Comet Fall (Wine of the Gods) (30 page)

She snorted. "As if a man had the slightest idea!"

He bit his lip and refrained from mentioning that the man had three children to her one pathetic s
lump of a daughter. Who had possibly died a thousand years ago. "How's Grace?"

Mercy glared. "I'm keeping her away from bad influences like you."

Good to know, and to see that Mercy has moments of normal humanity.

Pixie sidled up, a tiny little shy thing, already looking better fed than when she'd turned up on the doorstep a month ago.

"How about a pot of green tea, and a stack of pancakes? Mercy?"

She sniffed. "Pancakes and maple syrup. None of that obscene butter on mine."

Pixie glanced at him uncertainly.

"Butter on mine, please." He was rewarded with a flash of a smile.

"She's a bit young, even for you, isn't she?" Mercy showed her teeth.

"So, have you adjusted to the changes? You've
only been back for, what? Three days?" He refused to be drawn into a fight, especially if he was going to have to explain the difference between 'being polite' and 'making a pass.'

"This place is appalling. Karista is
worse
, I couldn't spend more than an hour there." She glowered. "So, tell me about the other nations and governments."

Pixie delivered pot and cups without a peep.

"Verona, south-east of here is fairly similar to us, main difference is that it has an emperor instead of a king, and the main holiday is a nationwide orgy. Scoone, on the northern half of the East Coast has gone democratic in an odd fashion, but seems to be recovering. You might actually like them, if they didn't burn you at the stake right off. Auralia to the South of all of us is a bit nasty . . . although, your old friend Pax seems to think it has potential. He's working with their Amma to grab a chunk of the New Lands. In fact he's out there now."

"Paxal?" She sat up attentively. "Where is he exactly."

"Be careful, it's a gold rush boom town," the Auld Wulf warned her, then sent the feel and direction and distance to Lucky Strike.
Maybe she won't come back. I'd managed to forget what a pain in the ass she was. Is. And distract Pax from whatever he's plotting.

She stood up and looked down her nose at him. "I forgive you for what you did to that little girl. It's not really your fault. You can't help being male." She
stalked out.

The Auld Wulf thought it over, and decided she
probably
meant getting Rustle pregnant.

Pixie came back, juggling plates of pancakes, with and without butter, and a warm pitcher of syrup. She looked out the door uncertainly as she divested her load to the table.

"Tell you what, Pixie. Why don't you bring me a whole crock of butter, and about half a pound of bacon to go with this. I'm feeling carnivorous all of a sudden."

Chapter Twenty-four

1374 Spring

The New Lands

 

Mercy made an entrance.

The flash of light against the dark mountains to the west, bright morning light to gleam off the polished marble, all aimed to draw people out to see what had caused the flash. The rumble of thunder, the quiver in the ground to convince people of one's power. And of course, up on the hill, or in this case, the crest of the ridge west of the town proper.

Ordinarily Mercy would have avoided marring the natural beauty of the ridge, but she needed to impress this boom town from the start, so she didn't get any arguments. She strode down to the town, form
ed a graceful series of sweeping flights of steps ahead of her, until she arrived at the base of the ridge at the end of a
filthy
alley. She flipped the top two meters over, so the voluminous biological material could continue composting out of sight and especially, smell.

She flash melted the surface and walked out to the main street.

It was deserted except for a drunk unconscious outside an establishment called the Miner's Bust, a shack with a, no-doubt amusing-to-small-minds, picture of very large and improbably pink breasts on the sign.

Apparently gold rush boom towns tended to stay up late and sleep in.

"So much for your grand entry." Paxal Gould stepped out of the shadows behind her.

"Goodness, Pax, are you
lurking?
"

"I've learned to be careful. That damned old man."

"Wolfgang?" She sniffed. "Nothing but violence and disrespect in that man. He's a
user
. He won't get any respect from
me
."

"Well." He strolled up and smiled down at her. "You can get away with it. Me, he tries to kill."

Mercy sighed in shear aesthetic appreciation. This is what a man should look like. And how a man should behave. You wouldn't catch him taking advantage of a sixteen year old who'd just been raped. And such a pity the girl hadn't killed him instead of her other attackers.

"Well, he's a primitive," Mercy pointed out. "He can only deal with other people on a simplistic basis. Dominance with men, sex with women
. You are wise to not lower yourself to his level, and we both know he is incapable of rising to ours."

Paxal's smile widened. "Oh, Goddess of Mercy, now I remember why you are one of my favorite people. Do you by any chance have any chamomile tea? I will worship at your feet forever for a single cup."

"Come up the hill, Pax, and you shall have any sort of tea you wish. You know I can't resist you."

 

***

 

Jin didn't move until they were out of sight.

The Goddess of Mercy? She certain hadn't sounded
charitable
. In fact, if he was reading between the lines correctly, she did not like the God of War at all. This did not seem to be a good development.

He kept an eye on the big mansion or small palace up on the ridge as the sky brightened and people gradually dragged themselves back to consciousness or a workable substitute. The smells from the kitchen were not encouraging, so he finally gave up watching and walked back to check on his other responsibilities. They were all eating breakfast at the Gold Nugget. Jin eyed the amount of food on the table.

"Well, I see you lot are basically healthy."

Deni snickered. "Hey Luz, are you . . . healthy?"

Luz looked like he wanted to pound the other boy.

Card, the easiest going of the three, a copy of his dad, just kept eating.

"We're bored. Can we just walk home?" Luz said.

Deni denied it firmly. "Are not. I'm staying. This place is so alive, compared to home!"

Deni had just turned seventeen, Luz was younger by about a month. Deni hadn't taken to farming or mining, didn't like the bit of drill with weapons Jin made everyone do. Maybe he needed a place like this to fire him up for something. So many of the Gemstone babies his age had been sired by the goats that his blond hair and blue eyes were a startling contrast to the other kids' black hair and honey colored eyes.

Luz ran an angry hand through his black hair, and glared at Deni with his honey brown eyes. "There is nothing to do unless you've got as much money as one of these miners. You spent every penny we all had on that . . . " he s
hut his mouth abruptly.

"You could have enjoyed it, if you could have." Deni looked smug.

Jin sighed. "If any of you walk home, do please let each other and me know, all right?"

"Right, Dad." Luz poked dubiously at the runny eggs on his plate. "I'll leave a note in the room, should you ever show up again."

Jin flagged down a waitress, and ordered bacon and eggs. Time to change the subject. "The horse market here is tight. I've only bought one so far, and she's half wild and green broke. I ought to have had my head examined."

Half a hour later he
wished he'd found something else to talk about, because all three boys wanted to see the horse.

They hung over the stall and commented knowledgably, and of course spotted the palomino.

"Mr. Genero,
this
is the sort of horse you should buy." Card sounded breathless.

"There's no way I could ever afford a horse like that," Jin said.

"And you'd better be careful, he's been trained to fight." The golden youth strolled down the barn aisle. He looked the boys over, curling a lip at their sturdily made clothing. His eyes hung up on the boys for a moment, then swung to Jin and narrowed. "So you know what they are?"

Jin nodded.

The god eyed the boys and shrugged. He glanced back over his shoulder at the hostler bringing his tack, and stepped toward the stall. The horse was quivering, ears pricked with all of his attention focused on the god and teeth bared. His teeth opened in anticipation of a lunge. Then the quivering stopped. The horse stood frozen as the Hostler saddled and bridled the beast.

Jin looked carefully an
d could see the animal breathe, very slowly.

The god strode in then and mounted. The Hostler leapt away and Jin shoved the boys out of the middle of the aisle as the horse leapt out of the stall and charged out of the barn.

"Dad, what was that?"

"Magic. The man must be a wizard."

Deni snorted. "Yeah, right, another no-balls." He swaggered out. Card followed, and Jin walked out beside Luz.

"Son, we all grow up at our own pace. Deni is an indifferent farmer, too lazy to mine, barely average in school. All he's got to brag about is his personal parts, and that's not going to take him far in life. You, on the other hand, are smart as a whip, and a hard worker. You'll do fine, whatever you want to be in life."

"Dad . . . " Luz trailed off, stared off and away. "You remember all the stories about wizards? About what they had to do to gain their powers?"

"Yes?" Jin had a serious sinking feeling in his gut.

"There was this girl, two years ago, two and a half now, I guess. She said it was true, but that there was a way to delay puberty without castration that ought to have the same effect. She talked about the brain having a last growth spurt in the late teens and early twenties, and how male chemicals in the blood interfered with it, so it didn't develop wizard abilities. I wanted . . . I had her do that thing to me."

The words of the god came back to him.
So you know what the boys are.

"Well, maybe it is time we went to Ash. See your grandfather, and you could talk to the wizards there."

Luz spun around and grabbed his arm "You know where there are wizards?"

"Yes. There may be some in Rip Crossing, too."

"You never told me! You knew where there were wizards and you never told me?" Luz's eyes were hot golden pools, and Jin remembered the corrupt wizard that had fathered the boy on his unwilling mother.

"I didn't actually realize . . . well. We'll go right after harvest."

Luz stomped away, and Jin followed more slowly. He spotted the golden horse tied outside the 'mayor's' house and strolled that direction. His eyes automatically categorized what he saw, and his gaze hung up on the men and horses outside the dry goods store. The riding horses were good looking animals, light weight and long legged enough to have some speed and endurance. The pack horses were much the same, a bit sturdier, but still finer than most of the horses in town. The four men who were taking their time loading the horses carried swords naturally, and stood in such a way that the mayor's house fell under their gaze without them looking as if they were watching it.

Deni, Card and Luz walked by them, giving the horses admiring looks and the men not even a glance. They stopped and stared at the palomino, then slowly strolled on. Jin stepped into the dry goods store and found a spot where he could see the men. They were finishing packing the light load on the horses and tying the animals together in a string. Jin wondered if they had brought in a
heavier load and were now over-supplied with pack animals, or if they were planning on moving fast.

Other books

Whirlwind by Cathy Marie Hake
Devil's Eye by Al Ruksenas
Indecent...Desires by Jane O'Reilly
Origins: The Fire by Debra Driza
The Spectacular Now by Tharp, Tim
The Time Traveler's Almanac by Jeff Vandermeer