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The Black Witch


I wrote this story a few weeks after writing "A Warrior Reborn," and, truth be told, I only vaguely knew where it was going to go when I started. I knew only that I wanted to follow Tristan's journey, and so I have. I actually consider this my best story in the TG Genre, and I hope you all enjoy it as much as I enjoyed writing it.

Here it is, the second part of this untitled trilogy. I haven't written the third part, and I'm not sure when I'll get around to it. If I get a good enough response, I'll probably get to it sooner rather than later. So those of you who really enjoy it, don't hesitate to let me know. Anyway, here it is.


The Black Witch
by
Nikki J

Tristan paced the battlefield, his long strides covering twice the

distance of most other men. His long, golden locks fluttered in the

gentle, wandering breeze. That wind carried with it the evidence of

that day's battle - a horrid stench of death and decay. As if he

couldn't see it with his own eyes. Bodies were strewn everywhere; some

were his men. Others were the enemy. The country of the dead men's

allegiance mattered not at all to the crows picking at their flesh.



Tristan wondered whether or not it had been worth it. Probably not.

One life can not outweigh the thousands killed on that battlefield. He

stepped over the bodies, careful not to trip. In the distance, he could

see the castle; it was huge, domineering, and dark. That was his goal,

and he confidently walked toward it. Tristan didn't need anyone else

with him. No one left alive in that castle would dare challenge him.

However, he did keep a sharp eye out for arrows; even under the flag of

truce, he wouldn't put it past the brigands to fire at him.



He neared the castle, and no arrows came. More, though, the forbidding

facade of the building began to fade as he stepped ever closer. The

walls were near to crumbling, the gate barely hung on its hinges, and

the ramparts were completely unmanned. No, it wasn't a fortress. It

was a ruin.



Tristan stood only feet away from the huge but derelict gate, and

pounded on it with his massive fist. The sound seemed to echo.



"Oi! If you let her go now, we'll let you live. If not, you will all

die. Decide soon, for we will be inside the castle within the hour,"

his deep baritone bellowed. When no answer came, Tristan turned, and

walked away.



The twang of a bowstring was all Tristan needed. On the quiet

battlefield, he could hear it quite clearly. He whipped around, and,

quick as a striking mongoose, snatched the arrow from the air scant

inches from his chest. He tossed it down with disdain, like it was

barely worth the effort to catch. Turning back around, he walked back

to his army.



"Guess we have their answer, then," one of his captains said. Tristan

only nodded. "No point in waiting. I'll ready the men."



And off he went,



*



A little less than an hour later, Tristan's men had the gate down, and

were pouring into the castle's courtyard. Tristan, of course, led the

charge himself. There weren't many defenders, and none could stand

before Tristan's mighty blade as he swung it to and fro, cleaving men in

twain. Blood, entrails, and the cries of dying men filled the air.

Tristan paid none of it any heed. He had his mission; he knew where he

was going. The castle's single tower beckoned. That's where she would

be.



He shouldered through the door at the base of the tower, knocking it

from its hinges. Mounting the steps three at a time, he raced up the

tower, the sounds of battle fading behind him. He ran easily, for he

was a pinnacle of human endurance, strength, and willpower. So, he

reached the top of the steps barely winded, and took in the scene before

him.



There she was, dressed all in white - the beautiful Princess Dierdre.

She had been visiting from a far away nation when she had been kidnapped

by a local highwayman. But then Tristan noticed the man in the room.

He was nearly as big as Tristan himself, and equally impressive.

Muscles bulged from his sleeveless leather jerkin, and Tristan's warrior

instinct recognized that the man was a formidable opponent. He carried

a pair of short swords at his hip.



"The mighty Tristan," the big man said. "I've heard of you. This ought

to be fun."



Tristan did not respond, but instead whipped his sword around, aiming

for a quick kill. Quicker than Tristan would have thought possible, the

man's twin short swords came up, parrying the blow. And then he

attacked, sending blow after furious blow at Tristan, who struggled

mightily to avoid being sliced to ribbons.



Never before had he encountered a foe of such staggering ability. It

was unnatural. Even as he fought with every ounce of skill he

possessed, Tristan knew that he was outmatched. Tristan, however, was

not one to give in to defeat so easily. In fact, he was not the type to

give in at all. If the other man wanted victory, he would have to

snatch it from Tristan's dead fist.



Concentration. Sweat. Anger. Pain. Weariness. And finally, fear.

Tristan knew he was on the verge of losing his life. After what seemed

like hours of fighting, his nearly endless stamina began to fade, and

still, his opponent fought with the same unnatural vigor.



Then, fatigue having taken its toll on both Tristan's mind and his body,

he made a mistake. His opponent seized it eagerly, and Tristan felt the

bite of a short sword on his wrist. He heard his sword clatter to stone

floor, and saw his hand flying through the air, severed from his body.



Tristan fell to his knees, clutching the bloody stump where his hand had

been.



"Who are you?" he asked through gritted teeth.



The man did not answer. He just smiled a crooked, mirthless smile, and

raised one of his swords.



The last thing Tristan saw was the flash of that sword as it arced

through the air towards his exposed neck. He couldn't move. He wanted

to, and he should have been able to, but something prevented the action.

Instead, he simply sat there on his knees, waiting. Time slowed, and

his fear began to mount.



He wasn't strong. He was weak - as weak as a kitten. Sure, his body

was physically impressive, and he was a talented killer, but in his

mind, in his soul, he was feeble. For all of his life, he had used

violence as a crutch, propping up his fragile life. Strange, that it

took impending death to show him the error of his ways. His life was a

lie. He was no champion. He was just a frightened child who had

squandered his gifts in favor of his own selfish needs and wants. He

was a killer, a murderer, and in that moment, just before he was about

to die, he was ashamed.



The sword descended, and Tristan closed his eyes, waiting for the moment

of his death. He hoped that the stories of some supreme, judgmental

being who presided over the afterlife was false. He wanted his farce of

an existence to end, so he could embrace the blackness of nothingness.



*



Tristan awoke with a start, and for a brief second had no idea what was

going on. He tried to slow his breathing, but his heart felt like it

was beating through his chest. The dream had been so real; in fact, it

had happened once, long ago. He remembered it well. However, in

reality, there had never been a confrontation at the top of that tower.

He had simply rescued the woman, and returned her home. Before that,

though, she had thanked him, and properly. Tristan still remembered

that night well; she had been very enthusiastic.



"What's wrong? Another nightmare?" Tristan heard Arista ask. He

turned, and saw her propped on one elbow, looking at him concernedly.



"I'm okay," he replied, but hardly believed it himself. Arista put her

arm over him protectively, and hugged him close. It felt good. Tristan

felt safe.



He thought back to how he had come to be in that situation, where he

needed a woman to hold him in order to feel secure. It had all started

a little over two years previous. He had been captured during a battle,

and then, imprisoned. There, the very woman he now clung to so

fervently had cast a spell on him, transforming him from the nearly

seven foot warrior into an effeminate weakling. Over the course of

months, he had shrunk to a little over five feet tall, and his body had

changed to mirror a woman's, save a few key differences. He had no

breasts, of course, and he had a penis, albeit a very small, barely

functional one.



Then came the mental changes. Arista had changed both his sexual

preference and the type of sex he found pleasurable. Before, he had

been a normal heterosexual male, but after Arista was done, he craved

the touch of men, and quite enjoyed having sex with them. He still did,

as a matter of fact. He had spent nearly two years as a captive, a year

of which was spent as little more than a sex slave. But over time,

Arista's true nature became apparent. She had not wanted to change him;

she had little say in the matter.



The two became lovers, though Tristan felt little attraction toward

women. However, he did feel affection for Arista, and the two grew ever

closer. Finally, when Tristan returned home to bid farewell to his

family (he and Arista had decided to flee together), it was revealed

that his own brother had been behind it all, and had magically compelled

Arista to comply with his wishes. It had all been a bid (successful, at

that) to acquire the throne.



Then and there, despite two years of conditioning, Tristan had snapped,

and had become the warrior once again. But he didn't have the strength

to go with that nature, so he had been easily slapped aside. He was on

the verge of death when Arista saved his life with a killing spell.



The two had been fleeing ever since, searching for a safe haven. It had

been two months since Arista had killed the king, and they had been

pursued by Einar and Honus (their respective countries) for the

entirety.



And so Tristan found himself, small, weak, effeminate, and quite pretty,

being held in Arista's much stronger arms. He had been conditioned to

act as a lady, and wore the accoutrements of such a station. Arista had

offered to change him back, but he had refused. That man was dead. The

warrior was gone. Tristan didn't think he could return to that sort of

life of violence, even if he wanted to (and he didn't). Violence had

gotten him nothing, and he simply wanted to live what was left of his

life in peace.



He sighed, and closed his eyes, hoping for sleep that would not come.



*



Tristan was still awake when Arista awoke the next morning. She kissed

his forehead, and said, "Good morning."



Tristan smiled at her, but said nothing. He knew the effect he had on

Arista, and that morning was no different. She kissed him full on the

lips, her tongue mingling with his. Arista's hands crept under

Tristan's shift and fondled his small penis, which stiffened slightly.

Tristan was grateful for that; it wasn't that long ago that he was

physically incapable of responding to a woman's touch.



The two kissed for a few minutes, until Arista guided Tristan's shift

off. There he lay, completely naked, his feminine form exposed to his

lover as her mouth left trails of kisses all over his body. She paid

special attention to his nipples, which were as sensitive as any

woman's. He moaned each time her tongue flicked across them.



Finally, Arista's mouth traveled between Tristan's legs, and she took

his penis and testicles into her mouth all at once. Slipping a finger

into his anus, she worked it in and out while sucking his shrunken

member. It was heaven for Tristan, who let out little whimpers of

pleasure throughout. Finally, with a gasp, he came, shooting an

impressive amount of semen into Arista's mouth.



When Tristan's body relaxed, Arista climbed on top of him, and kissed

him, transferring the semen into his mouth. She always liked to do

that, he knew. Tristan swallowed it.



"My turn," Arista said, stripping off her own shift. Tristan marveled

at her body. She was much taller than him, and her skin dark. Her

breasts were large, and her body curvacious.



She straddled Tristan, and leaned in, letting him tongue her nipples for

a few moments while she ground her crotch against his. Tristan was soft

again, but it didn't really matter. His penis was small enough that he

he couldn't really penetrate her anyway. She rolled off of him, and

spread her legs. He knew what she wanted, so he positioned himself

between them, and lowered his face into her nether region.



He licked, he lapped, and his fingers penetrated. Tristan knew Arista's

body better evem than he knew his own; he had performed fellatio on

her so often. And it was only a matter of minutes before Arista's body

was rocked by a series of convulsions accompanied by screams of

pleasure. Tristan kept going, for he took great pride in his ability to

give pleasure - a remnant of his year as a sex slave.



As Arista panted, Tristan slowed his efforts, licking only once every

few seconds. Finally, Arista's hand brushed his cheek, and then tilted

his chin back. Arista stared at him with such love that Tristan

couldn't help but feel it in return. He climbed on top of her, and lay

there, kissing his lover gently. His weight was hardly a problem, and

Arista held him, gently caressing his rear end.



"I love you so much," she said.



"I love you too," Tristan answered.



"Your nightmare," she said after a few moments of blissful silence. "Was

it the same as before?"



"Yes and no," Tristan replied. "Same basic premise, different situation.

It's not a mystery what it means. I am ashamed of my former life in

reality as much as in the dream. It is nothing."



"If you say so," Arista said. Then, she changed the subject, suggesting

that they needed to get up, and get going.



"But where to?" Tristan asked. "Where will we not be hunted?"



"I don't know. If we can get outside either Einar's or Honus'

influence, I might be able to hide us," Arista suggested. "That is the

only plan I have been able to come up with, at least."



"It's thin," Tristan stated. "Very thin."



"Or you could take the throne," Arista suggested.



"Like this? Not likely," Tristan responded.



"I can change you back. You can be the --" Arista began, but was

interrupted by Tristan.



His voice was more forceful than anytime he could remember when he said,

"I will not go back to being that person. What I was...it was wrong. I

will not risk becoming that person again."



"Then we have no choice but to continue our flight," Arista said as she

pulled on a riding dress. Tristan was doing the same, though he noted

that his was quite a bit more feminine than Arista's more utilitarian

design.



They ate a small breakfast at the inn in which they had stayed the

night, and paid the innkeeper - a small, rotund woman. Afterward, they

went to the stables and reacquired their horses. Less than half an hour

later, the couple was riding along a harldy distinguishable road through

the countryside, only barely knowing their real destination. They

simply wanted to get as far away from the rival nations of Honus and

Einar as they could.



Arista and Tristan had abandoned their carriage in favor of their

horses, selling the vehicle for traveling money. Also, they had changed

clothes from their incredibly frilly and elaborate court dress to more

modest working-class attire. However, nothing could hide the fact that

they were not the sum of their possessions. They were rich, and carried

themselves as such; no amount of peasant clothes could change that.



Stopping to rest near a tiny stream, Tristan dismounted, and stretched

his legs. There was a time when he could ride for an entire day with no

discomfort. But that was long ago, and he had been a far different

person. He sat down next to Arista, and the two ate travel rations

without enjoyment. Both were used to far different fare, and regarded

the tasteless lumps of bread and dried meat with ill-disguised contempt.

Tristan barely ate anything.



He knew he should be happy. He was free, or freer at least than he had

been for years, and he had the love of a strong, fine woman. Even

amidst their mad flight from their pursuers, he felt lucky. But he

couldn't shake his unease. Something was wrong, but he couldn't quite

put his finger on just what it was. He knew it wasn't anything

external, no lurking danger, but it was real all the same. It was a

problem in his mind, some stray thoughts in the back of his brain that

said that his situation was all wrong. He pushed those thoughts away,

and focused on Arista.



He did love her, that much he knew, but his physical attraction to her -

or to any woman - was lukewarm at best. He had made strides in that

respect, however. Only three months previously, Tristan had felt

absolutely no attraction. Only since the encounter with King Frederick

had that begun to change. Perhaps time would cure the additional lack.



After they ate, the two mounted their horses, and continued along the

trail, which allowed Tristan the opportunity to ponder his feelings for

his companion.



Was attraction - physical and sexual - absolutely necessary for love?

He had always thought so. In fact, throughout his life, he had used

lust and love almost interchangeably. But there he was, his love for

Arista absolute, and he knew that she was not even close to his ideal

sexual partner. She wasn't even the right gender. As much as he wanted

it to be different, he was not willing to take that step, and allow

Arista to change him back to the man he once was. She had claimed that

it was the only way for him to regain his past sensibilities toward

women. Tristan knew only a few things for certain, but he did know that

he was absolutely not prepared to pay that price. He would not become

that person again.



His mind delved more deeply into his reasoning as he rode. It wasn't

any one thing, really. The biggest reason, of course, was that he

didn't want to become a violent killer again, but it was more than that.

Thoughts of Arista guided his mind toward his former attitude toward

women. He had taken whoever he wanted, slept with countless women. He

had been completely dominant, and had no cares for their feelings. He

couldn't tolerate becoming that monster once again, and he knew that the

physical change was the first step. Tristan could not let the process

even begin; he simply did not trust himself to resist those violent

urges.



When the sun began to dip behind the horizon, Arista and Tristan were

too far into the wilderness to hope for any sort of inn or hostel in

which to spend the night, so they made camp a little off of the trail.

They didn't make love that night, but instead, merely held one another,

hoping to keep warm as the night's temperature dropped.



Tristan fell asleep, his mind still occupied by a dreadful foreboding.



*



His unease was well-founded, for when his eyes fluttered open the next

morning, he looked up to see a pair of burly men. Tristan's arms were

still wrapped around Arista, so when he tensed, she was awake

immediately. She sprang from the ground, muttered one unintelligible

word, and a fireball sprang to her fingertips. She held it there, her

arm cocked, and said, "Who are you, and what do you want?"



Tristan was frozen. He had no idea what to do. He looked back and

forth between Arista and the men for a few seconds before one of the big

men said, "Well, ain't that a surprise?"



Tristan came back to himself, and said, "Take whatever you want. We

have money. Just take it and leave." He reached for his bags, detached

a large money purse, and tossed it towards the men. It caught in mid-

air as Arista uttered another word. It slowly floated back to her.



"No. Leave and you might live. Stay, and I'll kill you both," Arista

said. Tristan began to speak, but Arista cut him off, "Quiet! Let me

handle this."



Tristan obeyed, feeling small and insignificant when faced with such

danger. The two men didn't move a muscle.



One, the smaller of the two (though he was still quite a big larger than

either Arista or Tristan), stepped forward, and said, "Chuck that

fireball, missy, if you dare. But know that if'n you miss, you ain't

gonna get off another one." He pointed to his companion, a bearded

grizzly bear of a man, and then back at himself. "There're two of us,

ya see."



Another word, and Arista had a second fireball in her other hand. "I've

two fireballs, then. One for each of you."



"A stand off then, is it?" the smaller, bald man asked. "So be it. Do

what --"



Arista released her balls of fire, sending them straight at the chests

of the respective men. A split second passed, and Tristan saw the big,

hairy man look down at a where the fireball had passed clean through

him. The smell of burnt flesh filled the air, and the hole sizzled. He

looked back up, and then collapsed, dead before he hit the ground.



Before Tristan could even look at the other man, a harsh laughter filled

the air. Male laughter. His eyes found the bald man who was the source

of that mirthless sound. The fireball hadn't been nearly as effective

on him, but not for lack of aim. A round hole had been burned through

his tunic but the skin beneath remained unscathed. He continued to

laugh as he reached through the opening of his collar, and pulled out a

medallion on a leather thong.



"Those sorts of tricks don't work on me, love. Shame about Billy

though. He was a stupid lout, but he was a good one in a fight. Now,

you gonna go quietly, or am I gonna have to get nasty with ya?" he asked

with menace.



Arista didn't answer, but instead, bounded towards the man. She tackled

him, and, using her fingers like claws, gouged deeply into his face.

The advantage gained by her surprise attack was short lived, however,

and the man soon had Arista's wrists in his meaty hands. He rolled her

over, and pinned her to the ground.



Tristan cowered in fear, trying to make himself as small as possible.

He wasn't scared of the man himself. He was terrified, instead, of the

situation. Tristan was afraid to help his lover, but scared at what

might happen if he didn't. Indecision froze him, and fear at taking

that first step kept him there long after the indecision faded.



He watched, horrified, as the man held both of Arista's wrists in one

hand as he hiked up her dress with the other. He forced her legs open,

and pulled out his member. He tried to kiss her, but she bit his cheek.



"Oh, I like me a feisty one," he said with an insane smile.



And then Arista screamed as the man plunged into her. The rape was over

in mere minutes, but for Tristan it seemed to last hours. He simply

couldn't move. Doubts flooded his mind. What could he do anyway? He

was helpless. What if he acted, and failed? Would he kill Arista?

Would Tristan's life be forfeit?



More, though, he couldn't move because his mind had formed a block

against violence. It had started with a spell - Arista had cast it

herself - designed to keep him from harming his sexual partners when

they were vulnerable. But even after the spell had been lifted, the

psychological impact had remained. That, coupled with Tristan's fervent

fear of becoming again the man he once was, made it nearly impossible

for him to act violently.



Ironic, he would think years later, that Arista was the person who had

planted the seeds that prevented Tristan from helping her.



*



Thin ropes cut into Arista's wrists as she struggled against her bonds.

She knew it would do little good,; the nameless man had tied the knots

carefully. Her eyes wandered to Tristan, who leaned against the cave

wall, staring back at her. She wanted to say something so badly, to

comfort her lover, but a dirty cloth had been shoved into her mouth.



The rape had been devastating to Arista, and she had cried for hours,

even as the man had led Tristan and her to the nearby cave. She knew it

was natural to be upset, but her tearsangered her; Arista was

embarrassed by what she considered a sign of weakness. But she hadn't

been able to stop them anymore than she had been able to keep the man

from raping her.



Physically, she wasn't really hurt, which surprised her. She had seen

many victims of rape before, and most had carried physical injuries.

Aside from soreness, she felt little pain. However, mentally, the

wounds were deep and plentiful. Nothing could have prepared her for the

pain, the anger, or the feeling of helplessness which had accompanied

the dastardly deed. But that wasn't the extent of it, for before the

rape, Arista had never been with a man (she had always preferred women),

had never been penetrated, much less so roughly.



She had always relied on her magic, and rightly so. It had never failed

her before that day when she had needed it most. Her mind wandered back

to a similar instance years earlier, when her lover, her beautiful

Tristan had suffered a similar fate. Two guards had raped him right in

front of her, and she had let them. Even then, she had been sympathetic

to his plight, though she had struggled to keep it hidden. But, having

lived through a rape herself, she had a newfound respect for Tristan.

How had he done it? How had he picked up the pieces so quickly? Why

didn't he hate her?



But as Arista looked into Tristan's eyes, she saw not even a hint of the

hate she felt she deserved. All she saw was concern for a loved one,

and that made her feel even worse. Love. She had only felt it once in

her life - not even the love of family had graced her existence, for her

parents had died when she was very young. She didn't even remember

them, not really. Tristan was all she had, and for the life of her, she

couldn't understand why he returned her love.



Arista knew that Tristan's attraction for her was limited, and that she

was partially to blame for it. She had used a complicated spell to

change his sexuality, after all. That he had somehow managed to break

through it, albeit only partially, was a testament to Tristan's

willpower. Even so, Tristan was willing to look past the fact that

Arista was a woman, and he wanted to be with her. If that wasn't love,

she didn't know what was.



Sitting there, completely helpless, and with turmoil dominating her

mind, she resolved to wait. Eventually, the man would make a mistake,

and Arista would seize it. He had secured them both in the cave, and

then had disappeared. She knew it was only in her mind, but she could

smell his sour breath and hear his heavy breathing. Where had he gone?

She could only guess. And wait. The time would come, and Arista vowed

to be ready, and not just for herself. Tristan needed her.



*



It was hours later before the stocky man returned, but he did not come

alone. With him was a tall, slender man with an immaculately trimmed

beard, dark hair, and a hawk nose.



"Oh, you did well, Barney. You did well, indeed," the slender man

stated. "That one," he pointed to Arista, "is a magician, you say?"



"Aye," Barney replied. "She held two fireballs at once, she did. I'm

no expert, but I know that ain't typical."



"No, not at all," the tall man said. He tossed a large purse at Barney,

who caught it, and continued, "You did not lie. As agreed, you will

receive the other half when we get them to my estate."



"Thank you, Lord Wallach," Barney said, inclining his head in deference

to the other man.



Wallach. The name was familiar to Arista, but she could not place it.

Lord Wallach approached her, and placed a small, sliver bracelet around

her wrist. Immediately, she felt it, and knew what the bracelet was - a

means of control. He reached up, and removed the gag.



"Do you know who I am?" he asked. Arista shook her head, unwilling to

speak. Her mind raced, as she expected to have to tell a story about

who she was. The truth wasn't an option. "Well, let me educate you.

My name is Wallach. Barney here called me a lord, but that's not really

true. I don't hold any title. No, I am a simple merchant. Now, tell

me who you are."



"I am a magician from across the sea," Arista said.



"And that one?" Wallach asked, pointing to Tristan.



"My servant," Arista answered without hesitation. She knew that

classification as a servant would rankle on Tristan, but it was

unavoidable.



Wallach looked at Tristan, and said, "Strange, a servant who dresses

better than the mistress." He shrugged. "It does not matter. Why are

you here and not across the sea where you belong?"



"I am on the run from a death warrant," Arista stated simply. A lie

which is close to the truth is always best, she knew.



"Interesting," he said. "But largely irrelevant. You are both slaves,

now, and will be sold within the month. You know what this is?" He held

up the bracelet. Arista nodded. "Then you know that if you should

choose to use your powers without permission, it will cause quite an

intense pain. Do not test it."



Arista nodded, knowing that he spoke the truth. She wouldn't free

herself through magic, not while the bracelet remained. She had used

similar items before, and Arista knew that she wouldn't be able to

remove it herself, either. She sighed.



"Gather them," Wallach said to Barney. "And bring them to my estate.

Your payment shall await you there. You may keep their belongings."

And the ducked out of the cave.



*



Arista rode her horse with her head held high. Barney had removed her

bonds, but she had gone quietly. She knew that she would stand little

chance in a physical confrontation with the much larger, much stronger

man.



They traveled for most of that day, through rolling hills, until they

approached a well groomed manor. The lawn was fantastic, with towering

oaks and bushes trimmed into fantastic shapes. A single road cut

straight through, and Arista saw the castle even from afar. Parapets

jutted from the walls, and towers loomed. It was a palace to rival any

she had seen, and Arista had seen quite a few.



The effect of the building grew as their horses carried them ever

closer. Arista's heart sank. This was not the home of some minor

brigand with delusions of grandeur. No, it was the home of someone

quite successful at whatever it was he did, and as such, probably quite

intelligent. She wouldn't be free as easily as she had expected.



A pair of guards stood in front of the main gate, and they were let into

the courtyard where they were met by another man who gave Barney another

purse of coins, and took custody of Tristan and Arista. They were

then led into the palace itself, and through its richly decorated halls.

Plush rugs, rich tapestries, and exquisite paintings caught Arista's

eye, and she was even more intimidated. It rivaled even the palace at

Einar, where she had lived for nearly a decade. Who was this Wallach?



Tristan's small hand found Arista's, and she buried her trepidation deep

in the back of her mind. She had to be strong for him. He needed her.



Turning here and there, Arista was quickly lost. The man who led them,

however, stepped surely and obviously knew where he was going. Finally,

he stopped in the middle of the hall. A door stood on either side of

them, and he said, "You." he gestured to Arista. "In there." He pointed

to the door at Arista's left. And you, in there." He indicated that

Tristan should go in the opposite door.



Tristan looked at Arista, a plea in his eyes, but he drifted away, his

hand clinging to Arista's until the last second. It caressed hers, even

as he pulled away. With one last backward glance, he disappeared into

the room, and the door shut behind him. With a deep breath, Arista

threw her shoulders back, held her head high, and entered the other

room.



What she saw was more than a little surprising. A team of servants

stood poised around a huge copper bathtub, sponges and pitchers at the

ready. She was ushered inside, and a pair of servants helped her out of

her dress. She stood there naked for only a brief moment before one of

the servant women told her to get into the tub.



She took a step and lowered her foot into the steaming tub; it was much

warmer than she would have liked it, but not uncomfortable. As she

lowered herself into the hot water, she couldn't help but relax a little

- until she remembered Tristan. They would soon discover that he wasn't

a woman. What would they do? Would they guess who he was? Certainly,

word of the fall of mighty Prince Tristan would not have reached this

far. Arista could only hope as the servants proceeded to clean her

every crack and crevice.



*



Having been cleaned, clothed (in expensive garments of silk), and made

up, Arista was led out of the room, and into the hall where Tristan

waited. He looked up at Arista apologetically; they had obviously seen

the evidence of his masculinity. Neither were allowed to speak,

however, and the man who had been their guide before became so again.

He led them through the spacious, expensively furnished halls once

again. That time, however, the trip wasn't nearly as lengthy; they

arrived at their destination only a few minutes later.



He pushed the door open, held it ajar, and indicated for the couple to

enter. Arista went first, Tristan clutching her hand like his life

depended on it...which it might just have. When she walked inside, she

saw Wallach lounging in a leather chair with a glass of some liquor in

his hand. He took a sip, and waved for the servant to shut the door.



He stood, and said, "Let me get a good look at you two." Wallach walked

around them, and Tristan squeezed Arista's hand. Arista looked neither

left nor right, but instead, kept her her chin up and her gaze

unwavering, and tried to look as regal as possible.



"Very nice," Wallach said as he completed the circuit. He looked at

Tristan, and said, "I've heard of boys like you that prefer to live life

like a woman, but I must say that you are easily the most beautiful I've

seen. You should have been born a woman, that much I can tell."



He sat back down, and continued, "I know the story you gave me isn't

true, but to be honest, I don't really care. Who you are is of little

consequence to me. The timing of your arrival, however, is quite

fortuitous...for me at least. I am holding an auction in a couple of

days, you see, for special slaves. You two qualify as such, and I

expect I shall get more for you than for the rest of the slaves put

together. In the meantime, please, do not try to escape or cause any

trouble. I'd hate for either of you to get injured. And besides, it's

not a bad life. You shouldn't fight it. I don't know where you two

come from, or what sort of life you've led until now, but you will be

treated well. A person doesn't spend a small - or in your case, a large

- fortune for a slave only to mistreat them, after all. Any questions?"

Neither Tristan nor Arista spoke. "Good. You are dismissed. Geoffrey

out there will lead you to your quarters."



*



Arista felt ridiculous. She was completely naked, save the bracelet on

her wrist, and she stood in a line of naked women. Tristan stood in

front of her, and kept looking back, as if to ask how they were to get

out of that mess. Even if they had been allowed to talk, Arista had no

answers. She simply had no idea what to do. If only she could have

gotten that damned bracelet off, she would have had any number of ideas,

but it was impossible. She was trapped.



The line moved slowly, and she heard a low murmur of voices from the

next room. An auction of people -- the idea horrified her. Slavery had

been outlawed in most civilized nations, but just as with everything,

enough money could get around that particular law. And this Wallach, it

seemed, had made quite a lucrative living off of preying on those who

wished to circumvent it.



Gradually, Arista moved closer to the door, until she could hear Wallach

describing his wares. He rambled on about the virtues of each woman,

about how exotic they were, or from where they had come. A few had

useful skills, most of which dealt with some sort of craft combined with

magic (such as a jewelry maker who could infuse her trinkets with arcane

properties), but underlying it all was a sexual tone. They were naked

so that the buyers could gauge how healthy they were, but also so they

could see the added benefit of a sex slave.



Finally, only Tristan stood in front of her. She leaned in, and

whispered, "Be strong. If we are separated, I will find you." She

kissed his cheek.



A few seconds later, Tristan was led into the room, and Arista heard a

gasp, followed by Wallach's slimy voice.



He said, "Ah, so you see how unique this little strumpet is, do you? He

is quite unique, though he has no real use other than as a member of

your harems. But what a piece to add to your collection! It will take

a special sort of buyer to appreciate this gem, however. I will begin

the bidding at a thousand gold pieces."



Such was the effect that Tristan had on most men that the bidding

quickly climbed far past any of the others who had gone before him.

Arista even heard a scuffle, followed by Wallach saying, "Men, please!

Be civilized!" Finally the bidding ended, followed by a few moments of

silence. At least they hadn't deduced Tristan's identity. And then,

the door opened, and Arista was led through.



She looked up, and saw Wallach standing at a podium. Arista turned her

head, and looked around the room at the gathered crowd of men. There

were perhaps thirty, and they were all richly dressed. She was led to a

spot where she stopped, and turned a circle, just as she had been

instructed. When she looked at the faces gazing at her again, she was

absolutely disgusted.



Arista didn't really like men overly much in the best of times, but even

less so when they leered at her naked body so openly, so lustfully.



"Beautiful. Exotic. And that's just her physical attributes. No,

fellows, this one is the real deal. A true magician, and a strong one

at that. I know for a fact that she can summon two fireballs at once,

and that those fireballs can kill a man in an instant. There is real

power in this woman," Wallach explained. "We'll start the bidding at

two-thousand gold pieces."



Arista didn't know which caused the ferocity of the bidding - her looks

or her power. She suspected that it was a combination of them both.

Either way, The bids quickly reached ridiculous proportions - even more

than Tristan. Part of her couldn't help but feel vaguely satisfied that

she was, at least, wanted. With a scowl, she banished the thought from

her head.



Finally, the bidding ended when only one person seemed to have enough

money to continue. The winner stood out, even amidst the rich, well-

dressed men. He was only average in size, and middle aged, but he had a

commanding presence about him that was unmistakeable. He was a man who

got what he wanted. He was a man who other men followed. And amidst

that, he had a dangerous air about him. Arista got a chill when she

looked into his eyes.



Arista was led to him, and he said in a gravelly voice, "Clothe her. I

shall await delivery in my carriage." With that, he turned, and left

the room.



He hadn't even looked at her, not really. He hadn't bought Arista for

sexual reasons, but for her power. Somehow, that pleased Arista. She

knew beyond a shadow of a doubt, though, that her fate was far different

from the one which awaited Tristan. Any relief she might have felt was

scattered to the wind at that thought.



*



Tristan was confused. He had been prepared for a lot of things, but his

current situation was not one of them. When he had been purchased,

Tristan had regressed back to the person he had been during that first

year of his imprisonment, when he had been little more than a sex slave.

Survival was paramount, and in order to get through his captivity,

Tristan knew that he would have to sacrifice any independence he had

regained. And so he had become Tristan the sex slave once again.



The trip to his purchaser's estate was short - barely a day and a half -

and he spent most of it locked in his carriage. He had been clothed,

and escorted from Wallach's castle almost as soon as he had been

purchased; he hadn't even seen what had befallen Arista.



The whole time, all he could think about was the last thing she had

said, that she would come for him. And he believed her with all of his

heart. So, his task was merely to survive. Arista would save him if it

was the last thing she did. Even so, he was under no illusions about

why he had been bought. He was an oddity to put in someone's harem, a

strange mix between boy and girl who would no doubt fascinate any guest

deemed important enough to warrant his company.



That assumption was the root of Tristan's confusion. He was sitting in

a spacious den which sported a roaring fire in the enormous fireplace,

when the man who had purchased him said, "You must be quite frightened.

Do not be. You will not be harmed here. In fact, you may leave if you

wish once my explanation is complete. But I want you to consider that

life here will be one of opulence, pleasure, and your every whim seen

to. You have my word on that."



Tristan gazed at his master, and noted, not for the first time, that he

was really quite frail and aged. Something seemed off about the whole

situation. That man, Tristan thought, was not healthy enough for sex.

So why was Tristan there?



"My son is a homosexual," the man blurted out. "For me, I simply do not

care who he wants to share a bed with, but my judgment is not worth what

it used to be. No, my younger brother...half-brother really...well, he

would use my son's homosexuality against him when I die, and likely take

my estate as his own, leaving my son with nothing. The church, you see,

oversees all inheritance, and the problem, dear child, is that they

abhor people like my son. Immoral, they call it...an abomination. For

the life of me, I can't see why, but that is neither here nor there."



He stood, and turned from Tristan, "I could have him marry a woman to

prove that he's not, but I have a similar failing to many fathers." He

turned back to Tristan, who could see his wet cheeks glisten in the

firelight. "I want him to be happy. No woman can do that, but perhaps

you can. I do not ask this lightly, for I do not own you, not really.

No person can own another. Will you marry my son?"



Tristan didn't know what to say, so he remained silent.



"You don't have to stay with him after my death, and I assure you, I am

close," the old man stated. "But when I die, and he gets the estate,

your own death can be faked, and you may leave with a payment befitting

such a service."



Tristan came back to himself, and asked, "If I say no?"



"Then you may leave as quickly as a horse may take you," the man

answered. "But know that by staying, you will be doing me and my family

a great favor. Moreover, you will have prevented quite a lot of

bloodshed."



"Bloodshed? How?" Tristan asked.



"My son will try to protect what is rightfully his, and my half-brother

will try to take it with the support of the Church's militant order,"

the old man explained. "My son will lose, but many lives will be

forfeit."



"So you're asking me to prevent a war, and all it will take is a few

months of my life?" Tristan asked. "I would be a horrid person to

refuse such a request."



"So you will do it?"



"Of course," Tristan responded. In truth, he wanted to leave then and

there, but the harsh reality was that he had nowhere else to go. Arista

was gone. He simply didn't know where she had been taken. And he had

told the truth. He didn't want to stand aside and let a war be fought

if he could prevent it. "But I have a couple of questions, if you don't

mind."



"Ask," was the old man's simple response.



"Where am I?" Tristan asked. "And who are you?"



"Ah, of course. I forget that you likely have no frame of reference for

your location. You are in Orankos, and more specifically, my hereditary

lands, the estate of Count Kinwan," he explained. "My name is Orrun

Kinwan. My son, who you shall meet tomorrow, is Abraham."



Orankos -- Tristan had heard of it, certainly, but he had not thought

that they had travelled so far from his home. The place was far to the

north of Honus, and Tristan knew that it was ruled not by a king of

queen, but by a collection of independent lords.



The old man sat back down with a sigh. "Anything else?"



Tristan smiled at the old man, and said, "Just one thing. Where can I

get some food? I am starving."



The old man laughed.





*



Arista felt the whip bite deeply into the flesh of her back, but she

stifled a scream. That's what he wanted, and she refused to let him get

it. She heard another crack, and felt the sting of the whip once again.

A gravelly voice said, "Submit, and you shall feel no more pain. Your

life will be one of luxury. Just sign the contract."



"Never," Arista growled through gritted teeth.



"Suit yourself. It's just as well. You know how much I enjoy this,"

her master said.



His name was Fortino, but Arista had learned nothing else about her new

owner, save that he was rich, powerful, sadistic, and had a need of a

magician's services. She had fooled herself into thinking that her

master might allow her a life devoid of humiliation because he had

wanted her for her magical talents rather than for sex. Oh, but Arista

had discovered soon after arriving at his fortress that there were far

worse things in the world.



Fortino delighted in pain, Arista could tell, and he had had a wonderful

time in the week since he had bought Arista. Three times each day, she

received a lashing. It lasted either until she submitted or until she

passed out. She had yet to give in.



He wanted her to sign a magical contract swearing fealty, but Arista

knew that doing so would strip her of free will. She would be unable to

disobey, even if it meant her own life. Arista would never sign such a

contract, no matter how much she was punished. She suspected, however,

that Fortino knew that, and was content just to administer those painful

whippings each day.



She counted them; somehow, it helped take her mind off of her flayed

back. The last number she remembered before passing out was fifty-

three.



Arista awoke to searing agony. She didn't know how much time had

passed, but she did know that her back was a ruined mass of blood and

flayed flesh. She felt someone rubbing something cool onto her back.

They did the same after each session. Apply the ointment, let her heal

just enough where she wouldn't die before they wished it, and then

repeat. Her life had descended into a constant stream of painful

suffering.



Looking at a nearby window, Arista considered throwing herself from it.

She was confident that she could muster the strength to carry her

through the window, if only barely, but one thought kept her from doing

so. She needed to rescue Tristan from whatever horrible fate had

befallen him. That she had no idea of how to escape was irrelevant.

She would find a way. She had to.



The beatings continued for what seemed like months, but was, in reality,

only a week and a half. For Arista, though, the days blended together.

There was only pain. Vaguely, she knew that she was fed every so often,

and that she used the facilities from time to time. Her days, however,

were marked only by how much pain she could take before the welcoming

blackness of unconsciousness would take her.



One night - she only knew because her window was dark - her door opened,

and in walked Fortino. He slammed the door behind him, and stood over

Arista.



"Two years," Fontino stated. "That's all I need, and then you can go."



Arista, who lay on her stomach, leaned over and spat on his shoes.



"I will put it in the contract that you will not be required to do

anything that will harm yourself or anyone you love, and that the

duration of your servitude shall be no more than two years. Less if we

accomplish our goals before then," Fontino said. "Or we can continue

with the beatings, and you will eventually die or submit to a lifelong

contract. I give you two days to ponder my offer, in which you will not

be beaten."



Arista turned her head, and stared at the wall. Two years of servitude

for the rest of her life - would it be so devastating? She knew that

there was only one reason to employ a magician such as herself; Fontino

was going to war. Arista didn't need to know the details. She didn't

want to know who the enemy was. All she needed to know was that, if she

chose to submit, that Fontino would keep his word.



She would deal with the consequences of her actions once she was free,

and had found Tristan. Her decision made, she sat up, and turned to

Fontino. She said, "I will do it, but I write the contract. I cast the

spell. You may have your own magician check it, but I want the wording

to be airtight. There can be no leeway in this contract."



"Very well," Fontino stated. "Rest. I will return tomorrow. You

should be healed enough by then to bend your mind to the task." With

that, he left.



Arista was keenly aware of just how wrong her decision was. Nothing

about it felt right, but she simply did not care. If she wanted to get

free, to save Tristan, she would do any number of detestable things. So

strong was her need that, in her mind, she had no choice at all.

Working with Fontino was her only option.



*



Tristan walked alongside Abraham, his voluminous skirts rustling with

each step. The gardens through which they walked were gorgeous, well

kept, and the smells of blooming flowers filled the air.



"I am sorry for your situation," Abraham said. "I know that I am

probably not your ideal mate, but know that I will not harm you in any

way. While we will have to spend time together, I will do my best not

to --"



"You don't have to apologize," Tristan interrupted. "Your father doing

what he did was the best outcome I could have possibly hoped for, in my

situation, and I am grateful. You have done me a great service, and you

have my thanks."



Abraham only said, "Oh."



"So tell me about yourself," Tristan coaxed sweetly with a smile. "I

know nothing of your life."



"As you know, I am different. My father --"



"Your sexual preference does not define you, and is not what I want to

know. I want to know who you are," Tristan said. He stopped, and

Abraham stopped with him. Tristan turned, and looked into his eyes. He

wasn't much taller than Tristan himself, and was extremely thin - almost

sickly. His facial features were nondescript, but Tristan's gaze was

drawn to his bright, blue eyes. They were alive, those eyes. Tristan

took Abraham's hands in his own. "Tell me who you are, Abraham Kinwan.

Your hopes, your dreams, your interests. I want to know. And I need to

know if I am to convince anyone we are to be married."



Abraham didn't say anything for a moment, but then stated, "I don't know

what to say. I'm not very good at this...at any of this. People

perplex me. They just don't make sense."



"Then what does make sense to you?" Tristan asked.



"Books. And theories. And business. I always know where I stand with

those," Abraham allowed. "But most of all, I just want to make my

father proud. He does so much for me, has given me every tool I need to

succeed, and I want to justify his actions through my own success."



"His actions need no justification, Abraham. He does what he does out

of love. The end result is irrelevant," Tristan stated. "To him, at

least."



"But not to me. I love him too, and I want to give him the gift of a

successful son," Abraham said.



The two started walking again, but Tristan kept hold of Abraham's hand.

His grip wasn't strong, but in that moment, Tristan didn't mind, even

though he hardly knew why.



"So, books? Do you only read academic works, or do you like stories as

well?" Tristan queried. "I was never really much for learning about

business and such. Instead, I always read stories of war, romance, and

heroes."



"I've read my share," Abraham stated. "But few really catch my

interest, not the way economic concepts do."



Tristan was reaching for something with which to relate to Abraham, but

he kept coming up short. The man wouldn't open up to him. He

certainly hadn't been joking when he had claimed a lack of understanding

of people. How does one reach a person with which one shares no common

interests? Tristan didn't know.



And then he hit upon an idea. Tristan hadn't really latched on to the

bureaucratic arm of government, not like his brother had, but he knew

enough to carry on a conversation. So he broached the topic of

economics, and was quite surprised when Abraham responded with

enthusiasm. Quickly, however, Tristan's knowledge was extinguished, so

he simply asked questions, listening as well as he could to Abraham's

answers.



Why did he care so much? Tristan hardly knew why he wanted to get to

know Abraham, to put him at ease about the situation. He could have

just done the minimum, and gotten to know a few facts, and then married

the man. But something inside of him wanted to take it all seriously,

like it was the real thing. Was it because he really liked Abraham?

No, he knew that wasn't it. Abraham was pleasant enough, but he was far

from Tristan's type. And he was extraordinarily boring and awkward. In

the back of his mind, Tristan knew that Abraham had become his backup

plan. If Arista never came, and he knew that was a distinct

possibility, he would have a home, a place with Abraham should he wish

it.



But did he even like Abraham? Maybe a little, but Tristan was far from

passionate about the skinny academic. However, Abraham was kind, he was

considerate, and he tried to make Tristan happy. Was that enough?

Tristan couldn't even confront the question. In fact, he refused to

acknowledge it, preferring instead to hope for a day when he and Arista

would be reunited, even though he knew, in his heart, that it was

unlikely that he would ever even see his lover again, much less be

rescued by her.



And so, he lived his life as best he could. Days passed, and Tristan

and Abraham grew slightly more familiar. They still weren't close, but

a plan formed in Tristan's mind which he thought would do the trick.

After two months, Tristan decided that enough was enough, and that it

was time for Abraham to open up. He had tried everything short of

seduction, and nothing had worked. Abraham was still as closed off as

he had been the first day they had met. So Tristan fell back on the one

thing he knew for certain, the one skill he had honed to perfection. He

decided to show Abraham that being with him could be quite pleasurable.

Seduction was his plan, and he put it into action on a drizzly fall day.



He had sneaked into Abraham's bed chamber, and undressed. Lying on the

bed in his most provocative pose, Tristan waited for Abraham to enter.

He didn't have to wait for long before Abraham came in the room, and

dropped the pile of books which he had been carrying. He tried to

stammer a few words about impropriety, but Tristan rose, and put a

delicate finger on his lips.



"Quiet, lover," Tristan said. He had thought about the situation quite

a bit, and had decided a direct approach would serve him well. Less

chance for Abraham to back out. He dropped to his knees, and unbuttoned

Abraham's trousers. When he pulled them down, Tristan was shocked; his

member was enormous!



Tristan had seen penises of all shapes and sizes, and had pleasured them

all. But he had yet to see one that rivaled Abraham's. Thick, long, and

hardening, Tristan wrapped his small hand around it, and began to stroke

it. When it was completely engorged, the thing was intimidating at

nearly the size of Tristan's forearm. Could he even fit it in his

mouth?



Tristan reached out tentatively with his tongue, and licked along the

shaft from the base to its head. The musky taste was familiar, even if

its size was not. Tristan licked it for a few minutes, paying special

attention to the head, before he finally decided to try to fit it in his

mouth - he opened wide, and slipped as much in as he could. He knew his

teeth were scraping it, but it was unavoidable. Doing the best he

could, Tristan sucked for all he was worth.



It must have been pleasurable enough, because it wasn't long before

Abraham came, shooting semen down Tristan's throat. As it softened,

Tristan continued to suck, to lick, and to stroke Abraham's penis. It

would be a few minutes before the man was ready, but Tristan knew that

he needed to keep the act going so Abraham couldn't back out.



After a couple of minutes, Tristan felt Abraham's member begin to harden

again. He stood, and led Abraham by his penis to the bed, where he

guided him into a lying position. When Abraham was lying down, Tristan

continued to to play with the man's penis, coaxing it to erection. It

became completely hard after only a few seconds, and Tristan climbed

atop the skinny man. Lowering himself onto the penis, Tristan was

surprised at how much he had missed being with a man. He knew all along

that he preferred having sex with men, but he had managed to put the

depth of his passion from his mind. It all came crashing back as he

felt the huge penis enter him. It hurt a little at first; it was just

so much bigger than any Tristan had taken, but the pain faded quickly,

and was replaced by pleasure.



Up and down, Tristan rode Abraham, and he was again surprised by the

man's stamina. It took him a full fifteen minutes before he came. His

hands roamed all over Tristan's petite body, toying with his nipples and

spending extra time with his small, erect penis. When Tristan climbed

off of Abraham, he could feel the semen dripping from his anus.



Abraham grabbed him around the waist, and in hands much stronger than

they looked, picked him up. He put Tristan on his back, and lowered his

head between Tristan's legs. His mouth felt wonderful as it engulfed

Tristan's tiny penis, sucking and tonguing it.



Tristan was keenly aware of how much pleasure he was getting out of sex

with Abraham; he hadn't felt anything like it in quite some time. He

had missed it, having sex with a man. Later, when both Tristan and

Abraham were spent, Tristan cradled Abraham's head in his arms, and

pondered his feelings. On the one hand, he knew that he loved Arista

with all of his heart; on the other, she simply wasn't there. Nor was

it likely she ever would be again. But Abraham was, and he was sweet,

gentle, and treated Tristan well. And the sex was fantastic. Did sex,

kindness, and circumstance combine to be greater than his love for

Arista? He didn't know, but even then,Tristan had doubts about how real

his feelings were for Arista. She was just so far away, he told

himself. And Abraham was right there.



Tristan simply didn't know what to feel.



*



Arista seethed. She knew that what she was doing was irrevocably wrong,

but she couldn't resist. The magic of the contract compelled her to

obey, and so she did. An enormous ball of fire and molten rock arced

through the air, landing amidst a regiment of enemy soldiers, decimating

them all. She heard the screams. She smelled the burning flesh, and

she felt the earth tremor when it hit. But she couldn't look, simply

couldn't watch the carnage she had wrought.



It had been nearly six months since she had signed the contract, and

each day, she had to remind herself why she had submitted. Thoughts of

beautiful Tristan danced in her head, warring with the knowledge that

she had done so many evil, despicable things. She had killed. She had

maimed. She had been an unadulterated instrument of destruction,

raining fire from the sky, moving the earth beneath the feet of opposing

armies, and sending waves of tornadoes to tear them asunder.



The Black Witch, they called her, and she deserved the name. To any who

stood in her way, she was evil incarnate, an indiscriminate murderer.

And she knew that the gusto with which she performed her tasks pleased

her master, Fontino. She imagined it was him she was killing each time

she sent a spell at her enemies.



They were winning; Arista had no idea what the war was even about. All

she knew was that her participation was a means to an end; she would

move mountains if it meant that she could save her love, her Tristan.



And just like that, the battle was over. She had won. Sure, the

soldiers would take credit, but even they knew that they wouldn't have

stood the slightest chance without the Black Witch. She turned from the

field of battle, and walked toward an elaborate tent. She entered, and

sat on a camp chair, staring at the ground.



Arista was too good at her job. The war was all but won; she had killed

much more quickly and efficiently than even crafty Fontino could have

predicted. Ostensibly, he was happy. He told Arista how much she

pleased him each day. But she couldn't shake the feeling that Fontino

had tasted true power, that he had seen how little all of his money, all

of his men really mattered. And Arista worried that he wouldn't let it

go.



She tilted her head back, and sighed. Life had grown so incredibly

complicated since Tristan had entered her life. Before, she had been

content to simply battle on behalf of her queen, but when Tristan had

come, all of that had changed irrevocably.



He had begun as such a defiant, arrogant captured warrior, but Arista

had seen the fear. It had been buried deep, but it was there.

Instinctively, she wanted to protect him, but back then, she hadn't been

able to. So, the plan had gone forward, and Tristan had been changed.

His vulnerability, Arista knew, was a big reason she had begun to fall

for him. She had wanted to save him, even then. She had wanted to

protect him. Their love had blossomed from there, and in the end, she

had saved him.



But there she was, with history repeating itself, forced to act in what

could only be called an evil manner. And all she wanted was to protect

her love, but she didn't even know where he was. She had asked around,

and searched, but no one knew of anyone fitting his description.



One question nagged at her, however. Would he still love her? She knew

his attraction to her was tenuous, at best, but she had seen the love in

his eyes. Would it last, even while she was out of sight, and out of

his life? She hoped so. More than that, though, she merely wished for

his safety. What horrors might befall such a pretty boy, she did not

know, but she had seen, had been the victim of man's insipid nature. It

was not a comforting thought.



A page opened the tent flap, and poked his head inside. Arista could

sense his fear at being in such close proximity to the Black Witch.



"Lord Fontino wishes to see you, ma'am," he squeaked. Arista inclined

her head, and the boy disappeared.



Back to work, she thought. What other deplorable actions would be

required of her that day? She rose, wondering what the future really

held.



*



Arista sat across from the man she hated most in the entire world,

eating dinner. Fontino merely pecked at his food as he looked at it

disdainfully. Even though it was significantly better than the fare

served to ordinary soldiers, it was still quite a bit less appetizing

than what he was used to. He moved the various foods around on his

plate aimlessly for a few moments before Arista asked, "What do you

want?"



He looked up, and smiled. It was a gruesome sight, not because he was

an ugly man - he wasn't - but because there was absolutely no joy in it.

Fontino answered, "Straight to the point. I've always liked that about

you, Arista." Arista didn't say anything, but instead, looked at her

master expectantly. "Very well. The war is over. Your task is

complete." He gestured to her meal. "Eat. It is a good day for both

of us." When Arista didn't touch her food, he suggested, "Then at least

have some wine. I had it brought here from the vineyards at Unath. It

is quite good."



Arista lifted her glass, and brought it to her lips. She knew as soon

as the wine touched her lips that she had made a grave mistake. Her

body went numb almost instantly, and she fell off of her chair. She

couldn't move. She could barely even breathe as Fontino rose, and stood

over her.



"Ah, do you think I didn't know about your defenses? That you have been

preparing spells in case I didn't live up to my end of the contract?

Well, I did. You are released from my service. But what shall become

of you, my Black Witch? I can not let you leave. Not knowing what you

know; I can't let a potential enemy - especially one as powerful as you

- walk free. You must see the logic in it," he said. Fontino squatted,

and his hand caressed Arista's brow. "No, you will continue as you have

been doing. I know your weakness, my dear. The boy from the auction -

the one who looked more female than male - he is your lover, is he not?

You need not answer; I know it as fact. Tristan, was his name? I also

know where he is, and I can have him murdered with a single word. So,

you see, dear Arista, you are well and truly trapped."



He stood, and turned his back to Arista as inwardly, the fires of her

anger rose to heights she had never before known He dared to threaten

her Tristan? She would burn him to ash, and lay waste to everyone and

everything he held dear!



"If I die by your hand or order," Fontino continued. "Your love shall

be murdered. The plan is already set in motion. You can not stop it."



"I have many enemies. You shall destroy them all," Fontino finished.

With that, he turned, and walked to the tent flap. He opened, it, but

before he stepped out, he said, "I will not use bracelets or other crude

means of control any longer. You are free to do as you wish, but beware

the consequences of your actions."



And he was gone, leaving Arista paralyzed and fuming on the floor.



*



Over the year and a half since Tristan had become a resident at the

Kinwan estate, life had taken a decided turn towards happiness. Fear no

longer ruled his life, and he had the love of a good, honest man. That

Tristan didn't love him in return was irrelevant. It wasn't love, but

there was a certain fondness, friendship, and sensuality which marked

the relationship between Tristan and Abraham, and that, for Tristan, was

enough.



They had been married on the eighth month of his residence. Abraham's

father died two months after that, leaving Abraham the entirety of his

estate. Tristan's obligation was complete, but he chose to stay. There

was little hope of finding Arista, and nothing else interested him about

the outside world. No, he was happy, and he remained at the estate.



No one, aside from Abraham or Tristan, knew that he was, in fact, male.

The servants called him Lady Trista, but the appellation rankled on him.

He was not a woman, and if there was one thing which bothered him about

his new station, it was being considered one. He knew it made little

difference, as he was closer to female than male in appearance, manner,

and dress, but he missed being acknowledged and accepted as who and what

he was. However, the lack was merely a minor annoyance when compared to

the joy of the rest of his life.



Abraham proved to be as generous and loving a husband as he was as a

lover, and he doted on Tristan. Tristan supposed that the man was

constantly afraid of losing him, scared that he might decide that his

job was complete. For his part, Tristan did his best to be a dutiful,

loving wife, and bent his will to satisfying his husband's every need -

both sexual and intellectual.



To Tristan's surprise, he showed a surprising aptitude for governance,

and Abraham often asked his opinion on key decisions. Eventually,

Tristan began sitting in on each meeting his husband conducted, offering

his own insight into each matter. It worked. Between their two keen

minds, Tristan and Abraham guided their business and political interests

toward extreme prosperity. They, it seemed, could do little wrong, and

made a nearly perfect team.



As the months passed, their wealth and power grew. Fourteen months

after Tristan had come to live at the Kinwan estate, two minor lords had

sworn fealty to Abraham, and more were to come. He was building a small

kingdom, and Tristan was the driving force.



At one meeting, Abraham was getting reports on his immediate neighbors

when someone - Tristan couldn't remember the man's name - said, "And

then there is Fontino, a lord far to the north of here, who has been

wreaking havoc on that region. As you know, m'lord, wars in up there

aren't uncommon. But this one is different. He crushes any who oppose

him, and has conquered no less than four territories. Maybe more."



"Is his army simply better equipped or more numerous?" Abraham asked.



"No, sir. He has employed a dreadful magician. It is said that she

could defeat an army of thousands by herself. I've seen one of the

battlefields, sir. I'm not sure when the battle was fought, or who the

opponent was, but the very ground had been melted," the man explained.

"I am inclined to believe the stories, at least insofar as the

magician's value as a weapon. They are not to be underestimated."



"Does this magician have a name?" Tristan asked.



"Yes, my lady. She is called the Black Witch," he answered. "It is

said that she has skin like ash."



Could it be? Could there be two female magicians of that skin coloring?

Unlikely, Tristan thought. But he considered it equally unlikely that

Arista would become such a monster as what the man had described.



Secure in the fact that he knew Arista at least as well as he knew

anyone else in the world, he dismissed the notion. Surely she would die

before committing such atrocities.



Abraham dismissed his advisers, and, once they were gone, asked Tristan,

"What do you think?"



"He'll advance on you eventually," Tristan acknowledged, and Abraham

agreed.



"Then we shall prepare," Abraham stated. "Do you think the reports of

the witch are exaggerated?"



Tristan shrugged. "Probably, but I have seen magicians do the things he

describes. In my experience, that sort of destruction isn't possible

from one person, though. Likely the tales have become bigger via the

retelling, or there is more than one magician. Either way, do not take

the threat lightly."



"You'll have to tell me some day about these experiences with battle

magic," Abraham said, smiling. "You're just full of surprises, aren't

you, my love."



Tristan recognized the look in Abraham's eyes. He had seen it hundreds

of times before - Abraham was feeling randy, and wanted his wife.

Tristan was only too happy to oblige. They made passionate love then

and there, without bothering to seek the privacy of their shared bed.

It was quick, and furious, but Tristan didn't mind. The urgency of it

all excited him all the more.



*



Arista was afraid, mortally and more than she ever had been before.

Fontino knew where Tristan was, and she had absolutely no doubt that, if

she displeased the man in any way, Tristan's life would be forfeit. Her

master was many things, but inept was not among them. He did not make

idle threats. No, Tristan's life hung in the balance, and only Arista

could keep it from swinging towards mortal danger.



More than that, though, she was frustrated. Trapped by her own love,

she didn't dare disobey; nor could she show any signs of a lack of

effort. Either might get her love, her Tristan, killed. And so she

buried herself in the Black Witch, into the persona of fear, of death.

She would not be responsible for Tristan's death; that much she knew.



But playing a role, night and day, in every waking hour tends to have a

strange effect on a person. They begin to become that person; it is

only natural. And that is the fate that befell poor Arista. She

killed, and she destroyed. Her wake was one of fire and devastation.

Wherever she went, agony, despair, and death followed. She became her

role; she was the Black Witch. Arista all but died, she was buried so

deep beneath the character, the role of the Black Witch. But Tristan

was safe, she kept telling herself. Eventually, she didn't even think

about him, though. Such is the effect of distance, both in time and

space. Out of sight, out of mind - Tristan became both to Arista. If

she stopped to think too long, his image would pop into her head, but

she couldn't afford to feel. She had to be hard, needed to be strong

and merciless. Thoughts of Tristan were not conducive to that.



After two more years, she had given up all hope of going back to

Tristan. He was gone; he was safe. And she knew that he would

absolutely abhor what she had become. At night, as she lie in bed,

Arista reemerged, albeit briefly, and she was ashamed of her actions, of

the person she had become. She was a monster, through and through. And

love was the root, the seed of it all.



Did that make it better, she would wonder? Did that make her actions

any less detestable? No, she knew that it didn't. It merely made her

selfish in the extreme. She had tossed aside all morality, had used her

powers to kill hundreds, if not thousands of people all for her selfish

desire to keep Tristan alive. She knew it was wrong, right down to her

core. But knowing it didn't change Arista's mind. Recognizing her own

selfishness did not keep her from, day by day, working towards more and

more murder.



Arista absolutely loathed herself; there was no other way to describe

it. She knew that she would reap no benefit from her actions, not

personally, at least. So was it truly selfish? Perhaps. Perhaps not.

Those doubts kept her up each night, but still she did her duty, and

played her role. The Black Witch emerged each morning, and people, both

friend and foe, trembled in her presence.





*



Tristan knew that life was about to change, and not for the better. The

mad, power-hungry Fontino had advanced onto Kinwan lands, and sacked two

of Abraham's fortresses. The next target was the Kinwan estate itself.

Battles had been fought, and Abraham's men had held their own as well as

could be expected, but the tide had been turned by the Black Witch.



She was shrouded in mystery, and no one knew anything about her, save

that she was dark of skin, viciously evil, and extraordinarily powerful.

She had laid waste to an entire regiment of Abraham's finest soldiers in

a battle only a month previous, single-handedly turning the tide of the

battle. Tristan knew that they were going to lose, but what choice did

they have but to fight?



Fontino was as abhorrent a tyrant as he was a ruthless military

commander. His people barely had enough to eat, and he worked them

harder than any sane man would. Many died from hunger, exhaustion, or

disease. They weren't people to Fontino; they were simply a means to

get what he wanted, which was more power.



No, neither Abraham nor Tristan could stomach surrender to such a man.

And so they fought, and most of the time, lost. The Kinwan forces were

not weak, however, and put up much more of a fight than anyone had

previously. It was not enough.



Battle after battle turned the land from verdant farm to burning

graaveyard, and soon, Abraham's forces began to dwindle. Three years

after they had been married, he came to Tristan, who was helping to

organize supplies. Gone was the innocent, skinny young man, and in his

place was a gaunt, world-weary, but strangely more alive figure. He had

grown a beard, and his hair had lengthened. The weight of the world

seemed to rest on his narrow shoulders, and Tristan saw the gravity in

his eyes.



Tristan asked, "What is it?"



"They're nearly here. We must get the women and children from the keep,

and into the mountains where the army will not follow," he said.

Tristan crossed the room, and hugged his husband.



"Is she with the army?" Tristan asked. There was no need to specify

who. Abraham knew that Tristan spoke of the Black Witch.



"Yes," Abraham answered.



"Then you're right. The women and children - they must go," Tristan

agreed.



"And you with them," Abraham stated.



Tristan merely said, "If you believe I'm about to leave, you are sorely

mistaken. I shall do no such thing."



"But --"



"No 'buts', Abe. I'm not going to run away," Tristan said with

finality. "So what is the plan?"



"We don't have a choice. Nearly our entire army is scattered or dead.

The enemy is on our doorstep. We must surrender, and hope that Fontino

shows mercy," Abraham said. "When they arrive, we will negotiate the

surrender, and hope for the best."



"You don't expect that, do you? The best, I mean," Tristan reasoned.

"Otherwise, the women and children wouldn't be leaving."



"I want them to run and to hide, and get as far away form this madman as

they can," Abraham said. "I can't stomach the notion of these people

living under such conditions."



"And us?" Tristan asked.



Abraham shrugged. "We'll be okay."



*



Tristan rode a white horse, and had clothed himself in a matching dress.

Let them behold true nobility, he thought. He held his head high, kept

his shoulders back, and stared straight ahead at the approaching

contingent of Fontino and his bodyguards.



To Tristan's right rode Abraham, looking as well as could be expected,

given the circumstance. To Tristan's left was one of Abraham's

commanders. Behind the three of them was a token bodyguard. None were

at ease. They all knew the gravity of the situation.



The tension was palpable as the two groups came together. Tristan

scanned the group, and then he saw her, the Black Witch, and his breath

caught in his throat.





*



The Black Witch hated peace talks. They were a waste of time; no one

would submit to Fontino's terms. They were designed that way.

Formalities, though, must be observed, she mused as she rode a few steps

behind the main group. She preferred to keep a bit of distance between

herself and the opposing force; too many close calls had dictated that.



The two groups came together, and the Black Witch looked at the

commander, Abraham Kinwan. He looked like a such a feeble man. His

eyes were sunken, and he appeared to be malnourished. A patchy beard

decorated his jaw. The soldiers behind him were unremarkable, and ....



Arista came to the forefront, pushing the Black Witch from her

consciousness. Tristan! Her dear, beloved Tristan was there, not ten

paces distant, and he looked as beautiful as ever. She struggled to

contain her smile as she saw the recognition on Tristan's face.



She had been planning for that moment for years. She started to mumble

the spell, careful not to draw attention to herself. But Fontino was,

as always, one step ahead of her.



Too late, Arista saw the flash of a dagger. She stopped mid-spell, and

screamed.



*



Tristan felt an intensely sharp pain in his side, and he yelped, falling

form his horse. He had felt a similar pain before, and knew that he had

been stabbed. But by who? Arista had recognized him, he knew. And he

saw that she had begun casting a spell. As he lay on the ground, he

reached to his side, and touched the wound. He hissed in pain, and

pulled his fingers away. They were coated in blood.



He looked up, and saw that a small battle had erupted around him.

Confusion enveloped his mind as the sounds of swords on swords, the

screams of dying men, and the neighing of frightened horses filled the

air.



And then Abraham was beside him, kneeling over Tristan. "Can you

stand?" he asked, urgency in his voice.



"I..I don't know," Tristan managed, coughing up blood.



"Never mind," Abraham said, scooping Tristan's petite form into his

arms. "Cover me!" Abraham shouted. No sooner had he taken a step than

an arrow erupted from his throat, spraying blood all over Tristan's

white dress. The two tumbled to the ground, and Tristan screamed in

pain, concern, and fear.



Abraham fell on top of Tristan, pinning him to the ground. A man knelt

beside Abraham, and pulled him off of Tristan. Tristan rolled over, and

managed to come to his knees next to his husband, and knelt over him.

He was still alive, but only barely. A sickly gurgle escaped his lips

when he tried to talk, and tears flowed freely down Tristan's cheeks.



"No," Tristan said between sobs, the battle raging around him. "You

can't..."



Tristan couldn't even finish the sentence. Until that moment, Tristan

hadn't realized the depth of his feelings for the man. It might have

been love; it might not have been. But Tristan was absolutely

devastated. He cried over his husband as Abraham died, paying no heed

to what was happening around him. He didn't care for his own injury; all

he knew was that Abraham was gone.



It was only a few moments, but it seemed like an eternity. Tristan was

lost. Nothing seemed to fit.



And then, as if by magic, Arista was standing over him. Tristan looked

up, but he didn't see Arista; he saw the Black Witch, and he understood

her reputation. She was throwing balls of fire with each hand, and

anger danced in her eyes.



*



By force of will alone, Arista stood over Tristan and the man named

Abraham. Fatigue weighed her down, and threatened to send her careening

into unconsciousness. Fireball after fireball, she sent at the enemy,

but they just kept coming. Desperation filled her mind. She had found

Tristan, and she was not about to let him be killed. Not after what she

had done to protect him.



In the midst of a brief respite, she looked around. The battle wasn't

even close to finished, and she knew she didn't have long before her

constant use of magic took its toll. And then, Tristan would be

defenseless. Besides, even if she could afford to wait it out,

Fontino's forces were going to win, and Arista would rather die than let

Tristan fall under the thumb of that man.



And then it hit her. That was the answer. She looked down at beautiful

Tristan. He was pale; the wound at his side still bled, but Arista

thought that he stood a good chance of living. The man was another

story. Tristan wept over his dead body.



"Tristan," Arista said, her voice still colored by the harshness of the

Black Witch. "Do not move, not until the spell is finished."



Tristan looked up, and Arista saw the person she loved more than

anything else in the world. "How will I know?"



"I will be dead," Arista said simply. She laid her hand on Tristan's

head. "Goodbye, my love."





*



Tristan wanted to say something, but sadness, shock, and anger clouded

his mind. He heard Arista mumbling, almost under her breath, and he

knew she was casting a spell. He dared not interrupt her, for he knew

that it was the only way. He had seen enough battles to know that,

without some sort of magical intervention, he would soon be dead.



Maybe it was selfishness, or perhaps he recognized that Arista wanted to

die. The only thing she wanted more, Tristan suspected, was his safety.

And she was acting to ensure both. She finished the spell, and in the

brief moment before it took effect, she looked down at Tristan and

smiled.



The Black Witch was gone. Arista had returned, albeit only briefly.



And then she collapsed to the ground, dead almost instantly. A white

light pulsed from her body, nearly blinding Tristan. A few seconds

later, his vision began to return, and he looked around. The

battlefield was littered with corpses. No one within three-hundred

yards had survived, save Tristan.



He was appalled at how absolute it was. All sound was gone. Nothing

stirred.



And the two people Tristan loved most were dead. Arista, who had gone

through such pain - Tristan had seen it in her eyes - and Abraham, who

had sacrificed everything for his people. They had both loved Tristan

with everything they had, and he had loved them back in very different

ways. He cradled both of their heads in his lap, stroking their cheeks.



He cried as he had never cried before, the tears coming amidst ragged

sobs. Everything was gone. Both of the loves of his life were dead,

the people about which he had come to care so deeply were scattered to

war, and he had somehow survived. Guilt crept into his consciousness.

Why him? Why was he special? Why did he deserve to live when so many

others had been killed?



After nearly an hour, Tristan felt a touch on his shoulder. He looked

up to see one of the estate's servants, concern in her eyes. And then

he passed out.





*



Tristan awoke to a creeping dread. For the first few seconds, he

didn't know what it meant, but then it all came rushing back. Arista

was dead. Abraham had been killed. The dread was replaced by an

overwhelming sadness.



He tried to sit up, but the pain in his side flared, shooting through

his entire body. He gritted his teeth, refusing to acknowledge it.

Tristan forced himself upright, and the blanket which had covered him

fell to his waist, exposing his chest.



He was naked. So, at least someone knew his secret. No matter. The

ruse was finished, regardless. He looked down at a bandage covering his

side. He touched it gingerly, and winced in pain. The wound was just

below his rib cage, and had missed any vital organs. Tristan had

experienced many such wounds, and knew that, painful though it was, it

wasn't life threatening. But it would hurt, and quite a lot.



He looked around, and noticed the familiar sight of the bedroom he had

shared with Abraham. He lay back, knowing that rest was necessary, and

he thought. What had happened? Someone had stabbed him, he knew, but

who? After a few seconds, he realized that it didn't matter.

Obviously, it had been one of the soldiers, a traitor in their midst.

He was almost certainly dead now.



But what really vexed Tristan was Arista. She had been the Black Witch,

but why? Did Fontino have some control over her? And if so, how did

she break it? Did Fontino still live? What of his army? A hundred

questions raced through Tristan's mind, but no answers were forthcoming.



He drifted off to sleep, cursing his own ignorance.



When he awoke again, it was night. He had no idea for how long he had

been asleep. One day? Two? He sat up, and felt considerably less

pain than before. Either he had been out for quite a bit longer than he

had suspected, or someone was quite a skilled healer.



The door opened, and a woman - the servant who had come to Tristan's aid

- walked in, carrying a tray with a bowl and a pitcher on it.



"Glad to see you awake, dear," the woman said. "I've been wanting to

talk to you."



"How long have I been out?" Tristan asked. The woman crossed the room,

and set the tray on a table near the bed.



"Four days," the woman answered. She handed Tristan the bowl, and said,

"Eat. You need strength."



Tristan took the bowl, and began to spoon the broth into his mouth. The

woman watched him diligently, as if daring him to stop. When he was

finished - there wasn't much - he handed the bowl back.



She set it down, and said, "I have something for you, but before I give

it, I want some answers." Tristan nodded. "You are not a woman. Who

are you?"



Tristan recounted the story of how he had been abducted by the slaver

Wallach, and sold to Abraham's father, and how the old man had

propositioned him. He didn't gloss any of it over.



"Hmm. And the woman? You obviously knew her, the way you mourned her

death. Who was she?" the woman inquired. Tristan told what he knew of

Arista's story. "I found this on her," the woman said, pulling an

envelope from her pocket. Tristan saw his name on the front. She

handed it to him. And then she left.



Tristan opened the envelope with trembling hands, removed the piece of

parchment form inside, and unfolded it. The letter which was written on

it read as follows:



My Dearest Tristan,



If you are reading this, I am dead. I have gone to great lengths to get

this letter to you; my influence has allowed me the use of a number of

servants, and a select few I trust have copies of this letter. I don't

know which one gave it to you, but treat them fairly. They have risked

a great deal to find you, and to deliver this letter.



I scarcely know where to begin. I love you. I have since nearly the

first moment I laid eyes on you. I can only hope that you feel the same

about me. I hold no illusions about how you will feel about me after

you read this letter, so try to cling to whatever image you have of who

I used to be. I want so badly to be that person again, but I doubt that

it will happen.



You have probably heard tales of the Black Witch; I confess to you now,

that I am that monster. I have killed. I have torn entire armies

asunder, and I am ashamed to say, lately, I have enjoyed it. I tell you

this for two reasons. First, I need to confess. The guilt of it all

weighs on me so heavily that I can hardly bear it. I hope that the

confession will help, but, in truth, I hold little hope. Second,

chances are that you have deduced as much from the stories you have no

doubt heard, and I wish to tell you my side of the story. I have no

excuses, and I take full responsibility for my actions. I just want

you, if no one else, to understand my reasons.



I was purchased by a power-hungry mad man named Fontino, and for the

first few weeks, I endured torture I will not describe for fear that it

might upset you. But I withstood it. I was willing to die rather than

submit to him. But then he came to me with a deal. Two years for the

rest of my life, he said. I merely had to serve him for two years, or

until his goals were finished, and I would be free. Free to find you.

Free to save you.



I agreed.



My help was more effective than he had anticipated, and after only

eighteen months, we had won his war. But Fontino is a snake. He

drugged me, and that was probably for the best. For what he told me

incited my anger to the point where I would not have been able to

control my actions. He told me that if I didn't continue to serve, that

he would kill you. He knew where you were. He had someone close to

you. And if I didn't obey, or if I killed him, that assassin would

strike, and your life would end.



I couldn't be the cause of your death, so I continued to serve him. And

I lost hope. I lost myself to the Black Witch. I became that monster;

I had moments of lucidity where I knew what I was, and was ashamed.

This letter is the product of those moments. But most of the time, I

was every inch the demon of the stories.



I have wondered often whether what I did was selfish. I did it for you,

but at the same time, it was for my own sake. I didn't want to live

with myself if I caused your death. I couldn't. I love you too much.



Lately, I have pondered the question of my own identity. Am I evil? I

have acted evilly, certainly, but I had good reasons, I think. People

call me a monster, a devil, but if they were in my situation, would they

do any differently? Could you? Even though it damns my actions, I hope

that you could take a different path than I did. I know that you are

stronger than I am, so you probably would have.



My weakness is my downfall. Perhaps you will pity me rather than hate

me for what I have done. I do not expect your love will continue, but

again, I ask, remember me as I was, not as I became.



With Boundless Love,



Arista



Tristan read the letter over and over, tears streaming freely down his

cheeks. He did not hate Arista, not even close. She had gone to

impossible lengths to protect him, had damned herself in the process,

and she had died thinking that Tristan would hate her for it. Sad did

not describe it.



An anger Tristan hadn't felt in ages welled up inside of him. He knew

what he had to do, and he hated it. He had to become the warrior again.

He wanted vengeance. He needed it. And he knew his target: Fontino.



He fell asleep knowing, for the first time in a long time, his path.



So ends the second part of Tristan's story, the conclusion of which is

yet to come.

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