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Ambrosia Fairy: An Erotic Tale of Desperation and Drinking
Ambrosia Fairy: An Erotic Tale of Desperation and Drinking
Ambrosia Fairy: An Erotic Tale of Desperation and Drinking
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Ambrosia Fairy: An Erotic Tale of Desperation and Drinking

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An erotic prequel to "Her Majesty's Toilet" and "Her Majesty's Festival" -- Ambrosia Fairy is set in the same fictional country where rituals of water-sharing (urinating and drinking) are imbued with religious -- as well as erotic -- significance.

Hundreds of years before Pilot and the Ambassador meet in "Her Majesty's" series, Ambrosia Fairy tells the folkloric tale of an early religious figure and folk hero. The Ambrosia Fairy brings joy and happiness to the people by offering the intoxicating liquor of her own fluids.

This causes some strife, as there are a few who become addicted and continually seek out her offerings -- but the Prince of the young nation is able to offer a satisfying solution for all.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateJul 11, 2019
ISBN9780463069332
Ambrosia Fairy: An Erotic Tale of Desperation and Drinking
Author

Kaylee Kennicott

Kaylee is 25 years old and writes erotica.

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    Book preview

    Ambrosia Fairy - Kaylee Kennicott

    AMBROSIA FAIRY: A TALE OF DESPERATION AND DRINKING

    Kaylee Kennicott

    Smashwords edition

    Copyright 2019 Kaylee Kennicott

    AMBROSIA FAIRY

    The Ambrosia Fairy appeared in the early days of our world: before the land was fully-formed, before the people multiplied and covered the hills and the valleys. She existed back in the days of the first King, that benevolent chief who unified the disparate valleys against the threat of outside invaders.

    The Ambrosia Fairy was named because she was not -- could not have been -- human. She might appear suddenly with the snap of a cold breeze, or waft away into thin air. She was so beautiful that she shimmered in the daylight, like a living and moving mirage. And at night she glowed faintly, emitting a little light so that she seemed like a village star after the sun went down.

    But the most incredible thing about her was the taste of her fluids: as sweet and intoxicating as ambrosia.

    In the early days of our land, people relied on the cycle of water: the way it flows, drips, and settles in an area. We relied on seasonal floods. We channeled irrigation for paddies in order to grow food along ridges in the valleys. Our ancestors worshipped the rains that fell from the sky and the streams that ran down from the mountain tops.

    And one day, the Ambrosia Fairy came down from the top of a mountain, herself.

    Those in the village square watched her descend: a tiny, shining, naked creature moving down from the highest peak. They were scared, at first. No one had seen anything like this before.

    But when she walked among them, there was no one who did not love her. There was no one who did not fall at her feet, believing her to

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