This is purely a work of erotic fiction. All characters, places, and situations are entirely fictional. All sexually active characters are 18 years of age or older. All rights reserved.
*** WARNING! ***
This chapter contains elements of non-consensual sex. Readers that find this material disturbing or offensive may prefer to skip this chapter. Thank you.
I lay in the bed, happily cuddled against the warm, soft body of my beloved cousin and listening to her gentle breathing. I hoped that this would be only the first of many nights that I would be falling asleep in her arms. We had a lifetime of friendship, shared memories, and a shared family history that had long ago made us inseparable. Heather had been my first real friend as a child, and we had always been there for one another. So much was changing for me so rapidly that perhaps I was wishing to be with someone who had always been a safe and trusted constant in my life. In my conscious mind, I knew that my emotions had been manipulated by deities with agendas entirely unrelated to my happiness. But I had always loved Heather deeply. The romantic nature of that love was new, at least on my part, but I truly couldn't have picked a better mate for myself.
I had expected to come to consciousness in my familiar clearing in the forest, perhaps even already alone with Heather and curled cozily together on the bed. I had hoped for a chance to discuss what Skagematuck had told me with her. What she chose to do with that information was up to her, of course. But I longed for her so deeply that I felt incomplete without her, and I knew that there was little chance of her choosing not to cement our bond forever.
I came to consciousness in a large, dimly lit room. The architecture was clearly antique, and while I am no expert on such things, it struck me as vaguely Greco-Roman. From a circular hole at the apex of the tall domed ceiling and a pair of small, high windows, the pale blue moonlight filtered in dimly luminous beams through the arid, dusty air. Sinister looking statues of dark bronze, many of which appeared to be depictions of an entire range of unspeakably depraved acts of horrific violence, were positioned regularly around the perimeter of the room. The slanted cylinder of moonlight illuminated an elliptical section of the hard, sandy floor, revealing a mosaic depiction of men, women, and even young children from some ancient society engaged in savage acts of ghastly violence against one another. Despite the grotesque and sickening subject matter, I was forced to feel a grudging respect for the artist that had used a naturally difficult medium to graphically convey a sense of utter madness and horror. I shuddered and looked away. I didn't know where I was, but I didn't like it and I was grateful that Heather wasn't here.
My eyes were slowly becoming more accustomed to the murky darkness, and I opted not to spoil my night vision by using my flashlight. I approached a large, heavy door that stood in one corner of the room. It was made of ancient wooden beams that had been reinforced with broad strips of black, rust-pitted iron. A heavy beam of dry, cracked, splinter-infested wood that held the door shut slid ponderously out of the way as I forced it back, making a harsh, rasping sound as it slid along the rusted iron brackets that held it. Bits of dirt, flakes of rust, and splinters clattered to the floor from the ancient wooden beam, and even in the dim light I could see dark stains in the wood from ages of contact with the rusted iron brackets. Dusty cobwebs were torn as the beam moved, and their occupants scurried to hide in the deep cracks in the dry, ancient wood.
I placed my shoulder against the rough surface of the door and pressed hard with my legs to force it open. It didn't budge, but I could feel the door move slightly when I backed up a step and then battered against it with my shoulder. Countless years of grime and rust had frozen the sturdy and unyielding iron hinges firmly in place, but with considerable effort I was able to get the ponderous door to open slightly as the hinges squealed loudly in protest and the hinges rattled against the shrunken wooden beams. A thin slice of dim blue outside light became suddenly visible through a narrow crack at the edge of the door. My legs trembled with effort and sweat beaded my brow as I pushed with all of my might against the barrier that held me trapped inside of the room. I am in excellent physical condition, but it still took me several minutes of grueling work to get the heavy door to open far enough for me to squeeze through it.
I walked outward, past tall columns of crumbling stone and into a paved area surrounding a courtyard of sorts. Dead, twisted trees rose up from a chaotic, weed-filled parody of a garden. A light, foggy mist hugged close to the ground, glowing blue in the dim moonlight. I saw a light colored human-shaped phantom approaching me from the side, and I turned to face it.
"John? Is that you? Where are we?" asked a voice that I immediately recognized as Cherise's.
"I wish I knew," I replied as I breathed a sigh of relief. I didn't know what lived here, but I was in no hurry to meet it.