Zoe trudged through the labyrinth with the slumped shoulders of a prisoner. Her ten chains wrapped around her torso, a weight she could only bear with her Might, and though the chains twitched, they remained docile. Unresponsive.
The chain around her neck ran behind her like a leash and connected to the chain of the being called Princh.
âTurn right,â Princh said. âThen straight ahead.â
Princh acted as though the leash between them was perfectly natural. She was around the same height as Zoe, and of a slighter build, though her dark green fur gave the appearance of extra bulk. A faint scent â like a dog in saltwater â rose from her sleek coat. The aroma followed Zoe as they navigated the twisting reality of the ruins.
Zoe kept looking for landmarks, but there were none. Scavengers or decay stripped the rooms long ago. She didnât understand how she got so twisted around. After a day of careful travel, she ended up back where she camped the night before. Her sense of geography wasnât bad, so she blamed magic.
Which, lately, seemed to be the leading cause of problems in her life.
âWhat are your plans for me?â Zoe asked.
âWe still need to straighten out the details.â
âYou must have been dropped here same as me,â Zoe looked over her shoulder. âSo why donât we ââ
The chain around her neck tightened. She stumbled. Gasping. She commanded the chain to release her, but couldnât pierce Princhâs control. Her knees trembled. The weight around her torso dragged her down, but she refused to fall. Princh arched a wispy eyebrow at Zoeâs defiance.
âThink youâre tough enough to call the shots?â Princh smiled. âRight now you have two little bags inside your chest that desperately need air. You have a Vitality of, what?â she squinted. âTwenty, twenty-five? No, twenty. So, itâll burn, but you wonât lose consciousness for a few minutes. When you do â if you continue to lack air â then youâll die. All Iâm doing is using one chain. The Black Star system saw fit to grant you eleven, but you canât even use them.â
Zoe glared. Clawed at the chains. Minutes ticked by as she tried to breathe, to speak, but only a squeaking sound left her scared lips as the last traces of air left her lungs. Her vision dimmed, swayed, but she remained conscious. Advanced Vitality created torture instead of knocking her unconscious.
Her knees gave out, but she did not fall. The chain around her neck held her upright. Princh smiled as she raised the chain until Zoeâs toes hung above the ancient tile.
âYou are a prisoner,â she said. âAnd every prisoner has a warden.â
The chain released Zoe, and she collapsed onto the ground. She lay there, limp and gasping like a fish. Princh squatted beside Zoe, the chain stroking the welts around Zoeâs neck.
âAs a prisoner, you have one choice: do what we say. Understand?â
Zoe sucked down air. It hurt to breathe. She nodded, and Princh smiled.
âGlad we came to this arrangement.â
Zoe gripped her Skein.
[Skein 97/117]
She boosted her Might.
[Skein 47/117]
[Might 36 (86)]
Her first drove through the air. Tiles shattered under her feet as she twisted upright. Silver knuckles hard as bullets.
Princh was gone.
Zoe swung through empty air. Princh stepped close beside her. Zoe tried to spin, but her momentum drove her fist into the stone wall. Dust exploded out as her arm was buried up to her elbow. Zoe tugged, squinting against the dust. Something moved in her peripheral vision. She tore her arm free. Spun.
Nothing.
Where was Princh? Zoe turned. Saw nothing, heard nothing.
âTell me something?â Princhâs hoarse whisper came right beside Zoeâs ear. Zoeâs eyes widened. She kicked to the side. Her foot shattered the wall, but the whisper continued. âWhy do you Might-based builds always think you can punch your way out of any problem?â
Zoe leaped away, turning to face the source of the voice, and saw nothing. A fist crashed into the back of her head.
The ground hit her cheeks. She blinked. The damaged wall collapsed in a crash of ancient stone and pale dust. She blinked. Where was Princh? She blinked.
Darkness.
###
Wood creaked as water lapped against stone. A smell of dust and silt, a dry wind blowing cool air, a rough hand upon her shoulder.
Someone shook Zoe awake.
She jerked up, fist forming, but chains dragged her back down.
Zoe turned her head, the only part of her body not chained to the heavy blocks of masonry forming the floor of the crude dock. The river flowed out from under the dock â which must be part of the ruins â and continued winding out through the dunes. It grew wider in the distance, as other rivers trickled in and fed its girth. Sickly trees resembling palms grew along the banks. White birdlike animals flittered through the scant shade.
âThereâs no escape.â
Princh leaned in the corner smoking from a lapis lazuli pipe. Hazy black smoke dribbled over the bowl and fell toward the sandy floor.
Stolen from Royal Road, this story should be reported if encountered on Amazon.
âBeing a fighter is only admirable if you can fight,â black smoke cascaded from her nostrils. âWhich you canât. At all. Honestly, how did you even reach the dungeon boss?â
âLeave her alone, Princh,â said a high, but tired voice.
Zoe tried to move, but the chains around her wrists and ankles were intertwined with the chains tethered to her spine. Princh had fused Zoe to her shackles and wrapped them through holes in the masonry. Unless she wanted to shift tons of ancient rock, Zoe couldnât move. Even if she strained, she had no doubts Princh would subdue her again.
One night long ago, the police locked Zoe in the drunk tank of a county jail. That same sense of helpless claustrophobia swept over her now. She exhaled through her nostrils and tried to maintain a calm exterior.
The other speaker moved into view.
âIâm Oriz, by the way.â
An androgynous human with high cheekbones, long corn-colored hair, and eyes like dirty honey. Her skin a subtle grey, as though she had poor circulation. A long indigo gown swept a pattern in the sandy floor.
Zoe stared.
âYou look like the dungeon bossâ¦â
Oriz shrugged as she tied her hair into a bun.
âAre we your first aliens?â she grinned. âWe donât all look alike.â
âNoâ¦â Zoe shook her head. âI didnât meanâ¦â
âIâm joking. The Crimson Armada system created the Mirrobell dungeon from memories of my world. The dungeon boss is called Zazzatha. Heâs the same race as me, but he died a thousand years before I was born. He was a ruthless priest who drowned his congregation for power and ââ
âThe dungeon is his punishment?â
âWell, it is called a dungeon⦠oh, you really donât know how anything works do you? Let me guess. You heard a voice in your head and then everything fell apart? Too slow to join the tutorial? Barely survived horrific encounter after horrific encounter until you, what? Stumbled into a dungeon?â
She frowned and looked at Princh, who shrugged.
âItâs what makes sense to me,â Princh said. âDoesnât explain why sheâs alive, but it explains why she integrated a damned dungeon quest item.â
âIt gave more attributes,â Zoe mumbled.
They both stared at her. Princh tittered. Oriz laughed. Zoe blushed, and they both guffawed until Princh coughed and heaved up thick black spittle.
âDonât make me laugh when Iâm smoking,â she hawked a dark glob into the river. âNo wonder you got those burns on your lips. Pure gluttony. You swallow every little trinket you come across?â
âNo!â
âThen how do you explain the gilded parasite swimming through your guts?â
Zoeâs eyes widened. Her stomach itched. Had it always itched, or was she only noticing it now? Were they messing with her?
She glared at Princh as the green woman wiped spittle from the hairs around her chin.
âYouâre messing with me,â Zoe said.
âNope.â
Princh squinted as she drew from her pipe. Aura rippled across Zoeâs skin as Princh flexed her Willpower and accessed her system. With a flicking gesture, Zoe received a prompt.
[Eyes Of The Healer]
[User can observe the hidden interactions of essence and flesh. At higher levels, the user can share these observations with others.]
Zoe blinked away a sensation of dust in her eye, but was distracted by something moving inside her guts.
She looked down with dread.
Her clothes, her flesh, became translucent. Through clear skin, she saw veins, muscular fiber, organs breaking down her scant meals of the last few days.
A half-dome surrounded her heart. Metallic tissue, the physical manifestation of her technique [Our Hearts Toll As One]. And throughout her body, long threads of glinting metal, of reflective mirror, interwove themselves with her mundane anatomy. This essence shone in stark contrast to the gunk of normal flesh. It took her breath away, to see Skein glowing, folding in upon itself, and passing through her cells like a billion threads through the eyes of a billion needles.
Amongst the wonders of her body, something malignant stirred. A gigantic golden worm slithered through her bowels. Foul aura leaked from its oily skin. A foot long, thick as a garden hose, nosing through the passageways of her intestines. Tendrils and antennae bristled its head like a prawn mated with a catfish. These whiskery feelers tickled Zoeâs insides. She bucked, horrified, trying in a futile effort to move herself away from what squirmed inside her. The chains clanked in mockery as they shackled her to the floor.
The worm stopped moving, and turned two dull white eyes towards her, as though it could see her through her skin. Zoe saw the bile rising from her stomach toward her throat.
âGet it out of me!â
âNo.â
Princh waved her hand, and the technique canceled. Zoe stared down at the tattered shirt covering her stomach. Her skin once more dark brown and opaque. The feeling of gilded whiskers persisted as a shiver-inducing memory.
âPlease, remove it,â Zoe said. âIâll do anything.â
âIf you didnât want it inside yourself, then you shouldnât have eaten the cursed item. What was it, anyway?â
Zoe wracked her brain. Did she even remember? Waitâ¦
âIt was Zazzathaâs earring⦠I bit his ear before he threw me down the shaft.â
âWhy would you do that?â Oriz asked.
âHe was going to kill me⦠why wouldnât I?â
Oriz and Princh exchanged another glance.
âEh?â Oriz gestured toward Zoe.
âFine,â Princh said. âI like her,â she pinched her fingers a quarter apart. âThis much.â
âItâs enough.â
âDonât talk about me like Iâm not here!â
Oriz crouched beside Zoe.
âTwo things,â she said as she fished in a worn leather satchel. âOne: both of us could kill you without trying. Weâre not even combat builds, by the way, youâre just that low of a level. So, some respect is in order, lest we rip out your tongue and use you for our purposes anyway,â her yellow eyes crinkled as she smiled. âAnd before you think about it, yes, there are ways of injuring someone that even Vitality wonât fix. The scars on your lips are a testament to that.â She produced a cork-stoppered vial of a rich red liquid. âAnd two: we really arenât that bad, just desperate. How desperate? Desperate enough to put our fates into the hands of a complete and utter stranger. Not just a stranger, but someone who doesnât even understand the most basic principles of the system that has blessed them.â She pulled the cork from the vial. âTry to see things from our point of view, yeah? Have a little empathy? It will make everything much easier.â
It felt outrageous that Oriz preached empathy while Zoe lay chained to the floor, but instead of ranting, Zoe focused on the question at hand.
âWhatâs in that vial?â
Oriz held the vial above Zoeâs face.
âThis is a healing potion,â she said. âIt will fix your eye and any other scrapes and bruises. We need you in peak condition if youâre going to row us back to the tavern.â
A spicy aroma wafted from the narrow vial.
âWill it remove the worm?â
Oriz glanced at Princh, who shook her head.
âSorry,â Oriz grimaced. âWeâll help you with the parasite later. Why donât you think of your little passenger as self-inflicted leverage? Now,â she waggled the vial. âOpen up?â
âHow do I know itâs not poison?â
âWhy waste poison on someone chained to the floor?â
Zoe sighed.
âFine.â
She opened her scarred lips, and Oriz tilted the vial. A thick droplet beaded the rim, before plummeting through the air like a piece of lead. It struck Zoeâs tongue with an explosion of spice, rich umami, and sickening diesel. It tasted like a bloody mary made with salsa and methanol. The drop slid down her throat of its own accord, and a single tear left her eye as she remembered the drink she shared with Bella.
She hoped she would see her companions again, and soon, but the hope was small, and feeble in the face of the nightmare entrapping her.