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Devore - The Demon Princes Lover

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Devore The Demon Princes Lover
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    The Demon Princes Lover
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The Demon Princes Lover: summary, description and annotation

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Driven from her home by a false accusation of heresy, Elyna is forced from her hometown on the heels of her fathers execution. Venturing out into the wild to escape a wrathful High Priest, Elyna must seek the aid of the very demon prince that her father was accused of dealing with. As Elyna pits her wills against the wily demon prince, can she resist his powers of lust or will she give herself over fully to passion? Warning!! This 4000-word tale of lust and betrayal contains explicit descriptions of oral and vaginal sex. Adults only!


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The Star Kins "What a paradox, what a fearful reproach, when the dis- tinction of a few hundred milesnay, as many feet or even inches!can transform heinous crime to simple unqualified circumstance!" ... Hm. Balder Bashin, in the Ecclesiarchic Nuncia- mento of Year 1000 at Foresse, on the planet Kroki- nole. "Law cannot reach where enforcement will not follow." ... Popular aphorism. Excerpts from "Smade of Smade's Planet," feature ar- ticle in Cosmopolis, October, 1923: Q: Do you ever get lonesome, Mr.

Smade? A: Not with three wives and eleven children. Q: Whatever impelled you to settle here? A rather dis- mal world, on the whole, isn't it? A: Beauty is in the eye of the beholder- I don't care to run a vacation resort. Q: What kind of people patronize the tavern? A: People who want quiet and a chance to rest. Oc- casionally a traveler from inside the Pale or an ex- plorer. Q: I've heard that some of your clientele is pretty rough. In factnot to mince wordsit's the gen- eral belief that Smade's Tavern is frequented by THE DEMON PRINCES the most notorious pirates and freebooters of the Beyond.

A: I suppose they occasionally need rest too. Q: Don't you have difficulty with these people? Main- taining order, so to speak? A: No. They know my rules. I say, "Gentlemen, please desist. Your differences are your own; they are fu- gitive. The harmonious atmosphere of the tavern is mine and I intend it to be permanent." Q: So then they desist? A: Usually.

Q: And if not? A: I pitch them into the sea. Smade was a reticent man. His origins and early life were known only to himself. In the year 1479 he acquired a cargo of fine timber, which, for a whole set of obscure reasons, he took to a small stony world in the middle Beyond. And there, with the help of ten in- dentured artisans and as many slaves, he built Smade's Tavern. The site was a long narrow shelf of heath between the Smade Mountains and Sinade Ocean , precisely on the planet's equator.

He built to a plan as old as construction itself, using stone for the walls, timber beams and plates of schist for the roof. Completed, the tav- ern clung to the landscape, as integral as an outcrop of rock: a long two-storied structure with a high gable, a double row of windows in front and rear, chimneys at either end venting smoke from fires of fossil moss. At the rear stood a group of cypress trees, their shape and foliage completely appropriate to the landscape. Smade introduced other new features into the ecology: in a sheltered valley behind the tavern he planted fodder and garden truck; in another he kept a small herd of cattle and a flock of poul- try. All did moderately well, but showed no disposition to overrun the planet. Smade's dominion extended as far as he cared to claimthere was no other habitation on the planetbut he chose to assert con- trol only over an area of perhaps three acres, within the bounds of a whitewashed stone fence.

From occurrences beyond the fence Smade held aloof, unless he had reason to consider his own interests threateneda contingency which had never arisen. Smade's Planet was the single companion of Smade's Star, an THE STAR KING undistinguished white dwarf in a relatively empty region of space. The native flora was sparse: lichen, moss, primitive vines and pal- odendron, pelagic algae which tinctured the sea black. The fauna was even simpler: white worms in the seabottom muck; a few ge- latinous creatures which gathered and ingested the black algae in a ludicrously inept fashion; an assortment of simple protozoa. Smade's alterations of the planet's ecology could hardly, therefore, be considered detrimental. Smade himself was tall, broad, and stout, with bone-white skin and jet-black hair.

His antecedents, as has been mentioned, were vague, and he never had been heard to reminisce; the tavern, how- ever, was managed with the utmost decorum. The three wives lived in harmony, the children were handsome and well-mannered, Smade himself was unfailingly polite. His rates were high, but his hospitality was generous, and he made no difficulties about collect- ing his bill. A sign hung above the bar: "Eat and drink without stint. He who can and does pay is a customer. He who cannot and does not pay is a guest of the establishment."' Smade's patrons were diverse: explorers, locators, Jarnell tech- nicians, private agents in search of lost men or stolen treasure, more rarely an IPCC representativeor "weasel," in the argot of the Beyond.

Others were folk more dire, and these were of as many sorts as there were crimes to be named. Making a virtue of neces- sity, Smade presented the same face to all. To Smade's Tavern in the July of 1524 came Kirth Gersen, representing himself as a locater. His boat was the standard model leased by the estate houses within the Oikumene, a thirty-foot cyl- inder equipped with no more than bare necessities: in the bow the monitor-autopilot duplex, a star-finder, chronometer, macroscope, and manual controls; midships the living quarters with air machine, organic reconverter, information bank, and storage; aft the energy block, the Jarnell intersplit, and further storage. The boat was as scarred and dented as any; Gersen's personal disguise was no more than well-worn clothes and natural taciturnity. "Will you stay awhile, Mr. "Will you stay awhile, Mr.

Gersen?" "Two or three days, perhaps. I have things to think over." Smade nodded in profound understanding. "We're slack just now; just you and the Star King. You'll find all the quiet you need." "I'll be pleased for that," said Gersen, which was quite true; his THE DEMON PRINCES Just-completed affairs had left him with a set of unresolved qualms. He turned awav, then halted and looked back as Smade's words penetrated his consciousness. "There's a Star King here, at the tav- i=" "He has presented himself so." "I've never seen a Star King.

Not that I know of." Smade nodded politely to indicate that the gossip had reached to the allowable limits of particularity. He indicated the tavern clock: "Our local time; better set your watch. Supper at seven o'clock, just half an hour." Gersen climbed stone stairs to his room, an austere cubicle con- taining bed, chair and table. He looked through the window, along the verge of heath between mountain and ocean. Two spacecraft occupied the landing field: his own and another ship, larger and heavier, evidently the property of the Star King. Gersen washed in a hall bathroom, then returned to the down- stairs hall, where he dined on the produce of Smade's own gardens and herd.

Two other guests made their appearance. The first was the Star King, who strode to the far end of the room in a flutter of rich garments: an individual with skin dyed jet black, eyes like ebony cabochons as black as his skin. He was taller than average height, and carried himself with consummate arrogance. Lusterless as charcoal, the skin dve blurred the contrast of bis features, made his face a protean mask. His garments were dramatically fanciful: breeches of orange silk, a loose scarlet robe with white sash, a loose striped gray and black coif which hung rakishly down the right side of his head. Gersen inspected him with open curiosity.

This was the first Star King he had observed as such, though popular belief had hundreds moving incognito through the worlds of man: cosmic mysteries since the first human visit to Lambda Grus. The second of the guests apparently had just arrived: a thin middle-aged man of indefinite racial background. Gersen had seen many like him, miscellaneous uncategorized vagabonds of the Be- yond. He had short coarse white hair, a sallow undyed skin, an air of diffident uncertainty. He ate without appetite, looking back and forth between Gersen and the Star King in furtive speculation, but it seemed as if presently his most searching glances were directed toward Gersen. Gersen tried to avoid the increasingly insistent gaze; the least of his desires was involvement in the affairs of a stranger.

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