Return to Grace's End
On the southern edge of the Free Lands, where the human kingdoms, fiefdoms, tribes, and city-states jockeyed and schemed and warred for dominance, there was an expansive forest running through deep valleys and jagged mountains that all served as a natural barrier to the unified empire of the elves. At the center of this forest--halfway in, along the singular highway hewn through that rugged land--was Grace's End, the sole elven settlement to be found in the in the Free Lands.
Riding along that dusty, well rutted, ever-shaded highway was a caravan; ten-wagon strong, with riders and carts and a not-insignificant cadre of armed guards and camp followers. Loaded on the wagons were goods and luxuries. Wines and liquors. Spiced cheeses. Rarefied herbs. Alchemical reagents. Things that were not easily produced in the unchanging empire of the elves.
It was in that caravan--riding within a chartered passenger carriage--that the mercenary swordsman, well-traveled adventurer, and all-around hero Kallen Blackblade was making a young harlot moan through her third climax. He held her throat as he pounded into her, watching her tongue loll and her eyes roll up as her cunt spasm around his shaft.
Unfortunately, her blissful, orgasmic delirium was not shared by Kallen. As he felt her climax slowly recede, he pulled out of her and sat on the edge of the bed, his manhood still erect and hard as steel, breathing steadily as he rode out his palpable frustration.
The young harlot, whose name she gave a Cella, raised her head to the renowned adventurer. "No... luck?" she said between ragged breaths.
"No luck," he said grimly.
Cella let out a soft groan as her head fell back. "I'm... gonna die."
Kallen chuckled at this, despite himself. "I've not managed to kill anyone that way. It'd make an interesting story."
"Not... for me..." she said, her head sunk between the plush red pillows of the carriage bed.
"Regardless, I wouldn't worry. I think I'm done for the day."
"Oh. OK," her voice, slightly muffled by the pillows, still bore a hint of disappointment. "I, uh, don't offer refunds..."
Kallen smirked at this, but the shapely blonde girl continued as she clawed her way back upright. "...but I could always come by again on the way back, hero... free of charge?"
"Thank you," he said. He wiped the sweat from his brow and nodded at the pretty young woman. "If I decide to... make another go at things, I'll be sure to come to you."
He saw her smile in the flickering candlelight, and saw the curiosity in her eyes, as well. She scooted over near him.
"Were you serious?" Cella said, her hand resting on his firm shoulder. "You've really never gotten off?"
"Not for a few decades that I can remember," he said with a sigh. "And I'm pretty sure I would remember."
Cella cocked her head. "Decades? How old are you, hero?"
Kallen paused, adding it up in his head. "I've seen forty-three summers, give or take a few."
She stared at him. "I don't believe you."
Kallen turned to glance at the mirror set on the wall of the carriage. Gray eyes stared back from a tan, firm-featured face with a trimmed mop of chocolate brown hair. Magic healing had kept the worst of the scarring away, but even with the weathering from years of combat, treacherous environs, and general acts of danger and recklessness, he looked like someone almost two decades younger.
"I guess a life of adventure has kept me young," he said, looking back at her. "Are you that surprised?"
She grinned. "More surprised that after all those years of ruins of combing through ruins, you never bothered finding something to help you cum."
Kallen Blackblade gave a rueful laugh. "I won't lie. It's definitely near the top of my list of things to look for."
***
Night fell on the forest. As vision waned, the caravan slowed to a stop and the various merchants, laborers, servants, and passengers quickly moved to set up a communal camp up and down the procession.
Kallen could see the glow of roaring campfires out the slatted window of his carriage; could hear the sounds of music and song from his traveling compatriots. He felt the carriage rolled to a halt in its place in the caravan line, and a moment later the door creaked open and the driver, a lanky woman with dark, wiry hair, poked her head inside.
"The festivities are ongoing, ser. I'm sure you'd like to join them?"
Kallen shook his head. "I'd rather sleep. Why don't you go?"
The driver tipped back her wide-brimmed hat, leveling a quizzical expression his way. "Are you sure, ser? I have a duty to stay with my carriage, while I'm sure many would delight in hearing your tales."
"There's plenty of delight to be had already without me. Go on." Kallen nodded to his intricately runed longsword, sheathed and propped against the corner. "No one will run off with your carriage while I'm in it, at any rate."
The driver considered this, for a moment. "Very well," she said at last. "Thank you, ser. May your rest be sound and sweet."
"I'm sure it will," he lied.
He laid in the carriage bed, listening to the steady murmur of revelry outside. As he lay there, he wondered how many had joined the caravan for the chance to see Grace's End and the supposed wonders it held. Wondered how many wouldn't return.
It was trade that had drawn his family to join, so many years ago, when he had only just become a man. Elven goods fetched exorbitant prices from the nobles who craved the status owning such items brought them. It had been that same trade that had brought the bandits who hid and camped in the forest in those times. The bandits who had attacked his caravan; killing, kidnapping, and looting with a merciless determination.
They'd thought him dead when they left him. Those had been the first trails on the long roadmap of scars that covered his body, and they had been the hardest. The scars he had earned when he returned to purge the forest of the bandits--returned with years of training, experience, and the liquid ebony blade that he was now known by--had been far easier to bear.
Now, even two decades later, he would occasionally feel compelled to travel the road again to Grace's End, and the truth was he didn't really know why. To honor his family? To ensure the forest highway remained safe? To see Grace's End again, where he had first walked, alone, bloody, and broken to, only to emerge with a new purpose to his life?
It was a mystery to him, one he had long ago given up on understanding.
"The whims of adventurers," he murmured with a wry smile as he drifted off to sleep.
***
Kallen Blackblade's dream was the same dream he had every night--without fail--for as far back as his memory traveled. There was a door. Wooden. Ornate. Covered with runes. It opened, and then he was standing in a room. Everything around him was a strange smear of blurred color, but he knew he was somewhere nice. Curved wooden walls. A fireplace. A wide, wine-red couch.