*****
Silk and Silver
After being told of his impending marriage to a foreign princess he's never met, a secondborn prince decides to write a diary to sort out his thoughts. In the weeks that follow, he writes of enduring an aggravating elder brother, questioning both his own traditions and the traditions of his bride-to-be, debating how he ought to lose his virginity, and traversing the tumultuous journey of going from boy to man.
Author's note: Months ago I made the decision to pull this story from Literotica, but I'm reversing that decision now, and it will not be made again. It's here to stay.
Tags: fantasy, low fantasy, teenagers, romance, virgin, virginity, coming of age, diary, oral, vaginal, mf
*****
41
st
of Summer, Year of the Gods 1322.
The nobility have been swept by an epidemic. Not an epidemic of plague or consumption, but the epidemic of the diary. I would indeed describe it as feverish. And Aunt Lisbet is not immune. She says she's kept a diary for two years now. It seems queer, the thought of writing as though you were penning a letter to a person when in fact you are not, but they say it's good for your health to put your thoughts to paper, to reflect on events and emotions. They say it sharpens the mind and clears the head. Gods know I need that tonight more than ever.
So here I lie in bed in my chambers, my shaggy, freshly cut but quickly growing hair still wet from the bath, clutching a leather-bound book filled with two hundred wordless pages -- make that a hundred and ninety-nine wordless pages -- and I hold in my hands not a quill pen but a silver-forged "dip pen," a recent curiosity from Persevia. I was told it writes much better than the quill, and as I put the ink to the paper, I can feel that it's the truth. Perchance this diary-keeping won't be quite as bothersome as I'd first thought.
There's a good deal of irony in having already mentioned Persevia, considering what I'd been told this morning. Father and Mother told me at breakfast that I was to be, at last and alas, wedded. I protested, of course, and said that I found my bachelorhood quite suitable.
"You're a man of eighteen," Father told me tiredly, as though I'd somehow become touched in the head and forgotten that. "It's time to take a wife and do your duty," he said.
How incredibly romantic. I can only wonder what my bride-to-be would think should she know that she was nothing more than my "duty." I can't imagine she'd be too pleased.
Again I protested, but Mother said I needn't waste my breath, that the agreement had been made. "The wax is sealed," she said. When I asked who my bride is, she told me her name is Sarisanya Fayarus, spoken like sair-ee-sahn-yah. A foreign girl same age as I. The firstborn daughter of the Sultan of Persevia.
Persevia. A peculiar land of people with silver hair and violet eyes. A land known no less for its obscene wealth and shipments of silk than it is for its slave trade, the latter of which Father tolerates only for the sake of the coffers of Persevian gold that our Kingdom frequently taps.
I didn't bother asking why I, the younger son, am to be wedded sooner than Norman. I already knew the answer. Norman is bound for greatness. He'll be King one day and he's deserving of only the most worthwhile wife of the most influential family. But not I. I'll always be just as I was born. So they'll saddle me with a foreign bride who speaks a different tongue, a marriage Norman would never be subjected to.
Norman of course managed to find my nuptials so very hilarious. "I'm sure it'll be lovely, having a wife with hair like a woman of age," he quipped, laughing. "Will you let me know if her cunt hairs are silver too? I'm curious."
That made Father red in the face, and when Norman added in a few other unseemly things I won't dignify by writing here, Father roared at him and demanded he be silent, lest he flay him then and there.
Oh how I pity the people of the Kingdom, what with the heir to rule them being such an insufferable twit.
After Father had finished barking at Norman, Mother told me that I ought to be thrilled. She assured me that, by all accounts, Sarisanya is a beautiful, well-shapen girl who is sweet and demure. "The girl will make for a wonderful wife," she said.
And perchance she's right. Perchance I shouldn't be as griping and grumpy as I am. I'm not a child anymore, and it was a given that I'd be assigned a wife before long.
48
th
of Summer, Year of the Gods 1322
You'd think Norman would walk with an air of gratitude, what with being the heir to everything he lays his eyes on, far and wide, sea to sea. But of course not. He's an arrogant, petulant cunt.