AMATEUR XXX STORIES

-

ALPHABETICAL SEX STORY LISTINGS:

A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z

LASSOK 03 thick white hair came

The tale of Lassok and Zairbhreena

by Cobalt Jade



3. Zairbhreena's Peril

But what of the princess? The last thing she remembered was standing in

front of the mirror in the gem merchant's tent when, without warning, she

was attacked by a fiery stream of light that fizzed like a soda-drink. She

would have screamed aloud, but it held her immobile. Then came another

flash of light and she fell into blackness.

When she came to her senses she was mute and paralyzed, lying on her

back. She felt oddly insensate. She could not feel the carpet below her,

or smell the heavy smoke that hung in the air. The gem merchant's

daughter, so helpful earlier, now squatted beside her and rudely poked her

breast. Zairbhreena tried to snap at her, but she couldn't open her mouth.

The girls' fingernail made a strange scraping sound. Zairbhreena thought

she had fallen ill and wondered why Jaseloris seemed so unconcerned.

Couldn't she see she needed help?

Jaseloris looked into her eyes, and Zairbhreena saw a small, evil smile

bloom on her lips. She stood and called for her guards.

"Take this statue," she said, "and sell it to Jendrik the potter.

Crushed into lime, it will make a fine addition to the clay of his wares."

The princess wondered what statue she had meant, for she had seen no

statue in the tent. But the guards seemed to understand he was ill, for

they lifted her off the floor, grunting as if she was a heavy trunk and not

a slim girl. Her body felt weirdly rigid. Turning her in their grip, they

passed before the silver mirror. And Zairbhreena saw that she was the

statue. She had been turned into stone, and they were taking her to the

potter's to be crushed.

She screamed, and screamed, and screamed! She screamed as they strapped

her onto the protesting camel, she screamed as they swatted it through the

bazaar, she screamed they reached the potter's yard and unloaded her like a

lump of mute stone. And no one could hear her, or attend to her plight,

for her jaws remained motionless. She was totally paralyzed, and totally

helpless.

They propped her against the potter's shed, balancing her on the tips of

her toes as she could no longer stand flat on her feet. Her eyes were

frozen in their sockets, unable to look away from the activities before

her. Two well-muscled slaves attacked a block of stone with heavy mallets,

while a third gathered the chunks in a basket and placed them on a table

that rotated under a giant grindstone, which crushed them further as it

rolled over them. Another slave then swept the powder into a wooden bowl

and poured it into a vat of wet clay an apprentice was stirring. Elsewhere

more apprentices threw clay onto their wheels and shaped it, then placed

the jars onto paddles of stone and fed into the fiery hell of the kilns.

The princess paid particular attention to this last part, and whimpered.

The two guards stood with the potter in a far part of the yard. She

supposed they were haggling over price.

She sent a silent prayer to the gods for rescue. Would she feel pain as

her body was crushed? More importantly, would her soul depart from the

statue when it was broken? Would it fly to the gods as if she had died, or

would it stubbornly cling to every shard and grain of dust? She began to

whimper again, thinking of the mallets, the grinding wheel, the kilns--her

agonized consciousness trapped forever in the form of dozens of bowls

scattered throughout the city.

Meanwhile, the elder guard had left the yard. The younger came to an

agreement with the potter and strapped her on the camel again, to take her

somewhere else. Zairbhreena wept in relief, but no tears crossed the

frozen features of her face.

The guard took her to a house she judged belonged to a tilemaker, going

by the colorful riles that adorned its walls and roof. He went inside the

yard and came out with a pouch of coins. He smiled and pinched her

petrified cheek as he walked by, then led the camel away without giving her

a backwards glance. She had been sold. But to who? And for what?

A wiry, elderly man with thick white hair came up to inspect her. He

had with him his handsome young son, who looked to be her own age. The boy
stared at her, much taken. "What will you do with this lovely statue,

father?" he asked.

"She is to be a wedding gift for Prince Lassok," the older man--the

tilemaker, she guessed--said. "Here, help me carry it into the yard."

The heart of the princess leapt with joy. The prince was sure to

recognize her on being presented to him. His kiss would release her from

this evil spell and transform her back to flesh, for that was what always

happened in the fairy-stories of her childhood.

The yard was full of blocks of rare stone in all shades of earth and

gem. Stacked here and there were columns of tiles that had been cut from

that stone, some neat as coins, others teetering like drunks. A heavy

wooden table buzzed loudly in the center, the strange noise made by a

circular saw that two slaves turned with handles.

The saw was slicing through a block of granite.

To Zairbhreena's surprise the tilemaker measured her waist with a piece

of string. "Twenty inches," he said. "Perfect."

"Why is that father?" the young man asked.

"Prince Lassok wants eighty gold tiles to adorn the floor of his nuptial

chamber," the tilemaker said. "This fair beauty shall easily yield that

amount."

NOOOO!!! the princess screamed. But no one heard her.

"Are you sure about that father?" the young man said, a note of entreaty

in his voice. "It is such a beautiful statue. Surely the prince would

appreciate it as a gift."

"The prince ordered some tiles, not a stone representation of some

nobleman's sweet-meat," the tilemaker said peevishly, marking the

princess's torso with a wax stylus. "Besides, if there are to be any

statues in his palace, he would want one of his wife, not some anonymous

young pretty."

With a shock the princess realized they did not recognize without her

veil and robe. They would not have recognized her even with them. All

veiled women looked alike in the city of Carsimbad.

"It is unseemly, too, to keep a nude statue about the house; it might

arouse passions that are better kept confined to the bedroom. Take note of

what I say, young man."

"Yes, father," the son said sheepishly. He looked like he wanted to

argue it further, but nonetheless obeyed the gestures of his father to help

him lift Zairbhreena's petrified form onto the table, positioning her

crosswise. The slaves began to turn the saw.

Zairbhreena struggled like a panther, vainly commanding her frozen limbs

to move, but she remained mute and immobile. The saw began to travel

toward her on an inset metal track, the sharp teeth a solid blur. She

began to pray. Please, almighty gods, free me from this fate! She could

not become the tiled floor of her own nuptial chamber, accepting the slap

and shuffle of indifferent feet as the prince mourned her

disappearance...or, even worse, took another wife in the bed made for her!

The saw crept an arm's length's, a hand's length, then finally a

fingernail's length away. Zairbhreena's prayer became a high-pitched

babble of fear.

Perhaps some god heard and took pity, for at that moment the leather

belt driving the saw snapped in two. The saw had stopped a hair length's

away from her hard stony waist.

The tilemaker swore and beat his slaves, for, as he loudly declared, he

had spent the last of his money on the statue and must sell it now to

repair his saw. With angry words he bade his son to take the statue to

Jafit the statuer and sell it, making sure he received a good price.

Zairbhreena wept with relief.

The tilemaker's son harnessed the work-horse to the cart, glancing shyly

at Zairbhreena in the shadowed privacy of the alleyway. A familiar warmth

smoldered in his eyes. "You are so lovely," he said. "I wish I could keep

you for myself. I have never had a girl before who stood still as you,

listening to everything I had to say." He stroked the cool stone of

Zairbhreena's cheek. "Or one who gazed at me with no distractions, and

showed her flesh with no coyness or censure, as you do now." He kissed

Zairbhreena on the lips, which of course she could not feel.

But, alas, a mere kiss could not break so severe a spell. The princess

remained a stone statue.

She had no chance to feel disappointment, for the tilemaker's son

initiated other, more intimate, actions. His mouth pressed against her

fine-carved smile, then tenderly mouthed each stony breast, kissing each

tiny nipple. His fingers explored the hidden crevices of her body in a

heat so raw and urgent it seemed, to the princess, that he was starving and

had found a roast fowl. Never had the prince acted this way towards her!

A warm, melting feeling came over her, a core of heat in her belly that

flushed slowly outward towards her skin. Her head swam with new and

interesting thoughts. The young man's tongue made a glistening track down

the smooth stone of her stomach, then lingered on the stony curls at her

loins. The princess felt...pleasure? Was it possible?

The young man cupped her hard marble buttocks in his hands, his fingers

pressing deep within the cool crack that cleaved them. The princess

moaned, a moan as silent as her screams. Her fused legs strained to part

for the probing fingers of the youth, her arms to rise and embrace him. If

any had been observing the pair, he would have seen the statue lighten in

color and move slightly. For that was the secret of stone to flesh; not a

kiss, as the princess had supposed, but the carnal act performed to its

climax.

But neither she nor the prince had guessed this.

The youth broke off his embrace at his father's sharp cry. "I thought I

told you to take that statue to Jafit!" he scolded.

The youth stood, quickly stuffing his stiff organ back into his

trousers. "I was readying the cart, father." And he pushed the petrified

princess inside, then threw a dusty canvas cover over her. The princess

felt the wheels turn as he led the cart out into the street. The passion

she had within her faded; the fleshy core had reverted back to stone. She

had no idea of what had happened to her. She supposed it was another form

of magic. In a way it was.

The increased level of noise told her they were coming close to the

marketplace. Mixed with the shouts and banter was the voice of the prince.

"Zairbhreena! Zairbhreena!"

I am here! Turn and look; I am in this cart! Desperately she tried to

project her thoughts. But he did not hear her, and continued to call.

The statuer gave the tilemaker's son 15 dinar for her. Well pleased,

praising her beauty. he stood her in the front yard of his shop with the

dozens of other statues he sold. Pointed toes planted firmly in the sand,

Zairbhreena stared unblinkingly out at the busy bazaar. The prince would

surely see her here.

But he walked right by her, distracted, and never knew she was there.

The hot sun beat down on the sobbing princess, warming her even though

her encasing of stone. What was to become of her? Suppose someone bought

her, and took her away from the city forever? They would never know who

she was. She could decorate a garden or foyer for many, many lonely years,

touched only by the dust rags of disinterested house slaves.

Though the prince did not notice her she attracted other sorts of

attention. Market thieves leered at her nakedness and made lewd comments

in the crudest manner. The statuer drove them away but they came back

again and again to loiter. One of them even tried to carve his name in her

thigh. Luckily, Caliph's marketplace guards chased the ruffian off...then

handed the statuer a fine for displaying a nude statue in public, which

went against the laws of the city.

"What am I to do," the statuer muttered, wiping his sweat-drenched

forehead with a square of white silk. "A beautiful young woman like

yourself should be displayed properly, to find a good home." He addressed

her like a young child or pet, but did not expect her to answer; it was the

same way he spoke to all his statues. "I shall have to keep you inside.

Ah well."

He went round to fetch his assistant to help him move her. But before

they returned another insult was inflicted on the princess: a pack of

off-duty shop girls, hardened by long hours of work, scrawled obscene

things upon her with their sticks of kohl and pots of lip-paint, barking

raucous laughter when the statuer chased them off.

He wiped her off with a wet rag. "Come my pretty," he wheedled. "Back

into the shop."

It was almost dusk now, and the princess's hope of rescue were more

remote than ever. As the statuer locked up his shop when a young man with

curly brown hair burst in. He was thin, with a nervous, ascetic look, and

his hands were covered liberally with stone dust. "I must see that

statue!" he panted, for he had run all the way across the market. "I've

heard talk in the city about her all afternoon!"

"You must mean the golden goddess here," the statuer said. "She has

attracted so much attention I was forced to bring her inside, so no one

would steal her." Actually that was not true, but the statuer, sensing a

sale, embellished on the truth. "Look well, my young man. Such fine

craftsmanship, it seems almost alive!"

The young man looked closely at Zairbhreena's face, marveling.

Zairbhreena neither moved nor blinked, of course. "How the eyes glisten!"

he remarked. "They seem as if full of tears. And those finely carved

lips, they almost tremble on the verge of speech!"

"Only thirty denar," the statuer said.

The young man sighed but did not haggle her price. From many pockets he

produced a variety of coins and other tender, some marked with the Caliph's

seal, others bearing inscriptions from lands to the north and east. "Here

is your money, O Cruel One, much more than a humble sculptor like myself

can afford, but I shall part with it anyway, as I have fallen in love with

this luscious maiden. Shall I owe you the last wezet?"

"A promissory note will be sufficient," the statuer said. "Or you can

let me sell your latest work for a commission."

"A deal then," the sculptor said. He loaded the princess in the back of

his donkey cart and drove her away towards the upper city, where more

adventures awaited her...

...or dusty oblivion.