It had been raining for days, and it was the first day with clear skies in weeks. The ancient waterfall was engorged with masses of water falling from high above into the pool below. Green moss covered the rocks, forever moistened by the wild waters. Large evergreen trees on the top of the rocks were leaning dangerously over the edge like they could tumble down any day. But strong roots were holding on to the rock and soil, trees that had withstood meteorological storms and the storms of time for hundreds of years. The waterfall had been there for thousands of years, and it would always be there. It had seen travelers refreshing on their journeys, washed animal blood off hunters, rinsed berries the women had picked, watered wild and domestic animals for centuries, had been there when the shamans worshipped their gods and sacrificed to the entities in realms beyond the human world.
The sky above was clear, but the sun was absent as the
evening had set in. It had been a clear day nonetheless, and the warmth of the
evening lingered. She stood at the side of the shallow pool. He sat there,
holding himself up on his hands and watching as she untied the strings of her white
gown. She let the cover slide over her shoulders, and it fell around her feet
on the mossy ground beneath her.
She was naked; where her skin was not painted with lasting
ink, it was pale like white sand and smooth like a rock having lain in the
water for many years. Feminine curves shaped her body, and her long fiery hair
fell over her white breasts and down to her belly. She had born children from
men who had planted seeds into her. She was ripe in her age but not too old to
bear more children. The men she had let enter her hut were lovers for a night
and fathers of her children forever. She used the men for just that, giving her
the gift of motherhood and bearing children. She raised and taught the girls in
the ancient arts passed to her by the women before her while she sent her sons
to live with families in the villages, learning to tend to the land or train in
the art of warfare and battle.
She stood there and gazed at him. He looked up at her, and
his eyes studied the depictions on her skin. Animals, images of nature and
creatures covered her long legs and her arms. An image of a sun was stitched
into the skin around her navel. Her pubes were prominent and always ready to
host large phalluses of strong and wild men that could give her children. Every
time he saw her, he was anew overwhelmed with his admiration and fascination
for her.
He was a man different than all the men she usually invited
in. When she summoned him, he was the only man she met at the ancient waterfall
by the lake. She called for him when she wanted him, and she wanted him often
because what he did with his hands and fingers brought her to the realms of
lust and desire without planting seeds in her that would transform into
children. His skillful mouth and tongue caused her lustful moans and wild cries.
He couldn’t give her children because his body was broken, but that is not what
she needed him for. She wanted him to satisfy her primal needs, and he was
always able to break the woman in her. And when she was with him, her heart
beat like a shaman’s drum and her mind was completely occupied with him.
The men who came to her hut were men with strong legs and
walked, ran, and sprinted through the forests, over the plains, and climbed
rocks or ancient trees, even higher as the waterfall.
He was no such man; he was forever sitting or lying. He
wasn’t walking and running; he was forced to stay close to the ground, never to
be upright again. He used to be like the strong, wild men with muscular legs
and seemingly unbreakable bones, a strong warrior for many years until fate met
him one day in an ambush of warriors from another tribe in a forest far from
his home. When they threw him off a rocky slope and thought he was dead, he lay
there looking up into the treetops with the sky peeking through, and he was
waiting for the eternal light to come for him. The light never came, but
instead, the day turned into night, darkness came, stars shone through the
trees, but the eternal light never came for him. He lay there in agony and
longed to leave the earthly realm, but he couldn’t leave. He also couldn’t move;
his legs seemed like they were gone, but when he looked up, he saw his legs
were still attached to his body. He saw his legs, but they had disappeared from
his mind.
The night turned into day; the day turned into night, and
night turned into day again before hunters from another tribe found him. They
dragged him through the forest like one of the animals they had killed; he
screamed and cried because of the unbearable pain in the upper half of his
body. He still longed for the eternal light, but it didn’t come for him. For
reasons unknown to him, they didn’t kill him, but an old shaman nursed him to
strength and one day strapped him to a cart and pulled him for several days and
nights back to his native village and dropped him off in the square in the
middle for him to be found the next morning.
He was from then on a man of no use to anyone, not a hunter,
not a warrior, not a husband, not a father. After only living through thirty
winters, he was then a man who was invisible to the people in his village. He
had to rely on the mercy of strangers and kind people in the village to bring
him food and water. In his hut outside the village, he usually lay on the straw
cot with the chickens pecking around him, keeping the insects at bay in the
summer and lying next to him on the cold days. A hound had found its way to his
hut one night and had never left his side since then.
It was a warm night in summer when he had been startled by a
soft knock on the narrow, wooden door of his hut. It was a messenger, his cloak
pulled far into his face so he couldn’t see him, but the messenger told him
that the Maiden of the water had sent him. He had never heard of a maiden by
the water, but the messenger had come to summon him for the Maiden and promised
him that a horse with a cart would come and gather him up the next night. He
told him to trust the horse and just let it take him. He told him to be ready
and clean as the Maiden wanted to see his body and bathe with him. Before he
could ask any more questions, the messenger had left his hut. He lay in the
shadows of his hut bewildered by the strange summoning.
The next day, he dragged himself out to the small water hole
by his hut and cleaned his body to his best abilities. His dark hair was long,
and he dipped his head in the water and rubbed his hands through his hair to
freshen it. With his blade, he scraped over his face to shorten his facial hair.
When the water became still, he looked at his reflection on the surface of the
pond. Thirty-two winters had come and gone since he had been born, and his
mother had died as she gave him life. He had never known his father, but he had
been taken in by a warrior and was trained in warfare and battle strategies to
keep his tribe safe. He had been a great warrior until he had been pushed off
the rocky cliff in the forest.
As he stared at his reflection, his mind was wondering about
the Maiden that had summoned him. He had never heard of a maiden by the water,
and he had not heard of water with a maiden living by it. He didn’t know if it
was a lake, a creek, a stream or even the water that was never-ending. He had
seen the never-ending water once as a young man, and he had run along its side
barefoot in the sand with the screeching white and grey birds above him. He had
seen nothing but water on the horizon as he had run along, and he was sure that it
was the end of earth he had seen.
The day faded, and it became dusk. He was sitting outside
his hut, the hound next to him. The hound never left his side except to hunt a
bird or a small animal. He sat leaning on the side of the hut and looked along
the path that led to his hut. He lived away from the village as an outsider, a
scorned one, an odd one with legs that didn’t help him stand or walk anymore.
His legs were dead; his manhood was just as dead. A medicine woman from the
village had come before to give him bundles of rigid dried reeds, and she had
shown him how to push a reed into the opening of his manhood and let the yellow
water flow out of it. With his fingers, he had to dispose of the digested food
that traveled through his body and came out from his behind.
He had cleaned his body and had pulled a tunic over his
chest and thin britches over his still legs. He didn’t have anything to cover
his feet; he was always barefoot. He sat in front of his small hut and looked
out to the path that led to his hut from the forest. As the sun was setting
behind the trees, a cart pulled by a black horse came along the path. He was afraid
of the large horse; he hadn’t seen a horse in a long time. The hound ran around
and barked, showing his teeth.
He called to him to stop the unrest, and the horse bopped
its large head, and the hound stopped and sat down, only whimpering.
He told the hound to guard the hut until he would return.
The hound stayed, and as he was about to pull himself over to the cart, he ran
his hand over the animal’s head and told him to be a good hound and wait for
him and protect the chickens. The horse snorted softly and bopped its head
again.
He petted the dog once more and promised that he would be
back. Then he twisted his body and pulled himself over to the cart, his
lifeless legs dragging behind him. He was breathing quickly but was relieved
that the cart was not too high off the ground, and he could pull himself up in
it. It was lined with a thick bear fur, and he adjusted his lifeless limbs in
the cart and leaned back. He looked over the rail once more at the hound, and
the horse dug its front hoof into the dirt, bopped its head and turned around,
trotting away from the hut and along the path.
The journey through the forest and up the hills was bumpy,
but the bear fur made it tolerable for him in the cart. He watched the scenery
go by, and he wondered if he would ever return to his hut or if this was one
last journey to a place he never knew existed and a woman who would possibly
kill him as a sacrifice to the gods. The horse seemed to know exactly where it
needed to go. He was at the mercy of an animal taking him to an unknown
location. If he didn’t return, no one would miss him, no one would look for
him, and no one would send a search party. His hound would eat the chickens and
leave the hut in search of another man.
Dusk had turned into darkness when he arrived at a lake high
up in the mountains. The full moon shone over it, casting a glistening shimmer
over it. Water softly splashed against the shore that was lined with trees and
brush. The horse stopped, and he looked around when he saw her for the first
time. He was still in the cart but had pulled himself up to emerge from the
cart if that was what was expected of him. She came out from the thicket where
he saw flames behind her in the brush. It looked like a clearing with a
homestead. She seemed to be sweeping towards him on light feet, and she was the
most beautiful thing he had ever laid eyes on. Her hair was a mane around her
head, red as fire and wavy as the water after a rock had been skipped on its
surface. It fell over her front and down to her womanhood. She wore a white
flowing dress; he noticed she was barefoot as well.
This was how he had lain eyes on her for the first time, and
immediately, he was stricken with her beauty. Her angelic face had a warm
expression, one of fondness and tenderness for a man as he was. His heart was
beating fast like the drums he heard from the shamans in a full moon night. From
then on, she would summon him over and over to connect with him in the most
intimate ways between man and woman.
And on this evening once again, he looked up at her as she stood
next to him, her bare feet in his line of sight. He couldn’t stand, and he
couldn’t walk; he was always at her passionate mercy. It wasn’t a bad fate; it
was the most amazing thing for him. For many days and nights, he longed for her
calls, and sometimes it took so long until she needed him again and as days
turned into nights, and nights into days, he would be uneasy, wondering if she
would summon him again. But he was always ready for her, and throughout two
earth cycles, she had always summoned him. The anticipation of finding himself
in her presence soon had kept him from ending his earthly life when his pain
and suffering seemed too much to bear.
Her body was that of a goddess, and for a few hours, this
goddess was for him to devour and shower with all his affection, skillfully
massage her, use his mouth, lips, and long tongue to make her scream into the
earth or underwater, causing the eruption of bubbles and small spouts on the
surface. She was one with the water when he held her there on the shoreline of
the lake. Continuously, water escaping from the ancient thermal holes
underwater kept the lake warm and enjoyable.
She stood over him and gazed down at him as he sat there,
holding himself on his hands. She never spoke much. A nod at him with a tender
smile made him lean over and kiss the bridge of her feet. And his heart was beating
fast at touching his lips to her cold skin.
She lowered herself down to him and sat next to him, her
long hair touching the ground. She put her slender hands to his tunic, and he
let her pull it over his head. Just as her body was decorated with ancient symbols
and marks, his was as well. Drawings of battle and war were forever etched with
hot iron pokers dipped into black ink into his chest and shoulders. His upper
body still presented itself as a strong warrior, but his lower body was lifeless as a casualty of the murders he had committed. Legs that used
to be strong now lay strewn limp on the ground, a fate he would forever endure as
he dragged himself through his earthly life.
She tossed his tunic to the side and gently loosened the
string on his britches. He held himself there, watching her thin, long fingers gently
loosen the strings, and she tugged, sliding them over his dead legs. He was
naked just as she was, and they were sitting on the shore of the warm lake. The
waterfall was swollen from the snowmelt and noisily splashed into the lake as
they looked at each other, scanning over their nude bodies. Her breasts were
white like the snow, her nipples like two hard hazelnuts in its bed. He
moistened his lips as he looked at her, and she moved closer to him, and with
her hot breath, she blew over his shoulders and strong chest. His breathing
quickened as the hot breezes flowing from her mouth brushed over his skin. Warm
waves of the lake gently ran up on the shore, reaching them where they sat.
As she carried her hot breath over him, she hushed, “I’ve
longed for you and your body, dearest Cahal. I’ve longed to breathe on you, to
let my tongue run over your skin and let my hands explore the lifeless half of
you. I dream of you when the stars are in the sky, and I dream of you when the
sun warms my bosom. I touch myself when I see your face and your body in my
dreams; thinking of your legs makes my loins shudder, and moisture run from within
me as I long to be consumed by you.”
Cahal was his name. He didn’t hear it from anyone’s mouth
often as he lived alone and was forgotten in his hut away from the village. The
Maiden of the water was the only one who said his name, and when she screamed
it, he indulged in it, and he treasured her moaning his name because only he
could give her what she hungered and thirsted for. He was different from the
men she usually lay with, and he knew he had a power over her that brought her to
her knees, and she became weak and childlike in his presence.
When he lay on his cot in his hut, alone and cold, he
imagined her screaming his name: Cahal, you’re my hunger and my thirst, and
only you can still it. You make me a woman at her most primal self, bringing me
to soar high as the sky and drowning me in the depths of the ocean.
Cahal enjoyed the touches of her hot breath, anticipating her
lips and tongue to touch him soon. The water from the lake ran up on shore, and
she pushed him down into the wet ground, grasses and mosses under him. He let
her, and she hovered over him for a few moments, looking at him with glistening
eyes, smiling warmly.
“Cahal, my sweet Cahal. Endless joy overcomes me when you’re
with me. Your life is my life; your death will be my sorrow until eternity.”
Cahal kept his eyes on her, wondering why she talked about
his death.
He was alarmed when a golden tear dripped from her emerald
eye. He gazed at her, and with his finger, he wiped the tear away, scanning
over her face curiously and questioning.
His heart was beating fast in his chest. The Maiden of the
Water lost another golden tear, and she gently touched the side of his face.
“Your death is near; you are but just a man, Cahal. Man dies
and returns to the earth; I will be forever and will forever mourn you, my dear
Cahal.”
Cahal’s hand trembled at hearing her say these things, and
she added, “This will be our last meeting, Cahal. Death will come to you before
the next full moon is born, and people who mean you harm will come for you.”
Cahal was stunned, and he stared at her in disbelief, but
she smiled at him and gently traced her fingers over the side of his face.
“Before death, you will have life with me on this night, and
you will feel life in every fiber of your body.”
With that, she touched her lips to his mouth and though, he
tried to forget what she had predicted, his heart was hurting as its beating
intensified with her kissing. Distracted and hesitantly, he put his arms around
her, pulling her body to him and returning her kissing with his own. The warm
water of the lake crawled up under them, saturating and softening the ground.
Tiny droplets from the waterfall moistened their skin as their tongues
connected in the ancient dance of man and woman. Cahal felt pain in his heart,
but he kissed her, and tears were in his eyes at the thought that this should
be the last time he would ever be with her.
If only he could have given her a child such as the other
men she had lain with. She was a healer, and he longed to know why she couldn’t
heal him. Their bodies were entwined, the drawings on their skin connected to
form pictures of a man and a woman, earth, life and death. She pushed herself
to him, and feeling his limp manhood under her delicate flower, made her hold
him tighter and bond with his broken body to become one.
The water of the lake surged around them, and Cahal’s long
black hair was wet now. A curtain of her wild mane surrounded them, almost as
to shield them while their mouths were connected in a kiss full of desire. And
he pushed his tongue into her mouth, encircling her tongue and tasting her. There
was cool moisture from above, warm dampness beneath them, and there was hot wetness
inside her as she longed for his mouth and tongue to drink her womanly extracts.
She softly detached her lips from his, brushed her tongue
over his skin, and he was breathing quickly, looking up into the sky as she
caressed him with her mouth, lips and tongue. Though her body was slender and
delicate, she had an invisible strength about her, and effortlessly, she pulled
Cahal further into the lake's warm water. He lay emerged in the water now, and
she slithered onto him, and her hands ran over his strong arms, tracing the
muscles and tendons, remnants from years of battle and warfare. Cahal’s face
was not submerged yet, but his body was, and though he felt the warmth of the
water on his upper body, his lower body seemed like it wasn’t even there. His
legs floated without any control, and only her legs on him kept them still.
She lay on him and created rhythmic friction against him as
she entangled her long legs with his lifeless legs. And she sank her face into
the water and licked over his body. Her fingernails scratched over his skin, causing
his breath to quicken. She had powers that other women didn’t have. It didn’t
take her breath away when she was underwater, and water didn’t fill her lungs. She
could swim above and below the water; she became one with it as she plunged
into the lake. Cahal had witnessed this many times; she plunged into the water,
swam behind the waterfall, and he would watch and wait for her to return to him
as he lay on the edge of the lake. He always found joy in watching her in the
water. She wasn't like any women he had ever known.
She did this again, and as she disappeared behind the
waterfall, he waited, and soon, she appeared in the center of the falling
masses of water. She wasn’t swimming; she was floating above the water surface under
the stream of the waterfall. She smiled
at him before she dropped into the water like a fish, and underwater, she swam
to him again and emerged by his feet, her red hair wet in straight, long strands
on either side of her face. Her eyes were emerald green and golden like the
water; her lips were full and shimmered red like the flesh of a salmon.
Her tongue slithered over Cahal, and he let her caress him before
she entangled herself with him again. Her face was right by his, and their lips
touched again, and they fell into a kiss again. He wrapped his arms around her
and held her to him. He longed so much to speak to her, but he couldn't speak
when he was with her. A spell was on him when he was in her presence, and he
didn’t have a voice. He could only talk with his hands, his mouth and his eyes.
She now was locked as one with him as his thin, bony legs
were clamped between her smooth legs. And she put her arms around him, and he
held her to him. Their lips remained connected while the water around them
became wilder and higher. Any other man would have been afraid at this, but
Cahal wasn’t because he knew what would happen. She pressed herself against him,
and as the water became wilder, it changed into a fountain under them, and
Cahal could feel the power of the water. As she held him to her and their
bodies were as one, the water lifted them from the ground, and they soared up
surrounded by wild, warm water. She detached her lips from his, and they looked
at each other, and as she smiled at Cahal, she sang her siren song, holding him
and carrying him up with her. They surrendered to the power of the water lifting
them. He was powerless at this mystery as the water encircled them in a tornado
and pressed them to each other, spinning them and lifting them even higher.
Sounds of joy and desire came from her lungs as they soared
to the top of the waterfall, with the tornado spinning them up. Cahal wanted to
be with her like this forever and never come back down to the earth beneath
them. He could only quietly let this happen; there was nothing he could do or
say. It was their dance when they were together. She lifted him, and they were one
with each other. With her legs wrapped around his legs, Cahal was in the
impression that he could feel his legs while they were up there.
She sang and held him; her hair flowed around her, and her
eyes didn’t move from his face. Her eyes were like the wild water around them,
and drops of water came out of her mouth, rising, as she sang her ancient song.
This mystery ended as the tornado slowed and became smaller,
lowering them toward the water. With their arms wrapped around each other, they
gently touched the surface of the water, not at the shore but right in the
middle. Cahal didn’t go under, though, because she held him still. And she swam
with him in circles, from small to large, until they reached the shore. There
she let go of him, and he lay there, and she lay next to him. She was quiet now
and looked into the sky above them. They were wet, and their bodies were warm
and excited.
It was Cahal’s turn now; she needed his touch and caress. He
turned toward her and held himself over her. Her eyes were those of a regular
woman now, green and deep, and he let his lips come down on her mouth and
kissed her. She was not a goddess and not a healer now; she was simply a woman.
She ignited in him the man he used to be, the man that had
lain with women in the tavern rooms after battles and fights. As a warrior, his
body damaged and wounded, his mind tired from the fights and his hands soaked
in the blood of the people he had killed, he had still needed the release only
a woman could give him at the end of the day.
Wildly, Cahal kissed the Maiden and pushed his tongue into
her mouth, meeting her tongue and wrapping his around hers. At the same time,
his hand stroked over the mounds of her breasts, cupping them and kneading them
gently before moving further down to her womanhood, her source of life and
lust.
She moaned softly, humming a melody of love and desire as
Cahal’s hand reached her most sacred place. He had done this countless times
with her; he knew her body and reactions and knew exactly what he had to do.
He detached his lips from hers. Her hands were on his back,
tracing the scars where he had been pierced and stabbed by swords and knives. She
moved her fingers along his spine, knowing that it was damaged from the fall off
the cliff and causing the death of his legs. And she cried as she always did
because touching him in this way, his pain radiated into her, and for a short
time, she took it all away from him. And life sprung into him as he assertively
flicked his tongue over her neck and bit her gently, breathing quickly.
And he wanted her, and while his hand pressed gently against
her flower, he lapped the water of her body and left small purple bruises on
her white skin. The images and symbols on her skin stung his eyes and raced
into his head, where they came alive. He kept his eyes open because he wanted
to see her, and she arched her back as he neared her nether region. Her hip
bones protruded, and he flicked his tongue along her curves and neared her
sacredness.
She moaned and squirmed under his touches and flicks of his
tongue. Water was still around them; the sun was setting behind the mountain,
the waterfall caught its last orange rays, throwing a golden shimmer over the
lake. Cahal was focused on her and now was with his mouth right by her sacred
womanliness. She grabbed his right hand and interlocked her fingers with his, needing
the connection to him as he explored her like he always did with merely his
left hand and his skilled mouth and tongue.
She moaned and whimpered as he ran his tongue along her vulva,
spreading her swollen labia in the process and licking through the soft canyon
of the flesh between her legs, reaching her hallowed spot at the top of it. A
squeal of excitement escaped from her lips as he gently pressed his lips to her
clitoris, enclosing it and tenderly suckled it out of its shelter. And she
arched her back toward the sky; she looked at the trees above them, looking
down and witnessing hers and Cahal’s bond once again. She knew he soon was going
to die, and tears flowed from her eyes as he cared and tended to her womanhood,
causing her legs to tremble while his legs lay still, only the water moving
them gently on the shore.
The sky was orange, and the clouds were purple as Cahal
pushed his tongue into her warm opening, tasting her feminine extracts and her obvious
joy of being with him. She held his hand still, and his sweat mixed with the
moisture on her body and the wetness running from her opening. He pushed his
tongue into her, and in exchange for his tongue coming out, he pushed three
fingers in, and she flinched at the sudden sensation of his fingers filling her
out. She tightened her inner muscles around his fingers, locking them inside
her, and with his mouth, Cahal gently pulled out her clit and let his tongue
explore the size of it, like a precious pearl in its shell.
She whimpered with desire, and she sang again a song in a
language he didn’t understand. But it was the song she always sang when she
almost reached the climax of her arousal. Cahal continued his quest to once
again give her exactly what she needed. He drank her sweet juices and softly
flicked her most sensitive spot with his tongue. He wasn’t concerned with his
own gratification as he had never been able to reach the same heights she did. With
the fall from the cliff and the injuries he had suffered, he had lost all
sensation in the lower half of his body.
The Maiden stopped in her song and screamed into the
evening, stirring a few birds in a tree as they fluttered out and soared into
the sky. The waterfall was thundering behind them, the waves on the water
increased, and the trees swayed in a gentle breeze as her scream echoed through
the forest.
Cahal gently finished her, and she collapsed under him.
Their hands were still interlocked. He looked up at her, and she met his eyes
and smiled. Her face wasn’t as white anymore; it was flushed with the aftermath
of her excitement.
With her hand, she gestured for Cahal to come up to her
face. They let go of their interlocked hands, and Cahal pulled himself up next
to her. She nestled herself into his strong arm, and he held her close and ran
his fingers through her long hair as she lay there. She was still a woman, and
in those moments, she wanted only to be held by him. Cahal was the only man she
let do this to her. Tears collected in her eyes as she thought about his
impending death. She had seen it in her dreams, and she had asked the gods for
mercy for him, but they had denied her wishes.
As he was occupied with bringing happiness to her, he had
forgotten about what she had said earlier. Now he heard her sniffle her nose,
and he looked at her. He wanted to ask her what it was, but he couldn’t. All he
could do was gently run his fingers through her hair and over her back.
The Maiden then pushed herself up and looked at him. Her
eyes changed again and turned from a human green into an emerald and golden
color. She held herself there, and her eyes scanned over his face. His dark
eyes flickered curiously, and she knew he had so many things on his mind, but
with the gods, she had sacrificed his voice for having his presence in her
life. She often imagined what his voice would be like, and it hurt her not to
hear him talk when he was with her. His eyes were questioning as he looked at
her face. He opened his mouth, but nothing came out, and he swallowed the lump
in his throat at the realization once again that he had no voice when he was
with her.
He enclosed her hand with his and now brought it to his
heart, and there he pressed her hand on his heart, and a golden tear dripped
from her eye and landed in his mouth.
And his eyes took on a silver shimmer, and she told him again,
“Cahal, my sweet Cahal, this is our last dance. I will miss you so much, and
you will forever be in my heart and my soul.”
Cahal’s eyes glistened with tears as he now remembered what
she had told him earlier and had confirmed now.
He put his hand on her heart, and their eyes stayed on each
other. She then put her arm around him, and without any effort, she turned him
around with her, and they were now in the lake. She held him against her, his
legs were floating under him, not moving, and they looked at each other. Tears
were streaming from their eyes as they held each other, and slowly they started
spinning in the water. Cahal had not experienced this with her before. In the
past, after they had connected most intimately, the cart with the horse would come,
and he would have to leave again.
Now they spun slowly in the middle of the lake like a dance;
the sky was almost black now, stars were flickering above them, the trees were like
dark giants at the shore of the lake, the waterfall seemed to have slowed and
didn’t sound as loud anymore.
Cahal kept his eyes on her, and she kept her eyes on him,
and tears slowly ran over their faces. They kissed again, and the kiss lasted a
long time. In his mind, Cahal kept hearing himself say that he loved her, and
he longed so much to tell her, but he couldn’t. Nonetheless, the Maiden heard
his voice echo in her head, and she cried at hearing it. It was a beautiful,
gentle but deep voice.
And she sent her voice into his mind, telling him that she
loved him as well and that he was the only man she would ever have loved.
Their lips were connected in a seemingly endless kiss. They
were still gently spinning in the lake, and now their bodies lowered into the
water, still spinning. Though there was darkness above them, everything was
shimmering golden in the water, and it became quiet and calm.
And she held him to her, and they looked at each other. His
eyes were dark and wondrous, and she held her gaze on him.
She spoke to him, “I love you, Cahal. You are me; I am you;
we have been and always will be one in our hearts.”
And he opened his mouth, thinking the water would get in,
but he now had a voice and spoke like he was on land, “I love you, I’ve loved
you from the first moment I’ve laid eyes on you. Tell me your name, beautiful
goddess!”
Red strands of her hair were floating around her face, and her
body shimmered golden.
She spoke softly, “I am Devora.”
Cahal smiled. “Devora, I love you.”
She nodded and smiled. “I love you, my sweet Cahal.”
Cahal now realized how his mouth was filling with water, and
it ran into his body. He wasn’t afraid, and while Devora held him to her and
their eyes were locked, his lungs filled with water, and golden tears ran from
his eyes and surrounded Devora and him as they gently kept spinning further
into the deep. She didn’t let go of him as he closed his eyes and became limp
in her arms. She held him close to her body and carried him down to the bottom
of her lake, where she lay him to rest; Cahal was finally free.
The legend goes that Cahal’s tears had forever painted the
lake, and it shimmered golden into eternity. After Cahal’s death, Devora was never
seen again as she had transformed and was no longer visible to the real world. With
her heart forever aching and longing for Cahal, Devora would forever sit on top
of the waterfall, and through the ages, she would look down to watch lovers at the
shores of the lake, connecting in love and desire just as she had with Cahal
many times. And sometimes, she would see Cahal look up at her from the bottom
of the lake, and he would always smile because he still loved her with all his
heart.
Dani Deveaux
What a sweet and wonderful story! Thank you for finishing and publishing it!/ Nessy
ReplyDeleteThank you Nessy, I am happy you enjoyed it
DeleteVery romantic! Thank you!
ReplyDeleteI appreciate your comment, thank you
DeleteVery sweet story. Nice to see something new from you.
ReplyDeleteI am glad I remembered to post it here, thank you for reading
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