Disclaimer:
Everyone is over eighteen. If you are not deeply into fantasy pulp fiction, gender fluidity and pansexuality, you are in the wrong place. This chapter features a depiction of non-consensual sexuality and, though it is stopped before it actually culminates, I realize this can be an issue for some. The author (despite the occasional jest in earlier chapters) takes rape very seriously. There will, from time to time, be discussions of nonconsensual sex in this tale as the story requires. But the sex that is described in loving, lurid detail throughout the Saga of Tallia the Unwilling will always be consensual. I fully realize what I'm writing here -- a tale of sexual fantasy adventure that hopefully thrills you, excites you and maybe even (from time to time) engages your brain. But I promise you this -- I am not EVER going to try to thrill or excite you with rape. For me that is a line too far.
BEHOLD! I, Thutmose-Neferkare, royal scribe, chief librarian and high priest of the divine Ra do bid you welcome to the fourth scroll in the on-going epic known as "The Saga of Tallia the Unwilling". It falls unto me to deliver most grave and tragic news regarding this scroll -- there is no explicit sex herein. Fear not, though my good readers. This be no so-called "filler story" here only to waste our time. There is still lots of violence and personal discovery ahead. Some of the violence and personal discovery even happens in the buff.
But just because there is no sex in this scroll, that does not mean this chapter is without its value. Know that we here at the Temple of Ra do not read these scrolls just for the hot gender fluid sex. I say thee nay! Verily, do we also enjoy rich character development and dramatic plot turns. Yes, we read these scrolls for the articles just as much the naughty bits. Suck it, ye varlets, if ye think this be not the truth!
Anyways, this tale also introduces us to our first non-human civilization, granted one that is largely ruined and lost. Deciding exactly how to translate the name of these inhuman beings into our native and most civilized tongue has been something of a controversy amongst my sub-priests. The most literally translation would be 'tien', literally the celestials of eastern mythologies, which include equally both gods and spirits. Some might also favor the world 'elf' from the folklore of the savage north. Lo, both of those doth carry loads of baggage even amongst our most learned readers.
So, we have instead gone with the term "the sidhe," a word born in the far isles beyond the borders of most modern knowledge. These tall, fair folk who dwell in underground strongholds seem closer to the intent of the author even if they belong to a mythology which, frankly, makes no damn sense. Why cannot the peoples of the north keep their tales focused on more sensible beings -- like people with animal heads, world-consuming god-snakes and crocodile-hippo-lions?
Also, we are told the word 'sidhe' is pronounced 'she' for absolutely no good reason. Lo, we can only blame the legendary strong drink of the northern tribes that is said to drive them mad for these most eccentric linguistic turns. But regardless, do not let the impenetrability of certain names or the lack of matters most lurid detract from your enjoyment of this scroll. For if you seek deep within, you will find much that is worthy. Oh, and this set us up for loads of sex in scroll five. So, keep steady thy course good and faithful reader! Your patience shall be rewarded and you shall have thy release but soon.
Yay, let it be written! Yay, let it be done!
Chapter Four: In Through the Backdoor
Sang awoke as per her custom with the first light of morning. She looked out of the cave mouth and was surprised that the rain had at last stopped. 'The rain spirits of this land are malicious indeed,' she mused, 'relenting only when we found shelter.' She drank a little water from her skin, cleaned herself and then left the cave -- quiet as a morning shadow.
She loved the early morning just as dawn was breaking. It was a peaceful time, quiet and serene. She had known so little of that in her life. She had been born an orphan in rough Denggang after all. Her father was probably a river pirate. Her mother was definitely a tavern girl who died early, likely from plague. Her memories of that time were few and she little valued them. Her future was going to be different. Lee Sang called the silent would soon be rich with wizard's gold and would be remembered for a thousand years.
She prowled outside the cave's entrance, familiarizing herself with the terrain. The thick and ubiquitous patches of bamboo served her well. There was ample cover all over this area. The mud was more annoying and she had to choose her steps carefully to avoid making tell-tale squishing sounds. But she'd traversed worse.
She even found a hutch of strange striped rabbits of a like she'd never seen before nibbling on wet morning grass. She bagged two with her silent arrows before the rest scattered. She stowed the brace in her game sack. 'A far better breakfast than boiled bones,' she thought. And then she found something in the dripping foliage that immediately made her speed back to the refuge where her companions likely still slumbered.
It was still barely an hour after dawn, when Sang crept back into the cave to discover her three companions thankfully alive but splayed out in the darkened cave, naked together in a pile of flesh and bedding, still very soundly asleep. The fire had also burned down to the last few resilient embers. She prodded Liandra gently and got nothing but a low, insensate moan.
'Ridiculous foreigners,' she thought, 'I could slit every throat in this cave with less effort than it took to bag the rabbits.' Still, she did take a moment to savor the shape of Tallia's ass which was on full display, framed wonderfully in white bear fur. The tall warrior woman had beautiful hips, and though obviously powerful and strong, the pale flesh seemed equally soft and supple. She did consider the most brief and lightest of touches. Tallia was deep asleep, after all. What would it harm?
'Fool,' she scolded herself, 'you are as mad as these drunken strangers.' She resisted and instead prodded Liandra once more and into wakefulness.
Sang said only one soft word, barely above a whisper, to the groggy priestess, "Patrols."
That word proved enough. Soon Liandra was awake and moments after that, everyone else as well. They quickly grabbed their clothing, their weaponry and their gear and prepared for a fight. Sang sat the cave's entrance, her bow ready and knocked, guarding the cadre as they quickly prepared for an attack. When moments past without the cave being stormed, they quietly followed Sang out into the grasslands. It was still miraculously not raining though the heavy grey clouds moving their way promised this to be a brief respite.
Sang's warning were soon proved not a lie. The band found a wide path through the nearby grass obviously recently trampled. Some of the tracks seemed like men wearing boots. But some of the tracks were stranger -- hooves and paws marched along side and amidst the shoe prints.