Strange Manors, Chapter 7 (Final)

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Chapter Seven: It’s All In Plato
Holweard’s Hollow, Wensleydale, October, 2019 (After Moonrise, Same Day)

The cool, eldritch gleam of Freyia’s gown seemed to draw all the soft light in the cavern, pulling me across the rough floor to the foot of the bed. Holweard wasn’t in evidence, but I was standing right on his node of power, trembling hands reaching out to touch the key to his mana. He wouldn’t be far away.

I was just as glad he’d left me some moments of at least ostensible privacy. I undressed quickly, my usual discomfort with my body magnified. Naked and defenseless, I raised the shimmering white garment above my head, took a deep breath, and pulled it on.

I shivered, feeling the tingling of every hypersensitive nerve. Dear God, this is amazing. More amazing than I had ever dreamed.

A voice whispered through the cavern, indistinct. “Better?” Holweard.

“I don’t suppose a Sprite has any use for a mirror?”

“I don’t work for free,” the voice reminded me in an amused tone.

“Think of it as a recruiting expense.”

A full-length mirror appeared to the side of the bed — one of those massive, old-fashioned sorts in the dark mahogany frames. I stood stock-still, mesmerized. In outward appearance, I was the stunning, raven-haired fertility goddess whose picture in the crypt high overhead had captivated me at twenty-one.

“So I take it you’re applying?”

With great reluctance, I tore my eyes from the mirror. Taking another deep and steadying breath — which caused my wonderfully ripe breasts to stretch the gown’s bodice delightfully — I exhaled and said, “Please. Come and join me.”

This time, he decided to make An Appearance. A warm and inviting breeze swept through the chamber, impossibly carrying the scents of high summer in the Dales, the grasslands and ripening hay, wild marjoram and lavender. . . . It whipped around me, stirring the silken fall of the gown, caressing my skin . . . . I closed my eyes, drinking in the magical moment, smiling in wonder. Yeah, the old guy’s got some moves!

When I opened my soft blue eyes again, he stood before me, somehow combining the Colonel’s gravitas with George Deaver’s handsome and youthful visage, and even a bit of the Pizza Boy’s more rugged physique.

“I see you’ve arrived at a decision after all.” He smiled with a possessive self-assurance, but I thought there was an undertone of something else, something completely different, in his expression. “Are you prepared to do homage for the honors of Chingleput and the lands of your forefathers?”

Slowly — moving vertically in the full skirt was surprisingly difficult — I lowered myself down, bringing one knee to the cold stone floor, then the other. Keeping my body straight, I held up my hands, and he took them in his own, smiling slightly.

“No,” I said gently. “I told you I don’t want it. Not the title, not the lands, not the sheep, not the foxes. Especially not the foxes.”

“What!!!”

I pressed his hands urgently, before he could tear them away, knowing I’d only have one shot. “Wait! I am willing — in fact, I very much want — to be the Lady of the manor. But only if you will be its Lord.”

That stopped him, whether it was my words, my posture, or some mixed-up combination of the two.

I wanted him to listen, which is hard to do if you’re hurling thunderbolts. Possibly real ones. I mean, I didn’t know that thunderbolts were his thing, but I didn’t exactly know they weren’t, either. My lore on sprites was pretty sketchy, and I wasn’t willing to put money on something I read on the internet somewhere when I was facing the genuine article.

Mercifully, his expression softened. “Child . . . the ritual — the magic, if you like — doesn’t work that way.”

“I kind of guessed that.” I quirked a half smile. “I’ve designed games, too.”

“It’s not a game, Luigi. The ritual was created by a goddess. You can’t just — what’s your phrase? — hack it?”

I shook my head. “I know. Not what I was thinking.”

“Oh, dear gods! We aren’t going to spend another whole night talking again, are we? What is with you Littons!”

“Well . . . I hope not the whole night. Maybe a bit of it?”

“No!”

“But I so enjoy our little chats?”

He had a most impressive glower. “Oh, very well! Fine! Talk! It’s what you do best, apparently.”

“I don’t suppose you’d object if I sat down? I mean, these knees are really amazing — the legs, too, actually — but between them not having extra padding, and the stone floor and all . . . .”

“You’re wheedling!”

“A bit?”

There! A ghost of a smile touched a quarter of a corner of his left lip. Just a twitch, but I’d take it. Then, surprisingly gently, he raised me up. A pair of comfortable chairs appeared behind us, and he took the more impressive of the two. “Might as well be comfortable. The gods only know how long you’re going to go on this time.”

I sat, feeling a bit weak-kneed. I got a hearing, anyway!

“Alright. You clearly have some scheme. Let’s hear it.”

“Holweard . . . .” It felt strange to use the name, just like that, with no honorific. I looked at him questioningly.

“It’s alright.” He seemed to understand my hesitation. “I am Holweard. My real name. ‘Humphrey’ or ‘George,’ for that matter . . . ‘Colonel.’ That’s all just window-dressing.”

I nodded, understanding. “Substance and accidents,” I said, reminding him of our discourse on Platonic metaphysics.

“Quite.”

“Holweard, then. ‘Luigi’ is my window-dressing. Luigi is ‘accident.’ Not substance.”

He leaned back in his almost-throne, looking intrigued. “I can’t believe I’m actually saying this, and I’m quite certain I shall regret it — but would you care to expand on that assertion?”

“As surely as you are Holweard of Holweard’s Hollow, regardless of the outward form you show the world, I am a woman. The form my body displays — or has displayed, up until I put on this gown — it’s a masquerade. And I am so very, very tired of it.”

“I’d wondered about that.”

“You did?”

“Well, naturally. It’s not everyday you see a boy in his Mum’s knickers, or a young man model a maid’s outfit. Live long enough, of course, and nothing’s entirely new.”

I expect I managed a good blush. I mean, Luigi didn’t have a great blush, but I was pretty sure the body I was wearing could rock one solid, and based on the heat signature my cheeks and upper chest were throwing off, it was a fair bet . . . .

Focus, Weej!

It seemed like he was reading a bit of my thoughts. “If ‘Luigi’ is window-dressing, what should I call you, hmmm? What is your name?”

That’s . . . complicated. “I . . . well. I mean. I should have a name, shouldn’t I? Something I’ve always known. But I don’t. I’ve spent the last twenty-five years trying to tell myself that none of this matters. That my body is my reality, no matter what I know in my heart. I’ve tried and tried, and I just feel like every day a little more of me dies . . . .”

He rolled his eyes. “It was a straightforward question. I don’t need your psychological profile.”

Insufferable jerk! “Just because the question’s easy doesn’t mean the answer is! No need to be snide!”

“I’m a sprite, not a social worker. If you're looking for someone to dry your tears or wipe your bottom, you’ve come to the wrong shrine.”

“Fine!” His verbal bitch-slap caused my temper to flare — no doubt exactly the reaction the old bastard intended! I raised my chin. “Call me ‘Freyia.’”

“Well, that’s bold!”

“Sue me. Or she can, I suppose, though I’m pretty sure any copyright she might have had’s expired.”

“I do believe I would enjoy watching you take it up with her.” He smiled. “Alright, Freyia. I think we have the basis for a bargain. The ritual will provide you one night each year where you will be a woman in all ways – in body as well as soul; in accidents and in substance.”

“One night!”

“That’s one night a year more than you’ve ever had. And I think,” he added with a leer, “you’ll find I can make it memorable.”

“And spend every day and the other 364 nights as ‘Viscount Chingleput?’” I shivered. “No, thank you!”

“Well, somebody’s got to do it!”

You do it, if you think it’s such great shakes!”

“Me? The impertinence!”

“Why not?”

“Because I’m an immortal sprite, that’s why!” He visibly brought his temper under control. “Besides, I already told you it doesn’t work that way. The ritual regenerates my mana, my power as the sprite of this node. But power flows the other way, too. The man who takes Freyia’s form for the night rises, restored to his original form, with temporal power on the site.”

“And a good time is had by all.”

“I do my best to make it pleasant for both sides. Usually. There were some scheming shits who deserved to have their noses rubbed in it, and I’ll readily admit I enjoyed doing so. Usually, though . . . .”

“It’s just . . . business?”

He shrugged.

“Don’t you ever get tired of it?”

“I should as well ask if you get tired of eating.”

I thought about that. “Is it? Isn’t it more like asking if I ever got tired of eating boiled oats? Or drinking tea, I guess, since the answer in both cases would be a resounding ‘yes.’”

“Oh, please. If you don’t eat oatmeal, you just eat something else. Kentucky Fried Chicken, no doubt, or perhaps a ‘Big Mac,’ gods preserve your digestive tract.”

“Hey, American food’s improved a lot since you visited back in the 90’s!”

“It could scarcely get worse.”

“Says the guy whose countrymen eat fried bread.”

“The point, if we could perhaps return to it,” he said bitingly, “is that you have choices among the things that sustain you, however dubious their provenance. As we discussed last night — at some tedious length, I remind you — other sources of mana have rather dried up. I can’t loiter about, idly waiting for someone to start burning foxes on a sacrificial altar.”

“I’m guessing there are laws about that these days.”

“Doubtless. But the fact remains: No ritual, and I die.”

“That’s not what you said last night.”

“Excuse me?”

“Last night, you said that if you ran out of mana, you would simply become mortal.”

“Does the English language work differently in your upstart ‘republic?’ In this country, ‘mortal’ is the root of ‘mortality!’ I think I’m on solid ground when I suggest that the end result of being mortal is being dead.”

“But we can do something else first.” I leaned forward. “We can live!”

“Just what do you suppose I’ve been doing these last few millennia, anyhow?”

“Honestly? The same thing I’ve been doing lately. Existing.”

“Well, it’s a fine existence!”

“Is it?” I couldn’t keep the incredulity from my voice. “Is it really?”

All the thoughts that had been building in my head since the prior night suddenly boiled out as I tried, desperately, to get the sprite to understand what I was telling him. “You’ve said it yourself. Bedding a bunch of skeevy climbers so desperate for a bit of status that they’ll lie on their backs and let you do it. And once you’ve rogered them, you get to be their nursemaid for the rest of their horrid little lives. Talk about drying tears and wiping bottoms! You clean up their legal and personal messes, swat viruses that might cause them a runny nose or an early death . . . . I mean, for fork’s sake, Holweard! What kind of an existence is that?”

“The continuing kind! And, not for nothing, that’s your own family you’re maligning.”

“Don’t I know it,” I muttered. “Listen, have you ever thought that maybe Puck was right?”

“If you’d ever met him, you wouldn’t ask. I believe your charming American expression is, ‘batshit crazy.’”

“Really? Puck?”

“Not without some fine qualities, naturally. He was a sprite. But he had truly dreadful judgment, sometimes. Like when he told Gloucester he could count on the Stanleys and the Percys. Can you imagine? A potted plant would have known better.”

“I thought you said he missed that war.”

“Almost all of it — but by the time he showed up, it was too late to do much good.”

“And what he did wasn’t helpful?”

“Hardly! I mean, unless you’re fond of the Tudors . . . and I suppose your family did well enough by them.”

“He was frequently unhelpful?”

Very frequently.”

“Then suppose one day he woke up and asked himself whether what he was actually doing was, you know, useful? Helpful? Maybe he decided Britain would be no worse off without his hoof on the tiller?”

“His upper appendages were ‘hands,’ you know. Where do you get your information?”

“Wait, what? You mean there’s something wrong . . . on the internet?”

“Is that your idea of humor?”

“Mmm hmm. Occupational hazard, I’m afraid. But to return to my point, Britain was almost certainly no worse off.”

“Are you actually thinking of arguing British history with a sprite?”

“I’m an American. We do that kind of shit, like, all the time.”

“Don’t remind me. You’ll make me think kindly of the McDonalds.”

“Come on. I’m right. You reached the absolute zenith of your power and prestige after the Hanoverians took over. The greatest empire the world has ever seen.”

He waggled his fingers. “Not an unalloyed good, I think you’ll agree.”

“Alright, maybe not. But look, you had Trafalgar. And Waterloo.”

“Good moments, both. Damned Frenchmen.”

“You produced generals and statesmen like Pitt and Wellington.”

“And Cumberland, and Lord North for that matter, who did such a fine job with you lot.”

“That . . . kind of worked out? Anyhow, don’t forget John Russell, Gladstone and Disraeli, Lloyd George and Churchill! You had the Battle of Britain — England’s ‘finest hour!’”

“As well as Neville Chamberlain, who made it necessary to have that “finest hour.” Not to mention luminaries like his father Joseph, or Cecil Rhodes, or Lord Cardigan.”

“Cardigan? The sweater guy?”

“No, dolt, the ‘Charge of the Light Brigade’ fellow!”

“Oh, yeah. Great poem, though, you gotta admit!”

“I most assuredly do not!”

“And that’s another thing — you had incredible writers! Dickens and Brontë, Thackeray, Austen, Tennyson, Joyce —“

“Don’t go starting with the Irishmen! I did mention the whole imperial project was a mixed bag?”

“Wow! Parochial much?”

“I’m a sprite — Of course I’m parochial!”

“Okay, whatever. I guess being tied down to one hollow for a few thousand years might warp you.”

“Unlike being a rootless vagabond?”

“Point. But seriously . . . can you really say Britain would have done better — been better — if Puck, whom you called batshit crazy, stuck around to ‘help?’”

He opened his mouth for a retort, then snapped it abruptly shut.

“I didn’t think so,” I said, knowing I’d scored a point.

He shook his head. “Unlike Puck, however, I am decidedly not crazy, and Holweard’s Hollow is my care. I can’t exactly leave it to another sprite!”

“No, I know that.” I held his gaze, thinking, Here goes — for all the marbles! “But you could leave it to your child.”

He looked like I’d dropped a sequoia on his head. “My . . . child?”

“Yes, Holweard. Your child. And mine. Ours, if you’ll have me. Great heaps of them, maybe, if we’re blessed that way.”

“I’ve never . . . I mean, a sprite can’t, actually . . . .”

I’d wondered about that; the literature suggested sprites could, “actually,” but I’d had a hunch the human authors had been projecting. Not the time to explore that rabbit hole! “But a mortal can. And we do.”

He rose slowly, looked down at me, and took my hands. “It’s a crazy idea, Freyia. That’s why you came back?”

I nodded. “You could do it, couldn’t you? Use your powers to give me this form permanently, and give you mine?”

“Not that I would, you understand. But the thing’s theoretically possible. It would take most of what I have left. And, ahh . . . no offense, but your ‘form’ could use a few enhancements.”

“Hey!”

“For purposes of health, naturally.”

“Oh, really?”

“Well, maybe one or two of a more, ah, aesthetic nature.”

“Vanity, thy name is . . . Holweard?”

“Maybe a bit.” He smiled, and there was longing in it. “I’m sorry, Freyia. You’re asking for too much.”

I rose, keeping his hands in mine. “I’m asking for everything. I know that. But I offer everything, too. All that I have. All that I am. My life for yours, until death parts us.”

His hands trembled in mine.

Time to sweeten the pot. “If it helps . . . .”

“Yes?”

“If you do manage to give me children, I think I can ensure a really long supply of truly awesome homemade lasagna.”

He laughed, as I’d hoped he would. “Freyia . . . you tempt me. Truly you do.”

From deep within, I pulled a special smile. “I think I have a way to convince you.”

His eyebrow shot up. “Really?”

“If you think you’re the only one who’s tired of talking, buster, think again!”

“No commitment?” He eyed me warily.

“No. No commitment. I understand how much I’m asking. I do. But I will show you, Holweard of Holweard’s Hollow, the difference between bedding a man in a woman’s form, only eager for power, and bedding a woman. A woman who wants you for yourself. I will show you what living feels like — and what life can be!”

I disengaged a hand and placed it on his heart. “But no tricks or rituals. No magic. I’m no goddess, real or pretend. Come to me as a man and let me be your woman, if only for tonight. If only for a moment.”

That did it.

Finally — finally! — The fire in our eyes matched. Without being aware of motion, I was in his arms, and his urgent lips were pressed to mine. Every nerve in my body came alive all at once, and I seized him in a fierce and possessive grasp. You are mine, Sprite, and by my love I will redeem you!

My body was new to me, of course, but it was also right, in a way I had never experienced before. It needed no lessons in that most ancient of dances. Besides, Holweard had skill enough for us both.

Hours later, after we had exhausted ourselves again and again only to come back, insatiable, he pulled me close and laid my head above his heart, my hair cascading over him like smoke over a battlefield. A chuckle rumbled in his chest. “You lied to me, you know.”

“Hmmm?”

“You did. Twice, even.”

“I’m sneaky that way.”

“There was magic.”

“Ah. Yeah, you’ve got me there.”

He kissed me then, sweetly. Tenderly. With eyes full of both love and surrender, he murmured, “And, you are a goddess.”

~o~O~o~

Epilogue
Shingles Manor, Wensleydale, April, 2024 (four years later)

“Momma?” George looked like he was deep in thought, which probably meant he hadn’t made it to the potty in a timely manner. Somehow, he’d managed to get Play-Doh in his hair; he was clever about those sorts of things.

“Yes, darling?”

“Why Sofa so . . . borey?”

“So-FEE-a, dear. Why do you say she’s boring?”

“She sleeps ‘n eats alla time.”

All the time.” Holly, George’s twin, nodded in world-weary agreement. “She’s borning.”

“Well, she’s a baby. You weren’t any great shakes at that age, either.”

“Shakes?”

“Sleep, eat, poop. And repeat.”

The word ‘poop’ set them both off. Because of course it did.

My mom smiled. “Your Dad was worse. Pooped all day long. Poop, poop, poop.”

Her words had the desired effect, with George and Holly growing ever more animated with each repetition of the magic word. “Daddy pooped!” George crowed.

“Poopy head! Poopy head!”

Mom looked upon what she had wrought, and saw that it was good. “Freyia dear, where is old poopy head this morning?”

More hysterical laughter.

“Oh, he’s with the architects, of course. Says they have ‘no earthly idea’ when it comes to accurate historical restoration. At this rate, the main building won’t be back to its original Gothic Splendor until the sun runs out of hydrogen.”

“I want to see arc’tecs too,” Holly insisted.

“Arc’tecs! Arc’tecs!” George chanted.

“Poop!” said Holly.

My personal superhero intervened. “Shall I take them down to the site?”

“That would be wonderful, Addie! I don’t pay you enough!”

“I’ve been meaning to talk to you about that.” Addie’s smile was huge, and her eyes sparkled. “Come on, you lot! Let’s get you properly dressed, then bother your daddy for a while!”

“Poopy head!!!” George re-dissolved into a puddle of good humor.

A sudden look of concern crossed Holly’s face. “When we haved lunch?

“I want waSonya!”

Mom beamed. “Then you’re in luck – I made a whole tray just yesterday.”

A tray?” My delicate eyebrow rose.

“Well, naturally I made a bit extra. Just in case.”

“Of what, the Zombie Apocalypse?”

“Could happen,” she said placidly. “Might as well be ready.”

As Addie gathered the cherubim unto herself and commenced the process of extracting them from the room where I was feeding their three-week old sister, Mom shot me a mischievous look. “I want to look after them myself,” she said, her voice in an annoying sing-song cadence that reminded me a bit of the title character in my final blockbuster, Fus and Feathers. “I don’t neeeeed any help!”

“I’m thinking of reinstating the Baron’s Court. Getting a patent that grants me high and low justice.”

“Which might worry me,” Mom replied. “If you were the baron.”

“You’d be a lot more worried if I were barren.”

“Certainly, but . . . no danger of that, huh.”

I smiled. “Call me Myrtle the Fertile Turtle.”

Addie waved and closed the door behind as she left with her squealing charges.

With the coast clear, Mom chuckled. “He’s making up for lost time . . . daughter.”

“We both are.”

She shook her head. “I look at you, sitting there with an infant at your breast – and a fairly impressive breast it is, too! – and I still can’t believe you’re my child.”

“But then I go and open my mouth –”

“— And all doubt is removed.”

Our ritual complete, she simply sat and watched me, a smile of complete contentment on her face. It was a beautiful and peaceful moment, stolen from the whirlwind our lives had become, which . . . .

“I’ve been thinking.”

. . . . wasn’t going to last. “About what, Mom?”

“Your village, dear.”

That still sounds so effing weird. “Uh huh.”

“They have pub food. And Indian food. Don’t you think they deserve Italian?”

“You can lead a horse to pasta . . . .”

“Don’t be ridiculous! It’s pasta! If you boil it, they will come.”

“That’s what you said about the EV charging station you had them put in.”

“I did not suggest boiling the charging station!”

“The gist of your argument was remarkably similar, though.” And it always was.

“Maybe. But also I said that about the walk-in clinic. And I was right, wasn’t I?”

“Given that the alternative is a twenty-five minute drive, yes.”

“So perhaps you should listen to your mother?”

There really isn’t anything more soporific than a thirteen-pound burrito happily sucking your mammary glands dry, and that provided a pretty convenient excuse to check out. I closed my eyes and retreated from my mother’s latest scheme, a smile on my lips.

But just as I was about to slip into unconsciousness, I felt sure and practiced hands rearrange Sophia’s sleeping form, resting her snugly into the crook of my arm, well supported by the recliner. Mom’s whispered words followed me on the smooth slide to sleep: “That’s some good mischief you cooked up there, daughter!”

My husband found me there some time later, and I woke to his touch on my cheek. It was still strange to see my old face whenever I looked at him. Good thing I don’t see well in the dark!

“You sicced the children on me,’ he said accusingly.

“I did. We’re up to three – gotta switch to zone defense.”

“Now I’m going to have to convince the Chief Architect that I will execute him if he calls me ‘poopy head.’”

“I’m sure he’ll call you ‘Viscount Poopy Head.’ ‘Lord Poopy Head,’ at the very least.”

Our daughter gurgled in her sleep – a fairly normal occurrence that nonetheless appeared to melt his heart. “She’s beautiful.”

I looked down at the top of her head. “Yeah. Not bad, really.”

“Amazing. You’re getting the hang of English understatement.”

“I know, right? But don’t get any ideas, buster. I’m not going native. There will be coffee, not tea, just as soon as she’s weaned, or heads will roll – starting with yours!”

“If you insist. You’re quite certain about the name?”

I nodded. “Yep. I was thinking of surprising you, and calling her ‘Heather.’”

“You wouldn’t!”

“Oh, I would have. Absolutely. Thought I owed it to the old girl, you know.”

“Tell me you’re kidding.”

“Nope. But there. I’m a mother. I get to change my mind.”

“Thank the gods! To what do your daughter and I owe our deliverance?”

“Research, as it happens.”

He looked at me warily. “Oh?”

“Yes, indeed. See, I wanted to tell Heather, too. So she’d know how much I appreciated her so-timely bit of wisdom, the day I fully intended to leave here forever.”

His look was so similar to that of his son, when caught with cookies (sorry – not biscuits!) that I was hard-pressed not to laugh. Wisely, he kept silent.

“So imagine my surprise,” I continued, “when I discovered that she hadn’t been in the U.K. in twenty years.”

He sank into the chair opposite mine. “I am closing my eyes and imagining that very thing.”

“Are you? Oh, good. My surprise continued to grow – ballooned to amazing proportions – when I learned that she’d gotten herself attached in an informal sort of way to someone from a minor branch of the Hashemites.”

“I expect it did.”

“Had a good run, too, by all accounts, before she got bored with him and moved on. But poor Heather – no children. Not one. Astonishing.”

“Truly. Though, I actually can’t imagine what that woman would have done with them. You can’t just go baking them into pies these days.”

I smiled and waited for him to peek. When he finally did, I said, “That was quite a trick.”

“It was important.”

“Was it?”

“Freyia . . . from the first time I saw you, a fey child with enough wit at twelve to demolish your father, I knew that you might be the one — maybe the only one — who could spring the trap my existence had become. But later, I realized you were in a trap, too. One that was just as intractable as my own, and probably even more cruel. When you drove off that morning, I thought we’d both missed our only chance.”

“And you figured that what I really needed was a pep talk from Heather, of all people?”

He was silent for a moment, then picked his words with very apparent care. “I was around, you know, when you two split up.”

“Pizza Boy. I haven’t forgotten the wandering hands.”

“Something broke in you, that night. I don’t know what. Changed you. I thought, perhaps, if that wound could be healed, you might find a way to recapture the spirit I’d sensed when you were young. There were things you needed to hear from her – and things you needed to say.”

“Things I needed to hear from a fake Heather?”

“Think of it as Heather as she should have been. As she might have been, if she hadn’t been so wrapped up in herself.”

“A sort of platonic ideal of Heather, you mean?”

He winced. “While I can’t argue with your description on purely philosophical grounds, I’m acutely uncomfortable putting ‘Heather’ and ‘platonic’ in the same sentence.”

“No argument here.” I cocked my head. “For what it’s worth, you were very convincing. Had me fooled, anyway.”

“Thank you, I think. She was a memorable character, at the very least.”

“You know, you could have saved a whole lot of trouble – not to mention the need to get in Heather’s skin for an hour or so – by just being honest about what you wanted. If you’d offered me this from the start, rather than my idiot forebears’ sleazy bargain, I’d have said yes.”

He leaned back in his chair, giving me a long appraisal. When he managed to convince himself that I wasn’t going to bite, he said, “It’s not that simple. The deep magic – the real magic – there’s an order to it. A structure. You had to want it. It was the only way out, for both of us, but I couldn’t tell you that. You had to see it for yourself.”

I sat, watching him. Savoring his rare look of uncertainty. When I thought he’d sweated enough, I said, “Holweard, my love . . . .”

“Yes, darling?”

“You are so full of shit.”

“I beg your pardon!”

“I’ll think about it. You honestly want me to believe that I had to put all my cards on the table first, before you said a word about what you wanted, or — something, something, something, mumble, mumble — and the magic duck wouldn’t come down?”

“Well, not precisely . . . .”

“That is pure, unadulterated handwavium and you know it!”

“That’s . . . not a word.”

“It is in my old industry. You think I can’t recognize hokum when I hear it? Dude, I made ‘Jiro’s Heroes!’”

“Technically, if I’m not mistaken, I made it.”

Phhhhhgt. You wouldn’t have the first notion how to do that. All you got’s the pretty face.”

“And the passport, and all manner and style of identifying documents.”

“You probably think C++ is something a teacher writes on your exam sheet when he’s feeling generous. Anyhow — stop changing the subject. Your statement, remember? Booooolsheet!”

He harrumphed most impressively. “I have no idea what you’re talking about!”

“You wanted to test me first – make sure I wasn’t one of those Littons.”

“Nonsense!”

And your ego got bruised when I told you I could buy Shingles with pocket change.”

“Well, that was a bit of a shock.”

“You just couldn’t bear to be without leverage. To be the one who had to ask.”

“You’re delusional!”

“You like it when I’m on my knees, don’t you?”

“I didn’t think you objected!”

“I don’t. Not the point.” I glared until my chuckle snuck out, and once it had, the laugh followed.

Before long, we were both holding our sides, and Sophia was protesting our antics.

“You did look adorable,” he admitted.

“Cad. Oaf. Insufferable egotist!”

“But that’s why you love me.”

“Who says I love you?”

He picked up our squealing daughter, held her close against his heart, and bent to kiss me. “I say so, naturally. Do you really think I could be wrong about something so fundamental?”

And all I’d had to do was stop fussing about what would make me happy. Amazing. “No, husband. I don’t.”

– The End

~o~O~o~

Acknowledgments

Strange Manors was, as several have noted, an odd little journey, but for those of you who followed the tortured path to its end, thank you. If you left a kudo, please know it really means a lot to me. For a story like this, it usually means I managed to make you smile, and I couldn’t ask for more than that.

Most of you know how much I love to engage with comments— it’s almost like being at a party where everyone knows you and kind of thinks you’re cool. (At least, I assume that’s a good analogy; I’ve never actually been to a party that was anything like that! :)

So an extra thanks to Joanne Barbarella (Luigi’s done with the French Maid outfit, so it’s yours if you want it!), to Catherd, to Erisian (I owe you some more cliffhangers; this story didn’t begin to even the score!), to my beautiful Calabrian sister ‘Drea DiMaggio, to Dallas Eden, Rachel Moore, Suzi Auchentiber, Dee Sylvan, Dave the Outsider, Bru, Patricia Marie Allen, Kimmie (you really got in Luigi’s head), JessicaNicole, Iolanthe Portmanteau, Rebecca Anna (the fair damsel of the sunflowers), Siteseer, Francesca Walker, AvidReader59, Ricky (who taught me everything I know about writing banter), Gillian Chambers and Gillian Cairns, Guest Reader, that lovely mermaid Laika, Lucy Perkins, Jill Rasch, Eric, Bytebak, Ron Houston, Emma (“cemma”, whom I will always regard as Emma Prime), Greybeard, Taryntula, and BarbieLee. Thank you, thank you, thank you, for joining the party!!!

That list is missing four names, because I need to mention them separately. I have been here less than two years, and I feel like I am constantly “meeting” wonderful people whom everyone here has known and adored forever. I recently started a lovely correspondence with both Bronwen_Welsh (“Bronwen O Cymru!”), and Sara Keltaine, both of whom are amazing women and talented writers. Out of the blue, Bronwen offered to proofread each chapter of Strange Manors, and with her help what you read was as free of errors as I can possibly achieve. And I have to thank Sara for introducing me to the useful term “handwavium,” which Freyia was able to deploy to such good effect in the epilogue.

Finally, I cooked up the idea for this story with my Glaswegian friend RobertLouis shortly after he helped me with the later chapters of Decision Matrix. Robert knows the Dales well, and helped me with mood and setting before I even put fingers to keyboard. After that, he also gave me a beta read on each chapter, as did AlisonP, who is one of my earliest friends here on BC and the one who encouraged me to keep writing after my first story was complete. Writing lengthy bits of dialogue with British characters would have been bonkers if I didn’t have Robert and Alison there to check my work, especially since I was trying to write something I could plausibly pass off as “humorous” wherever — and however— English is spoken! Thank you two so much, both for your help, and for your constant support for my writing.

Many, many thanks, everyone. Good night, and joy be with you all!

May 3, 2024
— Emma Anne Tate

For information about my other stories, please check out my author's page.

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Comments

Farewell (or is it only adieu?) to your Manor

I have loved every word of it, and feel jealous of your abilities.
If only I could write such rapid-fire conversation which (amost) doesn't make sense, but then when all is complete, actually did!
That's my life. Those who can do, and we who cannot are, however, fortunate in being able to read what someone else has achieved.
Thank you so much Emma, I look forward to your next.
Dave
P.S. Right from the start I have mentally read "Holweard" as "Whole Weird" with an increasingly justified feeling of correctness!

Holweard

Emma Anne Tate's picture

Dear Dave — I’m so glad you enjoyed this romp! I’m not sure what it says about your sanity, though, that you came around to concluding that my dialogue made sense. :)

“Holweard” is a mash-up of two Old English words; it means “cave guardian.” Luckily, I knew Erin was kinda busy running a website and a publishing company, because she probably would have twigged to it right off the bat!

Emma

Farewell (or is it only adieu?) to your Manor (slightly edited)

I have loved every word of it, and feel jealous of your abilities.
If only I could write such rapid-fire conversation which (amost) doesn't make sense, but then when all is complete, actually did!
That's my life. Those who can, do, and we who cannot, are however, fortunate in being able to read what someone else has achieved.
Thank you so much Emma, I look forward to your next.
Dave
P.S. Right from the start I have mentally read "Holweard" as "Whole Weird" with an increasingly justified feeling of correctness!

Not Sure I Should Even Guess...

...but I'm thinking that someone from the area would elide it into something like Hollerd's Holler.

Eric

I’m going to have to defer . . .

Emma Anne Tate's picture

. . . to my esteemed local guides, Robert and Alison, when it comes to pronunciation. Robert and I had quite the back-and-forth on my attempt at a phonetic spelling for “shallah pute yer bag in’t boot!” Lucy Perkins is also from the area, so she might know. But interestingly, your suggested pronunciation would also work in Appalachia, a region where linguistic drift from original roots has been less pronounced than in most of the United States.

Emma

Pronunciation

Robertlouis's picture

Place names often shift over the centuries into something that’s easier on the tongue, so Hollard is a possibility, but it wouldn’t be holler. It would be ‘Ollow, and that second syllable would be lengthy and rounded.

☠️

There's nowt wrong wi' tha accent, Duck.

Lucy Perkins's picture

I 'ave to say that tha's gorit bang on reet!
Sorry but autocorrect is not happy, so I will revert to my posh voice. I do think that you managed brilliantly between you to simulate the Yorkshire dialect. Of course, even within Yorkshire there are regional variations of accent. As a lass from South Yorkshire ( think Sean Bean, Brassed Off and possibly The Full Monty) much of my dialect is very different from the way that people in West or North Yorkshire speak.
In my hometown, it is quite normal to call a total stranger "Mi Duck" without getting an odd look. Still, as they say there "there's nowt sa queer as folk"
On the wider issue, I absolutely loved this story, both the first time I read it, and when I binge read it in one go yesterday. Just the tonic I needed.
Thank you Emma for a comedy masterpiece.
BTW, I loved your brief allusion to the Monty Python scene
" One day son, all this will be yours"
"What, the curtains?"
Genius!
Lucy xx

"Lately it occurs to me..
what a long strange trip its been."

Tha’s a relief!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

So glad it passed muster with the Yorkshire Girl — And one who likes Monty Python, too! Makes me think of old times, it does. Who would have thought, thirty years ago, we'd all be sitting here drinking Château de Chaselet, eh? :)

Emma

And try telling that to the kids of today..

Lucy Perkins's picture

We didn't have the price of a cup of tea..
A cup of cold tea..
Wi' owt milk
Or sugar
Or tea

Oh no that has set me off. My dear better half has locked herself in the garden shed, as one of my recital sessions can last all day.
A lot of people in this country pooh pooh Australian table wines. This is a great pity as...*fades into the distance*

"Lately it occurs to me..
what a long strange trip its been."

We Couldn't Afford Shoes

joannebarbarella's picture

So we had to walk two miles barefoot in the snow to get to and from school. That was OK, but it was carrying the bloody horse that really stank.

2 miles

You're forgetting it was uphill both ways!

And when we got home . . .

Emma Anne Tate's picture

. . . our father would cut us in two with a bread knife and dance on our graves, singin’ hallelujah. :)

Emma

Three dozen years ago

i.e. somewhat over the 30 mentioned, I used to indulge in Château Chirac.
(Very obscure reference.)

Chateau Chirac!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

None of the alcohol, and twice the parasites! Though it seems Monsieur Le Mayor may have overindulged in his own supply . . . .

I wasn’t able to manage a “true Bru” twist with this story, since the final surprise wasn’t in the last line. But I hope I kept you guessing, nonetheless. :)

Emma

About the same timescale

Lucy Perkins's picture

I was in a youth hostel in Paris, which was so posh, that Château Chirac (and a lot of rust) came out of the taps.
Not a wine for drinking. Definitely a wine for laying down and avoiding.

"Lately it occurs to me..
what a long strange trip its been."

A whine for you? Iron enriched and all!

The additional iron probably had more to do with the hostel you were staying at. Never had that problem in my flat in the 7th arrondissement.

Actually the quality of Chateau Chirac wasn't that bad. As long as you didn't mind it being a "bit" on the hard side.

Yes, the bacteria were different from what I was used to, so I had an interesting first night and then no problems at all for the next two years.

You might think that it'd difficult to be a non-alcohol drinker in France? Not at all! The French accept that people are individuals with sometimes eccentric ideas. At the time I developed a slight expertise regarding different mineral waters instead.

Pronunciation 2

Robertlouis's picture

There’s always the peculiarity, unique to Yorkshire, of dropping ‘h’ at the start of a word and inserting an entirely unnecessary ‘t’.

Classic example: “Close the door, please.”

In Yorkshire: “Put t’wood in’t th’ oil.”

Translation: “Put the wood in the hole.”

Easy, isn’t it? As I said, county and country divided by the same language.

If any of you ever visit God’s Own Country, I’m available as both guide and translator, and remember - I know where Holweard lives!

☠️

I’m not completely convinced . . .

Emma Anne Tate's picture

. . . that you and Holweard aren’t actually the same guy. I mean, I’ve never seen both of you in the same room together. Hmmmmm!

Emma

Actually…

Robertlouis's picture

…I’m more of a George Deavers type. *bows*

☠️

I can see that.

Emma Anne Tate's picture

I can absolutely see that!

Emma

Amazing Story...

...in at least two senses of the word. Great work.

It probably goes without saying that a story like this one -- discrete scenes set over many years -- stands or falls on its dialogue. As one expects from Emma, this one stands proudly. (And unlike Maximum Warp, this time I didn't feel as though I was missing out on half the references.)

I should go back to #6 again and read the conversation with Heather (and for that matter the one with Holweard) again in light of the new information here.

Eric

Actually...

Dee Sylvan's picture

I would recommend going back and rereading the whole story (I did). It's amazing how many things Emma cleverly set up over several chapters including Heather, Holweard, Mom, etc. I got many more of the MW references than these. What's up with Littons and their talking? :DD

DeeDee

I Think You're Right...

I do plan to read it all again. Actually, I'm pretty sure I've read everything Emma has posted at least twice -- except for MW.

Eric

Discrete scenes

Emma Anne Tate's picture

Doing discrete scenes that span a period of years is something I’ve been experimenting with. I did something similar with Sundown. Like most writing techniques, it’s got good and bad points. What I like about it is that I can show growth and character development over time without either writing a massive tome, or having stultifying blocks of explanatory techs bridging the gaps (“As the years passed, Luigi focused on his career, building a gaming powerhouse that centered on a recurring cast of characters, most notably the incredibly irritating “Jiro” and his evil twin “Fus” — Luigi’s effort to get back at Nintendo founder Fusajiro Yamauchi for his annoyingly adorable Mario Kart character “Luigi”). Instead, I can primarily rely on dialogue, which is more interesting to both write and read.

Emma

A Joy to Read

As always! The lively banter between those two! Oh my goodness. Thank you again for sharing your gift with us!!

Banter

Emma Anne Tate's picture

I’d never tried to write any kind of dialogue before starting my first story back in the summer two years ago. But what really helped me develop a feel for writing banter was attempting to extend Ricky’s wonderful story Reprogramming Your Life. I knew it wouldn’t be worth the effort if I couldn’t capture the feel of Ricky’s always-amazing and witty dialogue, so I spent a lot of time analyzing what makes it so good. Not just the tone, but also the technical structure of the dialogue, the way Ricky was able to keep it both light and fast-paced. As I said above, I learned everything I know about writing banter from Ricky. What I didn’t say, though it is equally true, is that I sure didn’t learn everything Ricky knows about it!

Emma

Lovely, just lovely!

Erisian's picture

Emma, this is a wonderful tale and has been a tremendous joy to read each week. Expertly written, hon, beautifully done. And yep, one night a year was never going to be enough!

Thank you for brightening each Friday with this magic!

- Erisian <3

Thanks, Erisian!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

So glad I could bring you a smile or seven! One night a year was not enough to put up with having to be “Viscount Chingleput,” but hey — for the chance to be a woman, wife and mother, endowed with goddess-quality looks and stupid money, even a dedicated small-r republican can swallow a bit of pride and put up with being a viscountess. :)

And, yes, “pride” was the word I intended there. Heavens. Minds out of the gutter, people!

Emma

Giving C++ is never generous

No matter the context.

Countless small details like this, that repay careful attention, have made this an absolute delight for nerds like me. Thank you, Emma.

Giving C++ is never generous

Erm, I OBJECT to that statement, all it means is you are telling someone to get with the Program.

Zing!!!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

Brilliant, Kimmie, as always!

Emma

Post Increment

No COMMENT!

It’s a British thing

Emma Anne Tate's picture

I’d never encountered the concept of grades with double pluses, double minuses, of forward slashes before spending a year in the U.K. It’s not an American thing. I suppose it gives instructors the ability to show fine distinctions, but to an American ear it verges on the comical. I can recall a lecturer telling a student, at the conclusion of his oral presentation, that it was a “competent effort” ( the student gasped, “Oh, dear!”), that might rate a “beta double-plus, query alpha slash beta.” (That “beta” was pronounced “beater” only made it funnier). That such a quintessentially British thing, which Holweard would know intimately, could be juxtaposed with a modern programming language that Luigi would know, was too good to pass up!

Emma

A fantastic story Emma

In the true sense of the word, a fantasy. To be honest at times I found it confusing, erratic and almost impossible fo follow, but absorbing, humorous and unputdownable (I hope that is a proper word, but if not you aren't the only one that can make up weird things ). I've read every word from start to finish, but am certain that if I read it again and again I will still miss some of the subtle nuances. Thank you ever so much for an intriguing, thought-provoking and entertaining time following Luigi's adventures.

photo-1592621385612-4d7129426394_1710612803242_0.jpg

Gill xx

“Unputdownable” is in the dictionary

Emma Anne Tate's picture

I’m sure it is. Right after “unobtainium.” :)

I honestly thought this story would be harder for my own countrymen to follow than for Brits. British history and myth may be a second language to me, but it’s a strong second; for most Americans, it’s, well, not. (The “don’t know much about history” scene in Chapter Two was a nod to Luigi’s peculiarity in that regard). But I know I jumped around a lot, too. Thanks for staying with it!

Emma

Grazie molto!

Andrea Lena's picture

Tutto è bene quel che finisce megli! Casalinga Gamgee - Madre di Samsaggia

A tuo piacimento? Penso di essere quasi pronto per un'altra avventura.

oh....e dei musticiolli con salsiccia dolce.

  

To be alive is to be vulnerable. Madeleine L'Engle
Love, Andrea Lena

Bellissima Andrea!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

Oh, dolcezza delle donne, sei sempre troppo gentile! I must congratulate you on seeing the key that the false Heather provided Luigi, that unlocked the puzzle. Once Luigi stopped thinking about what she could get, and started thinking about what she could give — and what the Sprite might, deep down, be needing — her path became clear.

As for dinner options, my dear, you still haven’t answered my cross-cultural question. Should lasagna be made with mozzarella, like a Calabrian, or with bechamel, like a Sicilian? Your ancestors are watching (but, of course, in a completely supportive and non-judgmental way :)

Emma

Field of dreams...

Dee Sylvan's picture

"If you boil it, they will come.” Your muse must've been on a second or third pot of coffee the way the zingers kept coming. Holweard and Freyia were made for each other. Both parties feeling so proud to have outsmarted the other, but all they wanted was to meet their equal. You are amazing Emma, setting up some of these zingers chapters ago, and not letting on.

Freyia's mom couldn't possible have imagined the delightful outcome that her precocious little Luigi would go on to achieve. Talk about getting blood from a rock, Mom got grandchildren from a burned out contentious millionaire! Even Addie got rewarded for putting up with Weeji for all those years.

Thank you for sharing your gift with us, Emma. You're a kind, loving soul, and we mortals appreciate all that you do. :DD

DeeDee

To the heart of it . . . .

Emma Anne Tate's picture

Dee, you always see to the heart of my stories, which are almost always about people and relationships. That, as Holweard and Plato might say, is the substance. The rest — pretty clothes and exotic locales, witty banter or pregnant pauses, are merely accidents, however decorative.

I’m sorry that I cheated on the redemptive arc for poor Heather. When I wrote that scene, I hadn’t decided whether that would actually be Heather, or Holweard. I toyed with the idea of writing the ending both ways and testing them out on Robert and Alison, but I wrote this ending first and once I had, I put the figurative pen down. It just made more sense, and added so much to Holweard’s character. But, I did give Heather the opportunity to drain some money from Jordan’s royal family. It’ll have to do.

Thank you, as always, for your warm, generous and supportive comments.

Emma

Since You Brought It Up...

...my original reading of Heather's fate was that she died after some sort of extended royal family intrigue, either because she pushed too hard or because someone involved in a more formal relationship decided that her informal one was a threat to them. (As the old punchline says, hey, it's the Middle East.)

My reasoning was that both Holweard and Freyia seemed awfully certain that she hadn't returned to the U.K,, considering that she apparently hadn't been heard from in years.

But I guess that wasn't where you were going with that.

Eric

She got bored

Emma Anne Tate's picture

All Freyia says is that Heather got bored of the princeling and moved on. As for being certain, remember that Freyia is staggeringly wealthy (well, the Viscount is, technically, but he’s certainly not so crazy that he would try to control Freyia’s purse-strings!). Tracking people in our digital age isn’t all that difficult, and if you’re willing to pay a bit of money, it’s absurdly easy.

Emma

Sorry, I Misread It...

...and thought it said that they'd been unable to find her after her time in Jordan. (Which as you said, given their research capabilities, would suggest that wasn't there to be found.)

Eric

As George Bernard Shaw so eloquently stated……

D. Eden's picture

“England and America are two countries separated by the same language.” Although there is no actual proof that it was Shaw, and there are some who say it was Oscar Wilde or even Winston Churchill, lol. I’ll go with Shaw if that’s OK with everyone here…….

The point being that I give full credit to anyone who can credibly write in the other form of English - the one that is not native to them. I have seen many an author try, but most never quite get it right. I for one would never even attempt it! I have enough trouble simply not dropping into technical mode, lol.

You not only did an admiral job, but you made it humerous. Handwavium indeed! That’s pretty much up there with “unobtanium”, lol.

To quote Hunter S. Thompson, “It never got weird enough for me.”

Well, this one definitely hit pretty high on the weird meter Honey - but you pulled it all together in the end, and most important of all, it held my interest and it made me laugh.

D. Eden

Dum Vivimus, Vivamus

In fact…

Robertlouis's picture

…as Emma and I discovered while proofreading Strange Manors, it isn’t just the US and the UK, but to add an even more parochial slant, Yorkshire and England are two parts of one country divided by the same language! We had a lot of fun getting the local vernacular just right - and the accent in the Dales is very different to the city of York, where I live. I can think of at least 20 different and distinct accents in Yorkshire. It’s very diverse in that sense.

☠️

Littons

Dee Sylvan's picture

I couldn't find a reference to the running joke about the Littons and excessive talking. Can you explain? :DD

DeeDee

I am so sorry. There’s no pony.

Emma Anne Tate's picture

I just pulled the family name out of a hat; it had a good English sound to it. (Well, not completely out of a hat . . . I’m pretty sure that the cat burglar in the original Pink Panther movie was named Sir Charles Lytton). Holweard just bitches about them talking too much because Luigi seems to prefer talking to more, shall we say, vigorous pursuits.

Emma

Exercising some literary license...

Dee Sylvan's picture

I see, said the blind man. Littons indeed! In other words, what I have previously described as an Emma-ism. lol. :DD

DeeDee

Sometimes

Emma Anne Tate's picture

I’ll cop to dropping a lot of obscure references, but occasionally I just make sh*t up. As Freud once said, “sometimes a cigar is just a cigar.” :)

Emma

A mountain o’ weird!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

Yup, this was a whole lot of weird. But I’m really glad it worked for you and kept you laughing! Thank you for reading my scribbles even when I’m chasing the muse through some very strange places.

Sara would have to confirm, but I think she indicated that “handwavium” and “unobtainium” are found in the same manual. I just love the term. Yes, it’s completely made-up, but it’s incredibly pithy and so perfectly expresses the concept that it needs absolutely no explanation. If the writers for the original Star Trek didn’t coin it, they should have!

Emma

Speedy ending!

I mean, the strings leading to this ending was carefully laid out and then they suddenly get pulled all together to get to the ending all in one chapter, a classic snare trap ending :)

I did not see this ending coming as I did not think Luiji was necessarily TS.

Edit: I had to chew on the ending a bit more and in a way it is a pretty sad view of humanity in that those who took the deal with Holweard did not or could not do better. I do not remember Holweard actually mentioning that he liked or respected any of his charges.

In a more ideal world he (it? I did not think sprites/spirits necessarily have genders *shrug*) could've found solace in being like a Mr Chips character, improving those under his care to accomplish great things in the world before the inevitable passing. That could have made it worthwhile.

Instead, he is opting for his own needs as the only way forward, finally able to provide and foster a generation of those same imperfect though hopefully far better than those random people he had to deal with by happenstance. It certainly is not easy being a sprite.

Hopefully in doing so he made himself far more long lived than Luigi was when he took on his appearance. Maybe he had a little magic left over ? Mortals should be able to wield magic I would imagine and he did state that it would take all he had at the moment to get the deal done but did he include the influx from such a willing joining?

A humanist, in the very best way

Emma Anne Tate's picture

Kimmie, I love how you think about characters and really get in their heads. It’s very much what I try to do myself when I’m writing (or editing, for that matter). I am constantly asking whether person A would say a particular thing to character B under the circumstances presented, or if that rings somehow false emotionally. It’s harder when I’m writing humor, because there are times when I have to pass up a really good joke because it doesn’t fit the character or the moment.

I was deliberately cagey about Luigi’s trans status, leaving only obscure and inconclusive hints here and there, so that I wouldn’t telegraph the ending far in advance. Luigi kept dressing even after his father’s death, of course, and he explains his decision to stay with Heather in terms that make it sound like he was using her as a “beard.” After Heather and his mom leave at the end of Chapter Three, when he faces the reality that Heather only gave him the time of day because of the possibility that he might inherit some meaningless title, he resolves to put away “foolishness” and become a person no-one would ignore. But when Holweard, pretending to be Heather, says he’s an appalling liar, he thinks, “you have no idea” precisely because, at a deep level, he understands that his whole public life is a lie.

I do think the sprite boxed himself into a sad existence by adapting Freyia’s ritual. It was bad enough with the monks, since he necessarily had to elevate the most hypocritical of them (true believers would have had no truck with worldly “power”). With the Littons, however, he tied himself to the worst features of inherited status. However impressive the guy who is awarded honors in the first instance, there’s no guarantee that any fine characteristics will pass to later generations. Indeed, powerful forces push the other way. Inbreeding, for one (Luigi was blessed to come half from good peasant stock), but also the corrosive nature of unearned privilege itself. As Luigi is pacing the 80-foot long bedroom at Shingles, he notes that his father was born into all that, with people catering to his every whim from the time he was born, and concludes that it’s no wonder the man was so messed up.

Still, with Luigi/Freyia’s help, the Sprite was able to trade a continued, but uninspiring, existence for a life with genuine love and children. He did mention he had enough juice to give his version of Luigi’s body some upgrades “mostly for health reasons,” so he should have a decent run. Your thought that he received an extra jolt of manna as the result of his voluntary joining with Freyia, life for life, is an intriguing one. Have you been chatting with our mutual friend, the Seraph of Cliffhangers? :)

Thank you for your careful reading and insightful comments. I’m always encouraged when you decide to follow a story — I know you’ll keep me honest.

Emma

You Didn't Even Make Me Smile

joannebarbarella's picture

No! You had me rolling on the floor laughing my ass (OK, I'll succumb to the American usage!) off.

From the "I don't work for free!"

"Think of it as a recruiting expense!"

The repartee just got funnier and funnier. You've complained to me in private that you have trouble writing comedy. Well, my dear, maybe you do, but FUCK, it's funny.

I will really appreciate that French Maid's outfit, but do you have a time machine as well, hidden in your wardrobe, to make it fit?

What a wonderful addition to our pantheon you are.

Humor is hard!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

I mean, I know what makes me laugh, but whether it’ll work for anyone else is always a mystery.

What’s really hard, though, is when there are serious parts to the story I want to tell (and there almost always are). Somehow I have to bring those out, without completely changing the overall tone of the story. I hate to have people think they’re getting a bait-and-switch. I found that balance hard here, just like I did in MaxWarp and Being Beatrice (it wasn’t as much of a problem in Resolving Reese, probably because that story was so short).

Thank you for your wonderful comments and your always warm support. Love ya, woman!

Emma

You always make me smile

gillian1968's picture

It’s only part of why your stories are so good, but it makes them special!

Gillian Cairns

Thank you, Gillian!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

I smile every time I see one of your comments, too!

Emma

Wonderful wrap-up of this tale

A Happy Ever After finish where everyone wins, all beautifully wrapped up with a bow on top, what more could anyone wish for - and I don't think anyone saw it coming - or spotted the truth in Heather's return.

As many others have already said, the dialogue is excellent - and it was excellent from the first draft that I saw. I think you've spent too much time this side of the pond - you have very nearly been assimilated!

A joy from start to finish.

Alison

Clinging to my coffee!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

I absolutely loved my time in the UK, but there’s enough stubborn Yankee in my blood that I’ll (probably) avoid assimilation, though my buddy Dee isn’t so sure! I’ll eschew tea except when I’m ill and I will never take to marmite. :)

Thank you for helping me with this story and giving me some confidence that I wasn’t completely butchering the mother tongue. Your support for my fledging efforts at writing has always meant a great deal to me. If it would not violate English propriety, I’d give you a big hug!

Emma

Like Americans

joannebarbarella's picture

The Brits have no idea how to make a decent cup of coffee! All that Starbucks stuff will just bring a dismissive sneer from the French, the Italians and yes, the Aussies.

We invented Vegemite and the Brits tried and failed to copy it. There is only one Vegemite!

The folks at Starbucks

Patricia Marie Allen's picture

Starbucks wouldn't know a good blend of coffee if they were drowning in it. Even as American "espresso" shop go, they don't even produce third rate coffee. They've achieved dominance in the area by buying up the companies that did and threatened to take some of their business.

Case in point: In Portland Oregon, there used to be a company called "Coffee People." They used a superior blend and thoroughly trained their staff in the fine art of brewing. They also had a very imaginative menu for variations. So much better than Starbucks that they weren't even in the same league. They had shops all over the Portland metro area. They threatened to dominate the Portland market. Starbucks dug deep in their pockets and offered the owners enough that they couldn't bring themselves to turn it down.

In the sale, Starbucks made it a condition that they couldn't even use the name "Coffee People" save for one shop in the Portland Airport, inside the concourse. That was bad enough, but Starbucks doesn't even offer a brew from the bled of the old Coffee People.

The best coffee I've ever made is what is commonly referred to as "cowboy coffee." It calls for cold water in a pot and ground coffee floating on top before the heat is applied. The brew is to be brought to a temp just below boiling (approximately 190 F) then taken from the heat and a half a cup of cold water drizzled around the top of the brew,

That's the only brew that I can drink black. Oh, and I make it using 100% Columbian dark roast.

Hugs
Patricia

Happiness is being all dressed up and HAVING some place to go.
Semper in femineo gerunt
Ich bin eine Mann

Stahbucks

Emma Anne Tate's picture

But Chahhhlie . . . Stahbucks don't want coffee with good taste! Stahbucks wants coffee that tastes good!

Honestly, I couldn't agree with you more. If you burn your beans like Starbucks does, you can't tell the difference between Brazilian Santos and Jamaican Blue Mountain. I firmly believe that Starbucks is what tea drinkers think coffee drinkers drink.

Emma

Starbucks is hideous

Robertlouis's picture

It always has that sweetish aftertaste, but without it tastes of, well, nothing. And the fact that it seems to have acquired a virtual monopoly not only in airports and malls but even hotels and, ye gods, hotel restaurants, makes me pine for home and my plumbed in Gaggia machine.

You can get decent coffee in the UK, but it’s a bit of a Round Table knight’s quest. Find a reliable independent with a good fairtrade roast and stick to it.

☠️

Marmite

I've honestly never tasted marmite - the smell turns my stomach so much I've never got close enough to actually taste it... Yes, some this side of the pond apparently like it - as it's still on the supermarket shelves - but it's certainly not a necessary qualification to be British!

Tea is another matter entirely :)

Hugs always welcome, forget English propriety - we're not all that bad. You've become a good friend on here as well.

Alison

Marmite

Robertlouis's picture

Hello Alison!

And, moreover, Fellow Emma Elf.

I agree entirely with you about Marmite - it’s the noxious substance that gathers in Old Nick’s hooves.

Those on the other side of the pond may not be aware that, here in the UK, “Marmite” is the universal shorthand for anything or any person who divides opinion to such an extent that there are no shades of grey. It’s an absolute: yes or no.

My other, more personal reason for loathing the stuff is to do with its manufacture - both where and how it’s made.

To explain: Marmite is malt-based and is a byproduct of brewing. Burton on Trent is the traditional home of British brewing, because of the amount of naturally occurring alum salts in the water. It’s also where India Pale Ale (IPA) was first brewed.

Now, I had to visit Burton every week for several years for business reasons, and on Wednesdays, when they made a new batch of Marmite, the smell permeated the entire town and the surrounding countryside.

And the smell was that of rotting cabbage. It was genuinely nauseating. And I had to put up with it every week. And knew it.

So that’s why I hate Marmite.

☠️

Marmite people

Hello Robert - I like the Emma's Elf reference. Being an Elf is an honourable calling - where would my favourite TV program, QI, be without their elves...?

Marmite people indeed - Margaret Thatcher, Jeremy Corbyn and Trump are the three most extreme examples I can think of, although there will be many others.

I used to live close enough to Burton that it was a regular shopping town for me, and also my local hospital and I remember the smell very well, although I never noticed a correlation with Wednesdays... However, my nausea at the smell goes back to my earliest encounter, around age 13. I always think of it as the toxic sludge left over after sewage processing. Each to their own I suppose.

Alison

I’m the same with peanut butter

Robertlouis's picture

Weirdly, I love peanuts in the shell, dry roasted and salted, but I can’t even bear to be in the same room with an open jar of peanut butter. As they say where I come from, it fair gies ye the dry boak!

Yours,

Emma’s Ither Elf

☠️

Elves?

Emma Anne Tate's picture

Maybe Sherpas, doing all the work while I, in the fine tradition of Sir Edmund Hillary, get all the un-earned glory and have my thoughts recorded in Bartlett’s Familiar Quotations. But that metaphor doesn’t work either. It doesn’t capture a necessary element: you both are inspirational.

Now, as to marmite . . . I am confident it would not divide opinion in this country. No, it would be one of those rare things, like the eclipse, that would unite Democrats and Republicans, theists, atheists, and agnostics, city mice and country mice, Yankee fans and Red Sox Nation. We would all loathe the stuff.

Figures it’s a byproduct of making IPA. Yechhhhhh!

Emma

Elves in 21st century

There is a TV program called QI (Quite Interesting). Originally hosted by Stephen Fry, now by Sandi Toksvig. It's an excellent program and they refer to their researchers as the Elves, and they are listed in the credits as such.

Anyway, I'm sure it is clear to everyone that the one with the inspiration and (sometimes twisted) imagination is yourself, and I'm sure Robert will agree that our part is peripheral to that. They also serve who only stand and wait, in our case we wait for the literary pearls that fall from your pen, and then do what we can to perhaps help polish those pearls a little.

I'm glad we all agree on Marmite!

Alison

So do sprites

Wendy Jean's picture

Go back before there was man? She would be quite a lovely witness too much of our history and not all of it good.

A long ways, anyhow

Emma Anne Tate's picture

Holweard simply says that he's been around "since the world was young." He probably doesn't mean that in a geological sense! The Sprite's knowledge of humankind was long and deep, and appeared to be a bit cynical as a result. That said . . . Holweard's view was also pretty parochial. Mostly, he stayed on the Dales.

Emma

He Probably Composed

joannebarbarella's picture

"Sympathy For The Devil". 'I've been around for a long, long time'.

Please Allow Me

joannebarbarella's picture

To introduce myself. I'm a man of wealth and taste.

Holweard would definitely rock those criteria. One of the best rock songs ever penned.

Loved it...

RachelMnM's picture

And certainly sad to this one ended - but in regards to ending - so well played. Damn! You've got chops Ms. Emma! The convo in this chapter alone sparkled and glistened! Brilliantly done and THANK YOU for sharing this tale with us! <3

XOXOXO

Rachel M. Moore...

Thanks, Rachel!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

I'm glad you enjoyed the ending -- the difficulty I had was trying to make the romance work without spoiling the earlier light tone. Thanks for your wonderful comments throughout. As always, you da bomb!!!

Emma

On heck of a..

Sunflowerchan's picture

One heck of a moving story. Thank you so much for writing it. I wish I could say more, but I'm quite blown away. You pulled off the ending the only way Emma Anne Tate can. With Wiz-bangs, fireworks, and the whole nine yards. Thank you for sharing this highly amusing tale with us!

Thank you, Rebecca!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

I find it’s difficult to manage both “humorous” and “moving” in the same story. Erin and Rasufelle do this beautifully in most of their stories, but I struggle with it. I’m glad it worked for you. Thank you very much for the lovely comments. :)

Emma

Glorious - truly scrumptious !

SuziAuchentiber's picture

Thank you Emma for such a glorious romp - entertaining in every paragraphy, stanza and phrase that greets the eye.
I loved the humour and the examination of British History which is always a rich seam of comedy and farce !!
Wonderful work as ever!
Hugs&Kudos.

Suzi

Thank you, Suzi!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

I am so glad you enjoyed the story — and positively delighted that you joined BC. You are an extraordinarily cheerful presence!

Emma

Not done reading yet, but I have to say...

Iolanthe Portmanteaux's picture

I've never made a comment in the midst of reading, but I just have to exclaim here. It's so good! So unexpected! Big cheers!

- iolanthe

And yes, wow, all the threads nicely tucked away at the end

Iolanthe Portmanteaux's picture

Well, done -- I'm sorry it took me so long to read this, but it's certainly one of your best, which is saying a lot.

You very deftly manoeuvred without a hitch from the world of sprites and moonlit hollows to the land of the domestic goddess.

I thoroughly enjoyed every minute of it.

hugs and hugs again,

- iolanthe

From Plato to Play Dough

Emma Anne Tate's picture

Yeah, this chapter had to cover a lot of ground — I’m so very glad you enjoyed it! Don’t worry about how long it takes you to get to things. We all have Play Dough to contend with, in one form or another — the frustrating, wonderful, and quotidian demands that make up a life. Your comments are all the more precious for that, and always worth the wait. :)

Emma

Definitely a fun read!

Wendy Jean's picture

I just reread the story, not that I remember with my brain damage. When I left comments and kudos wherever I went. If you haven't read this it is definitely worth your time.

Thanks, Wendy Jean!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

I’m delighted that the story held up to a re-reading. :)

Emma