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Aoife, the Queen Maker - A Halloween Story
by The Technician (technician666@gmail.com)

***

The arrow falls; the door opens; the Queen is made. 
This story explores the connection between the Orionid 
meteor shower, the ancient Celtic myths which surround 
Samhain, and the great warrior Queens of ancient 
Ireland. (MF, fantasy, rom)

***

Author Notes: "Aoife, the Queen Maker" is the story 
the pixies told me when I wanted to write something 
else. Sometimes I write a story with a theme and plot 
that I have created; sometimes I just tell a story as 
it unfolds in my mind. The story I originally intended 
to create was a scary story with lots of wild, kinky 
sex, but evidently the spirits of the glen had a 
different idea, and they spoke a totally different 
story in my head. It is a sweet, poignant story of 
true love intertwined with ancient Irish myths that 
gave birth to the holiday we call Halloween.

WARNING! All of my writing is intended for adults over 
the age of 18 ONLY. Stories may contain strong or even 
extreme sexual content. All people and events depicted 
are fictional and any resemblance to persons living or 
dead is purely coincidental. Actions, situations, and 
responses are fictional ONLY and should not be 
attempted in real life.

If you are under the age or 18 or do not understand 
the difference between fantasy and reality or if you 
reside in any state, province, nation, or tribal 
territory that prohibits the reading of acts depicted 
in these stories, please stop reading immediately and 
move to somewhere that exists in the twenty-first 
century.

***

It was dark and cold and rainy and lonely as I drove 
north on a little used two lane highway that wound its 
twisted way through the timbered foothills. The reason 
I was in my car driving 90 miles in the middle of an 
October night was because a man whom I had never met, 
Doctor Nathaniel L. Sorensen, had summoned me to his 
death bed. 

That may sound like an odd way of putting it, but it 
is exactly what his grandson, Earl, told me when he 
called me just before ten o'clock tonight. "W," he 
began, "I have a very strange favor to ask of you. My 
grandfather has asked me to call you. He says to tell 
you that he is dying tonight and he is summoning you 
to his death bed because you are the only one who can 
understand the story he has to tell. Is there any way 
you can come up here?"

Earl was a rather famous astronomer and professor. 
Like his grandfather, he spent his nights staring at 
the heavens - well, actually, in Earl's case, he was 
usually looking at monitors that gave him a numeric or 
visual representation of what his giant array of radio 
telescopes were seeing as they gathered information 
from the skies. His grandfather, affectionately known 
by his peers as "Night Sky Nate," had actually spent 
many, many nights staring through the eyepiece of 
giant telescopes located on distant mountaintops all 
over the world.

What the elder Dr. Sorensen had to tell me, and why he 
thought I was the only one who would understand, was a 
complete mystery to me. I had never met the man. I had 
never spoken with him. I had never communicated with 
him in any way in my entire life. I knew of him only 
as Earl's grandfather.

Earl and I had become friends when we met on-line in 
an electronics discussion forum. We were both 
interested in remote electronic control circuits. He 
was, of course, interested in better ways to control 
his telescopes. I was interested in better ways to 
control... shall we say, more interesting aspects of 
human behavior. One of my sidelines is various 
electronic devices that stimulate the body for the 
purpose of pain, pleasure, or control.

One session, Earl asked me outright what I actually 
did with some of the control circuits we discussed. I 
told him, "You would be shocked... pun intended."

He answered, "You would be surprised what it takes to 
shock me." And then added "...pun understood."

He then asked me to meet him in a private chat room 
and gave me a link to a room on a different web site - 
a site that I knew well. The chat room location was on 
a very private BDSM site that catered to the tastes of 
those who liked mechanical overtones to their bondage 
and discipline.

In answer to my un-asked question, he typed, "I spend 
my life looking for patterns in the sky. I recognized 
the pattern of your posts - what abbreviations you use 
and don't use, things like that. The same pattern 
shows up on several sites under several different 
login names."

I made a mental note to myself to look into ways of 
masking that weakness in the future, and met him on 
the new site. It turned out we had more in common that 
just an interest in control circuits. Earl became one 
of my very discreet customers. He was also a big fan, 
and sometimes helpful editor, of many of my stories. 
Evidently he must have said something about me to his 
grandfather, because now the dying doctor was 
summoning me to his death bed to hear, and perhaps 
write his story.

What a super-intelligent, apparently straight-laced 
astronomer who spent most of his life staring at the 
stars might have to say that I hadn't heard many times 
before was a mystery to me, but deep in my gut I had a 
feeling that this mystery was well worth exploring.

When I got to the hospice building next to the 
hospital, Earl met me at the door. He said flatly, 
"Nate says he is going to die tonight." Then he 
shrugged and added, as if in explanation, "It's his 
birthday. The doctors don't think so, but his father 
predicted his own death, and so he thinks that he 
knows when he is going to die also. He says tonight is 
the night."

Since I was entering a hospice area, I was expecting 
to find a very frail and decrepit old man, but when I 
stepped into to the room, Dr. Sorensen was sitting up 
in his bed reading an old field journal. "Come in W," 
he greeted me. "You are probably wondering why you are 
here."

"That is more than an understatement," I replied.

He motioned me to a chair that had been placed at his 
bedside, closed the notebook, and folded his hands 
over the cover as it lay on his lap. "Let's begin at 
the beginning, shall we." 

He looked and sounded just like a college professor 
about to start a lecture. I shouldn't have been 
surprised at that. He had, at one time, been a very 
prominent professor as well as a renowned astronomer.

"Actually, let's start before the beginning," he 
corrected himself. "My father was born on April 20, 
1909. In case the significance of that date escapes 
you, that was the day that Haley's Comet passed 
closest to the earth. He died on February 9, 1986, 
again as Haley passed closest to the earth. He always 
said that he was going to follow Mark Twain's example 
and 'come in with the comet and go out with the 
comet.' He did."

I must have looked somewhat confused, because he 
looked up at me and added, "It's all part of the 
story. Be patient. I'm getting to it... I'm getting to 
it."

He smiled, took a deep breath, and started anew. "I 
was born on October 21, 1930. The significance of that 
date, of which I am sure you are unaware, is that..."

I interrupted him and finished his sentence with "it 
is the peak of the Orionid meteor showers."

It was his turn to look surprised. "A student of the 
stars, are we?"

"No," I answered, "but Earl is never available from 
October 19 through 23 because chucks of old comet are 
falling out of the sky."

"All comets are old," instructed the good doctor, 
"they are the left-over debris from creation. And the 
chucks don't fall out of the sky, the earth merely 
passes through the comet's trail of debris. The 
particular comet that causes the Orionids is none 
other than my father's old friend, Haley, itself." He 
laughed as he added, "That means that I am a chip off 
my father's comet."

His laugh soon dissolved into a coughing fit. When it 
subsided he continued, "I came in with the chips and I 
am planning to go out with the chips. The cancer 
doctors say I have another few weeks or even months, 
but tonight is as good a night to die as any other, 
and I might as well keep up the family tradition - - - 
but first I have to tell you my story."

He paused. But this time he didn't laugh..., and he 
didn't cough. Instead he went very quiet with his eyes 
taking on a very, very far away look. I had seen that 
look before - usually in combat veterans. 
Psychiatrists call it "the thousand mile stare." 
Whatever memory was flashing through his mind was very 
powerful and highly traumatic. It was very quite in 
that room as we all waited for him to break the 
silence.

After a few moments, he sighed, took a deep breath, 
and continued, "I need to tell you some things about 
the arrows from Orion's bow that I have never written 
down for anyone except myself..." He held up the 
notebook. "... and I have never shown anyone this 
field journal - not even Earl. No one would have 
believed me, and if I had ever published any of this, 
I would have been laughed out of academia."

"Earl has shown me some of the things that you write." 
He looked at me over the top of his glasses. His eyes 
were now a very bright blue. "I think you will 
understand... and I am sure that you can tell my story 
to the world. I no longer care what my fellow 
professors think of me. They can put it down to death-
bed lunacy..... but it is the truth..... the absolute, 
god-awful, source-of-myth-and-mysteries truth."

He paused to open the field journal that was again 
resting beneath his hands. "W, I want you to have this 
when we are through here. Everything is written down 
in it... even the original Gaelic. Maybe you can pass 
it on to someone who might be around in 2025, or even 
2063."

He again looked at me over the top of his glasses and 
raised his eyebrows as if to ask if I was ready. I 
nodded and he began, "On my nineteenth birthday, 
October 21, 1949, I was stationed overseas with the 
navy as - what else - a weatherman. My interest was 
astronomy, not meteorology, but the Navy had enough 
navigators and as the recruiter told me, 'Stars don't 
affect ships at sea, storms do.' They wanted storm 
watchers, not star gazers and my enlistment choices 
boiled down to being a weatherman or a ship's cook."

He gave me a very wry smile. "I have always been a 
terrible cook, but I can read a thermometer with the 
best of them. A hitch in the Navy would pay for 
college, and besides, it was right after the war and 
the draft was still in place. They hadn't drafted 
anybody since '47, but I figured it was better to eat 
Navy chow for a few years than risk being drafted into 
an infantry squad if things heated up with the 
Russians or someone else."

"In any case, everything worked out pretty well. I 
ended up with a cushy post on a hillside in Ireland 
near Birr Castle. The Earl's great observatory had 
been dismantled during 'The Great War,' but it was 
still a place rich in history for someone like me who 
was interested in the stars."

He looked down a bit sheepishly. "I've never told Earl 
where his name came from. I wanted him to be named 
after the man who designed and built the great Birr 
Castle telescope and first saw proof of spiral 
galaxies. But I couldn't remember the proper name of 
the third Earl of Rosse. So, when my daughter was 
considering what to name her first son, I suggested 
'Earl.'"

He looked up at the ceiling as though he was watching 
the distant galaxies in his mind. Then he shook his 
head as if to clear his thoughts and bring himself 
back to the present. "Anyway, there I was smack dab in 
the middle of the Emerald Isle with not a whole lot to 
do except take temperature and barometric readings a 
couple of times a day - and there were four of us 
stationed there to do that. I made a lot of short day 
trips around Demesne to kill time and learn more about 
the Celts."

"In a little, local museum in a nearby town, I came 
upon some Gaelic manuscripts that the proprietor said 
talked about the Orionid meteor showers, or as the 
Celts called them, 'The Arrows of Orion.' I took it 
into my head to translate those documents and spent 
most of a month's pay to buy high quality copies of 
the originals."

"Gaelic is a god-awful language with too many letters 
and not enough words to really make sense in English, 
but I did my best with a lot of help from a couple of 
local Irish scholars. What intrigued me most was a 
warning I found buried in the text that said not to go 
walking on the fen during the meteor shower because 
'when an arrow from Orion's bow falls to the ground at 
mid-darkness on 'Dark Night' the doorway of the King 
Makers will open.'"

"At least, that's what I thought it said. A local 
scholar, who had been teaching me Gaelic, told me that 
'King Makers' should be 'Queen Makers' because the 
Celts didn't have Kings. They had Queens - Queens 
known for their beauty and their daring and their 
physical ability. Brave generals who had won great 
battles would be rewarded with a night or two in bed 
with the Queen. That not only served to provide 
incentive to the generals, it also provided brave 
breeding stock for future Queens to rule over the 
Celtic tribes."

"This same scholar assured me that 'Dark Night' was a 
reference to Shavnah. If you transliterate the word 
from Gaelic into English letters, you end up with 
Samhain, but he was adamant it was pronounced, 
'Shavnah.' He was especially adamant that Gerald 
Gardiner had gotten it wrong when he pronounced it 
'Soween.'" 

"Shavnah is the original basis for what eventually 
became Halloween. It is the night of the first dark of 
the moon following the Autumnal Equinox. My tutor 
noted that the Romans took the holiday back with them 
after they ALMOST conquered Ireland around 45 CE. They 
moved it to November 1, and the night before became 
known as 'All Hallows Eve,' or 'Halloween.' In today's 
calendar, Shavnah is somewhere in the first 21 days of 
October, not on October 31."

Dr. Sorensen paused to let all that information sink 
into my very confused skull. "In 1949, my birthday..., 
and the peak of the Orionid meteor showers, fell on 
Shavnah, as it did in 1968 and 1979, and will again in 
2025 and 2063." He gave me a very mysterious smile and 
went on, "I was back on those hillsides in '68 and 
'79, but I will have to miss 2025." 

Another shake of the head brought him back to his 
story. "In '49 it was a very clear, very dark night, 
and the meteor display was phenomenal. Looking up at 
stars that you would never see in the light pollution 
that exists today, I could clearly see the full 
outline of the mighty hunter and watch as arrow after 
arrow seemed to leave his bow and flash across the 
night sky. Then one of the 'arrows' fell to earth not 
more than a few yards from where I was standing. I'm 
sure that it was nothing more than a speck of dust or 
a very small pebble by the time it hit the ground, but 
that close, the flash was nearly blinding."

"As my eyes began to readjust to the darkness, I 
thought at first that the flash had damaged my 
retinas. I was sure that something was wrong with my 
vision because I could not believe what my eyes showed 
me. Standing there before me was the most beautiful 
woman I had ever seen. She was tall, with a body any 
Olympic athlete would die for. Her deep-copper-colored 
hair wound around her body nearly to her feet. Her 
nipples were bright pink, and stood stiff and erect in 
the cold, night air. The hair between her legs was a 
brighter shade of copper-orange and curled tightly 
against her cleft."

"I shook my head as if to clear an odd hallucination, 
but the nude woman remained standing before me and 
began to approach me. As she walked slowly toward me, 
she said softy, 'There is not much time. The door 
remains open only for a short while. We must make a 
Queen before the energy dissipates.' At least, that's 
what I think she said. She was speaking a very strange 
form of Gaelic, and I had enough trouble trying to 
understand the local version."

"She pulled me into her arms and began tugging at my 
clothing. Soon we were both lying naked on the spongy 
soil of the Irish fen. Our love making was frantic, 
she, from a need only she could understand, and I from 
my lust for her nearly perfect body. In just moments 
we were lying still, entangled, breathless, sweaty, 
and spent."

"'We have made a Queen,' she said to me. 'Now we can 
take our time and truly enjoy each other. You may call 
me Eve.' I didn't learn until later that Eve was 
spelled A-o-i-f-e."

"We made love all night. I was 19, and that was 
possible for me then. In the morning, we returned to 
my apartment together. I was shirtless, she was 
wearing nothing but my shirt and coat. It was 
scandalously short for that day, but would not even be 
noticed today. I wasn't sure how I was going to 
explain her to my roommates, let alone to Mrs. 
O'Malley." 

"Mrs. O'Malley, our landlord, was an extremely 
fastidious, little old Irish lady who 'didn't put up 
with any shenanigans in her place.' She was sitting on 
the front porch as we came walking up the path."

"I was still trying to figure out what to say when Eve 
spoke to her in Gaelic.

Mrs. O'Malley's eyes went wide and she crossed herself 
rapidly several times. 'Of course, dearie,' she 
answered. 'I will put you up in the spare room until 
we can make the arrangements for the wedding.'"

"As Eve walked up the steps and went into the house, 
Mrs. O'Malley pulled me aside and said to me in her 
heavily lilted English, 'So, Nate, me boy, you just 
had to go wandering on the fen on Dark Night when the 
arrows were shooting, did ye? Well, the door opened 
for ye, and you were chosen. Now you've gotten 
yourself a Queen Maker for a wife. Aoife tells me that 
the Queen has been made, but understand this: You be 
good to her, and the leprechauns will envy your luck. 
You treat her wrong, and you will envy those in the 
deepest pit of hell.'"

"I was deeply in lust, if not love for Eve. Mrs. 
O'Malley's words overcame any hesitancy on my part, 
and I answered her, 'I love Eve. Of course I will 
marry her, and I would never treat her wrong.'"

"Mrs. O'Malley answered, 'Aye, you will marry Eve. She 
will wait for you and you will wait for her. That is 
foretold in the stars and written in the stones. But I 
was speaking about the Queen. You love her and raise 
her right or my spirit will track you down when I've 
gone beneath the sod..., and you will see a side of me 
that no one above the green has ever seen.'"

"I married Eve about six weeks later. A very aged 
priest conducted the ceremony far out in the 
countryside in a very old church that seemed to be 
almost in ruins. I expected something close to the 
church's standard wedding ceremony, but instead of the 
regular book, he used a very, very old leather bound 
volume that appeared to be written totally in ancient 
Gaelic with elaborate calligraphy on every page. He 
spoke most of the service in that same, strange form 
of Gaelic that Eve had spoken and I had trouble 
following a lot of it. When we got to the vows, he 
repeated each statement in English for my benefit."

"'Eve,' he said, 'you have come through the door and 
chosen this mortal man. Will you love him in the time 
you have together and wait for him until the arrows 
call him home?'"

"She answered, 'Aye.'"

"'Nathaniel,' he said to me, 'you have been chosen. Do 
you accept your chosenness? Do you promise to carry 
the Queen to her throne and love and protect her for 
as long as you live? And do you promise to wait for 
Eve until the night on which the arrows call you back 
so that you may be together forever?'"

"I answered, 'Yes, I do,' but I really had no idea 
what in the hell he was talking about. None of it made 
sense. I just assumed that they used some strange, 
ancient marriage ritual in that area."

"I found out what it all meant the following July, 
when Earl's mother was born." Dr. Sorensen's eyes 
clouded as he continued. "Roisin was to be our only 
child. Eve died in childbirth. Or at least that's what 
the doctors said. Eve had told me a few days before, 
with tears in her eyes, that after the child was born, 
she would have to be going home, but she would wait 
for me there as she had promised. Her grave is on that 
hillside where I first met her. By her request, it is 
marked only by the shamrocks and wild flowers of the 
heath."

His voice was thick as he continued, "I raised Rose on 
my own - not easy for a man going through eight or so 
years of college to get a doctorate. She had a fiery 
spirit that matched the color of her hair, and in 
another age, in another place, could very well have 
become a true Queen."

"Instead, I made sure that she was properly educated 
at the best colleges and universities in the world. 
She lives out east and is now the head of one of the 
top Fortune 500 companies. The chair in her office is 
a design based on the throne of the Celtic Queen, 
Medb, a mythical warrior Queen of ancient Ireland. A 
portrait of Medb in full battle armor hangs behind her 
desk. I don't know where she got that painting, but 
the artist painted Medb to look very much like Eve."

Another look at me over his glasses, "It would appear 
that the CEO's of our large companies are the Kings 
and Queens of today and Rose has fulfilled her destiny 
in today's world."

Then he slumped slightly forward. It was as if he had 
expended the last of his energy telling me of the 
Queen Makers and the Queen he helped to bring into our 
world. He said softly to no one, "Our little Rose has 
become a Queen."

We could almost see the life flowing out of him. With 
great effort he raised his head. "Tell my story, W. 
Tell it so people will believe. Tell it so someday on 
an Irish fen, another Queen Maker can step into our 
world and a proper man will be waiting. Maybe she can 
stay longer for him than Eve did for me. Tell my 
story. Tell the story of Aoife, the Queen Maker and 
Queen Rose whom she brought into this world."

With that his head lolled fully forward. Almost 
simultaneous with his final words, the room was filled 
with a flash of light accompanied by a loud bang just 
outside the window. A nurse came rushing into the 
room, "Is everyone all right?" she asked. "You won't 
believe what just happened. A small meteor hit the 
ground right next to the building. I was afraid it 
might have broken the window, it was so close."

"Everything's fine," I answered. All eyes followed 
mine as I looked back at the bed, "That was just the 
door opening so Dr. Sorensen could go back to a 
hillside on the heath to be with his beloved Eve."

We all stood around in the room silently as Earl 
softly said his final goodbyes to his grandfather. 
Most of what he said was too quiet for me to hear, but 
at one point I could clearly him say, "I should have 
believed you, gramps. We could have gathered the whole 
family to be here tonight instead of just me. But I 
guess you wanted it this way. I hope you told W 
everything you wanted him to say."

When he was finished and we were all starting to go 
out the door, I paused and turned back to the bed. I 
addressed the body lying in the bed, but I was 
actually speaking to a spirit that was probably now 
walking the heath in Ireland with the woman he had 
loved - and waited for - his entire life. "Don't worry 
Nate," I told him, "I will tell the world the story of 
Aoife, the Queen Maker. And if I am still above the 
sod, I will be on the fen that surrounds Birr Castle 
on Dark Night in 2025. I know that I will be too old 
to be chosen - if I had ever been worthy of that - but 
maybe, just maybe, the door will open near me, and you 
and Eve can tell me more of the story of the Queen-
makers."

END 

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
It's okay to *READ* stories about unprotected sex with
others outside a monogamous relationship. But it isn't
okay to *HAVE* unprotected sex with people other than
a trusted partner. 4-million people around the world 
contract HIV every year. You only have one body per 
lifetime, so take good care of it!
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Kristen's collection - Directory 79