Chronicles of Raan (Three BDSM Fantasy Novellas) (3 page)

Chapter 3: Always Raina

Salif sat on the bed, a silent coil of tense energy. In his mind, the chant for peace was running over and over again, as he strove for calm. Two hours.

Use the girl as distraction.

Raina’s voice, in his head again, filled still with amused mocking. She was always there with him.

The girl came out of the shower, naked, her skin glistening with moisture, her hair damp tendrils around her face. She walked over to the bed, and sank gracefully on her knees next to Salif. “My thanks, my lord prince.”

“Get on the bed.” An order.

I will fuck the girl now, and then, I will pick a path
in the fork ahead.

She obeyed, lying on the bed, her legs spread just wide enough for Salif to see her outer pussy lips, to just glimpse the warmth of the interior.

All night long, Salif had imposed his iron will on his body. Not letting himself erupt in the girl’s mouth. This, this warm, all-enveloping wetness, the sweetness of her juices coating his dick, this was his reward. He thrust into her hard, fluidly.

She mewled for the first time, her hands gripping the sheets on the bed as he ripped through her. Her eyes were closed, she bit her lips to keep her moans under control. Her hips thrust to meet him in an instinctive answer. Salif could feel her pussy clench in response around his cock, responding to his hardness with softness, caressing his sheath, as she writhed under him.

He kept thrusting. The beats of the djembe pulsing a steady rhythm in his head, a cadence his body matched. The girl moaned musically, her body moving under him. He could feel the mind-lust rise, his hands roaming on the girl’s body, smacking her ass, driving her higher, faster, pinching her nipples, reaching forward and sucking them into his mouth, now to flick a tongue over a nipple, now to graze it between his teeth, and her moans were melody to him, the counter point to his inner drum beat, and then, finally, the crescendo. His hands clenched over her hips, as he came in shuddering release.

One instant of weakness. That’s all it takes.

“Hello Salif.” A voice sounded in his room; a voice that had been part of his inner self for so long. Raina. But no more just a voice in his head. She was standing in front of him, expressionless, as she looked down at him. The warning bells started to ring in Salif’s mind.

“No, no, don’t get up.” Her voice was winter and ice. She waved a hand, even as he was beginning to straighten, to shape a warding of protection. The magic leapt to obey her, and Salif found he couldn’t move. 

He hissed in anger. She used magic against Argentia royalty? This was a transgression punishable by death.

But inside, his heart was breaking as his eyes drank her in. His Raina. His first love; the only woman he’d ever truly loved. The woman who had seen the essence of him, and had loved him anyway. He gazed at her, devouring her hungrily. It had been fifteen years. Whatever caused the hate in her voice, it could not stop his eyes from searching hers.  

The years had been kind to his Raina. She had been twenty-three to his twenty-five; she would now be thirty-eight. Yet her hair shone as glossily black as the first time he’d run his hands through them. Her body, clad in a gossamer robe of purple silk was still supple, the skin on her face just beginning to lose the elasticity of youth. The laughter lines around her eyes had deepened, though as he gazed at her, he realized not all the lines came from laughter. She had felt pain, his Raina.

She had closed her eyes in silent despair against his inspection. He searched her mind, but she was shielded against him. Ahh, Raina, my love. Why?

“Why?” The question was torn from his lips, the words giving voice to the heartbreak. Leila slipped off the bed, silent, watchful, forgotten for the moment.

Raina’s eyes flew open, flew to his in icy anger. “You dare to question why?”

“Yes.” His words were simple. If she were to kill him here, as she undoubtedly had planned to do, she would have to explain why. She owed him that much. He closed his eyes, as pain ripped through his heart. She’d been his only friend in Argentia. Friend. Lover. Equal.

When she spoke, her voice was low, the words torn from her.

“Katya was my kinswoman. I was there when her body was returned to our clan house. Her broken, bloodied body.” Her breathing was harsh. “She was like my older sister. She was only twenty-five when she was killed. I swore the blood oath.” 

The blood oath, binding for life, made in front of witnesses. Raina would never rest till she’d tracked down and killed all responsible.

“You’d disappeared. No one would talk.” Her voice was still low as she continued the story. “In despair, we bribed the harem guards, bankrupted our clan. Finally, one talked. Revealed that you were not alone that evening in the harem. That the Mage King was there with you.”

“Despair upon despair…” her voice intoned. “The magic was strong in you, even stronger perhaps in the Mage King. I did not have the strength to fulfil my blood oath.”

He could imagine her wild, caged grief, as she sought a way out. A way to revenge her kinswoman, to fulfil the blood oath.

“I sought alliance.” Her voice was flat.

Who had the power to challenge the Mage-Born of Argentia?

His unspoken question lay in the air. But there was only one answer. Only one force with enough power.

“Yes.” She saw the awareness rise in his eyes, along with fear. “Yes. I sought the aid of the witches of Raan.”

Salif’s fear rose, instinctive. Even the Mage Prince of Argentia would not challenge the witches lightly. They were the one power above all power on his homeworld of Raan.

“With their help, I killed your father.” Her voice was again expressionless. She knew what she revealed. Knew that she doubled her death sentence. She had killed Argentia royalty. A quick death would be a kindness.

Salif closed his eyes. He had always known his father needed to die. There was no pain, no grief. He hurt only for Raina, for the necessity that drove her to do this.

“How did you find me?” His voice was even.

“You let the magic in tonight when you played the drums of this world…”

He drew a sharp breath, still held immobile by her spell. If there had been magic in the music, it had been the very slightest amount, one beyond the ability of any Tracker to find.

“I am always attuned to you.” She answered his unasked question. He could hear the tension in her voice. “I sent Leila to distract you… I could only move against you when you were weakened, when your essence mingled with hers…”

She looked at Leila for the first time, and Salif could see love in her eyes, hear the love in her voice. “You’ve done well, my little one.”

“Thank you, mistress.” There was gratitude and answering love in Leila’s voice. Salif’s eyes closed. Plots within plots, an Argentia speciality.

Raina straightened her shoulders, looked back at him. “And now, Salif. Death comes to you, as I fulfil my blood oath.” Her voice was level, but Salif had known her better than anyone ever had. Beneath the flatness, there ran rivers of sorrow and anguish that she would have to kill the only man she had ever loved. He could hear the love beneath it all. She would kill him, of that he was certain. But she would also mourn him. The thought gave him odd satisfaction.

His mind had stayed shielded to her, the shield thrown up in automatic response to the warning bells. But now, as the moment of death approached, Salif smiled at Raina. His eyes gentle, accepting. Understanding her, understanding that she did what she had to do.

“Raina, my first and only love. I give to you a gift.” he said. And he dropped his mind-shield, and made himself relive that terrible memory again, sending her that memory as a gift, so she might know and understand at last what had happened that evening at the harem.

The tears ran unchecked down her cheeks as she relived Katya’s beating; watched Salif try to form the wards of protection; relived Salif’s final gesture of mercy. Relived his anguish and self-loathing at what he had to do.

Salif looked into her eyes, unshielded. “You cannot judge me any worse than I judge myself.” The words were clipped. The aching remained. “I was complicit in her death. I welcome your fulfilment of the blood oath.” Ritual words, accepting responsibility, accepting her right to judge him.

She was shaking her head in utter denial. “No.” A world of pain in that one small word. Her hands made a sparse movement; Salif was freed. She knelt by the bed and spoke, the words etched in formality.

“Mage King of Argentia. I give thanks for your mercy towards my kinswoman. You are not complicit in her death, I judge my blood oath fulfilled.” There was an ancient magic shaping her words, the magic of the blood oath.

The magic must judge the truth of her words.

Both Salif and Raina’s life hung in the balance as the magic swirled in the air, seeking motive and assigning responsibility. But finally, the magic quieted. Raina’s words had been judged true; her blood oath fulfilled.

Mage King of Argentia, she had said.
The thought rose in his mind.

I am Salif Al-Hasn. I am the Mage
King of Argentia.

Salif straightened, rose off the bed. The dawn of a new era. Raina would need to be punished, of course. Her life was forfeit for the murder of his father, and besides, she couldn’t go around using magic on Salif without consequences. Salif smiled in anticipation.

Perhaps Raina and Leila, tied together, and whipped? Their naked bodies rubbing on each other as they danced to the music of the whip, their bodies writhing over each other, mouths buried in each other’s pussy? That would be entertaining indeed. His eyes gleamed at the mental image.

And then after, Raina would have to marry him, of course. It was the only way to save her life. That thought filled him with quiet joy. His Raina. Friend. Lover. Equal. Wife.

His mind was still unshielded, and Raina had always been able to read his thoughts. Her eyebrows had raised and her lips had twitched at his fantasy of whipping the girls. But her body had stilled as she’d read his next thought, yet Salif could feel the emotion rise in her heart. Relief, laughter, and above all, complete, steadfast love.

She bent and performed the triple obeisance, the proper homage due to the Mage King. She spoke, and her voice was clear.

“I am yours to command in all things, Mage King of Argentia.”

 

Chapter 1: Return to Argentia

 

I am Raina, Sorceress Queen of Argentia. This is my story.

Celebration filled the land as the news spread of Salif’s return and the death of the old Mage King. From city to city across Argentia, the people rejoiced. The old king had ruled by fear alone. Salif, mild, self-possessed, a vivid contrast every time he had appeared in public, was welcomed by the populace with relief and joy.

“This is insane…” Salif sent to me through our mind-link, as we were yet again greeted by the cheering throngs, this time in the main square of the capital city. We had been touring the country; Salif taking stock of the ravages of the last twenty years. I could feel his anger grow as he’d studied his country. His father had not been a good steward, either of his harem, or of his country.

My betrothed would be different.

Salif’s rage was at its coldest when he’d entered the arena.

“What manner of insanity is this, Raina?” His voice was soft. Dangerous. “Explain.” His words were to me.

I gulped. The truth would hurt him, but Salif would be able to tell if I lied to him. I summoned my courage.

“Your father liked to watch pain. Katya’s death opened the floodgates of his mind. In this arena, he watched the fights to fuel his mind-lust…” My voice trailed off. I was reliving the horrors of the arena, at the depths the old king had plumbed for his satisfaction.

My mind was unshielded; Salif could read some of the horrors I shrank from remembering. The sick perversity of the arena, where all had suffered and died.

“How did the witches permit this?” His voice was ice.

I quailed before his wrath. “The witches don’t explain themselves, Mage King.” I used his title as a reminder of the delicate balance between the Witch Council and Argentia.

He was not appeased. There was death in his eyes; the Arena Master would not live to see another dawn.

****

“We rejoice in your return to Argentia, Mage King.” The representative of the Witches of Raan bowed before Salif; exactly the proper bow to the Crescent Throne of Argentia.

But Salif was in no mood for nicety. His voice was arrogant and cold. “I seek one who will speak for the Witch Council.”

I knew my betrothed feared the witches, as all did in Argentia, but he hid it well. He was utterly the ruler of his kingdom. Despite the tension in the room, my knees grew weak, and my pussy moistened. Salif was two men; one kind, patient, laughing; the other cold, arrogant; with the full power of the Crescent Throne behind him. I wasn’t sure which man I craved more.

The representative straightened, looked into Salif’s eyes, gauging the depth of this new Mage King. He nodded once. “I will call to my council, Mage King.” He turned and left the Throne Room.

Scarce five minutes had elapsed, and we could both feel the crackle in the air, the sense of electricity that accompanied a materialization. I gulped as I saw who had appeared. The Mother Superior herself; head of the council of the Witches of Raan. She was the most powerful person on our world; perhaps in all the galaxy.

Salif stood. He inclined his head in the precise bow of courtesy due a superior. But he wasn’t cowed. His voice, when he spoke, was level, and his words were direct. “How could you permit this destruction of my people?” 

The Mother Superior stilled. Her face was hidden by her cowl, but her hands were withered. I turned to Salif with some urgency, but Salif had read the situation precisely. He turned to his Chief Advisor. “I will speak with the Mother Superior in private.” The words were clipped.

“Your will, Mage King.” The Chief Advisor bowed, but Salif had already turned to leave – courteously gesturing the Mother Superior ahead of him, his inherent politeness taking over, despite his truly formidable anger. I hesitated, unsure whether I should stay in the Throne Room, or follow.

“Sweet Raina,” Salif’s voice spoke in my mind, his words a gentle caress. “I always need you by my side. Come.” I flushed; there was intimacy in his voice. I was suddenly, vividly reminded that we hadn’t been intimate for fifteen years; that the urgency of tending to his country had kept the Mage King away from my chambers. I missed the feel of him. It had been so long…

“Indeed, my sweet bride-to-be. I crave the feel of you as well.” His voice was a purr in my mind. I flushed. I’d left the mind-link open; Salif had caught my thoughts.

I kept my head bowed as I entered the antechamber to the Throne Room. The Mother Superior was already seated; an attendant had placed food and drink on a table, and had left us.

Salif laced his fingers in tightly-held control. “You have much to explain.” His voice was flat as he addressed the Mother Superior. He knew how close he walked to the chasm of their wrath, but there was no fear in him. A true Mage King; his anger at the wrongs done to his people holding his fear in momentary check.

“Would you have us trample on the sovereignty of Argentia, Mage King?” The Mother Superior’s voice was a rasp. I clenched my fingers into my palm; my nails drawing blood.

“We all know the extent of Argentia sovereignty.” Salif was not cowed. “You have a duty to the people.” He glared at the woman, trying to see her features hidden in the cowl.

A battle of wills. Then, a lessening of the tension. Then, the Mother Superior turned and spoke to me, her voice warmer. “I like this Mage King. You have chosen well, Sorceress.”

She looked at Salif, her voice level. “We do not have the habit of explaining ourselves, Mage King. But this one time, explanation is due.”

She rose, poured herself a drink from the sideboard, and lowered her cowl. The face was old and withered, but her eyes were bright. There was steel in this woman.

“Many precautions are taken to keep our presence a secret in the galaxy, Mage King. You know this. You know the smallest handful of people that are aware of our existence; the even smaller handful that are aware of our powers. In Argentia, there are fewer than five who know the full power of the Witch Council.”

Salif nodded. He had learned this when he had been designated as Heir.

“We are hidden because our power is best wielded in secrecy.” Her voice was wry. “And so, we watched the degeneration in Argentia.  The twisted path your father took.”

She sipped her drink, wiped her hand against her mouth as a few drops spilled. “We dared not move directly against him; that would reveal our presence. Your father knew the line he walked; knew that we wouldn’t move openly against him.”

I listened to this in silence. Some of the story I knew; some was new to me.

“We moved therefore, in the most subtle of ways. We sent assassins; they were killed before they succeeded. We tried poison; your father’s tasters died. The Mage King was wily. Finally, your intended bride appeared before us.”

I remembered the scene well. It had taken my clan eight years and the accumulated wealth of generations to find a guard who would talk to us about who was responsible for Katya’s death.

“A pleasure slave destroyed. An abomination.” Her voice was death. The pleasure slaves of Argentia; the secret weapon the witches used to shape the galaxy to their wishes. The one secret above all.

“We trained a weapon. The Sorceress Raina.” She inclined her head towards me. “She was trained for six long years in the ways of the pleasure slaves. For we determined that your father’s harem was the last remaining place of attack. We disguised her, we hid her magic until the key moment. Until your father’s guard was down; the moment his seed was spilled.”

I had told Salif how his father had been killed. My time in his harem. I had feared his rejection after I told him the depths to which I had to fall to fulfil my blood oath. But I had underestimated my beloved. Salif had held me in his arms as the tears had fallen from my eyes; his lips finding mine in gentlest
understanding. “Can you ever forgive me?” I’d asked as I wept in his arms. And he gazed at my face, his eyes blazing his love for me, and said, the sweetest words I’ve ever heard in my life. “There was never anything to forgive, my love.”

“You judge your people ill-served by us, Mage King. But we serve the entire galaxy. The sufferings of a few are balanced by the needs of many.” Her voice signalled an end to the explanation. She looked at Salif, her voice hard, a warning in it. “Tend to your country well, Mage King. And know this. We will not tolerate another reign of terror.”

She turned to me, and this time, her gaze was warm. “Sorceress Raina. Daughter. We have used you as weapon, and we owe you our thanks. You have the gratitude of the Witch Council. Summon us if you ever have need of us.”

A wave of a hand, and she was gone.

I gazed at Salif, afraid of what I would read in his eyes. But he was looking amused. “It appears that I must walk carefully with you, my Raina. You have friends in high places.” He grinned, his smile reaching his eyes, a caress in his voice. “Ah, the games we will play, my queen…”

His eyes promised much. I swallowed; my nipples hardening, betraying my excitement; heat gushing in my pussy. I lowered my eyes, submitting to him completely. “Your will, Mage King.” 

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