Chapter 1
"C'mon guys, I'll
really
owe you one
,"
Zam pleaded, his hands splayed as he leaned on the table. He gave Cinder a beseeching look, doing his best puppy-dog impression.
Cinder leaned back in her chair, laced her fingers into the auburn mop of her hair, and made a show of considering his proposal.
"I don't know, man," she replied, "maybe you should write your junk off and call it a day. Stuff is just stuff."
Zam sat down heavily, elbows on the table. He ran his hands through his dreadlocks, then scrubbed them across his face.
"This particular stuff has a lot of sentimental value, Cin. I need it back."
Cinder raised an eyebrow. "Won't seeing her again be super awkward, though?"
"That's exactly why I need you there for moral support! Harper can be a little...," he groped around for the word before settling on, "intense. I need the two baddest girls I know to back me up."
He looked from Cinder over at Maeryll. The other elf was throwing darts at a board with uncanny, frightening precision, toss-
thunk
-bullseye after bullseye. It didn't even look like she was paying attention to the conversation, but Cinder had seen those pointy ears of hers twitching and knew she was gobbling up every word.
Cinder balanced the chair on two legs, her booted feet propped on the table amid the wreckage of their breakfast. At that moment the only other person in the Happye Bitche besides the three of them was the tavern's barkeep. Brov was busy doing that thing with a washcloth and empty glasses behind the bar that all tavern keepers Cinder had ever known did when they wanted to look busy but were actually eavesdropping on their customers. His pet dragonlizard yawned lazily on the countertop, then went back to sleep. Of the proprietor, Luna, there was no sign.
The Happye Bitche had that denuded, vaguely obscene look that all taverns got in the morning when the cold light of day stripped all of the beery mystery away and left behind only the stark reality of empty seats, drink-stained tabletops, and the vague stench of old alcohol. It was like seeing an actor without his stage make-up, or a dwarf without her beard. Nothing against the Happye Bitche, of course. Cinder loved the place, and Luna and Brov took great care of it. It was just a simple fact of life that bars were better at night.
Ah well.
Zam was their friend, and he was in a bind. You didn't turn down a friend when he asked for help, no matter how awkward a quest to get his stuff back from his ex-girlfriend was most certainly going to be. Cinder shifted her gaze to look at Maeryll.
"I'm in," the pale elf said, not bothering to turn around. There was a
thunk
as another dart hit the bullseye.
"C'mon M," Cinder began, adjusting her tits in her top. She was fully prepared to sell the idea and not above using
all
of her charms to do so. "Zam's our friend, and he needs..." She paused. "Holdupaminute. Did you say that you're in?"
Maeryll turned around, one hand on the elegant dip of her waist while she set a dart to dancing through her slender fingers.
"That's what I said."
Zam blinked, the surprise Cinder felt written all over his face. "Really?"
"Oh yes," Maeryll replied. "This sounds like it's going to be very, very amusing."
"Ah!" Zam said, pounding the table with excitement and looking very relieved as he shot to his feet. "Thanks! I owe you big, girls."
Cinder took her feet off the table and let the chair land back on all fours. She cast a speculative look at her friend.
"How big are we talkin'?" she asked, shooting a sly look at his groin.
"Really, really big," Zam confirmed. "Some people might even say huge. Being the humble guy I am, I wouldn't go
that
far, but some would."
"Mmmm...," the redheaded elf put a finger on her lips and cocked her head to the side.
"Cinder," Maeryll began, a warning note in her voice.
"Aw c'mon! We've got time, don't we Zam? This Harper chick broke up with you already, so it's not like you're trying to make a good impression anymore."
"Actually,
I
broke up with
her
," Zam protested, but Cinder was already heading towards the stairs, pulling off her top as she went.
"Last one to the bed has to clean up after!" she called behind her. "Hey Brov, you aren't fooling anyone. Put that rag down and join us upstairs."
Chapter 2
The day was bright, the weather was hot, and Cinder's tits were sweating profusely. She untied the yellow neckerchief she wore around her throat and used it to dab her forehead. Little half-moons of perspiration darkened the blue-green fabric of her shirt under the elf's opulent bosom, but it still felt great to be outside and on the trail.
"Damn Zam," she exclaimed, stopping in the middle of the path, closing her eyes, and turning her face towards the sun, "this place is downright
bucolic
!"
"It sure is," Zam agreed, but when Cinder opened her eyes she caught him staring nervously into the treeline as if trolls might be hiding among the shadowed boles.
"Anxious?" Maeryll asked, her voice nearly a purr. "I thought you said the breakup was amicable."
"I did, and it was," Zam assured them, "Harper and I just want different things out of life, that's all."
Something rustled in the woods, and Zam flinched as a bluebird took wing. Cinder lifted an eyebrow at him, and he gave her a tepid smile.
"Uh-huh, sure."
After another quarter-hour of walking, they came to the cottage. The snug little house was nestled among a grove of old oaks. It sported a thatched roof of yellow straw and walls of whitewashed lime hemp, the edges rounded as if applied by an enthusiastic amateur. There was a little wooden fence out front, more to keep deer out of the carefully tended garden than anything else.
"I guess she's home," Cinder said, observing the woodsmoke which rose from a chimney of fitted stones.
"Yeah." Zam swallowed, took a fortifying breath, and stepped towards the gate.
Cinder and Maeryll exchanged a look but followed him down the path. As they pushed through the gate Cinder turned her attention to the garden, assessing the plants growing there with a ranger's expert eye. As pretty as it was, the garden was obviously for utility and not just show. The wood elf recognized several varieties of helpful flora thriving in the dark soil, including queenmoss, walloweed, and a trellis of bloodvine.
She also spotted a few more disturbing kinds of herbage. There was acidic hemlock and widowbasil, and tucked away in the corner...
"Sheesh, is that a mortododendron?" she said, squinting at the little shrub. They might look innocuous, but Cinder knew if you ground up the flowers into a pestle and added hot water, you'd end up with a potion that could knock an ogre on its ass--at least for a little while. A sudden, unpleasant thought occurred to the auburn-tressed elf.
"Hold up," she said, "is this a witch's cottage?"