Category: Promo

  • “A Decadent Bargain”

    “A Decadent Bargain”

    “East of Kartonga, the so-called border with Varduun is a fiction, an absence of warning, law, or meaningful transition. The Kartongan wastes, for all their hazards; swaggering slavers, bravos with naked steel, the constant commerce of suffering, are still lands of barter and bravado, ruled by appetite but anchored in something resembling a code. Varduun is the antithesis. There is no frontier, no fort, no marker or ancient stone to signal entry into the Hyena Lands. One stumbles across, or is taken across, and the realization comes too late: all rules, even those of predation, become unreliable.

    In the wastes, a lion may keep his sword sharp, his mind keener, and negotiate his way out of trouble or into power, but these old games die in Varduun. The hyenas eat everything—body, mind, and custom. Some bands are slavers, trading wretched lives to whatever kingdom or caravan will pay; others are feral packs, utterly mad, snapping up even their own kin. Some are simply monstrous: sick with parasites, flesh warped, drooling, cackling, and yet keen enough to sense the scent of an outsider, to know how to bait and break a traveler. There is no shortage of fresh horrors in Varduun. Hyenas rut and feast without conscience or law, their alliances shifting, their minds as fractured as their bodies. Nothing survives long that is not hyena, and even that is no certainty.

    The catastrophe is not just ecological but spiritual. No one warns you. No post stands, no trader utters a caution, no scent changes in the wind. The hyenas know, and they wait. Kartonga knows, and does not care. For any lion, indeed, for any outsider, caught on hyena ground, there is only one wisdom: stay armed, keep poison handy, and pray you are never taken alive. To fall into their claws is to be remade as prey, as plaything, or simply as meat for the next sunrise. The only paradise east of the wastes is the one you do not enter, and the only warning is that there are no warnings at all.”

    —Travel in the Kartonga


    The fire was coaxed low, a red eye half-lidded with ash. Beyond it, the Zheru grasslands stretched in shadow—not yet the hyena city-states, but closer than lions liked to be. The jungle beyond listened. The jungle always listened.

    Tull groaned, body tensing as he emptied himself into the warmth of a most willing lioness. She arched beneath him, coins clattering in her braids, mouth parted in a voiceless cry. For a long heartbeat, the fire’s breath seemed to rise with his, the whole clearing pulsing in rhythm, until he rolled off with a satisfied grunt. His seed trickled down her thigh, catching the glow. She laughed low in her throat—smug, satisfied, a queen paid in full.

    Next to them, a second lioness sprawled on her side, bosom heavy, paw stroking lazily across her companion’s belly, as if to remind her: the bargain had been honored.

    Tull lay between them, chest heaving, mane damp with sweat, the perfume of both females clinging to him like incense. He wore no coins. He wore the night and a grin, softened by fatigue.

    The first lioness crawled slow between his thighs and lapped the trickling seed from his shaft, wrapping her lips around his girth and sucking, unwilling to waste a drop.

    They were lionesses of the Southern courts—vast pale-gold manes braided with stones and coin, chiming as they moved. Their hides glistened with oil. Their breasts rose and fell in smug unison. They were idols, poured and polished—and tonight, they sprawled victorious beside the barbarian who had carried them here.

    The wineskin drifted across his chest. One queen drank, lips wet, then tipped it to her sister, who swallowed and let the kohl at her lashes smudge into a wicked frame. They giggled softly, careless, too full of themselves to hear the silence pressing close beyond the fire.

    “We bought well,” murmured the queen with the heavier braids. She smoothed her companion’s mane and kissed it into place. “Do you feel it? How the world grows smaller when a strong male sleeps in reach?”

    Her companion, curvier, bit her lip and glanced toward the dark where grass met trees. “I heard hyenas. They follow laughter.”

    “Hyenas always call,” the first said, still slurping greedily at his post-coital dripping. “They call for scraps. We are not scraps.”

    Tull chuckled without opening his eyes. His broad hand slid across a waist and stayed there—heavy, warding. “No pack dares my camp,” he said, voice blurred with fatigue and pride. “Ask the vultures at the river raid.”

    The fretful queen shivered but stayed close, tracing the scars across his ribs as if they might answer for her.

    Coins were tangled in their manes, a few scattered across the pallet like bright seeds after the storm of their rutting. The queens purred, teasing one another with indulgent little touches. One stroked his balls absently, squeezing them with lazy ownership. The other leaned forward, mane spilling, and kissed his sack, while her sister suckled the head of his cock—tongue swirling with wet, playful greed that made him grunt even as he pretended to doze. They laughed and traded places, taking turns like it was a game.

    “Tomorrow,” the fretful one murmured, lifting her head long enough to break the spell. “We’ll be on the road. If we’re quiet, the jungle will forget us.”

    Tull cracked one eye, then closed it again, smirking. “When we wake, you’ll forget shrines and remember gratitude. The road waits for a proper farewell.”

    They both laughed, coins chiming, and bent back to him. One kissed his chest, bosom pressed against him, lips hungry. The other straddled him boldly—thighs slick, braids whispering—as she began to ride him with slow, teasing patience. Their giggles turned to purrs, to sighs, to the unhurried rhythm of females who had already taken what they wanted once and meant to take more.

    A twig clicked once somewhere beyond the fire.

    The fretful queen’s ear flicked, but her body betrayed her with a moan as Tull’s hands gripped her hips and pulled her down harder. The sound poured away like water into soil. She let herself be kissed back into silence.

    Coins chimed in quieter voices, gossiping over the contest of queens competing for the same spoils. They kissed each other for the taste of what they had taken, pressed their breasts against his chest, laughed into his mouth, then bent lower again, sharing him without shame. They licked wine from each other’s lips, licked him as well, and let the night spin around their careless indulgence.

    The deerskin creaked. Bangles rattled. The fire breathed in. The fire breathed out.

    Tull rolled back atop the second queen and began to thrust again.


    Wine circled again. Lips drank. Then lips drank from lips. They moved in long repeated shapes: breath, touch, hush; breath, touch, hush.

    At last the fretful one softened, her vigilance melting into something gentler. She studied Tull’s face—the tiredness at the corners of his eyes, the stubborn humor tugging at his mouth, the shadow of wounds twitching across his brow. She smoothed his mane with the reverence of a priest anointing a victor.

    “Bought well,” she whispered, not to be heard.

    Somewhere beyond, something padded with the care that makes no sound at all. A bough sighed. The listening changed tone, the way a hall does when a hidden door swings open.

    Court-taught queens obeyed their lessons: ignore what does not announce itself. They let their eyes close—smug and sated.

    Tull’s hand sagged across a waist, twitching once near the blade within reach. He was warm. He was tired. He had been fed with wine, flattered with laughter, stroked by two perfumed females who had paid for his strength and taken their due twice over.

    Even a wary male drinks stillness when it is offered.

    He drank.

    Coins settled. Wine breathed. The embers turned. The vines hung like banners without wind. The trunks stood like pillars without temple.

    The jungle kept listening.

    It is very good at that.


    The fire was a carcass of embers when the queens stirred. Their braided manes clinked with the tired music of coins as they shifted, stretching against the furs, breasts heavy with the drowse of sleep. Pale light crept into the clearing in thin blades, painting the hides of the two lionesses as if carved from dusk-gold.

    Between them lay Tull, bulk sprawled lazily, mane mussed, chest rising and falling with slow, ponderous rhythm. His warmth still anchored them to the belief that no harm could come while his shadow was theirs.

    The first queen yawned, a regal cat, lashes heavy, and pressed her bosom against his chest. Her paw wandered down without thought, brushing the old familiar prize she expected to find. It was there. Her lips curved in smug satisfaction. She nudged her companion awake with a sly look: See? Even dawn bends to us.

    The second groaned softly but obeyed, sliding closer, licking lazily at Tull’s chest before her hand joined the first’s. The air thickened with the sweet musk of their indulgence. They giggled, they kissed, whispering like conspirators about how gratitude must be shown once more before the day’s march.

    Tull did not speak.

    He was a brute of action, not chatter. His silence was power—the silence of a lion who knew the world quaked at his presence.

    They caressed him regardless, murmuring court-teases, half-mocking, half-reverent. Their tongues trailed across his skin. Their ornaments rattled. Their hips shifted with the instinctive restlessness of females who knew that the body was both gift and weapon.

    The first queen bent, her mane falling forward, lips brushing lower, trailing kisses like a worship path. She lingered—lips parting, braids swaying. Her black mouth gleamed against his pale heat. She hummed, pleased with her own craft.

    The second watched, thighs pressing together, hunger stirring. The fire caught the moisture of her lips and made them shine. She shoved forward, eager, jealous, pressing her companion aside to taste what was hers by right of the bargain.

    The first swatted at her shoulder in protest. Their laughter rose again, soft and shameless.

    Then the second queen’s eyes flicked up. Just for a moment.

    But something in his face made her breath hitch. The laughter froze raw in her throat.

    She blinked, as if vision lied.

    Dawn was cruel.

    Her hand lingered on his chest, unsure.

    The first queen looked up too—annoyed at first, then curious.

    They saw it together.

    The grin that had so charmed them was stiff now—a rictus stretched by rigor, lips parted in a soundless snarl. His mane was stiff with clotted dark. And jutting between his eyes—obscene as a crown—was the thick black shaft of a crossbow bolt, sunk so deep the fletching brushed his brow.

    Their warmth curdled into ice.

    The twitch they’d mistaken for virility was just death jerking the last nerves of a carcass.

    The first queen gagged, falling back, braids jangling like funeral bells. The second screamed, hands clawing at her thighs as though she could scrape away what she had just touched—what she had just tasted.

    The corpse lay between them, obscene in its false life, chest still rising on trapped air, cock still iron with the blind stubbornness of death’s last grip.

    The jungle, which had listened all night, laughed back.

    Figures stood at the edge of the firelight—hyenas, lean and painted with war ash. Their yellow eyes gleamed with hunger, with sport. Their teeth shone as they grinned. Their chuckles echoed across the clearing—mocking, triumphant.


    The queens shrieked, manes whipping as they scrambled from the pallet—naked, dripping.

    Their coins and ornaments were no armor now, only bright markers for the hunt.

    They fled into the wastes, bosoms and rumps jiggling with panic.

    Behind them, the hyenas followed laughing, knowing full well:

    What they chased could not be sought.

    And would never escape.


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  • The Teachings of Krothuum

    The Teachings of Krothuum

    Krothuum was a scar of stone and dust on the southern grasslands of Zhuru. Its walls were low, cracked things, more a mark of pride than a bulwark, and the gates gaped like broken teeth. Smoke clung above the city, not the holy incense of temples but the choking reek of coal-pits and forges, of fat burning on anvils, of oil dumped into the gutters.

    The city lived on steel and mockery. Every forge was a rival, every hammer-strike a jeer against the smith across the alley. Hyenas laughed at each other across the streets, the cackling rolling through Krothuum like thunder. It was a city that thrived on humiliation — and where shame was remembered longer than blood spilled.

    Into this dust-choked maze strode a she-wolf of the northern tribes, black of pelt, broad of shoulder, and proud of stride. Her amber eyes burned beneath the sweat-clumped locks of her mane, and her arms — thick with the sinew of war — bore scars that spoke of raids across mountains and the razing of caravans. She was not soft like the courtesans of Zarnack, nor sly like the thieves of Kansubar. She was barbarian stock: raw, bold, made for the clash of steel and the bite of blood.

    Yet for all her strength, she had come to Krothuum weakened — stripped not of her coin, but of her sword.

    It had been promised ready at dawn. She had paid for it with gold and a raided caravan’s worth of loot. A northern blade, reforged in the hyena-smith’s coals, tempered for the blood-feast she intended to unleash when she crossed the straits toward Drael. But dawn had passed, then noon, then dusk, and now the day waned while her temper flared.

    She shoved her way through the market, scattering fox-hawkers and goat-wives alike, until she came to the forge of Rathgur the Smith — a thick-shouldered hyena with soot-blackened fur, known for his laugh and his treachery in equal measure. His rivals claimed he spent more time mocking than hammering, yet he never lacked for customers. For in Krothuum, the louder a smith’s laughter, the more certain folk seemed that his steel would not bend.

    The wolf planted her hands on his counter, claws clattering against the iron-rimmed wood.
    “Where is my blade?” she snarled. “You swore it would be ready. You swore it with oath and coin both.”

    Rathgur did not look up at once. He worked the bellows, smoke curling around his muzzle. Only when the forge flared red did he glance at her — a slow, toothy grin spreading across his muzzle.
    “Not here,” he said. His voice was rough, each word dripping with the slothful amusement of one who knows he holds power. “Perhaps you misplaced it.”

    “Misplaced?” Her voice was a growl, low and trembling. “You think me a pup, hyena? You think I forget where I lay my steel?”

    He shrugged, the grin never leaving his muzzle. “Perhaps you forget many things. Where you leave your weapons. Where you leave your coin. Where you leave your legs, after drink and whoring.”

    The forge-hands laughed. A cruel, barking chorus. The wolf’s claws dug into the wood, carving furrows. Pride swelled in her chest, mingling with desperation. Her sword was not just iron — it was her name, her survival, her right to stride as a warrior. Without it, she was no more than a lost bitch wandering a city of jackals.

    And in that desperate moment, her tongue betrayed her.

    “Who,” she spat, her voice sharp enough to cut the smoke, “do I have to rutt with to find my sword!?”

    The words hung in the air like a curse. The forge fell silent, save for the crackle of coals. Hyena ears pricked. Jaws spread in grins. Then the laughter came — harsh, howling, rolling through the smithy until it seemed the very walls shook with it.

    Rathgur’s eyes gleamed. “Ah,” he said, drawing the word like a blade across her pride. “So that is the bargain you offer.”

    The wolf’s face burned beneath her dark fur. She opened her mouth to curse him, to call him heathen, thief, and crook — but the laughter was already binding her, wrapping her in mockery. In Krothuum, a word spoken in desperation was as binding as an oath.

    And Rathgur, hyena that he was, would not let it pass.


    The headboard rattled like a war drum, a cracked plank nailed crooked against the stone wall of Rathgur’s forge-room. Every thrust set it hammering, every laugh of his made it echo louder. The noise carried through the thin walls into the market beyond, so that all of Krothuum’s dust-choked streets could hear the she-wolf’s shame.

    Her claws dug splinters into the board, her amber eyes squeezed shut as sweat matted the fur at her temples. She cursed through clenched teeth, the words breaking apart into gasps and sharp yelps as the hyena’s bulk drove against her. His cock was thick, cruel, stretching her in ways that were no pleasure, only pain. He knew it, and he reveled in it.

    “Bitch,” Rathgur snarled, punctuating the word with a slap across her haunch, the crack of palm to fur echoing like a blacksmith’s strike. “You thought you’d strut in here, north-blood, tossing your pride like coin. You thought you could mock me, eh? Tell me where my steel lies? Ha!”

    His laughter rolled like thunder. His paw closed on her tail, yanking it back as he drove himself deeper, forcing a cry from her throat that no curse could hide. She trembled with fury, with helplessness, with the gnawing ache that each thrust drove into her belly.

    “Curse you!” she spat, though it came out broken, half a whimper, half a growl. “Curse you, hyena cur! Heathen crook—”

    Her voice snapped into a squeal as his thumb shoved rudely into her tailhole, pressing past clenched muscle. Her whole body jolted, shame burning hotter than the coals outside. He barked laughter, the cruel, barking kind that only hyenas could muster, and it shook the rafters.

    Outside, the forge-hands and passersby heard everything. The rhythm of the rattling board, the hyena’s laughter, the wolf’s strangled cries. Krothuum thrived on spectacle, and today’s spectacle was the barbarian bitch who had demanded her sword. Already wagers were whispered, jokes flung back and forth — who would finish first, her pride or his seed.

    She wanted to scream, to thrash, to claw his throat open. Yet the grip on her tail, the weight of his body, the cruel shove of his cock left her pinned and trembling. Her bosom pressed against the splintered board, her thighs shook with the strain of holding herself up. She tried to spit venom, to call him filth, to swear vengeance — but every word was broken by gasps and yelps.

    And worst of all, she could feel her pride crumbling with each thrust. Not arousal — never that — but the bitter, soul-deep regret of a warrior undone. She thought of her sword, her steel, her lifeblood. Without it she was nothing in this city. Without it she could not walk the caravan roads, could not raid, could not fight. Without it she had no power.

    And so she endured. Teeth grit, eyes burning, heart pounding not with lust but with rage and shame. She endured, even as his thumb worked cruelly in her tailhole, even as his palm cracked against her flank again and again, even as he laughed like a jackal feasting.

    “North-blood bitch,” he jeered, his breath hot against her ear. “Regretting your adventures now, eh? Regretting your big mouth? You’ll think twice before you wag your tongue in Krothuum again.”

    His thrusts grew harder, faster, each one shaking the board, each one driving her claws deeper into splinters. Her tail jerked in his grip, her body jolted against his weight. She tried to curse him one last time, but it broke into a strangled yelp as he shoved himself deep and spilled into her, the hot flood of seed sealing her shame.

    He laughed again, louder than ever, the sound rolling out into the street so all could hear. He slapped her haunch once more, as if to mark her, then pulled free. She collapsed against the rattling board, chest heaving, bosom slick with sweat, fury and shame burning her amber eyes.

    And still he laughed.

    “On your feet, bitch,” Rathgur said, buckling his belt as if nothing had happened. “I’ll show you your precious sword.”

    Her breath hissed through her teeth, her pride torn raw. Yet she dragged herself up, tail low, fury trembling in every limb. She needed her sword. She needed it more than she needed her pride.

    And so she followed him, half-dressed, into the daylight of Krothuum, where the crowd was already gathering, already laughing, already hungry for the next stroke of her humiliation.


    The forge-door creaked wide, and daylight cut across the soot and smoke. The she-wolf staggered into the street behind Rathgur, her mane damp with sweat, her chest heaving. Her fur clung to her body where his seed still dripped, her tail limp, her pride raw. She had not bothered to dress, only clutched her loin-wrap against her hips as if to guard what little modesty she had left.

    But modesty was nothing in Krothuum. The laughter had already spread.

    Hyenas lined the alleys, forge-hands leaned from doorways, merchants paused mid-bargain to jeer. Even the mongrels and half-breeds of the market were grinning, for nothing in Krothuum drew a crowd faster than shame. They had heard the board rattle, the wolf squeal, the hyena laugh — and now they saw the proof stumble into the dust.

    “Show me,” she hissed, dragging Rathgur by the arm. Her claws dug into his soot-stained hide. “Show me my blade, you bastard! Now!”

    The hyena only grinned wider, throwing a look to the crowd. His laughter was louder than the forge-bellows. “Aye, I’ll show you. But perhaps you’ll wish I hadn’t.”

    He turned, slow as a priest delivering judgment, and lifted a paw to point across the street.

    There, standing smug in the doorway of his own smithy, was his rival — a thick-armed hyena of equal girth, holding a longsword aloft in one hand. The wolf’s longsword.

    “There you are, wench!” the rival bellowed, his voice carrying over the dust and din. “Your sword’s been ready for hours! And here you are — fucking around like a common whore while I waited!”

    The crowd roared. Hyenas doubled over, their laughter sharp as knives. A pair of foxes howled and slapped each other’s backs. Even the slaves hauling coal grinned as they trudged past.

    The wolf’s face burned hot beneath her fur. She wanted to scream, to deny, to kill. Instead, she turned on Rathgur and struck him hard across the back with the flat of her paw. The blow cracked like a whip, but he only threw his head back and howled with laughter.

    Her rage boiled over. She charged across the street, snatched her sword from the rival’s paw, and lifted it high. Its weight steadied her, its steel cooled her trembling. At last she felt whole again — at last she felt like herself.

    She spun back, amber eyes blazing, and stormed toward Rathgur’s forge with murder written in every stride. The crowd parted, eager to see blood, eager to see the story end in violence. She raised her blade, teeth bared, ready to carve his head from his shoulders—

    —when the heavy door slammed in her face.

    The clang of iron bolts drove home her defeat. Behind the shuttered timbers came Rathgur’s laughter, louder than ever, echoing through the alleys like a curse.

    The wolf froze, sword in hand, fury quaking in her chest. The crowd laughed on. Some mocked her with barks, others with obscene gestures. None offered pity.

    For this was Krothuum, dustiest of Varduun’s cities. Here, humiliation was currency, shame was spectacle, and the tale of the black she-wolf who rutted away her pride would be told in taverns from Gorzanth’s barracks to Zarnack’s brothels.

    She clenched her sword until her knuckles ached, then turned away, vowing vengeance. But vengeance is long in coming, and laughter travels fast.

  • Tale of a Bare Bodied Dancer

    Tale of a Bare Bodied Dancer

    The tavern at the edge of the hinterlands was a tomb of smoke and stale mead, its rafters heavy with the stink of leather and sweat. The day’s victory had been bought in blood and ash, though what profit it yielded none could say. It was one of those ruinous campaigns, where mercenary contracts promised spoils but the spoils themselves had long rotted to dust. Kade and Thahn sat among it anyway, their skins still slick with the memory of battle, their throats raw from shouting war-cries.

    The boar and the steer—two older mercenaries who had fought beside them—had collapsed into a corner. Their tusked and horned faces lolled against the timber wall, drunken grins spread wide. They had been good fighters in the field, but they had no stamina for victory’s feast.

    Their hands shook as they raised cups, and now they sat slumped in oblivion, burbling nonsense about Zarhanda, about the next fight, about ghosts who never leave. Kade had propped the boar’s shoulder so he didn’t choke on his own tusks, and Thahn had nudged the old steer into a semblance of seated dignity. That was all the tribute owed them. The panther and the wolf meant to leave—the tavern’s dirt floor was foul and the light guttered low. They rose, ready to stalk into the storming night, when the sound cut across their ears. Bells.

    Bells and the slow roll of a drum, muffled but insistent, like a heartbeat rattling in a cavern. Kade’s ears twitched, and he slapped his companion’s chest with a grin. They turned, and there she was. She was not a tavern-wench of the thin, wiry sort. She was ursine—broad-hipped, dark-furred, her breasts massive globes hung with bronze bells that rang with every sway of her shoulders. Golden chains cinched her waist and rattled on her thighs.

    Naked but for her jewelry, she danced in the smoke and flickering torchlight, her eyes fixed not on the drunks, not on the unconscious warriors, but on the two standing beasts whose blood still sang with battle. Her fur was combed sleek, her movements a slow grind of hips and a cruel shaking of her bosom, bells chiming as though mocking the dead and the drunk alike. Her eyes narrowed, daring, her mouth crooked in a smile that was half-promise, half-challenge.

    The wolf and the panther stood still, watching, their cocks swelling beneath leather and fur but their discipline holding—for no barbarian wastes himself on mere jiggle and tease.

    Then she turned her back, bent low, and parted her thighs wide, the torchlight catching on her wetness. Between her dark lips, pierced flesh gleamed. A ring of steel ran through her clitoris, a barbarous ornament glinting like the prize of a chieftain’s tent. Kade’s restraint snapped like a bowstring. He dug in his pouch, dropped the coin so it clattered loud against the stone. The wench froze, then straightened, bells jingling, and her smile deepened into hunger. Thahn growled approval, already reaching for his belt.

    They took her to one of the yurts behind the tavern, canvas walls flapping in the growing wind. Inside, the air was hot, thick with furs and smoke. She lay back, legs stabbing into the air, chains clattering, breasts jiggling like swollen wineskins. Kade, his black panther’s body gleaming like oiled obsidian, drove into her with the fury of the field.

    His cock hammered her cunt with unrelenting force, his chest heaving, claws gripping her thighs until the bells screamed as loud as her cries. He raised a wineskin, bit into its leather mouth, and poured the red stream down his throat. The overflow spilled across her bouncing tits, running down into her fur. She laughed between moans, scooping the liquor with her tongue, slurping greedily before shrieking when his hips smashed forward again.

    Thahn crouched low, tongue lolling, his wolf’s cock already stiff. The bear wench bent her head, her mouth wide and wet as she swallowed his shaft whole. She sucked his balls, rolling them on her tongue, pulling at him until he snarled and pulled her ears back, forcing more down her throat. She gagged, eyes streaming, but giggled between it, smearing saliva across his sack as she slobbered at him. Kade bit her neck, hard, tasting the salt of her sweat. His cock throbbed inside her, each pulse swelling as he neared.

    The bear’s cunt milked him, sucking, pulling, her ring catching against his glans like a cruel finger tugging. He buried his face in her shoulder and roared as his seed erupted, flooding her womb until she screamed from the force of it, her chains rattling like thunder. He pulled out, panting, claws raking tender down her cheek, leaving streaks in her fur. She sighed, swooned against the furs, dazed with pleasure. Thahn licked his lips, his cock dripping with her spit, and without a word he shoved Kade aside and took position.

    The wolf slammed into her with a grunt, his cock spreading her used lips wide. She cried out, rolling her eyes, her arms wrapping his chest, her bells bouncing against his sternum. His thrusts were brutal, each one making her flesh quake. Kade, leaning against the yurt’s post, bit his lip and watched. Watched his friend’s cock split the bear wide, watched her tits bounce, watched her piercings glimmer. The sight alone hardened him again.

    Outside, the boar and the steer snored in their stupor. They dreamed of Zarhanda, of white wolves with milk-heavy bosoms who would feed them in glory halls. They dreamed while the young males lived the feast in flesh and blood.

    The storm howled outside, the yurts flapping, dust battering against the hides.

    Inside, the orgy deepened. Kade lay on his back now, cock glistening, as the bear wench squatted over him, his length buried deep in her ass.

    Her anus stretched wide around him, her moans sharp as he drove upward. Behind her, Thahn took her cunt again, his sack slapping hard against Kade’s, their cocks hammering her in rhythm. She shrieked, chains clattering, her voice breaking into guttural barbarian chants.

    She called to gods neither panther nor wolf knew, names torn from her throat like war-cries. Mead was poured over her ass, dripping down her stretched holes, hissing as their thrusts pushed it deeper inside her. The three of them drank, sweat soaking fur, cocks spurting white as they drove her past sanity.

    Every climax was another battle-won, every scream another head taken. Their seed pumped into her in waves, her belly swelling, her thighs slick, her piercings jangling like victory bells. Hours passed like this, rut after rut, bite after bite, the panther’s claws raking her ass, the wolf’s teeth sinking into her tits, until the three collapsed in a heap. She lay across them, passed out, her cunt and ass still filled, both cocks softening inside her.

    By morning the dust storm had passed. The yurts stood silent, smoke rising from doused fires. Kade and Thahn strode from the camp, still sore, still swollen, their balls heavy but emptied. They walked with a swagger, their thighs aching, their loins humming with the echo of her flesh.

    The victory had been small, the campaign fruitless, but this feast of flesh had been its own spoils. Behind them, in the tavern, the bear wench sat in her furs. She chuckled, pouring cold wine over her swollen lips, hissing as it cooled the ache.

    She shouted to the bartender in her rough tongue that she would not be dancing that night.