DargonZine | Volume 12, Number 8 |
early a moon-cycle after the confirmation signing of the Treaty of
Rihelbak, Nikorah was sitting cross-legged next to her father as he
presided over the seasonal all-clans meet. But she wasn't paying much
attention to the proceedings. Her fingers itched to be playing
something, but what occupied her mind the most was Bralidan, heir of
Grahk. Even after a cycle. She couldn't believe that she was still
dreaming about the good looking young man, but she couldn't seem to
forget about him.
She had tried talking about him to Kendra, but the herd keeper had
looked at her sternly and said, "Forget him, Nika. The Kuizhack, the
People of the Stone, are trouble. Don't ruin your life!"
Nikorah hadn't expected to hear that common Siizhayip saying from
Kendra, and it bothered her. There had been a hint of personal
experience in Kendra's voice, though Nikorah had never heard any stories
about the senior herd keeper of the Sun clan spending time among the
People of the Stone. Nikorah had always thought herself close to the
woman and it was difficult to think that the person she was closest to
in the clan had secrets from her.
Her attention was drawn back to the meeting when she caught the
word 'Rihelbak'. She focused, and saw that there were three people
kneeling and sitting back on their heels on the other side of the
council rock from Nikorah and her father. Their knees rested on a small
orange rug, banded with white, which meant that they were here to ask a
boon of her father, not deliver a report or a tithe.
The three wore the braided cords of different clans on their
shoulders, which was unusual. Why would an affiliation of clans get
together to ask her father for a favor? The word 'Rihelbak', along with
her knowledge of the history that had led up to the treaty, made her
uneasy about the possibilities. The seven clans that had attacked the
Grahk Kuizhack had not begun their war with a delegation to the Chosen
One. Yet, might not a new attempt to wrest the Rihelbak Plains from the
Kuizhack of Grahk begin with a formal request for the support of all of
the Siizhayip?
She heard her father ask, "Why?" Nikorah didn't know what her
father was trying to clarify, but she began paying attention hoping that
everything would become clear.
The one in the middle, with the braid of the Spring-Bok clan, said,
"Chosen One Demahh, you have heard how the numbers within the clans are
growing again. The winters have been mild, and the hunting has been
good, and the Siizhayip as a whole are prospering. But even the Great
Steppes are not boundless. The clans are running out of room, Chosen
One.
"Our remedies are few. We could leave the grass, and become one
with the Kuizhack." The way he said it made it sound like he would
rather be tied between four horses and ripped apart. "Or, we could
reclaim the Rihelbak."
"You are aware," said her father, the Chosen One, "that barely a
moon-cycle ago the treaty was confirmed. That land is overseen by the
Kuizhack of Grahk." Her father's pronunciation bore no hint of
approbation.
"I have noticed the increase in our numbers," he continued. "And
while it has gladdened me that we are prospering, I also realize the
difficulties it presents us with. But we cannot look to Rihelbak. It is
not our land to grow into."
"But, Chosen One," began the one on the left, a woman from the
Prairie Cat clan. "Those Fretheodan of Grahk, they do not use the land.
Rihelbak lies empty, unlived in, unhunted. It is an offense, Chosen One,
to waste the land so, with no one to thin the herds, with no one to burn
the grasses to stem their growth; it is an offense against the way of
the Anhilizharnoh, the Lords of the Sky."
Demahh was silent for a moment, thinking. Nikorah hadn't thought
about the treaty in those terms. She frowned when she thought about what
a state the Rihelbak Plains must be in after being neglected ever since
the treaty had first been signed. It *was* an offense!
"You know that the Fretheodan waste the Rihelbak?" asked the Chosen
One. "Perhaps they have some other Kuizhack use for the land."
"We have ... seen, Demahh Chosen One. We have sent scouts into the
Rihelbak. Never has one of the Grahk people entered the plains before
the group who went to the treaty signing. Not in more than two hands of
summers!"
Demahh shook his head, but whether at the Prairie Cat clan's
spying, which had to mean that they had done the forbidden and entered
the plains, or at the waste by the Fretheodan, Nikorah didn't know.
He took a deep breath, and said slowly, "What do you ask?"
The third one, a young man from the Red Cup clan, said, "We do not
ask for rebellion. We know that the might of the Fretheodan Kuizhack is
greater than our own. So, if we cannot claim the land as a right of
battle, then all we can do is ask. Present our petition to the one who
rules Grahk, let that man know of the struggle that is beginning in the
Great Steppes, as our numbers grow beyond what our home can support.
Surely they are capable of seeing the sense in our request. Surely they
will understand that we could put that land to better use. Surely they
will allow us entry into Rihelbak."
Nikorah wondered whether the Red Cup speaker was right. The
Fretheodan were strange, different. That room of rugs they had built out
in the open air like that ... so strange! Could they understand the
plight of the Siizhayip? Would they allow the clans to grow into land
they controlled?
Demahh was silent a long time, and finally he said, "You have all
spoken eloquently, and I have seen the wisdom in your words. We will
send a delegation to the home of the leader of the Grahk, and we will do
as you suggest: we will ask them for more room. Their answer, however,
is in the hands of the Anhilizharnoh."
The petitioners bowed, then stood and rolled up their rug. Their
leader, the Spring Bok man, said, "Thank you, Chosen One Demahh. Your
words contain wisdom."
Demahh nodded in response, and said, "I shall appoint Kendra to
organize and lead this delegation, as she has experience with the people
of Grahk. The delegation should be ready to leave within the
quarter-cycle. You may go."
The meeting continued, and Nikorah's attention wandered again. She
didn't think much about the proposed delegation, since she was fairly
sure that Kendra wouldn't allow her to get anywhere near the heir, after
her previous words on the subject. The information that Kendra had been
to the Grahk stone house before intrigued her, though. She wondered who
she could learn that story from.
When the meeting was over, Nikorah returned to her ghur. She drew
her lute and the cat-stone out of their storage places and set about
making music. Somewhere in the middle of her playing, a thought came to
her. She stopped playing and concentrated on it, her hands and feet
caressing the cat-stone absently. Of course she wanted to go to the home
of the Grahk people. Why shouldn't she? She would simply ask Kendra, and
Kendra would agree. It was simple. Wasn't it?
If her sudden decision to go with the delegation startled her, what
surprised her even more was the way Kendra actually did just agree. What
was even stranger, she realized much later, was that she never once
thought of heir Bralidan as she made her decision.
Bralidan once again stood in his father's antechamber waiting for
an audience. This time, though, Bralevant wasn't in the reception room
just beyond, but in his quarters getting ready to meet their
just-arrived guests. Bralidan was here to let the duke know just who
those visitors were.
They had come riding up to the gates of Plethiss totally
unexpectedly, and it had been Bralidan who was in a fit state to greet
them. So, he had gone to the mansion's forecourt and greeted the ten
riders, who were still sitting atop their fine horses. He had welcomed
them to the ducal residence of Plethiss, and then asked who they were
and why they were here.
He knew who they were, of course, at least in general. One of the
ten riders was the woman he had seen at the treaty signing just over a
month ago and whom he had been unable to stop thinking about since.
Nikorah was her name, and she was the daughter of the One of the Sun
clan.
The eldest of the riders, a woman in her fifties judging by the
lines on her face and the grey in her brown hair, said, "We are a
delegation come from the Siizhayip, the People of the Grass, to speak to
the ruler of these lands and the one who holds the rights of Rihelbak,
Duke Bralevant of Grahk. We have a petition to put before him." Despite
the cold formality of her words, he thought that she was looking at him
rather tenderly, an odd light in her eyes.
Bralidan had arranged for the horses to be taken care of and had
escorted the Siizhayip into the audience hall to await the duke. Then he
had hurried to his father's rooms to let him know who his visitors were.
Bralevant appeared at the door to the antechamber dressed in
hunting clothes, Osirek at his side. The aide was adjusting the fit of
the leather tunic, and brushing imaginary dust from the hide leggings.
Bralidan thought that his father's choice of dress, perhaps meant to
emulate the clothing of the visitors in some way, was a mistake. The
duke's pristine hunting leathers, never before worn and never likely to
be again, did not have the comfortable, worn-in look of the garb the
Siizhayip wore. Bralidan imagined his father would look like a preening
mockery, and it embarrassed him.
The duke impatiently dismissed Osirek, and said, "So, Alin, what
did they have to say?"
Bralevant started walking through the antechamber and out the front
door, leaving Osirek standing there looking like there was more he
wanted to adjust. Bralidan followed his father and said, "Well, they
said that they are a delegation from the Siizhayip and that they wish to
petition you for something. That's all they said. They didn't even
introduce themselves, though one of them I already know. I saw her at
the treaty signing last month. It's Nikorah, the daughter of Demahh of
the Sun clan."
"Ah, yes. She was quite striking. Very green eyes, right? And that
nose! I remember her as well."
Bralidan glanced at his father, wondering about the tone in his
voice. The look on Bralevant's face -- a sort of pleased leer -- made
Bralidan feel guilty for a moment as he realized what he might have
looked like while he daydreamed about the beautiful Nikorah. And then he
felt intense jealousy. His father couldn't possibly be interested in the
girl! She was so young! And while Bralevant had been without a wife
since Bralidan's mother, Omelli, had died shortly after giving birth to
Biralvid, it still wouldn't be decent to take up with a girl younger
than that youngest son!
Bralidan tried to figure out a way to determine just what designs
his father might have on the daughter of the One of the Sun, but he was
too flustered by the thought of competing for Nikorah with his own
father. By the time he had straightened out his thoughts, the two of
them had arrived at the doors to the audience hall. Not standing on
ceremony, the duke opened the doors himself and walked in. Bralidan
followed two paces behind.
The Siizhayip were standing in three ranks in front of the small
raised dais that the duke's throne sat on. Someone had placed an orange
rug edged with white stripes just in front of the first rank, which
consisted of Nikorah and three other young people, though Nikorah seemed
the youngest of the four. Behind them stood the old woman who had spoken
in the forecourt, and behind her stood five other Siizhayip of varying
ages. For the first time, Bralidan noticed that each of the nomads was
wearing different colored braided rope on their left shoulder, except
for Nikorah and the old woman, whose braids were the same. He wondered
what they meant, if anything, as he followed his father to the platform
and stood just behind the right arm of the throne.
Bralidan was looking at Bralevant when the duke lifted his eyes to
the group before him and prepared to welcome them. So he noticed when
his father caught sight of one of them and just stopped and stared,
dumbfounded. He glanced up and was relieved to note that the duke wasn't
staring at Nikorah. Then, covering for his father's distraction, he
straightened up and said, "Duke Bralevant of Grahk, of the Fretheod
Empire, welcomes the delegation of Siizhayip to the halls of Plethiss.
You may introduce yourselves and present your petition."
Normally his father didn't bother with that kind of ceremony, but
normally his father didn't stare gape-mouthed at -- Bralidan checked
again -- old nomad women, either. Bralidan looked at the woman in the
middle rank and saw that she had a hard, almost angry expression on her
face, but there was something else behind her eyes, something that she
seemed to want to keep hidden very badly.
That woman said, "I am Kendra of the Sun clan, speaker for this
delegation." Bralidan glanced down at his father and noticed that the
duke's hand was clutching repeatedly at his chest, right where he
usually wore his fox-shaped brooch. The one he hadn't worn since the day
Bralidan had found the Treaty of Rihelbak and that lovely falcon-carved
stone.
Kendra continued, her voice even and official-toned, "Before me are
Nikorah of the Sun clan, here to lend the weight of her father, Demahh,
the One of the Sun clan and the One of the Siizhayip, to the petition."
Nikorah knelt on the orange rug, and then sat back on her heels. She
looked perfectly comfortable there, and Bralidan idly wondered how long
he could match her pose, if he tried. He didn't think it would be very
long.
Kendra said, "This is Denaln of the Spring-Bok clan, Lorrip of the
Prairie Cat clan, and Tidick of the Red Cup clan." As their names were
given, each of the remaining three nomads knelt and settled comfortably.
Kendra went on, "Denaln will present the petition, but you should know
that the four who kneel, the five whose clans are represented behind me,
and more than half of the rest of the clans of the Siizhayip, take part
in the words to be presented. By decision of the One of the Sun, all of
Siizhayip support these words."
The four kneeling young people seemed to be waiting for some word
from the duke, who was still staring at Kendra. Bralidan kicked the leg
of the throne hard, jarring the solid chair. No response. He did it
again, and was about to reach forward and poke his father in the side
when the duke said, "Please, begin." Bralidan looked down and his father
seemed to have recovered himself and was looking at the petitioners,
mouth closed, an attentive look on his face.
The man who had been named Denaln responded with, "Greetings, Duke
Bralevant, ruler of Grahk and holder of the rights to Rihelbak. We come
with glad tidings and grave news to ask of you a boon.
"The Siizhayip have had the freedom of the Great Steppes for
countless ages. Once, the clans numbered no more than a handful, and in
the vastness of the steppes our numbers were so small that we could not
imagine a time when we would be stretching the resources of the great
grasslands we call home.
"The Siizhayip have prospered and grown. And that day that we could
not imagine has come upon us. The People of the Grass are beginning to
outgrow the grass."
Lorrip, the woman from the Prairie Cat clan, spoke up. "Great Duke,
we know the steppes and we know their limitations. We have reached those
limits, and we are beginning to exceed them.
"We have looked for an answer to our dilemma. Most of the solutions
that would allow us to sustain more people per sweep of grassland would
destroy our way of life. Leaving the grasslands would do the same. All
we can see as a solution is to find more grasslands to occupy. And to
our great fortune, such an area exists.
"I speak of the Rihelbak. We have watched closely, and we know that
you do not use the vast grasslands of the Rihelbak. You do not live upon
the plains, you do not herd animals upon them. You do not even plow them
under and try to make them grow foreign plants like the Kuizhack farmers
do."
The woman paused and took a deep breath, calming herself from the
slight hint of heat that had crept into her words. Then she continued,
"As you seem to have no use for this land that you control, and our
people are searching for land to grow into, what we ask is that we be
allowed to inhabit the Plains of Rihelbak."
The petition surprised Bralidan. He didn't quite know what to think
about it. Not much more than a month ago, he had managed to avert a
circumstance that would have returned the Rihelbak Plains to the
Siizhayip by default, and now here was a group of those nomads simply
asking them to cancel the treaty! He wondered briefly whether the
Siizhayip had somehow engineered the situation that had made everyone
forget about the treaty's stipulation to be confirmed every five years
and hidden the document itself. But that was nonsense, wasn't it?
On the other hand, the nomads had a point. As far as he knew,
Rihelbak had never been a useful part of Grahk, either before or after
the Seven Clans' War. In the agreement the Fretheod had once had with
the Siizhayip before the war, all of the grasslands from the Rihelbak to
the eastern edge of the steppes had been free for use by the nomad
clans. That had changed with the war that had forced Bralidan's great
grandfather to punish the Siizhayip by closing the Rihelbak to them. But
what use did Grahk have for the land? It had been seventy years since
the war and the Siizhayip needed land to grow. What could it hurt to
give it back to them?
As he pondered the situation, his constant worry about becoming
duke resurfaced. This was just the sort of situation that he feared,
where the two sides of an argument had equal weight within his mind. If
he had to decide between keeping and giving away the Rihelbak Plains, he
didn't know how he would choose. He looked at his father to see what
Bralevant would do, and found him staring at the orange rug, or maybe
Lorrip's knees.
Eventually, the duke said, without looking up, "You have given me
much to think on. I will have rooms prepared for you while I ponder this
issue." He stood and turned his back on the Siizhayip, and walked
quickly out the door he had come in through.
Bralidan followed his father as the duke walked swiftly back to his
rooms. He walked into the antechamber to find Bralevant saying to
Osirek, "... rooms in the north wing ready for them. One to a room I
think, there are plenty of rooms available. I think they will stay at
least a week."
"Father?" said Bralidan.
The duke turned and said, "Yes, Alin?"
"Father, are you really going to take a week to make up your mind?
I mean, it is a difficult situation, especially just a month after
confirming the treaty, but a week?"
Bralevant said, scorn in his voice, "Of course it won't take a
week. I've already made up my mind! Rihelbak is part of Grahk, and thus
part of the empire, and I'm not giving it away to anyone, for any
reason."
"But ... but ..."
"But what? Look, son. The empire is falling apart, and has been for
years, yes? And even though we have come to be able to rely on our own
people for support and protection, it is still the name 'Fretheod' that
stands behind the respect we command, yes? So, we can't let the empire
down. We have to preserve our heritage, or we will be nothing. Rihelbak
was gained for the empire by the blood of Grahk, one of the few gains in
territory the empire has made in over a century! I will not erode the
empire, give up our superior standing, just so the Siizhayip barbarians
can have a little more grass to run around in!"
Bralidan knew that his father revered the history and traditions of
the empire, even though life on the frontier that was Grahk had little
of the flavor of what the empire had once been. But he hadn't thought
that the duke was so blindly beholden to that distant empire, and it
worried him.
His father obviously didn't think much of the Siizhayip either. If
that was so, then why did he want them to stay for so long? "Father," he
asked, "why are you preparing to host the Siizhayip for a week?
Shouldn't you tell them your answer and let them get back to their
steppes?"
Bralevant got a crafty look on his face, and he said, "Ah, no, son.
No. I have plans to make. Now that she is here again, I'm sure I can ...
well, anyway, I will just play gracious host to the grass-lovers and see
what happens from there.
"And you should be happy that they're staying around, since that
means that the little Nikorah will be at loose ends for a whole week.
Maybe you can find some way to entertain her, eh?"
The duke leered again, which made Bralidan uncomfortable. But his
father had a point. Nikorah would be here for a week, and that meant
that he had some plans of his own to make. As he left his father's
antechamber, though, he wondered who 'that woman' had been. The old
nomad woman, Kendra, perhaps? Why did his father need to make plans
concerning Kendra?
Bralidan sat at the dinner table in the small dining room in the
family's wing. The servants had just departed after setting the main
course of pheasant in front of him and his brother Biralvid. They were
eating alone, since the duke was still making his plans, and the nomads
had been given the evening to settle into their quarters. Bralidan had
already spent some time choosing the outfit he would wear at tomorrow
evening's grand dinner, to be held in the great hall with all of the
Siizhayip invited, and most of Grahk's nobles as well. And he wondered
whether he should make an attempt to meet Nikorah sometime before the
party, to try to engage her interest when it was just the two of them.
Trying to get to know people at an event like a grand dinner could be
very difficult.
Biralvid said, "So, father actually called them 'grass lovers,' did
he?"
Bralidan had told his brother about the petition, and his own mixed
feelings on it, and then what the duke had said about Rihelbak and about
the Siizhayip. "Absolutely, his very words."
Biralvid shook his head. "You know, I still can't understand his
loyalty to the empire. I mean, when was the last time we had a visit
from an imperial envoy? They don't even try to collect taxes from us
anymore! No one from here east to the sea has had any meaningful contact
with the imperial province of Frethehel in thirty years or more."
Bralidan picked at the pheasant in front of him and said, "I know.
But I can see father's point. I mean, despite what you say, we are part
of the empire, and so is Rihelbak. The Seven Clans' War might have
resulted in more dead on their side than ours, but they did kill Duke
Bravid after all. We earned that grassland!"
"*We* didn't earn anything, brother, our ancestors did. And so what
if that duke died? It isn't like they were actually fighting to gain the
Rihelbak. That was just a punishment! The *we* of today, you and me and
father and everyone else, has no use for that land, while the Siizhayip
do. Why should we keep it from them for the sake of an empire that has
given us nothing except its name and reputation for longer than either
of us have been alive?"
"You have a good point, Biralvid. I can see it, but I can also see
father's side. I am very glad that this is not my decision to make."
"Well, I would give the land back to them in a second," said
Biralvid. "But since it is never going to be up to me, I guess that's
worth about as much as a blade of Rihelbak grass, eh?
"So, have you decided what to wear to the dinner tomorrow? I
thought I'd try ..."
Bralidan thought that the grand dinner wasn't going well at all. It
was a perfect end, though, to a frustrating day. He had spent almost the
whole day trying to 'accidentally' run into Nikorah, but the young woman
had never left her rooms in the north wing. Eventually, he had resigned
himself to wait for the dinner and make the best of the crowded room;
but again he was to be frustrated: Kendra sat Nikorah right next to
herself at the large table that had been set up in the great hall even
though the daughter of the One of the Sun had been assigned to sit
across from Bralidan. The food had probably been exquisite -- the duke's
cooks were the best to be had -- but Bralidan hadn't tasted any of it as
he stared down the table at the beautiful blond-haired, green-eyed woman
he had been dreaming of.
And now that the formal dining was over and people were milling
around talking to each other, Bralidan couldn't find Nikorah anywhere.
Kendra was talking with some Grahk nobles and trying to avoid his father
-- he watched her keeping her eye on the duke, and moving around the
room whenever Bralevant started to walk toward her. If she was still
around, Nikorah should be too, but Bralidan couldn't find her anywhere.
When Tidick, the Siizhayip delegate from the Red Cup clan -- 'red
cup' was a flower, as it turned out -- cornered him, Bralidan was sure
that the ensuing conversation would be another frustration, but as it
turned out he was wrong. Tidick was an engaging young man who put
Bralidan at ease quickly, and before long the two were comparing their
experiences with wilderness living.
Bralidan's knowledge had come during his attempts to learn military
command. The exercises in squad and army leadership had included mock
campaigns that meant that he had to live out of a canvas wedge-tent for
weeks at a time. And while that couldn't quite compare to living
year-round in one of those hide-covered ghur he had seen at the treaty
confirmation, there were similarities.
Aside from being engaged in something he felt competent to do --
leading groups of teraehran -- the experience of living on his own, away
from the servants and even just the walls of Plethiss, had been a
positive one. He found that he enjoyed the rough living. His officers
complained about the conditions they endured as much as the regular
forces, but he had found himself able to adapt to the harsh weather and
terrain, to do without servants waiting on him night and day, to provide
just the necessities for himself.
He was surprised to find out how similar the Siizhayip way of life
tended to be. They had long ago perfected the art of wilderness living,
though. Their ghur sounded like a vast improvement over a wedge tent.
They spent most of their time tending to their herds, or hunting the
free-roaming animals of the steppes. They also participated in mock
battles, sometimes as games, and sometimes as contests to determine
rankings, or to settle disputes. Bralidan thought they had a very
noteworthy way of life.
Tidick was called away by one of the other Siizhayip, and Bralidan
decided to get some fresh air and think. He strolled away from the great
hall, up a few staircases, and crossed one of the wooden bridges that
linked the house with the outer walls. Then, he walked slowly along the
top of the defensive wall, gazing over the parapet into the darkness,
which was only somewhat relieved by the light of the waxing larger moon,
Nochturon. The smaller moon, Celene, also provided its share of the
illumination, which, as usual, wasn't much.
Bralidan eventually stopped, leaned on the parapet, and tried to
think. He never consciously realized that he was staring out in the
direction of the Rihelbak Plains. His thoughts swirled and tumbled,
darting back and forth from Tidick's information about the Siizhayip way
of life, to the request of the delegation, to his worries about being
duke someday. But most often, his thoughts turned to Nikorah.
He didn't notice the shape that had come up next to him until a
soft voice said, "Greetings." He jumped a bit, having become used to the
silence and darkness of his place on the wall, then turned to see
Nikorah standing there. He couldn't help but smile, partly because after
all his efforts to find her, she had managed to find him, partly because
they were now well and truly alone and not at all likely to be
disturbed, but mostly because of the way her eyes almost glowed in the
light of the two moons, and her face shone palely as she looked up at
him.
"Ah, you startled me, Nikorah. You move very silently. And ... ah
... you look beautiful by moonslight."
She smiled, and he thought he saw a hint of color rise into her
cheeks before she lowered her head a bit. But she kept her eyes turned
up to him, and he didn't want to look away from them.
He waited for a moment, but she didn't seem ready to speak, so he
said, "I am glad you came out here, though. I've been looking for you
all day, but never ran into you. And then this evening, Kendra moved you
next to her, so I didn't get to talk to you over dinner. And afterwards,
you vanished again ..."
Silence stretched again, as they stood on the wall facing each
other in the darkness. Bralidan tried to come up with something else to
say, but all that came to mind was something stupid like 'I love you'
and he knew he wasn't really ready to utter that phrase.
But Nikorah eventually broke the silence. As she spoke she lifted
her head and stared into his eyes openly. "Well, it was Kendra. She's
been acting strange ever since we arrived. She told me that I couldn't
leave my room earlier today. And of course there was dinner. Then
afterwards she sent me back to my room, said that she wanted to make
sure that nothing happened to me. Like anything could happen to me in
the middle of that huge stone place! So I left the great hall but didn't
go back to my room. Instead I wandered around until I found myself out
here on the walls. I spent some time on the other side of the building
looking out over the town at the bottom of the hill. I was trying to
figure out how those people could all live in so small a place. I mean,
I suppose that it's a nice town, but compared to the steppes it *is*
tiny ..."
Bralidan realized that he had never heard Nikorah speak before. Her
voice was beautiful, almost musical, delicate and soft. He tried to
concentrate on her words like a gentleman, but it wasn't easy. With her
face turned up to his again, her shining visage was very distracting.
Not to mention her mouth, her full red lips flexing, parting, shaping
word after perfect word. All Bralidan wanted to do was to kiss that
mouth, taste the lips, feel the softness of her cheek.
But he couldn't take such liberties. He was practically her host,
and it just wouldn't be right. He was strong; he could control himself.
He knew what his dreams tonight would be about, though.
Eventually, her monologue ended with an innocuous remark about the
clothes he was wearing being very good looking on him, and he fell
naturally into an exchange of small talk. It was only natural that his
comments take on an undertone of more than casual interest, especially
considering that her own conversation was leading that way as well.
Bralidan was beginning to work himself into a position where he could
leave her company gracefully -- his control was being sorely strained --
when Nikorah preempted him by raising up on her toes and kissing him.
And not just a peck, either, but full on the mouth, hard and lingering.
Their arms went around each other automatically, and though
Bralidan struggled for a bit to remain the proper host and gentleman,
his fortitude wasn't enough to withstand the onslaught of this
particular beautiful young woman. He returned the kiss, arms moving up
and down her back, basking in the moment.
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