I was awoken early, by a hard cock. I had fallen asleep with the same hard cock thrusting into me, gently but deep. I had been so exhausted after my spell-casting in the Troll King's subterranean chamber that not even the delicious thrill of Fenizir's urgent need for me was enough to keep me from falling into a deep sleep. To awaken to that same urgency was disorientating, and for a moment I was unsure whether I had slept at all.
But it felt like morning, and the glimpse of dawn light penetrating the seals of the tent confirmed it. "You're awake," he said, and his lips descended on mine, kissing me, kissing my cheek, kissing my neck.
I wrapped my legs about his waist. "Harder," I said. "Fuck me properly."
He was very happy to do so, and for once I really didn't care who heard us.
*
I dream I am Perliss. I am eighteen today. Were I other than what I am, that would by Saruz law make me an adult, free to set out on my own path of life. Of course, to be respectable, that would mean seeking a husband to be the father of my children. Most young women with any wealth and breeding have a man lined up well before this significant day. Many, indeed, have notably rounded bellies as they stand before Veshla and entwine their fates with their beloveds'.
I have no husband lined up for me, and I am a virgin still. My father, Garraliske, is Prince Regent of Saruz, holding the throne for me. My mother, Epraliss, died in battle ten years ago, leaving my younger sister and I in the care of this man. He is handsome, I guess, and some say I resemble him, just as they say Laniss resembles our mother, but I think it is just the way he wears his blond hair long that makes him resemble me.
We are both skilled with the sword. He uses a heavier blade, but he has grown soft through years of too much sitting on my mother's throne, and too much ale and cake too. His only regular exercise has been in the bed, and seldom with the same man or woman twice.
"So, Perliss," he says, studying me from the throne as I play the respectful daughter. "You have come of age, and it is time to set out in the world as an Adventuring Princess."
His eyes are bright with amusement. How convenient it is for him that I must leave the palace to complete a divine quest before I have any claim to the throne. His own claim is weaker, but still he gets to sit there while I must go. "Yes, Father," I say.
"Have the gods spoken to you yet? Have they revealed the quest to you?"
There is murmuring from the assembled courtiers. Such unsolicited revelations from the gods are the stuff of legends, and I have spent years longing to be similarly blessed. "No, Father."
"Who will you go to first?"
"To Lord Oehr." Of course to Lord Oehr. The god of the underworld rarely offers quests, and never if not asked before the other gods. He is a proud god and judgemental by nature. It is for him, for this purpose, that I have kept myself chaste and have schooled my thoughts to be pure.
"A wise choice," Garraliske says. "You go with my blessing, Princess. We all hope to hear the tale of your adventure soon."
I know him too well. He would be happier never to hear it. "Thank you, Father."
*
We were not alone in the pass when the sun rose. A tall, black-cloaked and hooded figure was walking with a sure, swift stride up the same road we had followed. For a horrifying moment, I was sure it was one of the witches, but my own witchy senses suggested otherwise.
Fenizir, sensing my brief alarm, turned to see what had caught my attention - and leapt to his feet. "Arden!" he snapped. "Rouse the others. Quickly."
"She's not a witch," I said, studying the approaching stranger. "Although there's something very strange about her." A lot of somethings.
Still, Fenizir preferred caution, and by the time the stranger drew close enough to talk with, all the guards were dressed with swords at the ready.
"I mean you no ill," she called, and I was sure I could hear laughter in her tone. "I'm on my way to Benatek. If you have food to spare, I have some coin." She pulled her hood back in a gesture of friendship, revealing an attractive face framed by short blonde hair. A patch covered her left eye, or whatever restless magic it was that coiled there like a wyrm in its egg; the other was a clear, startling blue. At a guess, she was older than me by some twenty years or so, but she had a wiry, athletic grace to her movements.
"We have food to spare," Fenizir said, "but keep your money. Trolls guard the pass, and you may need it to pass."
"Indeed," she said, unruffled, and laid her pack and weapons on the ground. The sword was just a sword, unmagical in any way, but the bow was something else, something I felt I should recognise. "I'll sit with you awhile, if I may?"
It wasn't quite a question. Fenizir smiled. "Of course," he said, but ordered Arden and the others to be ready to move on, before joining Lela, myself and the stranger by the fire.
The remains of the previous day's stew were being warmed over the flames. I dished some out for her. "Smells delicious," she said. "I haven't had hot food since Saruz, and that was a hurried affair."
"I've never been to Saruz," I said wistfully, although suddenly I wasn't sure about that. I had an abrupt flash of memory, of standing in Temple Square in the heart of Saruz - but the moment passed swiftly, the memory fading from stark clarity into a blur of confusion.
"It's my home," Lela said, "or it was." A veil of unhappiness passed across her face, but then she looked over at Arden, who was standing nearby and watching everything, and shared a smile with him. "I'm Lela," she added, turning that smile towards our guest.
"I'm Lia," I said, "and our leader here is Fenizir."
"Hanwe," the blonde stranger said. "And I thank you for your hospitality."
"Hanwe," echoed Fenizir. "That's an interesting name." He glared at her suspiciously.
"Isn't it?" she said agreeably, and Fenizir frowned. "It's fifteen years since I was last in Benatek," Hanwe continued. "It's not a place I'm eager to return to."
"I imagine not," he said, his expression icy.
Hanwe laughed gently, and turned to look at me. "You remind me of someone," she said. "But I can't think who. Someone I met on the battlefield..." The way her sharp gaze lingered on my breasts and between my thighs, I could almost feel the imagined touch of her hands and lips. "Or in bed, perhaps?" There was a trace of a smirk about her lips as she looked into my eyes, and I could feel my cheeks burning.
"We must be going," Fenizir said. "We wish you a peaceful journey."
"Likewise," she said. "Thank you again for the food."
I watched her as she picked up her pack and weapons, and when she turned to wink at me suddenly, I reacted with a guilty shock that made her laugh. "Who is she?" I whispered to Fenizir.
"The Black Queen," he growled.
"Ahh," I said, understanding something at last of what the symbols had been saying about her.