Spoiler Tags:
M/F, BunnyGirl, Femdom, Dominant, Restraints, Seduction, Monstergirl, Cowgirl Position, Bonding
*****
The academy seemed quiet, too quiet. I took a deep breath, hoping to settle my nerves before she showed up. My palms were sweating and I hoped I wasn't pitting out of my only dress shirt. I tapped my foot on the stone pathway that ran through the quad. A classmate waved at me while struggling with his luggage, on the way back home for the long spring vacation. I didn't respond because I didn't even notice him, being too busy looking looking at my worn and scuffed boots.
Shit. I forgot to clean them. Now she's gonna think I'm a slob.
My heart raced in my chest and I searched through my pockets, hoping to find some sort of cloth I could use to dispose of the worst of the grime.
Quiet footsteps preceded her entrance into the courtyard, the sun seeming a little brighter with her presence.
Her smile washed away my worries, making me smile in return. "Ready for our date?" She asked with her airy voice that, when combined with her innocent countenance, had led to many underestimating the acerbic wit that hid beneath.
"Yes," I said, my voice squeaking embarrassingly high for a moment.
She giggled, hiding her smile behind her brown skinned hand. Fluffy velvet ears poked out of her head, a foot tall and twitching while she threaded her arm through mine.
So soft. And she smells like sunshine.
"To the gardens!" she proclaimed, freeing me from social awkwardness and reverie.
As we walked, I thought back to when I asked her out earlier this week, my last opportunity before we left our separate ways. I'd clung to my sword to hide my shaking hands. And, when I'd finally pried the words from my mouth with resolute stubbornness, her only response was, "It's about time. Meet me in the quad next tuesday, one o'clock. Don't be late and dress nice." Then she'd strode away, leaving me stunned but joyous standing here.
"It doesn't bother you?" She asked, tilting her head to the side to look at me while we walked.
So close.
"I'm sorry what?" I stammered, petrified that I'd been lost in the past and that she'd noticed me not paying attention.
She smirked, leaning into my side and looking back towards where we were traveling. "Just poking a little fun. It's cute to see you panic. It doesn't bother you that we're different races?"
"...No. Should it?"
She examined my face carefully for a moment. "It seems to for a fair amount of people. Especially with all the talk of war floating around."
"I think you're a lovely woman Artemis, both in face and demeanor. And I hope to get to know you better."
She laughed, loud and freely.
My cheeks blushed.
"You can do away with all the 'thees' and 'thous'. I don't put much stock in it and much prefer plain speak. Thank you for the kind words, and I also consider you attractive. I thought it was sweet the way you pined after me for so long before working up your courage."
My blush deepened and I reached for the steadying presence of the pommel at my hip, gripping it in a white knuckled grasp. "But a lady of such bearing deserves language befitting her. I know I am no poet, but you-"
"Paul..." The word came from her lips chilly enough to freeze my spine. "Paul Pierson, if you do not listen then we are going to have a poor time of it."
"Yes, ma'am," I responded to her like I would my teacher in drill class.
Pinching her lips she tilted her head down, staring at me with those soft green eyes.
Waiting.
"Yes Artemis."
Her expression immediately brightened. "Excellent, now we are almost there."
The gardens were beautiful, laid out in the six pointed star of the academy, each point a different color that represented the joined nations that built it. Within the center, there were a series of six benches arranged in a circle. Artemis directed us toward one. Taking a moment, she closed her eyes and breathed in deep.
"Did you know this is my favorite spot in the academy?"
"I do now."
Remember to buy flowers for her next time.
"It's so orderly and constrained, but it's a step in the right direction. It's missing that untamed chaos of the wilderness. The struggle, the fight." Her eyes glossed over with memory. Releasing my arm, she sat on the bench near the yellow colored portion of the garden, the one representing my own race of humanity.
I sat next to her, eager to continue the conversation that was going much better than my imaginings. "I don't know much about Bunyip culture, but what I have learned is fascinating. What is with the markings?" I asked, pointing to the golden line running up her forearms.
"Aren't you delightful? They're part of our caste system. The more lines, the higher up in the hierarchy. If you ever see a Bunyip with symbols on her face you'd best be polite because that indicates royalty."
"A caste system, isn't that antiquated? What if a person wants to rise above his or her place of birth?" I asked before I realized how insensitive that might be perceived. "I mean..."
"I take no offense. And you would be right. But my caste is not determined by my birth but rather by my contribution to our society. A soldier is of a similar caste to a breadmaker. But both would be under that of a general or shaman."
"Then how does one get training or is assigned an occupation?" Curiosity about her and her culture easing my nervousness. I delighted in watching her talk, it being a full bodied, evocative gesture laden affair with her.
Starting out from her chest, she spread her hands out wide in an encompassing arc. "A council of our peers get together and discusses it after our graduation from general education."
"Without your input?"
"No. That's silly." Waving away the idea, she continued. "We are included in the council and have final say in the decision, but we have to take one of the options presented."
"It seems like it could lead to some nepotism."
Her head bounced over each shoulder. "I'm not saying it's a perfect system, but it feels better than what you humans seem to favor."
"What's wrong with the way we do things?"
"Hmmmmm. Nobility for one, off the top of my head."
I'd been so ready to defend my people's way of life but I couldn't argue with her at that one. "They can be distasteful," I said slowly, my face pinched like I'd bitten into a sour lemon.
She chortled, covering her mouth with mock modesty while her ears folded forward. "So bold. You should hold back some, no telling who might be listening." Her sarcasm brought a blush to my cheeks.
"They
can
be real twats, can't they?" I admitted softly, pleased to see her enjoying herself.
"There you go. Now, I'm not saying the
idea
is unsound. Giving people responsibility to make sweeping decisions that affect the good of the many rather than the individual. And I'm not saying that such responsibility should not come with certain perks. But, I think that some have lost sight that they
should
work for the good of their people. And that such status does not confer upon them greater dignity and endowment than those they lead."
"You speak as though you've given this a great deal of thought."
She smiled enigmatically. "I guess you could say that. It's crossed my mind a time or two."
"So, back to the caste system. If you're here at the academy, I must assume that you've graduated from your general education. What caste were you placed in that led you here?"
She waved her hand in front of her nose, her eyes glazing over with a splash of fear and nervousness. "I think we've talked enough about me and my people. I don't want you to think I'm one of your bloviated twat nobles, do I?"
"I never called them bloviated."
She grasped at my arm and my skin sang with her presence. Dancing, her eyes drank in my reaction with calculating ease. "Just tell me about yourself. I know next to nothing other than you aspire to be a soldier and are diligent in your studies, never partaking of the wide variety of vices that seem to affect our compatriots."
I coughed, nervous about talking about myself in any great aspect. Talking about my family seemed like a safe enough middle ground. Her eyes watched me with interest as I told her about my brother and sister and our farm; my time spent as a town guard and how I won my berth to the academy through my woodsmanship and skill with a blade. I yawned halfway through a story about how I'd gotten a lucky strike against an instructor and had to flee with all the swiftness of my small frame. Rolling my lips inward, I pressed my teeth down, aghast at my impropriety.
I looked forward to this so much that I wasn't able to get a lick of sleep last night.
Giggling, she slid over a little on the bench, creating space.
Damnit. Now I've gone and fucked this up.
Wringing my hands in my lap, I tried to think up a way to say I wasn't tired or bored at all with the date, and how great of a time I was having without sounding like a schmuck. She smiled at me and patted her thighs.
"Come rest your head."