Chapter 134: Link to the Past
I pushed myself upright, feeling my knees unstick from the cold marble floor with a graceless wobble, my palms brushing dust from my sleeves as I did so.
Then I stared down at him—really stared—caught in that strange, electric blankness where my thoughts sputtered out, leaving only the soft hum in my skull and the sharp, humiliating awareness that I was still half-leaning over him like I couldn’t decide whether to kiss or kill him.
I felt my breath coming slow and sharp, as though the moment itself had dug hooks under my ribs and refused to let me step back.
Tora, Saints help him, seemed just as stuck, frozen on the floor with that wild blush spread across his cheeks and his chest heaving like he’d sprinted the entire length of the library.
He wore those ceremonial white robes—loose, flowing, deceptively pure. The kind of soft, fluttering fabric that made him look like some fragile altar offering waiting to be sacrificed.
His lips parted soundlessly once, then twice, like a fish thrown unexpectedly onto land, and I felt an absurd urge to poke him just to see if he’d squeak again; I didn’t, of course, because I was trying very hard to be a responsible adult, or at least the closest approximation the universe was ever going to get from me.
And then he actually did squeak—a sharp, startled sound that shot through the aisle like an arrow. I nearly threw myself back in surprise.
Just then, he jolted with a sudden burst of breath before shouting, “You’re him! You’re—”
I didn’t give him the satisfaction of finishing.
I vaulted forward with the kind of desperate, reflexive elegance only terror and embarrassment can create, pouncing directly on top of him and clamping a hand firmly across his mouth.
Tora let out a muffled shriek that dissolved into a pitiful string of panicked noises, his eyes blown so wide they reflected the candlelight around us in shimmering waves.
I whispered a frantic, breathless “Shhhhhh—Saints above, please—be quiet,” feeling the library shelves around us loom with judgment as if I’d personally offended every book in creation.
Tora nodded, trembling, and I felt him swallow against my palm, which did absolutely nothing to calm my nerves.
I slowly peeled my hand off his mouth, half expecting him to scream again, but he only inhaled shakily, staring at me like I’d descended from the rafters to devour him.
His breathing hitched, then stuttered, and suddenly—oh Saints—his eyes began to well. “Gods… you’re still alive…” he choked.
Before he could say any further, I grabbed him by the wrist, yanked him upright, and marched him deeper down the aisle with the stern authority of a parent dragging a toddler away from a hot stove.
I shoved him gently, but with purpose, back against a towering shelf of records. Dust fluttered around us in a lazy cloud, adding a dramatic effect I hadn’t quite intended but fully welcomed.
I planted a hand beside his head, leaning in just close enough to make him gulp audibly, and asked in a low, razor-sharp whisper, “Speak. What do you know about my past?”
The poor boy nearly folded in half.
Tora’s words tumbled out in tiny, disjointed fragments that seemed to have escaped his brain without his permission.
“Your… your father,” he whispered, voice shaking. “After that night, after you’d been separated. I remember that. I remember—”
His throat clicked, and then the last piece came out in a strangled whisper.
“There was blood. S-so much blood. Too much. All over the floor, painting those flowers—” His breath hitched, eyes glassy. “I… I can still see it. Saints, I can still smell it—”
I felt my jaw tighten at that, the familiar sting of a memory I shouldn’t have—the kind that sat behind a locked mental door I’d bricked over for my own sanity.
I straightened abruptly and stepped away from him, pacing tight circles in the narrow aisle. I felt the edges of my thoughts catching on each other, unraveling into something jagged, something frustrated.
Each time I tried to pin down a memory, it slipped, like something wet and half-formed sliding between my fingers. But then—just for a heartbeat—something flickered.
I stopped pacing, staring at him again. “Wait,” I muttered, dragging my fingers through my already-ruined hair. “I might—just maybe—recognize you. Hold on. You’re that servant boy from the lower house! The one that used to bring me things I never asked for and spill half of them on the way.”
Tora’s face lit up like a lantern. “Y-yes! Exactly that! You remember! You used to—well, you didn’t talk to me often, but sometimes you’d say—”
“I’d say you needed to stop talking so much because it made my head hurt,” I finished dryly, rubbing the bridge of my nose. “Saints, yes. That. Gods, now it’s coming back.” I blinked. “I remember you crying once because you spilled tea on one of the tapestries. Hah! The stewards nearly threw you in the river over that.”
Tora flushed, covering his mouth. “T-that was one time! The pot was heavy, the carpet was uneven, and—”
“And you apologized forty-seven times in a row,” I said, letting the faintest smirk drag at my lips despite the suffocating knot of tension in my chest. “I remember because I counted. It was like listening to a panicked songbird choking on its own voice.”
Tora jolted upright, almost relieved. “I… I can’t believe you actually remember me. All this time, I thought—I thought maybe you’d forgotten everything from before—before the… before that night…”
“Gods,” I paused, letting the moment settle. “Then you were there when it happened, weren’t you? After that… incident with my father—what happened to you?”
“I was barely able to escape,” he murmured. “The stewards found me hiding under one of the grain carts. They said your father was… looking for me.” His voice faltered. “But a merchant caravan had come through that morning. One of the drivers recognized me from errands I used to run. He smuggled me under the tarps and out through the back gate before your father’s men searched the yard.”
“Saints above,” I whispered. “To think you’d become a Glasswick.”
His cheeks pinked a little with pride—or possibly embarrassment—before he nodded.
He spoke in painstaking detail about the moments leading up to that night—the night my mother had died. My mother… a word I had thought carried warmth, memory, and safety, now paired with terror I’d never consciously remembered.
He spoke of the garden. The screaming. All of it felt like a distant dream I had woken halfway through, leaving only the terrifying impression without the actual memory.
“Most of the other servants,” he whispered, fingers twisting in his sleeve, “they were all in a panic. No one knew what your father would do next, and everyone in the lower house said—”
He hesitated, a bit too long.
His mouth worked around a word he clearly wanted to say, the syllables forming behind his teeth with the trembling desperation of someone who had been holding onto a truth for far too long.
“They said the—”
I was on him before the breath finished leaving his lungs.
I slapped my finger over his lips so fast he squeaked in protest. His eyes bulged, his entire body going ramrod stiff as my face hovered inches from his, my voice barely a whisper.
“Don’t,” I breathed.
“Everyone in the house already knew,” he tried to murmur around my touch, the words muffled. “We were taught to—”
“Ah-ah.” I pushed my finger harder against his lips. “Stop. Right there. Whatever comes after that sentence? Stuff it back into the vault where it belongs.” I darted a glance down the aisle—too many corners, too many shadows, too many places a person could stand unnoticed. “Anybody could be listening,” I murmured. “These walls aren’t safe, these shelves aren’t safe, this city isn’t safe.”
I waited until the silence settled between us again before placing my hands gently on his shoulders. His eyes shot open wide again, as if I’d lit a match under his ribs.
I leaned forward slightly and whispered, “Listen. That part of my past cannot, by any means, be disclosed. Not to anyone you hear me? If it gets out, many people could be in danger. Understood?”
Tora nodded so hard I feared his neck might snap, stuttering, “O-of course—yes—obviously—I’d never—I’m sorry…”
I gave him a soft pat on the head.
I really did—full palm, slow, deliberate, authoritative—like I was rewarding a puppy for not chewing through my shoes, and honestly the reaction was so gloriously worth it that I nearly congratulated myself twice.
Tora froze, eyes shooting wide like I’d just cast some forbidden charm on him, and a tiny sound slipped out of his throat, something between a startled gasp and a strangled oh.
His cheeks flushed a vivid pink that spread so quickly across his face I felt as though I could practically see the heat rising off him.
He tried—saints above, he tried—to pull himself together, to raise his chin and stand with dignity, but his gaze darted away in a flustered burst of breath, leaving him staring intently at absolutely nothing on the nearest shelf, as if the knots in the wood had suddenly become fascinating historical artifacts deserving his full scholarly attention.
“Good boy,” I said with a smirk, unable to help myself, because saints above, he was adorable.
Not in a pathetic way—well, a little pathetic—but in that earnest, trembling way that made him look like a skittish deer pretending to be a scholar, all wide eyes and fluttering breaths, stiffening every time I so much as moved a hair.
I withdrew my hand and let him marinate in the embarrassment, stepping past him with a quiet hum to crouch beside the disastrous sprawl of books and scrolls that had exploded across the floor.
Dust puffed up around me as I began reorganizing the mess, stacking his scrolls with exaggerated care, aligning the corners of his books into neat little piles, and pretending I wasn’t watching him from the corner of my eye the entire time.
My own tome lay face-down among the chaos, its spine bent in a way that suggested it was taking personal offense at its treatment.
I plucked it up, blew a soft cloud of dust off the cover, and brushed the binding with my thumb until the embossed sigils gleamed again.
As I stood, I glanced back—and there he was, standing awkwardly between the towering shelves with his hands clasped behind his back like a child standing before his headmaster, shoulders tense and posture rigid as he tried desperately not to meet my eyes.
“I… nearly forgot something,” he said suddenly, voice small, fragile, thin enough to snap under a breeze.
I raised my brow. “That so?”
He swallowed, eyes flicking up, then down, then up again with the hesitancy of someone preparing to launch a confession into the void.
“Your sister,” he whispered. “She’s still alive. I’ve seen her.”
The world inside my skull didn’t so much stop as lurch forward violently, like my brain had tripped over itself.
Instantly, I felt myself flung back to that moment with the High Warden—his voice dripping with poisonous confidence as he’d mentioned her, the way he’d said it with such casual certainty that it hadn’t felt like a threat, but a fact I’d foolishly avoided.
“Where?” I breathed, or stammered, or exhaled—whatever sound I made barely counted as language. “Where is she?”
Tora wet his lips before speaking again. “Somewhere on The Border Sea.”
My heart kicked against my ribs. “That’s… that’s—”
“Yes,” he said softly, cutting in. “The fifth layer of the city.”
I nodded slowly, my thoughts spiraling. The Border Sea. The name alone sent a ripple of unease down my spine.
I’d heard only scraps about it, rumors mostly—the place where most of the Glasswicks were penned like cattle, where the city blurred into something bleak and strange, where the magic in the air twisted into unpredictable currents that made even the highest of nobles nervous.
I exhaled slowly before murmuring, “Thank you.”
Tora blinked in surprise, as if gratitude was some impossible language he’d never expected me to speak to him. I extended my pinky toward him, holding it suspended in the dim light between us.
He stared at it.
I stared back.
“…What?” he whispered, looking at my hand like it was a riddle the bookkeepers had forgotten to annotate.
“Oh for saints’ sake,” I muttered, grabbing his hand and hooking our pinkies together myself.
He squeaked—an adorable little sound that sprang from somewhere deep in his chest and made him stiffen so sharply he practically levitated. I leaned in, lowering my voice to something conspiratorial and soft. “Promise we’ll meet again?”
Tora swallowed hard and nodded, his pinky tightening around mine.
“Good,” I said, flashing a grin before letting go.
And then I turned—pivoting sharply, heart beating with giddy, chaotic momentum—and dashed down the aisle with the reckless enthusiasm of someone fleeing both revelations and responsibility.
I didn’t look back, didn’t slow down, letting the green candlelight smear into shimmering streaks as I descended the staircase, tore through the silent floor, and burst out into the brighter halls with the book hugged tightly against my chest.
About an hour past before I slammed into the Barracks corridor, flushed with triumph and barely suppressed panic. The muffled chatter inside had just begun to pick up.
Perfect timing.
I skidded toward my bunk, shoved the tome under my pillow with all the grace of a thief hiding stolen jewelry, and flung myself into a casual lounging pose just as the door rattled open and everyone else poured in.
Elvina was already complaining—loudly—about something utterly inconsequential, her voice rising and falling with dramatic flair that made me want to applaud and shove her head into a bucket simultaneously.
Brutus lumbered in behind her, yawning so widely I could practically see his childhood traumas inside the cavern of his mouth. Freya and Mia drifted toward their shared bunk like synchronized dancers before sitting cross-legged on their blankets and beginning some complicated hand-clapping game with the solemn intensity of priests performing a ritual.
Brutus paused mid-yawn as his eyes finally drifted up to my bunk.
“You,” he said, pointing one thick finger at me. “Where the hell did you sneak off to this morning? Saints, you almost had be worried.”
I stretched my arms above my head lazily. “Aww, Brutus, were you worried about lil’ ol’ me?” I teased. “What’d you think happened, huh? Maybe I slipped, maybe I fainted, maybe I choked on my own fabulousness, maybe a murderous ghost tried to seduce me or—ooh, my favorite—maybe I wandered off, got lost, found a secret tunnel, met a cult, solved their prophecy, and then got eaten by some ancient sewer deity.”
He snorted. “Please. If anything ate you, it’d probably get indigestion.”
“I’ll take that as affection.”
“Take it however makes you sleep at night.”
I grinned. “Oh, I sleep beautifully. Like a prince. A prince who makes bad decisions and never takes accountability.”
Brutus rubbed his face. “Sounds about right.”
“Also,” I added sweetly, “if you’re so concerned about my whereabouts, you could’ve come looking. I bet you miss me when I’m gone.”
He made a face. “I miss the silence.”
I patted my chest dramatically. “Ow. Wounded. Right in my delicate heart. How will I ever recover?”
“A lotta crying,” he said. “Maybe writing in a diary. Dunno, I’m not your therapist.”
“Tragic, really. You’d make a great one.”
We continued trading barbs until I noticed it—movement in the doorway. A figure standing perfectly still, shadow draped across half their face. Iskanda’s attendant. Tall. Silent. Wearing that same uniform that screamed discipline, efficiency, and mild judgment. They were staring directly at me.
When our eyes met, they nodded once. Slow. Heavy with implication. My stomach did that excited little flip I’d never admit to out loud.
Brutus followed my gaze. “Oh no,” he muttered. “Where are you going this time? Another one of those ’training sessions’? Should I prepare your funeral? Or, better yet, should I come watch? I’ll sell tickets.”
“Oh hush,” I said, hopping neatly off the bunk. “I’ll be going back to the second floor. Iskanda wants another session.”
Brutus raised a brow and smirked in the most annoyingly suggestive way possible. “Right…”
“It’s for training,” I insisted.
“Uh-huh. Lots of sweating, lots of heavy breathing—”
“Oh saints, shut up.”
“—lots of positions—”
“I swear on every holy deity, Brutus—”
“—lots of yelling—”
“Brutus!”
He beamed at me proudly, victorious.
I rolled my eyes so hard they nearly tumbled out of my skull. “Anyway,” I muttered, stepping toward the attendant, “try not to miss me.”
“No promises,” he shot back.
The attendant turned sharply on their heel and strode down the hallway. I followed—feet light, pulse quickening, mind buzzing with possibilities. I felt ready—more than ready—to face whatever absolutely ludicrous, painful, humiliating, or physically unreasonable training Iskanda had concocted for me this time.
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 299: Creating a Monster
- Chapter 298: A New Arrangement
- Chapter 297: In the Tavern
- Chapter 296: Seeking Strength
- Chapter 295: Custody Swap
- Chapter 294: The Grotto
- Chapter 293: Angelic Voice
- Chapter 292 292: Drafting The Letter
- Chapter 291: Necessary Steps
- Chapter 290: Tea Time
- Chapter 289: Brewing the Recipe
- Chapter 288: Necessary Ingredients
- Chapter 287: Hidden Motives
- Chapter 286: Brass and Bronze
- Chapter 285: A Tight Leash
- Chapter 284 284: New Complications
- Chapter 283: I Can Sing
- Chapter 282: Catching Up
- Chapter 281: The Director’s Gift
- Chapter 280: Roleplay
- Chapter 279: A Chance at Redemption
- Chapter 278: Making Connections
- Chapter 277: Intelligence Gathering
- Chapter 276: Dossier
- Chapter 275: Acceptance
- Chapter 274: War on the Horizon
- Chapter 273: Unyielding Grandeur
- Chapter 272: Re-encounter
- Chapter 271: A New Employee
- Chapter 270: Ma Mort Nous Fait Taire
- Chapter 269: Dimming the Lights
- Chapter 268: Reincarnation
- Chapter 267: Solving the Relic
- Chapter 266: No Hesitation
- Chapter 265: Tongue Tied
- Chapter 264: Keeping Promises
- Chapter 263: The Setup Begins
- Chapter 262: Dealing with the Warden
- Chapter 261: Minimal Effort
- Chapter 260: The Furnace
- Chapter 259: Arrival at the Maw
- Chapter 258: Emotional Complexities
- Chapter 257: Shadow Assassin
- Chapter 256: Danger Strikes
- Chapter 255: Oberen’s Fate
- Chapter 254: Unique Attributes
- Chapter 253: The Deed is Done
- Chapter 252: Delicate Decent
- Chapter 251: Firelight Fiasco
- Chapter 250: On Full Display
- Chapter 249: Llyod’s Decision
- Chapter 248: Demonic Healing
- Chapter 247: Willow Returns
- Chapter 246: Open Invitation
- Chapter 245: Rules of the Realm
- Chapter 244: Moving Pieces
- Chapter 243: Killing Intent
- Chapter 242: A Proposition
- Chapter 241: The Ivory Gambit
- Chapter 240: Power Trip
- Chapter 239: New Horizons
- Chapter 238: A Thorough Lesson
- Chapter 237: Learning Curve
- Chapter 236: New Applications
- Chapter 235: Rematch
- Chapter 234: Confrontation
- Chapter 233: Home Sweet Home
- Chapter 232: Drowning in Wealth
- Chapter 231: The Vault
- Chapter 230: Lost Legality
- Chapter 229: Contacting the Spire
- Chapter 228: Surging Bodies
- Chapter 227: Worn Locks
- Chapter 226: Proprioception
- Chapter 225: Trigger Happy
- Chapter 224: Russian Roulette
- Chapter 223: Blackmail
- Chapter 222: Final Wager
- Chapter 221: Escrow Account
- Chapter 220: The Subtle Art of Losing
- Chapter 219: Flying Fingers
- Chapter 218: Game On
- Chapter 217: Liar’s Dice
- Chapter 216: It’s Time
- Chapter 215: The Black Box
- Chapter 214: Setting the Stage
- Chapter 213: Grand Reversal
- Chapter 212: The Subtle Art of Winning
- Chapter 211: Seizing Victory
- Chapter 210: Jazmin’s Choice
- Chapter 209: Hook, Line, and Sinker
- Chapter 208: Playing the Fool
- Chapter 207: Old Maid
- Chapter 206: Into the Fray
- Chapter 205: Coaxing Secrets
- Chapter 204: Turning the Tables
- Chapter 203: Heating Up
- Chapter 202: The Jackal Women
- Chapter 201: Let’s Dance
- Chapter 200: Honeypot
- Chapter 199: Registration
- Chapter 198: Blood Money
- Chapter 197: Oberen’s Den
- Chapter 196: Let’s Go Gambling
- Chapter 195: Running Options
- Chapter 194: Three Thousand
- Chapter 193: Surprise Visit
- Chapter 192: Departure
- Chapter 191: A Long Night
- Chapter 190: Warehouse Reunion
- Chapter 189: Business Talk
- Chapter 188: One Month
- Chapter 187: Negotiations
- Chapter 186: Debt Collection
- Chapter 185: Unexpected Arrival
- Chapter 184: Countershock
- Chapter 183: Against the Odds
- Chapter 182: Roshambo
- Chapter 181: Striking Gold
- Chapter 180: Restricted Access
- Chapter 179: Causing Chaos
- Chapter 178: Growing Power
- Chapter 177: To the Hot Springs
- Chapter 176: Excarnic Magic
- Chapter 175: A Proper Succubus
- Chapter 174: Flashing Steel
- Chapter 173: Born Anew
- Chapter 172: Compliance
- Chapter 171: Soaked in Sweat
- Chapter 170: Have Sex with Me
- Chapter 169: Setting Arrangements
- Chapter 168: Finding the Frequency
- Chapter 167: Into the Basement
- Chapter 166: Rooftop Philosophy
- Chapter 165: Frantic Union
- Chapter 164: Heat and Hunger
- Chapter 163: Mavus Grey
- Chapter 162: Familial Connections
- Chapter 161: New Introductions
- Chapter 160: Ficklebottom Returns
- Chapter 159: May the Show Begin
- Chapter 158: Into the Slums
- Chapter 157: Day of Assignment
- Chapter 156: Stacking the Winnings
- Chapter 155: Twisted Morality
- Chapter 154: The Final Thread
- Chapter 153: Glorious Retribution
- Chapter 152: A Stepping Stone
- Chapter 151: Frozen in Shock
- Chapter 150: Causing An Uproar
- Chapter 149: Pleading for Mercy
- Chapter 148: Twisting Shadows
- Chapter 147: You May Begin
- Chapter 146: Iskanda’s Gift
- Chapter 145: Quick Debrief
- Chapter 144: The Diagram
- Chapter 143: Into the Garden
- Chapter 142: Filthy Charity
- Chapter 141: In the Spotlight
- Chapter 140: Dance of Death
- Chapter 139: Fatal Freefall
- Chapter 138: Enhancements
- Chapter 137: Climbing the Spire
- Chapter 136: Incarnic Vs Excarnic
- Chapter 135: All Those Years
- Chapter 134: Link to the Past
- Chapter 133: Secret Heritage
- Chapter 132: Dignity is Dead
- Chapter 131: Iskanda’s Ruby
- Chapter 130: Into the Library
- Chapter 129: The Edge of Memory
- Chapter 128: Setting the Match
- Chapter 127: Rules and Regulations
- Chapter 126: The Director
- Chapter 125: Final Strike
- Chapter 124: Shadows Collide
- Chapter 123: Framed in Fury
- Chapter 122: Silk and Submission
- Chapter 121: Right in the Balls
- Chapter 120: Unseen Desire
- Chapter 119: Sneaking Off
- Chapter 118: Easing the Tension
- Chapter 117: Secrets Unveiled
- Chapter 116: Finding a Specialty
- Chapter 115: Training Begins
- Chapter 114: Six Heartbeats
- Chapter 113: Wicked Punishment
- Chapter 112: New Power
- Chapter 111: Afterglow Calculations
- Chapter 110: Ceaseless Oppression
- Chapter 109: Perilous Descent
- Chapter 108: Losing Control
- Chapter 107: Sending a Message
- Chapter 106: Back to Business
- Chapter 105: Do I Stink?
- Chapter 104: Perfume and Pretense
- Chapter 103: Settling In
- Chapter 102: Mirror Match
- Chapter 101: Into the Spire
- Chapter 100: The Velvet Chambers
- Chapter 99: Ascension
- Chapter 98: Iskanda
- Chapter 97: A Sudden Turn
- Chapter 96: The Final Stretch
- Chapter 95: Into the Forge
- Chapter 94: Trust no One
- Chapter 93: Retribution
- Chapter 92: Poison
- Chapter 91: Sex Heavy Haze
- Chapter 90: Brief Intermission
- Chapter 89: Done and Dusted
- Chapter 88: No Mercy
- Chapter 87: An Act of Betrayal
- Chapter 86: Aftermath Deliberations
- Chapter 85: Off the Rails
- Chapter 84: A Traitor’s Judgment
- Chapter 83: Nightmares of Flesh
- Chapter 82: Blood on the Tracks
- Chapter 81: All Aboard Panic
- Chapter 80: Trouble Arises
- Chapter 79: Static Theology
- Chapter 78: Hostile Notions
- Chapter 77: Checkpoint Charade
- Chapter 76: Trudging Deeper
- Chapter 75: Nothing to It
- Chapter 74: Tunnel Waltz
- Chapter 73: Foolish Redemption
- Chapter 72: Back in Motion
- Chapter 71: Plans and Pouts
- Chapter 70: Sewer Sprint
- Chapter 69: Grace and Grime
- Chapter 68: Spilling Secrets
- Chapter 67: Time for Torture
- Chapter 66: Bitter Truths
- Chapter 65: Like a King
- Chapter 64: Beneath the Mask
- Chapter 63: Dealing with the Devil
- Chapter 62: The Curtain Call
- Chapter 61: Chaos Unleashed
- Chapter 60: An Ambush
- Chapter 59: Final Preperations
- Chapter 58: Stress Relief
- Chapter 57: I’ve got a Plan
- Chapter 56: Lessons in Seduction
- Chapter 55: Meeting Mia
- Chapter 54: Hostage Situation
- Chapter 53: Misty Threesome
- Chapter 52: Training Session
- Chapter 51: The Mechanism
- Chapter 50: Like a Machine
- Chapter 49: Grounded
- Chapter 48: Building the Batch
- Chapter 47: Gaining Traction
- Chapter 46: Flesh and Folly
- Chapter 45: Expanding the Business
- Chapter 44: Planting the Seed
- Chapter 43: Undercover Escape
- Chapter 42: Blazing Chaos
- Chapter 41: The High Warden
- Chapter 40: Grim Arrival
- Chapter 39: Encore of Idiocy
- Chapter 38: New Developments
- Chapter 37: Humiliation Ritual
- Chapter 36: Let’s get Mixing
- Chapter 35: Femboys and Firearms
- Chapter 34: Vanishing Act
- Chapter 33: A Grim Decision
- Chapter 32: Deeper Troubles
- Chapter 31: Into the Wearhouse
- Chapter 30: Sex at the Stakeout
- Chapter 29: Forming a Plan
- Chapter 28: The Boss’s Rival
- Chapter 27: Rising Tensions
- Chapter 26: Growing Ambitions
- Chapter 25: The Courtyard
- Chapter 24: Brief Recovery
- Chapter 23: Cum Cards
- Chapter 22: Let’s Play Poker
- Chapter 21: One More Game
- Chapter 20: Warming Up
- Chapter 19: High Stakes
- Chapter 18: Meeting the Boss
- Chapter 17: Naked Ambitions
- Chapter 16: Whiffs and Wagers
- Chapter 15: Yearning for the Mines
- Chapter 14: Let’s get to Work
- Chapter 13: Waking Into Chains
- Chapter 12: Sex, Steam, and Submission
- Chapter 11: Dripping with Desire
- Chapter 10: Communal Degeneracy
- Chapter 9: Wine Stains and War Crimes
- Chapter 8: Unholy Exhange
- Chapter 7: Bargaining for Blood
- Chapter 6: Putting on a Show
- Chapter 5: Ballroom of Beasts
- Chapter 4: The Smell of Opportunity
- Chapter 3: The Warden’s Pet
- Chapter 2: Awaiting Punishment
- Chapter 1: Guttermeat