This is not tested, but would be pretty close to what you need:
sed -e "s/INSERT_HERE1/`cat file1.txt`/" -e "s/INSERT_HERE2/`cat file2.txt`/" <file >file.out
It will not properly handle a file with slashes in it, though, so you may need to tweak it a bit.
I'd recommend Perl instead, though. Something like this:
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
my $f1 = `cat file1.txt`;
my $f2 = `cat file2.txt`;
while (<>) {
chomp;
s/INSERT_HERE1/$f1/;
s/INSERT_HERE2/$f2/;
print "$_\n";
}
This assumes that INSERT_HERE1 and INSERT_HERE2 may only appear once per line, and that the file1.txt does not include the text INSERT_HERE2 (wouldn't be difficult to fix, though). Use like this:
./script <file >file.out