Date: Tue, 24 Dec 2013 20:19:40 -0500 From: redpatience@Safe-mail.net Subject: Magpie and the Prince Chapter 1 (revised) DISCLAIMER: If graphically documented sexual activities between men and men and adolescent boys offends you or is illegal in your homeland, please leave! AND NOW FOR SOMETHING COMPLETELY DIFFERENT: An epic fantasy tale of pederastic love. I wrote this with the intention of making one of the most immersive and transporting adventures possible. The characters and places have been knocking around (and fooling around) in my imagination for the better part of two decades, so I hope they're mature enough to come out and play, now. FOREWORD: This should be a very vivid and beautiful and hopefully exciting tale of romance and adventure, but I'm afraid it may take a while (in your opinion) to build to any sort of erotic exploits. It's also got danger and terror and sacrifice and true hopelessness and exile, maybe even a touch of genuine spirituality. For those of you looking for something "quick and dirty," this isn't it--although if you have the patience, I promise you will receive all that you desire. SUGGESTIONS: For your vivid imagination, I'll share the muses who inspired my characters. They are merely suggestions, you may discard them if you like. In the role of Irau, (for pronunciation, remove the b's from "bee-brow") imagine Marius Yo (Google him. Please.) In the role of Ten, (like the number) imagine Joseph Gordon Levitt circa Mysterious Skin In the role of Meru (like the mountain) imagine Ezra Miller (again, worth a google). ASPIRATION: May all beings have great bliss and happiness, May they be freed from even the slightest suffering, May they never be seperated from great happiness utterly devoid of suffering, and may they abide in equipoise beyond all ignorance, fear, and craving. Without Further Ado: I. Exile Dirt ground into his knees, and the boy wiped tears that ran down his chin. The village idol to the Mother of the Gods stood before him, a single wick in oil burning at her foot. Pines towered overhead, tops moving in the cool September air, but no mother or father, no grandsire or grand-mama stood by at this, his farewell. Pray for me, Mother-of-Death, the boy thought, but he dare not speak aloud. When he returned to the circle of thatch huts, the dark stooped forms of the elders awaited him, lined against the wall of timbers that protected the village. The gate was open, and two warriors stood with bows ready. The boy knelt at the foot of the Matriarch, and she touched the side of his head with one trembling hand. "These shall be the last words I speak," she whispered. As the mightiest of their shamans, only she dared speak aloud. "The endless night has come. The unspeakables walk in the forest. Dogs cannot keep them from the fields, nor cats keep them from entering the threshold of a house. No exorcist's spell can turn them away. These are the signs that they are more than mere ghosts. They are the flesh eaters of legend. We send you both to spare your young life, but also that you may spare others," The prince bowed to her, his hands steepled at his forehead. "Your father's mare awaits at the ford," the crone whispered, "and she shall be your sole protector." "I am afraid!" Irau said. "Shhh!" the woman hissed. A pair of green eyes flickered in the forest, drawn by his voice. "Think you that I have power to shield you from them?" The boy swallowed and shook in his cloth shoes. "Take these," the crone whispered. She hefted into his hands a box--a quiver heavy with arrows, far more than he would usually carry hunting, there were at least two dozen. "The tips are red flint painted with serpent's blood. They will fell the dark beasts, and risen men alike. Take also this," she whispered, and he felt her wrinkled, shaking hand grip his own and thrust something into the palm, leathery and soft like a dried apricot. "This is the strangest treasure of our people, but greater than any other. Your father's crown was a bauble; your mother's rings and garlands were nothing. This is the ear of the Magpie." Wisest of the soothsayers. The Aldeni people spoke of him often; though he was last seen many many generations ago, when the wise woman was just a little girl. "I pray he still lives. When you find him, you must offer yourself: body, breath, and spirit, in order to repay the debt we owe him. Now Go! Go with Goddess!" Irau stumbled down the dirt path out of the village, the full moon's light breaking silver through the pines. He heard chattering teeth in the bushes and wails far behind, and swallowed his fear. Why did he have to go? Why did these creatures have to come here, of all places? He reached his mare at the bridge. She was tethered in the middle of its arch, water crashing through beneath her. It made the beast anxious, but it was for her own safety; the risen feared crossing over moving water. He stroked her long face and and saw his baggage was all heaped on her back. She was ready. He was not. Putting a foot in the stirrup and climbing up, he fought thick, hot tears from bursting forth. "Farewell," he whispered. Irau had strung his bow and nocked one arrow and these he clasped in his left hand all throughout the night as his steed awkwardly picked her way down the mountain paths. The elders had waited until the full moon to send him, but they would have rather sent him in daylight. Daylight, however, was no more. For a whole moon no sun had risen. He went the ancient western road, through the canyons that followed the mountain streams, the roar of the water down to his left. At last, the dense ferns and junipers of the canyons opened and he found himself in a moonlit valley of yellow grass, where the air moved sweet and cool in ripples through the fields and the river led him to a lake filled with stars. The green eyes of his enemies did not threaten after he had passed beyond his people's borders that night, and at last, exhausted after who knows how many hours of unmarked travel, he slept against his sitting horse in a field of alfalfa. Light woke him. Golden, blinding sunshine; he had escaped the valleys where darkness prevailed. It felt marvelous beating on his skin and he stretched. He went to wash in the lake, and beheld himself in the water, seeing him own face for the first time in many weeks. A fair-skinned boy, he had become even paler in the weeks of darkness. He had almond shaped brown eyes and blue-black hair that fell down to his shoulders, except in the back where it reached nearly to his waist and was braided with wires of gold and tied with ribbons of white silk. His ears were pierced with big studs of turquoise, and he had a tiny ruby stud in one of his nostrils. If this was not enough to make him the target of bandits, his looks were: he could have been the prettiest boy in all five kingdoms. His delicate nose and full pink lips, perfect chin and high cheekbones made him rival any princess, much less prince. Before he had left, his mother's kin made for him the finest cloth they could. He had fine lambswool undergarments and on top of this a tunic of thickly woven cotton of many threads and colors: blue and pink and green, gold and violet all striped horizontally and tied with a belt of braided horsehair. His breeches were snug tanned hide, and his boots the same. He had a fur-lined cap, a coat of white wool, mantle of grey wool to wrap up in at night, and a cloak of woven grass to shed the rain. In short, everything befitting a prince of a people who still made their tools from stone and clay. Far off to the West, the sky was still indigo. A five day journey awaited him before he would even reach the King's highway that led to the cities he had heard of in songs, where buildings reached high as trees and people teemed as numberless as ants in an anthill. "Ready lady?" he whispered. The sun glittered on the water. He mounted, wheeled in place a bit, and set off. Weeks of hardship befell him. Irau had only a ten day's worth of corn and a sack of deer jerky, and then he had to forage. Collecting pine enough pine nuts and morels and grubs reduced his pace to a crawl. Not wanting to waste his precious arrows, he had only three ordinary barbs with which to hunt. He felled a rabbit or two, but it seemed most of the animals had fled these lands, as they had fled from his homeland. Hungry and cold, in growing darkness, one night he found a village. It seemed a village, anyhow. He approached with great caution, his bow nocked with an arrow, clutched at his left side. There were no sounds, and he found all of the lodges empty, burned out, their faggot-bundle rooftops gaping at the sky. Hairs stood up on his neck as he rode around. In the gardens were overgrown squash, rows of beans, and rotten heaps of melons. They had been planted, but not harvested. All of these things pointed to the worst, but his stomach twisted on itself and he felt the hunger pangs. Irau dismounted just long enough to stuff one of his saddlebags with gourds, but then heard he heard a crack. Looking up, he saw four sets of eyes blinking in the doorway of a barn. Green eyes. Not split with black in the center like those of a cat, but hollow. Then the stench of rotting flesh bowled him over. Irau stumbled to grasp his bow and loosed his arrow before hurling himself up into the saddle. He heard a choking noise as his barb landed, but by then, more eyes peered from the windows. Readying another arrow, he shot into the closest pair and heard a sound like water hissing in a pot before he galloped out of that place as fast as he could. They followed. All night, tears streaming from his face in panic, Irau could see them in the darkness and hear their ragged, chattering breath. Then, tangled in briars and low-hanging branches and surrounded by glowing eyes, Irau's horse would not move. The smell was overpowering. Putrid hands gripped his legs and his horse's tail. He stabbed one in its sunken face with an arrow, and it shuddered and collapsed in a mess of foul smelling smoke and hot, black grease. Undaunted, the others began to bite and eat at the haunches of his steed, tearing flesh from her body as she kicked and reared. Panicked beyond any reason, the horse delivered him from that place. She tore through the briars, dragging the ghouls along and stamping them under as she wheeled in fright. Irau barely managed to hold on, his thighs clenched onto the saddle, his arms thrown around her neck. He dropped his bow in the chaos, and when they emerged from the thicket in the weak grey light of the sun, he wept. Bright red blood ran down the mare's hindquarters and her black eyes had dimmed. She was doomed. Irau made the beast sit. He unloaded all the weight off her back and threw all his essentials into one bag, leaving behind much of what he had hitherto deemed essential, including his bedroll, extra boots, grass cloak, and the greased canvas that served as a shelter in rain. The mare wheezed as her eyes began to turn pale. A yellow foam dribbled from her maw. "I'm sorry, lady," Irau said weakly. He thrust an arrow as hard as he could into her jugular and ran. The horse reared up and came after him, her mouth gaping, teeth champing down as Irau shrieked in terror and ran. The beast's eyes were wild, but after just a few dozen yards, she collapsed into a heap of blackening flesh and tar. II. The Lean Moon A full month of this and Irau had become more adept at survival than he could have ever imagined. His days were hard and his nights terrifying; he moved about mainly in darkness, for in the sunlight he had to sleep as much as he could. A sort of perverse fear of the dark, one that made him unable to sleep after nightfall, would remain with him for years. He had seen things no human being, much less a boy of thirteen, ought to see; suffice it to say he had seen people of every age and beasts of every species turned into living cadavers. One night in the light of a half moon, he caught sight of a troupe of skeletal children. Their flesh was a distant memory, but ragged chunks of hair still clung to their scalps. They dragged the fresh bodies of a massacre, an offering to whatever fell master they served. Not long after this came the boar. It found Irau in his hiding place and nearly ran him down before he climbed a dead pine to escape it. The creature was almost as tall as he was, and sniffed and tracked him each night until it reached a new tree where the boy hid. Unable to rest during the next day, Irau would have to run until he found another tree to hide in and stay there all night. He had not slept more than a few hours in a week, and he stumbled a ragged few miles each day, thirsty and starving, until at last his strength gave out. He was walking through a clearing around dusk, looking for a tree to climb, but this forest had burned not long ago, and none of them had low growing branches. It seemed hopeless. Then, from the top of the hill, he saw far below the wide ribbon of the king's highway. If only it had come a little sooner. Darkness had fallen. III. The Captain That night, Irau was a mile down the king's road when he heard footsteps. It was not the unspeakables, nor the ghoul of the pig, however. Delirious with hunger and thirst, he hardly noticed men run up behind. They punched him in the gut, tied him up and hefted them over a shoulder with a bag over his head. If he had anything in his stomach he would have vomited, instead there was just blinding pain in his abdomen from the man's shoulder digging in with every footstep. The small fire blinded him when the bag was removed. Around him were the grizzled faces of a dozen men, some missing eyes, all of them scarred and mangy looking. A few were scarcely older than he was, but they all had the pink, round faces of the tribes to the west. They spoke a dialect of the common language he did not understand well, and could only make out a few odd words. If he had understood, he would have found out they were not just bandits--they would have called themselves guerillas. They were part of the insurrectionists fighting the King of Chaldicia in the name of a confederation of suppressed tribes. They were however, also bandits. "He looks half-dead," said the man who found Irau. "How do you know its a he?"asked the captain, "looks like a girl to me." "Feel here," the man said with a toothless smirk. Irau flinched as the captain put his big mitt over his crotch and fondled his bollocks and pestle. "Ahh. You got a nice wet pussy for me between those legs, but its in the back, not the front." the captain chuckled. They brought Irau ale, the drumstick of a chicken and big heel of black bread and he ate ravenously, guzzling the ale so fast he felt sick. After this was done, he noticed that everybody was looking at him intently. Some were already rubbing themselves. "Look at that scared little face," one of them said with a smirk. "Lemme clean him up a bit." "Pull them jewels out of his ears," said the captain, "clean him up and strip him of all that glitters." Irau cursed them and fought back until they held a knife to his throat. They unbraided his hair and removed the wire of gold, popped the turquoises out of his ears and the chip of ruby from his nose, and threw his two silver rings into a pan. They stripped his coat and tunic and shucked his breeches off as well. A man with a wet cloth came to wipe his face clean. "Myy my," the Captain said, admiring Irau in the firelight. Irau was only five foot even, his black hair falling freely down his back and narrow white shoulders. His nipples were tiny, pink buttons floating over ribs more visible than ever from his hungry journey. His belly was a flat and muscled with knobs; his buttocks were normally full and supple but had become apple-small, his pelvis jutting out and his knees more knobby than ever. Still, his hardships had given him plenty of tawny muscle, and several of the men had begun rubbing themselves through their greasy leathers. "I get him first," the captain said, "then it's the winners of dice games in order after that. Get playing!" he ordered. The men immediately broke out four boards and began gambling for the gang rape; a past-time that had become their favorite in the years since their band formed. The captain sat in his folding chair and pulled Irau over to him. "Pretty lips," the captain smiled, brushing Irau's mouth with one knuckle. The young prince bristled and clenched his jaw. He would bite off this man's cock if it came anywhere near his teeth. The captain fondled Irau's bollocks, and the boy moaned nooo, no, but in spite of his protests, the fat uncut shaft of his penis began to shift and fill. "A little catamite," the Captain said with relish, "a boy-whore. I knew it the moment I saw you. Such a rich boy, all alone, so pretty, wearing turquoise and gold. How else could you be so rich? Running away from your masters. Some dainty lord is fuming mad you got away...haha. Although...I wonder if your pussy's even tight enough to feel." At that moment, blood spattered Irau's pale chest. Stuck in the captain's head and twisted from impact, an arrow pointed skyward, feathers bright red in the firelight. The man slumped over and the bandits scattered; before they could order themselves, their camp was overrun. Half of them fell wounded with crossbow bolts, the others were beheaded or trampled in a sudden charge of mounted knights in black and white. Irau bolted into the forest, hoping the chaos would give him a chance to escape. He tripped over roots and heard hooves beating behind him. "Halt! Halt or die!" The boy stopped, turned. A knight had his crossbow leveled at him. "I'm not one of them!" the boy cried in the common language, "I was a prisoner!" The knight paused, surveyed the boy's body, but did not lower his bow. Then he licked his lips and smiled. "I know. You're still an outlaw." ((As always, I look forward to all commentary, criticism, and requests. redpatience@safe-mail.net))