Night of the Coven

By Kirk Brothers

Published on Nov 15, 1997

Gay

Controls


THIRD ADVENTURE IN THE BENEDICT/DAVID SERIES


NIGHT OF THE COVEN

Part 1 of 2

by Kirk Brothers

Copyright 1990

All Rights Reserved

"Tell me, Mr. Benedict," asked the smartly-dressed young lady with the microphone, "are you really a witch?" Her tone managed to convey journalistic curiosity, skepticism, and a trace of amusement all at once--a combination that Benedict found irksome. He had heard similar questions more often than he cared to remember--and all too often from the same type of mentality--but he merely sighed inwardly, and made the best of a bad situation.

"As you think of the word, perhaps, no. But as the word might be used by an initiate, yes. I prefer to call myself a Shaman, as I define that term, which does not imply the Hollywood caricatures of old hags riding broomsticks." He knew all too well that such a fine distinction would be lost by both the young lady and her tele- vision camera crew--as well as by the viewers who would see a brief and mangled excerpt of the interview on Channel Six that evening.

He knew, too, that his words would be cleverly cut and spliced out of context to create the impression that he was a fool. Never- theless he went on.

"The word 'witch' is derived from the old English 'wicca'", he said, stressing the final broad "a", "which meant either 'wisdom' or 'wise man'. The feminine form for a wise woman was 'wicce', and such men and women were regarded as spiritual healers and teachers --not supernatural persons who had made pacts with the forces of evil. I believe we are still spiritual healers and teachers, and that our 'magic' is merely paranormal, not supernatural."

"Then you really do practice magic!" said the young lady, with sugary delight. Benedict sighed again.

It was ten o'clock on the morning of Sunday, the thirty-first of October, Christian Era 1999 (Benedict used the abbreviation "C.E." instead of "A.D.", to refrain from endorsing the Gregorian term "Anno Domini"). He had opened his shop on Christopher Street for business as usual, only to have his cramped space invaded by a news team making up a "human interest" Hallowe'en story.

Benedict knew quite well that Sunday meant a skeleton crew and a slow day for news, so the assignment editor was inspired to fill time on the abbreviated weekend newscast with a feature on modern- day New Yorkers who practice witchcraft. Since a recent Supreme Court ruling that the news media had a right to enter a store during business hours, the team had needed no permission to be there. He reasoned that if he were hostile he would get worse and longer coverage than if he were gracious. He decided to be gracious.

"If by 'magic' you mean flying through the air and conjuring up the dead, no. You must realize that there are two types of 'magic'--white and black. The black arts are used with evil intent, and white magic is used for good. I am a white magician. We do not worship evil spirits, nor hold human sacrifices, nor aid any unspiritual purposes." The effect of his words was lost some- what when he added, "Get down, Satan!" to a large black cat with yellow eyes which had jumped onto a display of silks that adorned one end of a counter.

"Oh, your black cat's name is 'Satan'!", exclaimed the woman, at which Benedict could have bitten his tongue.

"A joke," he explained lamely, setting Satan back on the floor. "He walked in one day last winter, half starved, and he's been here ever since. You're not starving any more, are you, Satan?" he said to the animal, which rubbed its head against his ankles and purred.

The reporter, a sleekly-groomed blonde named Sally Burke, turned her attention to the shop and its offerings. "What do you sell here, and what is it all used for?" she asked. "The skeleton, for instance--can we get a good shot of it, Sam?" Sam was the cameraman, who promptly braced his one-legged camera stand against the base of a counter, to capture the image of the plastic bones by tilting his minicam slowly from the grinning skull down to the metatarsals.

"The skeleton is not for sale, Miss Burke--it's just a bit of atmospheric decoration. Similarly, the case here," he said, point- ing to a wall cabinet with sliding glass doors, "is for showing rare items--one of a kind--which I don't want to part with." He pointed to each of the items as he spoke.

"The mask is a genuine Shamanic artifact."

"A what artifact?" Sally asked, making notes.

Benedict spelled it for her. "Shamans were the medicine men, or witch doctors, or witches, of Indian tribes. They practiced magic rituals in the medicine lodges of the plains Indians and the underground kivas of the pueblo dwellers."

"Oh, like rain dances."

"Something like that. The dagger is genuine Mayan from a temple altar. It was purely symbolic--for show in formal rituals, not for human sacrifices--and has considerable value because of the gold and jewels."

Sally looked surprised. "You mean those are real? It looks like something you used to find in a box of Crackerjacks." She wrinkled her nose. "Of course," she said, by way of explanation, "it's very old."

Benedict paused, and abruptly closed the case. "Yes," he said in a tone conveying feelings which were lost on Ms. Burke. "The other items each have some ritual value in magic ceremonies, but I think you now have the idea that they're personal treasures, and not for profit on a sale."

"And all these candles and oils and things here?" she asked, gesturing to small countertop displays. "Are they stuff like the gypsies sell in Spanish Harlem? You burn green to attract money and red to find a lover and all that?"

"Some people might use them for such purposes. Now, the bottles of oil are simply different scents for whatever use any person might wish. They are from old formulas, and I make them myself. Some are regarded as aphrodisiacs, and some as medicinal. I myself reject such claims, and have no such uses for them--but if I did not have them in stock, a customer might go elsewhere."

"Which one is the aphrodisiac?"

Benedict smiled. "Take your pick."

"I get it," said Sally with a knowing wink. "Just what the customer wants, right?"

"No, it is not that, Miss Burke. The magic is in the mental state of the person who uses it. And his spiritual level. And his goals."

"You have any Tarot cards?" she asked abruptly. "I'm pretty good with them, myself."

"As a matter of fact I have an old Rider deck once owned by the notorious magician, Aleister Crowley--as well as many decks for sale, in all the popular designs."

Miss Burke was apparently struggling with an idea. "I have it," she announced. "I'm looking for something visual for my story --you know, something colorful to look at. How about you telling my fortune with that old Rider deck?"

"I'm sorry, but I don't tell fortunes--that practice is a gypsy corruption. The cards were originally used for religious and moral instruction at a time when most persons could not read or write, and so the lessons had to be presented in pictures--for easy learning, and passing down from one generation to the next. But, of course, if you wish to see the deck, I'll be glad to show it to you. As a matter of fact, I often do a spread on myself for purposes of spiritual meditation."

"Great! You can tell your own fortune! And we can have pictures of the cards you get and how your read them, okay?"

"If you insist, Miss Burke," Benedict answered with as much poise as possible. "We can lay them out right here."

He stepped behind the counter, and from the "Not For Sale" cabinet took a well-worn deck of the familiar picture cards. First Benedict spread the cards facing himself long enough to find a single card and place it face up before him. "This card repre- sents the querent--the one seeking guidance. I have chosen The Magician to symbolize me. Major Arcanum One."

The card showed a robed man holding a wand aloft as he stood beside a table bearing symbolic objects. A mystical halo floated above his head. Sally Burke was silent while he shut his eyes and slowly shuffled the cards, but it is unlikely that Benedict would have heard her had she chosen to speak.

"Most Tarotists use their own method," he explained, "and I'll now draw five cards at random to guide me through today. The deck was well shuffled, and I now draw all five and place them beside the significator--the Magician card."

When Benedict reached his fifth draw, two cards fell out at once. "I must use both," he said. "The cards are telling me that they must be read together as a single element." When he had laid them in a row, he turned them over one at a time, his face now calm with repose.

"First, the Seven of Swords. Next the Ten of Swords. The most important card is the central one, which is Arcanum Eight, or Strength. Then comes Judgment Day. And the last two cards to be read together are the Three of Cups and the Devil."

"Wow!" said Miss Burke. "Let Sam here get a closeup of the sequence, and then you can give us your patter."

"My what?"

"You know--the talk."

"Yes, I know." While Sam took his pictures, Benedict gazed at the cards with his eyes half closed, and a peculiar expression on his face.

"Well, what do they mean for you today?" asked Sally.

Benedict concentrated. "The Seven of Swords shows a man near an armed camp, apparently trying to make off with the soldiers' weapons--their swords, in the old days. The Sword cards always refer to hard work and conflicts. I see the central figure as myself, and I'm removing weapons from an armed camp. I am there- fore furthering the cause of world peace through disarmament. I happen to believe in that.

"The Ten of Swords shows a man prostrate on the ground with ten swords stuck through his body. The sky is black overhead, but bright on the far horizon. The clouds are lifting and the worst is over. The image suggests to me that this is the last man to be killed in war. It shows the urgency of the previous card--and its result.

"Arcanum Eight shows an angel holding shut the jaws of a powerful lion. It is beneath the Magician card, so it applies to myself--and, as I said before, its position makes it the key to this lesson. The angel with such spiritual strength indicates divine protection in my endeavors--which I believe I have.

"The next card is Judgment Day, or Divine Retribution. Evil will be punished and good rewarded. It follows as the natural result of Spiritual Strength.

"Finally, the Devil and Three of Cups together: a peculiar combination. The Devil symbolizes Black Magic, which I reject. But it lies beneath the Three of Cups, which shows joy as three women raise wine goblets in a toast while they perform some kind of ceremonial dance. Because the Devil is under, or suppressed, by the card above, I see it as a celebration of the triumph of love over evil."

"That's pretty good," admitted Sally. "You do like to make a religious thing out of it, don't you?"

Benedict nodded. "Of course one doesn't try to give a quick response just on looking at the faces of the cards. The whole idea is to meditate on their hidden meanings--and that takes time and concentration. It can't be done unless the atmosphere is conducive to relaxed thought, so that your subconscious mind has a chance to get through."

Sally nodded. "Yes, I see what you mean. If I was reading the same cards, I'd see them from my own viewpoint, right? So I'd tell your fortune from them this way. Somebody is going to try to rob you today. You could get stabbed in the back, so be careful. You have to keep your mouth shut about it for some reason. The open coffins and Gabriel blowing his trumpet mean that someone you know will die today. And the dancing over the Devil could mean you'll go to a party tonight because it's Hallowe'en. Are you going to a party tonight?"

"Not I, Miss Burke. Covens do meet on eight Witches' Sabbats a year, including tonight. But we celebrate the cycles of nature and the fertility of the earth. Our ritual tonight commemorates the death of Pan."

She frowned in thought. "He's the one who played a bunch of flutes to charm the ladies in the woods, right?"

"That was one of his talents," answered Benedict drily.

"Well, there you are--the music and dancing, like I said." At that point a soft cheep sounded and Sally became alert. "That's my beeper," she announced. "I have to use the radio to call the station." While Benedict kept a miserable eye on Sam and the sound man, Sally talked to her editor in the newsroom.

"We've got to leave," she said in a moment. "There's a fire over in Brooklyn. Thanks loads, Mr. Benedict! It'll be great on the show tonight!" she predicted enthusiastically.

The TV crew departed and Benedict watched them go with relief. "Idiot!" he thought. "She'll go far in her chosen profession."

At that moment the telephone rang. He picked it up and answered with the single word, "Benedict," which did not happen to be his birth name.

"Blessed be!" he answered in response to his caller's similar greeting--a Wiccan hail-and-farewell, like "aloha" or "shalom"-- pronouncing "blessed" as two syllables, not "blest".

He listened to his caller's request with a slight frown on his face. "Yes, of course, Brother Paul, I could easily make it up for you, if I can find fresh apricots. I'd rather not, because it's totally illegal to possess it, as you know. That doesn't bother me as much as the fact that it's terribly dangerous. A few drops on the skin can cause a very quick and terribly painful death." Paul was a member of the Radical Faeries who practiced herbal and other unorthodox healing--he talked some more as Benedict listened.

"Of course I know it can be a cancer remedy in a homeopathic dose! Even old-time allopaths used it as an antispasmodic in a one-percent dilution--not knowing they were practicing homeopathy. And I have absolute trust in your integrity and expertise--but I would never do it for anyone except you, Paul. I owe you more than I can ever repay, even with ten vials of the stuff. You know the precautions to take in opening it, I presume?...That's right." At last Benedict agreed, and hung up with a final "Blessed be." He looked at the antique clock on the wall--almost noon. David would have to work the store alone this afternoon while Benedict worked in one of the private rooms in the basement.

He returned to the spread of cards and mused on them a moment. Before he could put them away the bells on the door jingled as David entered. "Blessed be, David," said Benedict in greeting.

"Blessed be, Benedict," answered David in return. He opened his arms for a warm embrace and a kiss of genuine affection.

David was a young, well-built hispanic--with perhaps a touch of gypsy in his blood, Benedict guessed. David had never known his father, and had always missed the companionship, guidance and manly affection a father instinctively bestows on a son. For his part, Benedict, a widower, had always wanted a son, but his wife had died childless. Their complementary needs were a major factor in the emotional bonding which had first drawn them to each other.

David still shared an apartment on West Fourth Street with three other would-be actors and part-time hustlers, but had given up hustling himself to work and study with Benedict. Benedict hoped that David would be moving in permanently, if and when he decided to quit show business entirely.

In the meantime David slept over at least once a week, and always on Friday night. And because yesterday had been their mutual birth, he had also spent last night with Benedict in the king-size bed in the big bedroom downstairs, after a special "ritual" in the secret soundproof room.

"How's your ass feel now?" he asked with a grin, giving Benedict a friendly slap on the rump. Benedict gasped and winced in pain, and moved stiffly as he released David after the embrace.

"Worse than it usually does on Sundays," he answered. "Two days in a row is ghastly!"

"Good!" said David happily. His smirk of satisfaction showed his true feelings, and they both knew it.

Benedict went on. "That was the worst so-called birthday spanking I ever got in my life! I feel like there's no skin at all left on my rump."

David's grin broadened. "There isn't. It stuck to the solder I melted and dripped on your buns last night to tenderize you!" He dwelt on the lurid details with obvious relish. "When I peeled off the solder, the skin came with it--before I gave you your thousand whacks with the cane!" His tone was now mock sympathy. "I took it easy on you since you'd had five thousand Friday as usual--and fainted, as usual. So I ordered you to wear your diaper today to keep any blood from seeping through your pants."

David looked at Benedict seriously now, making direct eye contact as he always did when he wanted man-to-man conversation without role playing. "Benedict, I still don't know what your religious purpose is in having me beat your ass to a bloody pulp at least once a week--and wanting me to use your mouth for my toilet-- and saying you want me to do all of it to you any time, every day and night, if I'd enjoy it. The only thing you told me is you're some kind of flagellant for a special spiritual reason you'll explain to me some day, when the time is right. I'd like to know why, please--it's important to me."

"Then the time is right--well, almost right. We'll have a busy day once the crazy costume parade gets started and the crowd of tourists comes in to see the Village characters. Let's say we clear up the mystery for you this evening, after we close. We can go over to Stacy's if you like, and talk in the same booth we sat in the night we met, and when I talked with your mother."

"That would be a nice change. We haven't been there in a few months." Abruptly his manner changed, and he became the young stud hustler again. "Maybe I'll put my handcuffs on you, to give the guys in the crowd a laugh."

Stacy's was an out-of-the-way neighborhood bar overlooking the river, catering to a Village crowd. Everyone was welcome there-- black and white, gay and straight, tranvestites of both genders, and leathermen were among Stacy's "regulars". David had been a hustler cruising the bar crowd when they met last Beltane. There was no jukebox, and the "in" crowd shunned Stacy's as being too old-fashioned. That was just fine from Benedict's viewpoint.

He sighed now at the mention of David's handcuffs. He was constantly aware that, underneath his invariable black turtleneck shirt and loose casual slacks, he wore leather restraints that inhibited normal freedom of movement--a subtle reminder of his slavery to his young lover.

Around his neck was a thick high collar with D-rings, deco- rated with metal studs. A similar symbolic restraint around his waist was the wide bondage belt with its studs and D-rings--which were snapped to eyebolts that secured him to the wooden horse on which he was so savagely tortured by his sadistic son. Two similar ankle cuffs secured his feet to the horse to prevent any attempt to escape or evade his punishment--or to overhead pulleys that suspen- ded him head down with his mouth at crotch level to provide David with any kind of oral service at any time he desired.

By coincidence, Benedict had turned forty-nine at two-twelve yesterday afternoon, and David turned twenty-five eighteen minutes later. The chance circumstance of a shared birthdate was the fact that had brought them together six months ago. A week after their first meeting, when Benedict had helped David's mother with a problem involving arson in the Bronx--using his expertise as a hypnotist--Benedict had offered David a father-son partnership, with all the S/M sex David wanted as the Master [see BELTANE, 1999 - author].

At first David didn't believe such a relationship could work-- he doubted Benedict could make good on his promises. Benedict had given David only a vague idea that for Benedict the sadomasochistic acts would be rituals of penance--a self-imposed sacrifice in the hope of psychic development--and promised to give David the details when he needed to know them.

For his own part, David was a confirmed sadist, with muscles that Benedict compared to steel cables--not huge, said Benedict, but incredibly strong--and almost inexhaustible. As a true sadist, David was heavily into "toilet" action at which Benedict had been a virgin--though willing to be trained by David to take it.

Their first scene provoked an emotional crisis for David, who felt guilty for hurting the man he cared for as a father figure-- but Benedict persuaded David to try again, and repeated his offer. At last David came to accept his sadism as natural, and Benedict's surrender to him as an act of genuine love. A month later they had agreed to justify their complex and unorthodox relationship by leading double lives [see HECATE'S OFFERINGS - author].

The drape separating the store from Benedict's living quarters would separate their lives together into two physical and mental compartments. Here in the shop, and whenever they were out in public, they would pass as father and son. Benedict would be David's boss in the store, his teacher of occult lore, and his healer if David ever needed medicine--which had not yet happened. Here they would talk as man to man, and could discuss their private relationship as lovers and partners if the need ever arose.

But behind the drape David would always be the Master, and Benedict his slave, in an intense and extremely violent S/M partnership. Their "rituals" were brutal and bloody--carefully restricted to prevent serious injuries--but Benedict screamed in genuine agony every time David indulged his innate sadistic drives. In addition to torturing Benedict's bare buttocks with a ferocity that would shock any conventional person, David added to the mere physical injuries the insults of repeated rape, scatological humiliation, and verbal mockery.

But now David had come to work--they were in the store--and David was playing his public role as Benedict's employee. He made a move to pull off his jacket, but Benedict stopped him.

"Before you take your coat off, David," he said, "would you mind running an errand for me?"

David paused, grinned, and said, "Of course not, Benedict. But I need a quick pit stop first. Would you mind coming into the back room with me?"

Without waiting for a reply, David walked through the center opening in the drape and waited for Benedict to obediently follow. When Benedict let the drape fall behind him, David had already opened his fly and pulled out his penis, half swollen--a "piss hard" as he called it. David snapped his fingers and pointed to the floor.

Without a word Benedict knelt at David's feet. David slipped his penis between Benedict's receptive lips and sighed as the familiar erotic contact caused even greater tumescence. Then he relaxed and released the contents of his bladder at full force. It was a rule that if Benedict spilled a drop of David's urine at any time he would be awarded 500 or more "demerits", to be worked off the next Tuesday evening at the rate of one stroke with a cane, strap, paddle or scourge for each demerit.

Benedict swallowed every drop, and as required gave a ritual speech of "Thank you, Master. May I please have some more, sir?" David usually replied, "Later, pig!" This time he grinned, with- drew his penis, and said, "You're okay, slave! Have a big glass of cranberry juice for me to drink when I get back from this errand you want me to run. We need to restock the bladder for you later!"

When Benedict had followed David back to the store, David, as son and employee, asked, "What do you need, dad?"

"I have a special job to do this afternoon for Brother Paul in Ithaca. I'll be in the lab making it up, so you'll have to handle the customers yourself. You've done it long enough so you won't need to interrupt me. It's a very delicate process."

Benedict took a ten-dollar bill from the cash drawer under- neath the counter. "Run over to Balducci's, please, and get me a dozen fresh ripe apricots--not canned or dried. If anyone has fresh apricots at this time of year, Balducci's will. Then you'll be alone in front for a couple of hours at least."

When David returned with the apricots and change twenty minutes later, a glass of iced juice was sitting on the counter over the cash drawer, and Benedict was studying the Tarot cards again. It had been a slow day so far--only one customer. While Benedict looked at the apricots and nodded his approval, David looked at the Tarot cards with interest. "Are these your lesson for today?" he asked.

David studied privately with Benedict every Wednesday when the shop was closed for classes and private readings, and he had proved to be a good student with a natural flair for the occult, as Bene- dict had expected from David's horoscope.

"Yes. Take a few seconds to look at them, and then give me your first impressions. Your meditation takes off from your first subconscious reactions to them."

David looked at the figure of the man stealing the swords from the camp. "Conquering evil by taking away its power," he said. His glance moved to the picture of the prostrate man pierced by ten swords. "Betrayal," he said. "The phrase, 'stabbed in the back' means a breach of trust by a false friend." Then he looked at the angel closing the jaws of the lion. "Gentle persuasion overcoming brute strength." He frowned when he saw Judgment Day, and more so when he saw the Three of Cups over The Devil. "I'd have to look at these for a while," he said. "Am I right so far?"

Benedict shook his head in reproach. "Never ask if you are right. The meaning varies from one person to another. Your psychic awareness is different than mine. Your own ESP might not be right for me, and vice-versa. The Tarot, like the I Ching, is a very personal experience.

"I've just had a reading," he went on in tones of utter contempt, "by an egregious woman from Channel Six News."

"Sally Burke," said David. "I saw the station van pull away when I was halfway down the block. Will you be a TV star tonight?"

"Not if her judgment is the determining factor on anything. She warned me that I'll be robbed, stabbed in the back, and will have to keep my mouth shut about it. Someone I know in some way will die today, and I'll go to a Witches' Coven for a Hallowe'en party and dancing tonight!"

David threw back his head and roared. "Does she read tea leaves, too?" He took off his jacket and hung it up in the sitting room, in the closet reserved for his clothing in the future. "It looks like it'll be slow to start, so take as much time as you need downstairs. No problem. I'd like to look at your cards a while."

Benedict nodded and took the bag of apricots. "I'll be right underneath you." He smiled. "My favorite position." He kissed David lightly on the cheek. "See you later," he said.

Benedict had been a chemistry major for three semesters before deciding it was the wrong choice for him, and switched to anthro- pology. But he retained an interest in compounding natural medi- cines, and had a small but adequate laboratory for his needs. He chose his equipment, lighted a bunsen burner, and used the table top to slice open the apricots, from which he carefully removed the hard pits. A pair of pincers sufficed to split the pits open.

An hour later, wearing face mask and goggles, his hands well protected in rubber gloves, he opened a drawer to remove a half- ounce brown glass bottle with a tight screw cap--old but clean. He had a supply of them from years ago, which he knew could never be traced--they were totally unlike the fancy clear vials he used for the oils he sold in the shop overhead.

To be safe, he had boiled it and dried it in a little oven, wearing the gloves at all times. When everything was ready, he used a pipette to transfer two drams of a clear liquid from a test tube to the vial. Still wearing the gloves, he tightened the cap on the tiny bottle and gave a sigh of relief.

He boiled all the glass equipment he had used, before smash- ing it to pieces. He collected all the shards carefully in a small cardboard box, taped it shut, put it inside a small plastic bag and then inside a second. When he was sure there was no danger of contamination still remaining, he put everything away so the lab was in order, carried the trash in one hand and the bottle, wrap- ped in a purple silk handkerchief, in the other hand, and went upstairs. The trash went into the container with other harmless household solid waste, and Benedict went back into the store, where David was talking to a young woman at the book counter.

Benedict set the brown bottle, still wrapped in the purple silk, in the "Not For Sale" cabinet next to the Mayan ceremonial dagger, letting the silk fall open loosely to display the bottle in an innocent-looking way. He had said nothing to David about what he was making--the less David knew the better, Benedict thought.

He knew that David never opened the "Not For Sale" case--its contents were Benedict's "private" property which he would never show to a customer. Benedict was relieved now that it was done. Paul would be picking up the bottle some time tomorrow, and it would be a relief to get it out of the store.

Business picked up during the afternoon as Benedict had predicted: the Hallowe'en costume "parade" in the Village always brought a crowd of tourists down Christopher Street, and Benedict's window display was a real eye-catcher. Most of the customers were obviously looking for cheap souvenirs, and Benedict obliged them. But a few were "initiates," and Benedict was always happy to talk with them and show them his genuine articles.

At seven forty-five, with fifteen minutes left before closing, Benedict made up a bank-deposit envelope with most of the day's cash income, and gave it to David to take to the Citibank branch up the street. It was already quite dark. At the door Benedict stood a minute or two to watch the "parade"--a crowd of costumed figures milling up and down the sidewalks, crossing over in the middle of traffic, and drinking from cans in brown paper bags. A typical Village crowd, thought Benedict--a lot of college kids having a weekend party for any excuse.

A strongly-built man wearing jeans, a leather jacket, and an incongruous full-head mask of Marilyn Monroe stepped up to him out of the shadows.

"Get back inside, man," said the costumed figure--and Benedict felt the sharp prick of a knife-point just below the rib-cage.

NIGHT OF THE COVEN

Conclusion

by Kirk Brothers

Copyright 1990

All Rights Reserved

The man pushed Benedict, stunned by surprise, into the shop, pulling the door shut behind him and turning the knob on the dead- bolt. "Open the cash drawer, man, and give me everything in it."

Benedict hesitated. "There's no cash left here," he said, quite truthfully. The man slapped his face viciously. "Stay put, fucker! I'll get it myself." He stepped behind the counter and opened the cash drawer. He's been in the store before, thought Benedict. He knew exactly where the money was kept.

"Shit!" said the man. "Just some ones and a bunch of change! Where's the rest of it, fucker?"

"In the bank," said Benedict. "I never keep a lot of cash overnight. It isn't safe."

The man in the mask turned his head to the wall cabinet marked "Not For Sale," and slid the door open. "What's this here?" he asked, holding up the Mayan dagger.

"It's a magician's prop," said Benedict truthfully.

"Magic shit!" said the masked man, throwing it contemptuously on the floor. Then his Marilyn-Monroe gaze fell on the purple silk and the brown glass bottle. He picked it up.

"And what's this crap?" he asked.

Benedict reacted with genuine alarm. "Don't touch that!" he said.

"Why not, man? What's in it?" He sloshed the nearly-empty bottle--one of Benedict's precautions to prevent spilling the liquid on opening it.

"It's medicine! It's very powerful! It can be dangerous!"

"Cool, man! I dig medicine! What is it--mescaline? I know the kind of medicine you witches use, man! That's worth good money on the street!" He slipped the bottle into the pocket of his leather jacket.

"You mustn't take that!" cried Benedict. The man punched Benedict in the stomach. "Turn around, fucker!" Benedict did as he was told, and the man stuck the point of the knife against Benedict's upper back. Benedict cried out in pain and fear.

At the moment, the bells on the door jingled as David--his key in his hand--returned from the bank errand. David's entrance took the thug by surprise. He whipped the knife into David's view, the other arm wrapped around Benedict--holding him as a shield.

"Keep away, kid, or the old man gets it! Back up out of my way!" David took in the situation at a glance, and backed up, to give the robber an avenue of escape. Pulling Benedict with him as be backed to the door, the thug pulled the door open with his knife hand--and then viciously jabbed it against Benedict's right kidney area before bolting through the door. Benedict stumbled forward from the force of the knife jab at his kidney, blocking David's move to intercept the thief.

"Let him go!" said Benedict--but David was already off in hot pursuit. He returned a minute or so later, disappointed.

"He ran toward Seventh Avenue, but I lost him in the crowd," he said. "Have you called the police?"

"No," answered Benedict, "and I don't intend to. It would be more red tape than it's worth. I think it would be wise to follow Sally Burke's advice from the Angel card, and keep my mouth shut about it."

"She said somebody might try to rob you today--and you might get stabbed in the back." He appeared amused at the coincidence. "Did he get anything?"

"Just tomorrow's start-up change--you interrupted him and scared him off. And he tried to stab me in the back--out of sheer rage and evilness!" Then Benedict broke into hearty laughter. "He tried to stab my kidney area--where my bondage belt is, with all the metal studs! His knife never got through to my skin!" David appreciated the irony, and laughed in relief. Benedict, however, was pensive and somewhat preoccupied as they closed the shop for the night.

Five minutes later they were on Christopher Street, headed west toward Stacy's bar on Hudson. Benedict kept looking behind them as they walked. The street was still crowded with costumed figures--none of a sinister nature--but it made for slow going. As often happened when they went for a walk together, Benedict wanted something to eat. "How about trying a curry at The Punjab after a drink at Stacy's?" he suggested. "I haven't had Indian food in weeks."

"Sounds good to me," said David, "--but can we get down to our talk? You promised to explain why you want all the abuse I give you. I've always known you're not a masochist. You're just bi-- like me--and we love each other, so the fuck-suck part is natural enough. And I've read a little bit about flagellation in the old monasteries--but I can't relate it to witchcraft."

They stopped at the curb to wait for a police cruiser as it turned on its siren and flashing lights and headed as fast as traffic would permit up Christopher Street toward Seventh Avenue. Benedict turned to watch the police car with inner apprehension, and waited to answer until the wail of the siren had died down enough for him to be heard.

"It's not too difficult," he said, "given a knowledge of the customs of older times. Corporal punishment by flogging has always been part of the human condition. The Roman playwright Menander wrote a comedy called 'The Girl Who Gets Flogged,' which has a line of dialogue that 'the man who has never been flogged has never been taught.' Only a century ago spanking was almost universal as a proper means of disciplining children--in the home and in school.

"So in medieval monasteries any Brother could be whipped by the head of his religious order for any reason--it was expected for any infraction of the rules. And it's been written that in some orders, a Brother could be sentenced to a flogging by his fellow Brothers for any sin. Then, of course, some Brothers flogged them- selves, like the Philippine men who parade through their village on Good Friday, scourging themselves until the blood runs down their legs."

He paused as another police cruiser raced by, siren wailing. When he could be heard again, he continued. "In public floggings, the upper back is almost invariably the target, and obviously that must also be true when a man flogs himself. But in the privacy of a monastery a flogging was very often administered on the bare buttocks, for the humiliation of exposing the 'private parts.'"

He could not resist looking back up Christopher Street before continuing. "You must remember that Christians have always had neurotic hangups about sex because of the Adam and Eve myth of Original Sin. If it's obvious to you and me a flogging on the buttocks can be a sexual stimulus, remember that in medieval monasteries, it was tacitly presumed that Brothers were both celibate and heterosexual, with no lewd interest in another man's ass. Sheer idiocy or hypocrisy, depending on how you look at it."

"But that was punishment, not a religious ritual, wasn't it?"

"In a way it was both. Punishment means atonement for some material offense, and the purpose of penance is atonement for some spiritual fault. At any rate, Brothers could be flogged either for violating some rule, or to fulfill a vow of penance--to be flogged as a sacrifice for his spiritual development. Like the sacrifice of giving up meat on Friday, for example."

Again they stopped at the curb, while an ambulance went by, its siren wailing, as it headed up Christopher Street behind them.

"I wonder what's happening back there?" asked David curiously.

Benedict shrugged. "On a Sunday evening in New York City it can be anything from a barroom fight to a traffic accident," he said with a casual tone he did not feel. "We'll read about it in the papers tomorrow, I'm sure." He gathered his thoughts and went back to his subject.

"Flogging was commonplace in military life a century or two ago," he remarked. "Especially in the English armed forces."

"Like in 'Mutiny on the Bounty?'" asked David.

"That's right. In all the movie versions, Captain Bligh had his sailors flogged on the upper back, partly because of censorship in the film industry. But in real life sailors were often flogged on the buttocks, usually by being tied over a cannon to receive the lash. The sailors used to joke about that punishment as 'having to kiss the gunner's daughter'". David chuckled.

"And flogging in the Orient has been confined to the buttocks for centuries. The I Ching makes a number of references to a man who has been caned on the buttocks as a symbol of ill fortune. We all know it's official prison punishment in Singapore and India--to name only two countries which use the rattan or bamboo as the means of inflicting severe corporal punishment."

"But how does this relate to flagellation in witchcraft?" asked David, pulling Benedict back to the subject at hand.

"Ah, here we are at Stacy's," said Benedict with some relief. "Let's continue when we have the privacy--and the quiet--of our booth." Benedict was leading, and he reached out to open the door.

A blast of disco music roared out at them. Inside, a throng of costumed men and women jiggled on a new dance floor as a stereo system provided deafening accompaniment. In the middle of the floor a man costumed as the Devil performed an impromptu pas de quatre with three scantily-dressed women with masks suggesting black cats.

"What in hell's happened to Stacy's?" asked Benedict. Stacy himself was at the door greeting customers, and he welcomed David and Benedict like old friends. "Hi, David! Good to see you again! Hi, Benedict! Long time no see!" It was hearty and meaningless. "So you've come by to see my new place! Been remodeling it to bring it up to date and pull in a bigger crowd. Have a drink on me --I'll tell the barman. Here, have some matches." He thrust a book of matches into Benedict's hand.

"Uh--, thanks, Stacy, but we'd been hoping we could have a quiet talk. We'll take a raincheck, and drop in during the week." With a tactful show of interest, Benedict backed out the door as others arrived, and Stacy welcomed the newcomers.

On the sidewalk outside, Benedict looked at David with disgust on his face. "A disco bar! Well, we'll have to find another bar like the old Stacy's."

He looked down at the matchbook that Stacy had pressed into his hand. On the cover was a cartoon of a witch on a broomstick flying across the full moon. Benedict turned it over. On the back, above the striking surface, was lettered in old Gothic type the message: Welcome to the Coven.

Benedict stopped abruptly, laughing helplessly. "We'll have to pick up a bottle of champagne to take home after dinner," he said. "I want to drink a toast to Sally Burke. Let's get back to the Punjab, and finish our serious talk there."

The Punjab, as the name implied, was run by Sikhs, and the ambience was appropriate. The walls were hung with paintings depicting human figures with elephant heads, and each table was decorated with a brass elephant--the howdah serving as a candle holder. The men working in various capacities all wore the tradi- tional full beards, turbans, and steel bracelets, while the women wore colorful saris and a plethora of finely-wrought gold jewelry. On a white woman such a display would have appeared garish, but against the dark skin of the waitresses, the effect was exotic. Part of the exoticism, perhaps, was the array of five gold rings in the nose of the middle-aged woman who served them.

David was unfamiliar with the menu offerings, and simply set his card down. "You order for both of us, since you know what it all is." Benedict obliged, and the waitress departed after filling their water glasses, and pouring their first cups of tea from the pot which was left on the table.

"Witchcraft and S/M," he prompted.

The muted sound of another siren reached their ears, and they both turned their heads to look out the window. A morgue van went by on its errand up Christopher Street.

"I wonder what's happened," said David again. "Aren't you interested, Benedict?"

"No," Benedict lied. "Now, about witchcraft and S/M. First, sex is the core of our religion. We reject the nonsense that sex is Original Sin. We regard it, perhaps, as Original Blessing. Sex in any form is an expression of the cosmic force which created us, and witchcraft celebrates the cosmic force in all manifestations.

"All forms of sex are the result of natural laws, and nature knows no perversions. So no sex act is perverted--except perhaps celibacy, which is the suppression of the cosmic force. Our only taboo in terms of sexual behavior is coercion, as I explained to you last May.

"When my wife was alive I thought of myself as straight in every way--and with her I was. But intellectually I have always accepted bisexuality as perhaps the most natural, and therefore desirable, orientation--because it is non-restrictive. It gives a man or woman the greatest possible freedom in expressing his or her love--and free love is the essence of the meaning of life to me.

"When I met you last May you turned me on at once, and I realized that, for you, I would have no qualms about going gay. When you told me you were bisexual, and would have gay sex only if you were the top man, I immediately agreed, because that would be absolutely acceptable to me."

"What about monogamy?" asked David. "Would you have sex, or S/M, even, with other studs as well as me?"

"Monogamy is part of the Christian ethic," answered Benedict, "based on the Original Sin mistake. The natural state is polygamy for most animals--and we are animals with clothes. So I would have no qualms about having sex, including heavy S/M, with other studs, too--if you agreed to such gang-bangs and took part in everything, and if all the studs were as healthy as you, and as sadistic as you, and honored my few limits as you do.

"As far as S/M is concerned, the acts of sexual flogging, or a desire for toilet sex, are simply individual fetishes--and if all partners want to play those games, they are morally acceptable-- assuming the dominant partner is healthy, of course.

"In my case, a severe flogging fulfills a vow of blood sacri- fice--a symbolic shedding of my life force as a gift to the cosmos. A vow of blood sacrifice, to be real, must draw blood--and hurt badly enough to make me scream, or even pass out from pain and shock. In fact, I want you to make me faint--which you have done every Fricay since June. I believe that having my conscious mind black out from pain will help me develop a special psychic talent."

"That's the part I'm interested in," said David.

The waitress arrived with their dinner, and their conversation turned to food while she was present. When she had departed to the kitchen, Benedict resumed.

"Okay, tell me about your trip," said David as a cue, at which Benedict chuckled.

"A well-chosen word," he commented. "Your last assignment was to read one of Sylvan Muldoon's books on the subject of astral pro- jection. Tell me in a few words what you remember about that."

"Well," said David, savoring curried lamb, "it's often called an out-of-body experience, or O-B-E for short, and most people describe it as separation of the mind from the body--to travel on the astral plane."

"Is it like a dream?" asked Benedict as a teacher.

"Maybe a little, but everything is happening in real time, and the subject can control where he goes and what he does--once he learns how to travel."

"Exactly. It's a trip, of a unique kind--seeing material reality from a non-material observation point. Perhaps the ulti- mate psychic ability, which Muldoon had."

"And," went on David, "the subject can see his own body, like he's floating above it, and the two parts of him are connected by a silver cord fastened to his body's forehead, between the eyes."

Benedict interrupted, as the teacher again. "That's called the Third Eye by Hindus, and it's one of a number of points in the body called Chakras in their belief system. Now tell me, how does the subject get out of his body?"

David frowned. "That's the hard part. Some people have said they had the experience after a bad accident, or when they were having an operation. They said they opened their eyes and saw the doctors working on them--and afterwards they could say who was where and who said and did what. But everybody else said they just had a vivid dream."

"Naturally. But do you see any other ways to achieve it?"

"Well, maybe something like hypnosis--" he began.

"Hypnosis doesn't work," said Benedict. "At least not for me. My conscious mind keeps getting in the way, and I can't meditate, which helps other people make the separation. What's left?"

"I think I'm with you now. It could be just the shock of extreme pain that knocks the conscious mind out, and lets the psychic mind take over, I suppose."

"Exactly. At least, I suppose the same thing. And that's the purpose of my submission to safe and sexual torture by you--or by a gang of sadists if you'd like to share me with your buddies--to suffer such agony that my body lets go of my mind, and I'm free to explore the psychic frontier. The ultimate trip of my life, if I can ever achieve it.

"I would do anything--suffer anything--from you, David, to confirm that such a trip is possible, and to learn how to control the experience when I choose to do so. Now do you understand why I have given myself to you as your sex slave for life?"

"Wow!" said David as he mused on this. "And that's why you say the more I enjoy it, the more psychic energy I'm giving to you? My vibrations help you do what you want to do?"

"That's my hope. It hasn't happened yet, but perhaps it will before next Beltane. Or the Beltane after that. I'm committed for life to this experiment."

They paused while the waitress cleared their plates and, when they declined dessert, brought their check. As always, Benedict left a tip and paid the check while David waited by the door. Out on the street, David said, "Let's walk up to Seventh Avenue to see what's happening."

"I'd rather not, David." He groped for an explanation. "I'm on TV tonight, and I'd like to get home to watch the news, just to see how they butchered the interview. Wouldn't you like to watch with me?"

David paused. "Well, I have something I've been waiting to tell you, and now's as good a time as any. You always said you wanted me to move in with you if I decided to quit show business for good, remember?"

Benedict was at once alert. "Of course. I said if you do I'll call my lawyer and arrange for court papers for me to adopt you as my son."

"I remember. Well, I've had zilch jobs for nearly two years, and I've decided to tell Broadway and Hollywood to kiss my ass goodbye. I told the guys I room with I'd be leaving as soon as they could find another guy to take my space and pick up my share of the rent. Mark told me they found someone, and I can move out any time. So how about tomorrow?"

Benedict was elated. "Wonderful! Do you want to sleep over tonight, and pick up your things tomorrow morning?"

"I'd thought of that. But I'd rather go back to West Fourth and pack my things tonight. I'll bring just clothes and a few small personal things--I'm giving Mark my little TV and sex toys-- we have a lot better ones in the basement! I'll be late getting everything done, but I can sleep and shower there for the last time, and get a cab to bring me and my bags over tomorrow morning. Would eight thirty or so be too early for you?"

"Not at all, David! I'll be waiting for you--very happily, I might add. And I'll have breakfast for you."

David grinned suggestively. "And I'll have some breakfast for you, too, dad!" he said with a knowing leer. Benedict smiled. David threw his arms around Benedict and gave him an affectionate kiss on the cheek. "Thanks for everything this evening, dad," he said. "See you in the morning." He gave a final wave, and walked quickly up Christopher Street.

Benedict, smiling happily, walked home more slowly--stopping at a package store for the bottle of champagne he had told David he wanted to buy. He hadn't had champagne for breakfast in years, but tomorrow would be a special breakfast, and worth a celebration.

When David's taxi pulled up in front of the shop at eight forty-five the next morning, the burglar gates were already rolled up out of sight, and Benedict was waiting on the sidewalk. He smiled warmly as David got out, said, "Hi, dad," and handed Bene- dict two large bags to carry. The driver opened the trunk and handed David two bigger suitcases. David paid the driver, added a tip, and picked up the last of his belongings to follow Benedict into the shop.

Benedict locked the door with the deadbolt, and together they carried David's possessions into the room behind the drape in one trip. "Keep going, slave," said David, "I've decided I'm sleeping downstairs with you, so that's where all my stuff will be."

Benedict smiled and led the way. In the big room David asked, "Which wardrobe is for my stuff, dad? Would you rather I didn't use the one your wife had?"

"I have no sentimental attachment to her wardrobe, David--nor to her side of the bed--nor to the bed itself. I would be happy sleeping on a foam pad on the floor. I loved her very much, but that chapter in my life is closed. You and I begin a new chapter, and we make a fresh start. Her old wardrobe is empty, and should be big enough to hold all your clothes, with your luggage going in the front storage room. There's plenty of space in the bathroom for all your shaving gear. How can I help you?"

David grinned. "By keeping out of my way," he said in a friendly tone. "Unpacking and getting set up is a one-man job, since I have to decide where everything should go. You can get breakfast for us while I'm settling in here, but before you go, come here."

Benedict moved to face David, eye to eye and very close. David threw his arms around Benedict and kissed him full on the mouth, his tongue probing Benedict's lips and inner cheeks in a wordless expression of bonding.

"I'll have something for you to drink--and eat--in a little while," he announced. "I'll be up for breakfast in about twenty minutes." He gave Benedict a sharp slap on the rump as Benedict turned, and Benedict again yelped.

"I see you're still nice and tender," he added with a grin. "Be good, or I might spank you again tonight on all the scabs you have from Saturday!"

Benedict laughed and went upstairs. A brunch of juice, bacon and eggs, toast, and champagne with the coffee would be a nice way to welcome his son home for good.

At five minutes past nine the telephone rang, and Benedict answered with his usual greeting of "Benedict."

"Good morning, Mr. Benedict," said a familiar female voice. "This is Sally Burke--do you remember me?"

"Very well, Ms. Burke. You don't want another story today, I trust?"

"No--that's why I'm calling. I wanted to tell you how sorry I am we couldn't use the story last night. I know you must have been terribly disappointed."

Benedict's face showed pleased surprise. "You didn't run it! Well, I can take disappointment, Ms. Burke, but my son was simply desolated."

"What? Oh, yes. But you see we had that fire in Brooklyn, and there was that air crash that our Washington station had lots of tape on--and we have just a half hour on weekends with a lot of sports to cover--so we just don't have time for all the stories we'd really love to do! You understand?"

"I do, indeed." To drive the final nail in the coffin, he asked, "So there's no hope it will run tonight, I guess."

"I'm afraid not. You see, it's a Hallowe'en story, and it's not Hallowe'en any more. Maybe next year."

"We can always hope."

"Yes. By the way, did you see any of the excitement on your street last night?"

"I don't suppose you mean the costume parade. Well, I heard sirens, that's all. We hear them a lot, so I didn't pay any attention. What was the excitement about?" he asked casually.

"It's in all the papers this morning, so we'll have pictures of where it happened tonight and the latest details. But the police finally got the Chelsea Killer."

"Who's that?"

"You know--the man who robbed and killed those two old store- keepers a little uptown from you--on Twenty-third Street."

"Oh, yes. Now I remember."

"And police think he's the same person who killed a man in Germantown and that woman near Columbus Circle three months ago. They're doing a D-N-A test on his blood now and matching it to traces found at the crime scenes."

"So he was arrested on Christopher Street?"

"Oh, no. He's dead. Suicide, they think--they're not sure. He died in an alley there, and apparently he did it with cyanide."

"Oh, really?"

"Yes. He had a little brown glass bottle of it, and he opened it. Did you know that stuff smells like almonds, but it can knock you out if you take a strong sniff of it--and just a drop on the skin can kill most people in minutes!"

"I didn't know."

"It's horribly painful. And one of the wire services says it can be made from apricot pits. Imagine--apricot pits! Who would think of that? Did you know that?"

"No."

"That's right--you're into witchcraft, not alchemy. Is that the right word, alchemy?"

"That's the word."

"And they say he actually tried to drink some of it! They heard him scream once."

"I'm not surprised."

"Well, that just goes to show, doesn't it?"

"Show what?"

"It's a small world."

She offered no explanation for her observation, so Benedict merely responded, "It is, indeed. Well, thanks very much for letting me know, and blessed be!"

"What? Oh, thank you! And God bless you, too!"

Benedict cradled the phone and whooped with laughter. At that point David entered from the basement room. He was naked, and stroking his penis. "What's so funny, slave?" he asked.

"It's a small world, Master," he said. "But I have Divine Protection--and now I have the son I've always wanted!" He knelt spontaneously to kiss David's penis and feet. David used one foot to nudge Benedict up from the floor.

"The cock, slave," he said. "I promised you something to drink!" Benedict knelt and repeated the familiar ritual. When David withdrew his penis at last, Benedict said, "Thank you, Master. May I please have some more, sir?"

"Later, pig! When's breakfast?"

"Five minutes, Master."

"We'll eat in the kitchen together. And I'll have time to tell you something. Have you seen the papers this morning, or heard the news on the radio?"

"No, Master."

"I have. The excitement last night was that the Chelsea Killer was found dead in an alley up the street."

"I heard that much from Sally Burke just now. She called to tell me they couldn't use my story last night. I told her my son was desolated."

David grinned in appreciation of Benedict's irony.

"The Chelsea Killer was wearing jeans, a black leather jacket, and a mask of Marilyn Monroe," he went on.

Benedict feigned surprise. "Really! Then it's just as well we didn't report our robbery to the police, or we'd be answering questions all day, and couldn't tell anybody to leave us alone, could we?" He paused. "By the way, Master, I forgot to tell you something. I made up a special oil for Brother Paul, and after two hours of work it slipped out of my hand and smashed on the floor. So I've got to do it all over again today. That means I'll need you to handle the store alone for a couple of hours, again. I hope you don't mind."

"I don't mind that part of it at all, dad," answered David. "But I want you to get your demerit book out right now."

Benedict retrieved the little scratch pad on which he would write a list of offenses he had committed, and the demerits which David would dictate as his punishment for each one.

"Yes, Master?" he prompted.

"Write this down. 'For lying to Master about dropping Brother Paul's oil, five hundred demerits. For lying to Master about the reason for the first lie, another five hundred demerits. And for making your Master an accomplice to your crimes, four thousand demerits.' I might have more to add later."

Benedict had learned from experience not to smile at any of David's penalties, or ask any questions about them--to merely say, "Yes, Master." This time, he said, "Yes, Master. But may I ask, Master, why you say I lied to you?"

"You may. When you came upstairs yesterday while I was at the book counter, you were holding a purple silk in one hand, with something wrapped inside it. You put it in your private case, and later I saw the bottle. Naturally I didn't open the case--I just assumed that was Brother Paul's remedy.

"Brother Paul didn't come in yesterday--and you don't sell anything from that case--so it was there when I left for the bank. When we closed up after the robbery, I noticed the purple silk was there but the bottle wasn't. So the robber had taken it.

"You wouldn't call the police--you were nervous all the time we were out--and you didn't want to find out what was happening. The morning papers said the man died of cyanide poisoning, which can be made from apricots--which I bought for you at Balducci's yesterday.

"Of course I knew from your library books that cyanide is an old medicine that was used by homeopaths, and Brother Paul and you both use homeopathic remedies. And you have a lab downstairs." He grinned. "The jury finds you guilty. And we've sentenced you to five thousand strokes as fair punishment. We'll take it out on your ass, and we'll do it tomorrow night. The shop will be closed Wednesday, so it won't matter much how sore you are. You said last night I could whip you every night if I wanted to, because you want me to knock you out and give you an express trip on the bare astral plane! I'm giving that very serious consideration."

To soften the mood, he gave Benedict a quick kiss on the cheek. "What's for breakfast?" he asked.

Benedict smiled as he brought out the glasses. "We're cele- brating a very important day in both our lives, so we're starting with champagne."

David raised his brows. "Good! Now I can use a toast I've always wanted to say to you."

He pulled the cork from the bottle, and poured the foaming wine into the glasses as Benedict held them at an angle.

He replaced the cork loosely and replaced the bottle in the refrigerator. Benedict handed him a goblet, and they raised their glasses together, looking very straight and hard into each other's eyes. "Here's champagne to my real friends," said David, "and real pain to my sham friends." Their glasses clinked, and Benedict chuckled at the toast. They sat down for their meal, and David spoke again, now as Master.

"This may be the last meal we eat together at this table," he said. "In public we're dad and son, but here you're my slave, and slaves don't eat at the Master's table with him as an equal. I'll figure out some interesting ways to feed you properly, as a slave should be fed. But this one time I want to talk to you, and it's important enough for us to be face to face."

"Yes, Master?" prompted Benedict.

"At the Punjab you said witches aren't monogamous, and that you'd take any kind of sex or S/M from other studs--sort of like a prison gang-bang--if I was the ringleader. Do you remember that?"

"Yes, Master."

"Do you repeat to me now that you consent to submit to other studs if I bring them in for an evening?"

Benedict looked David directly in the eyes.

"I repeat my consent, Master."

David nodded, enjoying his bacon and eggs.

"Good. I just want you to know that I am giving the idea my very careful consideration. Enjoy your meal--I'll feed you your dessert after the dishes are done. And then, I think, I'd better get dressed for the store. You'll be busy in the lab again this afternoon."

"Yes, Master. But there's no need for you to run another errand. I still have a half-dozen apricots left."

THE END

Rate this story

Liked this story?

Nifty is entirely volunteer-run and relies on people like you to keep the site running. Please support the Nifty Archive and keep this content available to all!

Donate to The Nifty Archive
Nifty

© 1992, 2024 Nifty Archive. All rights reserved

The Archive

About NiftyLinks❤️Donate