Forest Moon Rising (16 page)

Read Forest Moon Rising Online

Authors: P. R. Frost

“Self-defense. Most courts wouldn’t even order your arrest if you killed him during the act,” Allie confirmed.
“Soon you will go out and find your own patch of forest to nurture. You must ask yourself if you will choose to force women to bear you children or if you will woo them and gain their consent first.”
“But my father changes into the form of the man these women love.”
“But he is not the man she loves. He will not stay with her and help her raise the child to adulthood.”
That caught his attention. “Do you mean that your children have both a mother and a father past the time of weaning?”
“Got it in one.”
“I cannot believe this. My father says that all creatures have only one parent. Look at the deer and bear. He would not lie to us.” Oak pushed his chair back, preparing to leave.
“Look to the wolves. The entire pack raises the cubs. Deer fawns stay with their mother, but she has the help of her sisters and older daughters. They form a herd. We call them families. Your brothers and sisters are part of your family. But where are your mothers? Do the women who bore you not grieve for the loss of you?” I found my language growing more formal, settling into a similar cadence to his.
Maybe he’d appreciate the words better in a familiar form.
“My father does not lie.” This time he shoved his chair so fiercely it tipped over.
“Oak, take my card. If you or your siblings ever need to talk again, you can find me.” I fished a business card out of my belt pack and stuffed it in his jeans pocket.
He grunted and fled, leaving the chair on the floor.
“That went well,” Allie said sarcastically.
“We planted a seed. That’s all we can hope for at this stage.”
Chapter 14
The Oregon State rock is the thunderegg, actually a geode. It looks like an unassuming lump until you break it open to reveal marvelous agate or crystal cores.
S
UNDAY MORNING I SAT on two writer oriented panels with fair attendance for the last day of a con. If the topic of discussion had been fan based, like “Are virgins the natural prey of dragons?” no one would have been awake. Unpublished and under-published writers are a different breed, even if they come out of fandom. I looked out on eager faces primed with notebooks or lap-tops, willing to drink deeply of my well of knowledge.
My brain wanted to follow the Nörglein home. Fortunately, three other published writers sat with me and carried much of the discussion.
“Tess, did the injury interrupt your career badly? How do you cope with personal problems that rob you of writing time?” About the only question I felt qualified to answer.
“Actually, the bad fall woke me out of a long depression. I’m happy to say I’m writing again, even if I am overdue on my deadline. I didn’t cope with personal problems. I let them consume me. And my career suffered. So now I’m playing catch up.”
Scrap had told me time and again I needed to get back to work. I didn’t listen. I wallowed instead.
We went on to discuss ways to make time for writing around busy schedules, how to channel anger and frustration into characters, how to recognize the symptoms of clinical depression and when to seek help. Just as the audience members began comparing antidepressant prescriptions, Allie came to collect me.
“Is the car packed?” I asked, my mind already on strategies for removing the Nörglein from my neighborhood. How I’d deal with his children, I had no idea.
“Yeah, all packed up and checked out. I’d like to take one last cruise through the dealers’ room first,” Allie said. She adjusted her gait to match mine.
“What are you looking for?”
“A corset.” She blushed. “It’s white brocade with a lily of the valley pattern. I was thinking of my wedding night.”
I swallowed my smile. “Okay. There’s a rapier I’d like to fondle again. My collection is in mini storage and I’d like something trusty but inexpensive to keep in the house. I feel half naked without a backup weapon.”
“Me, too,” Allie said quietly. “Tomorrow morning, first thing, I’m going to buy a gun and get a carry permit. I feel so vulnerable without one. Last night ...”
“A gun wouldn’t have worked on demon hide, or bark, or whatever.”
“But it will make humans stop and think twice about snatching your purse because you’re in a cast and can’t move fast.” She slapped the hand of a grubby teenager (couldn’t tell if it was male of female in generic jeans and a black Tee, with short hair gelled into hornlike spikes) away from my belt pack.
The kid slunk away grumbling about life not being fair.
“It’s not just here. Most of the con community is well behaved. Out in the real world we are both in greater danger. I’ll feel safer with a gun. I’m trained when to use one and when not to.” Allie veered off to the costume racks of capes and corsets, hats and feathers.
Oooooh, Tessie, look at this!
Scrap popped into view directly in front of me and led the way to a different table in the crowded room. Two dozen dealers with twice as many tables or racks lined the walls of the large ballroom. Another dozen filled in squares in the middle. Scrap zoomed in on a display of crystals in the back corner. Hanging sun catcher crystals, crystals in jewelry, candlestick dependents. And a crystal ball.
From twenty feet away I felt the power pulsating from it. A real crystal ball made of beryllium or goshenite, not blown glass or rock crystal. Three inches in diameter, it would fit nicely in the palm of my hand. Mineral traces made it a bit milky. As I approached, the imperfections seemed to swirl and coil, giving peeks at something beyond the here and now.
At least I now knew what fascinated the Nörglein père in the dealers’ room. If the kids had broken away from the gaming long enough to look, they’d know too.
My pearls grew warm and my scar throbbed.
“What is it?” I asked Scrap out of the side of my mouth as he landed on my shoulder. He turned bright green with lust.
The real thing. If I didn’t know better, I’d say it came from Mum’s garbage dump—you know where I found your magic comb, the dragon skull gargoyle, and the Goddess brooch.
Imp Haven is cold. Nearly freeze-dry cold. Magical artifacts tend to get dumped there. No one other than imps and the occasional gamer goes there by choice. The cold preserves the magic but makes it inert. Otherwise, the power within would broadcast their location across every dimension. So they remain jumbled up with the rest of the Universe’s garbage until someone like Scrap finds them and brings them out.
I understand Scrap lands in the middle of the dump frequently when his Mum swats him out of the house for being inadequate, a runt, or too smart for her to understand. He’s lost more than one of his hard-earned warts to his mum’s broom.
The merchant peeked out from behind her display boards filled with earrings and pendants.
“Starshine,” I called to the familiar figure.
Like most dealers, she made the circuit of cons, Renaissance Faires, harvest festivals, small town celebrations, Highland Games, and pagan gatherings. We ran into each other frequently. Today she wore her usual uniform of long, gathered black skirt, pink peasant blouse, and laced gray bodice. She contained her springy black hair with a pink scarf worn Gypsy style. A few tendrils escaped showing traces of silver. She also displayed samples of her jewelry on her wrists, at her ears, around her neck, and dangling from the scarf. She sparkled in the artificial light. In full sunshine she’d near blind the unwary.
“Tess,” she said brightly, immediately moving a tray of unset crystals toward me. In years past I’d made some of my own jewelry from her wares.
Much as I tried to find something interesting in the tray of aquamarine and morganite—colored forms of the goshenite—my eyes kept wandering toward the little ball anchoring a stack of silk handkerchiefs in a basket.
Starshine laid a possessive hand atop the polished crystal, covering it from view.
The power within it still vibrated on my own personal frequency. I think I could locate that ball anywhere in the Universe now.
I picked up a pair of drop earrings with rough heliodor beads. That’s the greenish-yellow variety of beryl. Not my favorite color, but a useful distraction. Now if she had emeralds, the rarest and most precious of beryllium colors, I’d jump on the beads in a minute.
“Where are these from?” I asked.
“You know I can’t tell you that. My rock hounds would skin me alive if I revealed their secrets.” Her deep whiskey sour voice almost chanted. She bustled back behind her table.
Hmm, the ball no longer sat in the basket, and the top silk square—a red one—had gone with it. The silk dampened the crystal’s aura but didn’t entirely mask it.
I put down the beads. “Actually, I’m looking for something larger.”
“Oh?” That almost tenor voice rose to an alto. She opened her eyes wide feigning innocence. “I have some crystals still in the rock matrix in the back. I didn’t know you collected them.”
“I don’t. What about the crystal ball?”
“The what?”
“The crystal ball you had in the hankie basket.”
“Oh, that old thing. You don’t want that.”
“I think I do. It speaks to me.”
She froze in place; blinked several times; remembered to breathe again. “Do you hear it?”
“In my own way.” Yeah, it was sort of like a distant chime calling me to Mass or reminding me of a banquet waiting.
Only the banquet wasn’t of food. With that crystal ball I could eat and drink of spiritual journeys and quests. I could fill the empty places in my soul left by my mother’s death and Gollum’s desertion.
I needed that hunk of beryllium more than I needed food.
“It’s not for sale.”
“Everything is for sale.” I mentally calculated the balance left on my credit card.
“Not for one thousand dollars.”
I gulped and did some fast math in my head. I’d have to tap some of Mom’s inheritance to cover it. “What about two?”
“Um.”
Could I survive on salad and peanut butter until I conned Donovan into cutting me a check? “Two-five will cover all your table rentals and percentages for the next six months. Everything you sell will be gravy.”
“Make it three.”
I gulped.
Do it, babe. We’ll find a way to pay for it later.
I hesitated, fingering the card in my belt pack.
With that ball, we can bypass the chat room.
“I can’t. I just can’t. That’s too expensive.” My credit card would bounce faster than Scrap caromed in and out of his mum’s dump.
As I turned away from the table I hesitated. Starshine looked a bit stunned. “Here’s my card in case you change your mind.” I handed her the one I reserve for business contacts with landline and cell phone numbers as well as private email and Web site addresses, the same card I gave to Oak.
“You should have bought the rock,” I tell my babe for the umpteenth time. She doesn’t even look up from her computer screen.
So I slide inside and peer out at her, making faces until she acknowledges me.
Actually, she hit the delete key and that kicks me out of the system as fast as Mum’s broom.
“Starshine wants too much for the crystal ball,” she mutters and types another short paragraph.
“We’d have found a way to pay for it,” I insist.
“I won’t go crawling to Donovan for money.”
“What about Gollum? He’s got that mega trust fund for Warrior expenses while on quest.”
“That crystal ball is not part of the current quest. Besides, I’d almost rather take money from Donovan than Gollum. And I won’t call either one of them.”
“But ... but ...”
“No buts about it. I can’t afford a crystal ball. No matter how much you want it.”
“But we need it!”
“How can you tell?”

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