Cherreads

Chapter 294 - The Grotto

A few weeks passed in what I could only describe as productive chaos, each day bleeding into the next with the kind of relentless momentum that left little room for reflection or rest.

Our theater had settled into a rhythm that somehow worked despite—or perhaps because of—its absolute insanity. Every week brought another death match where prisoners fought for their lives and the crowd's entertainment, our stage staining darker with each performance until we'd just given up trying to clean it completely and embraced the aesthetic of violence.

Tora performed between these brutal displays like a palate cleanser for the soul, his voice washing away the memory of screaming and steel with melodies that made nobles weep into their expensive handkerchiefs.

And throughout it all we continued hosted those private roleplay sessions for clients willing to pay premium prices for customized experiences, our crew learning to shift between personas and scenarios with the adaptability of professional actors who'd discovered that sex work and theater had more overlap than anyone wanted to admit.

Through all of this I maintained my daily ritual with Elvina, emerging into that small backstage room with my silver tray and poisoned tea, watching her convulse, bleed, and sob with the detached observation of a scientist monitoring an experiment.

She'd stopped resisting after the first week, learned that fighting only made things worse and that accepting the poison with resignation at least spared her the additional indignity of being forced.

I used those sessions to train her in the subtler arts of deception and performance, coaching her on how to cry on command, how to make fear look genuine even when it wasn't, how to lie with her entire body rather than just her words. She proved to be a surprisingly apt student once survival instinct overrode pride.

Meanwhile I kept close watch on the investigation into the Ivory Gambit, coordinating with the crew members we'd assigned to surveillance and information gathering, piecing together fragments of gossip and observation into patterns that suggested vulnerabilities we might exploit.

It was slow work, tedious and often frustrating, but necessary if we wanted to deliver on our promise to Lord Aldric and secure that coveted position in the Pantheon.

And then, finally, after weeks of waiting that had stretched my patience to its absolute limits, Madame Seraphine responded to the letter I'd sent.

Her reply arrived via private courier—a nervous-looking young man who handed over the sealed envelope like it might explode if jostled—and contained exactly three sentences written in elegant script that managed to be both courteous and vaguely threatening:

"Your proposal intrigues me. I have reserved a private dining room at The Grotto, my establishment in the inner circle, for tomorrow evening. Come alone or with minimal escort—I value discretion in business dealings."

I decided to bring Brutus, Julius, and Elvina, reasoning that three companions fell within the reasonable definition of "minimal escort" while also ensuring I had muscle, theatrical flair, and the actual subject of negotiation all readily available.

We set off the following evening with Brutus pulling Elvina along by a length of rope tied to her wrists, Julius practically bouncing beside me with barely contained excitement, and me trying to project confidence I only partially felt.

As we crossed the invisible boundary separating the mid-section from the inner circle, the atmosphere shifted with almost physical abruptness.

The streets here gleamed with bronze and polished stone, streetlamps burning with steady magical light that never flickered or dimmed, and the crowds moved with the affected casualness of people who'd never worried about where their next meal was coming from.

Nobles strolled past in elaborate costumes that cost more than most people earned in years, their conversations carrying that particular quality of enforced lightheartedness that suggested discussing anything serious would be terribly gauche.

When they spotted Elvina stumbling along beside Brutus, still wearing the tattered remains of what had once been an expensive dress, her face bearing the marks of regular abuse and her eyes hollow with exhaustion, the whispers started immediately.

It spread through the crowd like wildfire, heads turning and voices dropping to conspiratorial tones before rising into barely concealed laughter.

I caught fragments as we passed—"that's the Veylith girl," "can you believe she ended up like that," "I heard she's being used as a common whore now," "serves her right after what her family did"—each comment carrying that particular cruelty that only came from people who'd never experienced real suffering themselves.

Julius leaned closer to me, pitching his voice low enough that only I could hear over the ambient noise. "They're enjoying this far too much. It's honestly a bit disturbing how gleeful they sound about another person's downfall, even if that person arguably deserved some measure of comeuppance."

"Schadenfreude is the inner circle's favorite pastime," I replied quietly. "Second only to spending obscene amounts of money on things they don't need and pretending to be cultured while secretly being as vulgar as everyone else."

I glanced back at Elvina, noting how she kept her head down and her shoulders hunched, playing the role of broken prisoner so convincingly I might've believed it if I didn't know better.

"Let them laugh. Every person who sees her like this and spreads the story is free advertising for what we're building."

We arrived at The Grotto after another ten minutes of walking through increasingly upscale neighborhoods, and the building itself stopped me in my tracks with its sheer architectural audacity.

The exterior was constructed entirely from dark volcanic stone, creating an almost void-like appearance against the bronze and glass structures surrounding it. The entrance was carved to resemble a cave mouth—not metaphorically, but literally, with stalactites hanging from the upper frame and the threshold sloping downward like you were about to descend into the earth itself.

Bioluminescent moss grew in careful patterns around the doorway, pulsing with gentle blue-green light that provided just enough illumination to find your way while maintaining an atmosphere of mystery and slight danger.

I pushed through the entrance with Brutus, Julius, and Elvina following close behind, then felt my breath catch as the interior revealed itself in all its impossible glory.

The restaurant had been built to evoke the experience of dining in an actual cave system, except enhanced with magical elements that transformed geological formations into something approaching art.

The walls curved and swooped in organic patterns that suggested water erosion over millennia, their surfaces rough stone embedded with veins of crystal that caught light from sources I couldn't immediately identify and threw it back in prismatic displays.

The ceiling soared overhead in a vaulted dome punctuated by formations that looked like frozen waterfalls, and from these hung more bioluminescent growth that created shifting patterns of light and shadow across every surface.

But the most breathtaking feature was the pools. Throughout the dining space, carved directly into the stone floor, sat shallow pools of water that glowed with their own internal radiance—some blue, some green, some shifting through the entire spectrum in slow cycles that hypnotized anyone who stared too long.

The water moved with gentle current despite having no visible source or outlet, creating ripples that cast dancing reflections across the cave walls and ceiling.

Around these pools sat tables carved from single pieces of stone, each one positioned to maximize the ambient lighting while maintaining privacy through clever use of natural stone pillars and artificial shadows.

The air itself carried the scent of mineral water, cool and slightly damp in ways that made you feel like you'd actually descended underground despite knowing intellectually that we were still at street level.

Somewhere in the background played music—subtle, almost subliminal, created by what sounded like water dripping in rhythmic patterns against hollow stone.

We approached the front desk where an attendant stood waiting, their features professional and unreadable despite probably having seen countless bizarre sights working in an establishment like this.

"Reservation under Loona," I said, keeping my voice even and confident. "Private dining room, I believe?"

The attendant checked their ledger with efficient precision, running one finger down a list of names before nodding. "Of course. Madame Seraphine is already seated. Please, follow me."

More Chapters