Part of the reason Nimue had agreed to living so close to the Seelie Veil was because she was susceptible to a loss of magic. The human world didn’t have the right mix of magic to allow her to survive for longer than three months at a time. There was enough to survive for some time, but not enough to cut ties completely. Another reason was because Nimue had the foresight to know that Thorin would want children, and once she had taught him how it would be with her, Nimue had relented to granting him a child.
Nimue’s belly had grown quite large and she began to wonder if she would pop like a balloon. There were days where all she would do was sit by the fire in the bedroom she shared with her husband and stare out the window. She could no longer bend over and pick anything up. She could hardly walk without waddling like a duck, and she was aware of the pressure she felt on her hips every time she did decide to move. Nimue began to wonder why anyone thought pregnancy was a beautiful thing. Any time Thorin thought to comment on her beauty, because even so heavily pregnant Nimue was attractive, he was met with glares. Nimue was so heartily sick of being pregnant that she almost felt the need to voice this to everyone within earshot, but she never did. She kept her thoughts to herself, feeding her growing child with nothing but positivity – but she began to wonder if the child only fed off the pain in her spine. It seemed to be the place the child loved to curl up. In some of her more morbid moments, Nimue liked to envision the child plucking at the nerves that ran up her spine, as if they were some vulgar instrument to play with.
So, feeling the need to be productive, Nimue waddled her way into the greenhouse that Thorin had added into the plans of the house. He was a doting sort of man, always willing to give in to her demands, which she thought she detected a little fear of her wrath the last time they had spoken and she had asked for berries. Thorin hadn’t said a single word about the fact that it wasn’t berry season, and Nimue didn’t really care how he had come across the berries he had found, but she was pleased that they hadn’t been poisonous. On some level Thorin loved her enough not to squish her skull when she became too demanding, or when she became too tired to move, or too sad to function. Nimue worked her way through the greenhouse slowly, using a knife to cut flowers for a vase. She wasn’t allowed to make any brews, concoctions, or attempt any magic of any sort until the baby was born. Thorin was a diligent man, even though he spent half his time learning how to be a better father with his other children.
Nimue smiled then as she lifted a peach colored orchid to her nose. Thorin was a good man, even if he was a little misguided in the way he went about things. Amariel was always hissing between her teeth when he was around, but he was learning. It was a good sign that he was being diligent about his role as a father, because soon he would have another child to dote on. Three children before he had even turned forty. Nimue chuckled to herself, thinking that he was making up for lost time.
The nymph made it into the kitchen sink, turning on the water, before the first contraction caused her to drop the flowers in the sink. She felt the water from her womb run down her legs and she panicked a little. She called for Amariel, who ran to her mistress with practiced ease, seeing the water on the floor she nodded. The woman quickly gathered everything they would need and a few guards that had been standing outside. Thorin wouldn’t leave if Nimue wasn’t guarded by someone, not with news of Pendaran’s occupation of a once sunken city in the mortal realm.
Thorin.
He would hear the call anywhere. He would also know that it was his wife and that it was time for the birth of his newest and youngest child.
Amariel and the guards helped Nimue outside and to the spring where she had opened her womb to accepting this pregnancy, and as she was stripped down to her white linen shift for the purpose of her dignity and to keep her naked body hidden from any prying eyes, Nimue eased into the water. The guards walked thirty paces out in three directions, their backs to the scene, leaving Nimue alone with Amariel. The intensity of the contractions eased as Nimue relaxed into the water up to her neck. She kept her eyes on Amariel and went through the motions of trying to keep her body as comfortable as possible, but at this point in her pregnancy nothing was comfortable, not even the sand at the bottom of the spring.
Once Thorin would arrive, the whole process would end quicker than it had with Igraine. Thorin wouldn’t be able to smell any of her blood because of the water, so he would be able to touch her – though he might be alarmed to see so much blood begin floating through the water. Bemused between contractions, Nimue was silently glad that there were no fresh water sharks that she knew of. If he could be encouraged to join her, Nimue would implore that he join her in the water and put his hands on her belly to give her the leverage she would need to birth his child. This was an experience that he had not been able to have with any of his other children. Nimue was nothing if she wasn’t the one person capable of giving Thorin a new experience.
Maira was born quickly, picked up and cleaned off in the waters of the spring in which she had been born. She was passed quickly to Thorin once she was cleaned. However, the day was full of surprises and Nimue was not through adding another child to Thorin’s growing list. With panic she realized she was having another child, she would screech at Amariel and Thorin once before Liam was born. Amariel quickly scooped up the newborn and smiled up at Thorin with, quite possibly, the only genuine smile she had ever given the man.
“A daughter and a son. What will you name him, Nimue?”
“Liam.” An ancestor of hers known for greatness. The guards were called back to help carry the newborn children back into the house. Amariel fluttered around the twins with an unanticipated glee that Nimue had to laugh, though she could barely feel from her hips down.
“Surprise. I had no idea we were going to have twins. It would seem you have two sons and two daughters.” Nimue tried to pull herself to the shore of the spring but she was having an exceptionally hard time. “Remind me to chastise Amariel later for leaving me out here.”