TempestChapter 4
- 4 years ago
- 20
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The still air lay sodden and warm from the first wave of early summer heat, and moisture clung to the Cohort's face as he crept along the side of the path which wound along the west side of the island. His fingers twitched despite how tightly he had laced them, and he spun his gaze behind him every few steps.
Ahead of him was the S-shaped curve between the trees which lined the shore to the left and the gardens to the right. Just beyond was the dwelling of Elder Yurton. His breath became short as he hastened. He looked behind him once more, letting out a ragged sigh when he saw the path was still clear.
He felt fortunate most of his brethren had been tasked with surveillance on Mage Jothan. He had not wanted to devise fanciful explanations for why he was out after dark. This way he could be about his business and back in his quarters long before the others had returned.
He did not like this. It felt like a betrayal. But the Holy Order trumped all other considerations, even someone he admired. He turned his eyes forward and uttered a yelp rather unbecoming of his station as he shuddered to a stop and flung himself backwards, then stumbled and fell to the ground. He raised an arm when a hand thrust towards him from below the face which had popped out of nowhere.
"Please, let me help you up," said Jollis with a smile.
The Cohort hesitated before he clasped the proffered hand and was hauled to his feet in one swift move.
"I hope I did not startle you," Jollis said.
"Not ... not at all, honored Wanderer," said the Cohort with a bow of his head.
"Ah, then there must be some other explanation as to why your breath is still short. And why you feel obligated to use an additional honorific to my name."
The Cohort paused. "I simply wish to show you respect, and to thank you properly for helping me."
"Then I suppose that is your reason for why you are about this late at night."
"It was your directive, Wanderer, to ensure Mage Jothan was under proper surveillance. I am participating in that venture."
Jollis' smile broadened. "It is little wonder you let a crucial piece of information slip earlier. You are a very bad liar."
The Cohort's eyes widened. "My ... my Wanderer, I would never--"
"The one who lies simply to deceive is most certainly the fool," intoned Jollis. "But he starts on the road to wisdom upon admitting his lie when caught in it."
The Cohort swallowed. "I do not--"
Jollis voice grew less pleasant. "And I suggest you do not compound this lie with another, for you would surely have lost all honor at that point."
The Cohort flexed his fingers and said nothing.
"You were about to visit Elder Yurton, were you not? To tell him of the orders which I had given you and the others."
"What makes you think that?"
"Answering a question with a question is another form of deception. That was the last one I will allow you. Tell me the truth from this point forward or you will tell neither lies nor truths."
The Cohort staggered back a step. "Wanderer, I--!"
"You have one more chance to answer my question. I am usually a very patient man, but there are times when I find it a liability. This is one of them."
The Cohort swallowed and let out a ragged sigh. He bowed his head and lowered his eyes. "Yes, I was about to visit him. Please forgive me, but I am under orders."
"Then I absolve you of blame. But you must tell me why you were so concerned about the Portal energies earlier today."
The Cohort looked stricken. "But I am sworn to secrecy on the matter!"
"By that very statement, you have negated your secrecy oath. A secret is such only when no one knows it exists. And I will remind you once more of my lack of patience this evening."
"W-Wanderer, I am but a servant of the larger path. I cannot--"
"--delay your answers to my questions any further. Decide in this next moment before you speak again which is more important to you, your oath or your continued existence."
The Cohort swallowed. "Elder Yurton authorized some sort of experiment to be carried out on the Overlord Portal. It is Verano, however, who is doing the actual work."
"What kind of experiment?" Jollis demanded.
"I do not have all the details. It involves a careful and controlled cycling of the Portal energies."
"For what purpose?"
"I do not know."
"Verano is supposed to be perfecting the craft of targeting Portals via memories. Does this have anything to do with that?"
"No, Wanderer, I do not believe so."
Jollis considered for a moment, then nodded once.
"That is all I know," the Cohort said.
"Then return to your quarters. I offer an apology for my actions."
The Cohort paused as if confused, then bowed his head and scurried back the way he had come.
Jollis watched the Cohort retreat with a look of disgust, directed not at the Cohort but himself. Had a fellow Cohort resorted to the same technique to obtain information from his fellow, Jollis would have taken the man to task. Jollis' actions had been sheer expediency, and it felt distasteful to have resorted to such crude methods.
Nevertheless, it had revealed a most unfortunate fact which he had already suspected: Yurton was doing something which he did not want the rest of Oceanus to see. Or even his fellow Inonni. It flew against everything for which the Holy Order stood.
Jollis turned his head when he heard a rustling noise somewhere around the curve along the path ahead. He ducked into the trees until passing footsteps against the packed earth had turned into the gardens and faded into the distance.
So Jothan makes his move tonight, Jollis thought with some satisfaction. Then we will see what he is up to.
Jothan stopped at the point of the S-curve hidden from sight from both directions, glanced either way, and hurried into the gardens. He crouched out of sight and mumbled a countdown, passing thirty as he crawled along the ground behind a line of bushes, then twenty when he reached the northern edge of the gardens and plunged into the protection of the trees.
He had gone over in his mind several plans for a frontal assault on the Cohorts at the gate, but all scenarios had ended badly for him. Thus he chose the next best thing: diversion.
He reached the edge of the northern path and ducked down as his countdown reached ten. From behind a boulder he peered at the Cohorts standing at the gate. As his countdown reached five, he turned his head to the left and jockeyed for position to see past the thicker foliage until he spotted the warriors at the head of the path to the Portal building.
Three ... two ... one ... showtime.
A pearl imbued with elemental magic combined with combat magic, hidden among the trees between the west path and the shore, exploded its overloaded spell charge. A ball of crimson flame rocketed towards the night sky, whistling like a firecandle. Shouts of warning were drowned out when the flaming meteor reached the end of its arc and plummeted to the ground with a roar of thunder, landing between Yurton's dwelling and the astonished warriors guarding the Portal.
As flame engulfed the trees, the warriors at Yurton's dwelling dashed inside, then reappeared with the Elder, escorting him away from the fire and away from Jothan's position. The Portal guardians also left their post to join several Cohorts who now attempted to contain the fire until Verano could be summoned.
Jothan turned his attention to the gate. The two Cohorts looked on with concern, hesitated, then finally dashed away to join the makeshift fire brigade.
Jothan emerged from hiding, the flames casting a mottled orange glow upon the ground and the trees. He smirked as he saw the Inonni busy with their little "problem." He dashed across the road and through the gate, then darted into the trees where the road started to curve. He peeked towards the gate, but no shadows moved before the flickering red-orange light of his handiwork.
He took a few deep breaths to calm his racing heart. The initial rush had worn off, and he could not recall ever feeling this frightened. He sensed the fading residual energies of not just Barranus, but of others as well, all accompanied by the same nauseating staleness and decay. Such energies had never garnered such a reaction in him before, and the implications were too staggering to comprehend.
He emerged from the trees and sensed the energies emanating from almost due west, where a narrow path meandered off the main road. He glanced towards the gate. The glow of his diversionary fire was diminishing more quickly than he had anticipated. He plunged down the path, withdrawing a pearl from his pocket and holding it before him to light the way.
The path had been barely maintained. The foliage had been cleared back only enough to allow passage, the ground covered in spotty underbrush. He came upon what appeared to be a small hut, similar to a slave quarters, except comprised of but a single chamber. Jothan stepped inside, but it was clear it had been unoccupied for some time. He puzzled over its purpose until he remembered the former Overlord once had a personal tradesman. This may have been his quarters.
This was not the target of his search. The energies lie further west, but close. He emerged from the hut and held the pearl before him like a beacon as he continued down the path, peering into the darkness which seemed to close around him as if intent on swallowing him into the void. A breeze rustled the leaves and he shivered, not quite in proportion to the coolness of the air.
Jothan narrowed his eyes and extended the hand which held the glowing pearl, illuminating a small clearing. The moonlight was smothered by the canopies of the trees, only the occasional spots of silver light sliding across the ground. It was enough to tell him the area had been scoured of brush and vegetation.
His temples throbbed with the reverberating energies. He rubbed them and tried and sort out what he was sensing to little avail. Some had faded enough to be indistinguishable from the background magical radiance. He knew only he was sensing more than one, and Barranus was among them.
He advanced, and stumbled when his foot struck the edge of a raised mound. When he recovered, Jothan stood upon dirt looser and softer than the packed earth of the path. A shiver ran down his spine, and he jumped off the mound. He lowered his pearl for a closer look.
The mound was a little longer than a man was tall, and about a fourth as wide. Jothan came upon a second such mound only a few steps from the first. By the third one, he had determined the source of the energy emanations. He fell to his knees as his stomach heaved, but he managed not to vomit, shivering hard until the nausea had passed.
Nevertheless, nothing could lift the pall which had settled over him at the sight of the makeshift graveyard. A sense of disgust rose inside him which threatened to nauseate him once more. The supposedly "enlightened" Inonni had not had the dignity to perform the proper ritual for a fallen Mage, where his lingering energies could be dispersed and freed from the fetters of the lifeless body.
Jothan stared down at the grave he now knew contained Barranus' remains. All the others were filled with his brethren, fellow expatriates who had not known how great a payment would be extracted for the "privilege" of working for the Inonni. But what happened to them? Indiscriminate killing of expatriate Mages who wanted to work for them made little sense.
He straightened up and backed away. A twig snapped on the path behind him. He spun around and with a single gesture let loose a bolt of crimson combat magic. Without a specific target, the energy advanced on a broad front.
The edges of the advancing wall flashed as they struck home, and several dull thuds confirmed their unprepared targets. The remainder suddenly roared back towards him, and Jothan had only just enough time to duck before it shot overhead, its burning light illuminating his back.
Jothan straightened up as soon as it was past and raised his hands before him. In the same instant, a glowing sphere of tightly concentrated combat magic struck his chest and blew him off his feet and across the graveyard. He fell and rolled into the thorny underbrush just past Barranus' grave.
Jothan was nowhere near as accomplished at combat magic. He knew only several basic self-defense moves. Nevertheless, he leapt to his feet, ignoring the pain of the thorns in his arms and legs, and loosed another attack. He ducked out of the way of a counterattack, only to be struck by another arriving on its heels.
Every inch of Jothan's skin felt as if immersed in burning acid, and the scream remained locked in his throat from the shock. He had a fleeting thought about how well-played it had been, the first attack clearly the feint which had forced him into the second one.
The agony stopped all at once, the shock of its absence as jarring as the shock of its appearance. Jothan collapsed to the ground, his nerves still firing randomly all over his body, as if he had fallen into the smoldering embers of a campfire which now sought his skin as fuel to reignite. By the time he had managed to force himself to his knees, a flurry of motion surrounded him, and a staff whacked him across the stomach and then against the back of his head. Jothan fell across Barranus' grave and hovered on the gray brink of unconsciousness for a few breaths before he succumbed and lay limp and still.
The two warriors lowered their staffs and looked up as a third figure approached from the darkness, flanked by four shadows. The figure's eyes glowed with Mage-sight until a pearl ignited in his hand.
Verano turned to the other four warriors with him and ordered, "Guard the path back to the Manor." As they nodded and disappeared back into the darkness, Verano regarded the prone body. "I didn't want to do this, Jothan," he said with a quaver in his voice. "I had thought you would do well just on your own. Now you will have to serve in the same manner as your brethren."
Verano gestured to the warriors. They hauled Jothan from the ground and propped him up between them.
"Secure him, and make sure he cannot use his magic when he awakens," Verano ordered.
"Shall we tell Elder Yurton?" asked one of the warriors.
"Do not concern yourself. I will speak with him as needed." He brought his hands together and laced the fingers to stop them from trembling. "I do the Holy Order's most sacred work, as do you."
The warriors bowed their heads in acknowledgement and started to drag Jothan past Verano.
Verano gestured to stop them. "And make quite sure you are not seen by the Wanderer Jollis."
The warriors exchanged a confused look. "Honored Mage, would the Wanderer not wish to assist in your--"
"Do as I say. As the Holy Order commands through me."
"Yes, Mage Master Verano."
Verano let out a slow sigh as the warriors passed. He turned his gaze towards the graveyard, opened his mouth as if to speak, then swallowed hard and fled.
"Jothan then slipped past the gate once the fire had started, Wanderer," said the first Cohort.
"It was clear to us then he had anticipated the fire and was thus its instigator, despite having slipped from our observation at the crucial moment when he planted the spelled pearl," said the second Cohort.
"It pained us greatly, but we did not assist in putting out the fire. We instead observed from a concealed location. We thought it prudent not to follow him past the gate for fear someone else would spot us and learn of your clandestine surveillance."
"As soon as the fire was under control, Mage Verano led a contingent of warriors out of the Manor."
"Wanderer, I admit I am not privy to the security requirements of the Mage Master or the Holy Order--"
"Indeed, we now realize there is much we are not privy to," the second Cohort said in a slightly sour voice.
"Hush, please, and let me continue," said the first. "Wanderer, it seemed to me he took an inordinate number of warriors with him, at least six. Even if he had somehow known Jothan was responsible for the fire, this was more than was needed in light of Mage Verano's considerable magic skills."
"We were unable to observe the outcome, Wanderer. Before Verano returned, some of his warriors appeared ahead of him and cleared the area about the gate. If we had not left, we would surely have been discovered and questioned."
The low clouds at the dawn horizon glowed blood red with the approaching sunrise. A crimson taint touched the former D'ronstaq Manor as the glow brightened, and to those walking along the sandy paths formerly tread by slaves, Trainers, and Overlords, it felt like walking on faintly bloodstained ground. To the two Cohorts who emerged from the west side path, the ones who had helped Verano carry the body of Jothan to his final resting place, it seemed appropriate. They crossed the clearing,...
Donny Gentile listened with his eyes closed to the splashing of his sister as she swam in the clear water of their family swiimming pool. Their parents were both off on an afternoon of flea market shopping, and they had the house to themselves. Jenny always demanded they take advantage of such oppotunities, and he would taunt her with other things he had to do, girls he wanted to visit, all the while as excited as she was. The pool was well protected by both a high fence and landscaping, so...
One It was just a vague idea, really. But there was something magic about this island, and standing on it's highest point, still only a hundred yards from the beach, the far off thunderclouds crackled and flashed as she watched. All the storms did that, approach from the west, then veer off northward. The same phenomenon that had carried their liferaft here three months ago. An observor would not have thought of Prospero. Nor Ariel. Her black hair was almost to her waist, framing a face...
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Despite the trappings of opulence in the form of large tapestries that absorbed all stray sound, the chime rang clear and commanding in Amanda's ears. When her feet did not obey the summons but remained sunk into the plush carpet, a hand alighted on her shoulder. "Don't dawdle. Go." Amanda turned her head, but could see Larra only out of the corner of her eye. Larra nudged her, accompanied by a short outtake of breath, not so much admonishment as exasperation. Amanda knew what it meant:...
The slim man stepped across the threshold, and the door swung closed behind him with a tiny squeak of old hinges that seemed loud in the morning calm. When the cool ocean breeze behind him had ceased, a pall of stale sweat and brine teased the stranger's nose from under his hood despite the early hour and the almost empty tavern. The barkeep, a burly man with a misshapen nose, gave the stranger a wary eye and paused with his broom in mid-sweep. Two haggard men in a far corner abandoned...
The last quarter moon had convinced Lord Ambassador Mandas that the sole purpose of an architecture which advocated long, wide hallways festooned with statues of scowling royalty and state ministers of the past was to intimidate people like him as they scurried about their official business. Mandas had become inured to most of them as he dashed from one high official to another to gather more information for the King on the impending crisis with Oceanus. He had been shocked to hear that...
The men and women that considered themselves among the ranks of the so-called Rogue Mages milled in loose groups within the Chamber of Equals at the Oceanus Mage Guild. They betrayed no notice or concern for the scowls of reproof from the Traditionalist Mage Elders or the bemused looks of the Empiricists. They engaged in idle chatter, the occasional smattering of laughter rising above the din of conversation, earning only more reproachful looks. Few looked the part of a Mage. Absent were the...
Amanda felt yet another sharp tug on her collar chain despite the fact that she was keeping pace; she suspected that Halno, the Head of Staff, did it because he could. The completion of her remedial training meant she was a full slave, and thus accessible to Norlan's servants. Unlike slaves, servants were employees, and thus entitled to salary and benefits. Amanda and her ilk were one of the latter. At first, Amanda had been grateful. The servants were a talkative lot, and liked to trade...
Jollis had visited the Imperial Palace of Oceanus only once during the waning days of the first phase of Enlightenment, when the old Oceanus order had been unwound save for a scant few Nobles and Overlords they had missed. The Inonni would never refer to them as having escaped, as that implied that their future was imprisonment. The Inonni simply wanted them to fit properly into the new order. Their resistance was to their own detriment, worse than anything they imagined the Inonni would do...
Amanda had thought that her mind would dwell upon the indignity of being caged in a small, silent alcove waiting to be used like a plastic sex toy. Instead, she had surprised herself with how accepting she had become of her new role. Initially, she had viewed it as a boon, a way to avoid insanity. Now she wondered if the insanity would have been preferable; or a despairing semi-catatonic state that would leave her with little capacity to feel on her own; or a Draught-induced vapidness that...
Kyllos' footsteps echoed despite the softness of his shoes as he walked towards the dais in the throne room of the Imperial Palace. His tired eyes beheld the throne in another vain hope that the Emperor had come to his senses and taken his rightful place. Instead, the blood-stained sword still lay across its hand-rests, and dust covered the seat. Kyllos folded his hands and stopped at the foot of the dais, allowing himself a rare sigh as his eyes swept the chamber. He had heard that one of...
Mandas held his head high as he strode into the anteroom, resplendent in the ruffles and silks which comprised his best attire. His shoes answered the general din of conversation with crisp clicks against the stone of the entryway, muted when he stepped onto the deep purple carpet. One of his gloved hands clutched a walking cane which he tapped against the floor, its length carved with flowing designs and accents that represented parts of his clan's crest. One took the form of a snake...
No telltale bolt from the black announced the Wanderer's arrival this time. He had been transported to this spot early that morning, well to the east of his quarry where the rising sun would cover his arrival. He had holed up under a rocky outcropping, subsisting on a few meager rations and intense meditation. Now, under the cover of moonless night, he scurried through the underbrush as lithe as a cat and as silent as the breeze. Such stealth was second nature to him. It afforded him time...
"It makes little sense," said Jollis to an empty chamber. As the day in the Urisi Nation hurtled towards late afternoon, the sun had just risen over the Oceanus Imperial Palace. It was well past the candlemark when his Master should be seated at his desk tending to the morning reports. Yet the flame in the lamp at the corner of the desk remained low, untouched since Kyllos had retired the evening before. Jollis took a slow, deep breath. His own words disturbed him, not so much for their...
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Jothan scrambled onto the boulder as a wave broke around it, surging into foam before pausing and retreating into the sea. He shook the bits of wet sand and water from his bare feet for a more secure foothold. He squinted as he peered into the sky, the wind prickling his skin as he waited for the sun to re-emerge from behind a small cloud. Jothan lowered his eyes and looked out across the indigo ocean. He sensed the wards rather than saw them, as the slim crystals which held the enchantment...
Marris sighed as he stood just outside the carriage which had served as the slaves' sleeping quarters after their night with the Urisi sailors. Wind whipped off the ocean and blew his hair before his eyes. "This is most unusual, my Lord." "Nevertheless, you will honor my request," said Mandas. He stood facing the wind so the breeze would push back whatever few strands of hair had escaped his ruthless brush and gel. "Or are you to tell me the renowned hospitality of the great Ambassador...
When Larra had been returned to her quarters, it was with no small amount of satisfaction Bessa observed the slave's usual air of superiority was gone. However, Bessa doubted the bitchy little slave got what she really deserved for what she had pulled with Amanda. Bessa waited until she was past the slave quarters before she uttered a tiny forlorn sigh. She had not realized how much she missed Amanda until the girl was absent a second night. She never thought she would give the slaves any...
Jollis rose just before dawn, when moisture from a rain shower which had passed during the night still lingered in the grasses and dripped from the trees. The air already felt warm, at least compared to what he had become used to back in his homeland. There, the air would still feel frosty, the cherry blossoms' brazen display of color defying the final vestiges of winter. Yet here the peasants had already prepared for the onset of summer while much of Oceanus still enjoyed the cool and wet...
"I apologize for contacting you at such a late hour, Guildmaster," said the shimmering Farview image of Marlon as Uroddus fumbled with his spectacles and the sash on his robe. When Katla appeared just as she managed to close her own robe more securely over her breasts, Marlon added in a more contrite voice, "And for, ah, interrupting anything." "It is all right, Marlon," said Uroddus in a slightly rushed voice. "I am assuming what you have to tell me is of great import." "I...
Amanda was now convinced of what she had only suspected the day before: her bondage arrangement had been dictated by Mandas down to the last detail. The displeasure on Marris' face while he secured her was both confirmation and a small comfort as she swayed and strained at the ends of her chains. Her wrists were shackled, and a chain ran from them to a large metal hook embedded in the ceiling, pulled taut until her heels left the floor. Her ankles were bound tight with another chain,...
Illton was barely a village. This tiny sliver of bare civilization which curved around an ill-placed inlet had seen most of its sea traffic go to the larger port in Lerrusburg just to the south. The sea merchants came to this hamlet only when the ports at Lerrusburg were too busy or its taverns too full. The commercial center of Illton centered around a lone tavern, itself a decayed hulk with walls held up by hastily tacked on timbers, the placement of the nails marked by streaks of rust....
Norlan rushed through the corridors of his palace, his stomach still rumbling for the evening meal he had just been denied. The moment he stepped into the parlor, a stone-faced High Lord Ardon thrust a parchment into his chest. "Is this what you are supposedly looking for, Lord Ambassador?" said Ardon in a strained voice. Norlan took the parchment and examined it. He nodded once and tried to return it, but Ardon had turned away. "An expense report in my name but not written by me,"...
Rolas wore a distressed look as he watched Jollis bandaging his injured ankle. "Wanderer, you must get that treated," he finally said when Jollis faltered as he tried to place his weight upon it. "I have treated the worst of it," said Jollis without looking up. "I had a bit of salve remaining from the last time I was similarly injured. The torn tendon is mended. The rest will have to heal naturally." "But--" Jollis stood, tested his foot once more, and lifted his head. "The only...
Marris wiped his face with his hand and uttered a long sigh, then shook his head as if trying to dislodge the lingering grogginess. He had managed a bit more sleep in anticipation that his role in this sordid deal with Mandas would soon be over. He forced himself to straighten up as he stared into the mirror in the sanitary, running his hand over his freshly-shaven face. He rubbed the corners of his eyes to rid himself of the grainy vestiges of fitful slumber. At least he could manage to...
If nothing else had yet humbled the former Noble Lord, one look at the esteemed meeting place Rennis had procured would have done it. The Province which Tarras had governed before the Inonni came had a fine auditorium. Cavernous but not intimidating, decorated but not ostentatious, and comfortable but not lavish. The acoustics were perfect, allowing one to stand upon the stage and project his voice to the very back row with little effort. Tarras had used that chamber on many occasions to...
"Enter and be welcome." Yonlas hesitated nonetheless. Seeing the Elder Apparent was a painful duty anymore. He suspected Master Kyllos no longer slept properly, as if the man left his tiny office only to eat a meager meal in the cafe or meditate in the gardens. Nevertheless, Yonlas had his duty, and he stepped into the room. The blue flames in the lamp flickered at his approach. Perhaps his own perceptions were biased by his worry, but the lamp seemed to burn brighter each time he visited...
"With all due respect, my Lord, you are making things terribly difficult for me." Norlan forced himself to take a deep breath, and wished he could return to the days when he rarely interacted with the staff. "Nevertheless, you will find some way to muddle through. Perhaps you can take Marris back for a day." "Absolutely not," Halno snapped. After a pause, he tempered his gaze and his voice as if only now realizing to whom he was speaking. "I mean ... I would need to send someone to...
Across the ocean from the former D'ronstaq Manor, the day was already underway in the Urisi Nation. Amanda had been shown Bessa's copy of the map once more before she was sent on her journey to the Oceanus fleet. These events surely would have distracted Jollis from his own preparations as dawn broke across the indigo waters which isolated him from the truth. Jollis was preparing for death. Much time had passed since he had last felt the need. Even the mission to discover the horrible...
Amanda never felt so alone as in those final candlemarks in the carriage as it trundled towards Port Heldon. Her restraints forced her to remain standing. Her wrists were shackled and hung from a taut chain attached to the ceiling in the center of the carriage. Her ankles were shackled as well, and her body swayed with each bump and dip in the road. The chain on her collar was attached to one of the walls, and it rattled as the carriage moved. She wished Norlan had not fired Marris. Then,...
"We may be nearly there, Amanda," said Gedric. "The path is definitely sloping downward, and I can see a beach ahead." Amanda said nothing as she stumbled along behind him, for she was afraid her voice would reveal her distress and slow him down. They could not afford any delays now; she was sure Mandas and Norlan realized Gedric had not taken the expected route. For all she knew, they were alerted early and now lay in wait. The path was little more than a narrow trail following the...
Kyllos stepped out from behind his desk, giving his visitor a respectful bow of his head. "Good blessings to you, Brother of The Order." From just inside the closed door, where the Inonni Portal had deposited him not moments ago, the robed and somber form of Holy Order Elder Iridus closed his eyes and bowed his head in return. As he lifted his gaze, the lines etched into his thin and sallow face sharpened. "And to you, Fledging Brother of The Order." Kyllos smiled and folded his hands...
Amanda awoke with a start, her eyes flying open and seeing nothing but smooth stone a hand's breadth from her face. She did not know where she was until she turned over on the soft furs. She blinked and squinted at the bright, late morning light. She did not remember returning to the slave quarters, let alone her own niche. She had been so tired she had fallen asleep in the carriage despite her injuries. She looked down at her feet and felt her cheek and lips, but found nothing but smooth...
Kyllos took his time as he strolled down the corridors of the Imperial Palace and reflected on how empty the place seemed. While no fewer people serviced the Palace, many were Cohorts who traveled only when necessary. The favorite haunts of the former staff were deserted, as Cohorts tended not to gather until late evening for devotions at the Inonni Temple which had been erected in the center of the gardens. Inonni centers of government were never built so huge. They were designed more for...
Amanda awoke just before dawn while the other slaves were still asleep. Or at least pretended to be, which she discovered when she dared to open her eyes. She had been fortunate to sleep facing the inside of the chamber. If she had to turn over, she was sure she would have been beset once more. She caught Larra just before she was about to lift her head and stare at Amanda. Amanda shut her eyes and forced her breath to remain steady. She heard Larra stir once more, then subside. Amanda...
When he first rose from unconsciousness, Jollis believed he was caught in some sort of strange limbo. He did not dare open his eyes for fear of seeing nothing but a void. Only parts of his body seemed to exist: one arm, his hips and rear, one leg and part of the other. He could not tell if his head were still attached to his body, as he could not feel his shoulders or his back. Sounds came to him, vague and muffled. Something in his mind insisted he was sitting up. He stirred, and suddenly...
The room which served as the parlor for High Lord Bortho seemed confining despite its owner's great wealth and love of large, expansive chambers. Indeed, in this case, its own opulence was its undoing. Rich tapestries and beautiful paintings marched high along the walls, their edges almost touching one another. Before them stood statues and carvings composed of every material from wood to stone to metal. Arranged before them were vases, gourds, goblets, and other small treasures, sitting...
TEMPESTUOUS TELEMARKETER TEMPESTUOUS TELEMARKETER Elwyn sweated as he talked to the prospect on the phone. He could feel Glenda?s eyes on him. His butt still ached from her earlier interview with him. ?Hello? Mr. Sykes this is? Elwyn Stokes from ?Washington Politics magazine. We noticed you dropped your subscription?? He looked up at Glenda, who frowned even more right back at him. Elwyn thought of her nails raking his sensitive spot beneath his testicles and shivered. ?and we want...
Melissa sat on a bench, her back against the cold wall. The musty dampness of the crypt invaded her nostrils and with her eyes half closed, she rested with her legs pulled up against her chest. Angeline was on the other side of the curtain preparing and placing some of the props for the play. Bernadette, or Berni as she liked to be called, was applying the finishing touches to her clothes. Her bright red hair was glowing, even from the dim lighting that was scattered by the flickering...
OccupationsIn the music room on the first floor of the Stone house, Tempest slammed away on the grand piano keys, her tiny fingers moving fast as she played her self- composed masterpiece. She focused on the keys, channeling her anger and her anticipation, shifting the cherry sucker in her mouth from side to side as she concentrated and waited… She had been playing the piano since the day of her third birthday when Darleen found her tapping away on the grand piano in the music room. She knew immediately...
Chapter 2 – The diabolic doll It was the beginning of summer but one would never know by the unpredictable weather. The sun was attempting to shine, but it was dulled by the minor storm. The wind whistled, the swelled clouds were ready to burst and the smell of the upcoming rain dominated the air. It seemed as if the summer was still stuck in spring. There were no early summer beach days, no family picnics in the park, no big barbecue bashes in the backyard. It was proving to be a disastrous...
It was a beautiful day, the sun was out, casting its warm beams on the city below. There was a cool breeze that complimented the warmth and carried the heady smell of the lilacs through the air, filling the hall of the big brick church on Gotham Street. The sun shone through the stained glass windows casting different tones on the walls and the floors, illuminating the entire church. It was the perfect day for a baptism. The Stone and the Rush family stood before the magnificent alter inside...
‘No one knows.’ he knew the young girl wouldn’t believe him. If anyone was comparable to Tempest in the pranks department, it was Davis and she knew most of his tricks. He lowered his voice as the members of the Stone family did when speaking of any member of the Rose family, ‘all we know is he ran off with Bianca Rose.’ ‘Who?’ she thought Davis said Bianca Rose and she knew there was no way he could have said Bianca Rose. ‘did you just say-?’ ‘Bianca Rose.’ he whispered she looked at him in...
It was the beginning of the season, a bright new start screamed from the skies and a fresh dewy smell permeated the air. It was a season where the story started anew as it ended for good. It was an unusual spring to say the least, the rain was relentless, forcing everyone to take shelter lest the lightening lick their limbs and the thunder shake their bones. The constant down pour had become depressing and had most people staring out their windows wishing for the summer. It had been the...
Oh not again! For the second night in a row Candace has woke up due to the tingling sensations in her lower body. For the second night in a row Candace has woke up with a large, throbbing cock pressing up between her ass cheeks. Although she is wearing boy shorts, with the cock’s owner wearing shorts, she can still feel it move with each breath. Normally she wouldn’t mind having an erect member in her bed. Being sixteen she is always horny and it is one of the things her boyfriend loves...
When night falls and before bed, Candace’s mother, Rita, says she feels she is coming down with something. Not wanting to pass on any sickness to her husband of daughter, she goes to sleep on the couch, leaving Candace and Caleb in the bed alone. They are in bed, both lying on their backs. Candace is in her chemise and boy shorts, Caleb in just his shorts again, waiting for sleep to hit. This is when Candace decides to breech the subject. “So, is it me?” “What?” Caleb asks, a little...
“What happened last night was a onetime thing, I swear,” Caleb tells her in the morning. “If it needs to be done again, I’ll do it.” “Okay, Daddy,” she replies simply, almost running to the bathroom to try and ease her urges as best as she can. But later, once the day is over and it’s time for bed, things are a little different. Candace isn’t woken by the feeling of her father’s erection pressing into her, but by quick movement from his side of the bed. She rolls over and what she sees...
Throughout the day Candace tries her best to brush up against her father as much as possible, out of view of everyone else. It reminds Caleb of how a cat does it, thinking how appropriate it is considering how his daughter is playing dress up, though he pretends not to notice. He tries not to make a big deal out of it, but is becomes unbearable to the point that he is looking forward to bed time and even suggests an early night. He says it is to let his wife get some rest in the hope her...
Caleb wakes slowly, finding the blanket tossed aside with his catgirl daughter cradling his balls and his throbbing shaft buried in her small mouth. He cannot say anything because he knows that it would be a futile effort if he even tries to. He reasons that he will have a talk with her after. Candace on the other hand knows her father has awoken and the fact that he does not say anything is working in her favor. She swallows as much of him as she can before switching to sucking his balls...
Joyce had woke up early. Today is different from other days because Lewis, her son, is taking Rita to the doctor. This leaves her, Caleb and Candace all alone at home. Not that it is a bad thing. Looking out the window, the sun is already coming up. It is going to be a beautiful and sunny day and as such the woman planned on lounging around the house. She catches a glimpse of herself in the tall mirror, the sunlight shining through the window is causing her shear nightgown to seem almost...
Lewis takes his aunt to the doctor while the rest of the household eats breakfast. Candice manages to disappear when it comes time to cleanup and just as miraculously reappears when all the work is finished. Her appearance does not go unnoticed by Joyce, nor does her dress though she does try to pretend not to notice it. Candace is wears a halter top, clearly without a bra on beneath. Her hard, little nipples are very visible and pointing straight out. So is the full curve of her breasts,...
After about five minutes, when her body has calmed down completely, the realization of what she has just done hits Joyce. She has just fucked her sister’s husband! Caleb is now sitting on the opposite side of the pool with an impish grin on his face. Having filled his sister-in-law’s cunt with his cream, he is feeling pretty good with himself. He has very little guilt about the experience, having fucked his daughter just this morning. He is still running on hormones and adrenaline. Joyce...
Joyce and Caleb still remain naked, enjoying the sigh of one another’s bodies while they eat. Afterward, Caleb grabs a quick shower and Joyce goes into the living room to watch a movie. When the man returns, drying himself off, he sees his sister-in-law on the back of the couch, legs spread with one hand groping her breasts and the other buried inside her pussy. On the television is a porn movie. Caleb doesn’t recognize it, but on the screen is a young looking girl dressed as a nurse in a...
Later, after a large dinner, everyone retired to bed. Caleb’s wife, Rita, is on the couch again. She has her medication but I still contagious and still doesn’t want to get anyone sick. When Caleb enters his room he sees Candace kneeling on the bed, totally naked with her arms behind her back pushing her cute firm breasts and hard pink nipples out toward him. “I’ve missed you, Daddy,” she says, swaying slightly. Caleb has to admit that his daughter’s small frame and pert breasts are...