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Author's note
Part Nine concludes the portion of the series set in Spring. It is not necessary for you to have read the first six parts of the story, but this may be hard to follow if you haven't read Parts Seven and Eight. Part Ten will take us to Winter, and pull all the previous threads together.
This is primarily an incest story, but it is also sci-fi/fantasy, and supernatural elements are not incidental to the plot. Additionally, many chapters will feature elements of other categories, particularly group sex.
All sexual acts are consensual and involve parties who are at least eighteen years of age.
As ever, if you have questions feel free to email me or leave a comment. I'll try to respond promptly.
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Cahill sat in the great oak tree at the center of town, his bare back against the trunk and his legs crossed in front of him. Though he was perched atop one of the lowest boughs, the ground nonetheless lay two hundred feet below him. From that high vantage point, he could feel all the glamours they had placed over the city once known as Savannah. He had but to spin out a few filaments, letting the resulting reverberations inform him that the protective web was still perfectly intact. As it had been yesterday, and the day before, and the day before that. As he'd known it would be.
Still, he raised his flute to his lips. And as he began to play, his music pulled energy from his Libido. Shaped it. Forged it into something light and strong and resilient. Gave greater strength than was strictly necessary to the web he, his mother, and Aeife had first crafted so many years ago. A polychromatic lattice filled the sky, casting beautiful light onto the city below. It hummed softly, harmonizing with the sounds birthed by his instrument.
Shortly after he began playing, however, Niall wandered into the park. The teen shielded his eyes from the bright display his father had created with a hand pressed to his brow as he looked up into the tree.
With a sigh, Cahill tucked the flute into his belt. There might be no need to reinforce the glamours, but doing so temporarily alleviated the crackling of his nerves. Tamped down the flow of electricity that kept his body on edge from dusk til dawn.
He tried his best not to let his kids see that though. They worried more than they should as it was. They couldn't know that he did too.
Forcing a smile he didn't quite feel, Cahill dropped out of the tree. He fell no faster than a leaf would have, landing softly on the hard asphalt despite a great drop.
"Sorry to interrupt," his son said.
Cahill waved the comment away. "They're strong enough as it is. I just do it for the peace of mind." As his son well knew. "What's up?"
The boy looked like he suddenly wished he was somewhere else. Of course, Niall almost
always
looked like he wished he was somewhere else. Shy as he'd been as a boy, he'd gotten even worse after entering his teens. Puberty was never easy on their kind, and Niall wasn't coping as well Ty had at that age. It was bad enough that they had to undergo all those physical changes so quickly, the way mortals did. Add the sudden possession of an ability to sense and shape glamour and it was a wonder any of them made it to adulthood without going mad. Though it had to help that his sons knew who and what they were, that they were spared the worst of what he'd gone through, they were both much stronger than he'd been at that age. Their powers were developing fast and he couldn't even begin to imagine what it must be like to cope with that. Worst of all, while Niall wasn't necessarily any stronger than Ty, he had an incredible gift for reading Libidos. That made him especially sensitive to people's reactions. Uniquely prone to being overwhelmed by them.
"You weren't interrupting," Cahill said, deliberately infusing his voice with warmth and patience. "Really." He clapped his son on the shoulder for emphasis.
Niall smiled awkwardly, one side of his face remaining still. "I had that dream again." He scratched the back of his head. "Worse than usual."
He hadn't quite grown into his body yet either. Over the course of the past year, his son had added two inches in height, leaving him nearly as tall as his father. His shoulders were every bit as broad as Cahill's, but his frame was as yet wiry and lacking in muscle. He'd fill out in time, to be sure, but for now he was a bit ungainly.
"Doesn't mean anything," Cahill said. The boy should try having the dreams his father had suffered with for so many years. The sort that had made him question his sanity, his parentage, and his very nature. Dreams that sabotaged every attempt he'd made at forming meaningful bonds with other living things. What were a few nightmares about the Wild Hunt beside that? "We're safe as can be here."
"I know," his son said. "I know," he repeated, more softly.
They were as loosely connected to the Dreaming here as the Dreaming itself was to Faerie. True, in a sense, all three were of a whole. But one had to travel far, along paths no mortal could walk, to reach their fair city. And time flowed as differently here as it did in the Dreaming relative to Faerie. Perhaps more so. He wasn't even sure anymore, since he'd not left the place in a long time. Nor had anyone from Faerie or the Dreaming entered.
The only Dreamsmyth who'd set foot in Savannah was Oberon. And he hardly even counted as one of them anymore, now that he'd fathered two children by Aeife. His mother and her Wild Hunt had not reached this place, and that wasn't about to change any time soon. Not if he had anything to say about it.
"What did your mother say?" he asked.
"Not to worry about it," Niall confessed. "But that I should tell you all the same." He looked up at Cahill with his mother's eyes. Big, brown, and arresting. In a few years, his sisters would be in serious trouble. "If they ever find a way through...."
"They won't," Cahill said.
Niall stared at him incredulously.
He pulled his flute back out and held it up for his son to see. Though the great oak cast an even greater shadow, the silver acorn charm Liadan had given him gleamed brightly. It endowed the flute with even greater power than it would have otherwise had, and it was his finest yet. The silver beauty he'd given his father so many years ago paled in comparison. Any glamour Cahill crafted through the instrument would be twice as strong as it otherwise would be. Even more so if that glamour was protective in nature. "Trust me."
"I'd feel safer if you hadn't told me who gave you that charm."
Niall had never met Liadan, but the boy's mother had filled his head with tales about the Puck. None of which were flattering, of course. Granted, Caronwyn didn't need to distort the truth to cast his aunt in a bad light. The Lady of Mischief did that all herself. But his mother conveniently failed to mention any of Liadan's redeeming qualities.
He'd tried to fill that gap himself. But, like Caronwyn, Niall considered him an untrustworthy source on all matters Liadan.
"Grandma says my dreams don't do the Hunt justice," Niall said.
Cahill frowned.
Aeife sure had a way of spooking her grandchildren. Sometimes, Cahill suspected she did it for that very reason, though he knew that she'd say she was just trying to prepare them for a world they'd likely face one day. If he had his way, that day would never come, but he couldn't deny the wisdom of preparing them for it just in case.
"Have you ever witnessed it?" his son asked.
Cahill snorted. "Ever been told you're rather precocious?" Though every account of the Hunt differed, none painted a pretty picture. If he was less alarmed than his son, it certainly wasn't because he was under any illusions about what would happen if their glamours failed. And though Niall didn't realize it, his father wasn't feeling all too sanguine about that either. Still, before his son could get another word in, Cahill asked, "Would you feel better if I let you help me reinforce the glamours?"
That got a smile out of him. "A little, yeah."
So he took Niall by the hand and flew them back up into the tree. Together, they surveyed the city. Cahill hardly recognized it as the place where he'd first awakened. The population had more than tripled since that time. Yet, even as the mortal population swelled, the city had grown more and more fey. Everywhere Cahill looked, he saw majestic oak, ash, and thorn trees. Here and there, carriages were drawn by unicorns. At night, will o' the wisps guided people home safely. Streets constantly shifted, subtly altering the layout of the city.
"Dad?"
"Sorry," Cahill said, shaking himself out of his reverie.
He produced a fine fiddle from nowhere and handed it to his son, who nodded gratefully. Without further ado, the two them began to play.
#
When he returned home, Cahill found his mother out back, overseeing a scavenger hunt. There was something deeply incongruous, in the best possible way, about the image of her in her druidess robes, casually tossing glamour about here and there, surrounded by children. She looked as powerful and fearsome as ever, and the sheer presence of her vast Libido had his knees trembling, but the smile on her face was one of pure delight.
He'd never been more in love with her than he was at that moment. Except that was couldn't be true, because he felt that way a dozen times a day.
As he ran past at breakneck speed, little Regan loudly informed his father that the girls were winning
again
. Even before Cahill caught Caronwyn adding a fourth leaf to a clover Cori was about to inspect, he surmised what the boys' problem was.
"You're gonna get caught one of these days," he informed her.
"At what?" the gorgeous redhead asked, giving him a look so innocent it screamed of guilt. "I've no idea what you're talking about."
"Mmm-hmm. None whatsoever," he said, planting a kiss on her cheek.
At least his mother didn't seem to be favoring her own children. Cori was his daughter by Fiona, and he sometimes feared that Caronwyn wouldn't treat her the same as the other Walkers because of it. Nevermind that she'd approved it beforehand, or that she'd had Seamus plant a child in her the very night Cahill had impregnated his sister. His mother still leveraged Cori's existence to win arguments whenever it suited her, Aengus notwithstanding. Of course, not once in the eight years since the girl had been born had Caronwyn let anyone but him see the least sign of any disapproval. For all he knew, she didn't even hold anything against the girl, or him for that matter. She might just have liked having another arrow in her quiver. But he just couldn't help feeling a little apprehensive whenever Cori was with her, or deriving greater pleasure than made any sense from seeing her treat the girl kindly. Which, in truth, was all she ever really did.
He might not even have worried so much if his daughter didn't already have reason to feel like the black sheep of the family.