Elfleda
by Vonda N. McIntyre
This story copyright 1997 by Vonda N. McIntyre. This copy was
created for Jean Hardy's personal use. All other rights are reserved. Thank
you for honoring the copyright.
Published by Seattle Book Company,
www.seattlebook.com.
* * *
I love her. And I envy her, because she is
clever enough, defiant enough, to outwit our creators. Or most of them. She is
not a true unicorn: many of us have human parts, and she is no exception. The
reconnections are too complicated otherwise. Our brilliant possessors are not
quite brilliant enough to integrate nerves directly from the brain.
So Elfleda is, as I am, almost entirely human from
the hips up. Below that I am equine: a centaur. She is a unicorn, for her hooves
are cloven, her tail is a lion's, and from her brow sprouts a thin straight
spiral horn. Her silver forelock hides the pale scar at its base; the silver
hair drifts down, growing from her shoulders and spine. Her coat is sleek and
pale gray, and great dapples flow across her flanks. The hair on the tip of her
tail is quite black. For a long time I thought some surgeon had made a mistake
or played her a joke, but eventually I understood why this was done, as from
afar I watched her twitching her long black-tipped tail like a cat. My body has
no such artistic originality. I hate everything about me as much as I love
everything about Elfleda.
She will talk to me from a
distance; I think she pities me. When the masters come to our park she watches
them, lashes her tail, and gallops away. Sometimes she favors them with a brief
glimpse of her silver hide. Her inaccessibility makes her the most sought-after
of us all. They follow after her, they call her, but only a few can touch or
move her. She is the only one of us who can ever resist their will. Even this
freedom was their creation; they are so powerful they can afford to play with
the illusion of defiance.
But the rest of us, the
other centaurs, the satyrs, nymphs, merfolk, we strut and prance across the
meadows or wait in the forest or gently splash the passersby, hoping to be
noticed.
We dare not complain. Indeed, we should
not; we should be grateful. Our lives have been saved. Every one of us would
have died if the masters had not accepted us and taken us in. We owe them our
lives, and that is the payment they exact. Sometimes I think the price too high,
but though nothing prevents me from leaping off the mountainside or eating
poison flowers, I am still alive.
The noon sun is
warm in the meadow, so I walk toward the forest through the high grass. A small
creature leaps from his sleeping-place and flees, as startled by me as I by him.
Galloping, he surges into the air: one of the small pegasoi. His feathered wings
seem much too large in proportion to his body. That is the reason only the
smallest pegasoi can fly at all. This one is a miniature appaloosa pony, not as
tall as my knee. Half the meadow away he touches down and trots off, folding his
blue-gray wings against his spotted sides.
The
larger pegasoi, the ones my size, are spectacular but earthbound; they seek
flight but never find it. I have watched one standing in the wind, neck arched,
nostrils flaring, tail high. She spread her wings and raised them, cantered
against the wind, galloped, rain, but the wings were not large enough to lift
her. Our masters use their beasts as they use those of us part human: for
amusement, for beauty. It would not occur to them that a flying horse's heart
might break because she could not fly.
The shade of
the forest envelops me with a cool scent of pine and humus. The loam beneath my
hooves is soft. I can feel its resilience, but not its texture. When first I
rose, after the operations, the healing, the pain, I could not walk properly. I
stumbled and fell and was threatened with punishment if I scarred my bright bay
hide. After that I walked slowly but learned quickly. Human beings did not
evolve to articulate six limbs, but we are adaptable. I learned to talk, to
trot, to run, and I even learned to move my arms simultaneously, with not too
much gracelessness. I did not scar myself, and now my skin-- my
human skin-- is tanned as dark as my red-gold coat. My mane and
tail and lower legs are black.
The stream ripples
by, loud with snow-water. It splashes down a rock slide into a mountain lake
that reflects in its depths another, freer world. There the purple-blue
mountains are valleys which could be reached if one could find them. The
mountains themselves cannot be crossed. One of the large pegasoi, seeking the
sky, climbed only halfway to a summit before his hooves slipped on the sheer
rock and he fell. He broke his leg. Equine legs are a great trouble to heal, so
he was put to death, humanely. As humanely as he had been given this life.
The pond's surface moves and breaks, and one of the
mer-people glides onto stones dampened by mist. It is the water-folks' favorite
place to sun themselves when the icy water chills their memories of being
warm-blooded. I think the being is a mermaid, but I cannot be sure from this
distance. They are all slender and lithe, with narrow shoulders and long bright
hair. The women have hardly any breasts at all, and the men have no proper
genitals. They all have only slits, like fishes, half-concealed among the
multicolored scales on their abdomens. I have never seen them copulate with each
other, so perhaps the opening is only for excretion and for our owners to use
when pleasuring themselves. The mer-people are as deformed one way as I am the
other. They have no genitals at all, while I have two sets. I am sure some
biological engineer received a prize for clever design. My human penis hangs in
its accustomed human place, but above the front legs of a bay horse. My stallion
parts are much more discreet, tucked away between my hind legs.
The mermaid flicks her tail, the filmy fin sending
out rainbow drops of spray. Another of the merfolk casts himself up beside her.
But they do not touch; no intimacy exists between them. Perhaps the feeling has
been taken from them, or the cold water slows their passion as much as their
bodies.
But, oh, they are lovely. When I wade out to
drink, I can sometimes see them beneath the water, swimming together in their
own inexplicable patterns, hair streaming gold, silver, scarlet, scales rippling
blue, orange, black, all with a metallic sheen. Their tailfins are like gauze,
like lace, transparent silk, translucently veined. Their gill slits make
vermilion lines across their chests and backs and throats.
They never speak.
If I
moved from my hiding place of shadows, the mermaid and merman would disappear
beneath the silver surface of the ice-blue water, marring it with ripples. Two
sets of concentric circles would touch, and interact, and fade away, and I would
be alone again. I do not move. I watch the beautiful creatures sunning
themselves, occasionally flicking water over their scales with their fins or
their long narrow hands.
I envy their contentment
with solitude, their independence, as I envy Elfleda. She and they are never
touched by the games our masters play with us. Elfleda watches from a high
pinnacle where only she can climb. The merfolk participate when they are called
and commanded, but their eyes are blank. I think by the next day they have
already forgotten.
I never forget. I remember every
incident that has occurred since I was brought here. Soon it will all happen
again.
One of the merfolk swims away, then the
other. The forest has chilled me, and I am hungry. The sun bursts warm on my
back as I leave deep shade and cross the meadow to the orchard.
Light through the mottled ceiling of leaves dapples
my flanks. The lazy buzz of a black fly does not disturb me. Having a long tail,
I must confess, can be convenient.
A nymph and a
satyr copulate beneath a plum tree, oblivious to my presence. They are as brazen
as the merfolk are shy. The satyr's short furry tail jerks up and down as she
mounts the nymph and clasps him with her hairy legs. His green hands grasp her
hips and move up to caress her pink human flesh. On either side of her spine's
erect crest of brown bristles her back is slightly sunburned. The nymph arches
himself into her and she grunts, twining her fingers in his curly green-black
hair. His heels press the ground, his toes curl; her cloven goat-hooves dig up
bits of sod. The nymph moans and clasps the satyr to him. Our creators have no
respect for the traditional gender of their creatures. They please only
themselves, never myth or legend.
I wheel and gallop
away to escape the frantic plunging and gasps and groans in the orchards. I have
coupled with the satyr myself, gods help me.
The
meadow grass parts before me and the air flows through my mane like water. The
birds are silent in the heat but the cicadas' shrill afternoon song urges me
onward. My hooves pound the earth, crushing flowers, cutting the turf. Sweat
sparkles in my eyes. I pull my elbows close to my sides against the pain of
breathing. The air enters in burning gouts. Sweat pours down my chest, breaks
out on my flanks, drips down my legs, and flies from the points of my fetlocks
as I run. I feel my buttocks rub the sweat into white foam.
The meadow ends and I run among rocks. I leap a huge
boulder and come down in scree. The valley narrows, rises, and ends in a sheer
wall of stone. I stumble, stop, stand spraddle-legged, knee-locked, and try only
to breathe.
Later I realize I still have a plum in
one hand and a peach in the other. The juice, where I clasped the fruit, runs
between my fingers. I tear the pulp with my teeth and swallow it slowly until
all that is left are the seeds. Fruit trees are hybrids; they reproduce only
freaks, sports, throwbacks. I fling the seeds among the jumbled rocks, where
they will have no chance to grow.
The sweat dries on
me as I plod down the mountain. A dull ache creeps up my near hind leg from the
center of my hoof: I think I have a stone bruise.
Back in the meadow I lie down in deep cool grass. I
am never comfortable sleeping now. When I stand, like a horse, my head droops
and I wake with a backache. Lying on my side with my head pillowed on my arm is
awkward, and my hand always goes to sleep.
The
shadow of the mountain is creeping over me when I wake. It will be dark soon,
and the moon will be full. I fling out my forelegs and push myself to my feet.
A flash of white among the trees draws my attention.
"Elfleda!"
She stops and
turns toward me, tilting her head gracefully to draw the spiral horn from
beneath the branches. She has small breasts and long, strong hands. Human skin
blends into animal hide at her navel, but like the rest of the equiforms she has
human sex organs between the beast forelegs. Our owners must have bred and
chosen Elfleda's animal part carefully, for it is both horse and deer, with a
musky taint of goat. She lashes her tail.
"Hello,
Achilleus. What do you want?"
"I..." But I want
nothing from her that she will give. She is not cruel, only detached. She does
not feel for me and I have no reason or excuse to expect her to.
"They'll come again soon," she says.
"I hope not."
"They
will."
"And you'll watch for them."
"Yes," she says. I do not understand, since she can
ignore almost all of them, why she does not disappear into the forest when they
come. Instead she watches, and our masters see her and grow jealous of her
freedom. What they give, they can take back.
Elfleda
flicks her tail again. The black tip touches the point of her horse-shoulder,
her withers, her flanks. The wind lifts her short fine hair away from her head,
away from her back, haloing her in silver light. I step toward her, and she does
not back away. But I am covered with sweat and dust and I smell like hot horse,
hot human. I am embarrassed to approach her like this. She watches me, waiting,
unafraid. She knows she could outrun me if she had to. They made me large,
taller than I was in life-- in real life-- but she is
quick and her hooves are sharp; and they did not take away so much of my
humanity that I would force myself on her. That would be bitter love indeed.
"I wasn't thought ugly before --" My voice is
querulous. I should not speak to her like this, as if I would be content if she
took me out of pity.
She frowns, then her brow
clears and she steps toward me. "If you were, Achilleus, you know it wouldn't
make any difference to me." She reaches out: I can feel the heat of her hand
near my face. She has never touched me before.
I
draw back and turn away. "You still don't find me attractive."
"That isn't fair."
And
even now I do not look at her, thought I know she is right. "You've accepted
their rules. Nothing holds us to them."
"Do you
think not?"
"What keeps you from loving me?"
"We love, or we do not love."
"We let them control us."
"We cannot stop them," she says, and again I know
she is right. Between the times of their coming I want to believe we could all
resist them, if we tried, and I blame our obedience on our weaknesses and our
guilt, our willingness to be controlled and thereby absolved of all
responsibility. But when the compulsions come to me--
Elfleda touches my arm and I start violently. She
jumps back, as surprised as I, her other hand still raised, pointing toward the
sky where she sought to draw my attention.
"Look."
Darkness has fallen. I look at the stars and see a
brilliant multicolored light approaching. Above us, our masters ride in a great
dirigible that floats majestically over the crest of the mountains. Its engines
are nearly silent. Lights festoon its cabin and illuminate the tree-tops below.
It passes directly over us and we hear music and faint laughter. I look down at
Elfleda. The lights paint her, red, violet, blue, green. Her expression is
wistful, hopeful. She does not look at me.
A sharp
cry of delight or distress draws my attention back to the dirigible. When I look
down again, Elfleda is gone.
But what does it
matter? What does she matter? Others desire me, if she does not. If I felt tired
and spent a moment ago, I am excited and powerful now. Half the forest lies
between me and the meadow, and if I do not hurry I will be late. But the
distance is nothing. Evergreen branches brush me with their fragrance as I run.
The ache in my hoof is no more than an insect bite.
All of us gather in the meadow, beast and
beast-human alike. The little pegasoi cavort and scamper among us and over us,
while the flightless ones display their plumage. A gryphon sitting on its
haunches on a boulder roars and screeches, and the unearthly light of the
aircraft shimmers around us all. The dirigible descends slowly, so immense it
blots out the stars. I catch one tether-rope and the centaur Hekate takes
another. Hekate pulls harder than I, the muscles in her haunches bulging like
fists. The dirigible tilts down on her side and she laughs. We drag the craft to
earth against its lifting force, glorying in our strength, and bind the ropes to
trees. Our masters step down upon the ground.
They
are ordinary humans, as ordinary as we were before they changed us. They look so
strange, walking normally on two legs, hoofless, clawless, hairless. They are
small, weak, omnipotent. They smile on us and we wait, hoping to be chosen. They
are all as beautiful as flowers. The gryphon bounds down and rubs felinely
against their legs.
A silhouetted figure stands in
the hatchway of the aircraft, hanging back. He steps down and hesitates with the
light flowing across him. His face is coarse, his expression uncertain. He is
both curious and frightened.
"Hekate!"
The ugly boy vanishes from my mind. One of our
masters is calling dark Hekate, and she obeys, her black hair streaming in the
wind of her speed. Her great hooves plough the ground as she stops before the
slender young woman. Her horse-part is heavy through the shoulders and haunches,
powerful and immense, ebony highlighted through the spectrum by the dirigible's
illumination. In her other life she must have been a formidable and stunning
woman, for she is a compelling myth. The young human leaps upon her back and
drums her bare heels against her sides, laughing. Hekate wheels and bolts across
the meadow, her tail held high like a plume. The vibration of her hoofbeats
echoes around us.
Two satyrs bound along beside her,
as fleet and randy as goats. Their musk mingles in the air with the pungent
sweat of Hekate.
A light pressure on my back: "Run,
Achilleus, follow them." A nymph clasps me with his long pale arms, his fingers
across my belly. I can feel his slender legs around my ribs, but he is
weightless. "Run, or they'll leave us behind."
I
obey as if he were a master. I follow Hekate's path easily through the trampled
grass and silver darkness. I leap an obstruction and realize later it was
nothing but the human's flimsy robe. I gallop through a shallow extrusion of the
lake, flinging spray in all directions, passing naked humans who wade toward the
rocks of the languorous merfolk.
Hekate and the
human stand gilded by moonlight. They embrace, the human standing on Hekate's
broad back, leaning over her shoulder, bending around to hold and kiss her. They
glance toward me. The human woman laughs.
"What
shall we do with them?"
"Exhaust them." Hekate's
laugh is low and full. "Exhaust them, and go back to what we were doing."
Copulating in the grass, the two satyrs ignore us
all. The nymph slips from my back as I prance toward Hekate. The human turns and
sits astride her, facing backwards. She holds out her arms to me; I rear, I
mount Hekate as a stallion and embrace the human as a man. She slides her heels
over my forelegs and pulls herself onto me. As she draws me down to kiss her I
see Hekate bend likewise, as she shifts her haunches beneath me, to caress the
gold-green nymph. He is light and thin, but tall enough for her. His fingers
clench, nails digging into Hekate's shoulder blades. The human moans and slips
her hand down my stomach. I thrust in a single rhythm, and Hekate groans as
pleasure washes her in double waves.
Many
combinations occur between us. My memory is like diamond-bearing stone, opaque,
with sparks of crystal clarity. The human finishes with me, kisses me one last
gentle time, and slips from Hekate's withers. When the human draws the nymph
away, Hekate leans back against me. Beings move and laugh and touch all around
us, forming some immense incomprehensible dance. One of the other centaurs
gallops by and throws us a leather flask. I hold it for Hekate, and drink from
it myself. The warm wine cools me, and I let it dribble down my chin, drip on my
chest and into Hekate's long mane. The taste is strong and sour and the
intoxication hits us quickly. Revitalized, I rear back and return to the ground,
and Hekate and I canter through the meadow, playing like foals, rearing and
striking at a night-pony who sails between us, black batwings sharp as knives.
Under a tree we face each other and couple again, while nearby a fully human
pair watches and laughs.
The energy of intoxication
lasts a few minutes, and quite suddenly drains away as Hekate chases me through
the trees. I stumble and slow; she passes me, calls to me, but when I do not
follow she snorts and gallops away. I sink down in the soft cushion of pine
needles, enveloped by a pleasant lethargy. While I doze, the gold-green nymph
returns to me and curls up against my side, trustful among my hooves.
I dream about Elfleda, but the dream dissolves as I
am about to touch her, as she reaches for me. I half-wake and see her, real,
before me, half-hidden by a growth of ferns. She does not know I am here.
The ugly human boy is standing before her, head
down, hair falling across his face as if to hide it. Elfleda says something to
him that I cannot hear, and he looks up and smiles. All his movements and
expressions are hesitant. Elfleda takes his hand. He reaches up, touches her
breast, her throat, her forehead, her spiral horn. She touches its point to his
shoulder and lifts her head again. Together they walk away into the forest. I
shiver, close my eyes, and try to sleep again, making myself believe I never
really woke.
While it is still dark Hekate returns
and lies beside me, back to back so we can lean on each other and have a little
more comfort. I expected her to stay with the human.
"Couldn't you find her?"
"I found her," Hekate says. I wait; finally she
continues. "She sent me away. I suppose she had something better to do." Her low
voice is well-suited for anger, but not for disappointment. She mutters a few
more words as we fit ourselves against each other for sleep. In the meadow, only
the humans and perhaps a few satyrs will be stirring. I cannot understand what
drew the human from Hekate; I would be offended, too, if one of the humans left
me for one of the hairy creatures. Nevertheless we obey our masters as long as
we are able, whether the orders are to serve or leave them.
Obedience and the night are over for me; I am spent.
The nymph snores and Hekate shifts and sighs in her
sleep. I hear laughter, giggling, the command to hush, but the sounds pass over
me like a breeze. It must be the humans, searching in a pack for something to
entertain them, and I am beyond entertaining.
We
have few storms here, but when they come they are violent and long. We know now
when to seek shelter, for the gentle wind that precedes them through the
mountain peaks has a certain coolness, a certain flavor. My hair rises, all down
my spine, for the storm-wind and the breeze of words are all too similar.
I move my legs carefully so I will not hurt the
snoring nymph, then lurch to my feet. Hekate stirs but does not wake. I am
already stiff and sore, and my hoof aches fiercely. But I remember the direction
Elfleda and the ugly boy walked, and I remember the way the humans crept after
her.
I follow the bruised leaves of their passing,
too frightened to call out. Elfleda could be beyond the sound of my warning, and
the humans could come back and silence me. I climb as fast as I am able. The
ache spreads into my haunches and along the vertebrae strained by my unnatural
construction.
The trees end suddenly. Moonlight
throws my long shadow against pale granite. The mountain peak is still far
above, separated from me by ridges, flat sheets of rock, sheer walls.
I climb the first ridge, my hooves scraping the bare
stone. When I reach the top I can see Elfleda and the boy, gilt in the midst of
shadows. His hands are twined in her mane and her arms are around his naked
body. He moves against her.
They are safe, and
alone. I am spying on them, up here silhouetted against the sky, and I am
ashamed. I will go back to Hekate's solid warm side--
The moon reflects from ornament or weapon.
"Elfleda!"
As she throws
up her head at my warning the humans rush her. The boy jumps away, surprised and
embarrassed. The other humans are all around, yelling in triumph, holding nets
and ropes to take back the defiance they gave her. The ugly boy looks from one
face to another, confused, humiliated: at least he did not know what use they
planned for his initiation. He sees the ropes, and strikes one angrily away.
Elfleda rears and another misses her. She charges the humans, head down, and
they scatter away from her sharp horn. She is trapped by the mountain and the
waiting nets.
I gallop down the side of the ridge. A
noose settles over Elfleda's head, around her throat, and slides tight. She
turns, flinching, grasps the rope and sets herself back on her haunches, pulling
the human off balance. She tears the rope away and flings it to the ground, but
another settles around her shoulders. One strikes her hind legs like a snake.
Startled, she springs away, and the tension of the rope halts her in mid-arc and
pulls her down. She lies stunned, a scarlet burn on her throat, blood trickling
from one leg where the rope has cut it.
Laughing,
the humans close a circle around her as I near, my hoofbeats echoing on the
stone. To our masters, this is adventure. Between them I see Elfleda raise her
head. She tosses it, as a human approaches her, and her horn opens a deep wound.
I reach the crowd and scatter our frail creators with my shoulders. I charge the
human who holds the trip-rope; I pick her up and throw her down on the stones.
Our masters have stopped laughing.
Elfleda kicks off the loosened rope and pulls away
the other, struggling to her feet. She menaces the humans with her horn and I
with my fists, my hooves. They stand back, milling around us. We are all at bay.
"Achilleus!"
She bounds
forward and I follow. The humans are raising nets, crying to each other to
hurry. One snare drapes low, rippling and tangled. As it rises Elfleda leaps it.
I gather speed, collect myself, and jump. The strands graze my
forelegs-- they must entrap my hind legs-- but I kick
back and up, the round cords scrape me, and I am free!
I plunge after Elfleda's pale form. Our retreat to
the park, where we could hide and hope the masters might forget their anger, is
cut off. Elfleda flees toward the mountain and the impassable ridges.
She starts to climb, hesitating when she no longer
hears me behind her. "Achilleus, come on!"
"But
where will we go?"
"Anywhere but back--
if we want to live. Hurry!"
She reaches toward me in
encouragement: she is too high above to actually reach me.
"There's nothing out there for us."
She looks beyond me. I turn. The masters are very
near, now, confident of their prey.
"Hurry!" Elfleda
says again, and I put one hoof on the steep rock. This is desperation. I begin
to climb. I scrabble on the stone, straining upward. My hooves are made for
meadows and prairies. I can hear the masters just behind me. Trying to go
faster, I slip and fall to my knees, crying out at the wave of pain, reaching
with my hands to keep from falling. Granite soaks up my blood.
Elfleda is almost close enough to touch me. Did she
descend to help me climb?
"I can't-- "
"Try," she says. "Just try..."
Shining in the failing moonlight, a rope slips over
her head as she grasps my hand.
Another noose falls
around my throat and jerks me backwards. I fumble at it, struggling to free
myself and climb. The rope jerks me again, much harder, pulling me down, cutting
off my breath. My bruised hoof slams against a rock spur. The pain completes my
disorientation. I stumble again, falling and sliding on the stone. I am lost.
When next I am aware of anything I feel warm
droplets falling on my shoulder. I open my eyes, and see the masters leading
Elfleda back down the mountain. She is at the center of a web of ropes, around
her throat, her arms, her waist, binding her hands, but she holds her head
erect. One of the humans reaches out and pulls her black-tipped tail. She lashes
out with a sharp hind hoof and half-turns toward him, but the other humans drag
her around.
I lunge up. The ugly human boy reaches
out to stop me, too late. I scream and fall back, shuddering, panting, suddenly
cold and wet with sweat. When I lie still the pain is only a great throbbing.
"I'm sorry," the boy whispers. "I didn't know..."
I push myself slowly up on one elbow, straining to
see yet not move my hindquarters. Blood is black in the moonlight, but dawn will
soon turn the patch beneath me scarlet. Bones protrude from my shattered leg.
Elfleda and the humans disappear among the trees as
I sink back to the ground. I can only see the paling sky and the single human.
"Help me... please help me..." But he is wiping the tears from his cheeks,
pushing the hair from his forehead. It must be the kind moonlight and dawn that
make him appear less coarse, less uncertain. There is no magic here.
"Elfleda," I whisper, and the boy gazes blankly
down, as if he never knew her name.
Behind me I can
hear the footsteps of two more humans, as they approach me one last time.
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