Author's note: I have a decent part of this half-plotted out, but always willing to take thoughts on what readers would like to see, or what they think might be hot...after all, it is, ultimately, an erotic story. No guarantees anything suggested will be added, but I'll definitely use it to fuel the writing machine. Everyone involved in the erotic content of this story is over 18. Don't like don't read warning: this story is going to contain elements of mind control, transformation, non-consent/reluctance, brother/sister incest, mild erotic horror, and will also have male/male pairings as well as female/female and male/female. Also, obviously, non-human, but that's a given so I hope no one is going to take me to task in the comments about that. I haven't decided who will end up paired with who, but all genders are fair game.
This first part doesn't quite show off the non-human part, but there are plenty of hints as to what it's going to involve. More to come...
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The Waypoint was a sandstone building, tucked away in the forest deep enough that visitors were rare but not so deep that the sunset, brightly burning, didn't paint the walls with gold. Merrilee and her brother, Keppet, sat upon the walls this sunset, sharing their bread as they watched the sky darken. Around them, the bustle of the night's preparations continued: the guards set the great firepits upon the walls to burning as the Waypoint's wizard checked the wall's wardings. Neither chore could be skipped or hurried. They were all that stood between the sanctuary Waypoint offered to travellers and denizens alike, and the terrible dangers that lurked in the forest surrounding.
"I don't think the stories are true," said Keppet again when Merrilee didn't answer him the first time he said it, busy watching the wizard working below. "If there are so many witches in the forest, why haven't we ever seen one? And why's a witch worse than a wizard?"
Again, Merrilee didn't answer him, Keppet biting into his bread as a rare temper chewed at his mood. His sister, twenty-three and moon-eyed for the daft wizard below in his frayed robes and his smudged spectacles and his way of conjuring coins from children's ears while looking just as shocked as the children that it worked, was a source of great joy and frustration to him. They were both wards of the Waypoint, orphans of the forest brought here for safety nineteen years ago, never to leave. It was a fate that he rebelled against; while Merrilee was content to stay where they'd been raised in love and comfort, dreaming of making little wizards with the goofy creature assigned to their home, Keppet wanted to see what else was out there. Past the forests and the mountains.
There was a whole world to see beyond their sandstone cage.
"I'm just saying, Merry, I think--" Keppet began.
Merrilee finally spoke, showing that she'd been listening to him all along: "No, you don't," she said with soft, mild rebuke, fixing him a long that was loving but tired. "You never think. You're going to go thoughtlessly into ruin, my buck, that's what you're going to do. Fancy thinking a witch is anything like a wizard." She gave her man below another lingering stare, cheeks pinking in a way to make Keppet sick. Wizard Felix annoyed him to pieces. It wasn't right that--if the stories were true--their safety relied on someone so silly. "Wizards are human, for one."
"Seems like if I wanted to make people hated, I'd start by telling everyone they're not human," Keppet countered. "Or I'd tell them that they steal babies away and change good humans into beasts. The pictures of witches in the books the sisters showed us in school look as human as me or you, or as human as Felix."
"That's purposeful," said Merry. "But they're not, really. Not anymore. They only used to be. And that's what'll happen to you if you keep getting ideas about going outside the walls! If they catch you and think you're pretty enough, they'll give you to their patron to turn you witchy too. And if they don't have a mind to let you keep yours, they'll make you a familiar and you won't even have a brain left to be stupid with. Seems like an awful lot to lose because you happened to have a thought that you're cleverer than everyone who came before you."
Keppet's turn to blush, he knew, though his was from the shame of being so gently dressed down by someone he loved so much.
"I personally think Keppet would make a very handsome familiar," came a dry, sardonic voice from behind them, the siblings turning to see who was joining them: Keppet's closest friend, Jude, and his wife, Hollybrook. Jude had their toddler slung under his arm like a sack of spuds, the boy upside-down and giggling; Hollybrook, heavily pregnant, carried their newest within her. As Jude flung himself down with lackadaisical grace next to Keppet, he tossed the toddler into Keppet's lap, who tickled the child to make him giggle more. "Don't you think, darling?"
"Oh, yes," said Hollybrook. "I hear they turn their familiars into animals as they hex them. What animal do you think Keppet would be if a witch got him, Merry?"
"I'd hate to think," was Merry's uncomfortable answer, looking away. But Jude missed her discomfort.