look at my hands.
My hands are pale now, as I never really go outside, and they are pressed flat against each other. They look small and white against the dark fabric of my clothes. I always liked looking at my hands. They are fine, and while they are small, the fingers are still quite long - they look almost a bit like the hands of a noblewoman I think, but then, that's not something I should think about. But my hands have always been the one thing about me I really liked. They looked so small in his bigger, darker hands. They disappeared into them when we walked along the street past that church, so many years ago. When I think of him, I always have to look at my hands.
I shouldn't think of him though, and even more, I shouldn't open my eyes - it's safer to have them closed, I keep forgetting that. And when I have to get up and walk to the front of the church, I should keep my eyes on my feet, it's not good to look around.
Like back then, last year -- is it really just a year ago? I believe it is, to the day -- when I looked up, and I saw him sitting there with Father and the other boys, and he looked over to our side, and for a moment his eyes met mine, and I wanted to smile, but his eyes had already gone on, and they were looking at Katharina. I saw her look back at him for just a moment, before she blushed and looked at the ground, and then I looked at him again, and he was smiling for her. His smile was different from any of the smiles he ever smiled for me, and I felt a wave pain surging up somewhere inside me. 'He's going to ask for her hand soon,' I thought, and the pain increased. I looked back at my hands. They were still small but with fine, long fingers, pressed against each other. They were shaking a bit.
I had to get up then for holy communion, and my legs were also shaking. I wasn't sure I could make it without fainting. 'Maybe it's the heat,' I thought. It was so hot that summer, the heat lingered even inside the thick walls of our church, and I was sweating in my summer dress. I could feel little drops of sweat loosen from under my arms and run down along the sides of my body as I got up to go to the front for the holy eucharist with Mother and my little sisters. I had my eyes open then, but the darkness inside the church and the people gathered in the front and the preacher and the cup he was holding, all started to blur a bit in front my eyes. I was sure I was going to faint, but I didn't. Instead, I remembered my brother's smile, and Katharina's blush, and that he was going to ask for her hand soon, and it all felt like a little pang in my heart.
'Maybe it's because she is younger than I am,' I thought.
I had already finished my eighteenth year the winter before, and no one seemed to think of asking for my hand. None of the boys from the village ever looked at me like that. I suppose I am not all that pretty. I don't have wavy black hair and creamy skin and a curvy body like Katharina. I am small and skinny, I have freckles everywhere, and my hair gets a bright red colour under the summer sun, though Mother used to always wash it with special herbs and roots to make it look a bit darker.
Robert said I am pretty, though. When I was little, he told me I looked like a princess -- even though I don't at all, except that my hands are much finer than is common for a peasant girl and my skin might be white enough. It always gets burned when I am outside too much.
But that was when I was outside too much, that is, because these days I am never really outside anymore.
Back then, I was always outside. A year ago, the summer was at least as hot as this one, hotter I would say, and everyone would have liked to just hide inside their houses, but you have to work if you want to live and a good Christian isn't afraid of working, even if the sun is shining as mercilessly as it was that summer.
***
I walked along the little path by the forest at noon every day. I had done so every day during the weeks before the day I almost fainted in church, and I did so in the days afterwards -- this particular day was probably just a few days after that Sunday when he had smiled at Katharina in church, and Katharina blushed and hid her face, but had that glimmer in her eye that betrayed her blush to be nothing but a game of coquetry.
The sun was burning parts of my arms and legs my dress didn't cover and the sand felt like glowing coals under my bare feet. I still liked the feeling though, and I liked the smell of hot sand under the sun, mixed with a few dry pine needles that fell off the trees due to the heat. I was walking quickly -- every now and then the shade of tall trees covered the path, and I jumped from one shady part to the next, where I slowed down in the illusion that it was a bit cooler, enjoying the relief for my skin.
It was warm under my headscarf, so I took it off and shook my hair free in the air. There was a slight breeze for just a moment; it felt nice to have a little bit of wind play with my hair. It felt daring to do so, to bare my head, but no one was around to see me and I kept walking and looking down at my dusty feet and the brightness of the sand. My hand carrying the little bundle of food for Robert caught my eye, and for a moment I enjoyed the way my hand looked against the blue colour of the fabric the food was wrapped in, and then I walked faster, realising he must be hungry, he must be waiting for me.
The thought of him waiting for me made my heart skip just a little bit, and I started running, even though little stones on the ground cut into my feet - my dirty feet - but I couldn't wait to be there, to have that half hour I got with him every day when he took a break from his work in the forest, and ate, and smiled at me. My little princess -- no, he hadn't said that for years, but still, for that half hour he was mine, only mine, and there was no Katharina or anyone around for him to smile at, all his smiles were only for me.
Our oat field was a tiny stretch near the forest, far away from the house. We didn't own much land near the village, and so we had to walk quite a distance to it every day in summer. Robert worked there alone since Father had become so sick, and at lunchtime, I walked there, to bring him something to eat. I could always see him from far away, working hard in the field, sweating under the sun. At some point he would look up and see me, and wave at me with one hand, and I would start running, even though that is not something a girl my age should do, run happily and fast, glad to feel my legs under me, impatient to be with him already.
But the field was empty that day. When I went closer, I could see his things on the ground - the materials, scythes and everything. The donkey was tied to a tree, and the cart was standing there too, but Robert wasn't anywhere to be seen.
"Robert! Robert!" I shouted his name, but the heat seemed to swallow the sound as soon as it left my mouth. The forest was dark and menacing suddenly, and the crickets seemed to overshadow any sound. My heart was beating wildly, and I remember feeling cold, despite the heat. This wasn't right, where was he?
***
I remember shivering under the sun, just as I shiver now, every day, under the cold weight of the walls of this church. The robes I have to wear are thick and heavy; they hide my body, but for some reason they don't warm it. I am always cold now, even though the summer is as warm as it was last year. And that day, when I was standing by our field under the hot sun, I felt so cold, as if this place I am at now -- the place I plan to stay at for the rest of my life -- was already reaching out to me, clasping my heart with cold claws. Maybe I guessed at that very moment what the future would hold for me.
I felt a strong urge to turn around and run home. I couldn't understand my own fear -- it was normal for him to take breaks every now and then. You had to, under the burning sun, if you didn't want the heat to kill you. Probably he had just taken a walk into the forest.