
Count:Â ~4800
Chara(s):Â A Hunter with some demon blood (OC)
Pairing(s):Â N/A
Fandom:Â Org Fic – Fae Apoc xover
Prompt:Â Most Dangerous Game
So this. This is a series of stories taking place in my universe, Fae Apoc, at the time just before the aforementioned apoc. Portals are opening up to one other world at that time, and in this story, well, they happen to open up into a whole BUNCH of worlds.Â
And from those worlds, a bunch of poor soon-to-be-victims-of-bad-things who bear some resemblances to fandom characters happen to slip through some portals. And then bad things happen to them.Â
Because that, after all, is the name of the Bingo.
Content warnings: violence, death, bondage, capture, drugging, visions.Â
This is technically Chapter Two because I started writing this before I found the bingo. Chapter One will return later.Â
A. Intro
The team had found their portal – isolated, comfortable, close enough to a major road for shipping purposes. Â They had set up their force of former soldiers. They had the cages.
They were expecting to catch just the would-be gods coming through from Elleheim. Â People would pay good money to have a would-be god on a leash.
But then the portals started spitting out some interesting people. Â People who didnât think they were gods. People, as it turned out, from other universes.
The team was fine with that. Â Theyâd sell them, too.
B. Hunter
Chase had been in the cage for three days and it was beginning to feel like a vacation.
He had done all the banishment rituals he could remember, though that was really his kid brother Danâs job and, naked like he was, heâd been a little short on ways to draw any sort of warding circle or even a basic sigil. Â Heâd chanted bad Latin until the guards had put a muzzle on him; heâd tried every bar in the cage (twice); heâd tried the wooden floor and ceiling to the thing and found them surprisingly tough. Even with the sometimes-sporadic powers he still wasnât supposed to have, he couldnât crack even the wood ceiling.
Heâd done everything he was supposed to, so he took the opportunity to rest. Â The cage was big enough for him to lay down; it came with a pillow and a blanket, and that meant the only thing he had on his plate was trying to convince his captors to take the damn muzzle off so he could be done with a liquid-slurry diet.
Except this time the handlers were coming with the prods, and they werenât bringing dinner. Â He stood and moved towards the back of the cage. There were three of them. He could take three of them easy. Â Heâd taken more than that when he landed here, before they knocked him out.
Thing was, was it a smart thing to do? Â If he cooperated, maybe heâd get more leeway. Â Maybe theyâd take the damn muzzle off. Maybe heâd have an opening to get out of here.
It might be a vacation, but he was starting to miss his kid brother, and, besides, there was shit to do back home.
âKneel, hands behind your head,â the middle handler told him, sounding bored. Â Well, they couldnât have that, could they? Chase grinned at them – tried to; the damn muzzle didnât give him a lot of expression leeway – and gestured like he couldnât hear them.
âLast warning, or it gets unpleasant.â Â Nobody raised their voice at all. The middle handler stepped forward. Â âKneel, hands behind your head, or you make the trip on a dolly with a tranq dart so far up your ass the needleâll be tickling your eyeballs.â
Well, when you put it that way⊠Chase knelt, his hands behind his head.
âSee? Â I knew you could learn.â Â The left-hand one stepped in and cuffed Chaseâs hands – to the damn wooden collar, of course – while the other two kept their weapons trained on him until he was cuffed, shackled, and then lifted up into the waiting van. Continue reading →