Note: Alright, I'm trying something totally different here. This is an entirely casual series of fantastical, erotic "fairy tales", with the framing device being a group of late-night taverngoers with little else to do. It's not an "instead of" when it comes to my writing schedule, and other stories will continue to update at their usual pace.
Obviously, this series won't be quite like my other stories in style or plot, but I hope you enjoy! Let me know if you have any requests for future fairy tales!
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"Quiet night tonight." Horasen took off his apron and tossed it on the tavern counter. The redheaded young man groaned, stretching his arms and arching his back, trying try and recover something of their old shape. The inn had been busy today, and he'd been running around serving hot meals practically since sunup.
"Isn't it always?" He exchanged a look with the speaker, the curvaceous barmaid and current apple of his eye, Adelsia Winter. She gave him a tired smile as she carried two stacks of dishes back to the Grim Harvest's kitchen.
"Sure," he said, following after her, "but quiet doesn't have to mean boring. It's so dull here, don't you think?"
She snorted, dumping the dishes noisily into the sink. "Is this another come-on, Sen?" She looked at him in a way that suggested the answer didn't necessarily need to be 'no'.
As he was opening his mouth to voice the opposite, a hoarse voice snarled out, "Nah, he's right!" They both turned, alarmed, as the hulking Urg barged into the kitchen. Urg was said to be part ogre, by those who believed in ogres, and he certainly had the build of one. He grinned at Horasen. "It's been slower than a snail's defecation since those adventurers left!"
As he stooped to make room for the whole of him in the cramped kitchen, one of the good teacups on the high shelves teetered unhappily.
"Urg," Adelsia said, sounding nervous, "you know Miss Setteflour's rules."
"Aah!" The bartender waved a hand dismissively, but obediently backed out of the kitchen. "My own apprentice bossing me around! I teach you to mix drinks, not fraternize with locals!"
"Sen isn't a local," Adelsia said, walking back out. Horasen took the opportunity to admire her prominent rear end. Was it just his imagination, or was she putting a bit of extra swing in it tonight? He grinned, following close behind. "He's an employee. He serves drinks, Urg."
"Well, he's off-hours! Night shift!" Urg took out his beloved brass pocket watch and waved it around cheerfully. Adelsia looked to Horasen like she was regretting that birthday present now. "He's a civilian, and civilians pay or leave."
Horasen cleared his throat. He hated confronting the bartender. People said he'd been in five wars before he was old enough to spell his own name. People said he'd broken a man's spine by sitting on him. Horasen personally knew the second one to be true.
"Urg," he said, coughing again, "what were you saying a moment ago?" He sidled out of the kitchen after Adelsia, closing the door behind him.
"Huh? Oh, yeah." Urg turned around to the rest of the common room's occupants, his annoyance with Horasen evidently forgotten. "It's boring as hell around here!"
"Well, what do you expect, Urg?" asked Emekis, the town librarian. She always claimed she was too old for Horasen, but the attractive blond half-elf sure didn't look it, and he was pretty sure they aged at the human rate. She pushed her spectacles up a little freckled nose. "There's hardly anyone in at the night shift, after all. I'm only in this...loathsome little establishment while the library renovations are resolved." She gave Horasen a very particular look on 'loathsome'.
"Well..." Urg considered this. He seemed to brighten. "Why not a fairy tale?"
"What?" Adelsia looked taken aback. "Oh, no."
"I'm out." Errol the Lumberer emptied his ale tankard and stood up. "This late, you think we're gonna be thinking of children's tales?" He turned and walked out, leaving a few coins on the counter. There was, Horasen noted sympathetically, a very small tip. Errol was like that.
"I should think," said Emekis, adjusting her bun, "that the library should be all that you would need when it comes to fictional endeavors."
"I don't know." Adelsia was nodding, though her dark cheeks were turning a shade of orange. "People here probably have interesting stories to tell. The Grim Harvest sees a lot of wanderers." The barmaid looked around for an ally. "We could make it fun. Horasen, what do you think?"
Those big brown eyes stared up at him.
Damn them,
he thought. "Sure," he said half-heartedly. "What did you have in mind, Urg?"
"Well, we used to tell tales all the time here," Urg said, looking proud of himself. "Tall tales. Spook stories. But 'fairy tales' are what stuck. It was sort of a game." Why was he blushing, too? "I think Adelsia was just starting out here when we stopped doing them. Her mum wouldn't have wanted her to—"
"No, I remember it," Adelsia said coolly. "Mother never really checked to make sure I was out of earshot, Urg."
"Ha. Right."
There was an awkward moment of silence. The only sound was Emekis sipping at her water, observing the conversation without any evident emotion.
Total ice nymph,
Horasen thought. He turned to the bartender and apprentice, frowning. "I'm confused. What am I missing here?"
"Well..." Urg grinned. "It's a late night crowd. So back then, we figured, why not late-night stories?"
Adelsia arched her eyebrows at Horasen and gave a taunting pout. "If we're all old enough, that is."
Horasen felt his cheeks going as red as his hair. "
Oh.
"
The tavern doors swung open as Errol stuck his head back in. "I'm back in."
Errol was like that.
The rest of the taverngoers—all three of them—seemed to warm to the additional descriptor fairly enthusiastically. Emekis sniffed with disdain, but she wasn't exactly leaving, Horasen noticed.
"So, who goes first?" Horasen asked. As if he needed to. Adelsia always had to be the first at a challenge like this. Plus, neither of them exactly wanted
Errol
to start things off.
"I will," Adelsia said smoothly. She pulled herself up by the balls of her palms to sit atop the counter. She kicked her legs, though sadly not high enough to give Horasen anything beneath that skirt to think about later. "And we'll have a proper dark fairy tale. That's what you should tell in a tavern like the Grim Harvest." She grinned. "Fairy tales."
"But with tits!" someone yelled. Horasen didn't look. He knew it was Errol. It was always Errol.
"Yes, of course," Adelsia said, rolling her eyes. "Don't worry. This'll be plenty steamy." She leaned over, crossed her legs, and raised both hands. "I intend to tell you all..."
~~~~
THE TALE OF
THE RIDDLING SPRITE
Once upon a time, back when the barley grew gold and the gods still reigned, a young robed woman was walking down the paths of the Evergreen Forest. Now, as you all know, the Evergreen is a dangerous place for any sensible young woman to set foot into. Back then, the Rangers were seen as little more than exterminators, and oh, they did not do their jobs nearly as well.
But this young woman had a foul secret: She was a witch. A witch attuned to the Tendrils Beyond, in fact. Her mind was knotted, as that sort's always are, and so was her womanhood—no pleasure could reach her while it remained so. She had never felt anything down below, nor had she ever arranged her mind for ordinary thoughts. She was Tendril-mad, and she was proud of it, this witch.
And so as she entered the forest, the nymphs and dryads left her beds of delicate petals to walk upon, fearing her wrath, for their touches could have no effect on her impervious body. And so the fauns fled into the brush, for they could not make her dance until she could not stand. And the fairies and goblins scrambled into the treetops, for their lights could not daze her and confuse her. None contested her power.
She walked halfway through the forest alone, this young witch, with her pretty, pretty black hair and pretty, pretty green eyes. But then she heard a voice. A very, very pretty voice.
"What," said the voice, "walks atop two feet for the first question, four feet for the second, three feet for the third, and none for the fourth?" And this confused her, for its speaker was a beautiful sprite, with skin as green as the pine's first needles and hair as green as the greenest ocean. Her ears were pointed, and wavy hair fell down to her slim waist. Her eyes glimmered, green as emeralds in the riverbed.
The witch was not affected by the sprite's beauty, but she was confused. How could this one not fear her? Did she perhaps not know? She laughed at the sprite, pitying it. "You poor little creature," she said, for the sprite was but four feet in height, "don't you realize you cannot control me with those pretty, pretty eyes of yours? I should kill you for your foolishness, but because the sun is bright and I am in a good mood, you may live. Begone."
But the sprite did not go. She smiled at the witch. "Why should I leave?" she asked, and her voice was as pretty as a trickling stream, as merry as birdsong. "You cannot answer my riddle. I am therefore smarter than you, and as I am smarter, I see no need to obey you."
"Pah!" said the witch. "You insult me? My dark arcane masters will bring down a rain of tendrils and malice to punish the presumption!" But as she was about to destroy the creature, and half the forest with her, she stopped. And she thought. She thought hard, and she thought carefully, for the first time in many, many years.
"What walks atop two feet for the first question, four feet for the second, three for the third, and none for the fourth?" she asked herself. "It makes no sense."