This is my erotic story entry for the 2019 Literotica Geek Pride Day Story Event.
Welcome to Raska.
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Raska Tales:
One Small Gift
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It takes something special to be something to everyone, but it takes something extraordinary to be everything to someone...
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She had a legend to find.
Seven years to the day had passed since he had vanished into thin air at the eclipse of what had been one of the most destructive battles this city had seen since the Declaration. The Crown's wisest casters and most powerful wizards had been tasked with uncovering what had become of him, yet they moved at a slug's pace. All their efforts yielded the success of a whisper in a windstorm. Their actions hampered by the infighting and arguing over which direction to take or path to explore in their new grand mystery.
But that was before the war. In a time when they could bring the entirety of their knowledge and magical power to bear. The day the rebellion claimed its first heavy blow to the crown, and the stability of their nation fell into question, their focus shifted elsewhere, and the efforts fell upon just a handful of the willing.
Hands like hers. To seek out the reason why the fabric of the realm seemed to have swallowed both him and the beast he fought and wink them from existence. After years of research and exploration, she now knew. Most of the answers lay before her.
A final ritual was all she had left to do to bring the Hero home.
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The first rays of the morning sun peeked out over the horizon between the tops of the broken, stonework buildings. Each of the decrepit structures crooned their own sorrowed whistle with the breeze that passed through their shattered windows and crumbling walls. Murders of crows watched her from their roof-top perches as she took her time walking down the empty street between piles of rubble and glass. Rats retreated to their holes as a crimson tint took over the sky above.
Snapping like a whip at any exposed skin, a wicked breeze kicked up into a gust to stir a storm of sand and debris over the flagstone street. She could hear the entirety of the Ruined Quarter howl in mourning with how the air twisted and screamed through its forgotten paths. With these haunting sounds came the unnerving chill upon both nerve and skin. Shivers rippled over her skin and broke out into goosebumps.
It was a day as foreboding as when He vanished. A day that she remembered quite well.
Pulling her maroon cloak in closer around her body, she pressed on into the wind down a familiar block. Just a few streets down she came by a shop that once boasted hundreds of sweets and fresh fruits in its front window. A dozen lineups of tasty morsels now replaced by bits of smashed glass on ruined shelving. The bright yellow stonework that made up the building was now faded and chipped as to leave only clues to its once bodacious faΓ§ade.
Standing before that storefront, the woman stopped a moment to close her eyes and let her memory come to her. She recalled her first meeting with Him over three decades ago. A dire time it had been for her; a small girl, kneeling upon a mat by the bright red door of the confectionary. Clutching desperately to a roughly carved, wooden bowl and begging for coppers from any who could spare one. Hunger was burning the meat off her bones, which themselves were growing weak from her fourth day without a scrap to sate her. Another day and she'd be just another corpse in an alley or the sewer. Another nameless victim of poverty.
Yet that day was the one he chose to pass by.
She had been hunched over her lifeline bowl, her body wrapped in rags and a robe nearly twice as large as she could fill out. The ridges of her backbone, prominent through the worn cloth on her back, drew more ire from those who witnessed it than pity. Children kicked at her, wealthy verbalized their disgust, guards waited for an excuse to force her elsewhere. None were aware of how little more her frail heart and body could take.
It was near the time that the sun rose to its highest point that a pair of travel-worn boots stopped in front of her. At the time she had thought the footwear beautiful. A hand length short of the knee and crafted of fine, black leather striped with grey highlights, indicative of a distinct species of wyvern she had heard the guards speak of. Along the length of each boot, where the sole met the body, were shaped pieces of red iron that capped the toes and cupped the heels. A design perfect for mounting spurs or delivering painful kicks.
Her awe ceased when one of these boots rotated toward her, toe in line with her jaw. Instincts had her braced for what was expected to come. Another broken bone or lost tooth alongside a shattered nose. Following the blow would be a quick curse from the guards as they ran off another abuser of the homeless. Perhaps they would catch him this time. Perhaps she would die.
The tear was already prepared to fall from her eye, but something else fell in its place instead. A gold coin.
It had been lowered with care into her bowl before those majestic boots turned again and strode off. So amazed she had been at the awesome sight of that piece of metal that she hadn't even squeaked out a thank you. By the time her sense had come around tell her to do so, she just caught a glimpse of His back as it disappeared into the crowd. Not that she knew who he was then.
He hadn't become the man the Empire loved yet...
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Drawing her thoughts back into the present, crushing down the memories of that time, she pushed on past the sweets store and down through the district ruins. Not more than five blocks down, she stood at the edge of a crater that He had left during the battle. It was as deep as a horse was tall, consuming the whole of the street and half of the buildings on either side. Everyone thought that the blast of magic would have killed Him. Other civilians caught in it left not a bone to bury and yet when the smoke cleared, His magical shield faded, and He gave that sword of His a flourish before charging again.
Sliding down into the crater, she skidded to a stop just shy of the center and stumbled forth another few steps. When her footing was regained, she came to kneel down at the spot where He had cast his shield spell and put her hand to the ground. Trace bits of magic prickled her senses. The sheer power of the spells colliding still left a taste strong enough for her to detect even after all the years that had passed. It was enough for her to get a feel of essence she needed.
Closing her eyes and allowing her strength in the arcane reach out, she breathed a sigh of relief as her magic latched on to its metaphorical scent. Focus shifting to her right, toward the partially collapsed tunnel of the city sewer, she returned to her feet and took a few small steps toward that dark place.
Even after years without use, the smell of that river of waste still managed to churn her guts. Even more so than it had before. Drawing a torch from her pack, she gave a snap of her fingers and had a spark appear in the oiled rags to engulf them in flame. Taking one last breath of fresh air to ready against what came next, she raised her firelight and ventured into the darkness.
Piles of rubble and fungus-spawning dirt forced her to tread carefully with each step to maintain footing in the entryway. Some stone pillars, once carefully crafted to hold up the street above, now lay shattered across the ground with sections of the roof suffering a similar fate. Dirt that had been held up by the structure now piled in, walling off the underground nearly to her shoulder's height. Blocking off one half of the sewer and filling up the waste canal.
Crossing over the dirt bridge and proceeding along the side of the sewer that still stood intact, it did not take her more than a dozen paces to reach the end of the destruction. In this unscathed section, the arching ceiling in the underground gave a woman with her stature a good half-head of room. Stone walkways on either side of the tunnel gave one plenty of space to avoid the sickly brown, stagnate river running down the middle. Yet now she clearly recalled how He had to hunch slightly when He had come down here as part of his duties. How he specifically walked along the water's edge, so he still had the clearance to swing a sword...
Before she really could help it, she found herself immersed in her memories again. When she first saw his face, heartbroken as He saw the home she had made in one of the alcoves down here.