Read The Invisible Chains - Part 2: Bonds of Fear Online
Authors: Andrew Ashling
Tags: #Romance MM, #erotic MM, #Fantasy
it down. See? It takes some getting used to, but it is nearly invisible
and you can still speak normally. In fact, take care that you don’t
forget it’s there. You can even eat with it in place, though I wouldn’t
recommend it. Although, even if you were to swallow it whole it
would pass through you intact. The danger lies in inadvertently
biting on it. The gold is just thin enough for you to bite on the capsule
and cause it to leak. The poison is strong enough… for your purpose.”
Anaxantis removed the capsule from his mouth, wiped it carefully
on his sleeve, and put it back in the box.
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“There are three capsules there,” the doctor said. “For complete
peace of mind, you might want to try one out yourself. Not on
yourself, of course.”
“Thank you,” Anaxantis said. “I owe you.”
“No, not at all, dear boy. It was my pleasure. I like solving little
conundrums, and I believe firmly that we should be able to end our
life when… when it becomes unbearable. I can honestly say I saved a
few hundred lives, maybe even more than a thousand. You are aiming
to save more than ten thousand lives. You could very well die trying.
I think I owe you a favor or two. You’re a bright lad. Just be very, very
cautious with those things.”
“I will,” Anaxantis said, almost inaudibly. “And thank you. For
these and for believing in me.”
“Let’s hope you will never have occasion to bite on one of them.”
After the doctor had left, Anaxantis wrapped the capsules in the
piece of cloth from the little wooden box and put them in his pouch.
He felt at peace. The doctor’s capsules removed one of his worst
nightmares: being captured alive by the Mukthars. He didn’t fear
dying. Well, in fact he did, and one of his greatest worries was that
death would not be immediate, but a long and painful process. But
he was even more terrorized by the idea of falling in the hands of his
enemies, not dead but alive. There was no telling what they would do
to him. There was so little known of their customs and traditions. It
could very well be that they would treat him with respect and merely
hold him for ransom. But what if that wasn’t the case?
He could see before his eyes how they would overpower him, strip
him, and subject him to all kinds of indignities for the amusement of
their hordes. He had no illusions at all. Instantly the warlord would
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be transformed into a frightened, humiliated boy. He knew a thing
or two about changes in fortune and their effect. The worst was that
he would be powerless to do anything about it. That he would have
to suffer whatever they chose to do to him. Again. Just like when he
had forced himself upon him. And had beaten him. And had pissed
upon him. And had kept him chained like a dog for months. And had
laughed at his misery. And at his pleadings and tears.
This time it would be worse. It would be public.
He shuddered and his face contorted painfully as images of what
had happened that night, nine months and twenty-seven days ago,
and what could very well happen again, only much, much worse,
danced before his mind’s eyes. As if floating near the ceiling he could
look down upon himself lying on the table, weak, while strong arms
held him down, and again he felt the shock and the pain of the brutal
penetration. The images dissolved, only to be replaced by even more
gruesome pictures of himself being restrained by several laughing,
leering barbarians, while they tore the clothes from his body under
the gloating eyes of their companions and took turns…
“I will never, ever let anyone degrade me like that again. Before, I
couldn’t have stopped them if they tried to rape me. It would be even
more vile than… There would be several of them, no doubt. They would
make a public spectacle out of it. Hundreds of them watching me being
defiled. Helpless again. Unable to stop them. Unable even to hide my
shame, my pain. Would I cry out and beg them to stop, just like I did
then? Would they laugh, like he did? Laugh and carry on? Like he did?”
He shivered, rested his elbows on the table, and buried his head
in his hands, as tears rolled down his cheeks, hot tears for a helpless,
violated boy.
For several minutes he was overwhelmed by his hellish visions.
“But it will never happen. They can catch me. They can tie me up
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all they like. They can surprise me. Yet I will escape them. They won’t
be able to keep me. It will never happen again.”
The good doctor had given him a foolproof way out. Even bound
or chained he could move the capsule with his tongue between his
teeth and bite it. In seconds he wouldn’t be there anymore, and he
would effectively have escaped his enemies forever. What they would
do to his dead body? No matter. He wouldn’t be there to witness it.
He wouldn’t know.
“It will never, never happen again.”
The same thought kept turning around in his head like a mantra.
Finally he was able to convince himself and escape out of his
nightmare.
He picked up a flask of undiluted wine and it almost slipped out
of his clammy hands. He filled his cup to the brim and drained it in
one go. He shook his head, straightened his back and took a deep
breath.
The warlord was back.
He decided that what he needed was a ride in the countryside.
Hemarchidas and Myrmos. Between the two of them they would
manage to dispel the last vestiges of his nightmares.
“Radyamirodyahendo,” he called out from the hallway. “I am
calling it a day, so you might as well.”
Rahendo looked up from his writing and saw the prince, standing
behind him, looking over his shoulder. He tried to cover what he had
written with both his hands.
“Hey,” Anaxantis said, smiling, “those are not notes. You are
writing a poem of some sorts.”
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“A song actually,” Rahendo said, as if his darkest secret had been
discovered and his life would never be the same again.
“Really? A song? I used to write songs when I was younger. I was
quite good at it, if I do say so myself. Can I take a look?”
“Better not, my lord.” Rahendo looked around him as if he needed
a fast escape. “It’s bad. It’s very bad. It’s worse than bad. It’s the
worst. In fact, it stinks.”
“It can’t be as bad as all that.” Anaxantis smiled. “Let me take a
look. I might be able to give you some pointers.”
“Oh no. No, no, no. Don’t need pointers. Don’t want pointers. No
pointers. It’s not mine anyway. It’s something the pages are singing. I
just want to write it down before I forget, so I can put it in the letter
to my sisters.”
“So, they are singing together. Good. It shows some esprit de corps
is growing and that’s good for morale. I’m all for stimulating that.”
“Oh, I don’t know,” Rahendo said doubtfully.
Anaxantis pointed to the main entrance, and when Rahendo
looked in that direction, he grabbed the piece of parchment with a
devious grin.
“That’s not nice. Please, my lord, it isn’t finished. I think I have
some of the words wrong.”
“Never mind. Just let me take a look.”
He mouthed the words while he read them and frowned.
“Well, you’re right about one thing. It isn’t finished. The rhyme
scheme is all right, I guess, but the meter is atrocious. You’ll barely
be able to sing it.”
“Please, my lord, give it back. I have to go to the facilities. Urgently.”
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He pressed his legs together.
“Some parts don’t make sense. For example:
’It was mighty narrow
but I was straight as an arrow’
What does that even mean? And
’I’d readily give my body and soul,
for another night in the X X’
What do the Xs stand for?”
“I told you, my lord, that it wasn’t finished. I really, really must go
now. Nature’s calling. Very loudly.”
“Nature can bloody well wait,” Anaxantis said, becoming irritated.
“At least until I know what the Xs stand for.”
“If you must know, they stand for ‘captain’s barrack’.”
“Ah, I see.”
He went over the song again.
’I totally lost my self control
So inviting was the captain’s barrack.’
Ah, yes. It’s about a captain who organizes parties in his barrack.
’It was mighty tight
but I kept pushing all night
You can understand that
Never before such fun I had
I’d gladly give my body and soul
For another night in the captain’s barrack.’
Yes. There are a lot of people there, so you would have to push to
get in, I suppose. Hey, those last verses don’t rhyme. And neither did
the first, now that I come to think of it.”
“Can I go now, my lord?”
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“No, you can’t. You can piss in your pants as far as I am concerned,
but you are not leaving before you explain to me why it doesn’t even
rhyme.”
“It will be worse than just pissing, I’m afraid,” Rahendo said,
deeply unhappy.
“I don’t care. Why doesn’t this thing rhyme?”
“Because I lied a little bit.”
“You lied.”
“A little bit.”
“Aha. No captain’s barrack?”
“No captain’s barrack.”
“So, what do the Xs stand for?”
“You will remember that it isn’t mine, won’t you?”
“Yes, of course.”
“And that I had nothing, nothing at all to do with it?”
“OK.”
“And that you forced me to tell you?”
“Yes, yes, yes. Tell me already.”
“You remember how you gave us that barrack to use as a meeting
place?”
“Yes.”
“And how the pages decided to call it The Prince’s Waterhole?”
“Yes, that was quite endearing, actually.”
“And how they shortened that to The Hole?”
“Yes, more’s the pity.”
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Rahendo took a few steps backwards and looked at the main
entrance.
“Well,” he said, speaking as fast as he could, “for ‘barrack’ read
‘hole’ and for ‘captain’ read ‘prince’. Must go now. Bye.”
He ran away as if chased by a hundred Mukthars.
“Weird kid,” Anaxantis mumbled while he looked at the parchment
and mentally filled in the words Rahendo had given him. As he read
on and on he became first white, then fiery red, and lastly the same
shade of blue Obyann had so often sported these last weeks.
The complete, now perfectly rhyming song read:
’I totally lost my self-control
So inviting was the Prince’s Hole
My friends, I swear, I swear it’s true
Some day you must try it too
I’d readily give my body and soul
For another night in the Prince’s Hole
It was mighty narrow
but I was straight as an arrow
I took my aim
And to my everlasting fame
I was larger than a fishing pole
When I burst into the Prince’s Hole
It was mighty tight
but I kept pushing all night
You can understand that
Never before such fun I had
I’d gladly give my body and soul
For another night in the Prince’s Hole.’
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“Radyamirodyahendo, come back,” Anaxantis roared as he ran to
the entrance, where he bumped into Bortram.
“Has everybody gone mad?” Bortram protested. “First that weird
kid runs me over and now you.”
“Where did he go?” Anaxantis shouted.
Bortram shrugged.
“I’ve got no idea, but wherever it was, he needed to be there like
yesterday. Why?”
“Never you mind,” Anaxantis retorted. “Let me through. I’m going
to ride Hemarchidas in the country with my horse.”
He stormed away.
“He’s going to ride Hemarchidas? With his horse? That can’t be
what he meant to say. Can it?”
Anaxantis stopped in his tracks, turned around and shouted at
him.
“And another thing. If you happen to run into that little pervert
again, you can tell him, with my compliments, that no fun at all, no
fun whatsoever was ever had in… in… in the captain’s barrack. And
certainly not by no stinking page. You got that?”
“Yeah, sure. Captain. Barrack. No fun. By nobody. Got it,” Bortram
shouted back. “Though I wish I knew what you are talking about,” he
added to himself, shaking his head. “I swear, the weirdness of that
kid is contagious.”