Apollo Wilde
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- May 13, 2003
- Posts
- 3,112
It was a simple little village, really - hardly more than a glorified collection of multi-colored tents. A few days’ ride away from a moderately sized town kept it from being thought of entirely as a “dot” on the map, as did neighboring villages. It sat on the edge of a ring of oasis that lead out into the endless stretch of the golden desert, a dainty green bauble in an ever growing necklace of civilization. The little villages lived and died next to each other, trading and intermarrying until one family member or the other got a taste of success and moved to the city, never to see the humble encampments except on dire and extraordinary circumstances. Towards the city was the promise of life - in the opposite direction, the sterile sands of the desert. What dwelled beyond the comforting emerald richness was suspect. Some stated bandits; others stated quite simply that death awaited anyone wanting to trek across the desert.
They both would be correct.
Like a plague of locusts, they came. They were in various states of dress, faces masked by fabric dyed such a deep and iridescent blue that it rubbed off on their dark flesh. Gold glinting under the sun, they swarmed in on sturdy legged horses, trilling and ululating like a herd of djinn. At first it seemed a simple raid; valuables were taken and then they rode off, in a cloud of sand, vanishing into the burning glare of the sun. Then it became supplies - horses, food, jugs of water.
But the worst was yet to come.
One day, the women of the villages let out a wail. Their infant sons had been spirited away, carried away on the hot wind. Reports were sent to the town, complaints filed and shuffled through various bureaucracies. A modest enforcement of warriors were sent to the camp. They spent so much time waiting for an attack that ultimately never came that they became part of the village as well, exchanging greetings like those long lost sons. Idle in the oppressive heat, they busied themselves by learning additional trades, milking goats and smoking long stemmed pipes, staring up at the sun filtering through the fork-like leaves of the palms and studying the deep cool of the miraculous desert springs. Years passed, and some warriors left. Others stayed and established families, and thus, the villages slowly reclaimed the sons that they had lost years ago. The town, vaguely concerned, half-heartedly asked for strong men to go to the borders, to stay in the villages.
Heralded by a strange wind and a sun that could not decide if it wanted to rise or set, they came again. Still on the same short and nimble legged ponies, the hoards swept in. But now something had changed. Before, they simply robbed, and only those who fought back were killed. But now, they rode in, swords glinting in the murky red light of pre-dawn, and with astonishing leaps and twists, leapt from the backs of their ponies to do battle within the villages. Women screamed, children wailed, and men bellowed as the sounds of metal clashing against metal echoed in the bowl of the oasis. Swaddled in loose white clothing, the attackers were discernible only by the dark blue cloth they wrapped about their faces and heads to keep out the worse of the sun’s glare. If one got close enough to see what was exposed of their faces, from under the arc of blue cloth, dark skin was carefully tattooed around the eyes, forehead, and under the curves of the eyes. It was only when the sand demons had departed that a great cry went up from the villagers.
Their attackers were women.
One had fallen, after giving grievous wounds to three others and felling four more. Before her body could be utterly desecrated, the villagers gathered round to gawk, to prod. The fallen woman was like any other - she had breasts and no monstrous growths anywhere else. She was fairly young; almost disturbingly so for the havoc that she had caused. Her skin was the dark brown of cured leather, too brown to be simply a tan. Under the deep blue of her head wrap, her hair was shorn short and what was left grew in dense black curls. There was nothing to be learned from the body, no new techniques to use against the strange invaders if they were to come again. There had been no time to question her before she expired, either. So the villages waited, nervously, waiting for the grace of the town and of the gods to bring an end to their misery.
__________
Oya was not a queen. Nor was she a princess. Such words held no standing in their tribe. No, she was the Most Honorable, second to none, the strongest warrior in their tribe and the most aged. She was a woman in her 60s, still trim and deceptively young looking, despite the loss of one eye and the gray of her hair. Indeed, it was the missing eye that won her her title, a title that she guarded jealously. Jealously, but were it for her protege, a younger woman who was walking towards her.
Her tunic still stained with blood, Anat pulled her dark blue wrap from her face. Because of the richness of the fabric, clouds of dark blue sat on her high cheeks, so blue and so dark that it was prominent against her mahogany skin. Black linear tattoos followed the lines of her cheekbones and formed a narrow line from under her lower lip to the tip of her chin. In her ears sat many brass rings, arcing from the tip down to the fleshy lobe. Her eyes were framed by long lashes that were perpetually tan at the tips from riding into the sands, and were so dark brown that it would be easier to call them black. Though blood spattered her tunic, she was fortunate enough not to call any of it her own.
“And what news do you bring me, Honorable Anat?” The name and title were said with a certain fondness. Anat was her daughter, after all, though the laws of their tribe cared scare little for blood bonds. In a tribe where an entire family could be wiped out in a raid, it was easier to consider all members family and not to draw differences because of mere births. Oya, though, did have much to gloat about. Several raids had come and gone, and she had not lost her daughter like others had. If anything, Anat only grew stronger with each raid, and bloomed like a moonflower. Despite the lower station of men in their tribe, Oya had nearly swelled with pride when she saw such lower creatures dare to look after her daughter with something close to lust. For a man to risk death by his eyes was a high compliment indeed, and one that Anat seemed to be entirely indifferent to.
“Hyoshi fell today,” and Anat’s voice was slightly heavy. There would be no tears shed by her - she felt Hyoshi to be a weak warrior. It was more of the shame of having lost someone and thereby risk injury to her title that Anat feared.
“Oh? And of her body?” Oya did not flinch, did not falter. Death was a part of life. She too, had known Hyoshi since she was but a babe. From across the village, she could hear the keening wails of Hyoshi’s birth mother. A shame.
“Left behind. We ran the risk of losing Pani if we stayed behind.”
“A wise choice. Pani is a strong warrior. How does she fare?” Lost bodies too were not uncommon. They were grieved, but not uncommon. It was a rare and precious opportunity to have the time to collect a fallen comrade. Judging by the hurried nature that the usually meticulous Anat showed, it proved to Oya that there might be some formidable warriors among the villages yet. Perhaps a few brought back into the ranks might do the tribe some good. There had been some complaints of the lack of eligible men to sire further daughters on.
“She may very well lose her left leg below the knee. They have new warriors there who are unfamiliar with us.” Anat did not turn her gaze away from the cold stare of Oya’s. To do so would be shamed. Internally, her heart ached. She had loved Pani and her boldness. “They are brave men. Perhaps their bravery rests solely on their foolishness.” This was spoken with awe, only slightly tinted by her disgust. Her disgust was turned inwards; there was no reason why this should not have been a regular raid. It was only her weakness that made them flee today.
“And what do you propose to do? You have lost one and maimed another. This must be rectified.” Oya posed the statement both as a fact and as a question. Were she not so steadily trying to mold Anat in her own fashion, she would have lead the next raid herself to bring back men.
“I will lead a raid tomorrow morning - and kill them all before the sun is high. While they may be expecting another attack, their numbers have been reduced greatly by our warriors, and they are too far from the town to get reinforcements by the morning. Hyoshi will not have died in vain. ”
Oya nodded. “You have planned this well, Honorable Anat. I will be pleased to see your success in the morning.” Pity. But there would be other villages, other men for Anat to gather. The problem with the girl was that she appeared to have no need for men - she found the idea of breeding distasteful after an awkward maidenhood ritual. She had not become with child from the encounter - and had killed her partner as soon as the deed was done. Oya wondered if the girl would ever realize that others among the tribe did crave a man on occasion.
With a bow, Anat went back to her tent. She had much to plan. But something didn't sit right with her.
They both would be correct.
Like a plague of locusts, they came. They were in various states of dress, faces masked by fabric dyed such a deep and iridescent blue that it rubbed off on their dark flesh. Gold glinting under the sun, they swarmed in on sturdy legged horses, trilling and ululating like a herd of djinn. At first it seemed a simple raid; valuables were taken and then they rode off, in a cloud of sand, vanishing into the burning glare of the sun. Then it became supplies - horses, food, jugs of water.
But the worst was yet to come.
One day, the women of the villages let out a wail. Their infant sons had been spirited away, carried away on the hot wind. Reports were sent to the town, complaints filed and shuffled through various bureaucracies. A modest enforcement of warriors were sent to the camp. They spent so much time waiting for an attack that ultimately never came that they became part of the village as well, exchanging greetings like those long lost sons. Idle in the oppressive heat, they busied themselves by learning additional trades, milking goats and smoking long stemmed pipes, staring up at the sun filtering through the fork-like leaves of the palms and studying the deep cool of the miraculous desert springs. Years passed, and some warriors left. Others stayed and established families, and thus, the villages slowly reclaimed the sons that they had lost years ago. The town, vaguely concerned, half-heartedly asked for strong men to go to the borders, to stay in the villages.
Heralded by a strange wind and a sun that could not decide if it wanted to rise or set, they came again. Still on the same short and nimble legged ponies, the hoards swept in. But now something had changed. Before, they simply robbed, and only those who fought back were killed. But now, they rode in, swords glinting in the murky red light of pre-dawn, and with astonishing leaps and twists, leapt from the backs of their ponies to do battle within the villages. Women screamed, children wailed, and men bellowed as the sounds of metal clashing against metal echoed in the bowl of the oasis. Swaddled in loose white clothing, the attackers were discernible only by the dark blue cloth they wrapped about their faces and heads to keep out the worse of the sun’s glare. If one got close enough to see what was exposed of their faces, from under the arc of blue cloth, dark skin was carefully tattooed around the eyes, forehead, and under the curves of the eyes. It was only when the sand demons had departed that a great cry went up from the villagers.
Their attackers were women.
One had fallen, after giving grievous wounds to three others and felling four more. Before her body could be utterly desecrated, the villagers gathered round to gawk, to prod. The fallen woman was like any other - she had breasts and no monstrous growths anywhere else. She was fairly young; almost disturbingly so for the havoc that she had caused. Her skin was the dark brown of cured leather, too brown to be simply a tan. Under the deep blue of her head wrap, her hair was shorn short and what was left grew in dense black curls. There was nothing to be learned from the body, no new techniques to use against the strange invaders if they were to come again. There had been no time to question her before she expired, either. So the villages waited, nervously, waiting for the grace of the town and of the gods to bring an end to their misery.
__________
Oya was not a queen. Nor was she a princess. Such words held no standing in their tribe. No, she was the Most Honorable, second to none, the strongest warrior in their tribe and the most aged. She was a woman in her 60s, still trim and deceptively young looking, despite the loss of one eye and the gray of her hair. Indeed, it was the missing eye that won her her title, a title that she guarded jealously. Jealously, but were it for her protege, a younger woman who was walking towards her.
Her tunic still stained with blood, Anat pulled her dark blue wrap from her face. Because of the richness of the fabric, clouds of dark blue sat on her high cheeks, so blue and so dark that it was prominent against her mahogany skin. Black linear tattoos followed the lines of her cheekbones and formed a narrow line from under her lower lip to the tip of her chin. In her ears sat many brass rings, arcing from the tip down to the fleshy lobe. Her eyes were framed by long lashes that were perpetually tan at the tips from riding into the sands, and were so dark brown that it would be easier to call them black. Though blood spattered her tunic, she was fortunate enough not to call any of it her own.
“And what news do you bring me, Honorable Anat?” The name and title were said with a certain fondness. Anat was her daughter, after all, though the laws of their tribe cared scare little for blood bonds. In a tribe where an entire family could be wiped out in a raid, it was easier to consider all members family and not to draw differences because of mere births. Oya, though, did have much to gloat about. Several raids had come and gone, and she had not lost her daughter like others had. If anything, Anat only grew stronger with each raid, and bloomed like a moonflower. Despite the lower station of men in their tribe, Oya had nearly swelled with pride when she saw such lower creatures dare to look after her daughter with something close to lust. For a man to risk death by his eyes was a high compliment indeed, and one that Anat seemed to be entirely indifferent to.
“Hyoshi fell today,” and Anat’s voice was slightly heavy. There would be no tears shed by her - she felt Hyoshi to be a weak warrior. It was more of the shame of having lost someone and thereby risk injury to her title that Anat feared.
“Oh? And of her body?” Oya did not flinch, did not falter. Death was a part of life. She too, had known Hyoshi since she was but a babe. From across the village, she could hear the keening wails of Hyoshi’s birth mother. A shame.
“Left behind. We ran the risk of losing Pani if we stayed behind.”
“A wise choice. Pani is a strong warrior. How does she fare?” Lost bodies too were not uncommon. They were grieved, but not uncommon. It was a rare and precious opportunity to have the time to collect a fallen comrade. Judging by the hurried nature that the usually meticulous Anat showed, it proved to Oya that there might be some formidable warriors among the villages yet. Perhaps a few brought back into the ranks might do the tribe some good. There had been some complaints of the lack of eligible men to sire further daughters on.
“She may very well lose her left leg below the knee. They have new warriors there who are unfamiliar with us.” Anat did not turn her gaze away from the cold stare of Oya’s. To do so would be shamed. Internally, her heart ached. She had loved Pani and her boldness. “They are brave men. Perhaps their bravery rests solely on their foolishness.” This was spoken with awe, only slightly tinted by her disgust. Her disgust was turned inwards; there was no reason why this should not have been a regular raid. It was only her weakness that made them flee today.
“And what do you propose to do? You have lost one and maimed another. This must be rectified.” Oya posed the statement both as a fact and as a question. Were she not so steadily trying to mold Anat in her own fashion, she would have lead the next raid herself to bring back men.
“I will lead a raid tomorrow morning - and kill them all before the sun is high. While they may be expecting another attack, their numbers have been reduced greatly by our warriors, and they are too far from the town to get reinforcements by the morning. Hyoshi will not have died in vain. ”
Oya nodded. “You have planned this well, Honorable Anat. I will be pleased to see your success in the morning.” Pity. But there would be other villages, other men for Anat to gather. The problem with the girl was that she appeared to have no need for men - she found the idea of breeding distasteful after an awkward maidenhood ritual. She had not become with child from the encounter - and had killed her partner as soon as the deed was done. Oya wondered if the girl would ever realize that others among the tribe did crave a man on occasion.
With a bow, Anat went back to her tent. She had much to plan. But something didn't sit right with her.