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Think Before You Deal

First – “So, Who are You?”
Previous – Bug

Graduation Requirements? Blaecleah looked between Sedge-too-tall and ‘Obe-Horned-person. The conversation just kept getting weirder, and all he really knew was that he had dived in way over his head way too fast.

And ‘Obe was sighing. “Some day…” The frown was morphing into a smile. “Some day, Sedge, you’ll learn to figure out your deals before you make them. So. Yes, I can help you find a nice girl to help you with the requirements.”

“That’s not what you said! That’s not…”

“Well, we didn’t shake on it nor did either of us promise, for one.” She shifted her weight to her front foot and ticked off points on her fingers. “So I’m under no obligation. For second, I didn’t say I’d do the deed with you – I’ve never said I’d do the deed.”

Sedge’s expression darkened. “It’s not like I’m ugly.”

Wait, what? Blaecleah looked back and forth between them. Were they talking about…

“No.” The smile slipped for a moment. “You’re certainly not. It’s just that I have two more years after this, and this is your last year, and I just don’t want to, right now.”

Sedge sighed, the sort of put-upon full body sigh that Blaecleah had seen younger kids do when they were told they could’t have ice cream before dinner. “Fine. So… you’ll help? Just not… help?

Were they really still talking about… well, and if they were? People had weirder euphemisms.

“Well, you did manage to get the Easter Egg. I really didn’t think you’d be able to pull that off. So, yeah. I’ll help with the grad requirements.”

Something went a little limp in too-tall-Sedge. “Thanks, Niobe.”

Niobe! That was a more reasonable name than ‘Obe. And she was smiling a sort of sad older-sister smile. “You had reasonable expectation that I would help you, even if your listening skills are in doubt. What are you going to do with the kid, now?”

With the… she meant him. Blaecleah looked up at Sedge. There was a feeling in his throat like he was going to puke, and he didn’t understand why.

The look on the tall guy’s face didn’t help, either. He looked down at Blaecleah and sighed, all put-upon no-ice-cream again. “Damn, I don’t know. Do you want him?”

Next – Change of Plans


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Brown paper packages… ♪♫

I asked for prompts regarding Packages here for The MicroPrompt Giraffe Call. This is written to Rix_Scaedu’s Prompt here.


♪♫ Brown paper packages tied up with strings
These are a few of my favorite things… ♫♪

It sounded like her doorbell, if Ackelea had decided on the world’s twee-est doorbell. It sounded like a weird prank for late in the evening the day after Hell Night. It sounded like she ought to open her door, because it had just moved on to

♪♫ Cream colored ponies and crisp apple streudels
Doorbells and sleigh bells and schnitzel with noodles… ♫♪

and the Dead Gods alone knew what schnitzel with noodles was supposed to be.

“I’m coming, I’m coming, intercom on, I’m coming.”

♪♫ Wild geese that fly with the moon on their wings
These are a few of my favorite things ♫♪

“Dead things and intercom off blasted gods stop ringing already I’m on my way” She yanked the door open, remembering only then that she was wearing her oldest pair of shorts and her bra, because who visited anyone on the evening after Hell Night?

♪♫ Brown paper packages tied up with strings… ♫♪ The doorbell cut off as she opened her door, which was a small blessing at least.

“Well, that’s a brown paper package,” Ackelea said, mostly to herself. She wasn’t certain the package could hear her. “And it’s definitely tied up with string. Hope it’s not butcher paper, I don’t think that stuff breathes.”

On her doorstep, wrapped up in almost more string than paper, was something the general size and shape of a human being – or a fae – complete with a tag sticking out.

♪♫ …These are a few of my favorite things… ♫♪

Tip Package 😉

♪Tied Up With String♫

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Bug

After So, Who Are You?.

The halls seemed more empty than normal; it seemed as if Tall Guy was dragging Blaecleah down a viewing gallery to his execution.

He went where he was dragged, because Tall Guy had a very firm grip, and because he wasn’t sure that he could go the other way if he wanted to, even if Tall Guy let go.

Was that Master Tall Guy? Nah, that only happened in the stories. Well, mostly in the stories. He hadn’t been really sure about the collars, until D.J. had brought that skinny skinny girl around with the shiny gold collar. So maybe he just hadn’t read the right books? Maybe the creche library had been holding out on him…

“Here.” Tall Guy came to an abrupt stop, quick enough that Blaecleah kept moving. Somehow he found that momentum used to push him in front of Tall Guy, the grip on his arm traded for a grip on both shoulders. “See, ‘Obe? I told you.”

“‘Obe” was probably the woman – girl? – horned person in front of them, taller than Blaecleah by an inch, blonde and stunning with sun-burnished bronze skin. She looked as if Tall Guy had just handed her a bug, like they were kids on the playground.

Being the bug, Blaecleah found, was far less fun than handing the bug to someone else.

“‘Here?'” ‘Obe looked Blaecleah up and down. “It’s a first-year student, Sedge, well done.”

“Kneel.”

“Wha-” Blaecleah dropped to his knees. “Oh.”

Niobe sighed. “Sedge…”

“Tell her what happened, honestly.”

“What happened? I mean, you said you thought I was soft and dared me to take a year as yours.”

“And you knew what that entailed?”

“I know what being Kept is, doesn’t everyone?”

“See, ‘Obe? You said if I could get someone to willingly agree to the collar, you’d help me with the graduation requirements.”

Next: Think Before You Deal


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Feedback Wanted: Kailani/Dean Storm and Addergoole East ~ House Names

So, in Addergoole East (at least early-timeline), Kailani/Dean Storm has chosen to go with Houses of the Harry Potter sort.

I am thinking of having her (she is a very nerdy young lady with a serious academic bent) name them after the four/five classical Greek/Latin elements.

Thoughts? Brainstorming? Scoffing?

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Doeees anyone know if I have determined anywhere in writing~

~what Professor Pelletier’s Name is? And, if so, is it somewhere I can easily change it?

Help?

Edit: It’s not in the character: Pelletier tag.
Edit: Or on the wiki

Edited again: Her Name-name, her Adult Name, the way Luca’s is Hunting Hawk and Regine’s is Lady of the Lake

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What Comes Around…

I asked for prompts regarding Circles here for The MicroPrompt Giraffe Call. This is written to Rix’s Prompt here and is set in the pre-apoc of my Addergoole ‘verse.

“Yeah, man, I’ll see you tomorrow. Par-ty!” Aluph pumped his fist, hoping he sounded enough like the other guys. Joining a frat may not have been the brightest idea he’d ever had. It might have been one of the dumbest ideas that he’d had, actually, but…

…well, but college was weird after Addergoole. And having a frat around him wasn’t quite the same as a crew – wasn’t anything at all like a crew – but it was something, at least. And the way…

…no, even he couldn’t make the way they treated the girls okay, and he’d had four Kept in three years.

…but he didn’t have to do that part and he could play the role most of the time, when they weren’t drunk or stupid or… well, it hadn’t been his best idea.

But he was a little drunk and a little high and none of that really mattered right now. Although the way the dogs in the area all seemed to be whining was a little distressing and the way the streetlights were all going out was a little too funky for words.

Aluph found himself hurrying a little faster. The frat house was up the top of the hill, which wasn’t fun on a good day, and it was up through some of the creepiest houses, which was sometimes fun but not at two in the morning. And there weren’t that many dogs here but right now they were all over the place, whining and whimpering and getting closer and closer… Aluph was running. He’d left that shit behind with Addergoole. He’d left that shit behind with…

His leg went up in the air before the rest of him, and then he was swinging in mid-air under what had to be the giant maple tree in the creepiest house on the hill. He started to spit out a Working, because fuck that shit, only to find that his throat wouldn’t make sound.

“Well, isn’t this fun.” He knew that voice. How did he know that voice? “So Aluph -” Shit, whoever she was, she knew who he was. This wasn’t a random targeting. “You’ve got two choices.”

This wasn’t going well. Being upside down wasn’t helping Aluph’s fuzzy mental state at all, either. “Choices?” he tried to say. But right, he had no voice.

She knew who he was, and she’d shut off his voice – so she knew what he was, and she was probably something similar. This was really bad. Aluph fought against the rope. Damn. Sober, maybe he could’ve gotten down. But he was a long way from sober.

“You can agree to be mine… or I can leave you for the dogs.” As if on cue, the dogs growled, far closer than the last time he’d heard them. “Your call… but they’re hungry.”

He couldn’t see her – who was she? He knew that voice. He knew that… He nodded his head.

“You’ll agree to be mine?”

He nodded again. The dogs sounded very close; he nodded very quickly.

“All right. Say anything else and it’s the dogs.”

Aluph swallowed. “One year.” His voice was rough, but he could talk. “I’ll be yours for one year.”

Tip Circle 😉

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“So Who Are You?”

“So who are you?”

Blaecleah had been answering that question all day. Some people said it like an invitation, some people said it like a challenge. Some people said it like he was in their space – like this guy, too tall and too lean and with too white of teeth.

“I’m Blaecleah. Who are you?” It was a novel situation; before now, everyone had known him and he’d known everyone.

Instead of answering, too-tall just grinned. “Hah. I like you.” He grabbed Blaecleah’s arm – he tried to grab Blaecleah’s arm, seemed unsurprised when Blaecleah dodged, and somehow managed to get a hand on him anyway. “Very nice. Creche kid?”

“Yeah, what of it?” Blaechleah blinked up at the guy. The grip was too tight to break with a simple twist; did he need to start a fight?

“You guys are always tougher than the ones of us from outside. Sort of. Tougher and softer at the same time.”

“What’s that supposed to mean?” He shifted his body as far as too-tall’s grip would allow, and got his feet into fighting stance.

The guy just grinned even wider. “Look at you. Ready to knock my teeth in. And yet you’ve never lived a day without electricity in your life, have you?”

The creche was in the Village; the Village was within Addergoole’s wards. “No? Why should I?”

“Because you won’t be in the creche forever.”

“Obviously. I’m here now.”

“You are. And how will you survive here?”

Blaecleah looked around. “That’s a joke, right?” Soft carpeting, paneled walls – down here, you’d never know there’d even been an apocalypse.

“Is it?”

“Oh, you’re a barrel of laughs.”

“Look.” Too-tall did something, and then he was holding both of Blaecleah’s arms. “You’re quick, and you’re a smart-mouth, and that’s a good start. But that’s not gonna be anything but the bare basics, here.”

Blaecleah snorted. “I can take anything you can. I can take absolutely anything you dish out.”

“Oh, really?”

Something in Blaecleah set off alarm bells, but he’d come this far; he wasn’t going to back down now. “Really.”

“Anything.”

“Anything. Duh.”

“Say you’ll belong to me.”

What? Blaecleah glanced away. He’d grown up in the Village; he knew what that meant. He’d seen enough people wander through collared. He scoffed to cover his pause. “That’s the best you got? Sure, I’ll be yours for a year.”

“Then for the next year, you Belong to me, Blaecleah. Come on.”

Head spinning, Blaecleah went where he was tugged.

Next: Bug


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Luke and Doug through the Years

The first of two commissions I’m very behind on. Hi, Rix!

This story could go on for another ~4K, but I’d never get it posted. So here, have Luke & Doug in the Addergoole years leading UP to the apoc.

Approx. 1970

Luke stood in the doorway of the garage, studying his son silently. Superficially, they looked very similar – Doug had gotten very little of his mother’s coloration or face shape, except the set of her eyes and their startling blue.

The set of his jaw, on the other hand – Luke didn’t know who to blame for the sad, sullen expression his only living child seemed to carry around like a shroud.

Doug was dancing.

Mina had told Luke, privately, that their child had picked up the sport to tweak his father’s nose. Even someone as dense as Luke could hear the unspoken warning: So your nose had better not be tweaked. Not that he’d needed it.

Doug was dancing well; as far as Luke could tell, he was dancing beautifully, and he was dancing with strength and technical precision that beat his impressive armed combat skills. He did something odd with his feet, almost like the beginning of a roundhouse kick, and ended with a bow his Grandpa Mike would have been proud of.

Only then did he notice – or at least acknowledge – Luke’s presence. “Father.” He turned the bow from something courtly to something martial. His shoulders tensed up; his Mask was up (his Mask was always up), but Luke could imagine he was folding his ragged wing-stubs against his back.

“Son.” He didn’t bother with false warmth, not with the grandchild of a Daeva. Instead, he bowed back to Doug. “Impressive footwork.”

“Thanks.” He shifted stance, then shifted again. “What’s up?”

Doug had never been the vocal one. Of course, neither was Luke. “We’re starting the project I used to talk about.”

“The school thing.” Doug’s shoulders hunched forward for a moment. “For halfbreeds.”

“The school, yeah.”

Luke coughed. “Yeah. The school we’re building. And the students we’re, ah…” He frowned. “Asking people to have.”

His son actually looked at him. Glared, possibly. “Breeding. You’re breeding half-breeds.”

It was tempting to turn and walk away, to just tell Regine and Mike Doug wasn’t going to work out. But Luke had done enough turning away with this son. “There’s a good chance the returned gods are going to come back soon.”

“So you want an army. Disposable soldiers.”

Luke restrained a wing-flap that would just make things worse. “We want the people who will survive. We want to be able to rebuild if things go as badly as we fear they will.”

“Why not breed pure-bloods, then?” Doug turned his back on Luke and dropped his Mask, just long enough to rub the mess of his Change in Luke’s face. “Not the three of you, obviously.”

Luke sighed. He couldn’t help but sigh. But that didn’t keep Doug from misinterpreting it.

“Like you’ve never said it.”

“I have.” He waited a heartbeat. “I was wrong.”

“What, you can make real Mara now? Good for you.” Doug turned back away.

Maybe he should just fly away. Maybe he should just walk away and not turn back.

Maybe he should just follow Mike’s stupid advice.

“I was wrong; I was stupid. There’s nothing lesser about… about half-breeds.”

Doug didn’t turn around. “Little late for that, isn’t it?”

He’s going to say it’s too late, Mike. He’s going to say I should have figured that out when he was born, when he Changed, instead of being a…

A Mara?

Thanks.

It’s what you’re being, Bird-brain. A dumb, ham-fisted Mara. So cut it out.

That’s what I’m trying to do, Tree-feet. At that point, Luke had started flapping. He usually did, when he was talking to Mike.

Tell him it’s late, of course it is. Tell him…

“Of course it’s late.” Luke held out his hands, palms-up and weaponless. “It’s far later than it should have been. But we’re fae. We have just as long for me to make up for my stupidity.”

Doug turned – not a full turn, but he was shifting back, his shoulder facing Luke instead of his spine. “You do. You hope I do.”

“I do hope you do.” Luke took a step forward. “But I could be wrong. This is new ground.”

“Yeah, yeah. You keep saying.”

Don’t get angry, Luke. Right now, you don’t deserve that. You owe him enough that he can yell at you a little bit.

Mike’s advice was irritating even when it was right. Possibly even more when it was right. Luke took a breath. “Look. I’m sorry I was – I’m sorry I was a bad father. I’m sorry I was a stupid, hidebound ass about things where I should have known better.”

A heartbeat passed, and another, while Luke struggled not to feel like he was naked in a field of armed warriors. Finally, Doug finished his turn, facing Luke again. “You weren’t a bad father. Aren’t.”

“Thank you.” Luke found a smile crossing his face. “So. Consider the job offer?”

“Didn’t know you were making one.” Still, a smile was inching across Doug’s face. It made him look young. It made him look close to his actual age.

“Yeah. I could use a good fighter. A good combat trainer.” He tilted his head. “Keep going with the dancing, and I bet we could use a dance instructor, too.”

For the first time, Doug looked surprised. “You… what?” He looked down at his feet, in their soft-soled dancers’ shoes. “Doesn’t piss you off?”

“No.” There was nothing more Luke could say to that than the truth. “Think about it?”

“Yeah. Yeah, I will.” Doug nodded. “Yeah, I will.”

~

1979

Luke was drinking in Maureen’s Tavern when Doug came in. Stomped in, really, looking grumpy and altogether unhappy.

Luke nodded to Maureen, who poured another glass of whisky and set it at the seat neat to Luke’s.

“Son.”

“Dad.” Doug slumped into his chair.

“Troubles?”

Doug coughed out something that was probably supposed to be a laugh. “Nothing big.”

“Perry?” He shoved the glass a little closer to his son’s hand.

“Yeah. Of course.” Doug shook his head. “I didn’t think…. I didn’t think.” He downed half the glass in one gulp. “She – him – fuck.”

“Yeah.” Luke could more than empathize. “We knew…”

“Fuckit. Knowing’s different.” Doug finished his glass.

Luke echoed him, swallowing the whisky faster than the nearly-as-old-as-him stuff deserved. “Yeah.” It was one thing to know that the project of Regine’s worked best if the women had more than one partner. It was another thing to watch it happening.

It was a third thing to watch it happening when you’d allowed yourself to get far too attached to the woman.

He stared at his empty glass for a moment, and tried, cautiously. “Is it -”

“Who knows, with her?” He looked up at Marueen; Lady Foxglove, her lips pursed, poured them each another glassful of whisky.

“Drink this one slowly, boys, or there won’t be a third. Fourth, in your case, Luca.”

“I hear you, Mau.” He took a very slow sip of his whisky; over his glass, he watched Doug do the same thing.

“Good boys.” She patted his shoulder in a way nobody else had been able to get away with – nobody but the boy’s mother, at least. “It’s unpleasant now, but it’ll pass.”

“How do you…” Doug shut his mouth on something that probably would have made Maureen slap him; he might be Luca’s son but he’d gotten some of his mother’s sense. He shook his head. “Never mind.”

“Even someone such as I loves, Douglas. Even I.”

He shook his head while Luke tried not to cringe. “Not that. Just-”

Maureen was better at translating Doug than Luke was. “It’s obvious, dear. And not only is it obvious, it’s relatively common around here.” She patted his shoulder in the same way she’d patted Luke’s. “Obvious to me, dear, not to, say, Perry, who is not being the brightest of women – or to Keiara, Luca, who might do with a primer.”

Doug looked at his father, just a stolen glance before he looked back to his drink. It made Luke feel twisted up inside anyway.

He growled into his drink. “Not the point.”

“No, I quite think it is the point. She is – they are – young women -”

“Not that young.” Doug glared at his drink, not unwise enough to glare at Maureen.

“Compared to your father and I, they are both very young. Compared to you, they are still a bit young. And they are in a place where their attention – their intimate attention – is craved and desired. Nobody here is calling them a ‘half-breed freak-’”

Luke tried to drown his snarl in his drink, but some of it still made it out. Maureen glared at him, both of her tails down and her fox ears pointed raked back.

“Luca, of everyone in this room, you have the least place to snarl at me about that.”

“I’m not growling at you,” he grumbled. “I’m… damnit.”

“Damnit indeed.” She slid gracefully into a chair across the table from them. “There is the world out there, and then there is the world in here. And here, a half-breed girl is another pretty girl, and people are queuing up to give her children.”

“We know.” Doug’s hands were clenched around his glass as if it was holding him to the table.

“Yes, dear, I’m sure you’ve noticed. But what I’m saying is, while the young ladies may be being a bit foolish, they are likely not being malicious – certainly not, in Perry’s case.”

“Keiara?” Luke hated himself for asking, and asked anyway.

“Keiara… unfortunately, she may be being a bit malicious.”

“Damnit.” He clenched his glass tightly. “By all the departed gods….”

“Luca.” Maureen’s voice never changed tone, never changed volume. But suddenly, Luke knew he was being yelled at. “Hunting-Hawk, you are making a mistake.”

“What mistake?” He tried to sound rational. Next to him, his son looked at him sympathetically. He was probably failing on the rationality, then.

“You are assuming things that are not true.”

“You SAID…” He dropped his voice rapidly. “You said she was being malicious.”

“Yes. But you are assuming motives.”

“Shouldn’t I?”

“How familiar are you with the minds of young women?”

“Not.” Next to him, Doug snorted in laughter. Luke didn’t even bother to glare at him.

“Then trust me to know more about them than you do?”

“Assume you were one, once.” Doug snorted again, almost a full laugh. If that’s what it took to get him smiling… Luke supposed he’d take it.

“Indeed. For quite some time. Luke, she wants to hurt you, not because she is feeling mean, per se, but because she is hurt.”

Luke stared at Maureen. His wings flared out.

“Easy.” Doug’s murmur was enough to surprise Luke out of his sudden anger. “Messengers and all.”

“Right.” Luke folded his wings. He found they wanted to flare again, so he coughed, finished his drink, and coughed again. “She’s hurt. Why?”

“That, dear, would be a question you should ask her. But I imagine that she wanted a baby.”

“…Damnit…”

“Considering the nature of the Addergoole project…”

“Damnit, Mo, I don’t want to consider the nature of the Addergoole project.”

“It’s not just her, you know.” Maureen’s voice had shifted again. Luke found himself leaning forward, because when the Lady Foxglove sounded like that, something important was going on. “Luca, the way Mike is, Mike will have children for the project. Regine has contributed her daughter by Ambrus. And this is important. You cannot ask other people to do what you yourself are not willing to.”

“I have two sons…” He caught Doug’s glower, but it was too late.

“Don’t forget,” his surviving sons grumbled, “Luke’s sons are part of the reason for this little breeding project.”
~
1988

Doug and Luke stared at the baby. Neither of them were looking at each other. Neither of them could quite handle that.

It was the right name. It was exactly the proper name.

It was probably the least tactful thing Luke had done in all his centuries of life, and Wil had even called him up to tell him that. Extensively. Keiara liked it, at least – but that wasn’t really the important part here.

Doug cleared his throat. Luke flinched. It’s not the literal wings, he wanted to say. Do you think I gave a fuck about that?

But that would have topped his current tactless record, because Doug sure as hell did care about the wings.

“Why Douglass?”

Not, thank the departed gods, why Aleron? Why name your third son “winged one?”

Luke cleared his throat. “Because ‘Murky swamp’ is a lousy name for someone. And when I named you, I saw you struggling, pushing through a deep, dark water.”

“What did you see with this one?” He tapped the cradle.

“Fighting against angels.” Luke allowed himself a sigh. “I’m afraid being my son isn’t a great bargain.”

Doug laughed, or at least expelled air. “Sure beats the alternative.”

1997 (Year 3)

Doug was drinking again.

Luke would be worried about it – was a bit worried about it – but he knew that there was a time when drinking was the reasonable answer.

He sat down next to his son, wondering if he’d been forgiven enough to try that.

Doug didn’t even look up. This could go one way or the other, then.

Luke coughed. No answer.

He gestured to Maureen, and she poured him a measure of the whisky he favored. He gave her a look, more plea than order, and she left the bottle.

“Massima?” He pitched the question quietly.

“Don’t want a lecture.” Good, he could still talk.

“Lecturing you was the last thing on my mind.” He sounded surprised. He was surprised.

“Heard you with Mike.”

It took Luke a moment to untangle that. “Ah. Mike, about Magnolia, her first year?”

Doug nodded; Luke sighed.

“Different situations, all around. And if I don’t give Mike shit, nobody will.” Mike VanderLinden had impregnated one of his cy’ree – Magnolia – after seducing her. Not that it really counted as seduction with Mike; the Daeva could blink its eyes and end up sleeping with a Pope.

“Both got a Student pregnant.”

“How many of your Students have you slept with?”

“One.” Doug’s voice was raw.

“How many has Mike slept with?”

“All.”

“Well, he says not Agatha, and I believe him.” Luke shook his head. “I’m not here to yell at you, son.”

“Then why are you here?” Doug looked up, finally. His eyes were red; his face was red; his nose was red with broken blood vessels.

Luke took the glass away from him. It should have been a struggle; Doug hardly resisted. “To commiserate. And to dry you out. Come on, kid. We’re taking a walk.”

“I don’t want a walk.” This time, Doug actually struggled. Luke got a stronger grip on his arm and lifted.

“Too bad. You can walk or be dragged.”

“I’m not twelve anymore.” Doug got his feet under him with apparent effort.

“I didn’t drag you around when you were twelve. But you didn’t lose yourself in a bottle of whisky at that age, either. Come on.” Luke got Doug out to the meadow, the effort more than half his, his son’s feet dragging. “All right. So. The girl.”

“She lost the baby, Luke. I was training her, and she lost the kid.” Dough swallowed hard. “Our kid.”

Luke shifted his grip on Doug’s arm to something a bit less punitive and got them both walking, a nice, casual stroll out to the far corners of the meadow. “I know it hurts.”

“Hurts?” Doug yanked his arm away; this time, Luke let him. “Hurts? No, this isn’t pain. This is just what I deserve.”

Luke made a calculated gamble and laughed. It wasn’t a long laugh, but it was enough to make his son take a swing at him, which he let connect.

In a moment they were rolling on the grass, kicking and punching each other like Doug was a teenager again. Luke let it go on until Doug got him squarely in the jaw, and then he pinned the boy to the ground and let him pant until he started crying.

“Not funny.” Doug’s voice was harsher than usual, a rough pant of pain.

“No. No, it’s not. Losing a child always sucks.” Luke patted his son’s shoulder. “No reason to sound like a Daeva about it, though.”

Doug glowered up at him. “Quarter-Daeva.”

“Half Mara.” Luke rubbed his jaw. “And at least ninety percent your mother.”

“What’s that supposed to mean?” Doug pushed himself into a sitting position; Luke sat back and let him.

“It means you’re tough as nails.”

He thumped Doug lightly in the arm. “And this sucks now, of course it does. But you didn’t make her miscarry – I don’t think you could hold Sima back from sparring with gesa, chains, or ropes.”

“I’m her Mentor.”

“You are. And that means you’re going to have to man up.”

“How do you figure?” Doug was good at glaring. Luke wondered which of his parents he got that from. Probably both of them.

“You’re her Mentor. That means you have to find a way to deal with this. And then you have to help her deal with it. Because, believe me son, if you’re torn up about it, somewhere in her, she’s shattered.”

He patted Doug’s shoulder, feeling awkward. They’d better be the right words, because they were the only ones he had. “Come on. We can run off the rest of the booze, and then back inside with you.”

“Bossy.”

“Well, I am your father. And your boss.”

2005 (Late Year 10)

Luke was drunk.

It took an amazing amount of alcohol to do that, but it turned out Maureen had Meentik… whatever word made alcohol, and, at the moment, Luke wasn’t entirely sure. He couldn’t have said it, even if he had remembered.

He’d been pouring alcohol down his throat for something like three hours. Maybe five. He could almost, almost forget why he was here.

A hand landed heavily on his shoulder. “Dad.”

Luke swallowed something like a sob and something like a curse. Dad was the problem. But not with this son. “Doug.”

“The wing kid doing something stupid again?”

Luke caught another sound before it got out of his throat. “That obvious?”

“Yes. Come on. Time to walk it off.”

“Took a lot of work to get this drunk.”

“Time for more work.”

Doug grabbed his arm and hauled upwards.

Luke probably could have fought him off. Probably. He was a little more soused than he had been in a long time. “Isn’t this my job?”

“Not this time. Up. Up.” Doug yanked again. Luke stood.

“Maureen put a lot of effort into this intox… intox… drunk.”

“She always puts a lot of effort into drunks. I’m taking that off her shoulders.”

“Lots of words.”

“You seem to need ‘em. Come on. This way.” Luke wasn’t sure how it happened, but Doug had him outside and walking down the Village streets before he could actually argue with it. “What did bird brain do?”

Bird brain. “Don’ call him that.” Mike called Luke that. “‘leron’s smarter than me.”

“He’s not like acting like it.”

“He’s collared.” Luke wanted to fight, but he was having enough trouble just staying on the sidewalk. “Not his fault.”

“Were you this stupid about me when I was a kid?”

Luke gave that one some consideration. “Stupider.”

“I doubt it. So, what did the boy do?”

Luke swallowed. “Nothing.”

“Remember when I thought you’d be pissed about my dancing?”

“Thought? You were doing it to piss me off.”

“Well, yeah. Is that what the kid is doing?”

“He’s not doing anything.” Luke slammed his fist into his thigh. “He’s being done to.

“That happens with Kept.” Something about Doug’s voice was strange. Luke tried to focus on his son’s face – his eldest – his eldest living son’s face, but found that it kept wavering in and out of his vision.

“Not. Not like that. Not in my locker room. Not in front of my cameras.” He hit his thigh again, and was surprised to find resistance. “What…?”

“You’re not invulnerable to yourself. Stop it.”

“It hurts.

“You’re punching yourself, of course it hurts, you dumb Mara.”

“Not that.” Luke swallowed air. “Not that. That’s physical pain. I can handle pain. I can fucking handle being burnt alive.” That hadn’t been a fun time. “But watching him. Watching him be hurt.”

Doug stilled. “I remember. I remember, when that old Grigori said…” He wouldn’t say it. He’d never liked to say it. “What you did.”
Luke smiled. It hurt to smile. But he did it anyway.

“Yeah. Yeah, I could.”

“Why can’t you do it this time? You can’t tell me you’re not the biggest badass in the school.”

“I don’t beat students up just because they fucked my son!” If Luke roared it loud enough, maybe he’d believe himself. “I don’t beat up students at all. That’s not my fucking job.” He swallowed something that was too close to a sob. “Damnit. Damnit.”

“What happened?” They were outside one of the old cottages, one of the ones Regine had used during the “establishment” portion of the project.

Luke was pretty sure he’d spent time here with Keiara. With Aleron’s mother. He swallowed something else that wasn’t a sob.

“Dirk.”

“The little cy’Linden?” Doug’s voice was carefully neutral. Dirk was… an interesting case.

“Fucking… Fucking Aleron. Fucking my son across the bench in the locker room. Looking up at the blasted. Damned. Cameras the whole time. And he had the knife.”

“Thought we took that away.”

“Both know that doesn’t work. It’s not like you can’t Meentik a new knife.” He swallowed another sound.

“You’ve stopped rapes before. You’ve stopped rapes in the locker room before.”

“The boy.” Luke slammed his fist into his leg again. Something cracked, his hand or his leg; he could hardly feel anything and it would heal either way. “He was looking at the camera, too.”

“And? Hoping you’d help?”

“I can’t play favorites!”

Luke’s bellow shook his head; from the looks of the three Dougs he was currently seeing, it had shaken his son as well. “I can’t. I couldn’t when it was Donegal. I wouldn’t for Agatha or Kailani – or Ty, or Mark, or Indigo or Lolly. I didn’t for Niassa.” He swallowed. “Not for your kids, not for Regine’s or Mike’s. I can’t for mine, either.”

There was silence. A long, cold silence. Doug was not much for words – but this quiet spoke more than he normally did in a month. Finally, Luke looked up at his son.

His son was looking back at him his eyes narrowed. Doug cleared his throat, shook his head, and cleared his throat again.

“Dad…” And it was decades since he’d called Luke that. “It’s not playing favorites if you stop a rape. It’s just stopping a rape.”

Luke sighed, a quiet whimpering noise that he couldn’t quite believe was coming out of his own throat. “Fucking hell, I don’t even know if it was rape. It wasn’t even properly fucking.”

Doug hissed softly. “Ah.”

“Yeah.” Luke put his head down on the concrete. “I’m going to go back to drinking now.”

It was a good thing it was his son there with him, because Luke never saw the punch that knocked him out.

Late Year 13 – May 2008

Doug wasn’t drinking.

He was punching one of the magically-reinforced heavy bag that hung in the training room, which signaled similar things to drinking. But he was smiling.

Luke tried to remember the last time he’d seen an expression like that on his son’s face. With effort, he placed it – sometime in the boy’s early teens, before he’d Changed. He found his own lips curling in response.

He braced the bag as it started to swing. “Good sparring session?” Most of the cy’Doug this time around weren’t combat-primary, but that didn’t matter. Dancing or fighting, they all ended up sparring.

He caught a blush on his son’s cheeks. A blush. “Good.”

What… ah. Aleron had been in town, which meant that Doug’s Student Willow had been very occupied, which meant that Ana, Doug’s Student and Willow’s Kept, had needed distraction. “Ana?”

The blush only deepened. “Fuck. Yes.” He slammed against the bag. “She’s Kept.”

“You’re eternal. She won’t be Kept forever.”

“She’s young.

Older than Massima had been, Luke was pretty sure. “So was your mother.”

“That’s different.”

“Of course it is. Everything is different. But… she makes you smile?”

“Yeah.” He couldn’t keep the smile off his face, it seemed. That was definitely new.

“Then go for it, son. I’ll mow down anyone who gets in your way.”

This entry was originally posted at http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/716455.html. You can comment here or there.

But Why, a vignette

This takes place sometime during the “sign-up” phase of the Addergoole project – ~mid-to-late 1970’s. It was written in response to [personal profile] clare_dragonfly‘s comments here and here

Addergoole has a landing page here

There were very few pure-bloods in Regine’s Addergoole Project. She had very little interest in finding out what happened when you bred two pure bloods, for one – they had been finding that out, over and over again, since the gods first arrived. She wanted to know what you could get from paired half-breeds.

For another, she knew that the pure bloods would eventually become distressed, when they learned of her project. It had not been all that long that half-breeds were in any way considered part of Shenera Endraae, and to go about deliberately making hundreds more half-breeds – all with the aim of educating and arming them – she had not needed Michael and Luca to tell her that somebody would be angry when they found out.

She had, however, not entirely anticipated the screaming, shouting rage or a Mara and a Daeva struggling through her wards and forcing their way to her office.

“What the hell do you think you’re doing?” The shout was loud enough to rattle the windows.

“Come out here and talk to us or we’ll burn this forsaken place to the ground!”

Regine pushed three buttons on her wall – not that she believed anyone would need a call to inform them they had guests – and stepped out onto her porch. “How can I help you?”

The Mara was the woman, a tall, angry Mara – if that was not redundant – with her blue wings spread wide. “My son told me about your little ‘project.’ What exactly do you think you’re doing?”

Regine thought back along the list of names she had seen. Blue wings, probably, or something like it, and the Daeva had horns that resembled an antelope’s. “Silvestre.” He’s been one of the ones who’d turned down her offer. “A handsome man, and very bright.”

“And a half-breed.

“And wouldn’t you be interested in knowing why?” Regine had been given more than a little opportunity to practice this speech. She watched the steam bleed off of the woman’s anger.

“…what?”

“Your son was born half-breed, when you two are clearly full-bloods. Wouldn’t you like to know why?”

This entry was originally posted at http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/715132.html. You can comment here or there.