Title: Another Life: Enoch
Chapter 6
Characters:
Enoch/Chandir/Wryn
Series: Another Life
After almost falling out of the window, Enoch stood and stared at
the sun. It was so bright. The air seemed to glow around the setting
orb. Sighing, he turned his back to the colorful sunset. He really wanted to face it and follow it as
it descended below the horizon, but it was so bright it hurt his eyes. Tears dripped down his cheeks from the
brightness of the sun. At least that's
what Enoch told himself. It wasn't from
grief of leaving a home. He'd never had
a home. He barely remembered the shelter
of a man-made roof over his head.
As his tears dried, Enoch started to see what was before
him. He saw houses scattered across
several miles. He hadn't realized he'd
been in a village. Quickly, he looked
around and saw a forest not
too far away. He could find cover
there. He could forage for food. He could live there. Well, he could survive. Surviving until the next day was all that he
knew. Enoch forced each foot in front of
the other. He could make it if he just
tried hard enough.
He reached the tree line just as a coughing fit over took
him. Leaning against the tree, Enoch
coughed, his lungs burning. Gasping for
breath, Enoch knew it was the residue of the ash from Earth. His lungs were scarred beyond repair. Yet another reason to leave Chandir and
Wryn. He wouldn't be a burden to anyone.
He'd seen what happened to people who were burdens. They were either left for dead or their loved
ones died with them.
Enoch walked, stumbled, a few feet into the forest and then collapsed against a
tree. He'd rest for just a few minutes,
he promised himself. And then, he'd put
more distance between him and the village.
He looked around as he caught his breath. Even in the dying sunlight, the colors were
so vivid. The trees and bushes seemed so
alive. They weren't the withered,
decaying plant life of earth. Even the shadows that were cast seemed to be a
bright shade of grey.
As he walked further into the surrounding trees, Enoch heard
scurrying a few feet away. Swallowing
hard, Enoch wondered if there were animals here. On earth as all the forest died, the animals had been hunted to
extinction. He knew at one time small
animals named squirrels and chipmunk had run across the heavily wooded floor,
but even those had been caught in traps and eaten. Or they had died as the plant life they
depended on withered away around them.
He'd heard of larger animals called bears and deer, but he'd never seen
one. Thinking back, Enoch tried to
recall if the larger animals were dangerous. He sent out a silent plea that he
wouldn't see one tonight. At the sound
of a fallen tree branch snapping, Enoch hurried on.
Tripping and stumbling on roots and rocks, Enoch went deeper into
the woods. Darkness falling over him;
the trees blocking out the light of the stars and the moon, he only could hope
that he wasn't walking in circles. Hope,
he scoffed. Since when had the word hope
entered his life? Oh, yeah, since he woke
up to the sight of two large men staring down at him. Since those two men had fed him and bathed
him.
No! He must stop that line of thinking. Chandir and Wryn were kind enough to share
their food, he wouldn't burden them forever.
He had to go on. The dreams he'd
had since childhood of the two men were nothing but coincidence. There was no such thing as fate or
destiny. Or if there was then death was
his destiny.
He shivered as night fell fully upon him. He should have taken the blanket to keep
himself warm. No, he couldn't have
stolen from Chandir and Wryn. Not after all that they'd done for him. Maybe he could find a cave to take shelter
in. But the thought of walking into the
home of a deer, or was it bears that used to live in caves, scared him, so he
kept stumbling along. Finally he
couldn't hold off the exhaustion any longer and when he fell to the ground
again, Enoch curled up next to a tree and let sleep take him away.
"Oh, please can I keep him?
I'll hug him and love him and feed him.
And I'll call him Bruno!"
Enoch woke to the sound of laughter.
"Astrid, he's not a stray pup." A woman's voice brought
Enoch fully awake.
Looking up through the morning sun, Enoch could make out four
bodies. Four against one. He had no hope of surviving.
"Well as little and hungry as he looks, he might need
someone to take him in," Another female voice drawled out.
Enoch tried to stand up.
He knew that women could be just as vicious as men and here he was laid
out like an offering for them to rob or kill him.
"Careful, little one, careful." One of the women spoke
as she reached out to help him stand.
"Don't rush until you are fully awake. You'll hurt yourself."
"He shouldn't rush at all, Nica," Another woman
scolded.
"Yes, Kyra, you are right.
He's so thin! He would break if
he fell."
"I'm-" Enoch started to talk, but his throat was dry
and painful from the coughing fit of the night before. Trying to clear his
throat, he croaked out, "I'm good."
Laughter trickled over him.
"That's exactly what I say when I'm in trouble up to the
heavens."
"You seem to always be in trouble up to the heavens,
Astrid."
Enoch leaned against the tree he had been sleeping next to and
took in the sight of the women before him.
They were tall and healthy looking.
Enoch could see how healthy by the fullness of their faces and
bodies. He couldn't stop staring. He'd never seen a woman, any woman, so full
of life. Most of the women he'd seen had
been full of grief and sorrow. Not
enough food and too much death had taken the life out of them before death
could claim their bodies.
"I'm Kyra. I'm a Historian, the same as you are," Kyra
gently informed. Her head was tilted
slightly to the side, her long black hair hanging down. "These are my wives. Historians also. Sophie, Nica, and Astrid."
Enoch looked to each woman as Kyra pointed to them. Odd, he thought. Most people didn't introduce themselves
before they killed someone. He shook his
head. These women didn't need to kill
him. Their clothes were better than
his. They even had shoes! They didn't look like they were
starving. And besides, he didn't have
any food to offer.
"Do not worry so, Pais," the woman named Sophie
said. "We will not bring harm to
you. You look hungry. Would you care to share in our early morning
picnic?"
"Sophie!" Kyra exclaimed. "We should get him-"
"Yes, we should get him calmed down. What a wonderful idea, Kyra," Nica said
brightly.
Enoch watched Kyra glare at Nica.
If he'd been under that glare, he'd trembled and done whatever the woman
wanted. But the other women just smiled.
"Come. We'll take you
to a place that I know is a favorite of some friends," Astrid said.
Enoch had little choice but to follow the red-haired woman. He winced and stumbled when he was pulled
over pine cones lying on the forest
floor.
"Where are your shoes?" Kyra demanded of him in an icy
voice.
But before Enoch could say anything, Astrid was pulling him along
again. "Don't worry about
Kyra. She accidentally received an extra
dose of dominance from the gods.
Eeek!"
Enoch watched in amazement as Astrid grinned at Kyra. Why would Astrid grin at the person who'd
struck her? Admittedly, the strike
wasn't overly hard. And it was on
Astrid's well padded bottom. But still, why would Astrid have a glow on her
face?
"I need that extra dose to keep up with you," Kyra
admonished.
Enoch couldn't quite understand the depth of emotion that was in
Kyra's voice as she spoke to Astrid.
There was affection, understanding, gentleness, and love in the woman's
voice. His confusion must have shown on
his face as the woman named Sophie gently took his free hand.
She winked at Enoch and said to Astrid, "And that's why we
are a family of four. You, my dear sub,
need three to tame your wildness."
"Her wildness is in the bed as well as outside of it,"
Nica laughed.
Enoch stared at Astrid when Nica said that. These were women that lived together. Loved together. White mist started to surround them. Enoch watched as the women touched each other,
gave pleasure to each other on a bed bigger than any Enoch had seen. Sophie's ass was in his direct line of sight
and he saw it was bright red. He pushed
the image away.
"Why didn't you listen?" Sophie asked.
Blushing, Enoch looked down.
She knew he was having a vision and had blocked it. He didn't want to tell her that he'd seen her
with her wives or that he'd seen her red ass.
He stumbled and would have fallen had it not been for the strong hold
the two women had on him. His gasp
turned into another coughing fit. He
groaned at the fire that burned in his throat and lungs.
"You are unwell! This
is ridiculous! We need to-" Kyra
growled out but was interrupted by Nica.
"Drink! We need to
give Enoch a drink," the dark haired woman exclaimed. She handed Enoch a leather pouch that was
full of liquid.
Enoch lifted the pouch to his lips and took a sip. He started to
wonder how they knew his name, but the sweet tasting liquid captured his
attention. It was like nectar, he
thought as he drank deeply. Sweet and
almost tart at the same time, the juice soothed his throat.
"Woah there, Enoch," Nica said as she took the pouch
from his hands. "You will make
yourself sick drinking so fast."
"It's delicious," Enoch stammered out. "What is it?"
"Apple juice," Astrid said. "Ryder and Adryn barter with us. We give them yarn and they give us
apples. Sophie makes the best juice from
the fruit. But I make the best apple
cake."
"You do," Kyra said.
"Why don't we go to the meadow and pull it out. Enoch will share our meal."
Enoch was helpless to do anything but follow the women. Two of
them still held fast to his hands. The
five of them stepped out of the woods into a sunlit meadow. When he finally tore his gaze from the
beautiful sight of the meadow, the women had laid out a blanket and unpacked a
basket that Nica had carried. The sight
of so much food left Enoch speechless.
"Come. Sit
down," Kyra ordered gently. "You need to eat."
Enoch sat down and watched as the women joined him on the
blanket. They seemed to always be
touching each other, stroking each other.
Enoch was fascinated at the love that flowed between the women. So visible he could see it.
"It's there between you and Chandir and Wryn too,"
Sophie said quietly.
"I don't understand.
How do you know Chandir and Wryn? How do you know me?" Enoch asked.
Astrid looked at Enoch.
"We told you we are Historians also. Sophie had a vision of you several weeks
ago. She's been hell to live with
worrying about you. She even asked for a
spanking to help her."
"What?" Enoch knew what a spanking was, he just had no
idea why anyone would ask for one. He remembered the vision he'd had a few
minutes earlier. That explained why
Sophie's bottom was so red. Embarrassed
at what he'd seen, but feeling a strange need to know more, Enoch asked,
"So all four of you live together?
As wives?"
"Yes, as wives. As
Historians. As doms, sub, and
switches," Sophie said.
Shaking his head, Enoch thought, how does that work?
"It works really well.
Especially when you're a Historian and link together the pieces of the
visions to know what is to come," Kyra stated firmly.
Enoch looked at the strong dominant. She was so composed, every move she made
seemed full of grace and strength. He
turned and looked at Astrid. She'd said
she was a sub. That's what Chandir and
Wryn had called him.
"You have three women dominating you? You belong to them?" Enoch asked the
pretty red headed woman.
"And they belong to me. Did Chandir or Wryn tell you that
most Historians live in polygamous relationships? The symbol of past, present and future is
evident. But for us, we are four,"
Astrid said. When Enoch looked at her in confusion, she went on to
explain. "Kyra, Sophie and Nica are
past, present and future. I'm the thread
that holds them together. Just as the
thread holds the pieces of fabric together, the fabric is what anchors the
thread. We are bound together just as
much as the tunic that is worn."
"We are four, but we are one life line," Nica said
softly. "You are that life line for
Chandir and Wryn, Enoch."
Flinching back, Enoch cried out.
"No! Life. Living has no part of me. I couldn't even keep my family alive! I told them.
I told them of the landslide that would bury them. But they didn't listen. Days and days of acidic, dirty rain
fell. But they wouldn't leave the
shelter that was near the mountain. When I knew it would happen, when I knew
the time was near, I left. I was a
child! And I saw them die over and over
again."
"Enoch. Stop. Breathe," Kyra ordered gently. Firmly.
Sophie reached over and rubbed his back. "They didn't
know. They didn't understand the
visions. You don't understand them. It's hard to know, Enoch. Trust us.
We've all seen sorrow and pain.
But Enoch, we've all seen great joy."
"It's worth it, Enoch.
The responsibility of the visions is worth it. The respect to the visions is worth it. Enoch?
You. Are. Worthy," Astrid said.
"Chandir and Wryn will be your support. Just as you will be their's."
Enoch was fascinated, enthralled, with the conviction in the
sub's voice. He wanted to know
more. He opened his mouth to ask her to
continue. But the easy, peaceful morning
was broken by an angry dom storming out of the forest.
"You were to bring him home!" Chandir roared. "Not keep him all day, leaving Wryn to
worry about him!"
TBC
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