magical as it was strong.
âHey!â Inspiration hit me halfway to the bathing chamber. âMaybe Iâm having a bizarre reaction to whatâs going on with Epi.â The mare was going to be bred on Samhain night, the eve of the first day in November, as was traditional each third year. In Partholon three is a âmagicâ number, as Alanna had explained to me, and when the third year rolled around, the equine incarnation of Epona was bred to insure the landâs fertility in the coming harvests. November first was in a couple days, and Epi had been acting fretful and uncharacteristically temperamental ever since the arrival of her future mate the week before.
âRhiannon never behaved any differently during Epiâs breeding cycles.â
âI wonder if that was the norm for Eponaâs Chosen, or was Rhiannon such a selfish hag that she wasnât sensitive to the mareâs moods?â Before Alanna could answer, I continued, âOr maybe since Rhiannon was always in heat herself, she didnât notice a difference.â
We both laughed and I felt a little of my tension release. The door to the bathing room was guarded by two of my scrumptious warriors. There were several positive things about the Goddess Iâd begun to serve; the fact that she was a warrior goddess and had a hundred handsome, virile men âon staffâ was just one of the perks of my new job. I noticed that the guards had added leather tunics to their hot-weather uniforms of, well, virtually nothing except well-filled loincloths. I couldnât help sighing in disappointment at the thought of all of those muscles being covered.
Yes, Iâm married, but Iâm not a corpse. Jeesh.
The warm-mineral smell of the candlelit room enveloped me. Steam rose invitingly from the deep, clear bathing pool. The bubbling of the water as it continually filled the bath, and the gentle sound of the waterfall as the overflow left the pool coupled with the moist warmth, beckoning me to relax in its depths and soak away the soreness in my unusually achy body.
I ducked my head out of the cowled robe I wore to keep out the prewinterâs damp cold, and winked my thanks at Alanna as she unwound me from my silky underwrap. Slowly, I immersed myself in the warm mineral bath, reclining against the smooth sides of my favorite rocky ledge. I closed my eyes and listened to Alanna send another nymphet for a cup of herbal teaâthen felt my face grimace in self-disgust at my sudden unfortunate aversion to wineâuntil recently, a glass of rich, red wine had been one of my favorite things.
Maybe I was getting old.
No, thirty-five and a half couldnât be old, and anyway, Ihad always planned on being one of those eccentric old ladies who wore lots of big jewelry, had chic, funky hair, drank wine knowingly and died suddenly of an Old White Womanâs Disease (preferably a painless aneurysm after an especially sumptuous dinner). I enjoy practicing for my future golden years.
I tried to convince myself for the zillionth time that I just had a stubborn flu. It was making me depressed and making me imagine things. Of course, now that it was daylight, last nightâs dark images seemed distant and more than slightly ridiculous. ClanFintan would be home tonight. Just thinking about being with him again made me feel better, or at least thatâs what I told myself. Heâd been gone almost a month, and this worldâs lack of telephones and e-mail had really worn on me. Weâd been married less than six months, but with him gone I felt strangely hollow, like a bell without a clacker. Which was a disconcerting feeling for someone who had changed worlds recently. Actually, it made me feel a little like I was trapped in one of the alternative-dimension Star Trek episodes (minus Kirk and whatever alien bimbo he would be boinking).
âTry this.â Alanna handed me a thick mug filled with fragrant tea. âIt
R. K. Ryals, Melanie Bruce