The Girl with No Name
Copyright 2013 by Edward -EC-
EC's Erotic Fiction - /~caligula97030/

(warnings: public nudity, sex between adults, corporal punishment, maledom, 
humiliation, war violence, occult, language)

Chapter Thirty-four – Vesna Rogúskt-Orsktacktna

So…Danka Síluckt’s travels ended when the Path of her Life finally brought her 
back to Rika Héckt-nemát. Who would have thought she’d end up precisely 
where her journey started? Certainly not the traveling singers and story-tellers, 
who already were making up increasingly sorrowful and outlandish versions of 
her adventures. 

It seems that she lost all desire to travel after she married and became known to 
the world as Vesna Rogúskt-Orsktacktna, Farmer Tuko Orsktackt’s wife from the 
east. She became the partner he needed to repair his broken farm, and in doing so, 
she helped him repair his broken soul. Within eight years she bore him seven 
children, of whom six survived to become adults. There were four boys and two 
girls, all of whom were vital to the rebuilding of Rika Héckt-nemát. One son 
became a city councilman, another became the town Church’s leading priest, 
another served in Parliament, and the youngest boy…the roughest one who was 
always causing trouble, eventually became captain of the city guard. The two 
surviving girls did just as well: one married the mayor of Rika Chorna, and the 
other stayed behind, to marry a farmer and double the size of the Orsktackt estate. 
The Orsktackts became one of the leading families in Grand Duchy of Upper 
Danubia during the nineteenth century.

Although she lost the desire to travel, Vesna’s soul remained restless. She took 
over the abandoned trading house in her city and converted it into a medical 
research center. The project had humble beginnings, just a few doctors, alchemists, 
and potion-makers studying medical texts and cadavers, but over time the medical 
library grew, a hospital was added, and the project flourished into the medical 
university that we have today. Vesna frequently visited the hospital, constantly 
asking questions and occasionally assisting the staff when they had to set broken 
bones.

Rika Héckt-nemát started to recover the same year the girl-with-no-name secretly 
returned home. Farmer Orsktackt impressed upon the city council the need for rat-
control programs and improved sanitation. When word got out that the city was 
safe, outsiders came to take advantage of the free houses in the town and the free 
land outside. Eventually there were enough workers to re-start the aqueduct 
project. Workers returned to farms and orchards, the harvests were good, and the 
plague and famine of 1750 became a distant memory. Farmer Orsktackt and his 
wife continued their rides and hunting trips in the fields and forests, observing the 
countryside and noting with satisfaction the province’s recovery. 

----------

The Grand Duke of Danubia spent the following decades working on a multitude 
of projects. In 1761, the son of the Lord of Novo Sokut Tok went to the capitol to 
talk to the Grand Master of the Trader’s Guild. From there he planned to travel to 
Austria, to see about procuring some new muskets for his father’s militia. The 
night before he was supposed to leave, he accepted an invitation from the Grand 
Duke to have dinner at his castle. Seated with the sovereign was a beautiful young 
woman who had just braided her hair. The young woman captivated the visitor, 
and turned out to be available for marriage…very much so. Three days later, 
without understanding what exactly had happened, the son of one of the men most 
loyal to the Vice-Duke of Rika Chorna was in the Great Temple of the capitol, 
getting married to the daughter of a man his father considered an enemy. The 
ceremony was very public and greeted with the blessings of the highest clergy 
members in the nation. 

The young man had to cancel his plans to go to Vienna. Instead, he returned home 
with the Grand Duke’s daughter and the shocking news that his entire family had 
just switched allegiance. Along with his marriage certificate, the young man 
brought home a letter from the Grand Duke addressing his new in-laws with kind 
words of greeting and the “pleasure we will have working with each other as we 
address the challenges the Destroyer has placed at the feet of the Grand Duchy of 
Upper Danubia.”

That marriage was the first out of many. Some ambitious politicians even traveled 
to the capitol to intentionally seek an audience with the ruler and bring back one 
of his daughters. In 1763, a junior council official from Plátnackt Dék persuaded 
the Grand Duke to allow him to marry one of his daughters. The ruler normally 
would not have given a daughter to such a low-ranking official, but there was 
something about the young man that appealed to him. Perhaps he saw a lot of 
himself in the petty representative. Anyhow, he reluctantly followed his instincts 
and allowed the man to take away one of his less attractive offspring. Upon 
returning home the councilman used his new family alliance to seize control of 
the entire city, declare the area loyal to the sovereign, and appoint himself the 
local governor. The Grand Duke was very impressed with the young man’s 
audacity and rewarded him by adding several nearby towns to his jurisdiction and 
making Plátnackt Dék a separate province. 

Because of their perception of public honor and Danubian protocol, the Grand 
Duke’s sons-in-law never warned anyone else not to travel to the capitol or let 
their friends know how they had been duped. They had to pretend they had 
willingly married the sovereign’s daughters. As a result of the informal code of 
silence, years went by and no one could accurately calculate how many daughters 
the ruler actually was marrying off. Over five years the Vice-Duke lost family 
after family of his best allies to the wiles of his rival’s daughters. By June, 1767 
he realized that more than half of the provincial governors, town council leaders, 
and guild chiefs had someone in their family who had married a daughter of the 
Grand Duke. At that point the idea of starting a rebellion or threatening a 
rebellion as a political maneuver had become impossible. 

The Vice-Duke realized another awful fact; that his two surviving sons had 
recently departed for the capitol. The Vice-Duke desperately sent messengers to 
find the young men, but already it was too late. An elaborate entourage of 
Danubian Clergy members, Royal Guards, and ministers were escorting the 
happily-married young men back to their homes in the east. The Grand Duke led 
the procession, bringing with him gifts and bottles of his best wine to celebrate 
with his new in-laws. The Vice-Duke became dishonorably drunk at the festivities, 
while the Grand Duke looked on and coldly smiled. 

The Vice-Duke died the following year. One of his heir’s first announcements 
was that farming taxes throughout the Vice-Duchy would be reduced. The heir 
also announced much of his father’s artwork and jewelry would be sold-off to pay 
debts.

In 1770, after a decade of planning, the Priests of more than half of the parishes in 
the Vice-Duchy declared they were switching allegiance to the Old Believers’ 
faction of the Danubian Church. The religious coup brought western Danubian 
religious traditions to the east and ended all foreign religious influence in the 
Grand Duchy of Upper Danubia.

----------

The Grand Duke’s attentions were focused on the Duchy’s borders and securing 
control of the east, but occasionally he received reports about the plague town 
Rika Héckt-nemát and its recovery. Yes, a town that he had considered 
completely dead seemed to have recuperated and was starting to prosper. He sent 
a group of doctors to investigate the inhabitants and see if the quarantine should 
be lifted. Sure enough, not only was the town’s population healthy, but a new 
medical institute was operating, using a lot of the knowledge from the Cult of the 
Ancients. The messengers brought back news of the impressive work of the 
town’s leading couple: the farmer Tuko Orsktackt and his wife Vesna Rogúskt-
Orsktacktna.

The Grand Duke lifted the quarantine and re-routed the trade road to enter Rika 
Héckt-nemát. He decided to pay a visit to the city to see its progress for himself 
and investigate what the Crown could do to assist. Tuko Orsktackt, the town’s 
entire Clergy, and the City Council received the ruler in the most elaborate 
ceremony the city had seen in many decades. The Grand Duke and his ministers 
attended the Council to listen to suggestions that would improve the region. 

The Grand Duke visited the medical institute the following day. He was eager to 
meet its director and see if she really did have knowledge from the Cult of the 
Ancients. When she approached him and saluted, he stared at her in shock. She 
looked very familiar… no… it was impossible… but there she was, right in front 
of him. He was looking into the face of his favorite concubine… the smart young 
Follower who had mysteriously vanished during the Great Fire. Yes indeed, it was 
her!

Director Vesna Rogúskt-Orsktacktna smiled at her former Master. There was 
defiance and mischief in her expression, because there was no way the Grand 
Duke could do anything against her without seriously harming his own interests. 
He had come to the city to honor the achievements of the Orsktackts, with the 
entire political elite of the country watching. The ruler quickly regained his 
composure and congratulated her on the medical institute’s remarkable progress. 
When he asked what he could do to assist, she responded:

“Your Majesty has conducted extensive medical research and our people are 
grateful. I trust that Your Majesty would wish to see that remarkable work 
expanded for the people of the Duchy. This city would be most appreciative if 
Your Majesty could share your research materials with our school.”

“Yes, of course. Send your students to the Royal Library, and I will make my 
research available to your institute.”

Vesna couldn’t resist another mischievous smile and a final question:

“I trust that Your Majesty finds your loyal subject’s service to the Duchy 
satisfactory?” 

“Yes. Your service has been… truly remarkable… exceptional...”

The Grand Duke kept his word and opened the Royal Household to students from 
Vesna Rogúskt-Orsktacktna’s institute. She sent 14 young people to transcribe the 
entire contents of the Followers’ research. When they returned to Rika Héckt-
nemát, a wagon crew transporting a gift from the Royal Household accompanied 
them. When Vesna took off the cover, she saw a printing press with a supply of 
parchment and bookbinding materials.

Vesna reciprocated the following year. She traveled to the capitol, passing the 
new ministry buildings that would comprise the ruler’s vision for the grand new 
city. She visited the castle and met with the Grand Duchess, who was the daughter 
of the Vice-Duke in Rika Chorna. She surprised the castle staff by not having any 
visible gifts for the ruler, but she asked to meet with him in his private study.

The Grand Duke seemed nervous, wondering if his former concubine wanted to 
confront him about the past. However, there was no mention of her two years in 
the castle at all. Instead, she presented her gift to him: a supply of blue powder. 
She showed him how to use it by making tea and explained how the Followers 
had set it aside to extend the lives of their most important researchers.

“This is the last of my supply, Your Majesty. Now it is yours. The Ancients have 
given you their final gift, and the only thing they ask in return is that you use your 
extra time among the Realm of the Living wisely.”

Vesna left the castle and never again saw the Grand Duke. However, after that 
meeting he changed. His arrogance vanished, leaving behind his intelligence, 
cunning, and desire to see his realm prosper. He became even more obsessed with 
research and education than he had been previously. He was interested in judicial 
reforms and infrastructure development and applied innovations throughout his 
time on the throne. He would live until 1816, long enough to guide the Duchy 
past the partitioning of Poland, the turmoil of revolution, and the Napoleonic wars. 
The ruler remained aloof from Europe’s politics, so the conflicts that afflicted the 
rest of the continent never troubled the Grand Duchy of Upper Danubia.

----------

Isauria attended the university in Sebérnekt Ris from 1759 until 1763, completing 
the four-year program to become a scribe of historical events. During that time 
she wrote and published numerous articles about the wars of 1754 and 1758. Later 
she wrote a book of poetry romanticizing life in the Kingdom before the country's 
civil war. Her poems became particularly popular after 1764, when the Ottoman 
Sultan's army crushed both factions and re-annexed the entire territory. As soon as 
the Kingdom of the Moon was lost, people throughout Europe immediately began 
to romanticize it.

Isauria married another student the same year she graduated from the university. 
Two years later the Grand Duke, not knowing anything about Isauria's 
relationship with his former concubine, assigned her husband to join the Danubian 
ambassador in Constantinople. Isauria accompanied her spouse, undoubtedly 
passing through Sumy Ris and other parts of the former Lower Danubia. While 
abroad and living in a country where living conditions for women were much 
more constricted than in the Duchy, she alleviated her boredom by concentrating 
on her writing.  She had been fascinated by the stories about her former mistress 
circulating around Sebérnekt Ris and added new material to the tales and gossip 
she had collected during her year in Gordnáckt Suyástenckt. She also was 
fascinated with Danka's ill-fated marriage to Doctor Ilmátarkt and wrote a series 
of sad poems about the short-lived relationship. She embellished and 
romanticized many of the details. 

Like various writers before her, Isauria did not mention Danka or Ilmátarkt by 
name. She did not use her own name and chose to publish using various pen-
names. When she returned to the Duchy with her husband in 1775, she published 
a collection of poetry called "Lovers among the Ruins" that included not only 
material based on Danka's adventures, but also various romantic fantasies and 
some of her own early sexual encounters with various boys serving as apprentices 
with the Defenders' militia. 

During the 1780s, two popular Danubian poets plagiarized Isauria's work and 
recast her subject, using the increasingly popular title: "the girl-with-no-name."

----------

There was one final tragedy that Danka, or Vesna, or the girl-with-no-name, had 
to endure. At the age of four, her youngest daughter died of appendicitis. Even 
though she had other children, she took the child’s death very hard. She refused to 
allow the girl to be buried in the family cemetery. Instead, she set off on her own, 
carrying the child’s body to an abandoned piece of land on the east side of Rika 
Héckt-nemát. In the days before the plague, the area had been a labyrinth of dirt 
paths and squalid huts, the home of the city’s day laborers. However, it had been 
totally abandoned for almost three decades. And yet, in those woods, next to a 
pond and the foundation of a ruined hut, Vesna insisted on laying her daughter to 
rest.

The following year, Vesna Rogúskt-Orsktacktna had a chapel constructed on the 
site of her daughter’s grave, over-looking the pond. On the other side of the pond 
she later built another chapel to honor the families who had died in the rat-plague.

“There were people here. They’ve been forgotten, but that doesn’t mean they 
never existed. I plan to remember. My daughter and I will bear witness to the 
lives that passed through here, and the ones that ended here.”

The chapel project brought peace to Vesna’s soul. Over time her workers cleared 
away the brush and converted the woods into a large park. Her husband took 
official title to the entire area, but the two chapels became public places where the 
residents of Rika Héckt-nemát made pilgrimages and performed penance. A final 
touch for Vesna was reintroducing the ducks. The ducks were important to her 
and they have remained a feature of the pond for more than two centuries.

----------

Aided by his wife’s mysterious blue tea, Farmer Tuko Orsktackt lived to be 91 
years old. In his old age he jokingly complained that his wife wouldn’t let him 
depart the world without her, and “she’s too busy to worry about trivial things 
such as dying.”

The year 1800 came and went. As the new century opened, Rika Héckt-nemát’s 
leading couple frequented the concert house to listen to musicians and traveling 
singing troupes. Almost all of the traveling singers had a version of the legend of 
the mysterious girl-with-no-name as part of their performance. As the ordinary 
citizens whistled and sang along to the sad tales, Vesna always gave Tuko a 
knowing look and took his hand. 

The old couple smiled, thinking about the secret they shared, a secret they would 
take with them to the grave.