Steven George and the Terror
Copyright ©2023 Elder Road Books
Chapter 4: The Inevitable Change
ONCE UPON A TIME, there was a midwife. We assume she was given a name when she was born as most babies are, but over the years she had adopted the name of her patroness as many in that profession do, and was called Mylitta of the Green Vale. Throughout the valley, children had found their way into the world at her coaxing, and mothers had survived the most rigorous childbirths because of her care.
Mylitta was the first of twelve children, herself. From the time she was just upright on two feet, she had been with her mother at the birthing of a child. And when it was not her mother giving birth, her mother was helping a neighbor give birth or even helping the livestock in the barn. Mylitta had been around birth all her life.
Mylitta was at the birth of her sister, four brothers, two more sisters, a brother, two more sisters, and a brother. She watched her neighbor give birth to her firstborn with her mother in attendance. She helped with the calving in the spring at her father’s side, and sat with newborns through the night to be sure they suckled and were not rejected. When she was ten years old, Mylitta and her mother were called to the home of the magistrate of the nearest city where the magistrate’s wife, Ell, was in the midst of a particularly difficult birth. Mylitta rushed to get bowls of hot and cold water, fresh clean cloths, and to organize the servants to instantly carry out orders as they were needed.
When she returned to her mother, she was asked to help support Ell as her mother positioned the birthing bed beneath her. It seemed remarkable to Mylitta that as soon as Ell rested upon the old fleece, her breathing eased, and her desperation seemed to disappear. Ell smiled weakly at Mylitta.
“How nice that my little daughter will have a sister to welcome her into the world,” Ell breathed weakly. “Just having you here makes the labor easier.” It was not long after that Mylitta’s mother reached into Ell’s womb and turned the baby, so the little girl was born headfirst into the world. Ell, though weak, smiled and brought the babe to her breast, then fell asleep at last.
“Mother,” said Mylitta quietly, “it was not really my presence that comforted Ell, was it?”
“Sweet child,” said her mother, “your presence is always a comfort to mothers—even to me. But you are right in assuming it is not just your presence. It is the property of the birthing bed to bring change upon those who rest in its embrace. For you see, daughter, this old fleece is enchanted.”
The birthing bed had been present through every birth that Mylitta had attended. Her mother even threw it over the backs of cows, sows, and ewes when they experienced hard births. Though it was called a bed, it was nothing more than a huge sheepskin that Mylitta and her mother placed beneath the birthing woman to welcome her child. It was soft and was always cleaned with tropical oil and treated with wool wax. It was impervious to any stains.
“This sacred birthing bed...” Mylitta’s mother told her, “ ... has seen the births of kings and queens in ages past. It was the object of an ancient quest and is made from the skin of the prized ewe of Aciannis, goddess of health in ancient Ursentia. The ewe gave birth to the stars and in her old age was sacrificed to save the life of Aciannis’s own child. Since that time, it has been passed down from generation to generation. This, I am told, is but a fragment of the original fleece, which has been divided among midwives the world over.”
Mylitta was in her twentieth winter when her mother gave birth to the last of the children. After Mylitta had cleaned the sheepskin and brushed it with wool wax, she gave it to her mother while watching her newest little brother suckle. She was surprised when her mother handed the heirloom back.
To read the complete story you need to be logged in:
Log In or
Register for a Free account
(Why register?)
* Allows you 3 stories to read in 24 hours.