Caged Hunger
Pairing: John Clark (Michael B. Jordan) × BlackOC (Danielle “Dani” Rourke)
Summary: In a black site prison, John Clark is caged but never tamed. Dani Rourke, the CIA officer tasked with handling him, becomes the only guard he obeys — and the only one who can pull him back from the edge. But what begins as control twists into something darker: forbidden attraction, psychological games, and a collision neither of them can walk away from.
Warnings: 18+ only. Dark romance. Prison setting. Explicit language. Power imbalance. Possessive themes. Sexual content (oral sex, fingering, heavy dirty talk). Violence mentioned (John’s backstory). Obsession. Forbidden/forbidden workplace dynamics.
Word: 14k
The convoy rolled in like a clenched fist. Matte-black SUVs and a prison van nosed through the blast doors as if the concrete opened out of fear. Inside, the light changed: from the muddy daylight to a slab of fluorescence that turned skin sallow and eyes colder. You could taste electricity in the air. Metal. Old coffee burned down to tar. The hum of vents pretending to be silence.
They brought him out of the van already in the heavy cuffs—wrists fronted, chain looped to a black belly-belt, ankles in steel that bit when he moved. John Clark was a tall shadow with a pulse. Sweat and rain clung to him, then flashed off under the lights. Someone had scrubbed the blood long ago, but his skin kept that permanent memory—scars like parentheses, notes the world left on him.
“On the prints,” a guard said, jerking his chin toward the painted feet on the floor.
John didn’t move. Not for him.
Dani Rourke leaned against the intake desk without looking like she needed support. Twenty-nine, hair braided tight because loose hair gave inmates ideas. Her uniform fit like it had grown that way—a discipline more than a fabric. She had a clipboard, a stylus, and a face that didn’t blink unless it decided blinking was efficient.
“Mr. Clark,” she said, like the name was a barcode. “On the prints.”
He looked up at her. Not at the guard. Not at the camera bubble’s dark half-dome. Her. His eyes were the kind of controlled that made other people’s hands itch. It wasn’t deadness; it was focus, like every inch of him had a job and none of those jobs involved fear.
He stepped onto the painted feet. The chain clinked, small and obscene in the bright room.
The other guards relaxed in that ugly, relieved way men do when power confirms itself. The tallest one—Mason, shoulders like a wardrobe—cleared his throat and began the checklist. “Prisoner stripped of external identifiers, check. Contraband—”
“Open,” Dani said, the word for his mouth, not for Mason. John opened. She tilted his chin with two fingers, checked behind the tongue with a penlight. He followed the light lazily, eyes sliding back to hers when she was done. The tiny contact felt like a power socket. She removed her hand and turned to the desk as if her pulse hadn’t taken a stupid, traitorous hop.
“Scars,” Mason droned, reading off. “Right rib, blade; left thigh, GSW; back—hell, that’s a—”
“Documentation, not commentary,” Dani said. She didn’t raise her voice. She didn’t need to. “Rotate.”
John rotated. Not for Mason. For the clockwork of her voice. Shoulders under the shirt—state-issue gray clinging to wet and muscle—rolled like a mechanism that could be silent or murderous, dealer’s choice. A camera blinked its little red dot. The vent hummed. Somewhere a printer chattered. The world kept paperwork even if it tried to erase a man.
“Eyes straight.” She took the photo. The flash flattened him for a second, and still it didn’t make him small.
He was supposed to be this myth—the rogue SEAL who’d cut the head off a snake disguised as a U.S. Attorney General. The rumors threaded around the fluorescent hum: mercenaries, a murdered wife, an unborn child, an execution done with the clean certainty of a man who’d run out of acceptable targets. Men like Mason liked rumors because rumors made them feel like wardens of something bigger than themselves.
“Refuses to respond to standard command,” another guard muttered, checking a box ahead of time like he enjoyed prophecy.
“Responds to clear command,” Dani said, without looking up. “Hands forward.”
John brought his hands forward, the chain flashing. Slow. Deliberate. He did it the way a predator lopes: not because the leash exists, but because the pace is his.
The medic came in smelling like latex and mint gum. Pupils, pulse, reflex. John sat when Dani said sit, stood when she said stand. His pulse stayed bored under the medic’s fingers, but Dani felt something else in the room shift around that straight line: a tension wire thrumming between look and voice. The medic signed off. Paper slid. Barcodes scanned. The printer spit out his new name: CLARK, JOHN — DETAINEE 7B. The government loved a clean label for a filthy secret.
“7B,” Mason repeated, satisfied like a man who’d just put a lid on a boiling pot.
“Stand.” Dani’s voice again. “We’re walking.”
The chain at his ankles gave him a shorter step. He still made it look like a choice. The escort formed up: Mason behind, one guard on either side. Dani at point, because she’d already decided he’d follow her voice or he wouldn’t follow at all. The door hissed open like a throat clearing.
The corridor swallowed them. Long, white, humming. Cameras every ten meters. The floor shone with that too-clean finish that always smells faintly of lemons and bleach and other people’s fear. Boots tapped out a steady metronome that seemed to measure how quickly men pretend to be in control.
“Eyes front,” Mason said, more for himself than anyone else.
John’s eyes were on Dani’s back. On the collar seam. On the stray baby hair at her nape that the braid couldn’t bully into line. Not lust—yet—but attention that had temperature. She felt it without seeing it; that pure animal awareness of being watched by something that could break your bones and might ask permission first just to be impolite.
They passed a junction where the ceiling camera angle left a thin crescent of shadow on the wall. A known quirk. Not a blind spot big enough for sin, but big enough for a breath that didn’t belong to policy.
“Hold,” Dani said, palm up.
They stopped. The guards shifted, boots squeaking. John didn’t speak, didn’t test, didn’t fill silence with anything. The air in that slice of shadow had a different weight. Everything amplified: the tick of a far relay, the soft slide of Dani’s own inhale, the way chain against fabric sounded like a threat and a promise if you were twisted enough to hear it that way.
“You will follow my commands,” she said, not turning. “You will not address other staff unless prompted. You will not test a perimeter you cannot see. Nod if you understand.”
He nodded. The chain quivered, that tiny, treacherous music.
Behind them, Mason muttered, “He understands pain, is what he understands.”
John finally spoke, voice low-grit and calm. “I understand idiots in hallway echo.” He didn’t look at Mason. He said it to the space above Mason’s dignity, which was the same thing as saying it to no one.
Mason bristled, weight shifting forward.
“Keep your spacing,” Dani said, the words pinning Mason back more neatly than a baton ever could. She moved again, and the whole shape of the squad obeyed, as if the corridor itself wanted to please her.
They reached the 7B block. The door read the badge at Dani’s hip and sighed open. The cells here had glass-fronts like aquariums for unwise fish. The lights were tuned cooler, which made everyone look a little more like a ghost. A metal bed. A stainless steel toilet that pretended not to be part of the show. A drain in the floor because sometimes the show needed hosing.
“Inside,” Dani said.
John stepped in. The room narrowed around him like a throat around a name. He turned to face them. For a breath, nobody moved. Authority hung in the air waiting to be claimed.
“Wrists,” she said, and he brought them forward through the aperture in the door. Her hands were steady as she disengaged the front chain and fed it back through the slot. The touch was clean, professional, maddening. He smelled like rain drying on skin over steel—like the kind of man weather respects.
“Turn.” Ankles next, the short chain swapped for the fixed ring anchored to the floor near the bed. He kept his balance with a tiny, precise adjustment of calf and hip, a dancer’s economy misfiled under “threat.”
“Final strip,” Mason said, trying for bravado and landing on petty. “You want—”
“I’ve got it,” Dani said. Mason shut up because men like Mason always shut up when somebody does the work without asking for applause.
She slid the last shackle free, stepped back out, and sealed the door. It locked with that thick magnetic clunk meant to reassure taxpayers and terrify fantasies. John didn’t move to test it. He looked at her instead. The glass between them might as well have been a confessional screen.
“You’ll get used to the routine,” Dani said. Her voice laid tracks: wake, check, feed, lights, silence; the liturgy of state-sanctioned forgetting. “You’ll see me at 0600. You’ll see me at 1400. You’ll see me at 2200.”
His mouth tilted, not kindness. “Lucky me.”
“You’re here to be contained, not entertained.”
“That why they sent you?” he asked, head a fraction to the side. “Containment with cheekbones.”
Mason snorted. “You want a mouthguard with that mouth, hero?”
John didn’t look away from Dani. “Tell your dog to stop barking.”
The corridor cooled. Mason’s hand twitched; you could hear knuckles wanting attention. Dani let the silence stretch until it found the shape she wanted.
“Sergeant,” she said to Mason without glancing. “You’re dismissed.”
A beat where rank and ego wrestled. Mason lost, because the corridor, the cameras, the paperwork—they all knew whose voice the prisoner followed. He left with a curse under his breath that thought it was quieter than it was.
It was just the two of them, then—plus the cameras, plus the hum, plus the taste of metal. Dani stepped closer to the glass, not close enough to read as compromise. Close enough to text across a language nobody else admitted speaking.
“You will call me Officer Rourke,” she said. “You will obey my commands. You will keep your eyes on the line painted on the floor when I tell you to move. Nod if you understand.”
He didn’t nod. He blinked once, slow, the body’s version of I heard you spoken in a dialect people use before they decide to be dangerous.
“Mr. Clark.”
A beat. Then he nodded. A small concession. A world of trouble.
“Good,” she said, and for the first time since he’d stepped off the van, she allowed herself a breath that wasn’t measured in millimeters. “Dinner at nineteen hundred. Don’t make me repeat myself.”
“I don’t make you do anything,” he said, quiet as a closed knife. “You just like saying my name.”
Her jaw wanted to answer. Her mouth didn’t. She turned, boots measuring out the corridor. The cameras watched her leave; he watched instead of the cameras. The door at the end swallowed her, and the hum filled the space she left behind.
In the glass reflection, his face doubled—one version caged, one thinner and somehow freer, like a shadow practicing an escape. He looked at the empty corridor where her shape had been and smiled without showing teeth. The kind of smile a man wears when he’s already learning the architecture of a new prison: doors, schedules, voices, weaknesses. The kind of smile that says he’ll listen to the right command right up until the second he doesn’t.
The vents kept humming. The printer down the hall started whining again and fed another label into another file for another inmate with a less interesting history. The black site exhaled and pretended it had nothing in its lungs but air.
At 1900, the slot in his door opened with a rectangular sigh. A tray slid through: protein, starch, a vegetable that used to have a name. A plastic fork. The slot closed. Footsteps paused, then moved on. Not hers.
A second later, a shadow interrupted the light at the base of his door. Her boots. He didn’t need the window to know it was Dani. Some bodies learn another body’s gravity even if they never touch.
“Eat,” her voice came, level.
He picked up the fork like she’d put it in his hand.
“Mr. Clark,” she added, and this time her voice carried the smallest burr—fatigue or curiosity, he couldn’t tell. “Don’t test the riot team on your first night.”
He set the fork down and stepped closer to the glass until the world narrowed to her reflection next to his. “You gonna be the one I test instead?”
Silence. The kind that sparks if you breathe wrong.
“Eat,” she repeated, softer. Not an order. Something more dangerous.
He sat on the edge of the metal bed, ate like a man who had decided hunger was a negotiation he didn’t need to lose, and watched her shadow stay a moment longer than protocol would recommend. Then it moved away, swallowed by the corridor’s hum. The lights kept their bright, unmerciful stare. The glass did not blink.
Night in a place like this is just day with the lights lying about it. He lay back without lying down, shoulders still coiled, gaze on the seam where ceiling met wall. Somewhere in the facility, a compressor kicked and sighed; someone cursed; a radio squawked; paperwork stacked itself like a wall that pretended to be taller than a man.
He closed his eyes and saw her anyway: the precise mouth, the braid, the calm that wasn’t cold. The way the corridor obeyed when she spoke. The way his own pulse had been boring for the medic and a touch less boring when she said Mr. Clark like the name weighed something.
The chain at his ankle whispered against the floor as he adjusted. Metal on metal. A lullaby for people who’d forgotten what lullabies were for.
He didn’t sleep. Predators doze. He waited, and the black site waited with him, pretending the word containmentmeant anything more than a dare.
The black site woke itself with light. Fluorescents cracked on like an electric whip. A siren barked once, too short to matter but long enough to remind everyone that time didn’t pass here—it was programmed. Boots hit concrete in a staggered rhythm as the morning shift marched the block, batons clattering against bars, glass, steel.
Most inmates groaned, stood, went through the ritual like trained cattle. John Clark didn’t. He stayed seated on the edge of his bed, elbows on knees, chains slack around his ankles. Calm as a man in a hotel room.
“Up,” a voice snapped. Not Dani’s.
It belonged to Collins—new blood, maybe late twenties, with the face of somebody who still thought the uniform made him tall. His chest puffed against the vest; his baton slapped the door frame like punctuation.
John didn’t move. His gaze stayed low, fixed somewhere near the drain in the floor as if the order hadn’t even registered.
“I said up, inmate.” Collins’ voice cracked toward volume. “On your feet for inspection.”
John finally looked up. Not hurried. Not riled. Just a slow drag of his eyes to the glass. He took in Collins like he was reading a sign he’d already decided to ignore.
“Inspection?” John’s voice came low, a rough scrape softened by amusement. “You want me to stand so you can look at me? What—didn’t get enough cock last night?”
The other guards snorted before they could stop themselves. One coughed to cover it. Collins’ face went red, a blotchy heat that crawled up his neck.
“You think you’re funny, motherfucker?” Collins stepped closer, baton rattling the slot on the door. “Get on your feet before I drag your ass out of there.”
John leaned back against the wall, stretching out like a man testing a mattress. Ankles clinked, wrists loose in the belly-chain. His smile was a cut, teeth barely visible.
“Drag me out,” he said. “See how many of you it takes. Bet you a month’s pay you piss yourself before we hit the hallway.”
“Code Blue,” Collins hissed, half-turning like he’d call it himself, riot squad just itching to break something.
John chuckled, a low vibration that didn’t reach his eyes. “You ever been in a fight, Collins? Not a bar scuffle. Not a frat boy pissing contest. A fight where you know the other guy’s faster, meaner, better trained? Where you pray your mother never sees the tape of how fast you went down?”
Collins froze, baton tightening in his grip.
“Didn’t think so,” John finished, voice gone flat.
The corridor air thickened. The fluorescent hum seemed louder than breathing. Then the door at the end hissed open.
Dani Rourke stepped in. Calm as always. Braid tight, uniform sharp, coffee steaming in her hand like she had all the patience in the world. Her eyes took in the tableau in one sweep: Collins puffed up, John lounging in chains, the rest of the guards waiting to see which way the day would break.
“On your feet, Mr. Clark,” she said. Voice level, clipped. No extra words.
The silence stretched one second too long, then John rose. Smooth, unhurried, deliberate. Every vertebra straightening was a reminder that it was her command he followed, not Collins’. His eyes locked on Dani, not the baton, not the cameras.
“Hands forward,” Dani said.
He obeyed, wrists out through the slot. Slow. A deliberate pace that felt like mockery, but perfect in execution. The cuffs clinked into place.
Collins seethed, jaw tight. “He’s playing you—”
“Inspection complete,” Dani cut in. Her tone had the weight of punctuation, not suggestion. She slid the clipboard under her arm, tapped her stylus once, and moved on.
John leaned slightly toward the slot as she finished. His voice dropped low, too soft for the others. “Guess I just like the way you talk to me.”
Dani didn’t flinch. She snapped the stylus against the clipboard, a sharp little crack. “Stand straight, Clark.”
He straightened. Chain taut. Eyes still on her, mouth tilted with that infuriating almost-smile.
The guards dispersed in mutters, Collins stomping down the corridor like a boy robbed of his toy. Behind him, the whispers started: He only listens to Rourke.
Dani walked steady, coffee still steaming, her braid brushing her collar. She didn’t look back. But she felt his stare burn between her shoulder blades until the next door sealed behind her.
The clipboard was steady in her hand, and so was the coffee, and so was her walk down the corridor. That was what mattered: steadiness. Boots tapping the exact same rhythm whether her pulse was flat or sprinting.
But her pulse wasn’t flat. It was fucked.
She could still hear the laugh—John’s laugh. That deep, derisive sound he’d thrown at Collins, low and easy, like a wolf grinning through its teeth. It wasn’t the words that hooked her, though they had landed sharp enough to cut. It was how he wielded them: calm, surgical, as if he’d dissected Collins’ entire manhood in a sentence and left him bleeding in front of the squad.
And then—her voice. Her voice had cut through it, and he’d moved. No hesitation. No backtalk. No delay. Just that slow, deliberate compliance that had felt like… indulgence. Not submission, not obedience, but choice.
That was worse than defiance.
Because Collins was already a joke. Everyone could see that. But her? Dani wasn’t supposed to be the center of a prisoner’s gravity. She wasn’t supposed to be the voice he picked out of the noise, the eyes he locked onto, the one tether he decided was worth the effort.
She hated the way her body knew it before her brain wanted to admit it. The prickle at the base of her neck under his stare. The way her shoulders had stiffened like a teenager’s when his mouth tilted with that not-quite-smile. The sudden, traitorous awareness of how her uniform fit, how the braid brushed her collarbone.
She’d walked the rest of the block, clipboard neat, stylus clipped back into its slot. Didn’t let a single word slip sideways. But the whispers were already running ahead of her: he only listens to Rourke.
That rumor was gasoline. In a place like this, gasoline burned quick.
Her boots hit the steel grate that led into the admin wing. The cameras above her hummed with their little electric secrets. She sipped her coffee—lukewarm, bitter, state-issued—and kept her face calm.
But under the braid, under the uniform, under the badge, Dani Rourke’s pulse was still running too hot for this early in the morning. And she knew—knew like a bad song stuck in her head—that John Clark had noticed.
The block had its rhythm, and Dani played her part. Clipboard in one hand, stylus tapping boxes with that dry little click that echoed in the glass-and-steel throat of the corridor.
Cell 7A: inmate compliant. Cell 7C: inmate hostile during feeding, noted. 7D: no anomalies. 7E: medication dispensed.
Every door was the same. Steel, glass, slot, hum. A body inside, some angry, some silent, some broken in ways you couldn’t see. Men the government didn’t want anyone to remember existed.
Dani’s boots measured it out: thirty-six paces from the admin door to the turn. Eight paces between cells. Two seconds to glance in, enough to confirm life without inviting contact. Her shoulders stayed square, uniform collar stiff, braid brushing between her shoulder blades with every step.
“Rourke,” one inmate hissed through the crack at the bottom of his door. She didn’t turn. “Hey—Rourke—” The hiss sharpened when she ignored it. They always sharpened. She clicked her stylus against the box for hostile attempt at communication and kept walking.
The cameras blinked red dots overhead, sucking in every movement. The vents hummed the same note they hummed every day. The fluorescent light made even the walls look tired.
7F: restrained, compliant. 7G: no anomalies.
It was always the same—men testing the edges, reaching for her attention, and her denying it. Attention was currency here. Eye contact was more than acknowledgment; it was fuel. So she gave none of it.
Until 7B.
Her clipboard stayed steady. Her pace didn’t falter. But she felt it before she saw it—the weight of his stare pressing out from behind glass. She turned her head the precise fraction required by protocol, no more. And there he was.
John Clark. Sitting on the bed, ankle chain slack, posture loose in that calculated way that spoke louder than aggression. His eyes locked to hers before she even reached the glass. Like he’d been waiting for the exact second her boots would stop in front of his door.
Dani made the notation: inmate seated, compliant. Box ticked. Routine intact.
But it didn’t feel routine.
Because he didn’t look at her like the others did. Not hungry, not mocking, not desperate. His stare was steady, patient. As if he wasn’t watching the guard; he was watching her. Dani Rourke, twenty-nine, braid tight, collar stiff, pulse betraying her.
Her throat went dry. She swallowed once, quiet enough the camera mic wouldn’t catch it.
“Inspection complete,” she said, as she did at every door. The words landed, too neat, too even.
John leaned forward a fraction, elbows on his knees, chain clinking soft against the floor. He didn’t blink. He didn’t move his mouth enough to read the words, but she felt them all the same: I see you.
Dani moved to the next cell. She had to. Her clipboard clicked, her boots tapped, her shoulders stayed square. Protocol was an armor, and armor only worked if you didn’t admit the cracks.
But with every step away, her back prickled hotter. His gaze didn’t stay behind the glass; it followed her down the corridor like a hand between her shoulder blades.
At the end of the block, she turned the corner, out of his line of sight. The pressure lifted—but not clean. More like pulling out a knife and leaving the wound open.
She ticked the last box on her clipboard and realized her handwriting had gone sloppy.
The black site didn’t wake gently. It never did. Lights cracked on in the ceiling with their hard, buzzing brightness, stabbing into every cell like interrogation lamps. Vents pushed out stale air that smelled faintly of bleach and rubber. Doors groaned awake under the lock system’s hum.
Most inmates stirred automatically. Pavlovian. Trays clattered, boots echoed, batons tapped against glass. Voices barked the same orders they barked every morning. The sound of routine wasn’t peaceful—it was an assault, engineered to remind the men that they weren’t men, just numbered problems in boxes.
But in Cell 7B, the problem didn’t move.
John Clark sat on the edge of his bed, elbows on his knees, head lowered like he was watching the drain in the floor. Ankles chained, wrists locked, shoulders a stillness that vibrated with refusal.
The slot scraped open and a tray shoved through: eggs powdered into yellow dust, oatmeal hardened to cement, toast rubbery enough to fold. The tray clanged against the metal floor. John didn’t reach for it. Didn’t twitch.
“On your feet, Clark!” Collins’ voice cracked against the glass. Too loud. Too eager.
John didn’t look up.
“I said up!” Collins’ baton slammed against the glass, the sound reverberating like a shot in the corridor. The other guards slowed in their routines, half-watching.
Nothing.
Collins’ ears went red. “You think you’re funny? You think you get to pick and choose?” He rattled the door slot harder, metal screeching. “Get your ass on the line before I drag you out.”
Finally, John lifted his head. His eyes found Collins with the kind of calm that didn’t belong to a prisoner. The kind of calm that made your stomach know your fists weren’t enough.
“You sound tired,” John said, voice low, dry. “Maybe let someone else bark for a while.”
The guards near Collins smirked before they could stop themselves. Mason shot them a look, but it was too late—the crack had already landed.
Collins’ jaw flexed. “I’ll bark when I fucking want.”
John leaned back against the wall, chain clinking as he stretched out like he had all the time in the world. “And I’ll sit here. Guess we both get what we want.”
Collins’ hand twitched toward his radio. “Code Blue.”
The words rippled down the corridor. The siren hit immediately—low, ugly, rattling the steel in the walls. Radios barked, boots thundered, and the black site filled with the energy of violence waiting for permission.
Doors opened down the hall. Riot squad flooded out—six guards armored head to toe, black pads creaking, shields thudding into position, batons hanging like promises. Their visors hid their eyes, but the heat in the air was obvious. They smelled of sweat already, of rubber and adrenaline.
“Stack up!” Mason barked. “On my call, we breach!”
The riot wall thudded forward, boots hammering, shields slamming together in a crash that echoed down the block.
But inside 7B, the storm wasn’t storming.
John didn’t move. Still perched on the bed, still loose in the shoulders, as if the threat outside the door was entertainment, not danger. His eyes drifted up to the small window, watching the chaos gather, and then back down to the floor.
And that’s when the lock clicked.
The slot opened—not for the squad, but for Dani Rourke.
She keyed herself in before the wall reached the cell. The magnetic bolts disengaged with a heavy clunk, and she stepped inside. No shield. No baton. Just her boots, her braid, her voice.
“John,” she said.
His head lifted, eyes cutting to her instantly. Not to the siren, not to the squad massing outside. Her.
“You need to stand.” Her voice was calm, flat, unhurried. Like she had all the authority in the world.
The squad outside banged their shields again. Collins shouted, “Rourke! Get out of there! He’s noncompliant!”
But John moved. Slowly. Deliberately. One hand pushing against his thigh, then the other. Ankles grinding the chain. He rose. Tall, steady, caged predator unfolding at her command.
“Hands forward,” Dani said.
He stepped to the slot. Slid his wrists out, the steel glinting under the lights. Her hands were steady as she locked him into the transfer chain, but her pulse betrayed her. His knuckles brushed hers—warm, solid, deliberate. His eyes never left hers.
“Good,” she said, voice clipped.
And then the riot squad burst in.
Shields up, boots thunderous, they poured into the block, a wall of armored force filling the corridor. The air stank of rubber and sweat, adrenaline pounding like another siren. The cell door was still open, Dani standing there with John chained and ready to move.
The squad froze mid-charge. Shields halted.
Collins’ voice cracked through the visor. “What the fuck—”
“He’s compliant,” Dani cut in, voice like steel. “Stand down.”
The words carried a weight heavier than shields. For a beat, no one moved. Then Mason lifted a hand, barked, “Stand down!” The shields lowered in a clatter. The squad muttered as they peeled back, adrenaline souring into frustration.
John stepped out with Dani leading the chain. Calm. Composed. Like he’d never refused at all.
Collins’ face burned red through the visor. “He’s fucking playing you—”
John turned his head just enough, smirk sharp. “Guess you overdressed for breakfast.”
Laughter leaked from the line before anyone could choke it down. Collins’ fists clenched on his baton. His rage was loud, obvious, and powerless.
“Enough,” Mason snapped. “Back to posts.”
The squad dispersed, shields clattering back into racks. The siren cut. Silence crashed back in, humming vents filling the air.
Dani guided John back to his cell, locked him in, checked the restraints twice. Protocol. Always protocol. He didn’t resist, didn’t blink. Just watched her. Calm. Knowing.
“You’ll move when I tell you to,” she said, voice low as the latch clunked home.
His mouth tilted in that dangerous almost-smile. “Exactly.”
Her stomach tightened. She turned before he could see it.
The corridor emptied slow, leaving Mason, Collins, and Dani outside the block. Mason rubbed at his temple, jaw tight. Collins paced like a dog itching to bite.
“Rourke,” Mason said finally. “You want to explain what the hell that was?”
“I handled it,” Dani said. Her tone was clipped, even. “He’s in compliance. No injuries. No damage.”
Collins barked a bitter laugh. “Compliance? He’s laughing at us! He makes you his fucking handler, and you just—”
“He didn’t move for you,” Dani cut in. She turned, eyes sharp on Collins. “He didn’t move for Mason. He didn’t move for six men in riot gear. He moved for me.”
Collins’ mouth opened, closed, then opened again. “Exactly. That’s the problem.”
“No,” Dani said, stepping closer, voice flat, final. “That’s the solution. From now on, when it comes to Clark, I handle him. He listens. You don’t like it? File a report.”
Mason’s eyes narrowed. The weight of his stare pressed down, testing her resolve. She didn’t blink.
Finally, Mason exhaled through his nose, a sound halfway to surrender. “Fine. You want responsibility? You’ve got it. Clark’s yours.”
Collins muttered, “This is bullshit.”
“Then write it up,” Dani said, walking past him. Her boots clanged against the steel grating, braid swinging sharp against her back. “But until then, you stay the hell out of my way.”
Behind her, the silence hung heavy. John’s stare from inside his cell still burned hotter than the riot squad’s anger.
The door to 7B coughed its locks and exhaled the same metallic breath as always. Dani stood centered in the frame, clipboard tucked against her ribs, hips squared to the threshold. Behind her, Mason’s bulk filled the corridor like a refrigerator in a narrow kitchen; Collins was a blade of jittery energy, baton grinning from his belt.
“Yard,” Dani said.
John rose with that unhurried economy that made the chain at his ankles sound like punctuation, not restraint. He stepped forward, the transfer cuffs waiting at the slot. The cuffs’ mouth was a neat rectangle of state logic; her hands bridged the gap, cool and steady, metal kissing metal until it clicked into a system that pretended it was bigger than either of them.
“On me,” Dani said, tugging once. He came out of the cell as if the corridor were his hallway and everyone else were guests.
“Keep your pace up,” Collins snapped. “This isn’t a date.”
John didn’t look at him. “You still mad about breakfast, Collins?” The smirk was lazy, voice low enough to make the taunt feel private and humiliating at the same time. “Riot cosplay looked good on you.”
Collins flushed. “Say that again after I—”
“Enough,” Mason barked. “Rourke, move.”
Dani moved. The escort formed into a sketched-out textbook: she at point, John a half-step behind, two shadows of authority at their flanks. The corridor unrolled like a film strip nobody asked to watch: white walls, scuffed baseboards, fluorescents letting everyone know skin is a color invented by optimists. Vents kept humming the same old lie about fresh air.
Chain-sound. Boot-sound. The quiet scrape of John’s breath—measured, boring, except that it wasn’t. Her shoulder knew his distance without turning; every guard learns the math of proximity, but she felt this one like temperature.
“Pick it up,” Mason said.
John’s eyes slid his way, unimpressed. “Sergeant, you got two speeds: bark and sulk. Ever try giving an order?”
Mason’s jaw flexed. Collins snorted like he’d won something.
John didn’t break stride. “See, she gives an order,” he nodded at Dani’s back, “and I move. You two bray like stray dogs.”
“Careful,” Collins hissed, half to Mason, half to his own temper. “He’s baiting.”
“Bait would imply I want what you’re offering,” John said. “I don’t.”
Dani didn’t look back, but she felt the heat ripple off them. “Eyes front,” she said, without raising her voice. The words reorganized the air.
They hit the turn to the yard and the world widened. The door’s magnet dropped with a heavy thunk. Brightness, then open sky—caged sky, a square of bruised blue framed by razor wire that curled like punctuation over concrete walls. Towers hunched at the corners, rifles sleeping in their stations. Floodlights dangled on steel necks, dead for now but fat with memory.
The smell shifted: hot asphalt, iron, old sweat, a phantom of cut grass that never actually existed here. The yard was a stage—weights clanged in a corner where a knot of inmates pretended metal could tell them something about freedom; a half-court game knocked the ball like a heartbeat against the backboard; a few men walked the perimeter, counting the crack lines in the concrete like rosary beads.
They looked up when John stepped out. Ripples. Heads turned, voices snagged mid-sentence. News traveled at the speed of appetite in a place like this, and everyone’d heard about 7B and the riot gear that didn’t riot.
“New fish,” someone called. “Or just a shark in cuffs?”
John didn’t answer. He took the yard in with a soldier’s glance: exits, angles, patterns, the question of who thinks they’re a problem and who actually is. Dani held his chain lightly, the gesture formal and meaningless at the same time; they both knew what he could do if meaning ever stopped mattering.
“Thirty minutes,” Dani said to him, to the yard, to the cameras. “Stay clear of the tower lines. No contact with 6-block. No horse trading.” The last line was for the benefit of the microphones as much as his ears.
He angled his head. “What if I just walk?”
“You’ll walk where I tell you to walk.”
“Then I guess I’ll walk,” he said, and his smile was small enough to hide in, if you were the kind of person who liked dangerous furniture.
He walked. Not aimless. Not hunting. A perimeter trace just inside the painted line, the kind of route a man takes when he’s inventorying lunch tables in a high school full of knives. Men gave him room without deciding to. The basketball game stuttered for a beat as both teams calculated whether the gravity had changed.
A skinny inmate with old ink and a new mouth drifted into his orbit. “Heard you’re the hero who put a bigshot in the ground.” His grin showed a mess of teeth and hope. “Respect.”
John’s eyes slid over him like weather. “Respect isn’t a sentence,” he said, and kept walking.
Another one tried swagger: got too close, chest out, an elbow like a nudge. John pivoted half a step, cuffs barely whispering, and the guy hit a wall that didn’t exist. No shove. No theatrics. Just geometry. And a look that told the whole yard what would happen if anyone did the math wrong.
Dani watched, the way you watch a power line in a storm. Calm from the outside; humming with possibility underneath. Collins stood near the gate pretending to be casual and failing. Mason scanned with his dull cop’s squint, missing the undercurrents because he insisted undercurrents weren’t real.
When John crossed her lane again, Dani lifted her chin. “Hydrate.”
He took the paper cup from her hand like it was just another command. Drank. Neither of them looked at the cameras; both of them felt the eyes.
“Time,” Mason called, because clocks have authority even when people don’t.
“On me,” Dani said.
John finished the last swallow and tipped the cup so a single line of water ran down the ridge of his knuckles, over the steel. He gave the empty back the way you hand someone an answer they already knew.
They formed up to leave. The inmates triangulated their attention to the gate as if staring hard could widen it. The chain between John’s ankles tapped its patient notation into the asphalt. At the threshold, he glanced once over his shoulder at the square of sky. Not longing—calculation. He filed it away with the rest.
Back into the corridor. Concrete swallowed them whole. The first camera caught their entry, red LED blinking like a metronome for crimes that hadn’t happened yet. The light here was colder, the hum a shade meaner. Dani’s shoulders knew the distances all over again, remapped to walls instead of open air.
“Next time,” Collins said, “we put him on the far bench and keep him there. None of this sightseeing—”
“Next time,” John said, without looking, “you try an inside voice. The tower could hear your insecurity.”
Mason grunted something that wanted to be a warning and landed as a concession.
They walked.
Ahead: the corridor kinked around a support column and the camera above it covered ninety percent of what protocol insisted it covered. Ten percent was a crescent of shadow where walls, angle, and lazy installation made a lie. Every guard learned it during orientation. Most pretended it wasn’t there. Some took advantage when they shouldn’t. Dani logged it mentally as a risk zone and kept it in the part of her brain where you store words you don’t say.
Her body recognized the seam before her mind offered up the file card. Temperature dipped. Air pressure showed its bones. The hum got weird, like sound chose the other wall.
They stepped into the crescent and the world narrowed. Dani held her pace. “Eyes front,” she said to the space, to herself, to the fact that her pulse had found a new drum.
John slowed. Just enough to collapse the half-step between them into something that felt like it had consequences. The ankle chain scraped a new rhythm. She didn’t look back—she knew better than to look at wanting—but her peripheral vision fed her the math: his shoulder, the angle of his head, the line of his mouth when it wasn’t announcing itself to the world.
“Stay on the line, Clark,” she said. The line was a yellow stripe worn pale by obedient feet.
His cuffed hand drifted. Not a grab. Not insubordination. A brush. Knuckles grazing the inside of her wrist where skin is thinner and nerves are loud. Heat, brief as friction, undeniable as a slap you don’t return.
Her baton-hand twitched without drawing. “Careful.”
He didn’t flinch. He bent a fraction, breath hitting the shell of her ear in a way the microphones would classify as ambient.
“Every time you touch these cuffs,” he whispered, voice soft enough to bleed into the hum, “I think about your hands somewhere else.”
Her body betrayed her. A hitch so small it could have been a footfall on uneven paint. Heat streaking down her spine, caught and hidden by discipline that had been beaten into shape by years of being watched. The cuffs. Her hands. The image slammed into the part of her brain that did not ask permission.
“Watch your mouth,” she said. It came out even. She was proud and furious about that.
“I am,” he said, and the smile in the words was a crime in ten states. “Watching yours.”
“Eyes front.” The words clipped and sharp, a blade snapping home. “Do not test me here.”
“That’s exactly what I’m doing,” he murmured, and then—nothing. He drew back, pace matching hers again like the moment had been invented by lighting. The crescent ended; the camera picked them up clean. Red LED blinked its bureaucratic blink. To anyone watching, they were geometry and protocol, a guard and a prisoner behaving.
Collins yawned fake and loud because he had no idea what had happened ten feet back. “Make a left already. I’m missing lunch.”
“Tragic,” John said.
They took the left. The corridor straightened. Dani’s heart didn’t. It kept its new rhythm like it owed somebody money. She taught her lungs how to breathe under fluorescents again. At the next camera bubble, she let her gaze flick to the curve of black glass—not to check coverage, but to remind herself what was real.
7B waited with its aquarium calm. The lock welcomed them with a heavy kiss. She stepped John into the rectangle, turned him with two fingers at his elbow, fed steel into steel until the cuffs and the room made their uneasy logic again.
He watched her. Not the door. Not the other men. Her. Not a stare that asked. A stare that recorded.
“Hands,” she said, and he offered them through the slot, palms up, veins mapping under skin. Her fingers brushed his again as she freed one shackle, then the other, the ritual done at a pace that looked identical to every other time and felt nothing like identical to her nerves.
“Back,” she said. He stepped. “Face the wall.” He did. The door slid home with a seal meant to comfort gods.
Collins exhaled like he’d been holding his breath since the yard. “Finally.”
Mason checked a box on his clipboard as if the box meant something. “No incidents,” he said for the record, which was a lie of omission the record liked.
“Rourke,” Collins tried, swagger gluing itself back on, “next time I’m lead on him. I’m not playing second chair to—”
“Next time, you follow my orders,” Dani said without heat. “On Clark, I take point.”
Mason lifted his eyebrows. “That an ask or a tell?”
“It’s a protocol adjustment,” she said, voice quiet enough to undercut ego and loud enough to be policy. “He moves clean for me. He antagonizes you and escalates. If the goal is compliance and no paperwork, I handle Clark.”
Collins laughed; it sounded like a fork scraping a plate. “You like being his babysitter? He’s making you his—”
“Collins,” Mason warned.
Dani didn’t blink. “You want to write that up? Go write it. Use your big boy words. Meanwhile: on 7B, I’m lead. You two are support.” She let her gaze hit Mason first—rank—then Collins—temper. “We’re not here to perform masculinity. We’re here to keep the lid on.”
Mason stared a long second, running the math between pride and practicality. The facility hummed around the calculus.
“Fine,” he said at last. “Clark is yours on movement. Yard, med, showers. You call it, we back it.”
Collins sputtered. “You’re giving her—”
“I’m giving the block fewer reports,” Mason snapped. He pointed at Collins’ chest. “You don’t like it, write Command. Until then, shut up and fall in.”
Collins’ mouth worked. Nothing came out worth keeping. He looked at John through the glass like he wished eyes were batons.
John smiled a fraction, enough for only Dani to notice. Not triumph. Not gratitude. Something more clinical and intimate: a small notch carved into a wall that used to be smooth.
“Shift change in thirty,” Mason said. “Rourke, log the yard. Collins, run 6-block.”
They peeled off. The corridor took them in opposite directions. Dani stayed one second longer than protocol next to the glass, enough for her reflection to shiver into his. She didn’t look at him. She didn’t need to. The cuffs still sat warm in her hands like an accusation.
She walked. Boots. Hum. Cameras. The blind spot around the corner felt like a bruise on the building: touched and gone, tender and invisible. She tasted metal at the back of her throat and told herself it was just the air.
Behind her, in 7B, a man sat down on a steel bed and let the chain whisper against concrete like a secret learning to say its own name.
The prison was never silent, but night made it sound like it wanted to be. The vents hummed lower, steadier. Lights dimmed by fractions, fluorescent glare softened to a shade that still washed skin pale but at least pretended to rest. Doors clicked less often. Boots echoed longer in empty corridors, ricocheting until they sounded like someone else’s steps following behind.
Dani moved down the 7-block with her clipboard, stylus ready, braid pulling at the back of her skull. Her shoulders ached under the weight of too much caffeine and not enough sleep. Night shifts meant fewer guards on the floor, fewer voices, but that didn’t make the place safer. It made the tension louder.
She checked her first cells in rhythm. 7A: inmate prone, visible breath. 7C: pacing, muttering to the vent, eyes fevered. 7D: asleep, arm flung over his face. 7E: hostile earlier, now curled fetal, whispering a name into his pillow. Each notation ticked clean, each glance clipped and impersonal.
Until 7B.
He was awake. Sitting on the edge of his bed, elbows on his thighs, head tipped slightly down. Like he’d been waiting. The light cut across him, half-shadowing his face, but his eyes found hers the moment she stopped at the glass.
“Don’t you ever sleep?” His voice carried low, almost conversational, softened by the hour. “Or do they just wind you up until you break?”
Dani’s stylus tapped her clipboard once, too sharp. “Protocol requires full rounds every two hours.”
“That wasn’t an answer.” His mouth curved, not wide, just a tilt. “You’ve got the braid still tight, posture still straight. But your eyes—” He leaned forward, just enough for the glass to catch his reflection against hers. “Your eyes look like mine. Tired of watching.”
Her pulse thudded traitorously in her throat. “Back from the glass, Clark.”
He didn’t move. “I’m not complaining. Quieter at night. Easier to hear you.”
Her grip tightened on the clipboard. “This is routine.”
“Sure,” he said, tone soft, almost amused. “Routine.”
Her lungs remembered to fill. “Back from the glass.”
This time he moved, deliberate, leaning back until shadow claimed more of his face. The chain at his ankle whispered against concrete. His smirk stayed.
Dani ticked the box: Inmate compliant. The stylus clicked loud in the hush. She turned, boots measured, every step pretending nothing in her pulse had shifted.
“Long visit for a checkmark.”
Collins. His voice knifed out of the dim as he rounded the corner, baton tapping casually against his thigh. His grin was narrow, sharp, too pleased at catching her there.
Dani didn’t break stride. “I don’t log time stamps on rounds. I log compliance.”
“Yeah?” Collins smirked harder, falling into step beside her. “What’s he giving you in there? Tips on how to make him your pet?”
Dani stopped. She turned her head just enough for her eyes to pin him without raising her voice. “I don’t take tips from inmates. I write reports. You want my job, Collins? File for it.”
He shifted, smirk faltering under the weight of her tone. He muttered something about paperwork and peeled off toward the station, boots echoing louder than they needed to.
Dani finished her rounds. 7F: prone, breathing steady. 7G: compliant. 7H: asleep. Each box clicked clean, her handwriting neat again, but her hand felt too tight on the stylus.
She logged the report into the station terminal, filed her round, and poured another paper cup of coffee that smelled like burnt plastic and tasted worse. She stared at the monitor grid, eyes dragging inevitably to the feed for 7B.
Black-and-white. Grainy. He was still awake. Still sitting. His head turned, eyes fixed straight into the lens.
She stared back, coffee hot in her hand, pulse unsteady under her collar. The camera didn’t blink. Neither did he.
The radio crackled, pulling her out of it. “Rourke, warden’s office. Now.”
She set the coffee down, grabbed her clipboard, and moved.
The warden’s office sat at the far end of the admin wing, behind a door that clicked twice before opening. The light was softer here—desk lamp instead of fluorescents, blinds drawn over the narrow slit windows, the air stale with paper and old smoke ground into carpet. Files stacked high on one side of the desk, a monitor humming on the other.
The warden himself leaned back in his chair, sleeves rolled up, tie loosened, the weight of bureaucracy carved into the lines around his mouth. He didn’t look tired—he looked like a man who’d made peace with never sleeping right again.
“Rourke,” he said, voice gravelly. “Sit.”
She sat. Clipboard steady in her lap.
“You’ve had Clark since intake. I want your assessment.”
Dani laid the report on his desk, neat. “He refuses commands from Sergeants Mason and Collins. He complies with mine. No attempted violence under my supervision. No escape behavior. Psychological profile: controlled, calculating, but responsive to direct authority when it’s consistent.”
The warden skimmed the first page, eyebrows twitching. “So he’s dictating which guards handle him.”
“No,” Dani said, calm. “I am. He moves when I tell him to. They provoke, he resists. That’s the difference between order and Code Blue.”
The warden’s eyes lifted, studying her. “You’re suggesting what, exactly?”
“That I be designated as his handler,” Dani said. “All movement, all compliance goes through me. It reduces friction, reduces paperwork, reduces risk.”
Silence stretched. The hum of the desk monitor filled it.
“And restraints?” the warden asked finally.
“He doesn’t require shackles in-cell,” Dani said. Her voice stayed even. “He’s not violent under confinement. Keeping him chained when locked in is unnecessary and provocative. I recommend removal of ankle and wrist restraints once secured.”
The warden leaned back, chair creaking. He tapped the edge of the report with a finger. “You’re arguing for privileges.”
“I’m arguing for efficiency,” Dani said. “And control.”
His mouth pulled tight. “And you think moving him into the special observation wing helps that control?”
“Yes,” Dani said. “A larger glass cell, isolated from gen-pop, with controlled amenities. Books, exercise equipment. It keeps him stable and contained, prevents him from exerting influence on the others, and it makes compliance an incentive.”
The warden studied her a long moment, eyes narrowing slightly, as if weighing whether she believed her own words. Then he nodded.
“Fine. Clark moves to Observation 2 tomorrow. You’re his handler, Rourke. Don’t make me regret it.”
“Yes, sir.”
She rose, collected her clipboard, and stepped out.
The corridor back to the station hummed the same as it always did. Same vents, same fluorescents, same concrete pretending to be neutral. But Dani’s pulse wasn’t neutral. She’d just given him freedom. A bigger cell. Fewer restraints. And she knew—knew like she’d felt his eyes in the glass—that John Clark would recognize it as her choice.
She logged her report, poured the last of the burnt coffee, and stared at the monitor feed for 7B again. He was still awake. Still watching.
This time, the black-and-white grain made his mouth tilt in a way that was almost a smile.
Her apartment pretended at peace. Pale walls, a short couch in a tired gray, a kitchen that solved problems instead of hosting dinners. The window framed a slice of city that belonged to everyone else—bus hiss, brake squeal, a couple arguing softly on the sidewalk about groceries and apologies. Dani stood in the doorway a second longer than she meant to, as if a door in a different building still needed closing.
She set her keys in the small tray by habit: badge, key fob, a hair tie that had lost its elasticity but kept coming along for the ride. Her shoulders lowered the way they never could under fluorescents. Shoes off. Holster locked in the safe. The apartment exhaled.
The fridge hummed. Too familiar. She shut it with her hip and the seal sighed the same way a magnetized door does in the block. She pushed that thought down and turned on the kettle. Water scudded into metal—another wrong echo. She smiled, thin and private. “It’s a kitchen,” she told the room. “Not a corridor.” The kettle didn’t argue.
Errands first. Control what you can control. She walked to the corner grocer with a canvas bag and a list written in the neat, blocky hand the job had taught her. The air was wet with last night’s rain; a street vendor had set up early, steam off griddles carrying onion and cheap coffee into the morning. A cyclist cursed. A kid laughed. All this life in the open, uncounted, unlogged.
Inside the store she moved the way she always did—straight lines, tight turns, efficient. Apples, eggs, yogurt, rice. She stood longer than necessary at the tea shelf, not because she cared but because it felt like a choice with no consequences. Mint, chamomile, something with lemon on the label. The cashier’s nails were glittering stars; Dani found herself watching them tap prices into the terminal and thinking of red camera LEDs blinking over glass.
Laundry next. Coin-op, humming machines lined like soldiers. The washer chunked into a spin and found a rhythm that made her think of ankle chain on concrete. She closed her eyes. Opened them. A woman nearby folded a stack of tiny shirts with the reverence of someone who understood the weight of fabric. Dani folded socks precisely because precision soothed the part of her brain that measured distances between bodies. The dryer door thumped shut behind her like a door with a job to do.
She let herself be a civilian for three hours: grocery bags down, kettle whistling, shower burning her skin. Hair unbraided, dark rope of it heavy down her back. She stood at her mirror and saw the way her collarbone looked without a uniform pressing it into a straight line. Her face looked younger without fluorescent judgment. Her eyes didn’t. She ate at the counter, leaning on her elbows, phone face-down because voice mails could wait and silence had to be practiced to be useful.
She tried to read. Three pages in, the pulses of the building—the elevator cables, the radiator’s old bones—synced to another hum she knew too well. Somewhere else: vents, cameras, locks. She set the book down. Stared at her hand. The memory of warm knuckles grazing her wrist flickered up from the part of the body that collects forbidden electricities. She flexed her fingers once like she could shake the sensation out.
Night crept in without asking permission. She closed the curtains, let the city buzz on the other side of synthetic fabric. TV: static laughter in a room that didn’t have room for it. Off again. She lay on the couch, braid undone, hair damp on the pillow, and told herself to sleep. The ceiling made a slow promise to hold the building up. Her brain offered the image of a man sitting on a steel bed looking at her like routine was a story she was tired of telling.
She slept in tatters. Dreamed she was walking a corridor that wasn’t hers and every camera was a clock.
Morning returned in the stupid way it always does. The coffee maker tried to be helpful and produced something that tasted like apology. She braided her hair tight, uniform laying itself on her body in practiced layers until she looked like someone whose choices were simple. Badge. Holster. Keys. Door.
The prison site took her back like a tide swallowing a shore. Fluorescents bit. The air went thin and artificial. Boots tapped time out of concrete that had run out of patience a decade ago. The shift log caught her signature with a little digital chime and pretended that meant something.
Mason and Collins stood near the monitor bank, watching her arrive the way dogs watch a cat that refuses to acknowledge them.
“Heard your boyfriend’s moving,” Collins said, not looking away from the grid. “You gonna rub sage in the corners of his new place or just bless it with your clipboard?”
“Noted,” Dani said, because nothing she said would make him better and everything she did would make him quieter.
Mason grunted. “Warden cleared Observation Two. We moving him at oh-eight-hundred.”
“Then we’re late,” Dani said. “Let’s go.”
7B’s lock coughed. The glass bared a man who looked like he’d slept only because he’d decided sleep served the plan. He stood before she spoke. Not for Mason’s bark, not for Collins’ posture. For the geometry of her voice filling the frame.
“Wrists,” she said, and he slid them through. The cuffs seated with their precise little bite. He was warm today. Small heat rising off skin to her fingers through metal. She exhaled on schedule.
“On me.”
They walked. Collins had a snort ready and Mason had a warning preloaded, but neither of those things moved John off the line. The corridor’s eyes watched. The door to Observation Two sighed open like something embarrassingly happy to be useful.
The room was larger by half, glass on two sides, corners beveled so reflections wouldn’t hide surprises. The bed was still metal but had a mattress that acknowledged spines existed. A fixed desk. Shelving. Two sanctioned paperbacks: one a thriller someone in procurement thought was clever, one a dog-eared copy of The Old Man and the Sea that made the space feel like a stagehand had a sense of humor. A pull-up bar ruled the doorway’s inside top. A small stack of state-issued clothing, still smelling of bleach and emptiness.
John stepped in and gave it one clean sweep of attention. “Upgrading me?” he asked, mouth tilting. “Or giving yourself better angles?”
“It’s an observation suite,” Dani said. “You’ll have space to move. No restraints while inside. Movement outside will be cuffed.”
His eyes flicked to hers. She didn’t look away. “Generous,” he said. “That from your report, or did I earn it with my smile?”
“You earned it by not making me write what you’d regret reading.” She handed him the folded clothing through the slot. “Change.”
He changed efficiently, as if modesty were a tactical decision he’d weighed and shelved. Shoulders in the new shirt made the fabric look like it wanted to obey. He flexed his hands once, checking for some remembered pain that wasn’t there now that shackles were not chewing at his skin. He went to the pull-up bar and tried it with a single measured breath: body rising like it had an agreement with gravity, elbows closing like a door. Twice. Three times. Controlled, quiet. He dropped down, bare feet whispering against concrete.
“Comfy,” Collins muttered, loud enough for the camera to catch. “Maybe next we get him a fruit basket.”
John’s eyes slid lazily to the glass and past Collins like he was a draft crossing a room. He waited, the way patient men win arguments without speaking.
“Log the transfer,” Dani said.
When the paperwork had eaten its share of time, the radio crackled: “Rourke. Interrogation Room Three. Handler present for detainee 7B.” The air around the words did that thing it does when bureaucracy plants a flag in the dirt.
“On me,” she said again, and the chain set its small music going.
Interrogation Three was a cube of stainless steel that had encountered disappointment and learned to love it. One wall mirrored, one wall camera’d, table bolted to floor as if anyone might forget what floor was for. Two chairs that asked nothing from anyone, a drain that said less.
They seated him. Wrist chain to table ring, ankle chain to the floor point. He let it happen, body going through the arithmetic while his eyes did what his eyes did. She checked every clasp twice. The sound of metal closing mattered; it had to sound like certainty even when nothing was certain.
“You like this room?” he asked, casual, as if they were discussing weather that belonged to someone else.
“I like rooms that do their jobs,” she said. She reached to the second cuff and her knuckles brushed his deltoid through thin cotton: warm muscle, that contained energy like a coiled thing under fabric. Professional contact. Routine. The word that stopped working when his arm shifted that fractional degree toward her hand.
“Don’t,” she warned softly, tone for corridors that don’t have ears. Her palm flattened briefly against his shoulder to stabilize the link, fingers finding bone and heat. The cuff’s tongue slid home with a metallic click that traveled straight down her spine.
“Just helping,” he said, the smile living in his voice. “You know I like to cooperate. With you.”
“Hands still,” she said, and his obeyed her before the sentence ended. The obedience felt like a match struck in a room full of old paper.
He leaned back in the chair with a slowness that read as lazy until you noticed how straight his spine stayed. The mirror on the wall collected the two of them in a rectangle that would later be scrubbed by someone whose job it was to pretend ghosts didn’t smudge glass.
“You took a day off,” he said, quiet, just for her. “How was pretending.”
She didn’t ask how he knew. The block knew; cameras knew; the way her braid had loosened this morning maybe told a story to a man who knew how to read weather maps on faces. “Fine,” she said.
“Liar,” he said. Gentle. No gloat.
“I don’t lie,” she said. “I redact.”
He smiled at that, small, real. “Didn’t sleep either.”
“Eyes front,” she said, because that was the rule and because it kept her from imagining hands instead of cuffs.
He looked at the mirror instead. Cheap mercy. “Funny thing about these chairs,” he said. “They make anyone look like a liar.”
The door sighed. Two Agency men came in wearing suits that had never known a field and ties that pretended to be neutral. Clipboard, recorder, a box that made a click whine when it woke up. They smelled faintly of office. One nodded at Dani like she was furniture with a badge. She nodded back like she was the one keeping the furniture from breaking their shins.
“Agent,” said the taller one. “Handler.”
“Officer,” Dani corrected automatically.
The tape rolled. Questions that pretended to be knives and were actually spoons. Countries named in the wrong order. Dates like fishing lines thrown into a river John had already swum dry. He answered when he felt like it and let silence do the hard work otherwise. The suits mistook stillness for compliance. Dani knew better; stillness is the loudest refusal when you teach it how to sing.
At minute thirteen, the taller suit asked something about a dead man’s email header. John laughed, low and sudden, like a cough wearing a smile. Dani saw Collins in the mirror behind the glass—somewhere else, watching—flinch at the sound he couldn’t place in a report.
“Focus, Mr. Clark,” the suit snapped, brittle.
John turned his head toward Dani as if the command were hers to give. She stepped in close to check a cuff that didn’t need checking, because that was how control translated to cameras. Her fingers slipped over steel and an inch of his wrist, tendon rising under her touch—a strict, living line. He didn’t move. He let her touch the way a held breath lets the air kiss back.
“Stay still,” she said. It came out lower than she liked.
“Make me,” he said, too soft for the suits, exactly loud enough for her. Not a challenge; an ache.
Her thumb caught on the edge of bone. One second. Two. A third tried to be born. She removed her hand before it learned to walk.
The room’s temperature decided itself. She stepped back to her mark. The suit droned. John watched her in the mirror. Dani kept her eyes on the suits and felt the heat bloom at the base of her throat, the place uniforms are designed to hide.
The recorder clicked off with a small death rattle. The suits gathered their papers. “We’ll resume later,” the short one said to the air, because he couldn’t say it to anyone in particular without admitting he’d been talking to a wall.
They left. The door closed. The room’s hum returned to its old, patient pitch.
Dani moved to the table ring to release and re-lock for escort. Her hands found the latch by muscle memory the way your tongue finds a chipped tooth. The bracelet opened, metal sighing against metal. She reached for the second one.
“You’re getting sloppy,” John murmured, voice like a fingertip dragging through dust. “Or brave.”
“Neither,” she said. The cuff tongue wouldn’t feed at that angle; she shifted, leaned in, shoulder grazing his shoulder. Warmth ran through two layers of cotton and put itself in her bloodstream without request.
“Little more to the left,” he said, absurdly helpful.
“Shut up,” she said, a breath too quiet to be disciplinary and a breath too honest to be anything else.
The cuff seated. Click. She let go like letting go were a skill you could train.
Outside the one-way mirror, someone cleared a throat. Paper shuffled. The world joined them again with the manners of a rude neighbor.
“On me,” Dani said, voice sharp enough to carve the moment down to something she could carry.
He stood when invited by her voice, chains speaking in their small, faithful language. At the threshold, he tilted his head and smiled that not-smile he wore when he’d banked a fire and left it to warm a room later.
“Back to your aquarium,” she said.
“Bigger one now,” he said. “Nicer view.”
She didn’t answer. The corridor waited with its cameras and its lies about safety. She led him out, Mason falling in, Collins falling behind with a mutter that didn’t deserve ears.
They moved. Chain, boot, hum. The door to Observation Two opened. Glass made a clean sound when air touched it. She fed steel to steel and the logic of confinement printed itself on the room again.
He stood in the center of the larger cell and rolled his shoulders once like a man easing a suit coat into place. His eyes held hers through an inch of engineered clarity and an ocean of what neither of them was naming here.
“Drink water,” she said, because instruction is ballast when the floor tilts.
“Only if you do,” he said.
She turned before the heat in her face got ideas. The corridor swallowed her up with its familiar hunger, cameras blinking their small red eyes like they knew gossip. Her hands smelled faintly of steel and sanitized soap. Under that: skin.
She didn’t look back. The next door hissed open ahead like a mouth that liked the taste of her name.
Observation 2 looked different in the afternoon. Fluorescents still hummed overhead, but a high window cut a bar of sunlight into the corner of John’s glass, painting his dark skin in gold where the sterile light had always washed him flat. He stood as Dani keyed the door, posture loose but alive, like he’d been waiting for her voice.
“Wrists,” she said.
He extended them. The cuffs clicked home, her fingers brushing his warm skin in the process. Professional. Routine. And still her pulse twitched where the contact lingered half a second too long. His eyes caught it, filed it, didn’t comment.
“On me.”
Chains whispered as he fell into step behind her. Boots struck concrete in rhythm, her braid swaying against the sharp line of her uniform. The corridor’s vents exhaled their recycled breath. She didn’t need to look over her shoulder to know his eyes were on her back; she felt it the way you feel heat before you see flame.
The lunchroom hit them with a wave of sound and smell: trays clattering, utensils scraping, the dull roar of voices funneling into a low thrum. The air carried grease, bleach, and something starchy that clung to the throat.
Heads turned when John entered with Dani. Forks slowed midair. Conversations trailed. Inmates knew things without being told; the story of the man in 7B — the Navy SEAL, the killer of a U.S. Attorney General — had spread like contraband. And now they saw him unshackled at the wrists, flanked only by her.
He collected his tray like the routine was his invention. Powdered potatoes, gray meat patty, beans slick with brine. He moved to a table, set the tray down, and sat as if the room belonged to him.
“Eat,” Dani said, her voice flat, her stance just behind him.
He ate. Slow, unbothered, as if the food didn’t matter but the act of taking it did. The room shifted around him: some inmates stole glances, others dropped eyes quickly, one muttered something that ended with a look from John that flattened the remark before it grew teeth. He didn’t need to fight; his calm was heavier than fists.
Dani’s gaze swept the room, precise. She felt the attention like static against her brown skin — eyes from inmates wondering why he listened to her, eyes from John, steady and hot, sliding back to her between bites. Her braid stayed tight, her posture sharper than the corner of the table, but her pulse betrayed itself in her neck.
When the cycle ended, she tapped the cuff chain lightly. “Up.”
He rose immediately, tray abandoned. The room tracked him as if gravity had shifted. No one followed with words this time.
They stepped into the corridor. The door sealed the noise away. Now it was only boots, chain, and the building’s tired hum.
They walked the long stretch toward Observation 2, Dani at point, John shadowing. And then the blind spot yawned ahead — that crescent where cameras lied, where the red LEDs blinked at nothing.
Her body knew it before her brain called its name. Shoulders tense. Breath measured.
John slowed. She felt it before she heard it — his heat edging closer. His cuffed hand brushed the back of hers, feather-light, deliberate.
He leaned in, his breath finding her cheek, his voice low enough to vanish into the hum.
“You feed me, chain me, move me. But you know damn well, Rourke…” His mouth curved with the words. “…the only thing I’m hungry for is you.”
Her boots didn’t break stride. Her face didn’t turn. But her mouth, sharp and low, cut back:
“You’ll never taste me, Clark. But I’ll let you imagine it.”
Silence. Heavy.
He smirked, but the flicker in his eyes betrayed something else — hunger edged sharper by denial. Starved and wanting. The chain clinked once, as if even the steel had caught the tension.
By the time they stepped out of the crescent, the cameras blinked red again, swallowing the moment. Dani’s face was carved from stone. John’s smirk lived like a secret at the corner of his mouth.
She keyed him back into Observation 2, fed steel into locks with precise clicks. He turned once inside, gaze finding hers through the glass. His dark skin gleamed under the mix of fluorescent and sunlight, every line of his posture carved with patience.
She held his stare one beat too long before turning away.
Boots struck concrete. The corridor closed around her, humming, swallowing her whole. But his whisper stayed, replaying in her ear, an ache she refused to name.
The corridor leading to the storage room was quieter than the others. Less traffic. Less noise. The kind of silence that made your ears strain, listening for something that might not be there. Dani’s boots struck a steady rhythm, braid taut against her back, clipboard under one arm. Behind her, John’s chains whispered.
The lock to Observation 2 disengaged with a sigh. He stood waiting, posture loose but eyes already on her.
“Wrists,” she said.
His arms came forward, skin dark against the pale cuffs. She closed them with practiced efficiency. Fingers brushing his, warmth jolting through her knuckles before she pulled away.
“On me.”
The walk was short but heavy. Pipes overhead rattled once. The door to storage thunked open under her keycard, releasing a stale mix of dust, cardboard, and bleach.
Inside, shelves lined the walls — crates of uniforms, cases of canned beans, gallon jugs of disinfectant stacked like bricks. The air was heavy, still. No cameras here. No red eyes blinking.
“Work detail,” Dani said, leading him in. She uncuffed his wrists, metal sighing as it left his skin. For the first time since intake, he stood in front of her with no restraints. He flexed his hands slowly, veins rising under smooth, dark skin. His eyes locked on hers.
“You trust me?” he asked, voice low.
“I follow protocol,” she said, though her hand still felt the heat from his wrist.
He smiled faintly. “Feels different when the chains are off, doesn’t it?”
“Get to work.” She gestured to the stacks.
He moved to the shelves, stacking cans into neat rows, shoulders pulling under his shirt, forearms roping with muscle. It wasn’t the work that drew her eyes — it was the calm precision, the same way he’d dismantled a room with a glance in the lunch hall.
After a long silence, he spoke. “Pam liked storage rooms.”
Dani blinked, caught off guard. “Pam?”
“My wife.” He kept his eyes on the can in his hand. “She’d rearrange everything I lined up. Said I was too precise. Liked things to feel alive.”
The dent of grief in his voice was sharp, catching in the back of her throat.
“She was pregnant.” His voice cracked. “The file probably told you that. But it didn’t tell you her laugh. Or how she hated silence, fell asleep with the TV on just to keep it away.” His hand trembled against the can, denting the metal. “I was supposed to protect them. And now—this. This is all that’s left.”
The clipboard in Dani’s hand was useless. “I know what it’s like,” she said softly. “Being alone.”
His head turned, eyes pinning hers. “You married?”
“No.” Her voice broke on the single syllable. “Too many masks. Too many walls. The job doesn’t leave space for anyone.”
Silence, heavy, pulsing. For a second, they weren’t handler and prisoner. Just two people with holes carved out of them.
Then he stepped forward. His knuckles brushed her jaw, warm, rough. She caught his wrist by instinct, meaning to push him off. But instead, she held it against her face, breath shuddering into his palm.
That was all it took.
His mouth crashed against hers, hot and punishing. Her clipboard hit the concrete with a crack. His hands gripped her hips, dragging her in until her uniform rasped against him.
“You kept me chained,” he growled, his voice breaking into her mouth. “Made me sit in glass like an animal. Now look at you—letting me touch you.”
Her nails dug into his shoulders, teeth catching his lip, pulling a growl out of him. He shoved her back against the shelving, cans rattling.
His dick pressed hard against her thigh through the thin prison pants, heavy and hot. She gasped when he ground into her, friction biting, sending a flood of heat through her belly.
“Fuck,” she hissed, biting it down, trying to control it.
“You feel that?” he rasped, forehead pressed to hers. “That’s me starving for you. Every day I’ve been in that fucking glass box, this is all I thought about.”
Her hips betrayed her, rocking into him, wetness soaking through her panties under the uniform.
He dragged his mouth down her neck, teeth scraping her skin. “Gonna get you dripping on my hand,” he muttered, filthy and low. “Make you soak right through this uniform.”
His fingers yanked her belt open, hand shoving inside before she could stop him. Her breath caught as his thick fingers slid through slick heat, finding her soaked.
“Jesus,” he breathed, voice rough with triumph. “You’re fucking drenched for me. Thought you were cold, Rourke. You’re burning.”
Her head fell back against the shelf, eyes squeezing shut as his fingers worked her clit, sliding over her pussy in slow, filthy circles.
“Say it,” he demanded against her throat. “Say who’s got you like this.”
Her hand clamped around his wrist, holding him there, grinding down shamelessly against his fingers. “Fuck you.”
His laugh was low, dark, hungry. “Already are.”
She shoved him back, but only enough to drop to her knees
Her braid swung forward as she dropped to her knees. His dick hit her tongue heavy, salty, pulsing with need. She sucked him down deep, spit slicking her chin, his groans breaking into the air like cracks in the concrete.
“Fuck—Dani—” His hand tightened in her braids, not to force, but to hold. To anchor. “Look at you, fuck… taking me like you were made for it.”
She hollowed her cheeks, pumping him with her fist, tongue dragging along the thick vein. His hips jerked once, restrained by will alone, teeth gritted as his head knocked back against the shelf.
“Shit—don’t stop—” His voice broke, rough, guttural. “Swallow it. All of it. Show me.”
She moaned around him, and that was it. He spilled down her throat with a sharp curse, muscles straining, dick pulsing against her tongue. She swallowed every drop, lips sealed around him until he twitched and shuddered, groan tearing out of his chest.
When she pulled off, spit and cum smeared her mouth, her eyes blazing up at him.
John didn’t give her time to breathe. He hauled her up, set her on the table stacked with boxes. Her ass hit the edge, his hands yanking her pants down in one hard pull.
“Spread for me.” His voice was ruined, gravel and hunger.
She obeyed, wetness glistening between her thighs. His mouth went straight to her pussy, tongue flat and hot, groaning when he tasted her.
“Fuck—” Dani gasped, hands clutching his head, braid falling over her face. “John—”
He buried his face deeper, tongue fucking her, sucking her clit until her hips bucked against his mouth. The table rattled, boxes shifting, the smell of bleach mixing with sweat and her raw scent.
He pulled back just enough to growl against her skin. “Sweetest thing I’ve had in years. Can’t get enough.” Then he dove back in, eating her like a man starved.
Her thighs clenched around his head, her cries sharp and strangled, echoing off concrete. He didn’t stop until she came, shaking against his mouth, her release wetting his chin.
When she slumped against the wall, panting, he stood, wiped his mouth with the back of his hand, and kissed her hard — filthy, tasting of her.
She reached for him, desperate, but he caught her wrist.
“Not tonight,” he rasped. His eyes burned, but his smile was slow, controlled. “We don’t fuck. Not yet.”
Her brows furrowed, confusion flickering through the haze of lust. “Why—”
His finger pressed to her lips. “Because I’ve got plans, Rourke. And when I fuck you… it won’t be in a cage.”
Her stomach dropped, heat colliding with dread, but she couldn’t speak.
He tucked himself back into his pants, waited as she shakily pulled hers up. The cuffs went back on with loud clicks. But his smirk told her the steel meant nothing.
She led him out of the storage room, body still trembling, the taste of him thick in her mouth.
And behind her, John Clark’s eyes burned with something deeper than lust. Something dangerous.
The lock disengaged with its familiar groan, the glass door sighing open. Dani guided John back into Observation 2 with her usual economy of movement, cuffs firm in her hands, her face a mask of control. Every click of steel against his wrists was precise, practiced.
He didn’t fight her. Didn’t resist. He stepped into the cell like he was walking into a hotel room instead of a cage.
Their eyes met through the barrier, the fluorescent light glinting sharp in his. For a long moment neither moved. The world was silent except for the hum of vents and the distant thrum of the generator.
Then John winked.
Small. Deliberate. Loaded.
Dani’s face didn’t move. No smile, no twitch, no break in her mask. She turned smoothly, boots striking the concrete in perfect rhythm as she walked down the corridor. To anyone watching, she looked the same as ever — precise, composed, unshaken.
But inside, the words echoed like a blade against stone. When I fuck you, it won’t be in a cage.
It hadn’t sounded like dirty talk. It had sounded like intent.
Back in the guard station, she filed the work detail log. Her handwriting was crisp, steady, every line flawless. Not a single deviation betrayed the storm underneath. She rinsed her hands at the sink, scrubbing until the skin reddened, the smell of bleach clinging sharp. When she lifted her head to the mirror, her braid was still tight, her lips neutral, her eyes unreadable.
The mask held.
But beneath it, his voice replayed, deep and raw, gnawing at her. And the wink — quick, cocky, sharp as a blade — lodged like a splinter under her skin.
Inside his cell, John sat on the cot. Relaxed. Calm. His body loose, his face unreadable. A predator in a cage that didn’t fit him.
He wasn’t thinking about whether Dani was shaken. He knew she was.
He thought about rotations. Guard numbers. Blind spots. He thought about Dani’s schedule, the way her shifts stretched long, and more importantly, when they didn’t. He marked her next day off, fitting it neatly into the skeleton of a plan already forming.
His smile came slow, faint, dangerous.
The camera lingered on Dani walking the corridor outside. Her posture was rigid, her uniform immaculate. To the untrained eye, she looked untouchable — steady, professional, calm.
But her mind was burning, replaying his voice in the dark space behind her eyes. When I fuck you, it won’t be in a cage.
Back in his glass cell, John leaned forward, whispering into the stillness.
“Not on her shift.”
The glass reflected his smile, patient, certain — the smile of a man already obsessed, already decided. Dani Rourke wasn’t just his guard. She was the one thing he would carry out of this cage, whether she knew it yet or not.
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