Join me in night painted with crimson and black.

Fae are enchanting. Beautiful. And deadly. Cruel like winter morn. And they love a taste of your mortality.

Tiyan Markon didn’t know how his life would turn, how much darkness would slip into it, when he became pursued by the dark fae ruler. Tiyan finds himself in the palace of the fairy, a gruesome pit filled with dark urges and twisted beauty, and isn’t even aware, that the fair folk have plans for him.

“Do you hate me, Leira? With strong, beautiful hatred?”
- Lorian Ain'Dal, chapter "The Withered Bones of Hope IV"
Delightful Youth – IV

“We shouldn’t have go where Tiyo told us.”

“He has the best sense of direction.”

“But he chooses longest paths!”

Tiyan indeed was choosing longest paths. For purpose. Forest was threaded by them many times, every part of it. The groves of birches, white and black bark, silent even during strongest wind. Old willows with long spindly branches hanging over the lake, like a wailing widows waiting for lost husbands. Mysterious but safe enough to fall in love with. A cozy mystery, draped with familiar trees, familiar paths, and beloved sunny spots, where they bathed in warm light. He wanted to taste every moment of being part of the woods. Bright and welcoming, it was his second home.

The forest around Inamora was sunlit and friendly. But the wilderness behind it – not at all. It dragged through many miles and him, Noyd and other children never even tried to delve into it. Even Bollen, the bravest and most curious kid in the group, didn’t even propose a journey into Kolemia woods. Kolemia was dark, dreadful place and even the line separating the Inamora forest with its thick overgrowth, looked like its earth was trampled by giants and left in hummocks to serve as divider between day and night.

Between light and darkness.

And maybe good and evil.

“Tiyo, how well you know this path?”

“This stream shouldn’t be here.”

Tiyan almost stumbled.

Yes. He chose another path when they left Inamora. He was almost sure it’s not the Willow Trail, leading to the pond. And rarely he mistaken.

Noyd silenced the group of children.

“It’s Tiyan. He knows.”

Of course. His guiding skills were almost legendary among his friends. But now, even him started to doubt, if he carries the group in the right direction.

They eventually entered the thicket, which Tiyan definitely didn’t remember. He took pride of knowing almost every tree in these woods. Now, he faced a failure and strange panic entered his heart. Not because he turned out to be an unreliable guide. But because he was almost sure something guides them instead of him and that – that was disturbing.

The birds still were singing. He could hear the steady sound of woodpecker and rustling of a small animal on the right. But he suddenly felt like the forest stopped…

… living.

“I hate hazel” mumbled Bollen, when a twig hit him just in the face and his foot was caught by an unseen root. “It sticks to everything.”

“Tiyo…”

“We are…”

“It’s weird path.”

“Curse this hazel!”

“We—-”

The clearing emerged from the thicket unsuspected and sudden. Before them a meadow spread, not big, but large enough to separate one part of the woods from another. The grass was darker here and almost covered with small violet flowers. They looked like a carpet over grass – and Tiyan thought for a second, that something moves under them.

“Look at these flowers” Noyd was known for liking to press flowers and leaves between two wooden boards, until they become dry and she could glue them to the paper and adorn her room.

“A lot of them” made an obvious observation Bollen.

“This meadow won’t cry after few I take then” the girl pouted and started to pick the tiny violets.

Tiyan though couldn’t stop feeling that something is not right. The clouds which were full and fluffy not long ago, now started look way too similarly to storm ones.

“Noyd… it can rain soon” he tried. “I do not want to stay in woods when the storm comes.”

“You are worrybummy” Bollen snorted and rushed through the blanket made of flowers. “At very least, you will get wet. Are you afraid of getting too wet, Tiyo?”

“No.”

“Tiyan fears rain, Tiyan fears rain” laughed the bigger boy but soon stopped putting needles into Tiyan’s pride and began to examine the meadows. Noyd in the meantime gathered a handful of flowers.

“You will press all?” Tiyan rose a brow in doubt.

“Of course not” Noyd’s smile was ever-knowing. “I will bring some for my mother. Our house will stop smelling of cats.”

Nacara, Noyd’s grandmother – who lived with the family – had too many cats. Tiyan always thought they smell bad, yes, but were so adorable that he could forgive them this slight discomfort. His father, Gravir, didn’t like cats, but held two dogs. Tiyan had to resort to visiting Noyd, to bury his face in the soft fur that smelled not of cats, but of dust and cobwebs.

When Bollen called, Tiyan was so close to pick one flower and offer him to Noyd so she had one from him in her collection, that the friend’s voice pushed a groan of disappointment from his chest.

“Look. Look what I found.”

Tiyan and Noyd approached, trying to not step on too many violets, still stepping on them, as that part of the meadow was almost invisible from under the thick cover they created.

The woods became silent.

The woodpecker stopped hitting with its beak into the bark.

The rustling animals suddenly stopped moving.

Before them lay a circle. Made of green mushrooms, was perfectly round. The mushroom legs were embraced by the dry black grass, like something drank the green from it, to make the shrooms greener. And mushrooms were very green. So green, that tree leaves looked grey next to them.

And in the very middle of the circle, there was a fern.

Blooming fern.

“Oh, goddess…”

Noyd reached to it, but Tiyan hit her delicately on the stretched fingers.

“Why?”

“It shouldn’t be here. Ferns don’t bloom.”

“And when they bloom…”

“… it’s a fairy tale.”

“Tiyo, it’s just a plant. I saw once apples growing on the pear tree.”

“It weren’t apples, Noyd” sighed Tiyan. “They were pears. They looked like apples, it’s a kind of pears that looks like apples.”

“Nevermind. Maybe this fern was touched by magic.” giggled Noyd. “And we will live forever or something as exciting, if we eat it.”

“Eating dirty plants asks for stomach pain.”

“Tiyo! Do not be so stiff.”

Bollen in the meantime lifted a foot but Tiyan, seeing it, pulled him by his shirt.

“Do not enter it. Do you not hear?”

Bollen narrowed brows.

“Do you hear birds? They stopped singing.”

But Bollen just shrugged and accompanied by Tiyan’s protests, he entered the mushroom circle.

“Fool” Tiyan shook his head.

“You are fool. It’s rare that fern blooms. Maybe Bollen can bring it to his sister and she will again talk to him.”

“It’s not normal that fern bloom. Especially surrounded by fluorescent mushrooms.”

“Shut up” Bollen cut the discussion and with one swift move, he picked the fern flower.

Tiyan was sure that woods would become even more silent. A storm will rage or at least a lightning will pierce the clouded air. But nothing like that happened. The woodpecker resumed its search for the beetles instead and a squirrel jumped at the tree nearby, pushing some leaves down.

“And here you have your magic” mocked Bollen. “I will give it to my sister. She can’t be angry, when I gift her something like that.

“Take the leaf too! So she knew it’s fern for sure.”

And Tiyan saw how the black grass slowly starts to untangle from the mushroom feet, reaching for Bollen’s boots. When he blinked, it again stuck thickly to its previous hosts.

*

One week later, Bollen Prechan disappeared and never came back.

Tiyan knew why. But no one would listen.

*

His eyelids were heavy as stone. When he managed to open them, he still lay in blood and guts of his dead sister. The fae leaned above him, with faces like gruesome masks – smiles too wide, eyes too eager, features too sharp. Like plastered to their faces, made of molten darkness. Tiny faeries and High Unseelie, all of them. And all of them focused on him like an audience waiting for his performance. One lower fae had few needles in her hand. Tiyan realized its her fingers.

The small faery was sitting on his chest, supporting himself on his chin. Playing with his lower lip, like it was a musical instrument. He was humming a song, which melody was too alien for Tiyan to follow or understand. His big green eyes looked like ponds, full of duckweed.

Duckweed…

“Will he puke?” he eventually cocked his head. “Puke or not? We love when they can’t hold it up.”

Tiyan threw up. A slush of crimson and brown. Eyes again filled with tears.

“Ah, what a joy! What a joyous deed! He couldn’t hold it up! Oh, the humans, always so intriguing!”



My Beautiful Blood

Areltha boiled. Lorian could almost feel the bubbles of heat on her skin, even if imaginary. She admired him, lusted after him when he was punishing the slaves and he used it against her. Always. Areltha was a ever burning branch which he entangled with poisoned vines, feeding on her fire.

Her husband never understood that. Never got deeper with her. That’s why she left him and fed him. He knew her desire is like a ocean of blood. And she needed the bloody rain to expand, not a dam.

She kissed him voraciously, biting his tongue and drawing his blood. He pressed her between his body and the table. Her room was dark, fairy lights were scarce, but they will arrive soon, driven by the darkness of their passion. His groin pushed between her legs and she opened them, wide. Willing. Desiring him. Just how he liked most. He didn’t even need to touch her yet. She was dripping with lust.

“My lord…” she moaned into his mouth. “Your Majesty…”

He got hard. Fast. His erection rubbed her through his trousers, their need swelling between them.

“You need a slow treatment, Areltha” he purred, clutching at her hips. “Something that will make you beg.”

She nodded eagerly, pushing her hips up, to meet him and press and rub. She was like clay in his hands. Devoted. Deadly.

Stupid like a wild hare.

He never got attached to her, but his loins needed her. Her devotion and charming, desirable stupidity. She was another toy… but of noble lineage.

“Please…” she grunted, when he continued to rub her, edging her spot mercilessly. Her body squirmed. Like fish out of water – and her water was him. “Make me yours again.”

His teeth bit the sensitive skin of her ear petal. She shivered.

“Patience, my Blood.”

She loved that name. Her eyes were like rubies, shining, wide and slanting, reminding him of a wild lakai. Crimson eyes, bloody, like her desire and  ways to reach fulfillment. Nymre called her touched by the empty moon. A time, when fae women bled and could have children. Nymre never ceased to amuse his mind. Her cleverness and sharp tongue.

“My lord…” her crimson eyes suddenly looked at him with maddening intensity. His fingers closed over her jaw and held her. She moaned. Her whole body was softened, ready to receive him. “My lord… I… I know you feel bound to the raven faery…”

Lorian’s talons dug tighter into her cheeks, but Areltha continued.

“I want to give you a gift. Release you. Give you love that you really deserve. Offer you freedom from old bonds.”

His smile didn’t go off his lips. Kind, desirable, beautiful.

Like death in flames.

“I can remove Nymre. Not kill her. Just… remove. She stands between us, and you won’t turn her away. You deserve woman who won’t be quarreling with you, won’t oppose you. You need a woman that will pleasure you, not wound you…”

I need a slave? Lorian chuckled lightly. He had her already, and many other human slaves. And he didn’t plan to marry any of them. This poor woman thought that Nymre will allow her to remove herself. How… deliciously naive. Areltha… good to fuck, but so annoying to talk to.

His grip on her face loosened. Areltha breathed with full chest, wanting to pull him closer, but then, she was tossed against the table. Hard. So hard, that it pushed the air from her lungs. And didn’t allow her to take more.

She started to choke, when Lorian’s shadows started to coil around her limbs, a slow caress, no pain, but not the pleasure too.

Lorian allowed her to gasp and toss, and taking the glass of summer wine, he approached the window. Snowstorm raged outside, easily felt through the magical barrier. His heated skin cooling in the calm breeze, which was true winter – adapted to interior life. He heard gurgling sounds of Areltha behind his back, who tried to scratch her throat, in futile – his shadows were already inside her body.

He released her.

Areltha fell on the ground, eyes wide, her body trembling from pain and fear. Lorian observed her, when she moved in his direction, scrambling on her feet, hands around her throat.

“You are extremely slow, my Blood” he mused and sipped his wine. Sweet, sweeter than winter pears.

Areltha fell on her knees before him. Lorian eyes set at her with a deadly intensity – just like she was looking at him moments ago.  Her shaking hands reached to his trousers and between his legs. Slowly started to undo the material again.

“So that’s how you want to ask for forgiveness?” he laughed, a seductive laugh. His eyes were serious, though, cruel and cold. A void, sucking her all courage in. “Continue then.”

Areltha took him in her hands, whole shaking, and started to rub, slowly – she knew how he liked it. She learnt that through many years.

“My beautiful Blood” his voice was as cold as winter wind. “There are things we never discussed. Things that should be obvious to every Fae in this palace.”

She lowered and her tongue found the tip of his penis. She coiled it around him. And started to suck, looking at him, her body still shivering. Her eyes met his, while she bobbed, trying to coax his mercy.

“If you ever try to harm Nymre. In any way. In any form. You will please me with your innards. I will devour you, Areltha, served on a golden plate. Painfully and gloriously alive.”

She released him from her mouth, still caressing him. Her voice choked inside her throat. She just nodded, slowly.

“I will know, if you move a finger against her” his smile was sweetest than sugar. “And now, I am not pleased with you.”

“Forgive me, my lord” she muttered, raspy and heavily. Lorian buried his fingers in her thick black hair. Her expression was both pained and elated.

She liked that.

Of course she did. He had a type in women.

“You angered me, my Blood.”

“I angered my Lord” she lowered her gaze. Areltha, diving in his displeasure like in sea of sugary honey. Yet… still fearing death more than anything else. He could see her thoughts, frantically insecure, afraid of ultimate end.

“You need to feel it” he lifted her chin. Her lips glistened from sucking him. “You need to understand it.”

“I want to feel your anger” she breathed. Aroused by her own fear.

No one fears better than those who love to be afraid.

And no one wants to live forever as much as them.

He leaned over her, his shadows coiling around her neck again. A moan broke from her, much more needy than before. Her arousal battled with her fear, an amalgamate of intoxicating kind.

“Now…”

His talon slid over her lower lip, parting flesh and squeezing out a single drop of blood.

“… suck.”