Author: David Nunes da Silva
Title: Brothers of the Ox-Yoke
Part: Part 3 of 6
Universe: Midsummer Fires
Summary:Set 2435 B.C.E. in the Eastern Alps.
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Keywords: mf mm cbt sm best viol 1st hist 
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Brothers of the Ox-Yoke

by David Nunes da Silva

2435 B.C.E.    The Julian Alps.

In the third millennium B.C.E., they thought differently.    Or I should 
say, in the third millennium C.E., we think differently.    Only our cunts 
and cocks are still the same.    Characters who speak not one line, have not 
one thought, of which one can say: that is a modern thought - that is the 
goal, but of course it is impossible.  Some writing remains from around 
2435; not much.  A few hymns.   Some tax records.   But people don't, or 
certainly they didn't, write as they think, nor even as they speak.   Did 
they cuss in 2435?  Did they say "rape!" or "holy cunt!" or "bronze!"?       
  The ancient sources do not say.

The 'songs' in this story are from (that is, mangled from) the Avesta and 
the Rig Veda.   Translations of the Avesta and the Vedas tend to have a dry, 
academic quality, even the best ones.  The songs were not dry - they are 
about sex, cattle-rustling, and the use of a performance-enhancing drug in 
sporting events.    In my imitations, I have tried to make the tone raunchy, 
without changing the content, which is raunchy enough already.  For example, 
instead of:

      "Pusan, rouse her to be most eager to please, the women in whom men 
sow their seed,"
I prefer:
     "Make her beg for it, Pusan.  Make my wife a fuckable woman."

This is the second story of a trilogy.    If you read the second without the 
first, you won't know what is going on.   You may not anyway.

Home Page   ( http://www.angelfire.com/indie/dnds/index.htm )

I.  "... and run between the fires on a warm midsummer night."
   ( http://www.angelfire.com/indie/dnds/Arkwan.htm )
II.  Brothers of the Ox-Yoke
    (   http://www.angelfire.com/indie/dnds/tektu.htm  )
III. The Song of Kala Khoam
   (   http://www.angelfire.com/indie/dnds/kalakhoam.htm  )


[ this file is the first half of the second story, called 
     Brothers of the Ox-Yoke,
  of the Midsummer Fires trilogy. ]

* * * * * * * * * *

Tektu didn't need his eyes, to know his arrow would miss, but he lifted the 
cloth, in time to see it smash into a stone, nowhere near the target.  The 
stick Poradis had tossed into the air, hit the ground.   Tektu had tried too 
hard, trying to be fast, and had released much too soon.   Another arrow to 
replace.   Tektu wished he minded missing the target.   But he didn't feel 
anything.   When Arkwan had watched him shoot, and when Tektu could tell, by 
the tiny crinkle in the corner of Arkwan's eye, that he was pleased, Tektu 
had felt like the High King of the whole green Earth.   When he missed with 
Arkwan watching, it felt like a dagger into his balls; hurting all the more 
because Arkwan wouldn't whip him for his mistakes.    But since Hu had died, 
and Arkwan had gone with Nakien to the north, nothing really hurt, and 
nothing gave real pleasure; it was as if his pain and pleasure were 
happening to someone else.    He dropped his belt and loincloth, and Poradis 
gave him a stroke.   Tektu's bottom was as tough as tanned bullhide, and a 
stroke of the greenwood hurt him about as much as a pinch on the cheek.  
He'd like to feel at least a little pain, to feel something, when he made 
such a stupid mistake.  But if Tektu wanted a whipping that really hurt, for 
a miss, Poradis would demand the same - and the nagging sadness that weighed 
on Tektu was made worse, when almost every morning, he had to whip Poradis's 
skinny, old man's bottom.

Kahela shot next, and she watched her arrows miss the target with dead eyes. 
    There was a flicker of greedy pleasure in her eyes as she lifted her 
tunic for the strokes that would, if only for a heartbeat, distract her.    
Poradis shot last.   Poradis never put on his loincloth until after 
practice, and Tektu stood behind him with the switch raised, the way an 
arrow master stands behind his worst pupil.    But Poradis did not try any 
fancy fast shooting, or cover his eyes; he aimed carefully.   This morning 
he sent arrow after arrow into the target, his body as wooden as a carved 
God's.    Then Tektu and Poradis practiced dodging cloth-head arrows, and 
Poradis was hit.    But he got no whipping for that: being hit by the arrow 
hurt enough.

"You should try harder to hit the target, Kahela," Tektu said, once they had 
retrieved the arrows and lifted their packs.  "Even if there is no battle, 
there could be robbers.    We could be taken as slaves."

"We may be robbed, and raped, and killed, Tektu, but not made slaves.    Not 
in the lands under the High King."

"What do you mean?    Arkwan was taken for a slave."

"Do bards never come to your village, weaver?    Or do little weaver boys 
spend all their time playing with toys?"

They walked for some time.   Tektu could see that Kahela was going to make 
him ask.   He was pleased in a way; perhaps she was regaining her spirits.   
"Punish me for a dunce, O wise teacher," he said, mockingly, "but explain 
your wisdom."

Kahela said: "They must tattoo fool's penises in your village."

Tektu was hurt.  "Arkwan said I was ready for tattoos, and Nakien himself 
pricked me."

Kahela stopped suddenly.  Her face was white.   Tektu grabbed her in time to 
keep her from falling.   Too late he remembered that Nakien had also pricked 
Hu.    She looked like she was about to howl, and Tektu wanted to slap her.  
  He lowered her to the ground, and yelled at her instead.   "Dunce!   Why 
do you say we may be killed, but not taken as slaves?   Arkwan was taken!"

Kahela looked at him and shook her head.  She said: "Arkwan was not a man of 
the High King when he was taken; so Kros had the right to say he was on a 
cattle raid."

"So it's against the Law to take us as slaves," Tektu argued.  "Isn't it 
also against the Law to kill us?"

"Tektu, if you were taken and kept as a slave, in some village, every bard 
and peddler who passed through would know you.   You are the son of Nohas.   
   We may meet bandits along this path, but they will kill us, or we will 
kill them."

"They could take us to their cave, and keep us as slaves to their pleasure."

"In a black bard's tale," Kahela snorted.   "Real bandits live in some 
village, and pretend to be honest men."

"But there could be some who live in caves."

"And live on bugs?    And how would such men keep slaves?    Stay up all 
night to watch us?"

"I wondered why Arkwan did not escape," Tektu said.

"Where would he go?"   Kahela asked.

"He said he wanted to join King Taslan, and fight the nomads."

"And tell Taslan that he escaped from Kros?   Taslan would have to return 
him, or pay for him, to keep honor.   Arkwan was taken fairly under the Law, 
so for Taslan to keep him would make Taslan a thief.  King Taslan is 
fighting; he can't make an enemy of the bronze makers."

"A raid - nomads from the north.  They could take us as slaves."

"Nomads do not come this far south."

"You have taught me, Kahela,"  Tektu admitted.   "I was the dunce."

"For punishment, you shall enter me," Kahela said grimly.

Tektu felt his penis shrivel.   He had entered a woman once before; with 
Nakien, sliding into her a heartbeat after Nakien pulled out.    His seed 
had burst out.   Tektu had liked the smooth easy sliding, easier than a 
man's shit-eye, since his penis had been still sore from getting his tattoo. 
   Nakien had said that he should learn to keep his seed in, to prolong his 
pleasure.    Tektu never found out that woman's name.   That same night he 
had met Raki-Danniahik; they had spent the night playing, and wrestling, and 
laughing,   Laughing at nothing.  Toward morning they had slept, but Raki 
had woken Tektu in the gray light before sunrise.

Raki had his hand around Tektu's long stiff shaft.  "Tektu, in your sleep 
you said ... Do you really want to?"

Tektu nodded, and Raki turned away. Tektu pushed his sore penis tip slowly 
and carefully into Raki's shit-eye, and then pulled out again.  Then he put 
his hand on Raki's bare penis.   "We may come back to this village, Raki.   
I don't know.  It depends on Nakien.   Get your tattoos soon.   If you have 
them when I come back, we can do anything you want."

Raki had wept.  "I suppose you'd rather enter a woman.   I saw you.   You 
put your seed in her, didn't you?"

"Raki, I'd rather enter your bottom than spend the night with a hand of 
women, learning Nakien's secrets of pleasure.  Get your tattoos."

"I'm learning to be a priest.   That's what my name means in the old tongue: 
priest of Dannia.   I'll have to enter a women for the planting sacrifice, 
but I'm not sure I'll be able to."

Tektu had boasted that his penis would always rise when he wanted it to, but 
now, with Kahela, he didn't feel a stir.   He dropped his loincloth, and 
started to remove Kahela's tunic.

Poradis, who rarely spoke, grabbed Tektu by the shoulder.   "Can't you wait 
till tonight?  We should keep going."

Tektu didn't wait for Kahela to agree.   He put his loincloth back on, 
lifted his pack, and headed along the trail, putting three arrows in his 
belt, and carrying his bow, strung.   "We'll carry our bows as long as we 
are in the woods," he ordered.  "If Kahela is right that thieves will kill 
us, we need to shoot first."

Toward midday, Poradis stopped Kahela and Tektu with a touch, and put his 
hand across his mouth.  "What is it?" Tektu asked, as quietly as he could.

"A lot of people.  See this dust?   Ahead of us, going slowly.   We are 
overtaking them."

"Shall we hide?"

Kahela said: "We can't go along this path and not be seen.   We should join 
this group.   That way, we will be safe."

Tektu looked at Poradis, who nodded.    They started to walk.   Poradis 
spoke quietly: "Put your bow over your shoulder, Tektu.    Or they'll shoot 
you for a thief.    Walk slowly.   I don't want to turn a corner in these 
woods, and find ourselves face to face with drawn bows.   It will be better 
if they see us first from a distance.     Keep your eyes and ears open; they 
may have heard us.   They could be waiting."

After some distance through the woods, the path climbed to more open 
country, and they saw a few people, seemingly the rearguard of the large 
party.   There were two warriors, with shields and spears on their backs, 
arrows in their belts, and bows in their hands.   They were with three old 
women, who carried heavy packs.

Tektu shouted: "Well met on the roads, friends."

* * * * * * * * * *

The two warriors had their arrows nocked by the time they turned around, but 
Tektu thought they should have been faster.   At this distance, Tektu 
thought he could dodge the arrows.    But it would be a lot harder to dodge 
two than one.   Tektu held his hands away from his body.    They did not 
shoot.

"Well met if you be a friend," the older warrior shouted.   The younger 
warrior gave a loud shout, and there was an answering shout from further 
ahead.

"I am Tektu, son of Nohas headwoman.   In our village, we keep sheep, and 
weave cloth."

"Honor, road-friend Tektu.   We know of the village of Nohas.   But you are 
far from home."

"Who asks?"

"I am Marwat, warrior of Queen Ishan."

"Honor, Marwat.   Health and safety to your lady Queen, and great honor.   
You, too, travel far."

"Not so far, yet, but we go to the sanctuary at the smoking water.  The 
Queen is taking rams for the Great Sacrifice."

Kahela shouted: "Honor, Marwat.   Health to the Queen and her warriors.   I 
am daughter of Kratik: Kahela, of the village of Sugga law-singer."

"All revere the Law-Singer," Marwat shouted.

Poradis said nothing, and neither did the younger warrior.   Tektu didn't 
know if Poradis drank from the honor cup or not, but he was acting as if he 
was Kahela's man, standing behind her.    Clever, Tektu thought.  He's 
making Kahela seem to be a great lady, traveling with her own warrior.

But Marwat was not impressed.   He made them hand over their weapons.   They 
walked along with Marwat and the young warrior behind them, arrows nocked.   
Before sunset, they reached a marsh.   There was open water in the middle, 
but separated from the shore by a thick stand of reeds.   The Queen's 
company had set up camp under some trees on the sloping hillside, where a 
little rill tumbled down the rocks to sink into the swampy grass.

They told their names and households to the chief of the warriors, who made 
no move to give them back their weapons.   One of the warriors asked Tektu 
if he would like to join their evening practice.   Tektu knew that it was 
the sport of warriors to give cocky young fighters a good thrashing, 
especially wvaksa's sons.  It had been the same when the High King had come 
to Tektu's village in the spring.  One of the King's warriors had asked 
Tektu:  "Want some practice with shield and spear?"

"No," Tektu had said.

"A coward?"

"Yes!"

And the warrior had given Tektu a kick on the bottom, and the warriors, and 
the villagers, had laughed.   But Erdiosh, Tektu's friend, shouted: "He is 
not a coward."

"Do you want a match with me?" the warrior had asked.

Erdiosh, as all the village knew, liked to suckle on Tektu's penis.   Boys 
do that, of course, but people do say that the boy whose penis is sucked, is 
usually the brave one.    "As penis, so dagger," the proverb goes.   So 
Erdiosh thought he had to prove he wasn't a coward.  He took on the king's 
warrior, fighting with shields and headless spears.   It was horrible.   
Erdiosh was soon curled up on the ground, shouting "Stop. I'm a coward, a 
coward"  His shoulder was mangled, a rib broken, and there was a bad gash in 
his groin, bruises all over, and a cut from his own shield below his ear.  
And he had bitten his tongue.  The King's warrior had not been touched.   
Before walking away, the warrior kicked Erdiosh's bottom.

Tektu didn't want to travel with Queen Ishan's company of warriors, slinking 
along as an admitted coward.   He wanted to show these grinning warriors 
that he wasn't afraid of them.   He said: "I had in mind to practice with my 
bow tonight."

A different warrior, no doubt the Queen's best archer, answered him: "A wise 
choice, son of Nohas headwoman.    It doesn't hurt when an arrow misses a 
target."

"When you miss, son of I don't know who, I'll beat you with my bow.   Will 
that hurt enough for you?"

"Name your target!"

"I have no bow."

The Chief of the warriors gave Tektu back his bow and quiver.  Some warriors 
nocked arrows and watched him.    The Chief also brought a stick; of course 
no one was going to beat anyone with a valuable bow, that was just a way of 
speaking.    Tektu slung his quiver off his hip, facing forward, tied to his 
belt as well as hanging from his shoulder.  He pointed to a grassy bank, not 
very far away.   The warriors laughed.   What a beating this boy was going 
to get, they thought, challenging a real warrior.    The Queen's archer shot 
first, shooting a hand of arrows in a tight cluster.    Tektu took off his 
loincloth.   The warriors sniggered.   This calf was submitting to a beating 
without even trying to match the archer's shooting.    This was going to be 
fun, they thought.   We'll torment this fool all night.

Tektu waited for the noise to stop, then laughed.   He wrapped his loincloth 
over his eyes, and faced away from the target.   He stood still for a few 
heartbeats, and quickly spun around.   Then he waited, with the cloth still 
over his eyes, as the warriors began to murmur, and then to shout.

"Three arrows!" someone shouted.    "Did you see that?   Did you see him 
draw three times?   It was like lightning!"

Tektu took the cloth from his eyes.   The arrows were not as close together 
as Arkwan could have done, but at least he hadn't killed anyone.  His arrows 
were not as close together as the other man's; he had not expected them to 
be.   He didn't want to win, just to make sure he was respected.   But the 
warrior handed him the stick.

"It is good to have a contest," Tektu said, taking the stick.   "I usually 
practice alone.  A contest, with a merry wager - a little bottom-tickling as 
a prize for the unlucky one - that makes a pleasant change.  Who has been my 
companion, this evening?    I judge myself to be the loser; take this 
again."

"Health to you, Tektu, son of Nohas.  I thought to win this contest, and 
would have beaten you hard.   Do not spare me, but strike hard, or you 
dishonor me.  I am Aru son of ... Ishan."

Prince Aru had spoken the Queen's name in a whisper, and was blushing.   It 
is not very admirable, to force a young guest to compete with the chosen 
best of a company, and beat him for losing.    It is even less admirable, 
when a prince does it.

"Beat me hard, Tektu," the Prince said, in Tektu's ear.   "If you hit light, 
they will think I am using my royal rank.   I will lose the name of honor 
forever."

Tektu wondered, what will the Queen think?    Will she hate me for whipping 
her son?

"Your health and safety, Prince.    Remove your loincloth!"

"Safety, and your heart's desire, Headwoman's son."

The Prince does well to wish me safety, Tektu thought.   It is a dangerous 
thing, whipping a prince.    The Prince removed his cloak, then loosened his 
belt and pulled his loincloth through.     He kept his dagger at his side; 
it was copper, just like the other warriors', not a Kros nor a Tlossos.    
The Prince's loincloth was thick wool cloth, it covered his bottom, and the 
wear showed he'd been sitting on it.   Such is wealth.  Tektu's was rabbit 
skin, twisted up his crack.   Tektu winced just to think of how much this 
was going to hurt on the Prince's puffy soft white skin.   Every eye in camp 
was on the Prince; they didn't look at Tektu.   Someone told the Queen, and 
she came out of her house of skins.   There was a bard with her.  Tektu knew 
him, a red bard named Heyos.   The Prince looked at the Queen, begging with 
his eyes, and he lay down, facing away from her.   Some warriors moved, so 
they could look into the Prince's face as he was beaten.    Others stood on 
logs, or climbed trees, so they could look down at the Prince's bottom.   
There was complete silence.

Tektu put his own loincloth back on, and looked at the Queen.   She nodded.  
  Tektu stepped across the Prince's legs to get a better position - he was 
left-handed.   Then he his raised the stick and brought it down across the 
Prince's royal bottom.   The rod was solid ash, and this would be a serious, 
bruising beating.  This was nothing like the pleasant sting of a snappy 
greenwood switch.   This was even worse than the whippings with knotted 
leather straps that his mother gave him, that left his back a plaid of 
bleeding cuts.    A heavy rod like this could crack a rib.   Better to pulp 
the bottom with blow after blow, than to land any across the Prince's back.  
But there was no doubt that this very rod was what the Prince had planned to 
use.

Tektu delivered another stroke, then another.   The Prince gave no sign.    
Tektu looked at the Queen, at all the watching eyes.   He could not tell 
what they were thinking; no one looked at him.  He gave another stroke.   
Little tears of blood showed where one stroke had landed on top of another.  
The rod was not smooth.   There was now just one strip of unbruised skin 
across the Prince's bottom.  Tektu aimed for it, but missed.   The prince 
made a little sound.   Tektu put down the rod, and sat down.    A boy, a 
slave Tektu thought, helped the Prince to stand, and they walked away, the 
Prince leaning on the slave's arm.    The watching warriors began to murmur. 
    Tektu, all eyes on him now, retrieved his arrows, cleaned them, and 
carefully put them into his quiver.

Marwat came over to Tektu.    Tektu thought he might be killed.   He tried 
to show no fear, and made no sort of move to defend himself.

"Would you like another match?" Marwat asked.

Tektu expected a contest of plain shooting.    He planned to lose.   Then 
the warriors' honor would be satisfied without shedding Tektu's blood.   Or 
at least, not very much of it.   A beating was better than a dagger in his 
ribs.  But Marwat wanted a contest with eyes covered.   Tektu shot as badly, 
and as slowly, as he could.  Marwat, with his first arrow, hit a woman; 
fortunately, she was only scratched.    "I am not a prince, son of Nohas," 
Marwat said as he handed the rod, "you do not need to strike so lightly with 
me."   Tektu did not strike him any harder than he had the Prince.  Marwat 
took his hand of blows without a sound, and sprang to his feet with a 
reproachful look, as if Tektu had doubted his courage, in striking so 
lightly.  It had not seemed light to Tektu.   He wondered what these 
warriors considered hard.    Several warriors spoke at once, challenging 
Tektu to another blind match.   Tektu thought: they'll be angry if I refuse. 
    But if I whip them all, what then?   Will I see the sunrise in the 
morning?

The slave boy came and said the Prince wanted to talk to Tektu.    The 
Prince was lying on his belly, under blankets, but with his bottom exposed 
to the cooling breeze.  It was shiny, greased with bear fat.

"I want you to finish," the Prince said.   "I made a sound - I am 
dishonored.   Beat me harder.   I will be silent.   Give me the strokes you 
would have, if I hadn't cried."

Tektu said: "Honor, Prince.  How hard would you have struck, and how many, 
if I had lost?"

The Prince put his hand on his bottom.   "I've used that rod a lot.  I 
didn't know how much it hurt, until now.   But I think your hand is lighter 
than mine.   I would have given you one stroke; that is our custom.  But I 
lost the wager - I must endure whatever you give."

"Punish me, Prince.   I meant only to do what was fair.   I thought you 
would make a sign."

"One stroke for that challenge, Tektu.   But we would have challenged you 
again, all night long.    Until your bottom was so beaten you could no 
longer walk.   Unless you were brave enough to say you were a coward, and 
refuse a challenge.  And if you did refuse, I would have pissed on your 
face.   I've done it before.  You want to do what is fair?   Beat me until 
sunrise.    And piss on my face if I make another sound - in front of 
everyone."

"Prince, if one stroke is the custom, I can't give you any more."

"The custom is, that the winner can whip as long as he wants.   I would have 
given only one stroke, out of scorn.   A long beating is an honor, if it is 
endured without complaint.   Beat me now - I will not cry out again."

"Royal Prince, I can't do this."

Then I challenge you to blindfold shooting, a hand of strokes for the loser. 
  And I will challenge again, until my arse is too beat to  move my legs."

"I am not brave enough to keep winning against a prince.    However badly 
you shoot, I can shoot worse."

"But they know how well you shoot.  It will look as if I made you lose to 
me."

"You did, Prince.   When you let me give you a hand of strokes, when the 
custom is one.    That may be dangerous for me.   How many of your warriors 
are brave enough to win against you?   You said you had not felt the ash 
rod."

"They are not my warriors.    Let's have a real contest, Tektu.   Something 
I might win and you might.   A foot race."

Tektu said: "Prince, shooting at a target.  A far target.   No blindfold."

"Agreed.    I suppose you're good at all kinds of shooting.   But you may be 
surprised.  I am a good archer, even if they do let me win."

They laid out a target.  The Prince told Tektu to go first.

Tektu stood on a log: "Hear, all of you!  Health and safety to the Queen!    
Honor and her heart's desire!   Health to her son and daughters!  Prince Aru 
has challenged me at archery.   My best skill is blind shooting, but I will 
win at the target he has chosen!    We agree: a beating for the loser, a 
hand of strokes.   He will regret challenging me!"

Tektu was never very good at a far target, and he had not practiced that 
kind of shooting since he left his village.   Arkwan had said: "In a battle, 
enemies don't stay still."    So Tektu would lose to the Prince, if the 
Prince was any good at all.   The only trouble was not shooting so badly 
that everyone knew he was losing on purpose.    It was very important that 
he not miss badly.   He shot.   He missed badly.

All his life, at training, Tektu had been told about fighters who are good 
at practice, but useless in their first battle.   Sometimes the arrow master 
threatened horrible beatings for a miss, so his pupils could learn to shoot 
calmly, even when they were terrified.   Tektu was terrified, but it didn't 
make him shoot worse, so the arrow master tried something else.  "From now 
on, Tektu, I'll whip your friends - whip 'em with leather - when you miss, 
and whip you when one of them misses."  Tektu remembered aiming his arrow, 
thinking, I have to make this shot, I have to make this shot.   Thinking 
like that, of course he missed.   Day after day, as the moon waned, his 
friends were whipped for his failure - whipped on bottoms bruised and sore 
from the days before.   The master made Tektu shoot quickly, and he stood 
with the pig-whip, raised over some boy's bottom, or girl's, bent across a 
log.  Arrow after arrow missed, and for each miss he brought down the 
braided straps.  Tektu would never forget the sound, or the crying.   And if 
Tektu did not shoot quickly enough, he heard the lash strike before he 
released.   When it was a girl, Tektu tried desperately hard not to miss - 
and shot even worse.   All the girls, except his sister Danha, thought he 
was doing it on purpose, and they shot badly so he would be whipped.   And 
they weren't nice to him afterwards either.   When it was Danha's bottom 
under the pig-whip, that was the worst of all.  She never made a sound.  The 
master said: "See the target, Tektu.  Only the target.   Do not see your 
friends' faces, do not see their bottoms.   See only the arrowhead in the 
target."  And by the time the new moon rose, he could.

Tektu realized he had nocked an arrow, drawn, and fired, while thinking 
about practice at the village.   The arrow stood in the center of the 
target.   He shot a trio of arrows to finish the hand.   Each one went 
exactly where he wanted it, as he knew it would.   But he took care that 
they were not too close to the center.

As the Prince drew for his first shot, the Queen came out of her tent, with 
Kahela, and the Prince waited as his mother found a spot with a good view of 
the target.   The Queen put her hand on Kahela's shoulder - Tektu wasn't 
sure what that meant.  The Prince shot his hand of arrows.   They struck in 
a fairly wide scatter, but with Tektu's one bad miss on his first shot, it 
was clear the Prince had won.   With this beating, Tektu thought the 
warriors' honor would be satisfied, even if he won in other contests.   But 
first he would have to endure the beating.  In Aru's ear he said, "Honor, 
Prince.  Strike hard."

* * * * * * * * * *

"Queen, your heart's desire.  This woman says she is Kahela daughter of 
Kratik, of the village of Sugga law-singer.   The man Tektu, son of Nohas 
headwoman, has just been challenged by the Prince."

The Queen had summoned the strangers to her tent as soon as they reached the 
camp.   She looked at Kahela with suspicion.   She said "Heyos?"

The bard looked at Kahela.   "Honor, Queen.  I know Kratik well, but it was 
long ago when I was with the Law-Singer.    Does Kratik still have his 
bullhide whip?"

"His elbow pains him.  The students come to me now, for help with their 
singing."

"Hah!  Help!  You are indeed the daughter of Kratik.   And this ... Poradis? 
   Poradis!"

The two old men embraced and kissed.   "But why do you not give your name?" 
the bard asked.  "Have you become a slave?"

Poradis answered: "I and my daughter guard the doorposts of my house.   All 
is well with the house of Aradis."

Heyos said: "Health, Queen Ishan.   I know this man, he is of Sugga's 
village.   And I will know Tektu son of Nohas, when I see him.   You 
remember the tale of the God we do not name, at the dance of the bronze 
makers?   Tektu traveled with the slave who claimed the God had used his 
body."

Kahela said: "Honor, Queen.  The slave makes no claim.   Nute, the peddler, 
was at the dance.   Nute says that all who were there, saw the God's face."

"And was the Kohiyossa born in one night, as they say?"

Kahela didn't know what to say.   She wanted to talk to Tektu.  She wanted, 
desperately, to talk to Hu.

"Speak!" the Queen commanded.   "Warriors, whip this woman!"

"The Kohiyossa was not born in a night!" Kahela shrieked.

"Tell me what you know," the Queen commanded.

"Honor, Queen Ishan.   Last summer, a year and a night before the dance at 
the bronze makers, the God came to a dance.    At that dance too, He used 
the penis of a man - the same man.   At that dance, He entered one woman 
only.   Not in a night, but in the tenth moon, she bore a son with golden 
hair.   The bronze makers tried to sacrifice this boy, but she saved him, 
crushed in the rescue.   Nakien white bard, has ruled that this boy is 
indeed the Kohiyossa.   This summer,  at the dance of the bronze makers, the 
God used the same penis again.  He entered every woman, putting His seed in 
them all.   The smashers ..."

A slave stuck his head through the door.   "Prince Aru has lost his 
challenge to the young stranger!   The Prince has handed him the rod!   Um.  
Honor, Queen Ishan."

"Kahnikos!"   "And as for you, daughter of Kratik, I shall question you 
later."

They all followed the Queen, and the warriors made way for her.  The 
watching warriors made a ring around Tektu and the Prince, and Kahela 
couldn't see what was happening.  She stood with other women at the edge of 
the crowd.   They heard the smack of wood hitting flesh.   "What is 
happening?" a woman asked.

Another woman said: "Prince Aru is getting a beating.  He challenged a 
stranger, and lost."

"And the stranger is beating him?   What a fool.   I'll cook and eat his 
balls when the Queen cuts them off."

When the Prince was helped away from the practice ground by his slave, they 
passed Kahela, and the Prince gave her a little shy smile.    Kahela 
followed them, and hid behind a tree.   The slave was indignant.   "How dare 
he beat you!" he said as he soothed the Prince with bear-grease.    "You 
should drink some Hema for the pain.   And when you have this serpent 
whipped to death, let me handle the rod."

"No Hema," the Prince said.   "Fetch the stranger.   And Kahnikos, his name 
is Tektu son of Nohas headwoman.   Speak to him with proper honor."

Kahela listened to Tektu and the Prince.   When they agreed to another 
match, Kahela thought that Tektu was planning to lose.   But couldn't Tektu 
see that the Prince also planned to lose?   Kahela ran to the Queen's tent.

"Where have you been, Kratik's daughter?   Do you know that the man you came 
with, whipped my son?"

"Be well, daughter of Metik-Danniadae, King.   Tektu may win again, if you 
do not stop them."

"Why should I stop them?   If my son challenges a better archer, let him be 
beaten."

"I fear the warriors will kill Tektu."

"Why does he challenge a Prince then?   And I am a Queen, daughter of 
Kratik!"

"Honor, Queen Ishan!  Punish me for not speaking to you properly!  I think 
Tektu plans to lose.   But I think Prince Aru plans to lose as well.  I 
don't know why."

"My son sees himself as a hero.   It must be sweet for him, to take his 
beating honorably, after a fair contest.   The warriors lose to him on 
purpose."

"Safety, Queen, and long life.   But I fear Tektu will have neither."

"My warriors will obey me.   But we shall go see this match."

* * * * * * * * * *

"Kahela."

It was Hu's voice.   As clear as if he was standing next to her.    "Well 
done," he said.

* * * * * * * * * *

Tektu had already shot. Prince Aru was about to begin.    The Queen looked 
at her son, her eyes speaking, and she put her hand on Kahela's shoulder.   
Aru wasn't sure what she meant.    Kahela wasn't beautiful, but there was 
something in her eyes.   When she had come into the camp, in a heartbeat, he 
had wanted her.   Most woman would come to him: he was the Prince.   But not 
Kahela; he saw that in her eyes.   He would have to prove himself.

Aru planned to lose and get another beating, only this time, he wanted 
Kahela to look at his face.   He didn't know if she had seen him the first 
time.  He would lose and take a beating, as honor required, and she would 
watch his face as he endured the blows without a sound.   Surely she would 
be impressed.   But as he drew, she shouted "Your heart's desire, Prince.   
Shoot well!"    She must know what his heart's desire was - those eyes could 
see his heart.   He shot his hand of arrows, not knowing if he wanted to win 
or lose.   He thought he had lost.   But the warriors shouted "Aru, Aru."

Tektu stripped for his beating, and stood waiting for the Prince to command 
him.   Tektu had a snub nose and a lopsided grin, but he had a warrior's 
strong body, and a long penis, tattooed with a spiral pattern.   His ball 
sack was smooth, his piss-beard hardly more than a boy's.  He had scars 
across his bottom, like most archers who trained with strict teachers.   His 
black hair was braided close around his head, in the hero pattern, showing 
that he, or his father, had won high honor.   Young as he was, he was as 
tall as Aru, and heavier.  If he is coupling with her, Aru thought, I don't 
have a chance.   But she wished me luck, not him!   Aru was frantic with 
desire, and his penis stiffened inside his loincloth.    I should remember 
not to wear it so tight, he thought.   He wished he could punish Tektu like 
a naughty slavegirl, by raping his shit-eye.  Aru made Tektu bend over a 
pile of packs, with his legs spread, positioned for a rape, but then smashed 
the ash rod across Tektu's bottom, fast and hard.   As he gave blow after 
blow, in his eyes he was thrusting into Tektu's bottom with his own rod.   
His penis hurt, pressed against his cloth.    He gave more than the hand of 
blows they had agreed, but he stopped at last, and threw down the rod.   How 
she must despise me, he thought.

Tektu stood up, in a daze, and took a few steps, trying not to show the pain 
that every step cost him.   Poradis came over, holding Tektu's bow and 
quiver.

"Health and good appetite, Wvaksa, son of Nohas.   Have you finished your 
evening practice?   Shall we do some battle shooting?"

Tektu took the bow and quiver.   Poradis stood a short distance away, 
holding a slab of bark the size of his hand.    Tektu faced away from him, 
quiver tied low by his hip, and bow hung to the front.    Poradis shouted, 
and tossed the bark up and to the side.    Tektu spun around, grabbed an 
arrow with one hand and the bow with the other, nocked, drew, and released.  
   He missed the bark, but not by much.    He turned away again, and hung 
his bow.  Poradis threw again, and shouted.   This time the arrow clipped 
the bark as it fell.    One more time: Poradis threw, toward the lake this 
time, and the arrow went solidly into the bark.     Poradis and Tektu walked 
over to the fire, where food was cooking.   Tektu seemed to have forgotten 
the pain, and he walked along easily, his long penis swinging with his 
steps.    The warriors crowded around, asked Tektu what battles he had seen, 
and began to tell tales of battles, two or three of them talking at once.   
Skins of mead came out from under cloaks.   Tektu drank standing up.   Aru 
sat alone on the practice ground, his hand on the ash rod.

The sweet familiar tune of the evening sacrifice was raised; and they sang 
to the lake waters as they each cast a seed of grain or a drop of mead into 
the fire.   The warriors hugged their women, or each other, and thought of 
the homes they did not have.[  source   ]

.Now the Gods enjoy our gifts,
         and to the giver is given joy,
   of home and hearth and rest.
He who set us tasks by day,
        now makes us leave them all undone.
    Flies eagle home to nest.
A heavy load, under the goad.
     Sunset comes and out to grass, go oxen free.
Wind blows across the troubled water
     Then evening brings stillness to water and tree.

In the west the Sun commands:
          Let the weaving be halted and the cloth be rolled.
     And all the Sun obey.
Sun has set the time for working,
        but now we turn to quiet thinking.
    It is the end of day.

A business asks, for endless tasks,
       but evening comes, and father goes home; it is his joy.
A flame spreads out and mother's soup is brought to boil;
    She dips for the best bits and gives them to her boy.

Hungry he, he's done his chores,
          and he thinks of his brother who is far from home.
    He longs to clasp his hand.
At Sunrise we all began to work,
        and now in the evening we gather home.
   It is the Sun's command.

Thunder, Lord of Law, dashing here, in a flash He is there!

         Bird to the nest, and - flock to the fold; and -
         Thunder to his home in the waters goes.

Sunset speaks, and Sky obeys, and the evil Gods, and good.

          Great Storm obeys, and Friend-of-Men
          - Sun, whom all obey, hear me!

I sing your praise, to you I bow,
           but I am but a poet who dreams of gold:
      I give to you my song.
May Good Luck and Fortune come to me;
         the Sun will make happy all those who praise Him,
     and grant their lives are long.

Wealth from the Earth, or under the ground
      whenever it comes, I will to the Sun, my praises give.
This song across the Waters and the Earth will go,
       Men sing the Sun's praises wherever they live.

Warriors rise early, and under the summer moons they sleep when the sun 
sets.   But they lingered a while, singing by the fire.   The Chief 
Warrior's wife, thinking of sleepy heads at breakfast, stood up and stripped 
by the firelight.   She shivered in the breeze from  the lake.    "I'm going 
to sleep," she told her husband.  "It's cold.   If you don't come keep me 
warm now, you can sleep cold tonight.   Alone."  When the Chief rose and 
stripped, they all did, and they lay down together.  Tektu lay on his belly. 
   Warriors crawled across to lay on top, climbing under cloaks, and one of 
them put his knee on Tektu's bottom, making him howl.    Everyone laughed.   
A woman stepped on his bottom, and he howled again.    Warriors suckled on 
their women's teats, or on each other's penises.    Tektu's penis sprang up, 
and he had to turn on his side.   The woman who had stepped on his bottom, 
apologized.   She slithered down, and got her mouth around his penis.   
"Stop," he shouted, about to burst.   She didn't stop, but licked and 
suckled and nibbled like a lamb at teat.  Tektu's head was against an old 
slave woman, who was being fucked from behind by an archer, and two spearmen 
were rubbing each other's penises and leaning against his back.  But he 
didn't have time to be polite.  He pulled his penis from the woman's mouth, 
and half rose; the men leaning against him fell backwards.   Tektu ignored 
their yelps and shoved the woman into position, and thrust into her, seed 
bursting at once.     All around, men had been as quick, and panting hoots 
and sighs sounded together.   Only a few men continued to bull, here and 
there in the heap of bodies.   A warrior called out: "I let Marwat use my 
shit-eye, and he won't trade.   Does anyone want my penis?"
Tektu asked the woman her name.  She was Adjehan, wife of Runad spearman.   
Tektu apologized for being so quick.   "I am very sore," he said.  "Could 
you fondle my balls?   In a while, we can fuck again.   I want to suck your 
teats, and your ears, and tongue, and cunt, and every part of you."   But 
Adjehan said she should go back to her husband.   Tektu lay on his side, and 
the pain nagged and worried at him.  Men trying to sleep complained of his 
tossings and twitchings.

* * * * * * * * * *

Aru ate with his mother. Slaves brought them food, and the Queen had a small 
fire by her tent.    Aru lay down to sleep in the tent.  One of the slave 
girls came and said "Punish me if I fail to pleasure you."   Maybe she 
really did like him - she seemed to.    He told her he was going for a piss. 
  She followed, but he slipped away from her in the dark, and found a place 
to curl up in a pile of windblown leaves.   If it got too cold, he would 
have to slip in with the men.   But he was ashamed.   They despised him.   
His bottom was sore, and he couldn't sleep.

Aru was a warrior - an archer.   Just an archer like the others, even if he 
was the only son of the Queen.   He might not even be chosen king, unless he 
could prove himself.    If I had honor, Aru thought, I should have asked to 
be punished like the others, from the start.  I'm not worthy to be king, and 
the men know it.    And it wasn't so bad, really, the beating.   I did well. 
   I didn't make a sound, except for that one little moan.    I could have 
stopped it with a word, but I handed over the rod and bared my bottom.   I 
was brave enough to do that.   Mother won't like it, but I'll tell the Chief 
that I must be beaten the same as any other archer.  I have to do it; for 
respect and honor.   They despise me.   What sort of man keeps a slave girl 
and whips her when he fails to shoot his seed?   When I am beaten the same 
as they are, side by side, maybe the men will take me along when they go to 
steal a pig, or to rape some village girl.   And if we're caught, we will 
sit in a stream together, cooling our bottoms.   We'll hold each other's 
penises, and say to each other: "You're such a baby; can't take a whipping," 
the way brothers do when they've been whipped side by side.

Aru wished he could cool his bottom now.   It just went on and on hurting.   
He wished he had someone to laugh at the pain with, to hold penises with.    
I could go find Tektu, he thought.   Tektu is a hero, for his weapon; it 
won't matter to him that I'm a Queen's son.   We could be friends.   But I 
can't - I beat him more than we agreed.  Aru stood up, and stretched.  Then 
it really hurt.   I have to sleep, he thought.   Real warriors can always 
sleep, even after a beating.   He lay down, then got up again.   Naked in 
the cold wind, carrying his cloak, he walked through the trees.    The icy 
blast cooled his bottom a little.  The moon was rising, large and low in the 
east, and he felt his way through stripes of moonlight and shadow.  He 
tripped over a man; it was Kahela's slave, the old warrior.   Where he fell, 
his arms felt a woman's hips.  "Tektu?" she said.  It was Kahela.

"I am Aru, archer" he said, "Daughter of Kratik, I wish you your heart's 
desire."   He pulled at her cloak, which he was kneeling on, and felt with 
his face in the deep darkness.   He found her shoulder, her breast, her 
teat.   He suckled.   "You know my desire," he said, "it is you."

"Prince," she said.  "Uhm.   Honor.    Health and safety."

"I am an archer," he said, "just a warrior of the Queen."   He moved beside 
her and felt for her lips with his own, but she ducked her head and he 
kissed only cloth and hair.   It was cold.    Her skin felt very cold.    
Aru found the cloak he had dropped, worked his legs under her cloak, and 
spread his thick woolen cloak over them both.   He hugged her tight.   She 
kept her head down, and her knees high.   He nuzzled her ear for a bit, then 
lay still.  The wind picked up, now blowing down the valley.   He was cold, 
his bottom hurt, and he wasn't sleepy.    He tried to lie still.

Some time later, Kahela reached out and felt Aru's body, found his penis, 
and held it.    She snuggled into him, but kept her head down and her knees 
up.   I'll rape her in the morning, he thought.    Except I don't want to do 
it with everyone watching.    But if I ever catch her alone, where no one 
can hear, I'll rape her and rape her and rape her.   I want her so badly.    
  I'll win some battle, and she'll love me.    I'll ask my mother for 
something to trade, and pile golden jewelry on her like a queen; like a 
goddess.    To the fire with her!  I want her!

Aru realized his bottom didn't hurt any more, and he felt a great desire to 
sleep.

* * * * * * * * * *

Kahela made her way to the lake, wrapped in Aru's cloak, as he had rolled 
over on top of hers, and was still sleeping.    She folded the cloak and 
left it on a log, before pushing through the reeds to the lake.   She sank 
in the mud up to her knees, so she was glad she had left the fine royal 
cloak behind.   At the open water, she tossed in her few grains of barley.   
They floated, not moving, as if her sacrifice was not accepted.    "Queen of 
Wombs, may I be carrying Hu's son!   Give me that, and I will sing your 
praises forever!"    Kahela was starting to bleed, so it was impossible, 
even for the Goddess.   But it was a comfort to say the words.   Hu always 
included King Sea in his morning sacrifice, so she added: "Great King Sea, 
strong and kind, and Great Rod of the Centaur, whom all praise: may I have 
pleasure and comfort from a man again, on this green Earth!   May I have 
pleasure from a penis!"    It seemed impossible.     Aru was kind.   And 
polite, for a prince.   She had been willing to have his penis inside of 
her.    It was an honor, she supposed.  After all, no one would call her 
pretty.  But it would be Hu's face she saw, Hu's voice she heard, yelling 
"Goddess Cunt!" as he always did.  And that would be no pleasure, for 
Kahela.   She churned her cunt with a reed stalk.   But the muddy reed just 
made her think of Hu's penis, horribly blotched, and now mouldering in the 
dark, under the ground.   She did not think she would ever desire a penis 
again.   The thought of a penis - of flesh stuck into her - made her sick.

In her village, women were careful not to be seen naked, but Kahela had no 
thought of anyone else being by the lake.  It was before sunrise, cold, and 
the swamp mist had not yet risen.    Only the tormenting midges were awake, 
singing their tuneless song and dappling her bare hide with spots.  But she 
heard a voice, nearby, in the reeds, and in a tongue she did not know.   
Raiding nomads should not be here, but they were.   She had no weapon of any 
kind.    She would be taken; she would spend her life as a slave, raped by 
scores of men.     The Sky-Father's joke: she had dared to pray for pleasure 
from a penis - she, who had taken Hu's bare penis into her tattooed cunt!    
Everyone knew that Hu fucked Sugga with a bare penis, and there should be a 
blood sacrifice to the Sky-Father for that.     Kahela could have made it 
for him, naked on his grave at sunrise, so that Hu would have unstained 
honor.   Then she could have been whipped at sunset for having Hu's bare 
penis in her own cunt, until every scab from the morning whipping was peeled 
away.  And shamed - not only stripped naked before the village, but a leafy 
sapling stuck in her shit-eye when the whipping was over.   But she hadn't 
done any of this.   And now, instead of being whipped for a day, she would 
be whipped until she died.   As ugly as she was, she wouldn't be taken as a 
wife, but used as a drudge, whipped at some nomad's pleasure.

But then the voice continued in the ordinary speech, and Kahela knew it - it 
was Aru's slave boy.   He was praying.   To Gods Kahela had never heard of.

"King and Queen of Heaven!   Ela'u and Ashrath!   Accept the sacrifice of 
Yahedar son of Metik-Danniadae.   Watch over me in this foreign land.  I 
pray to you as my mother taught me, and will teach my children; we will 
never forget you, or your sacred land, our true home.   Take the breath of 
Abid-Ashirat my mother under your ridgepole.  And watch over my nephew Aru, 
and my sister Ishan.   Forgive Aru: do not punish his wickedness.   They 
call him Prince, and it makes him ashamed to weep for the death of a slave.  
  But he is still the boy who sat with me on her lap, held penises with me 
after she switched us.   She was his mother more than the Queen ever was, 
and he does weep, inside.   I will tell Aru the boy is his, at the right 
time.   For the Queen, punish her for making me do what I don't want to do.  
But she doesn't know she is my sister."

White bards from across the green Earth came to the village of the 
law-singer.   Even from the eastern plain, where the Sacred Mountain reached 
the sky.   Even from the islands of the northern sea.  They spoke of the 
Gods, and the Laws, of many lands.   But Kahela had heard of nothing like 
this prayer.   "Take the breath of my dead mother under your ridgepole'?   
Why did this boy think a God would want to do that?   Not asking for her 
name to be given honor, but for her breath to be taken.   It made no sense.  
  And the way the slave boy talked of the Prince!  Kahela knew all the royal 
genealogy songs - she had taught them.   Son of Metik-Danniadae, this boy 
called himself.   That was the old king, Ishan's father.   So he must have 
fathered this boy on a slave, as an old man.   This slave boy knew whose son 
he was, and in his secret thoughts, he called his masters: "sister," 
"nephew," "cousin."    A whole nother genealogy, not in the bards' songs, 
but kept in the slaves' memory.  Kahela had no idea.    So Aru had a son, by 
some slave girl.   At least he didn't always fall asleep when a woman 
grabbed his penis.

Kahela waited, and the boy left.   She waited some more.   She did not know 
why it mattered to her, that a slave not know he had been overheard, but it 
did.   By the time she came out of the tall reeds, the sun was up, and a few 
warriors were about.   But Kahela had too many thoughts - she forgot she was 
naked.   She had been about to praise the Sky-Father when she had heard the 
slave's voice.     Now she remembered that she had not sacrificed to Him at 
all.   She would have to go back.  She heard again in her ears the slave 
saying: "King and Queen of Heaven."   What were the names again?   Nakien 
will want to know.   So many Gods.   Kahela didn't want to sacrifice to the 
Sky-Father.  I will never praise Him again, she decided.   Let Him be angry. 
  Let Him punish me.   I owe a blood sacrifice - let him take it.  He killed 
Hu.  He can't punish me worse than that.   Kahela walked past the men who 
were looking at her, and put on Aru's cloak.

The Queen was at the camp, preparing Hema, using the milk from a young 
slave-woman, that she suckled and spit into a skin.   Marwat was trying to 
provide the seed.   "It's Tektu," the Queen said.  "Go and see."

Tektu looked ghastly; pale and haggard.   "It is only the beating," the 
Queen said.  "but when he tries to stand, he screams. He vomits; even water. 
    The Hema is ready, except for the sacrifice.    Do you know the song?"

The Queen threw butter and a drop of the Hema into the fire; Kahela sang, 
and Marwat intoned the counter-strophes:

.For all the bards who contemplate the ancient songs,
        Hema can still delight them.
And if they need some fortitude when fighting any wrongs,
       Hema will help to fight them.
Hema can give you courage and the strength to fight all day ;
    Hema will make you faster. ( for when you run away )
  And when the village council meets just take a little drink ;
     you will be wise and eloquent. ( without having to think )

In all the songs there's never been a more disgusting King
      than Ker the Hema drinker.
  And Manzen was a simpleton to swallow everything ;
      and they call him a thinker!

  "I have great love of learning, and I honor you," Ker said ;
      and Manzen called him "wonderful." ( but then he lost his head )
  That evil King thought Hema could abolish all decay ;
        but great Lord Hema murdered him. ( He likes to trick that way )

.Irhona in her agony hoped for a grateful son ;
.        she cried to Hema - save him!
And Rhonan took the honor when the stallion race was run,
        with strength that Hema gave him.

All maidens who are getting old and weeping to be wed :
       I don't think tears will help you.   ( just try Hema instead )
Hema can make a shy young boy the boldest man on Earth ;
       and also helps the woman. ( at least for giving birth )

Go dally with a damsel and a little Hema skin
       with lust and pleasure fills you,
but put your joy in jewelry and try with dice to win,
       then lust for treasure kills you.

Your lover's hidden secrets can the great Lord Hema show,
     There are some things He won't reveal. ( well, you don't want to know )
Ask Hema for the honor cup; so beautiful and round,
      and you will have it in your hands.  ( when you are underground. )

.Lord Hema in the starry sky sings proverbs as of old ;
      the precious words will make us wise ;
and when we have to fight we hope that You will make us bold,
       and please go fuck those other guys.

Lord Hema wrote the ancient songs and helps the bards to think :
     a bard will wait to be inspired. ( he's had too much to drink. )
He'll ask no sneaky questions, but He's open and direct ;
      and you'll tell things you hoped to hide. ( but what did you expect. )

And all of you who're listening better change your wicked ways :
     don't think you will escape Him,
  not when a man you've injured to the Great Lord Hema prays :
      "Pull down his cloth and rape him!"

Hema has sung the song of Law from every mountain top :
     Your wickedness can't be concealed. ( And you will get the chop. )
Your seed will stay inside you and you won't get any sleep,
     You won't see pretty bathing-girls. ( Or recognize your sheep. )

Then Kahela sang the revenge song:
.The terrible green dragon spits poison in his rage - Kill him!
   For the wise and honorable man - take revenge.
The giant thirsts for blood, his crimes beyond belief - Kill him!
   Hema, his club and fury overcome!
The wvaksa was a murderer, he made himself the king - Kill him!
   For the wise and honorable man - take revenge.
A Killer and a Law-breaker, he's hated by the Gods! - Kill him!
   The Law is on his lips, but not his deeds.

Mind-bending body pleasure with the soft and fickle whore - Kill her!
   For the wise and honorable man - take revenge.
For the man who plans us evil with a smile on his lips - Kill him!
   Hema,  Great Lord Hema,  overcomes!

Everyone around the fire joined in the shouts of death for the wicked, and 
Kahela felt hope that Hema would spare Tektu's life.  Kahela and the Queen 
each took a mouthful, and the Queen put the tip of the skin into Tektu's 
mouth, and he swallowed.    "Slowly," the Queen said.
Kahela said: "Queen, be well, and ...  Ishan, that is, Queen, do you want to 
go to your son?   He was beaten as well."

"Slowly, a swallow at a time.   And then wait to see if he vomits.   Don't 
give it all yet!   Can you do that?"

"Queen, long life.   I can do this.   Aru was under the oak, behind your 
tent.   The big oak.   I mean the Prince."

Queen Ishan ran.

* * * * * * * * * *

The Queen came back, dragging Aru by the hair. "Did you rape her?" she 
asked.

"No, Mother."

"Kahnikos!"

"Punish me for not speaking properly.   I mean, Be well, Royal Captain 
Ishan, Mother; punish me for not speaking properly.   And no, I did not rape 
her."

"Are you coupling with Tektu as well as my son, Kratik's daughter?"

"He didn't f... I mean, Safe travel, Queen Ishan.   We did not couple last 
night."

"You are wrapped in his cloak, Kahela.   Did you think I don't recognize it? 
   Just don't bring your swollen belly to my doorposts!"

"Honor and praise to Hema and the Queen!   He did not enter me."

"Hmph!  You lay under the same cloak."

"Queen, I know the arts of pleasure.   Nakien was my teacher; I watched him 
often.   I put my hand on Aru's penis, to stoke his desire; his heat 
increased.   I could feel his heat; his balls like soup pots on the fire.   
He was Womb, I was Fetus, tiny hand.   I moved to the position called the 
Tunic, but he ... fell asleep."

Tektu burst out laughing.   He had gotten to his hands and knees, and was 
trying to stand, but when he started to laugh, he fell over.   He screamed, 
but kept laughing.   "You can't learn it all by watching, you, you!" and he 
collapsed in helpless laughter.   "Look at Aru!   Look at him!"

Aru was as red as a sloe berry.   But not as sour.   He kissed Kahela, and 
began to dance, pulling her along.   The cloak went flying.    She raised 
her knees high, and smacked his penis from side to side as they danced.   
She turned around, and he took her from behind, both of them jumping and 
twisting.   Then they stopped dancing and Aru bucked, and bulled, and 
rammed, hard.   Then he stallioned, seemingly forever.   Nakien had never 
done so well.  Rhonan winning the stallion race had not done so well!  The 
men were standing around the fire, waiting for breakfast, blankets draped 
over their shoulders.   They stared, open-mouthed.

"Well, I guess they told the truth, they didn't couple last night," the 
Queen said.   Tektu was standing, and seemed at ease.   "How much Hema did 
you drink?" she asked.

"Be well, Queen.  Just a swallow.   But I'd like some of whatever the Prince 
drinks."

"That, you drink from the eyes of a woman."

"Queen, I could have had those eyes.    Yesterday, I didn't think they were 
pretty.   Now look at them."

Aru had started dogging, no longer stallioning in and out.  He was hooting 
and panting.  Then with a sigh, he pulled out.  He dropped to the ground, 
taking Kahela down into a kiss.    The Queen tossed the cloak over them.

"Warriors get busy!" she shouted.  "Fires!  Firewood!  Water!  Food!   Work! 
   All of you!    Slaves, the tent!"

Kahela stood up, taking the cloak and leaving Aru naked on the ground.   "I 
need to shit," she said.

* * * * * * * * * *

Kahela didn't need to shit, just to rest.     When her heart returned to her 
chest, she started back.

"Kahela,"

It was Hu.

"that was exquisite.   And I will also pray to the Lady of the Wombs."

* * * * * * * * * *

"And now, Tektu, you will tell me everything.   About the Kohiyossa."  The 
Queen sat on the ground by the fire.  "Kahela has told me ... never mind 
what!    Just you, tell me all.   I'll know if you lie, or leave anything 
out."

Not all, Tektu decided.   Let her punish me all she wants.   But there were 
some things, that he wanted her to know.  Things the warriors of the 
Kohiyossa wanted everyone to know: that the God who is not named, had 
danced.   At midsummer, on the bronze makers' ground.   Tektu could 
remember, word for word, Arkwan telling the story; Nakien dragging it out of 
him.   It was the day Tektu's life had changed forever; the day he became 
the brother of a God.    He tried to make it as convincing, as powerful, in 
the telling, as it had been in the listening.

"Arkwan, a friend of King Taslan of the northern lands, was taken as a slave 
by the bronze makers ..."

Aru sat up, listening intently.   (How can he sit? Tektu wondered.)    
Kahela stood in the shadows behind the Queen; Tektu avoided a glance in her 
direction.     He told the tale, from the dance at the bronze makers to 
Arkwan's going with Nakien to the north.   But he said nothing whatever 
about the Kohiyossa.

"..., and my sister went north with Nakien bard, as wife or lover to 
Nakien's slave.   Bards wander.  But  I hope I'll see my sister some day."

Tektu stopped, and waited.   The Queen knew something about the Kohiyossa, 
so she would know he had left something out, and would punish him.   But he 
dared not tell her where the Kohiyossa was.

"And why to you wander on this road, son of Nohas, you and the daughter of 
Kratik?"

"Queen, wisdom.   I am going home.  As for Kahela, who knows?   Perhaps she 
liked my penis, until she found a better."

"Kahnikos!   Aru, fetch the rod."

"I will not."

"And by ash you will learn to address a Queen, archer!   But for Tektu ...   
  I suppose you know he lost to you on purpose?   You beat him more than you 
agreed.   I thought he might die, this morning.   And another such beating 
will not make him talk.    But we can try another way.   Tektu, let me tell 
you what I already know: a baby was born, seed of the slave's penis; he had 
yellow hair.   His mother snatched him from under a tree; she was crushed.   
  And Nakien has ruled that this is the Kohiyossa of legend.   What I do not 
know is where this baby is."

"Happiness, Queen.   He is sent to a village.   I do not know where.   Only 
Nakien knows."  Tektu said.

"Did Nute carry the baby when he left the bronze makers?    Did he?   You 
will not say?   And you, slow-shitting Kahela?"  The Queen turned around.

Women, and some of the warriors, were around the fire.   They minded their 
tasks, did not look up.   But there was no chatter and gossip.   They were 
listening.

The Queen spoke louder.   "Well here is something you don't know, travelers. 
    Blood has been spilled!   Nohas is fled.   Battle rages at the village 
of Kros!"

"Mother fled?   Where?  Blood?  In my village?   Who?   Why?"

Queen Ishan shrieked.   She pulled her dagger, a fine Tlossos, and ran at 
Tektu, pointing at his eyes.   He raised his arms.  She threw the dagger 
down to her left hand, and pricked his inside thigh before he could drop his 
guard.    "You are slow, headwoman's son," she said.   "so the next time you 
address me, remember.   Or you may get pricked where you like it less."

"Happiness, Queen.   Wealth, Queen.   A long-rod slave boy, Queen.    I do 
not know why my mother is fighting, nor what side she has chosen.   But I 
fight for those who say that Arkwan is the God.   Was the God, I mean.    If 
you have chosen the other side, I am your enemy."

Aru said: "Queen, honor.  I too, fight for the unnamed God."

"I stand with the Prince, royal captain Ishan."

"Archer Aru, spearwoman Vaishga, I have not yet chosen a side.  We do not 
even know what are the sides.   We have learned much from Tektu, if we can 
believe him.   We will go west, into the fighting, and not south to the 
smoking water.    We seek to learn more.   If it is true, what Tektu says, 
that all at the dance saw the God's face . . .  well, when we know more, I 
will hear your words.   And then I will decide, and you will obey.  Bow now 
to the Queen's rule, or be my enemies."

Several warriors grabbed their weapons.   Arrows were nocked.     Vaishga 
fastened her cloak, so she wouldn't wave her bare bottom in the air, knelt, 
bowed, dropped to her elbows, held one hand in the other, and touched her 
forehead to her thumbs.   Aru, naked, did the same.    And then, so did 
Tektu.    The warriors around the fire bowed, standing.  Poradis was one of 
them.  Warriors at practice put down their weapons, and came running.   
Someone shouted, "Sovereign Ishan, our captain, Long Life!"   "Long Life," 
everyone shouted.

The Queen nodded, then broke into a grin which she hid with her hand.   She 
raised Aru to his feet.

"But whatever happens, we will remain loyal to the High King.   He is strong 
and we are weak."

* * * * * * * * * *

"By today, we would have been at the smoking water," the Queen explained.    
"But we have traveled west this moon, heading into the fighting, instead of 
south.   We are not near any holy grove.   We had not planned to sacrifice 
on the road.   But we do have the rams.   Have you ever been fucked by a 
ram?"

Kahela said: "Be well, Queen Ishan.  The High Queen is only fucked by the 
High King.   He wears horns, and they only pretend to cut his balls off.    
Why don't you do it that way?   Have some man play the part of the Ram?"

"The rams aren't so bad.   Even if they do think I'm the worst-smelling ewe 
they've ever covered.   The hard part will be the dance.  But if we don't do 
it, then my kingdom will not have sacrificed this year, at all.   The Lady 
will be offended.   When she chooses lambs and calves for next spring, and 
babies, we won't get any.   Can you sing Sasoyhan's Rides?"

"Dominion, Royal Captain ... "

The Queen interrupted: "Only the warriors call me 'Captain'."

Kahela continued as if the Queen hadn't spoken: "I know all Sasoyhan's 
responses and songs.   I learned them as a girl: I was sure I would dance 
Sasoyhan on my wedding night. I dreamed of all my friends, sick with envy, 
watching the husband I had won, fuck me like a hero from an old song.  And I 
dreamed of blood on my bridal gown, raised like a flag the next morning,   
But things ...    Well, anyway.   But isn't the Bride of the Centaur 
supposed to be a bride?   Or at least, be married?"

"But who?  Adjehan is a treasure; I love her dearly, but can you see her as 
blushing Sasoyhan?    Or Runad as the Horny Centaur?   He'd be too scared to 
speak, and he wouldn't get his rod up.   But Aru  ... Aru and you ... 
great-grandchildren will be told of this dancing of Sasoyhan! The Lady will 
say we made her praises last forever, and send twin calves to every cow."

* * * * * * * * * *

Tektu sang the part of Rhonan.    They did not have a cart, so Tektu pointed 
to empty air.

.Smell the buds and garlands, and feel the polished wood ;
  golden are the carvings and, the wheels are round and good.
Your line will last forever, when this cunt the Centaur gores ;
    get ready for the journey to the home that will be yours.
           Where penis of the Centaur goes inside!
     What a thing to mention to a bride!

I know you did not notice that this woman has been wed -
   there are many blossoms here for you to take to bed.
Centaur you are deathless and - we your praises sing :
    so find a willing maiden girl, and with her have a fling ;
          for this one, her husband has a rod!

     With a husband I don't need a God!

.Now that you are married may your husband and you agree.
    Bound to your new altar from your father's you are free.
Rhonan takes you riding and, the two Sky-Father's boys
    can let you have a sample of your coming marriage joys -
           his body into yours will be as one!

     I hadn't realized marriage could be fun!

You're the mistress now so you unbraid the flowing hair,
   and hunger for his penis or you won't get anywhere.
To every man a maiden and, to every maiden man
   and so we see the Gods above are doing what they can.
         May you have the blessing of Good Luck!

     Aren't we going somewhere for a fuck?

.Keep lusting for his body ;  you can overcome defeats
and be the one they turn to when the village council meets.
I hope that he will love you, and King Thunder give you sons,
I hope they will not turn out to be disobedient ones.
           Spoiled little boys are often seen!

     I will rule my household like a Queen!

Smell the buds and garlands and, feel the polished wood ;
  golden are the carvings and, the wheels are round and good.
Your line will last forever when, this cunt the Centaur gores ;
    get ready for the journey to the home that will be yours.
        Blessing on the beautiful new bride!

      And just when does the penis go inside?

Kahela climbed onto the ox, and Tektu led it around in a circle.

The Queen said: "You didn't miss a line.   But can't you give it more - sex? 
   With a cart, Sasoyhan bends over in front, with Rhonan behind her, and on 
'her husband has a ROD!' he thrusts hips forward.   It's all done with the 
look on her face.  No one can see, because of the garlands."

"But we haven't got a cart - Goddess cunt! - I mean, Honor Queen Ishan we 
haven't got a cart.   What can we do, if she's on the ox and I'm leading 
it?"

"Marwat, you lead the ox."

Tektu said:, "Queen, it won't work.   Does Rhonan go for his friend's bride, 
naked?   Does the shy virgin Sasoyhan come out, naked?   But if they are 
both clothed on the ox, how can we make it seem she is being fucked?  How 
can we make it seem we are stripping to fuck, unless we do?  And the real 
Sasoyhan wouldn't fuck if people could see her."

"Sasoyhan wears a cloak, but no tunic.   She's young, only just tattooed.   
And for you, just pull your cloth loose, like this, and pull your penis ... 
Great Lady, Tektu, I hardly touched you.   You're fast, but are you 
lasting?"

"Queen, it's just, I've been thinking about the rams."

"Keep it up.   If you can sing Rhonan with a stiff rod, all the better."

* * * * * * * * * *

In the morning Kahela slipped away from Aru, without waking him.    She had 
practiced with Tektu late into the moonless night, while Aru slept.   A lot 
of practice, for what was only the first dance and song: the wedding 
procession.   Two more dances, four more songs, to practice today.   They 
must dance Sasoyhan's Rides tonight.   The Queen would go to the Ram 
tomorrow.    If their count was right, the sliver of the new moon would be 
seen tomorrow night, and then the Great Sacrifice would be over.

Warriors were standing around the fire, rubbing their sleepy eyes, blankets 
draped over their shoulders, enjoying the rising sun,.  Each had a dagger, 
and most had bow or spear as well.  They had their belts on, for the 
daggers, but would not put on their loincloths until after practice.    
Kahela had never seen so many tattooed penises: her village was too poor to 
hold a midsummer dance.   They were spectacular - Tektu's clean black 
spiral, Marwat's dots like a dappled fawn - each was different, the work of 
many  hands.    The warriors stood close, with arms across each other's 
shoulders, or hand in hand.   Each companion was greeted with a firm clasp 
on the shoulder, a word of friendship, a penis squeeze, a hug.  Vaishga, the 
only woman warrior, was greeted with hugs and feels of her cunt.  They 
insulted each other in jest.  They wrestled.  Marwat was dozing on his feet, 
and Vaishga smacked his bottom with a javelin butt, without him seeing it 
coming.   Everyone laughed, Marwat most of all.  Tektu was greeted in 
companionship like the others.   The Queen would not allow him his weapons, 
except during practice, but the men acted as if he were one of them, and not 
their captive.   He was teaching them the fast shooting he had learned from 
Arkwan.  Poradis too, was embraced.   There was a potent smell, the smell of 
many penises together.   This was the sign of Companion, the God who loves 
the sacrifice that one friend makes for another.

Kahela felt the lure of this warrior companionship; she was as good with her 
bow as Poradis.   But only Vaishga, who never let a penis in her cunt, and 
who had no special friend among the men, was accepted.    The men would not 
accept the Prince's bed-mate - not even if she could shoot as well as Tektu. 
   Kahela knew that more than anything, Aru longed for this fellowship, this 
companionship, but the men gave him respect instead.    No man would say to 
the Prince: "you stink like a horse."   No man would say: "I'll fuck your 
woman, you see if I don't."   No warrior would, when clasping Aru's penis, 
jab him under the foreskin with a fingernail, while watching his face to see 
if he winced.   No one would trip him up and grind his face into the dirt, 
and stomp on his fingers until he cried "you win," or do any of the other 
things which are signs of love among warriors.  Aru now took strokes for 
mistakes at practice, like the others, but so far the men had not warmed to 
him.  This morning, for the first time, the warriors looked at Kahela with 
the same cautious respect they gave the Prince.

They seemed a little too cautious.   They looked guilty; even Poradis and 
Tektu.    Poradis's eyes flickered.   Kahela went to search, in the 
direction he had glanced.   She found a body.   A boy, or rather a young 
man, for he wore a man's loincloth.   There was an arrow in his back.   In 
his hand was the leg of a sheep, the stolen prize he had lost his life for.  
  He had many wounds; some had turned ugly.   He was not skin and bones, but 
in the past, to judge from his fingernails, he had starved or been very 
sick, and he was very small for a man.  Perhaps he was a boy, and just wore 
the cloth.   He was lying face down, but even so Kahela could see that his 
belly and paps were swollen from some disease.   He was covered with mud and 
the stains of the forest ; he stank like a shitpile.     Kahela looked him 
over, and gasped. The arrow shaft went in just under his shoulder blade, but 
the arrow had been broken off, and the fledging was not in sight.     But 
what drew Kahela's eye was the bottom - the narrow loincloth was twisted up 
his crack, and his bottom was a mass of jagged scars.   This young man's 
life had been a life of beatings - beatings till the skin broke, and more 
beating before the wounds healed.

Kahela wept.   No one should be beaten like that.   Anyone would shoot a 
thief, but to die for a bit of mutton!   Did the man who beat him so 
cruelly, make him steal?   Kahela thought of her father's whip, how it made 
her feel punished and ashamed.  How much it hurt.   How much she hated him 
for whipping her.  But her bottom had no scars on it.  And her father 
usually let her off, even when she had been very wicked.   Had she told him 
how much she loved him?   Queen Ishan was heading into battle, and this age 
of the green Earth was coming to an end.   Would Kahela ever see Kratik 
again?   Could it have been his father, who beat this boy so much, who made 
him steal?   Could any father do that?

"Who shot the thief?" Kahela asked the warriors.   They looked at the 
ground, even Tektu.   "This has nothing to do with fighting for the young 
God, for Arkwan," Tektu said.   "I won't say who shot the arrow."

"Be well, Princess; arrow luck in battle.   Whoever shot him, the man was 
stealing."   It was a spearman.  Dan-something,   Hek-Danniadae, that was 
it.

"I am not a Princess, Hek-Danniadae spearman.   The Queen will punish you, 
and me too, if she hears you say so."

"Princess, long life.   Hek-Danniadae is my brother.   I am Ohrsos."

He was being insolent; he was Hek-Danniadae.   Certainly his name was not 
"Arse."    Kahela went to wake the Queen.

The Queen did not care who shot the little thief.    "Give him to the 
corpse-birds.   Why should we bury him?    Carry him away.   We'll be gone 
before he smells.    Ohrsos, cut his penis off and skin it - someone may 
recognize the tattoo.   I want to know which village is sending out 
thieves."

Ohrsos pulled his dagger and cut the man's belt.  "Many grandsons, royal 
captain.   He, I mean she, is not a man."

"I can see that, Ohrsos."    The Queen looked at the body.   "She has no 
tattoos, but she had become a woman - obviously.   There are wounds, turned 
ugly, but not many old scars.   Turn her over.   Great Lady - look at that.  
  I want to see - spread her legs and lift her.   I want to see her cunt.   
And her shit-eye.   Fuck with fire!   Look at those scars!"

The Queen touched the body, feeling the scars.    "This girl was raped, 
often, since she was small.   She was beaten and starved.   Before 
midsummer, she escaped, and has been living in the woods.  She must have 
known she was carrying a child.   Her belt is grass rope, badly made; she 
lacked the skill to set snares, I guess.   She has eaten through the summer, 
nuts and berries, but she must have hungered for meat, to come into a 
war-camp.  And with the baby - Great Lady, how long ago was she shot?   She 
is still warm."

The Queen plunged her Tlossos into the dead woman's belly, and pulled out a 
baby boy, large but blue and clearly dead.     Kahela held the boy against 
her chest, under her cloak, and slapped his back, trying to coax him to 
breathe.

The Queen looked away.   "Warriors, you've let the fire go out.   Ohrsos, 
Tektu: carry away the body.   All of you - any more thieves, any strangers, 
capture them - I want to question them, torture them.    We are heading into 
a war.   Kahela, when you are ready."

Kahela walked behind the body, holding the dead boy against her chest as if 
he were still alive.   They laid the woman on a broad stone, where the 
carrion birds, the tombs of the bravest, would feast.   Kahela laid the dead 
boy on his side, his mouth to his mother's teat, and his hand on it, as if 
it were an honor cup.

They returned toward the camp, but Aru came out  looking for them, and 
wanted to be taken to the bodies.    Kahela took him, and let Ohrsos and 
Tektu return to their chores.   She wondered why Ohrsos's father had named 
him Arse.   His brother's name was worse, now she thought about it, at least 
for a boy.  In the old tongue "Hek-Danniadae" meant "Clitoris like Dannia's"

Aru knelt down and kissed the dead boy on the temple.   "They said you were 
trying to get the boy to breathe, that you walked away with him at your 
breast.   He is not cold.   Could he.. ."

"Prince, he is dead."

Aru cut a leafy branch and laid it across the mother and child.   "She was 
young.   Some village that sends children out to steal."

"Didn't your mother tell you how much this girl was beaten and raped?   
Prince."

"Archer.    So, she was raped."

Kahela took away the branch, picked up the dead boy, and handed him to the 
Prince.   Then she turned the mother's body over.   Aru looked at the scars. 
   Around the shit-eye there were scars on top of scars, a ring of bumpy, 
cut-up flesh.   Kahela lifted the body's hips and spread the knees so Aru 
could see the terrible scarring of the cunt.   Kahela said, "Prince, the man 
who did this: you are holding his son.   She would not let him do it to her 
child, so she ran.   She is not so very young, just small.   She never got 
enough to eat.   She was a slave, bought to be fucked.   Fucked as a little 
girl without tattoos."

Kahela's eyes had a sudden sight of Hu's bare penis sliding into her.   
"That was different, Sky-Father!" she cried aloud.

Aru said: "They should have stopped the man who did this, in his village.   
We should have helped her, not killed her.   If people were kinder, she 
would have tried asking us for food, and not stealing it.   People should 
..."     Aru stopped suddenly, looking ashamed.  He dropped the dead baby.   
  The dead woman was on her belly, bits of her insides coming out through 
the gash the Queen had cut.   No one put back the leafy branch.   The Prince 
looked at his lover's face, then at the ground.   He seemed frightened.

Kahela wanted to talk of something else.  "Why do two of the warriors look 
exactly alike, and why are they called 'Bottom' and 'Goddess Cunt'?" Not 
many knew the old tongue, so she gave the two warriors' names in ordinary 
speech.   She wondered if Aru even knew what the names meant.

"They are twins, of course," the Prince answered.    Their shit-eyes, their 
bottoms ...  their step-father ...  like ..."    Aru pointed to the dead 
woman.    "They have scars around their shit-eyes, scars on their bottoms so 
there is no skin.  It was their step-father.    He died.   Two moons later, 
on the day of Purging, they walked  naked into the center of their village 
with bloody daggers held high above their heads.   They had killed their 
mother.   They asked the village for judgment.    They asked no forgiveness. 
  The village knew what their step-father did, but perhaps not how bad it 
was - but they could not ignore the scars.     Killing a parent is not an 
ordinary killing.   It was her family who should strike first.    But her 
own brother refused to club the boys.   His sister was as much to blame as 
their step-father, he said.   And in all the village not one person was 
willing to harm them.    An old priest gave the ruling - they must make the 
circuit of the village, and every one, to the smallest child, must strike 
them with a whip; then they must be driven from the village and never 
return.   And so it was done, unwillingly.   The villagers did not want to 
punish them at all."

"But they killed their mother!"

"I suppose they have ordinary names, but do not wish to use anything from 
their parents."

"They didn't have to kill her!"

"Many woman feel that way, but in the warrior band they are respected.   
They are loved.   But they can't bear to fuck a shit-eye, or to have theirs 
fucked, and women fear that seed of such penises will kill them inside.   I 
make my slave girl fuck them, when she has been very bad."

The Queen came out to fetch Kahela.   "Sasoyhan's Rides," she said.   
"Practice."

* * * * * * * * * *

Tektu, with his penis hanging out of his cloth, mounted behind Kahela, who 
was leaning forward over the ox's neck.  She was naked except for a cloak, 
hanging down to one side, and he swung his cloak to the other side.   The 
cloaks did not hide much.  He snuggled his soft penis against Kahela's cunt, 
as he had during the practice.   But this was not a practice.  It ought to 
feel different.   He was dancing a holy dance; a sacrifice of seed to the 
Lady - to the mother of the God who is not named.   But Tektu could not feel 
Her touch.   He thought of Arkwan's holy penis.    He thought of the tattoo 
that bound that penis with his own.   Now his penis played a part in this 
most holy of all sacrifices, and he felt nothing.   It felt no defferent 
than the times they had practiced.  Did the Lady not care about a sacrifice 
of seed, from his penis?

They sang the cart song, as Marwat prodded the ox.   Tektu tried to stiffen 
by thinking about a ram's penis fucking the Queen, but his thoughts strayed 
to the Chief's rod, surely the thickest ever to piss on the green Earth.    
Since they had joined the Queen's company, Tektu had slept with the warriors 
- he had been embraced and had his penis suckled like the others.  But when 
a warrior had pointed to his own penis, Tektu had said he would rather not.  
  The warriors laughed, and Tektu's shit-eye had been tenderly but 
thoroughly raped.    Then the Chief Warrior showed him his tree branch.   
"Front or back?" he had asked.    Tektu had run his tongue under the Chief's 
foreskin, the way Nakien had shown him, and had nearly choked on the flood.

"He yah!" Kahela screamed.   The watching warriors laughed.  Tektu's rod had 
slipped past her doorposts, and was pounding to be let further in.   Kahela 
pretended to be a virgin having her first peak of pleasure, and the warriors 
hooted.  Kahela shifted, pulling her cunt off Tektu's rod, which was jammed 
in at a painful angle, and sat on top of it instead.    She worked her hips, 
the ox plodded, and Tektu soon burst, leaving a patch of wet on the ox's 
neck.   Their cloaks, draped on either side, hid what was happening, but the 
warriors watched, as exited as spying children.   Only Aru scowled.  Looking 
at her lover, Kahela touched Tektu's ribbon of seed, and put a drop on her 
forehead, to scare away the Gelded Ones.

Adjehan and Runad, who danced the groom's parents, did a dance of welcome, 
and Marwat led the ox around the family altar.   The song to the green 
Earth, and the dance for the animals who give themselves as food, went 
smoothly.   Now was the Hema song.  Of them all, Kahela knew this one best, 
but every practice today had been a disaster.    Kahela touched the seed on 
her forehead, then licked her finger.  "Hema, help us to praise you," she 
prayed.   She choked, she stumbled.   The Queen had to prompt her with:  
"Then Rhonan took the honor  when the stallion race was run ..."   How could 
I forget that line, Kahela thought - Aru can stallion longer than any man.  
Kahela pledged a whipstroke for every mistake, as Hu used to do.   The 
revenge song went better, with everyone shouting "Kill him!" together.

Kahela put down the Hema skin.   She danced away from the others, and alone, 
she danced the blowing out of a lamp.  She slipped out of her cloak, 
covering her face with her hands.   Then she put her hands over her cunt.   
Then she moved one hand to cover her teats.   Then she pretended to have a 
shocking thought, and moved that hand to cover her shit-eye.   The warriors 
began to tap their weapons on the ground, and to chant "Sasoyhan, Sasoyhan." 
     Kahela lay down on her side, with knees to her chest, and with one hand 
over her shit-eye.   Aru danced in as the Centaur, naked, pretending to look 
for Sasoyhan with a lamp.  The dance was going badly.   He should have been 
stiff before coming in - what sort of a centaur was he?   Kahela, as virgin 
Sasoyhan, caught sight of his penis, pretended surprise, then turned on her 
back and spread her knees as wide as they would go.   But the joke was 
spoiled by Aru's limp puppy-tail.

The Centaur danced over and knelt with knees spread over Sasoyhan's head, 
his limp penis on her face.   His balls on her eyes, his tip dangled in her 
open mouth.   She used her lips and tongue on his tip, and he stiffened 
nicely, but then he stood up, quickly.   Kahela thought: he can't be worried 
about his seed.   Not the everlasting Aru.

They danced the nipple pinching and the thigh caress, the ear nuzzle and the 
cunt kiss; Aru's dancing was elegant, formal.   But every time his penis 
touched her, between her breasts, under her ear, up the crack of her bottom, 
he pulled away quickly, as if his solid rod was a robin's egg, or a spider's 
web, and would wither at a touch.    Cutting a few moves, he moved to the 
cunt fuck.   This was not proving much of a ride.   The Queen would be 
disappointed.

Aru whispered in Kahela's ear.  "Remember all the cows and ewes; they'll 
want their calves and lambs.   The Queen is rather short tempered - don't 
you find?   And you are surrounded by her armed men.    So if you should 
happen to think of  running away before the dance is over, you should think 
again.   And you have been a bit naughty."

Kahela had no idea what he was talking about.   She spread her ...

"Yaghhaha," she screamed.   The pain was intense.   Was he fucking her with 
a dagger?    But he pulled out - she could see his penis.  Ram, in it came 
again.   Ahihyah, that hurts.   Ou-w-YAH!   But that - feels good.    Ram! 
in again.  Agha!   He's right, I can't run away.  And the Queen won't blame 
him - it doesn't look like he's hurting ... Huhua!  How is he making it hurt 
so much?   If I could figure it out ... Ram!  If only this didn't feel so 
good I could think better ....

Aru switched from ram to stallion.   The quicker, faster strokes were not as 
painful.   The pleasure was unbearable.   Kahela tried to get away.   He 
held her.   She squirmed and flailed - she couldn't control her need to make 
it stop.  He switched to wolf, not pulling his tip quite out on the out 
stroke.   That made it less intense.  She remembered Nakien saying: "We call 
this wolf  because it's like dog, but wilder - no one knows how wolves 
really fuck."    She hoped Aru would stallion again.  It felt so good when 
it felt so good she couldn't stand it.    He pulled out altogether.  For a 
moment, she thought he had burst, and was disappointed - she liked his usual 
dog finish.   But he was not finished.

He had fucked her with no pretense of dancing, but now he began to sway his 
hips, and the warriors began the chant.   "The CENtaur entered SASoyhan and 
SASoyhan was GLAD ..."     Sasoyhan began to sway and twist.    The Centaur 
bit her cunt her belly her nipples her lips ouuw ouuw.     Kahela was aware 
of Sasoyhan feeling intense pleasure from the bites and losing herself in 
them, while she, Kahela, remained apart.   The bites were hard.   Kahela was 
glad for Sasoyhan's pleasure but felt neither pleasure nor pain, just the 
bites.   This was Nakien's "Red Mountain."   It was like Hema.   But Kahela 
doubted she'd be quite satisfied with Hema, after this.

Aru dropped his look of calm.   Or perhaps Aru was gone and Centaur had 
come, and Centaur looked at Sasoyhan with desire.   Centaur bulled, although 
it was not exactly bulling.   Not exactly like any fucking Nakien taught - 
slow, for one thing.  They swayed deeply and widely with the chanting and 
the pounding spear butts, and fucked in rhythm, quick ins and slow outs.   
They were now standing now lying now rolling now over now under, and the 
chanting pounded and pounded on.    Aru's desire was overwhelming, and 
Kahela let her body, let Sasoyhan, slip away, entirely his.   But she, 
Kahela, remained apart.

Kahela kissed the Centaur's pap, and caressed his strong thighs, and felt 
pleasure not in her lips, not in her hands, but in his body.   Desire 
gripped her, stronger than any pleasure in her own body.   She began to 
scratch and bite, drawing blood from his penis, his paps, his lips.  
Briefly, Aru resisted.   But his desire proved stronger; his own body 
slipped from his mind. Kahela owned his body; and felt that body's desire to 
let its waters flow.    She slowly brought the Centaur's penis in.   It did 
not take long.

* * * * * * * * * *

Lying in the dark, Kahela felt a touch.   "Hu," she whispered.   "O, Hu, I 
... Aru,"

"I understand.   And you must have known.    Tanyata.   And I like your Aru. 
   He can be a hero, I think, and will be my brother's champion.    I was 
there tonight, even if you never thought of me.   It was - nice.  And the 
Lady was there.  I felt Her hands reaching into your womb.  Taking my seed.  
So the baby - well ..."   But from now on Aru will have to fuck you on his 
own."

"And Kahela..."

"Yes, Hu."

"Don't fight the Sky-Father."

* * * * * * * * * *

Marwat danced in as the priest, with his pot of coals, and pretended to look 
for Kahela's cloak.   Finding the couple sleeping on it, he pulled it out 
from under them.   He held it up and pointed to a spot, where there was, of 
course, no virgin blood.    The warriors laughed.   Throughout the song he 
kept pointing to the non-existent spot, and got a laugh each time:   He 
worked his rod up, and thrust it into the gathered robe, shot his seed, and 
got more laughs.  He had done nothing of the sort during the practices.

Stained with red the bridal gown, it is her father's pride,
and much Good Luck to him, and his, who gave the virgin bride.
And every bride will keep the man who stains a bridal gown:
his love is bound up in the bonds we see here red and brown.
The penis to the gown is drawn, to see the virgin blood;
he longs to mix the color with another milky flood.
He pushes in, pulls out again, the woolen cunt he fills
with milk, but soon the penis feels the pains of many ills.

For all the ills and sicknesses that flocked around the pair,
and plagued the bride were trapped inside when she untied her hair.
The Demons gather 'round the robe and sicknesses in throngs,
and that is why you pay the priest - for sacrificial songs.

Demons all: I warn you now, this flag is white and red,
a shield against your mischief will protect this maiden's head.
Their travels safe from highwaymen; on lucky roads they'll roam,
and so we ask politely: please all Demons to go home.

The priest cuts up the bridal gown, dismembers limb from limb;
he sings with love the verses of the gown-disposal hymn.
A robe of white with stain of red will Fire's altar dress;
no penis in this woolen cunt should seek his happiness.

* * * * * * * * * *

Marwat pretended to rip up Kahela's cloak, and burn it.    Aru got up, 
naked.   He was no longer the Centaur but the son of a man.  But his erect 
rod was Rod - the undying god of the fuck.  Rod of the Centaur - that part 
of the son of a man, that partakes of the everlasting.   He danced waking 
up, rubbing his sleepy eyes.   The son of a man picked up the Hema skin, and 
stood beside the priest, squeezing a drop onto the fire.    Then he danced 
waking Sasoyhan up.     Sasoyhan touched Rhonan's penis, the Hema skin, 
Centaur's Rod, the Fire on the altar, and finally, no longer a goddess, she 
took the hand of the son of a man, in front of his homestead altar.   Hand 
in hand, they tossed grain into the Fire.  The son of a man sang to his 
wife:

My father here made sacrifice; our family altar stands.
Let friends and kin their own wives win!   I take you by the hands.
Good Luck and Hospitality, Lord Sun, and Fruitful Earth,
all say you'll live for long and give to all my children, birth.

The son of a man spoke aside to Rhonan, but pointing to his own penis:

O Rhonan use our penis, and make Sasoyhan desire
like other wives so all our lives we'll have wood for the fire.
You can make her fuckable and make her want to please,
our penis won't get lonely if she'll spread apart her knees!

Then the priest questioned, and Rhonan answered :

Who took her?  Who possessed her?  Who was He, who had her first?
    Hema had her first of all; He was the first one in.
    On such a ride He took her - just luck they're home again.

And to whom did Hema give her?   Who was He, who had her next?
   A randy fucking Centaur took the gift Lord Hema gave.
   and without a little Hema - I doubt she will behave.

And who from Centaur had her?  And what husband was her third?
   I hope that Fire gives to Rod the praise that He deserves :
   He's the only reason why - she at this Fire serves.

But will Fire pass her on?   Her mortal husband begs!
    A lucky man, for Fire gives, a hundred years of life ;
    and he'll be rich and happy if - he can get back his wife!

The son of a man sang to his wife again :

    This is the world I give you :    spend your life with me ;
       all the Gods will love you ;    mistress shall you be
       of all the little rascals who    run in and out the door -
       some of 'em with two feet  - some of 'em with four.

      I want you here beside me ;    the gifts we give today,
           give we will to Fire still    when both of us are gray ;
with little rams and baby lambs    still running after you,
     some of 'em on four feet and    some of 'em on two.

Then Rhonan sang to Sasoyhan :

    Look kindly on your husband and     from time to time, behave
    you are the mistress here but still -  don't drive him to his grave!
        The love you give to strangers    will make them friends anew :
          some'll walk on four feet and     some'll walk on two.

      And may the Lady give the gifts    a grandmother enjoys
lambs and pigs and calves and kids    and little girls and boys.
      Wombs'll fill with blessings till     you can't take any more :
              some of 'em with two feet  -  some of 'em with four.

Then Rhonan pronounced the invocation of The King :

Wind and rain and thunder and - the battle-axe of light ;
    the captain of the horses of the blast :
    the ground that we stand on shivers at the sight,
    and trembles when your thunderbolt is cast.
Like the fury of the wind his love for her shall be ;
    her womb shall bear the stallions of the Sun :
    beautiful and fearless,  powerful and free -
    and among them make her husband one!

Finally, Aru took the ash rod in his hand - the same rod he had beaten Tektu 
with - and spoke the doorpost words; the words of the son of a man,  to 
Sasoyhan.  With them, the Great Sacrifice began.   All that they did and 
said, until the new moon rose, was now sacred to the Lady of the Wombs:

All that will ever be under this roof,
          and all who will pass through the door,
all of our animals, all of my kin,
           and all who will sleep on the floor ;
all we are given, all that we grow,
          our pottery, barley, and wine ;
you are the Queen of all who live here
        and mistress of all that is mine.

* * * * * * * * * *

The Ram was staked, the knife sharpened, the Queen naked, except for a 
necklace of sheepskin and the ewe's horns on her head.    The drums sounded. 
  The cymbals clanged, and then fell silent.   The dangerous part of the 
Great Sacrifice had begun.    The faint cackle of the Great Fire, and the 
Queen's footsteps, were the only sound.   The last rays of the sun touched 
the eastern hills.

"A horse - a horse and rider!"

The Queen stopped.  Then continued.   Whatever it was, whoever it was, would 
have to wait.  If the thinnest sliver of the new moon was seen before the 
sacrifice was over, it would be too late.

Aru took a hand of archers.   As they ran across the grassy hillside toward 
the rider, the rider tried to urge his horse in their direction.  The horse, 
a dappled mare, shook him off.   Then she decided to go look at the 
strangers anyway.   Aru sent an archer back for honey-cakes - or anything 
the horse might like.    "Weapons down, men," he ordered.   He was no 
captain, no chief - but for once, he was going to act the prince.   A man 
who could ride a horse was certain to be important.

Aru and his archers ran to where the man had fallen.   Aru, not looking 
directly at him as he lay sprawled on the ground, addressed him: "Well met 
on the roads, if you be a friend."

The fallen rider did not get up.  He said: "Water."   Aru sent a man for 
some.   The rider had a bit of rope around his neck, the knot sealed with 
dried clay.   The clay had the impression of a seal.   The seal showed a 
ship.   Aru bowed.

"Health, Wvaksa.   I am Aru, son of Ishan, Queen.   Health and our loyalty 
to the High King."

The High King's messenger - for there could be no doubt of that - said 
nothing until the water came.  He ate the honey cakes Aru had intended for 
his horse.  Then he tried to stand - and could not.   Aru and an archer 
helped him stand, and they had to help him with his loincloth.    He pissed 
for a long time.    Then they had to hold him as he squatted and shitted, 
and Aru made his archer wipe the messenger's shit-eye with grass.   But then 
he was able to stand on his own, stiff but erect.

"Prince Aru, what do you do, bringing a company of warriors here?"

"Wvaksa, we hope to stand with honor."

"Arrow-luck, son of Ishan.   That is a careful answer.    But on which side 
do you stand?"

"And also arrow-luck to the Great King - and our service."

"All you desire, Prince.   And in that King's service: answer his 
messenger!"

"May the King's messenger find joy in our welcome, and what he seeks, and 
honor - from the Queen."

"Ishan is here!   Take me to her."

"Health, King's messenger.   She is busy."

The messenger turned red with fury, and walked away from the Prince without 
a word, toward the gathered warriors.    There was a shout.   Men turned 
toward him, nocking arrows.    The Queen turned to look - and the Ram butted 
her, smashing into her ribs and catching her breast with the tip of a 
flower-decorated horn.    The men converged, the Chief slit the Ram's 
throat; Tektu plunged his flint into the ball sack and pulled out the balls 
and cut them free while the ram's heart's blood was still spurting onto the 
ground.    An archer held the Queen's breast-wound closed with his hand, 
while Kahela, who had a bit of bard-lore, hugged the Queen's chest until she 
began to breathe again.

The messenger arrived, with Aru close behind him.   The messenger could see 
that the Queen was not going to die, at least not at once.   He gave Aru 
just a moment, then grabbed his arm.   "Prince Aru - there is no time.    
Warriors - no not warriors - weavers and shepherds, but with bows and 
spears, are coming here.   They were grabbing at my horse's hooves.   Form 
up.   Find a defensive position.  They are many.   But real warriors can 
scatter them."

The warriors, even the Chief, looked at the Prince.    Hek-Danniadae said: 
"Should we fight them?   Do we know they are enemies?   Perhaps they fight 
for the Kohiyossa."    The Chief smashed Hek-Danniadae across the face with 
a spear, but it was too late.   "So, you are on the side of this Kohiyossa!" 
the messenger shouted.

Prince Aru sat down, and scratched behind his ear.   He picked up a skin of 
mead.   "Messenger," he said, "the King's seal is very nice."     Aru took a 
little drink.   "But at the moment, I have a few warriors, and you don't 
have a horse.  I have her.   I suggest you tell me what you know, and tell 
it quickly."

The messenger paused only for a heartbeat.   "I do not know if this mob, is 
for this Kohiyossa, or not.   I don't know any thing about any Kohiyossa, 
except the old tales.   I asserted the High King's authority, and they would 
not listen - and they would have killed me - a sealed messenger - if I 
hadn't gotten away."

Aru stopped the messenger.   "Ohrsos, Adjehan, Tektu - carry my mother up to 
those trees - only Adjehan stays with her.    Everyone else - we'll fight on 
the larger hill.     Fill water skins.    Go now.   Messenger - I haven't 
finished with you.   Everyone fights - women and slaves.  Let Tektu and the 
other captives have their weapons.   Keep your eye on the messenger - hold 
him if you need to.    We'll let the enemy have the oxen and the sheep - if 
they are the enemy - if it comes to a fight.    Chief - choose the battle 
lines on the hill."

The Chief would not have chosen to fight on the hill.  He thought it was 
foolish.  Aru had never seen a battle, since the High King had kept the 
peace for many years - but the Chief had seen many.   The Chief knew that he 
was a better battle leader than the Prince.   And the Prince was, he kept 
saying, just an archer.   But choosing which side to fight - against enemies 
who might or might not be enemies.   Arresting King's messengers.   And 
making a parley with the mob that was coming.    The Prince would do all 
that better than he could.    And if there was one thing the Chief knew, it 
was that in battle any leader was better than a fight about who would be 
leader.    So the Chief formed the men on the hill.   "Warriors," he 
bellowed.   "We need to look like warriors, and throw fear into weavers and 
shepherds.    Polish your spear-points.  When the horn sounds - all move 
together.   Make those shepherds shit their cloths.  Slaves, women - try to 
look like warriors - hold your weapons straight.    If it comes to fighting, 
try not to get in the way.    Warriors, load up with arrows - fill your 
packs.    When we come down from this hill, we won't come back - any weapons 
we leave behind will be the enemy's.   All carry water - this will be a long 
one.   If scattered, form up again if you can - you know how.   We have 
practiced; they have not; we are warriors, slaughtering weavers.   And you 
are the best of the best.   Arrow-luck and safety to the Prince!"

"The Prince!" they all shouted.

"Prince - let me put a few men in the trees - a few at least," the Chief 
pleaded.   "Let the mob think that we are more than we are.   That they have 
walked into a trap.   That we are all around them."

The fastest runners of the enemy came into view.   It was too late for any 
changes now.   The Prince shouted: "Archers.   When you hear the fast 
drumbeat, shoot at the men around the spokesman of the enemy.  Fast 
shooting, as we've practiced.   A trio of arrows - no more.  Most of you are 
not accurate at fast shooting yet, but shoot fast anyway - we want to 
terrify.   When you hear the slow signal, shoot slowly and carefully, pick 
your man, shoot him, and kill him.   Dodge arrows, but don't use your 
shields so much you don't shoot - keep the enemy busy.   These shepherds 
have not seen battle - harry them like wolves!  Arrow-luck and safety!"

"The Prince!" they all shouted again.   The foremost runners of the enemy, 
who were looking at the ground, tracking hoofprints, heard the shout and 
looked at the warriors gathered on the hill.  They turned and ran away.

The Queen's warriors waited.   The sun sank behind the western hills.  
Flocks of birds in the forest rose crawing into the sky - the enemy was 
moving into position.   Well, the Prince had chosen to stand on this hill, 
and stand they must.   They could only hope that the enemy, moving through 
the trees, would not find their wounded Queen.   It began to grow dark.    
The Prince and the Chief whispered to each other.    The mob appeared, and 
advanced up the western slope of the hill until they were just out of arrow 
shot - they thought.   Someone in the mob shouted "What make you here, 
warriors?"

The Prince sounded the drum, a fast tarattat.    There was just enough light 
for the attacking mob to see a little commotion among the archers on the 
hill.   Then the archers stood still again.   Only then did the arrows, 
fired in a high arc, descend on the front rank of the attacking crowd.   
They raised their shields - but the arrows were so many and they came so 
fast, that most under that deadly rain were hit by an arrow, or two.   The 
mob shot back - ineffective at the distance, shooting uphill.

Then the Chief of the Queen's warriors bellowed: "Bow before the High King; 
or die!"   Runad, who was at least thin and bald, stepped out in front of 
the ranks of spearmen.   The mob of weavers and shepherds, looking up, could 
see the proud bald head, red in the light of sunset, and the glinting 
spearpoints behind him, black against a dark sky.   A ram's horn sounded, 
and the wall of spears began to move slowly down the hill.   Arrows, 
invisible in the dark, landed thick as hailstones on the weavers and 
shepherds at the foot of the hill.  There were screams, and shouted orders.  
  Many bowed to the ground - which did not protect them from the arrows.  
Some shot back in the direction of the spearmen.   But more and more began 
to run away.   The darkness of a moonless night had fallen.

The drum sounded again.    The Queen's warriors, no longer shooting, moved 
in a block across the meadow.   There were many bowing men, faces to the 
ground, proclaiming loyalty to the High King.   The Queen's warriors took 
their weapons, stripped them, and tied them with their own belts.    They 
wrapped each captive's head with his own loincloth.   But most of the enemy 
had retreated to the forest.   When there was no one on the grassland still 
shooting, the Queen's warriors began gathering the captives together.

Tektu looked about for the Prince, or the Chief, but did not find either, so 
he took two archers to where he had left the Queen and Adjehan.   The Queen 
was comfortable, and well enough hidden, in the dark, so after telling her 
of the battle, he left the two archers, and returned. A fire had been lit on 
the hilltop, and he went to it.  The Chief had arranged his warriors for 
defense, in case the enemy who had fled to the forest, regrouped and 
attacked.   Inside the lines, he was preparing to torture the captives.   
"Heat more spearpoints," he said loudly.   The captives still had their 
heads wrapped in their cloths.  "Find the whips we use on the rams.   Bring 
the ox - we don't want to drag them ourselves."   The men helping him turned 
the captives, who had their wrists tied to their ankles, on their faces, so 
their bottoms were high in the air.   They tied a  cord around each penis, 
behind the balls.   Only one resisted, and was beaten; the others were 
silent, and did not resist.

Tektu whispered in the Chief's ear: "Chief, the Queen is safe.  She seems 
well, and comfortable.  I am no bard, but if there was any worse than a 
broken rib or two, I think we would know it by now.   I want to tell the 
Prince - do you know where he is?"

The Chief said the Prince was with the wounded, where they had camped.   As 
Tektu headed in that direction, he heard his name called by a captive.

"Tektu!  Is that you?  Have you become one of the High King's warriors?"

The voice was that of Erdiosh, his best friend from his village.

* * * * * * * * * *

Tektu glanced at his friend; turned back to the Chief.   "Chief, I know one 
of the captives."

"Many are from the village of Nohas.    I want you here when I question 
them."

"Chief - this captive.   May I take him now to the Prince?    He may speak - 
without your tortures."

The Chief whispered: "All men speak better without torture, Tektu.   It is 
the fear of torture that loosens tongues.    Take your friend.   Tell him 
that you'd like to help him, as a friend - but you need him to tell you what 
he knows."

Tektu said loudly: "I'll deal with this captive first.   I'll take him for 
special torture."    He led Erdiosh, hands bound, by the cord tied to his 
balls.    The boy's head was wrapped in his cloak - he wore no loincloth.   
When they were out of earshot, Tektu said: "Erdiosh, one thing - is my 
mother alive?"

"Courage, Friend.   She is dead."

"Tell me how it happened."

"There was a quarrel, about Nute and the Wvaksa. Taucon priest said that the 
peddlers were liars, that they had stolen you and Danha with a trick.  Gur, 
the dyer, said that the peddlers were honest.      Your mother.   Well, she 
went mad - when Danha and you disappeared.   It was just a quarrel - but 
Taucon goaded her on, and she was a madwoman!  She had Gur tied up and she 
whipped him - for days - to make him say that the peddlers were liars.  Then 
Heyos came through and told us it was not a lie - that all the bronze makers 
had seen the God's face.   Gur wanted to be headman - he said your mother 
didn't need to fight him, or go into exile, because honor didn't require a 
woman to fight when another was chosen head.   But your mother chose to 
fight.   I don't think Gur wanted to kill her.    Is it true, Tektu?  Did 
the peddlers steal you with a trick?   You went - and you didn't say 'Stay 
in safety' to me - I didn't know where you had gone."

"But why did you leave the village?   Why did so many leave the village?"

"Friend, your mother first chose exile - and many went with her.   We had 
been on her side, and had done nothing to stop her when she tortured Gur, 
and the others.   We didn't think we could stay, when Gur became headman.    
The shepherds from the countryside, they didn't know what your mother had 
done; they followed your house - as their fathers had done.   Then she 
decided to fight, and was killed.   We could have begged Gur to let us back, 
but we didn't.    We followed Taucon.   It was Taucon who defied the High 
King's messenger.   But we all tried to kill him.   And now the High King 
will punish us all."

Erdiosh gave a sudden backward jerk, yanking on the cord, and fell down.  
Tektu had to wrestle him on to his back, and then he couldn't see in the 
starlight to untie the noose.   He had to cut it with his dagger.   There 
was a lot of blood.   Erdiosh said: "A sealed messenger!   The High King's 
sealed messenger!"    Tektu had to drag the frantic, screaming boy to the 
camp.

Kahela and Aru were tending the wounded by the firelight.   They were 
pulling an arrow from the thigh of a man Tektu knew; a shepherd.  He used to 
come to midsummer fires every year, looking for the wife he never found.    
There were about a score of wounded lying or sitting around the fire.   Hema 
was being prepared, and mutton - the Great Sacrifice ram - was roasting.

"Hek-Danniadae is dead," the Prince said.  "A battle-axe.   Vaishga had an 
arrow through her knee.  Kahela says she will never walk on it, even if she 
lives.    Most of the arrow wounds are not too bad - long shooting, and they 
had their shields."

Aru held the shepherd's leg until the bleeding stopped, and Tektu told him 
that the Queen seemed safe, and told him what he had learned from Erdiosh.   
He said "This is Erdiosh from my village.   He may know more, if you wish to 
have him tortured.   But the Queen must know of these things; Heyos must 
have told her.   I think you do not need to torture him to learn what you 
already know."

Aru said: "Untie the boy's hands, Tektu of the house of Nohas.   Unwrap his 
head.   Put his cloak on him."

When Erdiosh had been dressed, the Prince spoke:  "Erdiosh of the weavers, I 
am Aru son of Ishan, Queen.   I speak for the High King.   Speak good wishes 
and praise of the High King, now, or be his enemy."

Erdiosh said nothing.  Tektu jabbed him in the bottom with his dagger, and 
said: "Say: Health to the High King."

"Health to the High King."

Jab.  "Say: Good wishes for his safety."

"Good wishes for his safety, and I, I praise his rule.   He is powerful.  
And wise."

The Prince said: "Enough, Tektu.    Health and safety, Erdiosh of the 
weavers.   Go in safety.   Or stay in safety, and be welcome.   Tektu, give 
him your belt, and that knife.   Get another copper one from the spoils."

Tektu undid his belt, and handed it to Erdiosh.   Erdiosh looked at the 
loincloth in his friend's hand, at the spiral line around his penis.  Tektu 
embraced him.   "It has hungered for your tongue, Erdiosh son of Ra'udhvosh. 
   And your shit-eye.   Tomorrow, we will find a needle.   A joke - you'll 
be tattooed on Little Penises day."

Kahela said: "No tattoo tomorrow, it is still the Great Sacrifice."

"But ..."

"Did you see the moon, son of Nohas?   I did not.   And we stood looking 
into the west at sunset."

"No tattoo tomorrow then, Erdiosh," Tektu said.   "Once you have it, you can 
have me in your bottom.  Or your mouth."

"I ..."   Erdiosh stopped.

"And my penis will know no shit-eye but yours, son of Ra'udhvosh weaver.  
Was that what you wanted to ask me?"

"Then I am not to be punished?   For attacking the High King's messenger?"

"I speak for the High King," Prince Aru said.    "I promise a spear in the 
gut to the Taucon - even though he is a priest.   And he shall have a weapon 
in his hand.   For the son of Ra'udhvosh, if you will serve me, and Tektu my 
arrow master, with that dagger, then you shall eat when I eat, and share 
rewards and dangers.   If not, then fare well on your journey, with our 
wishes for your health and safety."

Erdiosh bowed low, nose touching the ground.  But he stood up to speak: "I 
will follow you, and Tektu arrow master.  Tektu guards the doorposts of 
Nohas - the doorposts where my father and grandfather had roast meat and 
sweet honey."

Tektu was not the Prince's arrow master.  When the sun had risen that 
morning, Tektu had been a captive; not trusted with his own weapons.   When 
it had set, Erdiosh had been the Prince's enemy, across the battlefield.    
Tektu still did not know what the Queen planned to do - if she would fight 
for the Kohiyossa.   If the Queen had asked for his service, he would have 
refused.   It made no sense to promise service to the Prince.  The Prince 
was nothing - just an archer of the Queen.   Tektu's bright copper dagger, 
Erdiosh's now, caught the firelight as Erdiosh held it up and swore his 
loyalty.   The Prince was unarmed, and alone.  His young friend's voice, 
slowly speaking the words of the oath - invoking the Lord of Oaths - hung in 
the dark night like a mist over a winter meadow.   The Oath-Lord's bond, 
which the Sky-Father Himself could neither break nor bend, now bound the 
Prince and the young weaver.   Tektu said, "Prince, my loyal service."   
Kahela gasped.   If Aru noticed that anything unusual had happened, he gave 
no sign.

After a bit, the new arrow master said: "Let us go to the captives - men of 
my village.   They are tortured; perhaps bravely keeping silent what we 
already know."

"No one has been tortured yet.    I hope they are frightened.  I want them 
to speak good wishes and praise of the High King."

Kahela said: "Prince, before you promise everyone else that they will eat 
when you eat, give a thought to when that will be.   The rams are scattered. 
   We don't have enough food."

Tektu said: "Erdiosh, where are the women?   The children?    When those who 
followed the house of Nohas left their homes, they cannot have left their 
wives and children - but there are no women among the captives.   I saw no 
children in the battle."

"Many women did fight, Tektu, and the older children.  The young ones - they 
did not keep up when we went after the King's messenger.   They are to the 
west, not far.  I suppose some of the women are with them."

Kahela said: "Health and happiness, Erdiosh daggerboy, son of Ra'udhvosh.   
A daggerboy must speak honor to the arrow master, when you speak to him; you 
will get a whipping if you don't.   Don't talk to the Prince at all, and 
especially not to the Queen - you are only a dagger boy.   If they talk to 
you - bow to the ground.   Did you have much food with you?   Wagons of  
barley? - or stock to slaughter?"

"My service, arrow master.   Be well, Lady."

Tektu said: "She is Kahela, daughter of Kratik.   Of the village of Sugga."

"The Law-Singer!   May the Lady Sugga make the Law prevail!    Reverence, 
Kahela of the Law.  We have no food.   We are hungry.   There is no food 
with the children."

Tektu wanted to go to the captives, and not leave them expecting torture any 
longer.  Erdiosh, daggerboy, strode rudely ahead of his Prince and his arrow 
master.   When he arrived among the bound and blindfold captives, he 
shouted.   "I am Erdiosh, son of Ra'udhvosh weaver.   Friends, great news.   
Tektu - Tektu son of Nohas! - has returned to us.   He is now a man, 
returning with honor, to guard the doorposts of his house.  He will agree to 
be our headman.   But the house of Nohas is loyal to the High King.   Shall 
we be loyal to the doorposts of Nohas, and serve the High King?   And 
renounce Taucon, who defied the sealed messenger?   Shall we have Tektu for 
headman?"

"The headship is with the house of Nohas - the house of Tektu," a shepherd 
said.   "But we are captives.   We will be punished for attacking the High 
King's messenger."

A weaver said: "Surely we will be killed."

"We will all be gelded!"

"We are slaves already!"

Erdiosh said: "Tektu is arrow master to these warriors.   That may save us.  
  Speak now - Tektu is headman, the son of Nohas!"

"Tektu, son of Nohas, headman!"

"Speak now - Health and safety to the High King.  Death to Taucon, who 
defied the messenger!"

All the captives shouted through the loincloths wrapped around their heads.

The Prince said: "Unbind their ...."   but Erdiosh, bare-penis daggerboy, 
silenced his new Prince with a wave of his hand.    "The quarrel is over," 
he shouted.   "Gur had the right of it.   The peddlers told the truth.   
Tektu was not stolen for a slave, nor Danha.   The peddlers' story of the 
Young God was true.  Let he who says other, speak!"

No one spoke.

Erdiosh shouted: "We follow Tektu into battle, if he leads us.   Arrow-luck 
to our headman, Tektu son of Nohas!"

"Tektu of Nohas!"

Erdiosh bowed to Tektu and Aru.  "I hope I have served."    Then he glanced 
at Kahela.  "I forgot your instruction, Kahela of the Law."    He bowed to 
Aru.   "Honor, Prince, and pleasure in the years to come."   Then he grinned 
at Kahela.   Bowing to Tektu, he said: "Honor, arrow master, and pleasure in 
the nights to come."    He asked Kahela:  "Was that a good address of 
honor?"

But when they finally lay down to sleep, just before dawn, Tektu picked up a 
stick, a bit of firewood.   Tektu had let other boys suckle him.  Erdiosh 
had always hoped he was the favorite, but Tektu had never said.   Until 
tonight.  "No shit-eye but yours, son of Ra'udhvosh."    Since he had heard 
those words, it had been like living in a dream.   As if Strong Lust had 
taken him by the hand.  And now this.   Erdiosh, proudly, leapt into 
position, and Tektu, beating very fast, turned his bottom dark under the 
cold starry sky.  In his eyes, Erdiosh saw himself in the village.  He was 
wearing a spotless white tunic, embroidered with cunts and penises, and his 
long hair was bound up with the the beaded white hair ties used by married 
woman.   He saw himself before the village oven, with everyone there to 
watch him be stripped and shamed.   But when he lifted his tunic, he felt no 
shame, but gloating pride in his girdle of golden beads.  As he bent naked 
for his whipping, he heard himself saying "beat me hard, husband," the way 
proud women do, to defy the shame.   Tektu shook him by the shoulder - and 
the dream was over.

"What did you say?"  Tektu asked.

"Um.  I.  um.   Never mind."

Tektu said: "That beating was for 'house of Nohas,' 'son of Nohas'.   I have 
told you not to say them."

Erdiosh said: "The doorposts of the house of Girtu.  I will tell everyone, 
Tektu son of Girtu.   And now your mother is dead too."

Tektu, new-made arrow master, new-made headman, and, although he did not 
know it yet, the man who held the kingdom in the palm of his hand, curled up 
in his lover's arms and sobbed.

* * * * * * * * * * *

[ the end of the first half of the second story, called The Brothers of the 
Ox-Yoke, of the Midsummer fires trilogy. ]

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