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Author's Note
This continues a re-telling of my Homelands series. I'm proud of the original versions but don't feel that they lived up to their full potential. This time around, you can expect a slower pace, stronger characterization, and a less grandiose plot. This is no longer an epic fantasy, with a huge battle between good and evil waiting at the end. If you read the original versions, you should feel as though you're revisiting old friends, but you shouldn't assume that you know how their story ends. If you haven't, there is no need to do so. This re-telling is meant to stand on its own and is my preferred version of the tale.
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When Frank stepped out of the passenger car, he forgot to let his feet touch the ground. Leaves swirled around him like water going down the drain and the air was shimmering.
Then he saw that not everyone had waited him and Noreen to finish up.
Nat confirmed that Dom and their mother had lost patience and decided to head towards the house by themselves. Liz had tried to convince them to stay, but Grandpa Dick had said there was no reason for them to. He was probably even right about that. On some level, Frank knew he had no right to be disappointed in his mother. If he didn't get to share his initial exploration of Autumn with her, that was his fault. Yet a needier side of him, one Frank only wished he could silence, wished he could turn back the clock. As great as the sex with his grandmother had been, to say nothing of all that energy, the price was too steep.
What if the tour their mother gave Dom ended in her bedroom? Or his, for all the difference that would make. Knowing her appetite, and his brother's not-so-reluctance to satiate it, the odds were good that neither would be seen again until morning, save perhaps for a trip down to the kitchen to grab some food that could easily have been summoned.
"Maybe if the three minutes you'd asked for hadn't lasted fifteen," Todd said, leaving it to Frank to fill in the rest of the sentence. He then elbowed Nat in the side, as if to inform their sister that his comment was more than witty enough to laugh at, seeing as she hadn't noticed that on her own. "Shit, I'd be on my way too, if I had any idea how to get there."
That even Todd could tell he wasn't welcome to join the expedition party told Frank everything he needed to know about what would happen after it arrived at Orwin Manor.
"That's okay," Noreen said, sounding a bit up-in-the-clouds still herself.
A quick glance at her confirmed that Frank wasn't the real reason the air was shimmering. Had he drank his full and then some? Sure. He'd given plenty back, though, and when a Libido the size of his grandmother's was pushed to the absolute limit like that, an overabundance of energy causing it to strain and swell, even the physical world took notice.
Well, okay, it always did to
some
degree. But there was something of a difference between causing air particles to follow a path that wasn't quite natural and looking like a human bonfire. Shit, there were even sparks raining down around her, if not many of them. A Libido that wasn't in duress still caused slight disturbances, but they were so minor that Frank's siblings claimed they couldn't even see them. He wasn't sure whether that meant he possessed a talent they did not or if they just needed to try harder, but no one could miss the impact their grandmother was currently having on her surroundings.
Or, rather, the worldly manifestations of energy seeping through cracks in her Libido. That was what he was witnessing. She wasn't just at capacity; she was past it. Frank had given his grandmother more than she could take. The woman certainly hadn't complained about that—quite the opposite—but he'd literally been too much for her.
The same was true in reverse, of course, but that wouldn't surprise anyone. Even his sister had poured more energy into his Libido than it could possibly contain, if not with the same regularity their mother had. It was easy to make Frank overflow. Noreen, though?
When was the last time Grandpa Dick had managed that?
"In fact, I think we should remain in small groups," Noreen continued. Her voice had returned to normal, but she was still leaking. The others had noticed, too, because how could they not? At any moment, she was going to start a forest fire. She didn't seem to care that some of them were gawking at her, though. If anything, she amused by it. "Let's all pair up with someone different, though." The arm looped through Frank's fell away and she favored his younger brother with a grin that was simultaneously menacing and yet deeply arousing. "If this is your first time in Autumn, find someone who's been here before."
Todd didn't say a word as she led him down the steps from the concrete slab that served as a makeshift train station. A crisp suit, reminiscent of a military uniform but without the insignia, replaced his scarecrow costume and he somehow managed to make it look as though he was escorting their grandmother rather than the other way around.
Brie gave Bobby a hip check. "How about it, big guy? Mind showing me around?"
Her words might have been for their uncle, but her eyes went from Frank to her mother then returned to glower at him. And not because his eyes were glued to their grandmother's posterior, which looked surprisingly full in the diaphanous green gown she'd changed into.
He was hardly opposed to the idea of letting Liz show him around, but part of him still resented the way her daughter kept forcing the issue. Was Brianna right that Frank and his mom weren't meant for each other? Perhaps; he wasn't even sure he believed in that sort of thing, however much he might like to. Either way, that was for Frank and his mother to work out on their own. There was no need for his cousin to play matchmaker.
And how fair was that to
her
mother? Liz was—
—giving him a shy smile. Followed by a nervous little wave.
He smiled back, starting towards her.
"What would you like to see first?" Grandpa Dick asked Natalie, planting his hand just above her bubble butt. "The house or the orchards?"
When his sister replied that she loved picking apples, without a hint or sarcasm or an obvious double entendre, Frank decided that he didn't know her anymore. Though he supposed that was touching, in a way. For a moment, Nat was the same girl who used to liked to help their father rake leaves because he'd let her gather them all into a pile at the end and jump in it before he stuffed them in a trash bag. Would her tour of the manor and its properties end with their grandfather's fat cock stretching both her holes? Probably. The girl would have plenty of wholesome fun before that, though, and might even deserve it. She was as fond of fall as Frank was, and more outdoorsy besides.
"It looks like you drew the short straw again," Liz said, running a hand through her hair.
"How do you figure?" Frank asked as he looked over her new outfit. She now wore a brown dress with dark leggings, a thick belt in still another shade of brown, a sensible pair of boots that came to mid-calf. A knitted scarf was wrapped around her shoulders, offering just a splash of color. Orange, as it happened, though she wasn't brave enough to make her lips match. Those remained red, which would probably earn her a lecture from her daughter later on about the importance of matching one's makeup to their outfit. In Frank's humble opinion, though, she pulled it off. "You're taller than anyone but Nat," he added, "and if those boots had the sort of chunky heels she loves so much, even she'd be the same height."
His aunt seemed too distracted by his vest to manage a response to that, though. Not that Frank could blame her; it was a bit louder than anything he usually wore. Granted, he didn't usually wear
anything
above the waist, and still didn't have an actual shirt on, but he didn't think it was his swollen pecs or toned abs that had caught Liz's attention.