Read Fimbulwinter (Daniel Black) Online
Authors: E. William Brown
Cerise chuckled. “If that was being caught off guard I can’t wait to see a
fight you’re ready for. You were totally badass cutting your way through the
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woods, and the way you handled that troll! I got wet just watching it.”
“Gore whore,” Avilla teased. “You’re just a slut for power, aren’t you?”
“You know it, honeydew,” Cerise agreed smugly.
“Well, I’m glad you’re coping so well, but I’m not a pain slut like you.
Daniel, can you please take a look at this?”
I turned to find that she’d drawn the canvas closed, and shrugged her
dress off to bare herself from the waist up. I just about swallowed my tongue.
I’ve never seen such a perfect hourglass figure, and those magnificent breasts
of hers could have belonged to a comic book character. Her golden-brown skin
was smooth and unblemished, her large dark nipples perfectly placed and
exactly symmetrical.
There was a short, wickedly barbed arrow sticking out of one of them,
and a trickle of pale fluid still leaking from the wound. That brought me back
to Earth.
“Of course, Avilla. I do have to touch it, though,” I warned her.
“Just be gentle, please. It’s very sore.”
I nodded, and laid my hand lightly on her breast. Closing my eyes I
reached with my body sense, feeling for the wound. But something wasn’t
right. Not at all. There was flesh under my hand, but it wasn’t remotely human.
There was no meat or blood, just.... I strained, trying to identify it... sugar,
cinnamon, honey, mead, and a host of strange fluids that shimmered with
magic.
“Whoa,” I murmured. “Sugar and spice and everything nice, that’s what
Avilla is made of. So that’s what Cerise meant by ‘spell-wrought’.”
I opened my eyes to find her looking up at me with fear in her eyes.
“Can your power heal a creature like me?” She asked pleadingly.
I took her face gently between my hands, and looked into her eyes.
“Avilla, you aren’t a ‘creature’. You’re a woman. A remarkably beautiful and
resourceful young woman who just happens to also be a magical creation. But
if the people who live in this land are too ignorant to understand that I’ll be
happy to keep your secret. And yes, I can heal you.”
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Her smile was bright enough to light the world. But I made a mental note
to find out what her story was soon. If she’d just been transformed somehow
that was one thing, but if there were people in this land who could actually
create sapient beings I needed to know details.
“Thank you,” she breathed. “I didn’t think you’d understand.”
I smiled reassuringly. “I do, sweetie. Cerise, why don’t you hold her
while I do this? As sensitive as she is, I’m afraid it’s going to hurt a bit.”
“Good idea.” The pale, slender witch shot me a grateful look, and
scooted over to sit beside her girlfriend with both arms firmly around her.
“Let’s get this done.”
I put my hand back on her breast, and focused again. It was a bit different
than working on myself, and at first the magic that filled her body seemed to
resist my influence. But then Avilla sighed, forcing herself to relax, and the
resistance dissolved. The tender flesh around the wound throbbed with pain,
but it responded sluggishly to my prodding. In a few minutes I convinced it to
let go of the arrow, so I could remove the barbed point without doing any more
damage. Then I closed the wound, and started a flow of vitality to encourage
healing.
Her body drank it up like a sponge. Suddenly her magic welcomed me
eagerly, greedily searching for more of the energy I was providing. Thinking
that perhaps she’d been running low for some reason I expanded the flow,
letting the fringes of it wash across her whole upper torso as I concentrated the
majority of the energy on the wound.
An odd sound from Avilla almost distracted me, but I managed to keep
most of my attention on what I was doing.
“You alright?” I asked.
“Oh, yes,” she sighed breathlessly. “That feels so nice. The pain is almost
gone. Please, don’t stop.”
Cerise chuckled indulgently. “Mana slut. You can’t get enough of it, can
you?”
“I can’t help it, Cerise,” Avilla replied defensively. “You know I have
trouble... keeping... charged... oh please, Daniel, tell me you can do this
again?”
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Her body was soaking up my magic like a sponge now, and I could feel
her arousal blossoming into full force.
“I can,” I told her. “But I’m starting to think you should be asking your
girlfriend’s permission. This is like a drug for you, isn’t it?”
“Maybe.”
“Yeah, she gets totally stoned if you feed her too much at once,” Cerise
put in. “You’d better ease off until you get the other arrows out.”
“Meanie,” Avilla pouted. “I never get to have all the magic I can hold.”
“That’s because you can hold enough magic to levitate a mountain,
honeydew,” Cerise replied proudly. “No matter how much I stuff you you’re
still going to want more, and you get so silly you can’t hold up your end of a
power tap before long.”
I smiled at their familiar bickering, and busied myself extracting the rest
of the arrows. By the time I was finished Avilla was comically tipsy, and was
sloppily trying to make out with Cerise. I calmed her down a little by having
the two switch places, and spent another twenty minutes or so healing Cerise.
“So, what’s your secret?” I asked as I worked. “You started out human,
but I can feel you’ve done something odd to yourself.”
“Um.... it shouldn’t interfere with healing,” she said hesitantly.
“She steals power from demons,” Avilla explained conspiratorially.
“Hey!” Cerise cried indignantly. “Avilla! Don’t give away my
mysteries!”
“You did it to me,” the buxom blonde replied, sounding a little put out
about it. “Besides, it’s kind of cool. Ever since she got a piece of that succubus
she’s been insatiable.”
I laughed. “Alright, Avilla, that’s enough of that. I don’t need to hear
details about your sex life.”
“Thank you!” Cerise snapped.
“I can imagine it just fine,” I went on cheerfully.
Avilla giggled. Cerise sputtered. It kept them both distracted enough for
me to finally finish.
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Alas, then I had to earn my keep. Wounded soldiers and sick villagers
weren’t nearly as much fun to work on as my witches, but it was just as well.
Another hour or two of that teasing banter and I was liable to do something that
would get me knifed in the dark by one or the other of the adorable little
psychos.
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Chapter 3
The caravan set out not long after I finished healing Cerise, but I was far
too busy to spare any attention for the scenery.
A lot of the soldiers were injured to a greater or lesser degree, and they
lined up to see what the mysterious wizard could do for them. The first few
were cautious enough to make me wonder how many charlatans there were in
this field, but after I healed a cracked rib and a couple of infected arrow
wounds word got around that I was the real deal. After that I had to recruit the
girls’ help to screen them and keep the line organized, or I wouldn’t have been
able to get anything done.
“First priority is anyone who looks like they might die if they have to
wait,” I told them. “Then soldiers who can walk on their own, but are hurt bad
enough to keep them from fighting properly. After that I’ll take serious injuries,
but minor ones will have to wait for tomorrow.”
“So, keep them alive, keep us all defended, and then go from most serious
to least? Got it,” Cerise said confidently. “Better let me handle that, though.
Avilla’s a sucker for a sob story.”
Avilla pouted at that.
“I’ll take your word for it,” I replied diplomatically. “Avilla, can you
scrounge up a knife and see if you can find some rags and a source of water? I
can heat it myself, but a lot of these old injuries are going to need cleaning.”
“Oh!, Yes, I can do that,” she chirped happily, and ran off to take care of
it.
My next patient had a nasty compound fracture of the upper arm and
shoulder, courtesy of a troll’s club. I coaxed the shattered bones back together,
stamped out the infection, closed up the wounds where broken bones had
punctured skin and reconnected severed tendons. I let him go with a caution
that the bones would remain delicate for several days, and advised the sergeant
who’d shown up to observe to keep him on light duty if it was possible.
On close inspection the soldiers were a bit of a historical anomaly. Most
of them wore chain hauberks of a standardized design, and much of their other
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equipment was also identical. Heavy black boots, dark green cloaks and pot
helms were standard, while the sergeants had more elaborate helms with nose
and cheek guards. A lot of them carried long spears with narrow points that
were obviously designed for piercing armor, while the rest bore a mix of
swords, axes and what I was pretty sure were compound bows.
That was odd. In feudal societies fighting men usually had to supply their
own equipment, so that level of standardization was rare. But then, so was the
fact that the unit was called the ‘5 Margold’ and not ‘Rain’s Company’, or
something like that. Somehow this world had apparently evolved relatively
modern military organizations without abandoning feudalism.
I resolved to keep my eyes open and try not to make assumptions until I
knew more about this strange society.
My next patient was a peasant farmer who’d come down with the flue,
which was potentially lethal under these conditions. Then an assortment of
wounded soldiers - cracked bones, nasty gashes and puncture wounds, and a
paralyzed arm that turned out to be the result of some goblin shaman’s curse
rather than a physical injury. The spell was easily removed, which seemed to
particularly impress the men.
I was starting to wonder if any of the troops guarding the caravan were
actually healthy. The sergeant nodded when I commented on it.
“It’s been tough fighting, sir wizard,” the grizzled veteran said. “The
worst I’ve ever seen. We were near two hundred when we set out, but not a
day’s gone by when we didn’t lose a man or six. Three times we’ve had a
whole patrol, a dozen or more men, just vanish with no survivors.”
I frowned. “I wouldn’t think goblins would be that effective against
trained soldiers, unless you were chasing them through the woods. Those little
bows of theirs can’t be much use against armor, and their marksmanship isn’t
that great.”
“Not your first campaign, is it sir? No, the goblins can’t stand against us
in the open field. They raid us instead, always popping out of the woods to
plink a few arrows and curses at whoever they can get a beat on and then
running off into the woods. Can’t follow them without running into traps and
ambushes, and every now and then they get someone. It wears on a man, even if
our archers do make them pay for it.”
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“But what’s bad is the real monsters. We keep running into trolls,
sometimes alone but usually with goblins. Worse things, too. An ogre,
felwolves, even a beast the captain says was a manticore. We turned back
when the scouts reported giant tracks.”
Yeah, that made more sense. I’d seen myself how tough trolls were. If
giants were even bigger they’d be bad news to a group like this.
It was twilight by then, and the sky was mostly overcast. A few flakes of
snow drifted down on us.
“The captain’ll be calling camp any time now,” the sergeant observed.
“I’d best get the men ready. But if’n you don’t mind me saying so, I figure
you’ve done enough for one day. There’s no sense in you wearing yourself out
over bumps and bruises when we might have a man take an arrow in the throat
before dawn.”
“Fair enough, sergeant. What’s your name, by the way?”
“Thomas, sir.”
A call from up ahead interrupted us, and he hurried away with another
respectful nod. I had to admit, after my years as a corporate drone I could get
used to that kind of treatment.
The caravan stopped in an open field beside the road, which had
apparently been used for that purpose many times before. The men circled the
wagons to form an improvised barricade between the camp and the
surrounding woods, and a work party began cutting wood and setting up a
bonfire while smaller groups corralled the animals and hung canvas awnings