Read Fimbulwinter (Daniel Black) Online
Authors: E. William Brown
“We left a few men in Lanrest when we first set out,” Rain explained
when I asked about it. “For the first few days we were sending the wounded
back to town as well, and there are a few men who thought the camp had been
wiped out in that giant attack and made their way back on foot. We’ve got
seventeen men who can fight, and another twenty-odd wounded.”
“Any sign of Rolf and his band of deserters?” I asked.
“Not a hint. That’s just as well, though. I’d have to hang them, but with
our losses the men are in no mood for that.”
“I suppose not,” I agreed. “So, I take it the Baron still isn’t too happy
with you?”
Considering that the tavern was outside the town wall, odds were they
wouldn’t go more than a few days before something snuck in to attack them in
the middle of the night. That couldn’t be an accident.
“We’re on shit duty,” he confirmed. “I asked about moving the men into
one of those new towers you’re building, but he said he was reserving the
space for his own retainers.”
“You could always jump ship,” I suggested. “I’m leaving as soon as the
wall is done, and I could use some professional soldiers.”
He shook his head. “I wish I could, but our contract runs for another
month. Besides, the Baron wouldn’t allow a body of troops that aren’t under
his control to stay here. If I break the contract he’ll run us out of town before
sunset.”
“If you stay here another month he’s going to get you killed,” I pointed
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out. “You heard him plotting to thin out the refugees, and those are his own
people. The closer you get to the end of your contract the less he’s going to
trust you. He’ll send you to scout for giants, or collect food from ruined
villages, or whatever it takes to make sure none of you are alive by then.”
“No Margold company has broken a contract in seventy years,” he said
stubbornly. “I’m not going to be the first. If he orders us to do something
suicidal then he’s in breach of the contract, and we can pull out. But unless he
does we’re stuck.”
I sighed. “I’m sorry to hear that. I suppose your loyalty speaks well of
you, but it’s damned inconvenient for me. Ah, well. Are you still supposed to
be providing my escort?”
“Yes, and I can spot you a couple of guards for your tower too. Just
don’t expect us to turn on our employer.”
“I get the picture. Go ahead and send them over, then. I’ll be starting on
the wall in a bit.”
Rather than walk back to my tower, I swung by the docks and moved
the hover-barge. I still didn’t trust the situation, and I wanted the thing close at
hand just in case. I reshaped the embankment next to my tower into a dock just
big enough to hold it, and resolved to come back and finish the improvements
I’d been planning sometime soon. It needed a roof, and some kind of heating
system, and manual controls so I didn’t have to steer it myself. Of course,
controls would also mean someone could steal it.
One of the refuge girls peeked curiously over the side of the stairs as I
parked the barge. What was her name again? Gudrin, that was it.
“Good morning, milord,” she said cheerfully, her breath misting in the
chill air. “Are we going to be leaving on that thing, then?”
I almost reminded her I wasn’t a lord. But no, that was a bad habit. It
was becoming increasingly clear that if I wanted to be able to protect my
people I was going to have to pass myself off as a noble. Better to just refrain
from commenting on that topic until I had a chance to come up with a plausible
story.
“It looks that way,” I told her. “I take it you’re joining us, then?”
She did a little curtsey. “If you’ll have me, milord. Miss Avilla said
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most of the mercenaries for hire are single, and she wanted a few reliable girls
on hand to keep the numbers in balance. Although I’m not sure what I think
about this ‘wolf-touched’ business.”
I chuckled. “She actually explained that, did she?”
“Hrodir was asking her some pointed questions, milord,” she
explained. “It seems her magic works better on some folk than others? She said
I’m so open a couple more wolf hearts would probably have me sprouting fur
and getting an urge to go hunting.”
“You don’t seem too put off by the idea,” I observed.
She shrugged. “It’s a bit unsettling, to be honest. But you’ve taken good
care of us so far, milord. I’ll trust that you know best how to keep us all alive,
and try not to worry overmuch.”
“I see Avilla is picking good people,” I smiled. “Don’t worry, if we do
any major enchantment I’ll ask for volunteers and explain the risks first. I take
it you’re on lookout duty?”
“That’s right, milord. We’ve a lot of people coming and going, and it’s
hard to get a good enough view from inside. But there’s plenty of open space
between here and the town, so if I see soldiers coming I can scurry back inside
and help Gronir bar the door long before they could reach the stairs.”
I was halfway up the steps myself by then, so I paused to look her over.
She was wearing one of the warmth cloaks I’d enchanted the day before, but
her face was bare and her feet were wrapped in rags. With the temperature
well below freezing that seemed a little inadequate.
“It’s a good plan, but find someone to take turns with,” I told her.
“You’ll get frostbite if you stay out here too long.”
She nodded. “All taken care of, milord. Beri is going to spell me until
lunch, while the men are busy moving furniture and getting guard shifts
organized. Then they’ll take over and we’ll be working inside.”
Two steps inside the tower I was intercepted by a blonde-haired
missile.
“Daniel! Are you alright? Are we in trouble? What happened with the
Baron? I saw you brought the windboat, do we need to leave?”
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I stopped the manic flow of questions by kissing her. Ah, honey and
cinnamon, with a hint of cherries this morning.
“We’re fine, sweetie,” I said reassuringly. “The Baron’s not happy, but
he’s not going to make an issue of it publicly. I think you can even go shopping
as long as you take a couple of guards with you.”
She smiled in relief. “Oh, good. I suppose I was worried about nothing,
then.”
I shook my head. “No, it’s good to be cautious. Actually, I want us to
make a point of keeping up better security in the tower from now on. Keep
guards on the doors whenever they’re open, and make sure anyone who goes
into town has an escort. Cezary may try to get revenge somehow, so let’s not
give him any openings.”
“Can we count on Rain’s men for that?” Cerise asked from the
stairwell.
“Better not. They take their contract with the Baron pretty seriously. I
don’t think they’re going to end up coming with us, either, so we may need to
hire more men than originally planned.”
Avilla frowned. “That’s too bad. He seems like a good captain. Well,
we have three town guards, a couple of hunters and a veteran mercenary now.
Should we go for a dozen fighting men, or more?”
I considered the size of the hover-barge, and the volume of supplies I’d
like to have room for. “I think twelve will do. I don’t want to make things too
crowded. Oh, and we definitely need gloves and good boots for everyone if
we can manage it.”
“Of course. And liveried clothing, and proper bedding, and tents… oh,
unless you’re going to do something about shelter?”
“I’m going to put walls and a roof on the hover-barge tonight. Beyond
that, we’ll see how much time I have. How are we doing on money?”
Cerise grimaced. “Everything costs three or four times what it should,
now. But those cloaks are selling really well. If you’ve got time to make a
couple more I think that’ll cover all the essentials.”
“Alright, I’ll knock a couple out right now. Then I’d better get to work.
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The new wall doesn’t protect enough of the town to do us much good yet, and
I’m getting nervous about those giants.”
It was a dreary, overcast day. The snow never quite stopped falling
completely, and every so often we’d get a flurry that dropped visibility to
nearly zero until it passed. Eventually I realized my toes were going numb, and
had to stop to put a warmth enchantment on my boots before I could go on.
The men in my escort worked in short shifts, four men watching the
fields around me nervously for thirty or forty minutes at a time while the other
four huddled around a warmth stone I’d set up in the nearest tower. A group of
the Baron’s men were moving into the gatehouse I’d built yesterday, but the
rest of the new construction was still empty aside from a few sentries on the
wall.
The first time a flurry forced me to stop work I was terribly tempted to
pack it in for the day, and spend the afternoon improving my weapons or
preparing for the trip to come. But then I remembered the faces of the
townspeople, and the refugees huddled together against the cold.
I might not be able to save them. But I had to try.
I built two more towers that day, and another gatehouse on a road that
was more or less perpendicular to the river. I was tempted not to bother with
that, but there was enough traffic through the existing gate that I decided I’d
better not block it. Besides, the gatehouse could easily quarter a hundred men.
Maybe I’d spend a day building shelters for the refugees, when I was
done with the wall?
I kept going until the light began to fail, and Cerise came to fetch me for
dinner. After a full day of heavy spellcasting I barely had the energy to wolf
down my food, and stumble off to bed.
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Chapter 10
I was awakened the next morning by a leisurely blowjob.
I groaned happily, still only half awake, and palmed one of the soft
breasts pressing against my thigh. Much more than a handful. In my limited
experience Avilla’s blowjobs were usually fast, hungry affairs, but she was
taking her time this morning. Nuzzling, sucking, stroking, swirling her tongue
around the tip...
“Oh god! You’re getting good at that, Avilla.”
She giggled, and came up for air just as I realized that hadn’t been
Avilla’s voice.
“Good morning, milord,” Tina said brightly. “Miss Avilla sent me to
wake you.”
The smiling redhead rose a bit, her heavy breasts dangling and swaying
enticingly. I found myself cupping them in my hands, and she sighed happily.
“You like them, milord?”
“Hell, yes. But is this really what Avilla meant?”
Her brow furrowed in consternation. “I think so, milord. She reminded
me to swallow an everything. Oh! Did y’want to have my virginity this
morning, milord?”
I swallowed heavily. Wow, I really wasn’t used to the way these
people thought.
“I, ah… I think we should make that a special occasion, Tina. A girl
only gets one first time, right?”
She beamed. “You’re so kind, milord! I’ll be looking forward to it. Are
you gonna do my boobs too? You said you could make’em really big.
I chuckled. “I suppose I can. Hold still for a minute.”
I closed my eyes and focused on my magical senses. Growth was a
simple form of flesh sorcery, much easier than some of the healing I’d been
doing. Hmm. Her breasts didn’t seem to be very sensitive, but that was easy to
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fix.
“Oh!” She gasped. “That feels good, milord.”
“That’s the idea, Tina. Think that’s enough?”
“I get to pick? Oh, more please, milord!”
I kneaded her soft breasts, drawing a series of gasps and sighs from the
lovely young redhead as I tuned her nerve endings to an exquisite level of
sensitivity. By the time I was satisfied with that she was about two cup sizes
bigger, which was getting pretty impressive. She looked down at herself in
dazed wonder.
“There we go. How’s that?”
“Oh, my lord!” She breathed. “It’s… they’re…”
She abruptly ducked down and took my organ back into her mouth.
Now it was my turn to groan again. She bobbed her head energetically,
thoroughly coating me with saliva, then pulled away. By the time I caught my
breath she had my length nestled into her newly expanded cleavage.
“Fuck ma big boobies, milord!” She pleaded.
How could I say no to that?
Avilla gave me an impish grin when I finally made it into the kitchen
for breakfast. I mussed her hair, and gave her a squeeze and a kiss.
“Devious wench,” I teased. “Are you going to make a habit of setting
me up like that?”
“I’m just making sure everyone in the household is happy,” she smiled
back. “You were going to hesitate and agonize over it and leave her worrying