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“This is no time for mockery and humor. I’m a witch. Of course I use a broom to fly. How else would I have reached the mountains so quickly?” Lady Rema said, blushing.

“I do apologize,” Lela said. “How very rude of me to poke fun at your revelation and your broom.” Hysterically laughing, she held her stomach. She considered picking up the bag of food and heading back to Eldrich’s house.

“Lela! Compose yourself. I have more to tell you.”

“Oh yes, by all means, please go on.”

“My plan the day you left was to bring you back, even if I had to cast a spell on you. I was afraid that once vampires learned the golden ball was hidden and that you had left the castle to go live with one of them, they’d come after your father and everyone else in the castle. Vampires are vicious, but they do respect rules. And without the golden ball, they cannot harm you nor can they attack your loved ones provided you remain in the same household. Do you understand what I’m saying?” She gritted her teeth. “You left the castle, leaving the door open for an attack. They would have killed your father and anyone else who dared cross their path. I would not have been able to stop them. They would have tortured your father, drained him slowly and then cast him into the sea where he would have endured further agony. They are despicable, soulless creatures who care nothing for humans or any other beings.”

“If what you’re saying is true, why didn’t you come after me?”

“Because of him,” she said.

“Eldrich?”

“He’s not what you think he is. I was afraid.”

“Don’t hold your tongue, now, old lady!”

“I was afraid he would rip me apart if I tried to take you. Most of our spells don’t work on vampires and the few that do require special ingredients and a wise hand. I have neither. I’ve never traveled outside of Barmoth. I’m a pathetic witch.”

“Eldrich is not like that. He would have never harmed you.”

“I know you love him, but he’s hiding something from you.”

“Enough! I want to know where my father is. I swear I’ll strangle you right here and now if you don’t tell me.”

“My sisters cast a spell on the castle, making it invisible and impenetrable. They helped me protect the people I love. But another witch, a powerful and old one, cast a different spell. She sent everyone to one of the unknown kingdoms. She hates you and Eldrich. She wants nothing more but to see you both suffer. I tried to bring them back. My sisters and I tried, but we could not break her curse.”

The same witch who turned Eldrich into a frog for not lying with her; the same witch who cast a spell on Zel sentencing her to death unless Lela lied with her lover, Xavier; the same witch who was now bent on forever hurting her and Eldrich. Curse you, witch! Curse you!

“What must I do to get them all back?” Lela asked.

“You’ll need to travel to her. She demands that you and Eldrich come to her and beg her for forgiveness.”

“Forgiveness?” Lela bit her upper lip.

“For the hurt you and Eldrich have caused her. Eldrich for not lying with her, and you for breaking the curse, and worst of all because Eldrich fell in love with you. For all of that, she demands you ask her for forgiveness.”

“And if I do that, will she return my father…everyone to the castle?”

“She has given me and my sisters her word.”

If Lela was to beg anything from anyone she needed to know that person’s name. “What’s her name?”

Lady Rema shuffled her feet. “She goes by the name of Stiltz.”

“I know that name,” Lela said. She’d heard her mother and father whisper it when they thought she wasn’t around and whenever she asked them about it, they’d shoo her away and tell her to go play and never speak of it.

“She’ll try and trick you.”

“Did my parents know her?” Lela asked, frowning.

Lady Rema covered her face with her hands. “The day after you were born she came before your mother and father to claim you. Stiltz had helped your poor mother after her father told a terrible lie to the King. He told your father that his daughter, your mother, could spin straw into gold and when your father found out that she couldn’t, he sentenced her to death. Bless your father, he is kind but he’s no one’s fool. He’ll not tolerate disrespect or treachery. Ah, but the wretched witch, Stiltz, helped your mother and in return for her help your mother offered her, her firstborn. You.”

“I have absolutely had it. How many more secrets are you keeping? And spinning straw into gold? Absurd, ludicrous! Gold has not existed in Barmoth for an eternity,” Lela said.

“When Stiltz came for you, your father and mother tried to dissuade her, offering her treasures and a noble position in the castle. She finally consented to one thing. If they could guess her name in three day’s time, she’d pardon your mother. Witches are secretive. We do not disclose much about ourselves and certainly not our real names. But Stiltz was careless. She thought she had won and so on the third night she walked through a remote village yelling her name. A villager, I’m convinced it was a fallen angel who was passing through Barmoth, traveled to the castle and told your mother and father. Stiltz swore she’d hurt you someday. She stormed out of the castle swearing she’d find a way to hurt you.”

Lela could not absorb the information she had just heard. It was all too much. She’d think about it later.

“If you have any other secrets, hold them. Tell me how to get to the witch.”

“She lives in the highest point of the tallest mountain.”

“Even with Eldrich’s speed and strength it will take us days, maybe even weeks to reach it. I’m not a climber. It’s impossible!”

“I will give you my broom. It can carry you both. Go to Eldrich and be back here at sundown.”

Lela wrapped her arms around Lady Rema. “All is not well between you and me. We will someday sit down and finish this conversation. But I know you did what you did because you wanted to protect me and my father.”

“Come back at sundown,” Lady Rema said.

“Wait for me here,” Lela said.

“Go.”

Lela made it back to the house in less than an hour. She raced up the stairs and into her room. Exhausted, her stomach full from dried, salted meat, she fell into her bed. She needed to sleep, if only for a few hours. Drifting into slumber, she prayed to the Gods to give her courage.

A whisper awakened her.

“Sweet Princess, I missed you,” Eldrich said into her ear.

Still groggy, she said, “I have so much to tell you.”

Kissing her neck, he swept his hand down her arm. “Tell me afterwards.”

His heat was driving her crazy and she felt guilty for wanting him inside of her.

His lips touched hers. She opened her mouth to him, her hand sliding down to his hard cock. She gripped its head and moved her hand up and down on it. He continued kissing her sending shivers down to her toes.

Moving her hand away from his stiffness, he said, “I have a surprise for you.”

“What is it?” she asked, moaning and squirming.

“Will you do as I say?” he asked.

She’d do anything he asked. “Command me.”

“Sweet delicious, Princess, I missed being inside of you, thrusting into you.”

“Then do it, my love. Plunge into me, hurt me.”

“Not yet. First I want to show you my surprise. I think you’ll be pleased.”

“Tell me what to do. I’m yours.”

He sat up in the bed and leaned against the headboard. “I want you to play with yourself. I want to watch you touch yourself.”

He had never asked that of her. It struck her that she had never thought about putting on that kind of display for him. She suddenly felt prudish.

The sconces on the walls shimmered light into the room. She got up and glided to the end of the bed.

Grinning, he winked at her.