Author's Notes:
This story started as a brainstorming session while I tried to answer a question that has been bugging me: How do throuples/polycules form? The oldest love story in the world is one where two lonely people find one another, form a connection, and decide to become a couple. Beyond that, though, there's no simple formula.
Here on Literotica, I've found various stories where a love triangle formed and looked for the "how." There's "New England Triad" by Peter_Cleveland where a marriage nearly fell apart due to infidelity, but resulted in a redefinition into an open marriage, then eventually a triad with the husband, his girlfriend, and his wife. In the series "Finding a Lost Puppy" by PoeticallyChivalrous there's a stable triad that forms due to the nature of their BDSM relationship. The most unique and interesting one I've found so far is the series "Triad" by SteveWallace, where the main character is "claimed" by a girl that is far too young for him after she develops a crush. Years later, when she's more mature and he's already in a relationship, she reenters the scene and is accepted by them both.
Since there isn't a long history of socially acceptable threesomes, there's no recipe for their formation. I decided to come up with something unique, borrowing concepts from the show Sense8 and the Wheel of Time book series by Robert Jordan (warder bonding) to make my throuple.
Hope you enjoy it!
Story:
Waiting by the Water - Abby
I really tried to sit still. I would sit on the log, tap my foot, and watch the water flow by. It was calming. Before long, though, I'd be clenching my fists, trying not to cry, then I'd look up at the rising moon and feel my panic rise again. So I'd get back up and pace along the rocky beach some more.
This was the third night I'd spent out here along the river. I knew that I'd been born at night under a waning gibbous moon. The full moon was four nights ago, so tonight could be the night. Despite being under the spell my whole life, I didn't know enough about the magic to know if there would be signs.
I was about to hit 240 moons of age, and I had not yet Bonded.
Would I simply drop dead? Would I be confronted with a figure wearing a black cloak and carrying a scythe? Would Paul show up at the last second to Bond with me and save me?
Tears rolled down my hot cheeks. Panic washed over me again, along with fear and regret. I couldn't undo this. I ran away from home and couldn't return. That bridge was burned. Even if they'd let me back in, there wasn't time to make it back. I'd be dead before I made it. I'd been taught that the curse always claimed those in my family if they weren't Bonded when the magic matured.
I just didn't know the reason why Paul hadn't shown up yet. He had acted supportive. He'd had reservations, of course: he didn't want to leave his family, he didn't understand why I wanted to run away, and he didn't see the appeal of the life of the outside world. In spite of all that, he'd told me repeatedly that he wanted to be Bonded to me, and I thought he'd come to join me once he'd made his decision, so I left without him.
When I left, I'd breached the magical barrier for the last time. I'd walked along the river downstream for two days before finding the landmark we'd picked -- a place where two rivers joined before going over a pile of rocks. Beyond that point, the water wasn't navigable and any boat would be torn up by the rapids.
It was an unmistakable marker so I knew I was in the right spot. I'd spent the last two nights waiting by the water, and the days asleep under some nearby trees in my little tent.
Something was different tonight, though. I heard sounds that I couldn't explain. At first, I thought it was my imagination, or that maybe the sound of the rapids downstream had somehow made it up to where I was. It sounded like a soft hissing.
After an hour, the sound had grown loud enough that I could recognize it -- whispering. There were a myriad of overlapping voices, all whispering. They seemed to be coming from every direction. Moving around didn't change anything, as though the whispers were inside my head.
When it hit me that the sound wasn't natural, goosebumps had appeared all across my skin, and I felt my throat close from a flood of terror.
I grabbed my travel pack and sprinted away from the water into the darkness. Paul wasn't coming. He wouldn't save me. I had to save myself. I had to find someone else, and quickly.
Room for the Night - Justin
I yawned and fiddled around with the radio, absentmindedly. Long road trips were always frustrating when I was stuck with FM radio for entertainment. I'd spend ten minutes scanning the bands to find a good station, and it would last for a couple songs before there was more static than music, and then I'd have to start all over.
It was dark and I was getting tired, so I'd need some caffeine and some good, loud music to drive the last four hours to get home.
While tapping through my presets, I was frustrated that all my familiar stations were still too far away. I saw a gas station with a convenience store up ahead, so I turned the radio off for the time being.
Pulling up to a pump, I inserted my card and started filling the tank before I pulled out my phone to call my girlfriend.
"Hey Katie," I said while stifling a yawn after hearing her pick up.
"Justin! You sound tired, are you close? Going to be home soon?"
"Uh, not really. I'm just stopping to get gas and something to drink. I'm still about four hours away. I should be home by two or three a.m."
Katie paused a moment before replying with a simple, "No."
"No?" I asked, confused.
"You're too tired, I can tell. You should've left your parents' house before noon if you wanted to make the drive in one day. You need to stop somewhere for the night. You're not going to fall asleep at the wheel. I won't let you!"
Katie was stubborn, and usually, it was for all the right reasons. Rather than argue, I decided I'd reassure her instead.
"Okay, do you think you can call around and find a room for me?"
The pump clicked while I was still describing my location. I tore the receipt from the pump and hopped back into the driver's seat while listening to Katie clicking away at her laptop, looking for motel options along my route.
Running - Abby
The first sign of civilization that I found was a road. Unlike the hand-laid cobblestone roads of my village, this was a perfectly flat, smooth, black path. A highway made by machines. The constant droning whispers kept my adrenaline pumping, which certainly contributed to my surprising pace.
I stopped, looking in both directions. It wasn't a major expressway, just two lanes, and I could see no vehicles in either direction. To the north, the road went uphill a little ways, but I couldn't see more than a half a mile before the road dipped back down out of sight. There was a faint glow on the horizon, which could be a whole town over there, or just a single lamp on the side of a barn.
The south looked even more desolate. The road was dark as far as I could see, which was a pretty impressive distance under the bright moon. There were no signs, no traffic, and therefore nothing that could help me.
Despite my legs protesting against jogging uphill, I turned north and forced myself to pick up the pace.
I only slowed a little to swing my backpack around to pull out my canteen and guzzle down the last of the cold river water. Tossing the empty container back in, I shouldered my pack and sprinted the last few paces to crest the hill.
What I saw brought me a little hope. There was an intersection with another road, this one running east-to-west, home to a blinking red light and a gas station. I'd actually seen one of these before, on one of my trips out of the village years ago. Better than that, though, was a small low-end motel on the far corner from me.
I didn't slow, and planned my route to the main door in front, but as I approached, I saw a man exit from there with a key in one hand and holding a phone to his face with the other.
The whispers were louder, still indistinct, but impossible to shut out. Even more terrifyingly, I saw faint wispy gray ribbons appear around my arm. Looking down, I noticed they were circling around my whole body. They would appear, float around, then vanish again. This was death magic, my family's curse, and it was preparing to claim me. It was ready to pounce, just as soon as the protection of my own youth faded.
I stifled a sob and redoubled my efforts. Not seeing any moving vehicles on the road, I sprinted diagonally across the intersection, focused on the man who was now pulling a duffel bag from a parked vehicle.
I was too winded to shout at him, so I could only watch as he entered his room before I could reach him.
I reached his door and didn't wait to catch my breath before pounding on it. I was bent over gasping as I heard the handle turn. A chain kept it from opening all the way -- I heard it click as the door opened -- so I assumed the man was peeking through at me.
Realizing that composing myself didn't matter, I simply looked up with my panicked red face and gasped out a simple, "Please help me!"
The door immediately closed, I heard the security chain fall, and then he reopened it fully. This time the man grabbed my upper arm and pulled me inside and looked out into the darkness, scanning for whatever I was running from.
I fell, kneeling on the floor. "Nothing... nothing's chasing me." I was just starting to breathe normally, and being off my feet was helping tremendously. "You can close it."