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Chapter 3 by Krone Krone

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Ch 2 Gemma's arrival

(2 days ago )

The rain hit like a slap as Gemma Thorne stepped off the mag-lev at Central Terminus. Warm, chemical, endless. It plastered her wool coat to her shoulders, turned her dark hair into heavy ropes, and made every neon rune on the vaulted ceiling bleed violet and crimson across the cracked concrete.

She stood still for a second, suitcase in hand, letting the city breathe on her.

Nacht City didn’t welcome arrivals. It sized them up.

The platform was a crush of bodies: full-blood orcs in forge leathers hauling crates, mudblood slaves collared and leashed trailing behind, vampire courtesans in silk slits leaning against pillars, fangs glinting as they watched the crowd like cats at a fish market. A goblin hawker shoved a tray of glowing vials under her nose—“First-night special, witchy! One sip and the repression spells melt right off!”—and she sidestepped without answering.

She walked.

The terminal opened onto the Underdistrict boulevard: iron hab-blocks stacked crooked, pipes bleeding steam, diesel trucks growling past on fat rubber tires. Gas-flare lamps hissed overhead, throwing long shadows. A sky-barge rumbled low, dragonfire engines painting the clouds orange for a heartbeat. Billboards flickered: BLACK LOTUS – LIVE CHAINS. OLD TOWN – SURRENDER REQUIRED.

She kept moving, boots splashing through puddles that smelled of iron and sex.

An alley mouth gaped to her left. Inside, a mudblood boy—half-orc, green tint faint under the streetlight—was chained to a lamppost. Shirt torn open, back striped fresh. A Drakon overseer in a long oilskin coat pressed a glowing brand to his ribs; the boy arched, hips jerking against the post, collar pulsing rose in time with his choked moans. A small crowd watched, smoking, placing quiet bets.

Gemma’s stomach twisted. She looked away.

Across the street, two amazons in Old Town leathers dragged a collared man toward a pleasure house. He stumbled; one cracked her whip across his thighs. He dropped to his knees, forehead to the wet stone, ass raised. The amazons laughed—low, satisfied—and kept walking.

She turned a corner. Narrower street. Quieter. A succubus leaned in a doorway, red silk robe open to the waist, tail flicking lazily. She met Gemma’s eyes and smiled slow, tongue tracing a fang. “New blood,” she purred. “Come inside. I’ll show you how the city really tastes.”

Gemma kept walking.

The boulevard widened. A loading dock loomed ahead—rusted girders, abandoned crates, the low throb of distant dragon engines. She stopped, breath visible in the humid air despite the warmth. Rain dripped from her lashes. Her blouse clung transparent under the coat, nipples peaked against the fabric. She didn’t fix it.

Two days in this place and already the city was under her skin.

She adjusted her glasses, straightened her spine, and hailed a cab—an iron brute with riveted hood and exhaust coughing blue smoke. The troll driver glanced at her in the mirror.

“Lantern Precinct,” she said. “High Nocturne ring.”

He grunted, shifted gears with a sound like grinding bones, and pulled into traffic.

The cab climbed the rattling incline tram, chains clanking, city falling away below in layers of neon and shadow. Gemma watched through the streaked window: floating platforms of the Midnight Bazaar, towers of High Nocturne stabbing upward, the distant glow of the Spire Crown like false stars.

She arrived at the Lantern Precinct just as the blood moon began to rise, turning the rain crimson for a single heartbeat.

The building squatted like a bruise—black obsidian and iron, wards humming low. Two orc uniforms at the door watched her climb the steps without moving.

Inside: diesel gloom, cigarette smoke, clacking typewriters. Stares followed her through the lobby—wizards suddenly fascinated by paperwork, humans curling lips, vampires filing nails with silver blades.

She walked the gauntlet to the Special Arcane alcove.

Two desks empty. One occupied.

Blonde braid still damp. Leather jacket slung over the chair back. White shirt clinging in places it shouldn’t for office hours. She looked up—electric-blue eyes, no film of precinct bitterness yet—and smiled, small and crooked.

“You’re Thorne,” she said, standing. Voice warm, rough-edged. “Cassy Harward. They said you’d show today.”

She offered her hand. Palm callused, faint green flecks under the nails.

Gemma took it.

For the first time since the train doors opened, something in her chest loosened.

“Coffee’s terrible,” Cassy said, sliding a chipped mug across. “But I made fresh. Figured the new partner deserved at least one cup that doesn’t taste like regret.”

Gemma sat.

The precinct kept staring from the bullpen.

She didn’t care.

Not right now.

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