W
e give thanks to the
mother for her bounty.”
Athame, chalice, ring.
Apples and honey, sweet incense on the fire, crystals and elixirs charging in the bright white moonlight.
Ladybug breathed around tears as she stared up at the moon, full and luminous and ancient; stared up at the same moon that countless women like her had stared up at since time immemorial. The Aunts would be proud, she decided.
He stood behind her, tucked into the shadows of the makeshift covering on the flagstones.
The rain had come down earlier, but the sky was clear as she gazed up for a moment longer before joining her quiet companion.
Anzan was silent as she set the athame in its altar spot, arranging the key and the five-petaled vervain.
His many eyes had stayed locked on her form as she performed the ancient rights beneath the moon, watched when she’d slipped from her ceremonial robe to stand skyclad beneath the winking stars, watched as he’d watched her every month since the spring.
Now she smiled, lifting the chalice she’d been left by the Aunts, their mother’s before them, her mother’s before that.
Relics of the past that were her birthright, like her place beneath the moon.
The feast she’d prepared was small but hearty, the fragrant pumpkin soup overtaking, for the moment, the heady, musky aroma of the still-aroused araneaen beside her.
“Now what, little bug?”
“Now we eat.
Then you’ll need to make a web in the center of the yard, high enough to hold me .
.
.
is that something you can do?”
Anzan’s smile was sharp, the moonlight glinting off his fangs once more.
“I think I can manage that.”
“We’ll need to start planning our Samhain celebration soon.”
His smile remained as she reached to push a lock of shiny black hair from his face.
“It was me, you know.”
Ladybug wasn’t sure if she would ever get used to his absolute stillness, nor the sensation of his rippling eyes.
She took the opportunity to cut herself another slice of the apple tart, avoiding his heavy, weighted gaze.
“You?”
“Me.
It was me.
I’m the reason your heat was so .
.
.
hot.
I smelled you.
I wanted you.
But I didn’t know it was you!
I didn’t know I wanted
you
you.
I smelled you and I started dreaming of .
.
.
it doesn’t matter.
It was me.
I was the receptive female.
I think I would have smelled you from the other side of the world.”
The harvest moon made his blue eyes glitter,