01-14-2024, 10:24 PM
In the hushed silence shared between great oak trunks and the inhabitants between, daybreak sun began to hazily filter through the dense canopy top. Slivers of smouldering warmth broke through the stillness, slithering between the whisper of leaves hanging overhead. Through the dim dawn I watched her breaths drawn beneath the fur-lined coverlet we shared. My gaze lingered overlong on the curve of her shoulder, the flirting glimpse of naked flesh leading from the bite-bruised arch of her dainty neck. Primal claim. Archaic meaning to the worshipers of yonder days. It took all of my restraint not to pull her closer against the hewn plane of my chest, to rip away the silk from her milky skin and claim again and again the flesh beneath until I was all but exhausted. I had claimed the lives of three river lords. I have slain my share of mortal men few of whom I dared called friend. My body was the mirror image of a warrior, of an Adonian God carved to the likeness of war-torn Ares now forgotten by these modern times. Why, then, did she make me feel so... weak? There was hesitance in the way my arm snaked away from her sleeping waist to gingerly push away the collar of her nightshirt to fully feast upon the skin beneath. She was velvet where I was grit. Her body was trained for the temple, for kneeling before the statue of my likeness and praying with dulcet words that I may listen, that I may free her people from the torment of the river lords. I would unite them under one king so that they could live in peace without fear of death and dismay. She was soft whereas I was stone. A reminder awakened as the tips of my fingers glissaded down that love-torn flesh with feathered softness, a contrast to the feral, rutting beast the night before. "Stay, my precious Moonlight." I'd murmur against the tempting curve of her ear. Before she could stir I was gone but a short distance from our temporary camp, tossing myself into the cold of the river to scavenge for her a meal to replenish her strength all the while keeping her just in my peripherals. A handful of trout and other native fish were our prize and I didn't waste any time igniting the embers of last night's flame and tossing their corpses upon it. From beyond the dancing light, I watched her, the faintest flick of a smile entertaining my mouth. "We should be getting close now, Moonlight." My voice was rough and deep. A stark contrast to the tone of humans. The vibrant hue of my iris lowered to the flame-scorched wood on the fire. "Are you ready to become a Goddess?" |
Jahi