Author's Note: I'm still working on Say a Prayer. Sorry for taking so long with it. However, an idea for a short story has been bugging me, and I must write it! It doesn't have much conflict. All graphically sexual descriptions in my stories involve characters that are at least 18 years old, often older than that. It will take a while for sex to start happening. I'm not even sure if this story will be very satisfying. Oh well. Thanks for reading! I appreciate it.
******
It was a very quiet and a very painful summer for her. In spite of the hot weather this evening, Taida Donatal was folded into a desperate ball underneath her bed's covers. Her father's favorite punishment was in effect, off to bed with absolutely no dinner. She could have crept into the pantry to swipe a hunk of cheese or bread away, but if she were caught, that would earn her the second favorite punishment, a beating.
She probably could have taken the beating while full, but not while she was hungry. It wasn't worth the risk.
What had she done to deserve a lack of food? She'd asked him about replacing her lost dowry, a few pieces of jewelry inherited from her late mother. They had been taken from her bedchamber without her consent. Since there were no servants in the house, the only person she could imagine taking the dowry was her father.
"Don't think of yourself, you wretched creature," Mariu Donatal had said to his daughter with a poisoned tone and a livid brow. "This filthy government has nearly ruined me! Now go on to your room. I don't want to see you poking your clumsy fingers in the food. A clear stomach will clear your head. You'll save me some coin while we're at it."
This filthy government ...
A great, stretching gurgle painfully forced itself out of her belly. She cringed and dug her palm there, trying to ease her aching.
Taida had never been overly political. Her father was different. He'd been extremely loyal to the previous king. That was sensible because the king had chosen Mariu Donatal to be his favorite artist. Paintings and sculptures were commissioned, and that led to even more high class customers. Life had been so wonderful with the previous king ... well ... life had been wonderful for Mariu Donatal.
But ... for many people ... it hadn't been so wonderful. Many people saw the king as giddy, cruel, and out of touch with even the upper middle classes, let alone with what the lower classes had to deal with.
Then came the famine, which was caused by an overlong lack of rain.
Did the king open the emergency supply of carefully stored food to the people?
No. He only threw a royal ball to celebrate his birthday.
Her stomach growled again, and she remembered the sight of several hungry beggars in the streets of the capital. Her mother, sweet thing that she was, made a habit of keeping small, wrapped vegetable pies in her pockets and casually placing them into the desperate, dirty hands of as many starving people as possible.
Civil War was inevitable. The men and women that gathered up to fight against the king were called The Givers by the common people because they were known for stealing literal food from the wealthiest pantries and dividing the food among the starving masses. Sometimes they even traveled to nearby countries and stole food from there. The higher classes simply called them The Insurgence.
It turned out that not all of the higher classes were loyal to the king, however. Some were happy to help fund an army against him. Despite that fact, the leader of The Givers wasn't a man with a noble title, at least as far as anyone knew. He was proud to announce to all who asked that he was the son of a blacksmith and a whore.
But that man ... he'd become the new king ... and it turned out that in some cases he didn't exactly need an army, because somehow, some way, he'd learned sorcery. Wild stories of fire and shadows being used as weapons against the body and mind soaked into the nation like water to a sponge.
He was every bit as vicious as the former king. Every single aristocrat that refused to kneel to him was beheaded, and not with a guillotine. Oh no, the new king used an usually large sword that glowed with an eerie green flame.
Well, the exact method of killing them was a rumor. All Taida knew was that they had been killed.
His Royal Majesty, Rutiago Severtana I, was in charge of the great nation of Boscira. Most of Mariu Donatal's customers were dead, and he was too stubborn to accept any customer who was loyal to the new king, which meant that there were almost no customers. He had to settle for teaching his crafts at a university, which meant they had to a move to different part of the capital. The pay wasn't much, but it was something.
The stupidest and possibly most insulting part was how there had been a few requests from the new king to have Mariu Donatal create works of art for him, as the old king had. Her father had too much pride for that. He'd rather suffer as a teacher.
Not only did they have no more servants, which wasn't particularly awful, but they had to slowly sell off all their treasures. Taida supposed that one must do what one must to survive ... but ... but ... she was going hungry as if they had no room in the budget! There wasn't even a famine anymore!! The image of Mariu Donatal's rather round belly poking out under his dark blue tunic made her want to chew her fingernails and suck on her thumb. At least the sweaty, salty taste might soothe her cravings.
And her dowry ...
Did he really need to sell that bit of treasure too?
Without an adequate dowry, a suitable marriage would be difficult. Not only that, but Taida was well aware of how her physical beauty was gradually evaporating. Lack of proper nutrition did that to people. No dowry, no beauty, all that meant was that a good marriage for her was out of the question. She was ruined.
Tears leaked between her closed eyelids as she began whining as a sad puppy would. Her face became wet and hot. Her pillow was soon damp.
Her brutal mind was teasing her, dropping memories of delicious, wonderful food into her thoughts. The sights ... the smells ... the tastes ...
Sliced of toasted bread, soaked in a jelly made of egg yolk, rosewater, and wine. Then fried. Then saffron and honey added on top.
Bacon flavored broth with thick vegetable chunks and plain dumplings.
Buttery rice gruel with scrambled eggs, salted to perfection.
Roasted beef served with a bowl of firm but easily chewed beans and a side of potato slices carefully fried so that the outside was crispy but the inside was fluffy.
A large potato with thick slices of meaty bacon wrapped and tied about it. Baked so that the juices of the bacon would seep into the potato, making every single bite taste like the best of pork.
Shiny, hard boiled eggs, salt lightly added.
Openly, without any shame, Taida wailed and sobbed. Her fingers slid up to her throat, where a plain necklace waited to be fidgeted with. It was made of a leather string and a common pebble serving as a pendant. As her nails tapped the little stone, she almost felt a shaving of hope. This was a good luck charm, wasn't it? She imagined so. She couldn't remember the exact reason for keeping the cheap thing, but she did believe it had something to do with luck.
BANG!! BANG!! BANG!!
"Hey, are you Miss Taida Donatal?"
"Hmmmmmmmmmmgggggggggnnnnn!!" Taida groaned as the unknown voice interrupted her crying.
"Miss Donatal?" More banging on the door. "We require your family's presence at the royal castle. I'm here with an official order from His Majesty himself."
What? Oh no.
Taida thought she knew why. King Rutiago was offended at all of the refusals. He wanted blood.
And there was no way out of it. When a king had his mind set on something, he could send an entire army to help him accomplish a goal.
She was defeated before she even had a chance to fight.
A bit of dizziness bothered her as she tried to come out of bed. It was an unfortunately well known occurrence. She clenched her thighs and screwed her eyes shut, waiting for the watery, bobbing feelings to go away. Then she called out to the voice outside her door, "I'm coming!"
"I suggest you pack a bag. You might stay there a good while." Was that a man's or a woman's voice?