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In Vino
In Vino
In Vino
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In Vino

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The fourth book of the Futanari Saga:
Pope Clement XV, the first American to be raised to the papacy, is under attack from within the Vatican. Powerful cardinals, averse to his efforts to reform the Catholic clergy, are trying to force him to resign his office. To undermine him, they spread rumors of his involvement in financial and sexual improprieties. To retain the papacy he must discover their identities and defeat the rumors...but how?

The foremost technology firm of the day, Todd Iverson’s Arcologics, is about to introduce an artificial, completely automated womb. The device is capable of protecting and nurturing a child from zygote state all the way to birth. It would make the destruction of unborn children utterly unnecessary...but there are forces determined to see that it never reaches the light of day.

Fountain, a young futanari with unprecedented powers over food, is exploring wine: what it is, what it can do, and what it can be persuaded to do. Pope Clement has asked her if she can concoct a wine that elicits utter, perfectly candid truth from those who consume it. Her explorations lead her into realms never before penetrated by even the greatest of vintners...and a moral thicket that tests her understanding of right, wrong, and God’s will to its limits.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateApr 8, 2022
ISBN9781005913854
In Vino
Author

Francis W. Porretto

Francis W. Porretto was born in 1952. Things went steadily downhill from there.Fran is an engineer and fictioneer who lives on the east end of Long Island, New York. He's short, bald, homely, has bad acne and crooked teeth. His neighbors hold him personally responsible for the decline in local property values. His life is graced by one wife, two stepdaughters, two dogs, four cats, too many power tools to list, and an old ranch house furnished in Early Mesozoic style. His 13,000 volume (and growing) personal library is considered a major threat to the stability of the North American tectonic plate.Publishing industry professionals describe Fran's novels as "Unpublishable. Horrible, but unpublishable all the same." (They don't think much of his short stories, either.) He's thought of trying bribery, but isn't sure he can afford the $3.95.Fran's novels "Chosen One," "On Broken Wings," "Shadow Of A Sword," "The Sledgehammer Concerto," "Which Art In Hope," "Freedom's Scion," "Freedom's Fury," and "Priestesses" are also available as paperbacks, through Amazon. Check the specific pages for those books for details.Wallow in his insane ranting on politics, culture, and faith at "Liberty's Torch:" http://www.libertystorch.info/And of course, write to him, on whatever subject tickles your fancy, at morelonhouse@optonline.net

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    In Vino - Francis W. Porretto

    In Vino

    Francis W. Porretto

    In Vino

    A tale of the Futanari

    Novels by Francis W. Porretto:

    The Realm of Essences Series:

    Chosen One

    On Broken Wings

    Shadow of a Sword

    Polymath

    Statesman

    The Spooner Federation Saga:

    Which Art In Hope

    Freedom’s Scion

    Freedom’s Fury

    The Futanari Saga:

    The Athene Academy Collection

    Innocents

    Experiences

    The Wise and the Mad

    In Vino

    The Aeolian Fantasies:

    The Warm Lands

    Other Novels:

    The Sledgehammer Concerto

    Priestesses

    Love in the Time of Cinema

    Antiquities

    The Discovery Phase

    Copyright © 2021 by Francis W. Porretto

    Cover art by Laura Shinn (http://laurashinn.yolasite.com)

    No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted without the express written permission of the author, except for brief quotations embedded in critical articles and reviews.

    This is a work of fiction. The persons and events described here are entirely imaginary, nor are they intended to suggest or imply anything whatsoever about actual persons or events. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is coincidental. All locations and institutions are employed fictitiously.

    Contact: morelonhouse@optonline.net

    To Beth,

    my love and life companion,

    To vintners and those who assist them,

    To all those who seek the truth,

    And, as always,

    To the greater glory of God.

    §

    Drink no more water, but take a little wine for thy stomach’s sake, and thy frequent infirmities.

    1 Timothy 5:23 –

    §

    Wherever the Catholic sun doth shine,

    There’s always laughter and good red wine.

    At least I’ve always found it so.

    Benedicamus Domino!

    Hilaire Belloc –

    §

    Ultimately, love is everything.

    M. Scott Peck –

    What Has Gone Before

    Onteora County, New York is a small, kidney-shaped district in central New York State. It’s home to a number of unusual people and institutions. Notable among the institutions is a strange little college called Athene Academy. Athene is unique, in that all of its students, faculty, and staff are futanari: genetically women, yet equipped with male genitalia rather than female. Three vignettes about the lives of Athene futanari and those they interact with appear in The Athene Academy Collection.

    Because of Athene, Onteora possesses an unusually high population of this tiny human subgroup. Because of the interest in futanari among certain perverts, Japanese oyabun Hayao Nakahara established a laboratory and training facilities in the U.S. The laboratory produces futanari by cloning; the training facilities mold those futanari into sex slaves conditioned to obey their owners’ every wish.

    One such slave-in-training named Fountain escaped from Nakahara’s facility in Gloucester, Virginia. Through good fortune, she became the beloved ward of security specialist Larry Sokoloff and his wife-to-be Trish McAvoy. The tale of their adoption of Fountain and their exaction of justice from her tormentors is told in the novel Innocents.

    Nakahara vowed to recapture Fountain, whom he viewed as a product for sale, and enlisted corrupt Onteora police chief John Ashford in the effort. This and other stresses Onteora undergoes because of its futanari population are recounted in the novel Experiences.

    Eventually, the religious institutions of the world had to grapple with this unique third sex, incompatible with the other two and unable to reproduce. The Catholic Church, which has just elevated its very first American, Gerard Cardinal O’Rourke of Queens, New York, to the papacy as Pope Clement XV, is the first to confront its difficulties. Alongside the challenges of the futanari, Clement must wrestle with the great wound in the Church’s side: the clerical pedophilia scandal. However, an ultra-activist homosexual group, Inclusivity, strives to invalidate or corrupt the technological marvel that Clement hopes to use: Rachel MacLachlan’s desire-control nanites. The conflicts that result are narrated in the novel The Wise and the Mad.

    As our story begins, Pope Clement, the Sokoloffs, Father Raymond Altomare of Onteora parish, and another priest wait to be served dinner by Fountain, who has exhibited miraculous powers over food...and much else.

    Sunday, June 23, 2030

    Gerry, my lord, Miss Trish, Father Monti, Father Ray, Fountain said, dinner is ready.

    Five persons, all of them dazed by the extraordinary aromas that had permeated the pope’s study for the preceding hour, turned immediately toward the young futa. She set a large platter on the dining room table. It was filled to the brim with orzo, shrimp and bite-size chunks of chicken, tomatoes, diced peppers, onions, and celery, bathed in a pale, delicate sauce. She essayed a half-bow and took the seat between Larry and Trish Sokoloff.

    Gerard Seamus Patrick O’Rourke, better known to the world as His Holiness Pope Clement XV, spoke in a voice that trembled with longing.

    Domenico, would you please say grace for us? But in English, please.

    Father Domenico Monti, Clement’s personal secretary, nodded once. He steepled his hands and bowed his head. The others did the same.

    God our Father, Monti said hoarsely, we thank thee for this gift from thy bounty, and pray that we will ever be grateful for your generosity, mercy, and love. In Christ our Lord, Amen.

    Amen, the others chorused.

    Clement rose as four sets of hands darted toward the serving implements. Trish Sokoloff won the race. As she shoveled a mound of Fountain’s creation onto her plate, Clement took up the decanter of red wine and circled the table filling glasses. He started with his own.

    Being Supreme Pontiff has to come with some privileges.

    When he reached Fountain’s place, he found the futa sitting back with her hands in her lap, waiting patiently for her turn to serve herself. She smiled at him as he stopped beside her.

    Do you drink wine, Fountain? he said.

    I have not yet had wine, Gerry, she said.

    Ah. I noticed that you didn’t have any earlier, he said. Is it permitted, Larry, Trish?

    I can’t see why not, Larry Sokoloff said. She just hasn’t encountered it yet. We’re not wine drinkers at home.

    Fountain hasn’t had anything alcoholic yet, Trish said. We figured she’s still a bit young for it.

    What’s your domestic tipple? Clement said.

    I don’t drink anymore, Trish said.

    I don’t drink much, Larry said. When I do, it’s usually just a little brandy or bourbon.

    And a shot of Bailey’s in your coffee on Sunday, Trish said.

    Her husband smirked. Well, yeah, but that’s in place of cream and sugar.

    Clement chuckled. An excellent substitute. The alcohol cuts through the fat. It’s the body’s version of a plumber’s snake. Fountain, would you like a glass of wine? I’m sure it won’t harm you in any way.

    I would like to try it, Gerry, Fountain said. I am always interested in exploring new foods and flavors.

    Very well. He poured a small amount of Chianti into her glass, set down the decanter, and returned to his seat. As the others were plainly waiting for him to be first to try the dish, he served himself a modest portion and spooned up a bite. The others followed suit.

    Fountain’s creation hit him like a speeding truck. The cavalcade of flavors and textures was both overwhelming and exquisite, a gustatory delight of unprecedented magnitude and variety. It seized him immediately and irresistibly. He had to thrust his chair back from the table to avert a most un-Pontiff-like action.

    Is something wrong, Holiness? Father Monti said, his laden spoon having not yet reached his lips.

    Uh, nothing...nothing, Domenico. Clement’s heart had gone into overdrive. His whole body quivered with pleasure. None of his non-mystical experiences could compare with the rush from that single mouthful of Fountain’s concoction. He closed his eyes, tipped back his head, breathed deeply through his nose, and emitted a long sigh. When he’d steadied, he panned a huge smile around the table.

    Glory be to God!

    Larry was grinning like a fool. His wife Trish giggled, one hand pressed to her lips. Ray Altomare and Domenico Monti were staring at their plates looking thunderstruck. It seemed their encounter with Fountain’s cuisine had paralleled Clement’s.

    Fountain was staring fixedly into her wine glass.

    What’s the matter, dear? Clement said. Don’t you like it?

    Fountain didn’t reply at once. Clement became alarmed.

    It speaks, she whispered. "It speaks so much."

    She slowly drained the glass and turned a face that glowed with the unique joy of discovery toward Clement.

    Thank you, Gerry, she whispered. This is special.

    A new thing, Fountain? he said.

    Something you’d like to experiment with? Larry said.

    She nodded, eyes wide and sparkling with excitement.

    Clement reached for the decanter and refilled her glass.

    #

    It was not long afterward that the members of the little dinner party, having scraped the serving platter completely food-free, sat back from the table to digest. There were many groans. Some were of pleasure, some were of rue, and some compounded the two.

    Fountain alone was silent. She appeared to Clement to be deep in thought.

    Holiness, Monti croaked.

    Really, Domenico, Clement murmured, can’t you bring yourself to call me Gerry for the span of a dinner party?

    Apologies, Holiness, the Piedmontese priest said, but I fear not. The capacity for such informality was beaten out of me long ago.

    Clement shook his head. A pity, though I suppose I’ll manage to cope. What was it you were about to say?

    I think... Monti faltered. I think it was wise that you should dine thus, with your present company and without the members of the Curia. He brightened. And I thank you from the bottom of my heart for including me.

    Clement smiled. Thanks are not necessary, Domenico. You serve the papacy with such devotion that I felt it would be unjust to exclude you. He chuckled. Also, I’d been told that I was about to experience an extraordinary event, and I wanted to have at least as many clergy present as laymen. To act as witnesses, you understand. He turned to Fountain. Does that dish have a name, Fountain?

    It does not, Gerry, she said. I composed it only today, from what I found in your pantry. Would you like to name it?

    I’m not sure that I’m up to the task, Fountain, Clement said. It was something like a jambalaya without sausage, but subtler. Considerably subtler. It did not overwhelm with pepper as jambalaya often does. May I have a few days to think about a name, dear?

    Of course, Gerry.

    Fountain does this sort of thing all the time, Larry Sokoloff said. Dishes we’ve never seen before, recipes concocted on the spot, sometimes with ingredients she’s never used before.

    But this good? Clement said.

    "Always this good, Gerry, Trish said. No matter what she makes, Fountain’s cooking is guaranteed to ring all your bells."

    It is in the food, Fountain said.

    Clement peered at her curiously. What do you mean, dear?

    She met his gaze with eyes of the purest innocence.

    "Food speaks, Gerry, she said. It is powerful, and it knows its power. It wants not merely to nourish, but to please, to be cherished–to be loved. Upon the instant my lord and Miss Trish introduced me to food, I knew it could do wonders."

    You hadn’t had...food before that?

    Her eyes darkened. She shook her head. No, Gerry. A—a sludge to keep us alive. It had a foul odor. It was bitter, slimy, hard to swallow...vile. Except for an occasional glass of milk, it was all we were given. Until my lord made me his, I was unaware that there was anything else.

    The study filled with a silence of expectant yet reverent quality. It brought a sense of immanence, the special tension that speaks of an event—or a Person—that has breached the wall of Time and waits to be recognized. Clement had experienced such a state before, but always at prayer or during meditation.

    This is something the world needs to know.

    This young woman was created from stolen tissue by an evil method and trained for the basest sort of slavery. A will-less, rightless existence her owner could terminate whenever he pleased. An absolute dependence that could never be broken.

    She could be the most important mortal to come into the world of men since the Blessed Virgin.

    Did the wine speak to you that way, Fountain?

    Oh yes! The futa’s face filled with excitement and possibility. I must learn all there is to know about wine. It has great power. It could protect the health. It could relieve many sorrows. It could...could... Her eyes lost focus and her gaze drifted into the infinite.

    A new prospect formed in his mind’s eye.

    Could the old saw be true after all?

    Fountain, Clement murmured, could wine be used to elicit...truth? To encourage someone to speak his mind plainly and without any pretense?

    Her focus returned, and she smiled.

    I do not yet know, Gerry. It is possible. Its powers seem unbounded. I must study it thoroughly.

    Trish sucked in a noisy breath. Larry took her hand and squeezed it. Ray Altomare and Domenico Monti stared at the futa as if mesmerized.

    Possible, Clement said. Not certain.

    Fountain canted her head and looked away. Her smile spoke of an adventure eagerly anticipated.

    I will know soon enough.

    #

    The evening wore on. Dessert was gelato and cannoli, hand-made by the Vatican’s own kitchen staff. Servants brought coffee for the Sokoloffs, brandy for Ray and Monti, and wine for Clement and Fountain. There were stories, jokes and japes, and copious merriment. It was an interval of a sort few popes have enjoyed and fewer still have allowed to become public knowledge.

    Clement encouraged Fountain to try sips of several kinds of wine. He asked her opinion of each and how they differed.

    The red wines speak more sternly, she said. The white wines beckon more subtly.

    I’m not sure what you mean, dear, Clement said.

    She frowned delicately. "As with all voices, the voices of food have both volume and tone. The red wine is brusque and assertive. It demands my attention. It would not accept going unheard. I must listen. Yet it says nothing the white wine does not. The white wine demands nothing. It invites, beckons..."

    Tempts?

    Yes, or seduces. Her forehead creased briefly. "I failed at first to listen, and it did not raise but lowered its voice. Whether or not to listen is at my option. Her eyes twinkled. Miss Holly might say that the red wine is ‘full of itself.’"

    Who is Miss Holly? Clement said.

    Holly Martinowski. One of my other parishioners, Ray supplied. A very nice young, ah, woman who writes romance novels.

    "Excellent romance novels," Trish added.

    My, my. Onteora is home to all sorts of Catholics. Clement drained his brandy and sat back. The variety must be refreshing. He snorted. "All I get to deal with are sour-faced cardinals with pretensions to importance."

    Holiness! Monti looked mournful.

    Clement chuckled. All right, Domenico, I’ll admit there are a few pleasant exceptions. Larry, Trish? I assume you’ve booked accommodations for tonight and a flight back to New York tomorrow?

    Yes to both, Larry said.

    Remember to send a copy of the hotel bill to Domenico. He’ll see to it that you’re reimbursed. Clement rose, marveling afresh at his painlessness and ease of motion. This has been one of the very best days I’ve had since I was first ordained a priest of Christ. He spread his arms in unabashed invitation, and each of the Sokoloffs hugged him in turn. Thank you, most sincerely, for indulging my curiosity about you and Fountain. He turned to Fountain, took her hands, bowed over them and kissed them. "And thank you, dear girl, for the greatest experience I’ve ever had at the dinner table...and for much else."

    The futa smiled. You’re quite welcome, Gerry.

    Ray? Clement said. Unless you absolutely must be off, I’d appreciate it if you’d stay in a Vatican guest suite tonight. I’d like for us to celebrate Mass together tomorrow morning.

    Ray Altomare’s visage lit from within.

    Gerry, he said, I can imagine no greater honor.

    Excellent. Let’s bid our other guests a good night.

    #

    When Father Monti had closed the study door behind him, Clement turned to Ray and waved him back to his seat. More brandy, Ray?

    No thank you, Gerry, he said. I have a feeling I should keep what remains of my wits for what you’re about to tell me.

    Clement chuckled. You’ve got the right idea. I realized when Fountain and I were chatting that even though her, ah, guardians are devout, she’s got no idea about the Faith.

    Ray nodded. Larry didn’t want to be the one to educate her. She thinks too much of him to doubt anything he says. Trish just feels unequipped.

    Hm. Well, that might be for the best, Clement said. You, on the other hand...?

    He fought back an urge to cringe.

    Oh boy. I should have known that was coming.

    I suppose it is my job, isn’t it? he muttered.

    Well, Clement drawled, "you are the pastor of Onteora parish, aren’t you, Father?"

    Yeah. Ray shook himself and straightened up. I know it’s my job. But it’s going to be a tough one.

    All the more reason I’m glad it will be you who takes it on, Clement said. "Fountain is special. May God be forever praised, she gives new meaning to the word ‘special.’ And I can trust you to know how to introduce her to the Testaments, and our theology, and the Church’s doctrines about a life well lived without oppressing her, bruising her innocence, or damaging what makes her unique."

    He trusts me more than I trust myself. God, be with me. I’m going to need You.

    I hope you’re right about that. Ray sighed. She won’t be my first special catechumen, but she’s likely to be the most difficult. You’ve noticed how literal she is?

    I most certainly have.

    And that she takes nothing for granted?

    Yes again, Clement said. And neither should you. I think... He paused and looked away briefly. I think she has a significant part to play in the dramas of our time. If she accepts and embraces the Faith—and there are no guarantees about that, despite my most fervent hopes—she could serve the Christian world as no one has done since Aquinas.

    Ray’s awareness surged to a painful acuity.

    What kind of service is he thinking of? The Christian world is in desperate need of several different kinds.

    Gerry, I sense that there’s meaning in that statement that I’m unable to thresh out.

    For the moment, Clement said, "that is as it must be. But I don’t think it will be much longer before my meaning is as clear to you as it is to me, so be careful with her. Supremely careful."

    Ray bowed his head. I will, Gerry.

    I’m sure. Clement rose. Now let’s say our prayers and get some shut-eye. I’d say we’ve earned it.

    #

    He is impossible.

    "He demeans us. To exclude us yet dine with his secretary, a parish priest, a lay couple, and that creature..."

    You did not vote for him.

    "Nor did you. But three-fourths of the Conclave did. And I will never understand it. I’d have thought it was

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