Chapter 219: Flying Fingers
I winced hard, my entire body going rigid in my seat, teeth clenching so violently I tasted copper where I’d bitten clean through the inside of my cheek. Every muscle screamed at once, a full-body rebellion sparked by pain that refused to be localized, refused to be reasonable, refused to be ignored.
And yet…
I kept smiling.
I refused—absolutely refused—to let the expression falter, even as tears spilled down my face in hot, involuntary streams, my body responding to trauma with the sort of honesty my pride would never allow.
Even as my severed finger lay there on the altar, stark and undeniable, like an accusatory footnote appended to a long history of questionable decisions. The smile stayed. Stretched. Hardened into something manic and defiant, the kind of grin that didn’t ask whether this was a good idea, only whether it had been noticed.
I forced my breathing to stay controlled, dragging air in through my clenched teeth and releasing it with careful restraint. I held that grin in place with sheer will, because giving Oberen the satisfaction of watching me crack—of seeing anything akin to weakness flicker across my face—was not an option I was willing to entertain.
Through the haze of pain, sharp as shattered glass, I caught flashes of my crew at the edge of the crowd, their reactions cutting through with uncomfortable clarity.
Julius’s eyes were blown wide, dark with fascination, his expression caught in that peculiar limbo between horror and something dangerously close to admiration. I could practically see him cataloging the moment already, filing it away as material for some future performance where tragedy and spectacle would blur into applause.
Grisha, meanwhile, wore a faint smirk, her tusks catching the light as she tilted her head, clearly impressed that I hadn’t immediately passed out or vomited.
Willow and Nara were clutching each other at the edge of the crowd, bodies pressed close as though proximity alone might anchor them to reality. Their eyes were wide, unfocused, tracking the altar with stunned disbelief, shock rendered physical in the way their shoulders tensed and their breathing synced into shallow, panicked rhythm.
And Felix—gods, Felix. He looked genuinely, heartbreakingly terrified. His small hands were clamped over his mouth as if he were afraid that any sound might somehow make this worse, his eyes blown so wide I could see white ringing the irises, fear stripped of any protective layers.
The sight punched straight through me, sharp and unwelcome, a flare of guilt igniting in my chest for dragging him into this spectacle, for letting him see the cost so clearly.
I acknowledged it for exactly half a second—then shoved it down hard, because sentimentality was a luxury I simply couldn’t afford right now
Internally, I was under no illusions. I knew exactly how insane this was—had full awareness that a sane person would’ve walked away, would’ve taken Oberen’s offer, would’ve chosen intact hands over whatever victory I was pursuing. A reasonable person would have weighed the costs, assessed the odds, and decided that no plan was worth this price.
But this wasn’t about sanity. This was about pushing through, about proving that I wouldn’t break under pressure, about making this plan work even if it meant sacrificing pieces of myself in the process. Sometimes you had to be willing to bleed to show the universe you were serious.
Oberen’s voice cut through my spiraling thoughts with surgical precision—clean, sharp, and perfectly timed—slicing into my internal monologue like a blade through flesh. An unfortunate metaphor, all things considered.
“You look pale,” he observed with mock concern. “Understandable, given the blood loss. This is where most people realize they’ve made a mistake, where survival instinct overrides stubborn pride and they admit defeat before losing anything else important. I predict you’ll follow that pattern within two or more rounds, once the shock wears off and the pain becomes impossible to ignore.”
“Shut up,” I said through gritted teeth, “Stop gloating and start the next round. Or are you too busy congratulating yourself on winning one challenge to actually continue the game?”
Oberen chuckled. “As you wish,” he said, gesturing magnanimously. “It’s your turn to bid. Let’s see if pain has improved your judgment or simply made you reckless.”
We rolled. I peeked at my remaining four dice. Two fives, one four, one two. Oberen studied his own roll with that same casual attention, and I began calculating probabilities with renewed focus despite the throbbing agony radiating from my hand.
I had two fives visible. A conservative bid—say, two fives total—would be safe, verifiable, and utterly uninspiring. Safe bids in Liar’s Dice were a trap; they handed your opponent breathing room, space to escalate safely.
An aggressive bid, on the other hand—four fives, maybe even five—would force Oberen into a corner, daring him to either challenge or commit to an even more aggressive counter-bid.
“Three fives,” I announced at last, threading the needle between caution and audacity, my voice steady despite the pain.
Oberen considered this with slightly more attention than he’d given my previous bids, his fingers drumming against the altar—carefully avoiding the blood pooling across its surface—before responding, “Four fives.”
I studied him in silence, letting the moment stretch just long enough to make it uncomfortable. My gaze combed his face for cracks—for a twitch at the corner of his mouth, a tightening around the eyes, any microscopic betrayal that might whisper bluff or certainty. There was nothing. Oberen’s expression remained infuriatingly smooth, a mask of serene confidence.
The numbers clicked into place anyway, indifferent to his theatrics. Four fives across nine total dice was possible—uncomfortable, but not outrageous. It sat right on the edge of probability, that dangerous slope where caution and cowardice began to blur together.
If he was lying, this was my opening. My chance to claw back ground, to prove that the previous round hadn’t rattled me nearly as much as the blood suggested. If I hesitated now, I’d be conceding more than dice—I’d be conceding momentum.
“Liar,” I declared.
The overseer stepped forward without ceremony. Cups were lifted. Secrets spilled into the open. Oberen’s dice revealed themselves first. Three fives, two sixes.
I had two fives. Five fives total. The bid was short. I’d won.
The crowd reacted a heartbeat later, realization rippling outward as the math settled in. Julius’s cheer cut through the rising noise, sharp and delighted, his voice cresting above the roar as spectators collectively grasped what had just happened—understanding now that this wasn’t going to be a neat, one-sided slaughter, not a foregone conclusion wrapped in ritual and blood.
This was a fight. A real one.
The atmosphere in the casino shifted palpably, fascination sharpening into investment as people leaned forward, already rewriting their expectations, already constructing narratives about resilience, defiance, and whether I was brilliant, unhinged, or both.
The overseer removed one of Oberen’s dice, then activated his device with that same clinical precision. The mechanism responded instantly—no flourish, no pause—just the cold certainty of action.
The blade fell, claiming its due at the knuckle, and the altar bore witness as the cost of the bid was paid, joining the quiet tally already etched into the night. Blood sprayed across the altar to join mine, creating an abstract painting that would’ve sold for ridiculous amounts if anyone had the stomach to preserve it.
Oberen didn’t even flinch. Didn’t even blink. He simply kept smiling—that same infuriating, unbroken smile—as though losing part of his hand was no more noteworthy than an inconvenient haircut.
The composure was absolute, polished to a mirror shine, and that was what unsettled me most in a way that felt wrong. Not emotionally—this wasn’t about sympathy—but in the way that perfect performances feel when you know they’re being executed by professionals.
And that’s when I noticed them, the faint, nearly untraceable lines crossing his fingers. Old scars, subtle enough to escape casual notice, but unmistakable once seen—marks left behind by prior losses that had been medically repaired or magically restored.
He’d played this game before. Multiple times, judging by the pattern. This wasn’t his first round of Liar’s Dice with dismemberment stakes—this was practically routine for him, familiar territory where muscle memory and experience gave him a psychological advantage I couldn’t hope to match.
The realization should’ve terrified me. Instead, I filed it away as useful intelligence and kept playing.
The rounds blurred together after that, each one building in intensity as the dice counts decreased and the margin for error shrank proportionally.
We traded wins and losses with grim symmetry, the overseer’s motions becoming almost metronomic as fingers were claimed with mechanical regularity. Blood pooled and spread across the obsidian altar until its glossy surface looked less like a ritual table and more like the aftermath of a particularly artistic massacre.
The crowd fed on it. Each drop of a blade sent a fresh surge through them, gasps cresting into cheers, horror transmuting seamlessly into exhilaration.
Their energy rose in waves, and somewhere along the way I found myself slipping into a strange rhythm where pain became background noise, dulled by repetition and adrenaline, while the game itself sharpened into absolute focus.
And then—quietly, insidiously—I noticed something else.
It wasn’t dramatic. There was no sudden reveal, no triumphant flash of insight. Just a subtle sense of wrongness creeping in around the edges of my awareness, clearly unmistakable once I knew to look for it.
Oberen was cheating.
Not the clumsy sort of cheating, not the amateur fumbling that relied on distraction or desperation, but something far more insidious. He was swapping his dice. Subtly. Elegantly. Trading the standard pieces for ones that were almost certainly weighted, engineered with a level of craftsmanship that bordered on artistry.
Nothing crude. Nothing obvious. The kind of work that would sail cleanly past casual inspection and still evade most professionals unless they knew exactly what to look for.
And I did.
I’d spent years studying sleight of hand—not as a hobby, but as a survival skill. I’d trained my eyes to notice when motion and intention drifted out of alignment, when hands lied just enough to betray themselves.
And Oberen’s cups were doing precisely that. Not much. Not enough to raise alarms on their own. Just slightly wrong.
There were micro-pauses when he lifted to peek, fractional delays that suggested he was doing more than just looking—he was swapping dice from some hidden reservoir built into the cup’s base or possibly his sleeve, replacing unfavorable rolls with ones that better suited whatever bid he was planning to make.
It was brilliant. Genuinely, infuriatingly brilliant. An elegant mechanism that let him roll honestly when it suited him, preserving credibility, then quietly assert control when the stakes demanded it.
He could shape outcomes without ever tipping his hand, manipulating probability while wearing the comforting mask of chance. To the crowd—and even to most opponents—it was just Liar’s Dice. To him, it was a performance.
I chuckled quietly to myself, the sound entirely internal because laughing out loud would’ve given away that I’d noticed. Of course he was cheating. Of course he was. Because that’s what people like Oberen did—they stacked every advantage, rigged every system, then congratulated themselves on their brilliance for winning a game they’d sabotaged from the start.
I kept playing anyway, kept making bids and challenges, kept bleeding onto the altar while Oberen taunted me with renewed enthusiasm.
“You’re doing better than I expected,” he said after I won another round. “Though ’better than expected’ still results in you missing half your fingers, so perhaps my expectations were catastrophically low.”
“Funny,” I replied, forcing my voice to stay light despite the waves of pain threatening to drag me under. “I was thinking the same thing about your cheating. Very subtle work on the dice—professional quality, really. Almost couldn’t tell they were being swapped if I hadn’t been paying close attention. You must be proud of yourself.”
Oberen’s smile didn’t falter, but something in his eyes sharpened. “Careful,” he said softly. “Baseless accusations of cheating suggest desperation. It’s unbecoming.”
“Oh, I’m not accusing,” I said cheerfully. “I’m simply stating facts. But please, continue. Keep cheating. It doesn’t matter. I’ve already won.”
Oberen laughed then—loud and bright, the sound echoing across the sand pit with genuine amusement. “You’ve already won?” he repeated, clearly delighted by what he perceived as delusion. “You’re down to three fingers. You’re bleeding profusely. You look like you might pass out at any moment. And you’re claiming victory? That’s adorable. Genuinely. I almost feel bad about what’s going to happen next.”
I smirked even wider, ignoring how the expression made my face ache. “You’ll see. Just keep playing.”
Oberen’s expression flickered then—just for a moment—a momentary hitch, a whisper of uncertainty crossing his features before being crushed flat by sheer force of will.
It was the look of a man who’d begun to suspect that something in the equation had shifted, that my confidence might be anchored in something sturdier than bravado or shock-induced delusion.
Pride, momentum, and sunken cost had him neatly boxed in, and besides—the numbers were still on his side. He had weighted dice. He had more fingers. From a purely logical standpoint, he was winning. Which meant the safest course of action was to keep going, to press the advantage, to trust the system he’d so carefully engineered to ensure his victory.
So he continued on, making deliberate slip-ups in bidding to stray from suspicion. He lost rounds he didn’t need to lose, allowed blades to fall when he could have avoided them, all in service of maintaining the illusion that this was still a fair contest.
That outcomes were being shaped by skill and chance rather than precision-crafted fraud. It was clever. Subtle. The kind of long-game deception only someone deeply comfortable with manipulation would attempt.
The rounds pushed on, bleeding into one another until pain, blood, and the hollow rattle of dice fused into a single, surreal rhythm that set my teeth on edge. Shake. Bid. Challenge. Drop. Each fall of the blade ripped a scream from the crowd, raw and ecstatic, while every successful bid sent a fresh roar rolling through the pit like thunder.
And through it all—through the screams, the clatter, and the steady, creeping horror—Oberen and I kept up our verbal sparring with practiced precision, trading barbs and smiles like seasoned performers locked in a macabre duet.
And then we reached it. The final round.
And then we reached it.
The final round.
We were both down to a single finger, the altar’s surface slick and shining with thick pools of blood. I felt myself growing dizzy, vision swimming slightly as the delayed consequences of blood loss finally caught up to adrenaline.
The world blurred at the edges, a soft, treacherous haze creeping inward—but I straightened anyway, forcing my spine rigid, my posture immaculate, my expression confident. Collapse could come later. Not now. Not in front of him.
Oberen’s face had gone manic with false competition, eyes bright and far too-wide, his smile stretched thin and feverish, as though intensity alone could substitute for inevitability.
“Final round,” he breathed, clearly savoring the moment. “Winner takes everything. Loser goes home with five fewer fingers and a valuable lesson about hubris.” He leaned forward across the altar, close enough that I could see my reflection in his eyes. “Any last words before we begin?”
“Yeah,” I said, pushing the word past lips that felt numb and distant, my voice steady by sheer obstinacy. “Just one—if you’re going to lecture me about hubris, at least wait until you’ve actually won. It’s terribly gauche to celebrate mid-sentence.”
We rolled our final dice with an almost ceremonial restraint—just one each now, the game stripped down to its barest bones, all the elaborate scaffolding of hidden information and layered deception collapsing into a single, brutal exchange.
I lifted my cup and peeked beneath it, the motion feeling oddly heavy, as though my body itself were protesting the inevitability of what came next. A three stared back at me. Not disastrous. Not inspiring. Just a three—perfectly average.
Oberen examined his die with the same maddening nonchalance that had characterized him all evening, his attention languid, almost bored, as though the outcome were a foregone conclusion and this was merely a formality he was indulging for politeness’ sake.
When he glanced up at me, his expression was triumphant. “I bid,” he said slowly, “one six.”
The math, at that point, was mercilessly simple. If he truly held a six, calling him would cost me my final finger and the game along with it.
The math was brutally simple now. If he actually had a six, challenging would lose me my final finger and the entire game. If he was bluffing, if that confidence was theater and nothing more, then challenging him would hand me everything in one decisive, glorious sweep.
No room left for clever maneuvers, no space for gradual advantage—just a single, irrevocable choice and the consequences waiting patiently on either side.
The crowd’s whispers had risen to a roar, people shouting speculation and encouragement, the noise building to levels that should’ve been impossible in an enclosed space.
My hand was shaking in its restraint, blood still dripping steadily from my ruined fingers to join the pool below. My vision was blurring at the edges from blood loss and exhaustion. Every instinct I had was screaming at me to stop—to preserve my final digit, to accept defeat with what dignity I had left, to sit down somewhere quiet before I lost consciousness, bled out, or achieved the rare and prestigious feat of doing both at once.
But I’d come too far. Sacrificed too much. And most importantly, I’d planned for this.
“Liar,” I declared.
The overseer glided forward for the final time, robes flowing after him like liquid shadow. The crowd’s noise reached a fever pitch, people climbing over each other to get better views, voices overlapping into incomprehensible sound.
He lifted Oberen’s cup first. A six gleamed up from the altar, pristine and perfect, exactly what Oberen had claimed.
My stomach dropped. My vision tunneled. Every muscle in my body went slack with shock.
Then he lifted my cup.
A three.
One six total. The bid was accurate.
I’d lost.
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