***
Thank you for all the feedback on the last story! Due to the positive feedback I've decided to continue this as a series. This one does continue after the first story, but you can probably enjoy the erotic scene without the context of the first chapter.
This chapter includes a scene with an otherworldly being, as opposed to the more vanilla erotic scenes of the last chapter.
To recap: Duchess Sarya is the ruler of Fellhaven, which has been besieged by a barbarian horde. Sarya decided to undertake an erotic ritual with the barbarian rulers, to buy her city a truce. With the success of the ritual, Sarya must now undertake other drastic steps to safeguard her city...
***
It had been a week since Sarya had embarked on that wicked 'negotiation' with the barbarians, and the duchess' body was still sore and tingling from the rough, brutal attentions of the savage king and his champions.
But that night of intense lust had purchased a reprieve for her besieged city: King Ulrik and his chiefs had agreed to postpone any assaults for five weeks. That pause in the siege would give her people time to prepare more defenses. Moreover, the delay might finally encourage the other dukes and duchesses of the Empire to march to her aid.
The duchess stood within her council chamber, staring down at the map of the city, surrounded by a dozen squabbling, grumbling advisers. Little markers adorned the map, showing the positions of her small garrison and the sprawling camps of the savage horde.
"I still do not understand," Sir Viktor hissed. The tall, bulky older knight glared down at the map, his hand resting on the hilt of his sword. "More than a week since they have arrived, and they have done nothing but dig their trenches and build yet more ladders and rams. Surely they have enough equipment for an assault by now, and I never figured such savages to be cautious."
The redheaded duchess flinched a bit at that. She had kept her 'offering' to the barbarians a closely-guarded secret. Only a handful of men knew the truth behind the truce.
One of those knowledgeable men spoke up.
"They are waiting for the right time to strike, sir," Brunloc said softly. The tall, lean sorcerer was clad in fine but drab clothes, and his thin, pale fingers flicked a few dark curls from his cheek. "Certain phases of the moon are holy to them, and to their strange, dark gods. No doubt some upcoming phase of the moon is holy to a war god of theirs, so they are waiting for a sacred moment to launch their assault."
"Foolish," grunted one of the other knights on the council. "If I were commanding this siege, I'd have struck already."
"Well, thank the gods that you are not, sir," Sarya sighed. "This delay may be unexplained, but I shall not complain." She swallowed a bit, nearly flushing at the memories of that wild, savage ritual of passion and sex that had purchased the truce.
She felt her sex moistening at the thought, and dug her fingers into her palm. The brief flash of pain served as a momentary distraction.
"And still no news from our lookouts on the walls?" a fat old merchant asked.
"No," Sir Viktor said with a sigh. "No sign of any scouts or outriders from any of the other duchies. Still, it has only been a bit over a week. It will take some time for the other dukes and duchesses to rally."
"If they will at all," said Marek, another of her advisers: a young nobleman with a lustrous blonde beard, and clad in resplendent plate armor.
Marek had, in fact, been on the short list of potential husbands, before he'd been betrothed to a baroness from another province. At the time, she'd been a touch disappointed, but after her encounter with those brutal, skilled barbarians, the handsome blonde had barely come to mind at all. Such soft, fancy men held little appeal after she'd been so thoroughly used by King Ulrik and his champions.
And yet in the week since that ritual, she'd felt her lusts flickering again, and it wouldn't be prudent to sneak back into the camp of the Iron Blades for another wild evening. So perhaps Marek might serve as a distraction, if he was willing to forget his own betrothal...
Viktor's derisive snort snapped her out of such thoughts.
"They had damned well better come," he grumbled. "If not, well..." He laughed ruefully. "I don't know what I'll do. Maybe if we win this war all by ourselves, I'll march to the other dukes and slap some sense into them, or challenge them all to duels."
"An old knight like you fighting a dozen duels against younger, stronger rulers?" Brunloc asked, his pale features splitting into a devious smirk. "Even more unlikely than our garrison fending off that horde all by ourselves."
The comment earned glares from Viktor and most of the other advisers. Despite Brunloc's legendary skill as a sorcerer, his japes and smirks had won him few friends on the council. Sarya, for her part, held a great deal more respect for him than the others. His knowledge and his discretion had arranged for the truce with the Iron Blades, after all.
"Please, gentlemen," Sarya said with a sigh. She raised a hand at Viktor before he could growl back a rebuke. "We have enough to worry about, with the savage Iron Blades beyond our walls. Let us not descend into petty bickering. Let us focus instead on our supplies, on keeping the walls manned, and seeing if we can devise a way to get more messengers beyond the enemy camps."
"Is there no sorcery you can work, mage?" Marek asked Brunloc, with a hint of venom in his tone.
"To get a message out, you mean? Oh, yes, my dear knight. All I require is the heart of a virgin and the blood of a dozen babies."
Marek's eyes widened, and the sorcerer snickered.
"Do not be foolish, sir," Brunloc went on. "The heart of virgins is quite useless when it comes to rituals." He ignored the glares and took a sip of his tea, then cleared his throat. "I however do know of rituals that involve sending messages via animals or even dreams, but alas, the range of such messages only extends for a few dozen miles. Not nearly enough to reach the nearest duchy. But enough to reach their armies, if they march to the relief of the city."
"A few dozen miles?" Viktor snorted. "Barely of any use at all, then."
"Would that you had a sorcerer in your employ like the mages of yore, my lady," Marek said drolly. "Such sorcerers could turn into monsters and fly fast as the wind. Had we a proper spellcaster at our disposal-"
"I may not be 'proper,'" Brunloc cut the knight off. "But I far from useless."
"So the legends of sorcerers being able to turn into dragons are unfounded?" Sarya asked, only half-joking.
"Not entirely unfounded, no." His smirk turned a touch more devious. "But such skills are beyond me, and beyond most sorcerers living today. A few centuries ago, perhaps, when sorcery was more potent..."
"Please, let us not divert into ridiculous tales about the history of mages," Viktor said with a roll of his eyes. Before he could berate the mage any further, the door to the council chamber burst open.
Sarya whirled, her heart filling with fear at the sight of the young guardsman she recognized as Jacobi, one of Brunloc's many agents within the palace. The young soldier had been stationed on the walls, and only dire news would have caused him to interrupt a council meeting.
"A rider," he said, panting a bit. "A rider has broken away from the camp of the Iron Blades, and is riding towards the gates. Waving a white flag, of all things."
"An emissary?" Viktor asked, frowning. "Maybe coming to demand our surrender."
"Don't think so, sir," Jacobi said. "He's wounded, and he was pursued for a short time upon leaving their camp. Seems more like an escaped prisoner."