Sezithorum spent most of the afternoon poring over the Codex, punctuated by more releases of charm. Beyond those brief orders, barely more than grunts, he scarcely said a word to them. He was typically taciturn, and he'd gotten absorbed in books and projects before, but never to the point of completely ignoring them. Even when telling them to get him off, he didn't look at them, and didn't seem to notice or care which of them it was.
At one point, Tiska arranged herself in front of him across a couple of high stools under the table. The table and stools limited her mobility, so Roji had to help their otherwise oblivious master get himself positioned and inserted, but it was worth the extra effort to set up. In addition to providing Tiska with some satisfaction, it allowed both apprentices to rest their mouths. It also meant that Sezithorum had to do most of the work himself, which kept him occupied for a while and delayed his orgasm as he kept getting distracted. Tiska didn't mind, she simply kept her fingers working across her clitoris, and let him go at his own pace.
Roji prepared their evening meal while Tiska fed the animals. The apprentices sat and ate silently, watching their mentor. He ate absentmindedly, though he carefully avoided dribbling anything that might stain the book.
They watched as he reached toward the empty plate, bumping the scaly face of the rebik that had been licking the residue from it. A moment later, he did it again, still oblivious to the rebik as it hissed and bared its teeth. The third time the hand approached, the rebik snapped at it, sinking its teeth into two fingers. Sezithorum jerked his hand away, blood dripping from the wounds, and glanced back and forth between it and the reptile that stared blankly back at him from what had once been his plate. He curled his hand into a fist and said a few words under his breath. He opened his hand again, flexing and extending his fingers, and wiped the blood away from the unbroken skin. Finally looking up, he met his apprentices' eyes. "We must perform a summoning."
Tiska stood and grinned broadly. "Marvelous. What are we summoning this time? The water spirit again? She was amazing, neh?" Her eyes unfocused as her hands ducked inside the open front of her robe and her knees buckled slightly.
The old wizard smiled slightly at the memory. "Not this time, although remind me once this ordeal is over, and we shall conjure her again. No, unfortunately we must summon a warrior."
"A what?" Tiska's brow furrowed at the strange word. It had no odd tones or accents, beyond what was typical of his speech. The sounds fit with the language she had spoken her entire life, yet it was unfamiliar. Roji moved to look at the tome, taking advantage of the old man's distraction. He flipped the cover up and glanced at it: the Codex of Conjugal Cross-Planar Conjuration. He dropped it again, and returned to the page his master had just been examining.
"You have heard stories of the Sekiune to the southwest, and how the denizens there attack their neighbors, in order to collect food and such. Those are warriors, people who make war."
Tiska wrinkled her nose. "A violent man? That could be fun. But one who's not allowed to have sex? Why bother?"
"We are not summoning one of those in particular. They are little more than untrained rabble. We must call a much more powerful warrior from another world."
Roji looked up from the Codex. It wasn't making any sense to him anyway. "But why do we need a warrior at all?"
Sezithorum turned to him sadly. "Because war is coming. Great and terrible war. We must avert it if possible. And I have no intention of allowing either of you to become corrupted by it. But the fact remains that when war comes to you, you must defend yourself."
Roji was shocked. "So you're summoning the warrior to protect us?"
"After a fashion. But protecting ourselves here in our little demesnes will not aid anyone else, and their myriad warriors would eventually overwhelm our lone defender." As Tiska and Roji watched, their mentor seemed to age thirty years, his face growing gaunt, his normal confidence evaporating. They'd both become so used to it that they didn't notice his faint accent or formal manner of speaking anymore. Just speaking about this "war" was agitating him enough that his accent became more conspicuous and his speech more halting. They exchanged silent glances.
"Unfortunately, the only way to avoid the necessity of everyone becoming warriors is to send our own warrior out to confront the impending danger, before it grows beyond our ability to quell."
After a pause, Tiska spoke up again, in a tremulous, childlike voice. "So we call up this warrior, send him off, and then we'll all be safe here, neh?" She stared plaintively into Sezithorum's face, but he wouldn't meet her gaze.
"I must accompany him. He will be unfamiliar with our customs, and possibly even our language. And if the summoning works well, he will have no facility with manipulating charm, which means that he will need the support of my arts as well." His face brightened, though his eyes remained sad. "You two, however, will remain here, safe and protected."