DISCLAIMER/WARNINGS: Needlessly violent and
foul. You know, same old, same old phair.
FEEDBACK: Tell me you love it, hate it, or
could not care any less… p.phair@comcast.net
WARNINGS: You know what I'm like most of the
time. More of that version than the unusual glimpse of me you saw
in Unexpected.
PROMISE: As long as the ancient Celt haunting
my dreams continues to tell me this story, I'll keep writing it
down. This is what any generation would call
a…
Fair Trade
by phair
Chapter 7
A gale blew out of the west with the dawn and sent the sea into
a churning expanse of swells and froth. Rowers locked their oars
and crawled into the hollows below their benches when the Captain
took the wheel from the Pilot. The Captain was born at sea and
believed he was better able to ride the storm than his
navigator.
He did not need to alert his passengers of the danger. Finntan
was on the deck with the first sprinkle of rain. Ainninn was right
behind him.
"We best get the riggins down. We'll be swamped," Finntan
screamed to be heard over the rising winds.
"I'll race it. We'll ride the tide," the Captain
argued.
Ainninn was already scrambling up the masts as the ship rocked
violently. Finntan was quick to follow. The pair of them worked
without a word between them but in perfect precision. The Captain
and the Pilot were surprised enough to let them have their
way.
Finntan and Ainninn had managed to drop the sails moments before
the dire prediction came true. However, they had no time to get
themselves back to the deck and safety. A monstrous wave slammed
against the port side nearly capsizing the ship. The masts hovered
almost parallel to the water. The Captain turned the wheel hard
trying to follow the momentum of the sea. A groan of wood rose
above the call of the wind warning him the rudder was under
terrible stress.
"Let the wheel go!" Ainninn shrieked as she swung wildly on a
rope dangling less than a the height of a man over the waves.
The Captain held his grip. "We'll be lost without
it!"
"And, what are we now?" Finntan screamed as he tied himself to
the mast. "Listen to her! The Gods are with her."
"Damned Celtic Gods! Not Roman Gods," the Captain
cursed.
Mery screamed from the cabin. Ainninn forgot her own
peril for a split second at the sound. The site filled her with a
different fear. Her naked slave was darting and swinging from
benches to riggings to railings. She defied nature in her sprint.
For a brief moment, she seemed swallowed by the sea in a ferocious
wave only to swim her way back to a loose rope. She swung hard and
crashed feet first into the Captain. He lost his hold of the
wheel. Finnally freed of its tormentor, the wheel spun wildly
until it splinter off its mount.
The ship pitched back to port. The momentum almost
flipped her but she fishtailed. A wild action which managed to
right the hull. Another wave from behind pushed the floundering
ship forward. The winds were finally at their backs.
Ainninn was flung against the suddenly vertical mast.
She lost her consciousness and her hold from the force of the hit.
The world whistled in her ears as she crashed to the deck. She did
not feel Dru's hands turning her over and saving her from drowning
in the sea water pooling on the deck.
Finntan cut himself loose from his safety harness and
took command. "If you want to live to see another dawn, man the
oars! We'll row out of this horrid storm or drown in a sea of fish
piss."
"You're a madman!" The Captain screamed. "We're
doomed without a rudder."
Finntan bellowed with laughter, "What kind of Roman
are you? Surrendering to the fates because the waves broke your
little boat? Be useful and grab an oar or be bait for dinner, the
choice is your own."
"Lunatic!" The Captain shouted but he took a bench
and began to row for his life.
"Help me?" Dru asked as Finntan
approach.
He didn't speak. There was no need to speak. Both he
and Dru had the same mindset. He slung Ainninn over his shoulder
and headed to the cabin. Mery stood in the doorway. Blood ran
from a cut over her eye. Finntan could see she was terrified.
But, beneath the fear there was real anger.
"How could you do that?" She questioned as the
Finntan lowered his burden to the berth.
"Easy," he replied with gentle humor. "I just lifted
her up. She's kind of light. Just akeward to
carry."
Dru chuckled but stopped when Mery snarled a warning
at her. "Don't you push me, slave! You are in just as much
trouble as these two are."
"What? What did I do wrong?" Dru asked as she
stepped away.
"Racing out there with no thought of the danger. You
could have been killed."
The ship took another slam to the stern. It sent
flying Mery into Finntan's arms. Dru was knocked off her feet and
sprawled across Ainninn's still unconscious body. The ship tipped
wildly to port then to starboard and back to port before settling
into a rhythmic rocking.
"We still might be killed, my love," Finntan whispered
in her ear as she nuzzled close to his heart. Mery let out a
little sob. "Save your anger with us until we stand on dry land
again. Then you may be as angry as you want."
"She's hurt bad," Dru interrupted the couple. She had
climb to the inside of the berth Ainninn lay motionless on. "She's
not opening her eyes."
Mery managed to check her emotions to focus on
Ainninn. She stepped closer to the drenched body. Placing her
fingers on Ainninn's neck she waited to feel the life pounding
heartily beneath the skin. With an ear to Ainninn's chest, she
listened to the breaths and did not hear water bubbling under her
breasts.
"She took a heavy hit. Her body needs to rest, I
think. But, nothing looks terribly bad. No wounds to stitch or
bones to set."
"What do we do then?" Dru asked from her spot between
Ainninn and the ship's wall on the berth.
"Wait. All we can do is wait for her to wake," Mery
said.
"If she wakes," Dru worried aloud.
Finntan grinned. "She'll wake. She's got more to do
before her days are done."
"You sound very sure of a fame she's yet to deserve,"
Dru sounded bitter.
"I am. Ainninn was first favored by her father and
then our people embraced her and now, even the Gods clamor to
befriend her."
"What makes you so sure?" Mery was surprised by
Finntan's apparent faith.
"We survived," Finntan winked. "Who else but the
Gods' own chosen one could guide us through that
maelstrom?"
"You said a moment ago, we might still be killed,"
Mery countered making the big man laugh.
"Then I will be proven wrong. But, for now, I'm
right."
* * *
Ainninn's head throbbed. It seemed like she could not
recall a moment when her brow did not pound a drum beat of
suffering. Every inch of her body ached in sympathy for her head's
grief.
She was sick of waiting for the pain to subside.
Using more strength than her body thought she still had, Ainninn
forced her left eye open. A small groan from the effort
accompanied the action.
"It is good to have you returned to us," Dru smiled
and placed a cold rag on Ainninn forehead.
Ainninn tried to lick her lips but her mouth was dry
and stuck. Dru saw the struggle and grabbed another rag from the
bowl on berth beside her. She carefully dribbled water on
Ainninn's parched lips. It was enough to loosen the wounded
woman's tongue.
"We are no longer under sail? Are we drifting?"
Ainninn questioned and tried to sit up.
Dru easily restrained the action by placing her hand
on Ainninn's chest. "You are weak. Do not try to rise yet. We'll
need Finntan to get you on your feet the first time you try to
stand."
"How long was I dreaming in the land of nod?" Ainninn
asked and slowly realized her pains were not only from the
battering she took during the storm but also from
stiffness.
"Days and days. We've been rudderless and rowing
since the storm passed. The Captain lost his mind. Finntan is at
the helm with the Pilot. They've steered us by the stars at night
and we weigh anchor at first light to rest the rowers." Dru
laughed, "It seems a system that pleases your Gods. The Pilot
sighted land this morning."
"The land of the Iceni?" Asked with soaring
hope.
Dru shook her head no and smirked at the resulting
disappointment on Ainninn's face. "No, we did not happen upon
those sacred lands in our directed drifting. We found a island, it
would seem. Foul place, at best. Remote with lush greenery to
swallow the unsuspecting whole and rumored to be filled with
forrest dwelling creatures. The people are little better. A
disagreeable lot of near savages. The Romans won't even try to
conquer this place or her people."
"Perhaps, we can enlist their assistance. If the
Romans reject them, they can not be all bad," Ainninn was rueful
but trying to find an advantage in misfortune.
"Ah, you've happened on an idea of our own good
thinking. And, we've a bit of luck. A man on board knows the
place and has kin on the shore," Dru happily informed
Ainninn.
Ainninn struggled beyond Dru's hold to sit up and
confront the cheery woman. "Spit it out! Who was raised in this
horrid place? He'll have a heroe's welcome from my father for his
efforts."
"Big fellow," Dru said and raised her hand above her
own head. "Smelly and belching. Vomits too much when the waves
toss us. You might know him by name; Finntan."
Ainninn took a few moments to clear the cobwebs from
her mind and actually understand Dru's meaning. "Home? We're
home?" Dru's laughter and nod overrode Ainninn's relief at the
news. "Why did you go on so? You left me to think us lost when we
are not. Why the joke?"
"I did not mean to unduly concern you. But, I could
not resist the chance to repay the suspense I've endured these past
few days in kind fashion." Dru's smile faded, "They gave up hope
on you. All save Finntan and me, believed you died but your body
was unwilling to give up your ghost."
Ainninn saw the worried exhaustion in Dru's eyes and
her tone softened. "I should thank you then instead of reprimand.
However, I did not enjoy you humor nor will I when you tease me
after I have all but forgotten it. Thank you none the
less."
Dru merely nodded.
"When do we get ashore?" Ainninn asked then winced as
the soreness of stretching her muscles with a yawn.
"On the morning tide. This is the last day on ship
for us."
"Most welcome news," Ainninn sighed and lay back down.
"Rest while you can, Dru. Once on dry land, we have a journey of
two days more. But, then we will stay put. We shall be home for
good and forever."
Dru watched Ainninn drift back to sleep. Tears formed
in her eyes as she mumbled her reply, "There is no we in this
arrival. You'll be home for good with just another slave in tow to
add to your wealth."
Chapter 8
Ainninn felt invigorated. Even though her brow still throbbed a
bit from the wallop she took hitting the ship's deck, the pain
could not diminish her joy at being home. The hills were greener,
the air was fresher, and the sky seemed bluer with her feet planted
solidly in the dirt of her homeland.
They were traveling light so their journey was making
excellent progress across the lush countryside. Finntan and Mery
nagged Ainninn into resting before it was fully dark on the first
day of travel. She'd been reluctant to do so but relented when she
noticed Dru shivering. Once the camp was struck and a fire built,
Ainninn and Finntan went through their gear to find warmer clothing
to share with Mery and Dru.
Looking over her shoulder, Ainninn suppressed a
chuckle at the sight. The two women were trudging along behind her
in Finntan's and Ainninn's over sized clothes. It was as if a huge
bolt of wool tried to swallow them whole. Ainninn regretted she
was not in her right state of mind during the last few days on
board the ship. She would have thought to have Mery stitch
suitable clothes for Dru and herself to keep them warm in the cool,
misty air of Iwernia.
"You look well rested. It was clever for you to
suggest we make camp when we did last eve," Finntan said seriously
but with a rye look in his eyes.
Ainninn smiled and replied, "As always, you care well
for me. I struggle against your wisdom out of the ignorance of
youth but I never doubt your heart's fondness for me. Forgive me
my childish ways. I was just so anxious to be back by my own fire,
under my own blankets, and eating from my own stew
pot."
"Nothing to forgive. I just felt the need to taunt
you once more before we are home again. I'll miss my
responsibility when I return your care to your father's hands."
Finntan winked then, "But, I shall continue to nudge you from time
to time if you are too full of who you've become."
"I would hope so," Ainninn laughed. "Nobody else will
cross me. There is only you to keep my feet on the ground and my
head it's usual size."
"Mistress," Dru's gasp interrupted the
conversation.
Both warriors turned in time to see Dru collapse to
her knees. Mery hurried to her side to hold her up.
"We should stop for a while," Finntan said.
"Perhaps the night?" Ainninn asked.
Dru shook her head no before answering, "I need but a
moment. We can move on in a moment more. We are just hurrying too
fast. It is hard to get breath enough to keep up with
you."
Ainninn turned to Finntan and said, "Start a fire.
We'll be one more night under the stars. A day one way this or
that will not harm our task. But, a little extra slumber could
benefit each of us."
Finntan went quietly about the task. Ainninn waved
Mery over to help him as she went to Dru's side. With the others
making the camp, Ainninn squatted and began to check Dru for
injuries or fever.
"You wheeze with your breathing," Ainninn observed.
"When did this begin?"
"It is my ailment since birth. Only during wet, cold
days, though. My lungs ache with the rains." Dru took as deep a
breath as her chest could hold and blew the air back out slowly.
"Mistress, I'm sorry to delay your travel. I can be ready to walk
again before Finntan sparks the fire. Please, do not lose your
patience with me."
Ainninn laughed. "Is the mighty gladiator afraid of
being an annoyance? Worried I'll sell her off to any passing elf
in the glen?"
"Elf?" Dru yelped. "I thought Finntan was telling
tales to frighten the sailors. Are there truly hideous, flesh
eating creatures hiding in these rolling greens around
us?"
"Yes, and with great fangs to rip the skin from the
bones," Ainninn spoke in a low tone watching Dru's alarm increase
with each word. "But, I think you've little to
fear."
"Why?" Dru asked fully believing the
story.
Ainninn smirked and said with great amusement, "They
only eat virgin meat."
Ainninn's good humor served to darken Dru's mood. She
watched with squinting eyes as her Mistress laughed and wiped merry
tears from her cheeks.
"You think it's funny to have lost what I did the way
I did? You find my suffering the stuff of mocking?" Dru's
whispered questions stopped Ainninn's laughter cold. "You've seen
the rings they spiked my nipples with? You must have while I was
helpless under your whipped tutelage. Or maybe later, you noticed
their shine when I lay too weak to cover myself? You must have
seen them. They are the rings my Master used to tame me while I
suffered under his weight."
Ainninn shifted back on her heels but had nothing to
say.
However, Dru's anger was not ready to be silenced,
"Does it strike you as comical to know he fastened a chain to them
after staking me out on his bed. When I did not respond as he
wished, he would tug the chain until I thought the rings would tear
free leaving me mutilated? If Mistress thinks this is quite
hilarious, you'll be even more pleased to learn there is yet
another ring buried between my thighs, deep inside
me."
Ainninn answered just as Finntan lit the flame for
their camp. "I saw them. Mery explained their use. But, my mind
is still foggy from fall. I spoke without thinking. I meant only
to tease you a small bit in return for your humor at my expense on
the ship. Nothing more than that was intended. You'd be wise to
see fit to excuse my poor jest."
Dru remained silent and glaring. Ainninn sighed, weary of the
argument. She stood and offered her hand and a warning to Dru.
The slave grudgingly accepted both offerings.
"I have been liberal with you and your pointed tongue. But a
bit of caution is in order, my father will not allow such words
from the mouth of a slave. And, that is what you remain with me.
Your pain, both past and future, is your lot. Do not think you
will be given privileges with my people the Romans did not see fit
to bestow on you."
Dru stood next to Ainninn. She stayed silent with her face to
the ground. Her shoulders shook from either the pain in her lungs,
the cold, or her anger. Ainninn walked away determined to not care
about the cause.
* * *
They rose with the birds after a pleasant but quiet
evening of food and rest. The misty air slowly warmed as the sun
climbed into the sky above. Even so, it remained chilly enough to
make all their cheeks rosy as they travel out of the glen to a well
worn path up a rocky hillside.
Once they reached the highest ledge, Finntan roared a loud shout
across a rolling meadow of green leading to massive wall of heavy
stones. It ran from the edge of the cliff overlooking the sea in a
half circle. The fortress was fortified with battlements at ground
level and stacked the height of a man up and once again up from
there. A narrow passage way leading inside was barred with a metal
door.
Finntan was so happy to see home he slapped Ainninn hard across
the shoulders. Still weak from her injury she almost lost her
footing and collapsed. The same meaty hand that struck her turned
to steady her. Between his support and her own arms flaying for
balance, she righted her body.
"Do you wish to kill me when we are within view of
home?" She snapped at him.
Finntan laughed before replying, "It was a loving
swat. Have you grown so weak among the Romans that a simple pat
sends you tumbling to the dirt? The soft life of those foreigners
made you lazy, you I think."
"You'll not believe that after I've slept a week in my
own blankets. Come see me after a moon. See if I not best your
best again then," she said but smiled broadly.
They walked only a short distance on the road when
Finntan suddenly stopped and dropped his pack to the ground. He
frantically began to search the contents. The three women
exchanged confused expressions before Mery looked over his
shoulder.
Still uncertain of his motives, Mery asked, "What is
so important?"
Finntan stated his reply in a tone which suggested it
would not be argued with, "You are a free woman, Mery. You'll have
no worries with our homecoming. But, the little Viking, is a spoil
of our travels. If she is to remain Ainninn's prize, she must be
bound to her Mistress when we enter the village. Otherwise, she
belongs to our Chief."
He found several lengths of leather at the bottom of
his pack. Sparing a moment, he braided the strands together and
pulled them tight. Once Finntan was satisfied the tether was
strong enough, he stood and handed it to Ainninn.
Ainninn barely glanced at him as she accepted the offering. Her
belly groaned loudly but it was not from hunger. She was reluctant
to restrain Dru. The thought of doing so was literally making her
sick.
"Unless you want to see her in his bed, bind her hands and hold
her fast," Finntan was emphatic.
Ainninn turned to face Dru. She saw exactly what she expected
she would. Her slave was glaring at her openly. However, Dru
crossed her wrist before her chest and waited to be tied. Ainninn
threaded the leather through the rings embedded in the metal cuff
still locked around Dru's wrist. She used a tight knot leaving Dru
no slack.
"Now, bring it up into the collar ring. Keep her hands at chest
level," Finntan pointed as he instructed.
Ainninn obeyed without question. Dru remained silently defiant.
After knotting the tether, Ainninn had about five or six lengths
of leash left to lead Dru. She stepped away feeling the need to
distance herself. Her feet no sooner settled in the dirt than
Finntan leapt forward and smashed Dru hard across the mouth with
the back of his hand. He turned then and snarled at
Ainninn.
"Do not tolerate such disrespect from her in front of your
father! If she raises her eyes to you, warn her once then strike
her. If she dares to shoot death looks at you, flog her!" He
kicked at Dru's trembling body on the ground and made a promise.
"If you try any surly acts while I can grab you, you lose another
inch of skin from your shredded back. If you embarrass Ainninn in
any way, I'll cut your tongue out and stew it for your dinner! Do
you understand me?" Before she could answer, he advised her, "You
won't live long enough to stand before me if I hear any word but
yes pass your lips."
"Yes, Sir," Dru answered dutifully and waited for permission to
rise.
"Thank you, Finntan," Ainninn said softly. "I am in your debt
for this reminder. Slave, on your feet."
Finntan walked away leaving Dru to get up on her
own.
"Mery, if you would," Finntan's good nature returned abruptly as
he addressed his love, "take my arm. I'd enjoy nothing more than
walking by your side as we return my the land of my
birth."
Mery gave a small smile and nodded her ascent. They strolled
down the road like a pair of young lovers returning from a their
wedding night. Ainninn watched them for a moment before hurrying
after them. She caught up in five steps. Dru did nothing more
than struggle to her feet and trail behind the trio.
Muffled shouts could be heard from the battlements before them.
The calls were not directed to the party approaching. The messages
being relayed were for those behind the walls. With a crack and
thunderous groan of wood, the door protecting the passage into the
fortress began to lower from the top seam outward.
"I've never seen such a contraption," Mery marveled as she
watched the door open.
"Our chief has a rich mind. He creates all sorts of devices to
protect our people," Finntan explained with more than a small
amount of pride apparent.
The tunnel beyond the doorway into the fortress was narrow. It
would only allow one man at a time to pass the length of it. Once
inside, the traveler was defenseless. The walls were too close for
a warrior to draw his broad sword from it's scabbard. Should his
sword be at the ready, a warrior would have not room to wield it.
Retreat was complicated for a broad warrior as there was no room to
turn. They either advanced or were forced to blindly back
up.
"I'll go first. The way is dark. Keep hold of my cloak and
follow close on my heels."
Mery nodded agreement with Finntan's directions.
Ainninn looked over her shoulder at Dru. The woman, in spite of
her bloody nose, was staring in wonder at the fortress. Ainninn
could not help but be pleased with the open admiration of her
father's creation.
"Amazing, isn't it?" Ainninn asked.
Dru nodded but then thought better of her silence. "It is a
wonder. Is this why the Romans are so eager to befriend your
people, Mistress?"
Ainninn smirked before she answered. "It is only the half of
it. The less impressive half, I might add."
The four weary travelers made their way down the narrow but
lengthy passage in silence. The walls were so tightly hewn, even
the smallest breath echoed like a shout. Mery and Dru grunted
several times as they stumbled over the uneven stones beneath their
feet. Their distress was magnified many times by their own echoes.
Their sighs of relief when they finally saw the light at the
tunnel's end caused soft chuckles from both Finntan and
Ainninn.
"Follow the bright path and you'll be swallowed by the sea
beneath the cliffs," Finntan warned. "The floor at that end of the
tunnel ends before the walls do."
He lead the way sharply left into what seemed an even narrower
and darker tunnel. His shoulders brushed the walls on either side.
The soft whisper of his cloak against the stones was all that
remained of him in the blackness surrounding them.
"Finntan?" Mery hush her words but they boomed in an
echo.
"Easy," Ainninn said in an equally magnified voice before
touching Mery's back. "A few steps more."
"Ouch," Mery crashed into Finntan.
"Do not lift your foot. Glide it along the smooth stone until
you feel a step," Finntan instructed before he moved again.
The floor beneath them creaked open. Mery could see Finntan had
descended several steps below where she was standing. The lighting
was better but still dim. She did as he instructed and found the
step with tip of her boot. She eased her right foot down once and
then let the left join it. Again she repeated the process and felt
a cool breeze caress her legs. One step more and Finntan was able
to grasp her hips and lift her down to grass covered
ground.
"Thank the Gods," Mery exclaimed her relief at exiting the tight
confines.
Finntan chuckled and turned back in time to see Ainninn's feet
descending. Her progress halted briefly while she instructed Dru
on the subtleties of the steps.
"As Finntan said, feel with your foot for the steps. Once you
are down three, he and I can lift you the rest of the
way."
"Mistress, I can't see," her voice was shaking with fear.
"Please, free my hands so I can follow without snapping my
neck."
"The loss is mine if you break," Ainninn was annoyed. "Do as I
say and hope for the best."
Before Dru could form any argument, Ainninn dropped onto the
solid field beneath the tunnel's opening. A scraping of soft and
tattered leather sounded as Dru obeyed the direction. Her foot
struggled to the edge of the stone floor and found the stair below.
She grunted at the uncontrolled plop. But, her other foot eagerly
joined its mate on the step. Dru edged forward again and once more
caught the edge and made an ungainly drop to the step. Her other
foot scrapped along but followed. Her third try was less graceful
and she hit the stone stair hard enough to lose her balance. If
Ainninn and Finntan had not grabbed a thigh each, Dru would have
been wedge shoulders to heels between the tunnel wall and the
stairs.
She could not contain her gulps of terror even though she was
safely standing on grass ground. Dru dropped to her knees,
trembling at what almost was her fate. Finntan stepped close
between Dru and Ainninn. His voice was low as he warned
them.
"Show no care for her Ainninn. Dru look for no comfort. Our
Chief approaches, pay him his due and act as you are; Mistress and
slave."
Dru glanced up. The brilliant sunlight was blinding after the
darkness of the tunnel. It reflected off the sea beyond the wood
and stone homes speckling the enclosed hillside. A village
perfectly defended by a treacherous cliff at its back and a man
made trap at its breast. And, their leader was racing toward them
like a wild mare from the land of dreams.
He was shorter than Ainninn but as broad as Finntan. He was
dressed in a wool battle skirt and heavy boots. His cape billowed
behind him leaving his naked chest exposed to wind and wandering
eyes. The man's hair was gray as storm clouds and braided into
three plaits; one slung over each ear and one down the back of his
head. As he ran toward them, he let out a braying cry. Dru
thought, for a moment, he might actually slay them were they stood.
Instead, he hurled himself at Ainninn and wrapped her in a
smothering hug. The pair of them almost crashed to the dirt but he
managed to hang on and stay on his feel.
"I was this very moment prepared to go search for you! Where
have you been? What has taken so long to be back to my side?" He
fired off the questions as he pulled Ainninn to arm's length only
to draw her back and hug her again. "I saw the ship three, no
four, yes, four suns ago rowing for the coast. You should have
been home by the next eve's supper at the very latest. Where have
you been?"
"My fault, my friend," Finntan spoke up quickly to apologize.
"I delayed our return by insisting on rest and meals. I worried
after the women's health too much, perhaps. My focus was on safely
returning and not timely."
"I think there is more to your story than that," the Chief said
as he eyed the drawn features of Ainninn's face.
Ainninn hushed a plea, "Please, there is much good news. Do not
lessen the wonder of it by worrying over a minor
bump."
"A bump? Or is it several?" He asked in an equally low
voice.
"I promise to share all with you by your hearth before the moon
rises. Let us, for now, reassure our neighbors. We were very
successful with the Romans. We will gain much and suffer little
from them in the coming years."
He smiled then. A bright and dimpled cheek smile. Another
solid hug was given before he turned to face the gathering of
villagers who had hurried to greet their returning friends and
learn their collective fate.
"We are blessed, twice or maybe more," the Chief bellowed to the
group. "My daughter has returned whole and safe and with our
brother, Finntan. They have happy news for us. Tell them,
Ainninn, tell them what you've achieved."
Ainninn struggled to hide her surprise. Her father was their
leader. Any news should come from his lips. For him to step aside
while breath still filled his lungs, was unprecedented. However,
she did not want his faith in her misplaced and she cleared her
throat to speak.
"We have an agreement with the Romans. We will guide their
merchants to our neighbors to the west. They wish only to trade
their goods for our neighbors wool. Each expedition they will give
our Chief his weight in gold, a literate slave, and a cask of wine
from their most pristine vineyards."
A surly woman at the forefront of the group interrupted, "How
wonderful for our Chief, your father. This venture makes the noble
Loich even richer."
"And, that gains you nothing?" Ainninn asked before her father
could snap an angry rebuttal.
"Unless the slave is warming her bed of gold while tapping the
wine cask for her private sampling, Maida won't be happy," a thin
man in the back of the group quipped.
Ainninn waited for the nervous laugher to die out on its own.
"Loich, your Chief, my father, has grown fat off your labor, Maida?
He fed his belly while your six babes wailed in hunger? Is that
how it has been all these years since your husband fled your
bed?"
"You insolent whelp!" Maida hissed.
Again, Ainninn spoke before her father could. "The very fact
you dare curse at Loich's daughter before him and our neighbors
proves his fairness. He has never let a villager suffer needlessly
if he had means to help. He killed deer for your table before he
slaughter rabbit for mine own meal. If anybody has complaint about
his largesse, it is myself and my dead too soon mother. You and
your children have nothing to complain about."
The crowd was quiet. Loich kept his emotions from his face.
Ainninn was unsure if she had said too much. She was more nervous
than any in the gathering when her father began
speaking.
"My daughter is my fame. I've no need to add my words to her
generous appraisal of my actions." He smiled then and the
villagers relaxed with his ease. "I know you'll forgive my wanting
to shelter my daughter and Finntan for the rest of this day and eve
to come. We'll celebrate their homecoming tomorrow with a grand
feast. Let me see them safely under my roof and prove to myself
they are well indeed."
The gathering of neighbors resumed happily greeting Ainninn and
Finntan. Most stayed gathered or along the path to shake their
hands. But, a scattering few walked after Maida when she turned
her back on Loich and headed for her hearth.
Even though the path was well known to them, Ainninn and Finntan
followed Loich to his home. The way was less traveled than the
other paths around their village. The grass was lush beneath their
feet and served to cushion their steps. The home was a stone
structure with its own parapet jutting off the corner closest to
the cliff's edge; closest to the sea. A watcher within its bosom
would notice any vessel traveling over the waves toward the coast.
Loich shouldered the heavy wooden door open and warm, scented
air surrounded the weary travelers behind him. "Come in and sit by
my fires. I have hot food ready and warm cider at the ready."
Loich's direction was in a voice weak with worry. It startled
Ainninn to see her father's frailty. He never betrayed the
smallest pain even when her mother stitched closed gaping wounds
hard won in a fight. Here, in the comfort of his own home, Loich
slouched with fatigue and he seemed unsteady on his
feet.
"Are you ill?" Ainninn asked while Finntan closed the door
after they entered. "It looks to me like you should sit while we
make you a fine meal. What plagues you?"
Loich snorted and shook his head slowly as he answered, "Your
mother, my child. She's haunted me for nearly a moon. Heaping
vile curses on my manhood for letting you travel so far from home.
She feared you dead. So many nights, she woke me from sound
sleeping. She went on and on about your sweet head being too
cherished to be, as she spoke, 'smashed apart on the floor above
the sea.' I've no argument with that but I don't know what mystery
she divines for me."
"Gods, that woman was strong stuff in life and now in death
she's worse," Finntan gasped in horror.
Mery placed a hand to his chest to quiet his fears.
"Tahemetnesu is not here to harm you, warrior. She returned to
warn her husband to be more careful with his
treasury."
"That was my very goal," Loich interrupted Mery. "I sent the
only two I could trust to deal with Rome. My treasury is secure
because of their skills. Why would Tahemetnesu lecture me when I'm
right in what I've done?" He paused a moment before asking, "And,
who are you and what is that ragged little creature skulking in
Ainninn's shadow? Ainninn, what have you brought into our
home?"
Mery answered first and fiercely, "Your treasure is your
daughter, you braggart. Tahemetnesu is right to return from the
land beyond the Styx to lecture your carelessness with her. She
did smash her skull on a floor above the sea. The ship's deck was
coated with her blood. We nearly lost her."
Loich took Ainninn by the shoulders as much to view her as to
steady his trembling. "Is what she says true? Did you almost wash
away from me?"
Ainninn nodded and Loich gasped. He pulled her into a tight hug
and wept into her hair.
"I will never let you leave our shores again. You will stay
here and tend these lands until it is time you join your mother in
her paradise. I promised her I would not let you wander too far
from her grave. She wants an eternity with you. I thought it all
to be childish religion and promised her but did not believe the
words. She returned to tell me I'm a fool. A fool damned to
eternity without either of you."
Ainninn's heart broke for her father. She didn't know for
certain if it was a specter who haunted him or if his mind fled his
head. She did know he was worried and sad and grieving the one he
lost and the one he almost lost.
"All is fine. I am well. Mery and Finntan and the little
Viking took care of me," Ainninn was aware Dru stiffened at the
title. Apparently, Dru perceived the term as an insult and not a
promotion. "Let me introduce you well to Finntan's woman," Ainninn
began.
"It is more right to say, I'm Mery's man," the big man laughed
and draped his arm around Mery's shoulders. "Loich, my life long
friend and Chief, this is Mery from the land of the Ptolemy.
She'll have me."
Loich stood straighter to acknowledge the Egyptian but kept his
arms around Ainninn. "You are most welcome among my people. Let
them be your people too. We, your new family, will set to build
you a dwelling after the homecoming festivities
tomorrow."
"What of my hut?" Finntan questioned. "I thought she'd stay
with me."
"You'll stay with her." Loich chuckled with the first sign his
humor was returning, "We'll knock your hovel over with a one handed
push and build Mery suitable housing."
"I, I don't know what to say. Your generosity is without
equal," Mery stammered.
"You saved my daughter. You tolerate my best friend," Loich
said with a wink. "It is the least I can do for you. Now, sit by
the fire. I'll get the cider and meat."
"No," Dru spoke up but flinched when Finntan balled his fist and
glared at her.
"What is this?" Loich questioned with a flare of anger all his
own.
"Pardon, Master, but I am to serve my Mistress. If you show me
the way to the kitchen, I will do my duty," Dru spoke in her
clearest speech to make sure her intent was understood by
all.
"Funny little accent. No Viking there," Loich laughed.
"Ainninn, set the little slave to work and join me by the
hearth."
Ainninn drew her blade. She sliced the leather binding Dru's
wrist. Another slit freed the collar from its leash.
With a gentle toss of her head to the left, Ainninn issued her
first real command to Dru, "Kitchen is behind the tarp. The food
and drink should be in cooking pots on the table. Bring them to
the fire and then you can fetch the plates and
cups."
"Yes, Mistress," Dru spoke without looking up.
Ainninn felt her stomach knot but the others did not notice as
the went to sit and waited to be served by Ainninn's
slave.
Chapter 9
Ainninn climbed down the ladder from the second tier
of her home. She was well rested after a night of good food and
strong drink by the fire of her own father's hearth. In fact, she
was still a bit giddy from the revelry of her first night home.
She drank more than she usually allowed herself. Loich needed to
lend her an arm to steady her when it was time to take her
rest.
That was an equally intoxicating event. Sleeping in her own
bedding was more delightful than she dared to remember on the trip
to Rome. As she reached the hearth side, Ainninn promised herself
she would never leave her home again. A small worry bloomed like a
weed that she would not be able to keep that
promise.
The house was still. It seemed as if the other
occupants had not awakened yet. This did not surprise Ainninn.
They had all made very merry late into the evening. She was
certain Finntan and her father would have pounding heads when they
finally did rise. It was the least she could do for them to
prepare strong cider to ease their suffering. A bit of broth would
be welcome after a more than likely purge of their bellies'
lingering contents.
Ainninn stepped into the damp chill of the kitchen to
begin preparations of food to break their fasts. She skidded to a
stop when she saw the naked figure huddled under the table. It
took her foggy brain a few moments to determine the who and the why
of the sleeper shivering on the floor's cold stones.
"Oh yes, my little slave," Ainninn murmured as she
realized she had actually forgotten about the slave while she
indulged in excessive consumption of cider and mead and wine during
the previous eve's festivities.
Ainninn squatted down to examine Dru more closely.
She had looked on the woman's nakedness before but always quickly
so she would not be caught gaping by Finntan or Mery or Dru
herself. On board the ship, it seemed wrong to gawk at the the
woman she injured. A slave she wrongly punished. Somehow, in her
own kitchen, it seemed more appropriate for Ainninn to inspect her
property.
Dru was huddled face down. Her bare ass was humped
high in the air and her wrist were chained tightly to her ankles.
Dru face was turned so her right cheek was pressed against the cold
stones. Her jaw was slack allowing drool to dribbled down her
chin. A soft snore punctuated her breaths.
Ainninn looked at the strong muscles of Dru's arms and
legs. Even in sleep they seemed to flex in preparation for
trouble. The skin stretched across them was tanned from
unprotected days under the Mediterranean sun. Scars were plentiful
but not so hideous as to distort the power slumbering beneath the
skin. In fact, the well healed wounds accentuated the slave's
fortitude. A force so resilient ongoing suffering could not
destroy it. Even the old brand burned into the meat of her thigh,
marking her origin as a Greek slave, seemed only to reiterate the
body could endure oppression and survive. Ainninn noted most of
Dru's bruises from the arena were too faded to see. The only
lingering damage still visible was the welts Ainninn inflicted with
her precise and merciless whipping.
Looking away from the harsh reminder of her failure to
show good judgment, Ainninn's eyes settled on the downy white skin
of Dru's ass. Those delicate globes were as fair as the day Dru
was born. The rounded cheeks trembled with each breath inhaled.
The delicious curves seemed to beg for closer inspection. Ainninn
reached out to finger the delicate and only unscarred patch of skin
left on the slave's much abused body.
She was within a hair's width of stroking the sweet
ass when Dru jerked to wakefulness. Her body bolted backward
within the limited confines of the chain links. Years of abuse
trained Dru well. Even sleeping, her body was ready for an
assault. She tucked into a fetal position to protect her face and
unprotected belly. Fists clenched in spite of their helplessness
dangling at the end of chained wrists. With a sideward glance and
blinking eyes, Dru tried to find the danger which woke her. Her
shoulders sagged as her gaze focused on Ainninn.
"Morning," Ainninn said with a deep
hush.
Dru took no comfort in the tone, "Mistress wishes a
meal?"
Ainninn shook her head no. "I would see what I've won
for myself before I eat again."
"Mistress has seen my shame," Dru looked up a bit and
then back down when she saw the clear interest in Ainninn's eyes.
"I'm too beaten and broken to linger over. Let me fix a feast for
you and the house."
Ainninn shook her head no again. "I'll feast but it
will not be on food. You belong to me. We are safe and home.
I'll finally see all that I earned and I'll touch it
too."
Ainninn stood and retrieved the key for the chain from
the cupboard across the room. When she turned back, Dru was openly
glaring at her. Hatred was obvious in the tight set of her jaw and
squint of her eyes but fear was there too. Ainninn smirked and
walked over to squat before the slave once again.
"If Finntan was in this room, he would knock you
senseless. Do not shoot death looks at me if you intend to keep
air in your lungs."
"Why will you hurt me?" Ignoring the warning, Dru
questioned in a voice broken with hopelessness.
Ainninn stopped midway to releasing the chain. Dru's
face, filled with fright, was so young. Years in the arena had not
hardened her to the point she lost her youthful glow. Her hard
fought life had not destroyed every last vestige of her innocence.
Her fear softened her features and made her eyes moist with tears
which she fought not to shed.
Still, Dru was a strong woman, attractive, and trapped. Ainninn
was deeply aroused by both the woman and her own power over the
slave. It was a new feeling but one Ainninn could not deny. She
did not think to question if the feeling was right or wrong. She
only knew it was as tempting at the brew she swilled the night
before.
"You've endured much worse than what I intend."
Dru's hissed her reply but it was filled with terror, "If you
force me, it is just as bad as what was inflicted before you. It
is crushing."
"It won't have to hurt."
"If my will is not with you, it will be far more
painful than the flogging. Would that be all you do to me this
morning, I'd kiss your feet in gratitude."
"I can be kind," Ainninn felt awkward but continued to try to
reassure her slave. "I was taught much by a Greek traveler after I
came into my own. My father made sure I knew both men and women so
I could rule them more easily. You must know the desires of both
sexes to rule adequately. I know, not only passion, but how to be
gentle and caring as well."
"Then be so," Dru said and looked up with pleading
eyes. "Be gentle with me. Care for me. Don't use me for your
wants like you would a whore."
Ainninn sighed unhappy with Dru's continued
resistance, "You are my slave, not a whore. It is different. You
must do as I will, that is your lot. I've had enough of this
discussion. My will is to be comforted by your mouth without
delay." Ainninn said as she reached for the chain once more, "I
want you on your knees now."
Dru stuttered in absolute horror, "Right here? On the
kitchen floor? With the sun high in the sky? You lower me to less
than a whore. You make me a bitch in heat. Is this the kindness
you spoke of? The gentle caring? You act like a Roman. No, this
is worse than they ever did to me. You act like a rutting pig and
I merely a sow in the muck."
The slap was well earned. Both women knew it. Dru
let her head roll with the hit but it was still forceful enough to
split her lip. Blood oozed where only moments ago child like drool
dribbled.
"Pardon Mistress," the venom in the words could not
have been thicker.
Ainninn grabbed Dru's chin and dragged her face to
face. "Silence! If Finntan or my father hear you utter words so
glibly, they will end your life."
Dru's eyes closed and she angled her head back
exposing her neck, "Please let that be the caring you spoke not
long ago of. I've spent too long on my knees intimately pleasing
people I do not even like. Then, when my owners were sated, I was
sent off to kill. I've murdered too many men I actually admired.
I've suffered too long at the hands of petty women like you to
continue to pretend to care if I'll see another morning. So,
Ainninn, if you are wont to rape me, just kill me instead or I
promise you before the moon rises I will find my own exit from this
gentle kindness you praise yourself with."
Ainninn stared at Dru. Her words, her anger, her
desire fled with the resignation and defiance of the shackled woman
huddled before her.
"You ruin my morning," Ainninn finally growled. "I
would have made you enjoy a little pleasure before you set to your
tasks but your sharp tongue and your sour face steal the warmth
from my center. Would it have been too much to ask for a simple
suckle?"
"If you had but just asked," Dru nearly wept her
reply, "I would have happily comforted you."
"Ha, the Viking Slave of Rome wishes to be wooed,"
Ainninn said and tossed her hands in the air in complete
disgust.
Dru shook her head no and answered, "No Mistress, a
Suebi woman enslaved by Roman soldiers and swindled into your
possession, who saved your life once already, wishes only to be
treated as something like a human. Perhaps, you could find it in
your gently caring heart to think of your slave as a favorite pet
or useful ox. Is that too much to ask of you,
Mistress?"
For the second time that morning, Ainninn was
silenced. She had no answer worthy of the argument. Climbing to
her feet, Ainninn stalked out of the room in search of something
else. She was unsure what that might be but she knew she would
find no satisfaction in the kitchen.
Dru watched Ainninn stride away. She kept her eyes
focused on the swinging tarp her Mistress pushed aside to leave.
Its soft sway was the only wake Ainninn left behind her. Her feet
made no sound as she crossed the stone floors to wherever she would
go next.
Dru hung her head and let the nausea rolling in her
belly flip what remained there from the night before. The food has
become as heavy as stones with the tension of the morning. The
weight of it made her sorry she bothered to eat anything at all.
She had served them well and mutely last eve. Keeping
their plates filled and the mugs brimming. The four spoke and
laughed and even sang a bit before they staggered off to their
beds. Finntan bid them good night and then pointed Dru to the
kitchen. He followed her and made her strip in front of him which
frightened her. When he pulled a chain from an eye ring in the
wall, Dru considered bolting but the man waved her over easily with
the promise it was just ensure she wasn't stolen from under
Ainninn's roof. He made quick work of chaining her tightly. He
said nothing but did pat her head before he waddled off to find his
way to Mery's bed.
Dru realized she had allowed herself to be fooled.
They lulled her with a tranquil domestic setting. The chores given
to her were reassuring in their ordinary nature. Even the casual
pat on her head took the humiliation of chaining away. At least,
it eased the sting a bit allowing Dru to relax and sleep.
Then it ended like sweet dreams are known to do. Ainninn boldly
entered at day break looking to sow her oats. Ainninn, her owner
and a woman, just barely so but grown enough, and a simple
villager, too boot, Still, she was just as randy as a Roman
soldier.
"No peace," Dru muttered and lowered her
eyes.
A glint of metal caught her attention. There, within
reaching distance even bound, was the key. A means to escape the
kitchen for certain. But, where would she go once
unbound?
"Worry then, run now," she growled as she grabbed for
a temporary release.
Ainninn was annoyed. Annoyed so much as to need a
sulk but not so much as to forget something as important as the key
to the chain. She dropped it or tossed it or it simply removed its
own self from her hand. It was not lost. The tiny but vital piece
of forged steel was to the left of Dru's right knee. A three
legged and blind cat would have little trouble finding it. What of
a weary slave? One reduced to threatening suicide if forced to
taste between Ainninn's thighs; would that slave find the key?
Ainninn grinned feeling a renewed excitement in the morning's
promise. She settled on a stone across from her father's door to
watch and see if a show would emerge from within.
Dru crept to the tarp using all the skills she learned
in the arena. The house was so quiet, it was like she was
completely alone. Pushing the tarp aside, she saw the room as she
left it the night before. Nothing had changed. Listening with
every fiber of her body, Dru neither heard nor felt the faintest of
rumblings in the house.
"Time to act," she made up her mind and sprung to the
door.
Ainninn barely saw the flash of white flesh barrel out
of her father's house. Dru dashed around the far side of the home
and darted momentarily out of sight.
"Ha-ha, and I thought it would be a dull day!"
Ainninn chuckled before sprinting after her runaway
slave.
The only sound she made as she put distance between
herself and her captivity was the rustle grass. Dru was cutting a
path down an incline heading for the cliff. Over the edge and into
the wildly tossing water below was looking like her ultimate
escape. It seemed only two or three horse lengths more. The cold
wind was welcome against her tear stained face. She briefly
thought of how perfect the morning was with fresh air blowing by
her as she raced into the sun rising out of the sea; as she ran
toward eternal freedom.
Dru nearly stumbled when she crested what she thought
was the edge of the cliff. Instead of a long drop down to jagged
rocks jutting out of the black cold ocean, she was greeted by
another long meadow of green and wet and lush grass. It stretched
to another sightless edge.
"There, that's the end of it," she panted and picked
up her feet and put them down hard to control her speed on the
slippery field. "It must be the end of this world."
The closer she got to the edge, the more concerned she
became for the sea beyond her. It did not seem to function as an
ocean should. Crashing waves make a joyous noise and birds squawk
a choir of support. But, this sea behind Loich's house had no
sound. It was mute or muzzled but silenced none the
less.
"Quiet it can be but let it be wet enough to drown me,
strong enough to kill me," she pleaded as she continued to hurry to
something wanting only to get further from her.
Three heads bobbed up and down and up again from
beyond the edge of the meadow. Dru gasped and tried to stop but
only skidded along the wet grass. The heads bobbed up again and
attached shoulders were bouncing into view as well. Loich,
Finntan, and Mery were emerging from over the edge and approaching
the meadow.
The men were more naked than their mothers' had ever seen them
and drenched. Steam rose from their skin but their howls were
laughter and not pain. Mery was wet at well but wearing linen that
revealed more than it covered. She was happily chatting with the
pair.
Dru's arms flailed as she tried to turn back toward where she
came. Three sets of eyes settled on her and widened. The expected
shouts signaling a hunt for a runaway did not follow. The three
seemed to be shouting a warning to her but she was too frighten and
the language too thick for her to understand. It was only when a
solid body slammed into her that she understood their
words.
"Watch out!"
Dru managed to stay on her feet but was dragged several steps
with Ainninn. Her Mistress finally released any hold she had on
Dru and accepted she'd fall alone. Ainninn flipped and flopped
into the grass. She was still sliding when Dru, completely
panicked, got her feet solidly under her and turned to flee north.
The shouts from the onlookers not only continued but seemed to
grow in number as panting behind her increased.
A grunt of effort and Dru's knees were knocked to the ground.
Both hands went out to break her fall but her face still smashed
into the dirt anyway. Scrambling still, Dru spit out bits of grass
as she tried to claw free of the arms holding her legs. Fits of
laughter weakened her efforts. Dru shot a glance over her shoulder
and saw a giggling but breathless Ainninn holding her
fast.
"Fun, such fun. You were right, this was much better than a
tumble in the blankets. Lets go again," Ainninn panted the words
and climbed the length of Dru's body, holding her tight for the
entire journey. "This time, maybe we should grease you so it's not
so easy on my."
Dru, stunned by the words, was left to merely stared at
Ainninn.
"You should have said you'd be racing," Loich called as he
approached with his two companions and several villages following
him. "I'd have got the betting set. You spoil our sport being
impulsive."
Finntan smiled but did not voice his support. His eyes narrowed
when Dru looked to him. A subtle head shake let her know he was
not fooled.
"The pair of you must wash up. I'll not have you track mud and
grass into my host's home," Mery scolded and appeared unaware of
the deception Ainninn fabricated.
"Ah yes, a sprits in the lake," Ainninn sighed. "Wonderful
follow up to a hearty race. Especially, a race I
won!"
"Enjoy the morning, my girl. Today you rest and recreate.
Tomorrow our work begins again. There'll be no games again until
the winter winds blow the Romans back to pig muck of their
homeland."
"He'll cut you to shreds if you try that again," Ainninn said
quietly as she and Dru walked down the meadow.
Dru did not answer. She kept trying to walk behind her Mistress
but Ainninn continued to slow her pace. Every few steps they would
be abreast of each other again.
"You hear me, right?" Ainninn asked.
"Yes, Mistress."
"Why run? You can't get away from here." Anninn stopped
walking and spread her arms wide at the vista around them. "The
way we entered is impossible for an outside to follow back.
Running toward the sea will only exhaust you as you tramp from one
meadow to the next. Our protection to the east is the sea itself.
The shoals are speckled with vicious stones to wreck any vessel
approaching. There is no escape from my village,
Dru."
Dru answered easily. "You are not correct, Mistress. Death is
an escape which seemed within reach this morning. But, fast as I
chased it, you were just a bit faster."
"Should I be pleased or insulted that I am more unbearable than
your Roman masters?"
"Mistress' will to be either, I suppose," Dru said with a shrug
and began to look for the lake. "Where is this thing? How do you
hide the obvious?"
Ainninn did not reply. She turned and continued to walk again.
This time she made certain to stay a step ahead of Dru. When they
finally dropped into a lower meadow, Dru gasped at the sight. The
lake was enormous and filled with churning but clear water. It
lapped at its banks like a dog greeting a long absent master.
Without warning, Ainninn grabbed Dru by the arm and a fistful of
hair. She began to drag her along. She pulled and shoved and
forced the slave into the fridge water. When the water climbed
higher than her hips, Dru realized Ainninn was not intending on
stopping.
"Mistress," she stuttered with the cold and fear. "I'm not so
very good in water."
"You don't need to be good in the water to drown. If that is
what you meant to do then let me help you the rest of the
way."
Ainninn jerked Dru forward. Dru splashed face first into a
dunk. She snapped up gasping for breath and tried to move to
safety without getting in deeper. But, Ainninn was on her. A firm
hand on her head and a push sent Dru under the surface. Dru
struggled but could not break free. Mighty gladiator she was but
her beating on the ship, the long days' journey in a colder
climate, and the failed dash to the sea conspired to weaken her.
Her body jerked against her Mistress' hold but she could not get
her nose above the water. Her fingers dug into Ainninn's skin
climbing higher up the strong arms but it did her lungs no good.
With a strong tug, Ainninn pulled Dru's head above the waves.
"You like this drowning? Is this what you wanted? Shall you like
to drown some more?"
Dru was coughing, trying for a breath of air. She
could not speak but she heard the words very clearly. She very
much wanted to say no but it was not possible. Ainninn, tired of
waiting, shoved her slave under the surface again. Dru dug her
nails into Ainninn arm. She clawed and struggled. Suffocation was
a greater agony than she'd imagined it would be. The pain made her
body demand survive.
"Is this to you liking?" Ainninn screamed as she
pulled Dru out again.
Dru was more prepared this time, "NO! NO!
MERCY!"
The hold on her eased immediately. Dru sagged against
her Mistress and panted for air. Ainninn bundled Dru up against
her hip and hauled her along on the trudge back to the shore. The
pair was exhausted but they eventually made it to the safety of the
grass. They fell with the first stumble. Neither let go of the
other as they hit the dirt. Long moments of ragged breaths passed
before Ainninn sighed.
"You stop running for your death and I'll stop
dropping you to your knees for my pleasure," Ainninn began the
bargain. "Do what I tell you without complaint. I'll not ask you
for your services in my bedroll or under the stars. I think I'm
quite good at the task and you would have enjoyed me but I can
spare you this chore if you promise all other things I
demand."
"All I need to do is obey and not die by my own hand?
You'll not abuse what the Romans' ruined?"
"This is what I said," Ainninn swallowed trying to
catch her breath.
"I will obey you then. I will not seek my own exit
from your care. But, I will hold you to your promise, Mistress,"
Dru warned. "I'll not lose my self again to the whim of my
betters. The last time was the last time."
"As you say," Ainninn agreed. "Now, enough talk.
Let's bath then eat and then race again. That was more fun than I
expected."
Dru watched as Ainninn stood. The woman stretched
before she striped off her clothing. Anninn was tall and lean.
Muscles were clearly defined under firm and dark skin. Her breasts
were sweetly rounded and the nipples peaked in the cold air.
Ainninn's ass was finer than any Roman statue Dru had ever seen.
"What have I bargained away?" Dru thought bleakly as
her Mistress went bounding into the water.