by Jade Astor
“’Twill be a snug fit for the prince,” the man said and then barked out a crude laugh. “I suppose he’ll manage, though.”
“Should make a nice change, after Kevris,” the other suggested. Still chortling, the two of them rolled Lyrion back over and examined the front of his body this time. The one he assumed was Mulciber pointed at the circular birthmark in the middle of his abdomen. “There. You see that? It’s the Mark of the Bearer. It was mentioned in the scrolls. We have found the right man, without question. The prince will be most pleased with us, I daresay.”
“On your feet, Bearer.” Arowan pulled Lyrion into a standing position and glanced at Mulciber. “Do you think he understands us? Maybe they are mute.”
“The prince might prefer it if he is,” Mulciber said. “But no—I think he’s pretending. After all, we could make out the language of the scrolls after a fashion. The scribe thinks our people were joined at one time, until our ancestors left the forest to found our own civilization. I suspect our tongues remain similar, though perhaps not identical.”
With a skeptical grunt, Arowan reached up and seized a handful of Lyrion’s long gold hair. “Tell us, Bearer. Do you hear and speak? If you are indeed pretending, bear in mind I have no time for games. I have ways of ending them that you may not like.”
His fingers tightened on Lyrion’s hair, making him gasp. To his surprise, he felt his exposed cock stir between his legs. The two soldiers noticed, too, and glanced at each other with raised eyebrows.
“Well?” Arowan prompted. A bit more pressure, and Lyrion’s cock rose higher.
“My–my name is Lyrion,” he blurted. The blush now extended all the way from his face to the midpoint of his thighs. As humiliating as his current predicament seemed, he could not deny that having two men stare at him with curiosity, and perhaps something more, stirred his emotions in a way he had never experienced before. Obviously, it affected his body as well.
Mulciber nodded, pleased. “You see? His accent is peculiar, to be sure, but we can get used to it.”
“All right, enough of this. Let’s get moving before some of these friends you say he has come looking for him.”
Arowan released his hair and prodded him to start walking. As he stumbled forward, the rough ground scuffing his bare feet, Lyrion suppressed a sob. Though he would never admit it to these men, he knew no one would search. The villagers would never dare to cross the enchanted barrier. Their fear of the unknown would outweigh their concern for him.
Lyrion wasn’t sure how long they walked, though his two escorts seemed to know where they were going. Now and then, he noticed bits of cloth tied to the trunks of trees, all of which Mulciber stopped to collect. So the strangers had taken the time to mark their route, another sign that they traveled unfamiliar territory. Wherever they had come from, he was going back with them. Most likely, he would never see Da and Fa, or Gregar and Sehru, again.
“Where are you taking me?” he demanded at last, unable to bear the uncertainty any longer. “And why?”
“Even if we told you the name of our land, it would mean nothing to you,” Mulciber said. His tone was kinder this time, almost pitying. “Our people split off from the Hidden Ones so long ago, I doubt any of you even remember us. We had forgotten about you until one of our miners uncovered one of your ancient scrolls in a cave. We could hardly believe the things in it—but at least some of the stories were true, it would seem.”
Lyrion decided his best bet was to build upon the guilt Mulciber was obviously experiencing. “But what right have you to separate me from my home and my family?”
“That is unfortunate, I suppose, but it cannot be helped. Would you have come with us willingly, had we simply approached and asked? I think not. But don’t worry—once we reach our destination, you will no doubt find it worth the hardship to become the consort of a great and wealthy prince.”
“Your life will be a lot easier than ours, I’ll wager,” Arowan said with a touch of bitterness. “Deep feather beds, warm baths, freshly cooked dinners served on silver plates—I hope you’ll spare a thought for Mulciber and me, heating stale bread over a campfire while we keep watch for brigands.”
Lyrion scowled. He had no idea what Arowan was talking about, nor what a brigand was, but in any event he couldn’t conjure a pinch of sympathy for a man who was dragging him through the forest, naked and bound.
“Surely our lot isn’t as bad as all that,” Mulciber teased him. “Though I must agree with you on the feather bed. I shouldn’t mind a tumble in that myself if I thought the prince wouldn’t catch me.”
“An excellent idea. If the opportunity arises, I trust you shall inform me.” Arowan glanced over at him, and Lyrion recognized his mock-angry expression as the same one that often passed between Da and Fa. Were these men bonded in the same manner as his parents?
Hastily he reminded himself not to dwell on such matters. He could not afford to dissolve into a storm of tears and grief. Instead, he had to concentrate on finding a way to escape. Though Mulciber had taken the markers off the trees, perhaps he could make his way home somehow. Once he slipped back through the enchanted veil, he would be invisible to these outsiders even if they gave chase.
They trudged on, finally coming to a clearing where a few crude tents stood around a banked campfire. When they drew close enough, several more men emerged from the tents and the surrounding woods. All of them wore armor in the same style as Arowan’s and Mulciber’s. Many carried swords and spears that looked capable of inflicting serious wounds. Fleeing from them would not be easy.
Immediately, Lyrion found himself the object of the entire company’s fascinated attention. No less than ten men, excluding Arowan and Mulciber, gathered around him in a circle, murmuring and whispering to one another. Some pointed at the mark on his abdomen and discussed it in hush, almost reverential tones. A few even reached out to touch his arms and chest.
Lyrion felt terrified, but also strangely aroused by their interest. Once again his cock twitched and lifted from between his thighs, but this time he didn’t blush. The soldiers stared in wonder at his nakedness, their wide eyes traveling up and down his exposed body.
Finally Arowan stepped in front of him, blocking the soldiers’ view, and clapped his hands. Their attention reluctantly shifted to him. “As you can see, we have secured the prize the prince sent us out to claim,” he announced. “All of you are to remember his orders. The Hidden One is not to be injured, abused, or maltreated in any way. Call back the remaining scouts. We will break camp at once and begin our return journey to Mavra.”
The men cheered, obviously pleased to be going home, an irony that made Lyrion’s heart sink a little deeper in his chest. The encampment began to bustle as tents were torn down and the fire put out. Weapons and supplies were counted and loaded into small wagons which the men apparently pulled themselves, for Lyrion saw no pack animals nearby.
Another wagon rolled forward, drawn by a pair of soldiers who left it directly in front of him. Lyrion frowned in confusion until he saw the shackles inside.
“We’ll need to blindfold him, too,” he heard Mulciber tell Arowan in a low voice. “We can’t take the chance he’ll memorize the route.”
Lyrion considered struggling, kicking, even biting as a length of cloth was rolled around his eyes and steel shackles bolted into the wagon replaced the rope bonds on his wrists. What chance did he stand against an entire company of armored—and armed—warriors? Long-suppressed tears fell freely as he curled up without even a blanket to cover him or protect his tender buttocks from the rough wooden flooring. He wept as the small cart began to shake and shudder, carrying him off to his unknown new life.
* * * *
The journey through the forest lasted three days and two nights, with the soldiers stopping to create camps each time darkness fell. At the end of the first day’s travel, Arowan decided to remove his blindfold, apparently feeling Lyrion would be too disoriented to plot a return trip. Lyrion had no
doubt he was correct. At night, Lyrion was released from the wagon and chained instead to whatever sturdy tree Arowan chose, though he was provided with a bedroll of his own. Back in his own village, he would have sneered in disdain at being asked to sleep on an itchy, rough blanket. After bouncing around naked for hours on rough wooden planks, it seemed a luxurious treat.
Eventually, he began to sense a growing excitement among the soldiers, and the forest grew less thick. A threadlike path through the trees appeared, and soon it turned into a road. Finally, in the distance, he spotted the outline of what looked like city walls. Lyrion knew his destiny lay close at hand.
Just before they reached the walls, the procession stopped at a small gatehouse, and Arowan approached the wagon.
“You’ll walk from here,” he announced, undoing the shackles. Lyrion began to rub his wrists in relief until he saw another soldier approaching. This one wore a different sort of armor, leading Lyrion to surmise that he was a palace guard rather than a foot soldier like the others. In his arms he carried a polished wooden box, which Arowan opened with care and deference. Lyrion’s stomach tightened when he saw him lift out a length of gleaming golden chain and a folded cloth dyed a shimmering shade of green he had never seen before.
“Stand here,” Arowan commanded, indicating the spot directly in front of him. Feeling he had no choice but to obey, Lyrion remained unmoving while Arowan and the palace guard applied this new and much shinier chain to his wrists, waist, and ankles. Though he had grown somewhat accustomed to being naked after spending so many days in his natural state, Lyrion felt that the chain around his waist, which pulled his hands tight against his sides, drew more attention to his bare cock swinging just below it.
He experienced a fresh surge of panic when Arowan unfolded the green cloth and he recognized a hood without eyeholes.
“Though these circumstances are somewhat unusual, you are still entering the kingdom as a captive,” Arowan explained when Lyrion cringed. “As a prisoner, you may not look upon the prince until he gives you permission. However, there’s nothing to worry about. It’s strictly ceremonial.” His whiskered mouth curved in a smile. “You’re going to please him very much…in every way, I would expect.”
The words only partially soothed Lyrion’s nerves, and he found himself shivering when he heard the enormous gates to the city scrape open. Though he could see only shadows through the hood, he was aware of crowds lining the path they walked upon, which was paved with flat stones that bit into his bare feet. These people, too, regarded him as some amazing rarity, and he heard their whispers and even a few cheers as he was paraded past the unseen throngs by Arowan and Mulciber, who each held one of his arms.
Next, the texture beneath his feet changed to a different, smoother type of stone, and his surroundings grew much quieter. Something told him they were now inside the palace.
A heavy set of doors groaned open in front of him, and he stepped into another room. This one had cloth on the floor, an odd custom he had never heard of, and all was silent except for a quickly stifled gasp from a fresh group of unseen onlookers. Mulciber and Arowan stopped walking, and to his alarm they stepped away and left him alone.
He had the sense he was in the middle of a room with an unknown number of people watching him. Lyrion fought back a fresh surge of trepidation and forced his knees not to tremble. He heard the whisper of footsteps against the floor cloth, and realized someone was walking toward him.
“He bears the mark,” a clear, authoritative voice announced. Lyrion felt fingertips brush over his bare skin, touching a spot just above the chain. “He is exactly as the scroll describes. You have done well, my warrior lords.”
“Thank you, prince,” Mulciber and Arowan said in unison. “He claims his name is Lyrion. He is surely one of the Hidden Ones.”
Sweat began to drip down Lyrion’s forehead and chest. The prince himself was inspecting him…touching him.
“I want to see his face. Captive, would you like your hood removed?”
Lyrion struggled to find his voice. He had no idea how to address a prince, so he took a guess based on what he had heard so far. “Yes, my prince,” he managed to whisper.
The prince’s fingers moved away from his mark, briefly dropping lower to brush against his cock. Lyrion swallowed when he felt it stir and harden at the contact. Would the prince take this as a terrible insult, an unforgivable breach of propriety?
A rush of cool air swept over his cheeks as the hood came off. Lyrion found himself looking into the most startling, intense pair of dark eyes he had ever seen.
Far from offended, the prince smiled at him.
“I like his face immensely,” he announced to the entire room. “This will be the man to bear my heir.”
Chapter 4
The prince dropped his hand to his side and stepped back. “Take him to my chamber and bathe him,” he ordered without taking his eyes from Lyrion. “No doubt his long journey has made him weary. I will speak to him in private later.”
Two young men in matching tunics and belts stepped forward to lead Lyrion from the throne room. They escorted him down a long stone corridor, which he marveled at as he walked along, and ushered him through a wide wooden door.
He held his breath in wonder as he took in the ornately furnished room, complete with an enormous four-poster bed curtained with the same shimmering green material as the hood the prince had removed. In the opposite corner stood a large metal tub, similar to the wooden ones people used for bathing in his own village. Six pails of water waited in front of a stone fireplace that reached from the floor nearly to the ceiling.
One of the servants tugged on his chain, guiding him to step into the tub. The other retrieved two pails of warm water. Lyrion noticed that they gave off a pleasant floral scent, which transferred to his skin as the two men began pouring it over him. When they had used all six pails, they guided him back to his feet. One patted his body dry with soft cloths while the other brushed his freshly washed hair, all without removing his chains.
They were still hard at work when the door creaked and another man slipped into the room. This one had hair almost as long as Lyrion’s, though it was of a startling reddish color he had never seen before. His garment was equally unusual, the material so thin it did little to conceal the outline of his chest or even his privates, which he had adorned with some sort of jewelry. Of course, Lyrion was in no position to be concerned with modesty when he himself had promenaded through the entire city and palace wearing only a length of chain.
The newcomer stepped closer and looked him up and down. The two servants continued their work as though he were not even there.
“So you’re the one about whom I have heard so much talk. Perhaps you have heard of me, too.” He touched his chest proudly. “I am Kevris, Prince Talek’s concubinus.”
“Concubinus?” Lyrion blinked. The ways and words of these people were most confusing. “What is that?”
The one called Kevris tilted his head back as though offended. “You do not know? Are you ignorant?”
“In the ways of this land, I suppose the answer must be yes.”
Kevris’s eyes narrowed to angry slits. “You seem very sure of yourself,” he said, startling Lyrion. He was, after all, covered in chains and at the mercy of the prince and even his servants. He felt far from sure of anything.
“Most assuredly, I think no such thing. Please explain your meaning.”
“I might have known you would try something like this. You seem quite sure the prince will enjoy your mummery. I, for one, do not believe you are as innocent of our ways as you pretend. In time, Prince Talek will see such schemes for what they are. And I intend to help him to that realization.”
Without warning, Kevris reached out and curled his fingers around Lyrion’s bollocks. He squeezed them playfully at first, then much harder, until Lyrion recoiled with pain. Just as abruptly, he let go and drew back.
More perplexed than ever, Lyrion parted his li
ps to respond. A harsher voice from the doorway made that unnecessary.
The prince crossed the room in three rapid strides. Anger clouded his face. “Kevris! I did not send for you! Why are you here?”
“I came to see the Hidden One,” Kevris said without betraying the slightest touch of alarm. Lyrion was not sure whether to regard his nonchalance with horror or admiration. “I am most curious, like everyone else in the kingdom.”
“You may indulge your curiosity at some other time, which I will determine. Leave us now.” The prince gestured to the servants, who stood frozen with a fear they were trying not to show. “The two of you may go as well.”
“Yes, my prince.” Kevris spoke the words in a formal tone, but Lyrion saw the sneer curling his lip. He felt quite sure the prince did, too.
Finally, the three of them left, the two servants carrying the water-filled tub out by its rope handles. Kevris followed them at a leisurely pace. Soon Lyrion stood alone before the prince.
“I trust you enjoyed your bath. I always find warm water soothing after a journey of any length. I can imagine how long yours must have seemed.” He scowled when Lyrion offered no response. “Why does everyone think I enjoy hearing my own voice echo off the walls? That is perhaps the only reason I keep Kevris here at all. He is not afraid to converse with me. Speak!”
“I beg your pardon, prince. I did not want to overstep my place.”
“If Kevris was the reason for your silence, pay no mind to anything he said to you,” Talek said with an impatient wave of his hand. “He assumes his position in my household is far more secure than it truly is.”
Nervously, Lyrion bowed his head. “I was unable to comprehend what his position is. He used a word I did not know.”
The prince snorted in disdain. “He uses a good many words I wish I did not know. However, whatever he might claim to be is of no importance. Though he has served me well, ’tis your service I am far more interested in at the moment. Did the soldiers tell you why I sent them out to find you?”