The clank of iron echoed beneath my boots as Brutus and I were escorted deeper into the prison’s guts.
The air felt thicker, heavier, like the walls had been soaked in misery and forgot how to breathe. Every step carried us down a spiral of shadows, past rusted gates that creaked open like they were groaning under the weight of centuries of regret, past flickering torches that sputtered and spat as if even the flas wanted to escape.
The dull hum of distant machinery—chains, grinding rock, low growls from sowhere off in the dark—wrapped around us, a soundtrack to this subterranean purgatory.
I squinted through the gloom, my mind firing off sarcastic complints to the architects of this charming dungeon, silently thanking them for the ambiance but requesting a refund on my dignity.
When we finally descended to the ground floor, the sight that greeted made my stomach drop and then simultaneously give a little jig of recognition. This was it—the lowest pit of the prison, the very sa floor where I’d once been cramd into that godforsaken cage, a spectacle for the warden’s twisted amusent.
That cage still sat there in the center of the cold, cavernous chamber like a blackened heart, a dark promise that echoed in the pit of my gut.
I swallowed hard, the bitter taste of old mories rising like bile, but I forced my face into sothing resembling nonchalance. Maybe if I looked calm enough, the past wouldn’t have the nerve to follow here.
All around the floor, dozens of prisoners were gathered, split into two groups that might as well have been from different planets. To one side was Section Twelve—our ragtag band of misfits, castoffs, and broken souls. The other was Section Six, where Brutus’s boss supposedly held court, a crowd that looked as tightly wound and dangerous as a coiled serpent ready to strike.
The tension between the two groups was almost electric, humming in the stale air like the buzzing of angry wasps. I could practically feel it biting at my skin, making the hairs on the back of my neck stand to attention.
Standing tall between the two factions, right in front of a massive set of gleaming black obsidian doors that looked like they swallowed the light whole, was the correctional officer who’d be overseeing our work.
He was a relic of the prison itself, ancient and implacable.
His gray hair sprouted like moss from a rock, splaying unevenly across his balding crown. His eyes were glassy, like shards of frozen ice that never quite lted, and his jaw was all sharp angles and cold steel—literally, like so cruel chanical prosthetic forged in the fires of eternal boredom.
He looked like soone who’d forgotten what rcy tasted like, and if you were unlucky enough to catch his attention, you might just join that list of forgotten flavors.
I tugged at Brutus’s leg, my fingers barely managing to wrap around the thick muscle beneath his prison-worn tunic.
"I can’t see shit," I muttered, voice rough with a mix of annoyance and amusent. He gave one of those heavy-eyed, exasperated looks that said, Really? before bending down without a word and hoisting up onto his broad shoulders like I was so mischievous child.
From this new vantage point, the room stretched out like a nightmare panorama. I glanced first toward Section Six. The n there were hulking, faces carved from stone, bodies taut and hard like they’d been chiselled by years of violence and neglect. The won interspersed between them shuffled anxiously, tiny islands of nervousness adrift among a sea of brute force.
The air around them was thick with silent threats and simring power plays—like sharks circling a bloodied al, waiting for the perfect mont to strike. I swallowed, suddenly feeling much smaller than I already was.
Then my eyes flicked to our own crew, Section Twelve. It was a different kind of wild. Sure, so of them looked like they could snap your spine just by glaring, but most were the exact opposite—ragged, mad-eyed, stitched together with scars and desperation.
Orcs with cracked tusks, elves with twitching fingers and vacant stares, demons whose horns were chipped or broken entirely, all tangled in their own personal hellscape. They were the discarded, the trash of the prison, the ones nobody wanted to rember or talk about. Watching them, I felt a pang of bitter kinship. We were the leftovers, the thrown-away scraps, and here we were, the bottom of the barrel, yet still expected to claw our way out.
Brutus’s voice cut deep through my reverie. "Don’t bother looking for the boss in that crowd." He shifted beneath , and I felt the rippling of muscle in his shoulders. "He doesn’t show himself much, not here at least."
I cocked my head, curiosity piqued despite myself. "Why not?"
Brutus’s eyes narrowed as if dredging up a secret he hated to share but couldn’t ignore. "He’s a wanted man, even in this hellhole. He’s made enemies that don’t forget. Done things no one can unsee." His voice dropped to a low growl, each word coated in the weight of prison lore and blood debts. "They put a price on his head."
A silence settled between us, thick and heavy. I let the tension wash over like a cold wave, reminding myself that power in this place wasn’t just about muscles or magic—it was about survival, and who had the most knives tucked behind their smiles.
The prison didn’t care if you were king or pawn; it cared about how long you lasted before the ga chewed you up.
Then, without warning, the officer’s voice thundered across the room, slicing through the silence like a guillotine.
"Listen up!" His jaw clanked as he spoke, tal grinding against tal with every syllable, making his words sound like commands from so cruel god of punishnt. "Your rotation task is simple—operate the mines. Extract dusktal. The rarest ore in these parts."
My stomach sank with a groan that was half resigned, half theatrical despair. The mines? Of course. Because when you’re bottom of the prison food chain, the universe loves to remind you by handing you the worst damn job imaginable.
The officer continued, rolling out a tattered parchnt that looked like it had been dragged through every hellhole on the continent.
"Dusktal is a charcoal-black ore that shifts to a blood red, depending on the angle you hold it." He held his hand as if cradling a ghost, fingers flexing to mimic the shimr of the mineral. "Whoever collects the most of it in this rotation earns privileges. Double als, better tools, perhaps even a hint of rcy." His voice dripped with sarcasm, but it was the closest thing to hope anyone here could dare whisper.
"And there’s pay," he added, gesturing to two guards who began distributing single bronze coins to every prisoner on either side. "A small salary for your labor. Earn enough, and maybe you can buy a better cell—or better friends."
The clink of coins being handed out echoed like a tiny symphony of desperation. When the coin finally landed in my palm, cold and rough against my skin, I clenched it tightly, steadying my resolve. This was the beginning of sothing. Not glamorous, not easy, but a foothold.
Then, just as I was about to take a deep breath and brace myself for the grind, sothing else happened. Nearby, a naked orc woman in our group—her skin a mottled green that glead with sweat—started to rub herself against the cold stone floor, fingers moving with slow, deliberate rhythms that left wet, sticky trails behind her.
Her eyes were glazed with a kind of wild abandon, mouth parted in a quiet moan that blended with the oppressive hum of the prison. The sound wasn’t quiet; it was intoxicating—barely contained want, trembling with raw need. She seed utterly lost to the mont, oblivious to Brutus and I standing re feet away from her.
I facepald hard enough to hear an echo, mumbling under my breath, "Welp. It’s going to be a long ass day."
Brutus snorted softly, the sound vibrating through my thighs. "Welco to Section Twelve, sweetheart."
I adjusted my miniskirt, feeling the fabric cling in ways that made more conscious of every prisoner’s eyes—especially the ones that lingered too long. With the coin heavy in my hand and the orc’s erotic cacophony reminding of the reality we were stuck in, I squared my shoulders and steeled my heart.
The officer’s hands creaked as he threw open the massive black double doors behind him, revealing a yawning tunnel swallowed in shadow.
A cold breath seed to spill from that abyss, snaking into the chill sliding down my spine like icy fingers tracing a promise of things unseen and perhaps best left that way. I leapt off Brutus’s broad shoulders with all the grace of a cat who’d just spotted the back door to freedom—or, you know, the next level of hell.
The prison’s corridors stretched and warped around us, endless stone and iron stretching into dark oblivion. I kept my eyes peeled for Brutus’s boss.
Hours passed in a slow march through the labyrinth, the walls closing in and the air growing thick with the tang of sweat, dust, and despair.
Then, finally, the tunnel broke open into a sprawling cavern—a black cathedral of stone that seed to stretch into infinity. The very rock pulsed with the weight of secrets, a kingdom of shadows hiding the day’s brutal toil.
The officer whipped around suddenly, his jaw clanking with ominous authority, voice slicing the stale air.
"There might be...others...in the cave," he warned, steel-hard eyes boring into us. "If you have any encounters... report to imdiately. If you survive..." The last words clattered like a death knell in my ears, making my skin prickle, hair stand on end, and sothing wet and cold pool low in my stomach.
Across from us, a large crate sat waiting, groaning under the weight of pickaxes that looked as battle-scarred and worn as the prisoners themselves.
The n and won from Section Six surged forward like predators, grabbing their tools without hesitation. So passed them down the line with the efficiency of a well-oiled machine, arms moving in a deadly dance honed by routine and ruthless competition.
Section Twelve, on the other hand, stumbled forward like a flock of startled birds, awkward and uncertain, scrambling for the leftovers as if the crate might snap shut and swallow them whole. I reached out and snagged a pickaxe with a chipped blade and a handle that looked like it had seen better days—perfect.
Just then, before I could even lift the damned thing, a thick hand closed around my wrist, rough fingers squeezing like a vise while another sneaky palm slid low to grope my ass with shaless audacity.
The voice that whispered in my ear was dripping with suggestion, low and gravelly, "A pretty thing like you shouldn’t be working, sweetheart," he hissed, voice thick and dripping with cruel heat. "Co join us. Section Six’s got plenty more... fun to offer. We’ll fuck you so good you’ll forget your own na, stuff you like the slick little hole you are." His hand squeezed my ass tighter, fingers digging in like he owned already. Then, without breaking eye contact, he started grinding his bulge hard against his thigh, the slick strain of his cock pressing, desperate and needy. "Stop pretending you don’t want it."
I was about to squirm free, but then Brutus’s shadow lood behind the man, a hulking mass with a smile sharper than any blade. His hand landed heavily on the intruder’s shoulder, squeezing just enough to send a clear ssage.
The man squeaked—a high, pathetic sound—and then shuffled back, defeated. I giggled, a small, triumphant noise bubbling from sowhere deep inside, and finally hefted the pickaxe onto my shoulder like so kind of dark hero in a terrible fantasy.
I began skipping ahead further down the cave, because why not? Brutus snorted behind , the sound part amusent, part warning.
We moved toward a jagged cut of rock, the perfect battleground for the day’s tornt. Brutus imdiately sank into the rhythm of hacking, each swing reverberating through the cavern like a drumbeat of ancient violence. I perched myself on a nearby boulder, watching the spectacle unfold like a proud parent at a very grim recital.
Section Six was a force of nature—well-organized, savage, efficient. They worked in tight, practiced groups that moved with dangerous montum, each man a cog in a brutal machine that seed almost to purr.
When a group grew tired, they slid over to the edges of the cavern, where their won waited like prizes and reliefs all at once—shadows against the jagged stone, bodies slick with sweat and desperate need.
One of the won let out a sharp, startled yelp just as a man pulled out with a wet, sloppy pop, his seed splattering across her trembling back. She whimpered softly, breath hitching as another rough hand yanked her head back, stuffing her mouth full before she could even protest. Their moans, gasps, and the wet smack of flesh on flesh echoed sharply off the stone walls, creating a wild, chaotic symphony of lust and exhaustion—raw, loud, unapologetic, and sohow... kind of impressive.
I sighed, trying desperately to tear my eyes away from that display of savage grace, only to catch a sight even more pitiful.
Our own group was a circus of chaos and tragedy. Two idiots were fighting over nothing in the dirt, one poor sod was wielding his pickaxe backward like so kind of drunken weapon of mass destruction, and, of course, the naked orc woman from earlier had taken to pleasuring herself with the axe’s handle—slow, shaless strokes, punctuated by wet, desperate moans that rippled through the stale air.
Most of the rest were either curled up sleeping or jolted awake only by the sharp crack of the officer’s chained whip—a terrifying sound that promised punishnt without rcy.
Brutus suddenly spun toward , eyes dark with sothing unreadable. "Why the hell are you just sitting there?" he growled, voice rough as gravel.
I rolled my eyes dramatically, stretching my limbs with a slow, exaggerated yawn. "What? I’m looking pretty. It’s exhausting work, you know."
His brow furrowed, unimpressed. "You’re a damned fool." Then, with a low chuckle, he pushed lightly. "Get up."
I groaned, dramatically dragging myself to my feet. "Fine, fine," I grumbled, smirking as I gave him a slow, pointed look. "Just try not to get jealous when I outwork you."
Brutus burst into heavy laughter then, thick with amusent, tears sparkling at the corners of his eyes. "Oh yeah? What could you, of all people, possibly do? I an, just look at you—you look like soone who got lost on their way to a tea party with the queen."
His laughter roared higher.
"What, you planning to seduce the stone into cracking itself open?"
I smirked, feeling that familiar rush of mischief stir beneath my ribs. "Watch and learn."
With all the grace I could muster, I sauntered over to the jagged rock Brutus had been assaulting with pure brute force. I raised the chipped pickaxe, flexing my fingers around the worn handle, then brought it down sharply against the stone.
User Comments
0 comments from readers