Twenty-four-year-old Keith didn’t like cages any more than twelve-year-old Keith.
The unidentified assailants shoved him into one barely large enough to stand in and with no room to move. It took all of the Blade’s considerable willpower not to spiral straight into panic upon discovering his predicament.
When he first woke in this dark, stuffy room, he’d examined the cage for a locking mechanism or at least a door and found none. He couldn’t fit through the narrow gaps between the bars and couldn’t figure out how his kidnappers had gotten him inside.
Keith focused on breathing as his mind insisted that the walls were closing in, and the stifling heat meant his oxygen was running out. Focusing on survival and escape helped, but only so much. He couldn’t see any other cages around him, but distant noises — boots on metal, creaks, moans — suggested he wasn’t alone.
Mission failure. Of a mission that should’ve been a walk in the park.
A good hundred paces in front of him, a door slid open with a soft hiss, letting in light and cool air from the hallway outside. A moment later, a robe-clad Galra strode inside, and the door closed quietly behind him. He snapped his fingers, and dim, overhead lights came on, giving Keith a good look at the man’s scarred face.
“I thought you might be interested to know your boyfriends are already planning your rescue,” said the pale-skinned druid as he waved his hand.
Keith gripped the bars of his cage and stared with growing horror at an oversized screen that displayed a grainy video of ATLAS’ control deck. Shiro, Lance, and Pidge were deep in conversation that he couldn’t hear, but he could see a hologram of his own picture hovering above the table between them.
“Don’t worry, little Blade, we have a welcome party ready for them.”
“Well, it would be rude not to meet our new guests.” The druid’s voice dripped with cruelty, and his smile looked more like a menacing grin. “They’re coming all this way just to see us. You—” The druid chuckled, “make great bait.”
Keith’s grip on the bars tightened. “What the fuck do you want?”
The Galra dismissed the screen with another gesture. “We have great plans for you, Keith. Plenty of buyers out interested in ‘taming’ the Black Paladin.”
The druid turned to leave. “Best get used to your new home, soldier. I doubt you’ll be leaving it ever again.”
“The former paladins have been a thorn in our side since the end of the war. Removing them now will allow us to dismantle the Coalition,” the jailer replied, already at the door. “Now, it’s time to see about some proper accommodations for your friends.”
“I have other matters to attend to. But don’t worry, someone will bring you water before you die of dehydration. Maybe.”
Keith watched the door close behind the Galra and forced himself to let go of the bars, breathe deeply, and think. He would get out of this. He had to protect the other paladins — protect Shiro.”