The Shrinemaiden (The Maidens)

BOOK: The Shrinemaiden (The Maidens)
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Contents

The Shrinemaiden

Copyright Information

Chapter One: The Auction

Chapter Two: The Temple

Chapter Three: The Price

Chapter Four: Repercussions

Chapter Five: A Proposal

Chapter Six: An Encounter

Chapter Seven: Training Begins

Chapter Eight: The Lessons

Chapter Nine: A Different Game

Chapter Ten: All Good Things

Chapter Eleven: Preparations

Chapter Twelve: Sarcopia

Chapter Thirteen: A Seduction

Chapter Fourteen: Secrets

Chapter Fifteen: The Ball

Chapter Sixteen: Arrisque

Chapter Seventeen: Allies

Chapter Eighteen: Plans

Chapter Nineteen: Outmaneuvered

Chapter Twenty: Strategy

Chapter Twenty-One: Into the Den

Chapter Twenty-Two: Betrayal

Chapter Twenty-three: Rage

Chapter Twenty-four: The Rebellion

Chapter Twenty-Five: Home

About Annie Eppa

A Excerpt from The Slavemaiden: Coming in 2014

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

THE SHRINEMAIDEN

 

 

THE SHRINEMAIDEN
© Copyright 2013 Annie Eppa. All Rights Reserved.

 

 

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either products of the author’s imaginations or used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, without permission in writing from the author.

 

Warning: THE SHRINEMAIDEN contains explicit scenes of dubious consent, m/f/m situations and bondage.

 

 

 

 

The Shrinemaiden is an erotic fantasy novel, a standalone and the first of the Maidens trilogy. Follow Annie’s blog for new releases and future giveaways!

Blog:
http://annieeppa.wordpress.com

Goodreads:
Annie Eppa

 

CHAPTER ONE

The Auction

 

 

She should fetch a good price today, they said.

The madame told Adelai this as she brushed her hair, until it’s golden enough to her satisfaction. For the first time in her life, Adelai was surrounded by servants, who help her into the elaborate weaves and frills of her bridal gown. Shrinemaidens to be consecrated all wear the same thing - white silk affairs of ribbons and lace, cut low enough to display hints of bosom to draw in more bidders, but high enough to maintain a pretense at modesty. But modesty, Adelai knew, is not one of the many things that shall happen tonight.

Over the babble of the other shrinemaidens getting ready the High Priestess Saleia told her the same thing, as she scrutinized her appearance. Though her eyes are failing and her back is stooped from forty years spent overseeing rituals and ceremonies like these, she was quick to spot and point out every flaw, from a wayward lock of hair to the minute, nearly invisible creases in Adelai’s dress. Tonight, she insisted, must be perfect. High Priestess Saleia runs the temple of Inne-Anneah like a soldiers’ barracks, and to girls like Adelai it felt natural to be a little afraid of her. It was hard to imagine that the high priestess had, once upon a very long time, been a shrinemaiden herself, with her wrinkled face and long nose.

“Show no nervousness!” She reminded the girls in her harsh nasal voice. “Your auction price shall depend on your manner and bearing, and your future shall depend on your auction price. Need I repeat myself again on the consequences of receiving a low bid?”

The High Priestess need not. Everyone in the room was very much aware of what a low price would mean. A mediocre existence playing mistress to unimportant men at best; plying the trade in the illegal brothels still active within the city, at the worst.

A high bidding price, however, meant power. The chance to consort with kings and princes.

Among the kingdom elite, a shrinemaiden’s virginity is a sought-after luxury.

High Priestess Saleia took her bidding prices seriously. The summation of her girls’ worth amounts to the shrine’s reputation. The Temple of Inne-Anneah, the Goddess of Love and Lust, is a sovereign nation all on its own, a small drop of island between the kingdoms of Atalantea and Sarcopia, and bowed to no king.

Opportunities to bid for a shrinemaiden are extended only to a selected pool of men and women, all with varying combinations of nobility and wealth that satisfies even the High Priestess’ stringent criteria. It is for this reason girls like Adelai and her sisters spend years at the temple, training in court etiquette as well as in the seductive arts. They were taught politics and law, economics and trade, because the High Priestess considered this a valuable asset - sometimes more than the arts learned in the bedroom.

Adelai sometimes thought outsiders would find it strange to know that they were schooled to distinguish a count from a duke or a baron, to dance and play the harp, to converse in world affairs - just as well as they were how to pleasure a man with their mouths. Training was strict. Girls who chose to disobey one too many times, or whose innocence was compromised during their novitiates, were turned out with nothing but the clothes on their back and bleak prospects.

All potential shrinemaidens share one unique characteristic: their eyes were varying shades of purple, believed to be the mark of Inne-Anneah’s favor. Violet-eyed girls from noble families serve in the temple willingly, an honor that brings much prestige. Daughters of poor families, those with far too many mouths to feed, are sold to the high priestess in the hopes they can lead a better life there. Orphans like Adelai were dedicated to the temple even quicker, lacking the families to mourn their absence.

Adelai remember little of her parents. They died when she was only three, she was told; a result of a plague that had once ran rampant throughout the land. She was the youngest to have ever been offered, the ceremony performed by the high priestess herself. Adelai was the only one, she says, to have ever manifested purple eyes before five years of age.

Despite what the high priestess says, Adelai knew she had every reason to be nervous. Raised as the girls are in the arts of pleasure, they have never touched a man, or been touched by one. Their lives have been worldly, but they were also sheltered, the temple forbidden from entry to most males. Formal literature notwithstanding, their practices in the sexual arts have been limited to wooden phalluses for their mouths, and in other innocent experimentation, all to better preserve their expensive virginities. None of them had firsthand experience in the hands of real men, and it is this fear that plagues all shrinemaidens in the days leading up to their biddings.

All these thoughts ran through Adelai’s mind, even as the high priestess looks her over one last time and nods, satisfied. “I suppose you are as ready as you shall ever be. At any rate, you should fetch a good price today.” She laughs, but Adelai doesn’t. Saleia knows what is to come next; she does not.

 

Only one man is inside the waiting room they are shown into, an hour before the auctions are to begin. It was a shock to find him there, and for a moment, Adelai wavered. This is not the first meeting she had had with Thornton Altfyre, the taciturn, Sarcopian captain of the guard, and she knew well enough that he wasn’t supposed to be here. A young servant in the room hurried forward, eyes wide. “Milord - “ he began but is silenced when the captain raised his hand. The high priestess clucked disapprovingly, but he paid her no attention. His eyes were on Adelai, and despite herself she cannot help but blush.

“I was… sent, to inquire whether the preparations have been completed,” he said to the high priestess, and the mild distaste in his voice at being sent to oversee this trivial errand was clear. “The other auctions have been set. Already the slaves have been put on display.”

Slaves. Adelai could not stop herself from shivering. Shrinemaidens were not the only ones to be bidden on that night, but they were the only ones who have gone willingly. Many of the others at that separate auction are to be sold into slavery for their failure to pay debt, but the majority were prisoners from the latest war between Highrolfe and Sarcopia. The latter kingdom had emerged victorious, and many of those taken prisoner are a strange mix of notorious commanders and famed nobles. Adelai could not help but feel sympathy for them, but in this she knew she was powerless to interfere. While many of the guests will not be able to participate at a shrinemaidens’ auction, they can easily join in the biddings for these others. And while guests shall only pay for one night with a shrinemaiden, the others will be kept in servitude for the rest of their lives.

“We will begin soon.” The high priestess says, watching the captain watch her. Adelai kept her head bowed. She could feel the tension in the room, but was too afraid to look back at the man again.

Thornton was the only male from the outside permitted to enter the Temple of Inne-Anneah in recent years, although his visits were usually marked by the presence of dozens of matrons, to ward off any temptation on his side or on the girls. Adelai’s sisters rarely encountered him inside the temples though, and they all had constantly speculated as to his reasons for visiting, for the captain of the guard of the kingdom of Sarcopia had little in common with a temple high priestess, no matter how well-connected she was. Atalantea and Sarcopia have been at constant war in the past, though an unsteady truce holds at the moment.

“Maybe they’re lovers,” one of her sisters suggested once, and the others laughed at the absurdity of the idea. Adelai tried to smile along with the others, fearful they would see through her. The explanation was simple enough. Sarcopia was hosting the auction this year at the king’s palace, and the captain had been sent to hammer out the details. Why the captain of the guard was chosen to oversee this on behalf of the king, was still anyone’s guess, and it was obvious that the man himself was discomfited. Many spoke darkly of a trap, an attempt by King Garrant to do with treachery what warfare and strategy had failed. That Belair, the king of Atalantea, and the High Priestess Saleia seem willing to overlook this ploy and entertain the captain further puzzled Adelai, for she knew King Belair was a highly intelligent man. The high priestess, for all her acerbity, was also the wisest woman she knew. Furthermore, the temple had sworn not to interfere in all kingdom matters, to maintain their neutrality.

Adelai did not need to look back at him to know that there was a smile on the captain’s face. Today he made no jests or attempts to infuriate her as he often did, or ignore her. Adelai mustered enough strength to shoot him a freezing glance, like he was nothing more than tapestry as far as she was concerned. Thornton was one of the Sarcopian king’s closest advisors, and a powerful man in his own right, but not even he has the means to bid in the auctions, lacking the long lineage that has sustained Sarcopian nobility for countless generations. It made her heart twist, just a little, at this reminder.

Rather than be annoyed by her disdain, he grinned back, that little curl to his lips that invited and provoked at the same time. Adelai responded by turning her gaze away, trying in vain to look for something more interesting to fix her eyes on, without much luck. Her other sisters swallowed their first instincts to giggle among themselves, and bowed coquettishly at him as they passed, like they had been taught to.

The auctions were to take place during a lavish dinner inside the palace’s dining hall. None of the girls batted an eyelash over the luxuries of the place, nor did they gasp at its obvious opulence, from the richly draped scarlet curtains to the sparkling chandelier that glitters down at them from overhead; to the long tables arranged with expensive silverware and goblets that gleam gold in the light, though this was their first time visiting the castle. The high priestess’ training made sure of that.

The guests settled, ate from sumptuous-looking meals of ox and fattened partridge. Hovering servants filled their decanters with wine. Several of the other kings were in attendance, even the King of Atalantea, in what appeared to be a gesture of goodwill to the Sarcopian king. A small gong from somewhere sounded, marking the girls’ entrance into the room, and all looked up to watch them approach.

Adelai’s legs shook, but she concealed her fear. There were far more people here than she had ever expected. Looking at those sea of expectant faces, some curious, others eager, it was hard not to feel anxious. A few of her sisters trembled as well, but one look from the High Priestess was all it took to stiffen their resolve.

It was also Adelai’s first time to see the prisoners, those captured during the Highrolfe - Sarcopia war. Some she quickly recognized not by face, but by the way the others treated them. The prisoner in the middle of the group must be the legendary General Khalid Exeter, she thought, easily the most prized item among the prisoners then. It was he who had dealt the most damage to the Sarcopians, earning substantial victories throughout the war despite the overwhelming odds and in the face of a larger army, for Sarcopia was a military kingdom and Highrolfe was not. Some said he fought valiantly at the last battle that had eventually overcome his nation, giving the king and many of his subjects time to flee to the safety of the Ongkor mountains while he remained behind. It had taken a dozen men to overpower and capture him.

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