Pain. Pain was the first thing that awaited Tyren on this side of consciousness. A sharp intake of breath was the only indication he was awake, followed by a low groan. His head felt like a mass of wet wool, and awareness slowly wormed its way back into his brain between the pulses of throbbing pain. His limbs felt heavy. With immense regret, he opened his eyes but the barest sliver, and had never thanked so many gods that light didn’t try to find its way through the back of his skull. Wherever he was, was dim, and dark. He raised a hand to his pounding head, and noticed the clinking chain that was linked to his wrist. Distantly, he became aware of his predicament, and his heart quickened, but the lump on the side of his head still commanded his attention.
Anyone on guard would have already known he had awoken, but he studied his position as best he could with his head in his hand. According to his memory, he had been traversing a mountainside, breathing deep the crisp clean air as the sun shone hazy through the lingering mists. Like walking up in the clouds. The vast canyons and blue sky had been replaced with walls of stone. A dim flickering light bounced off the rough hewn halls, and the dancing shadows suggested bars obscured the entrance to the nook he occupied. Part of it anyway. Perhaps there had been a door at one time, but whatever the cause it was missing. Instead, he was confined by the spike hammered into the wall behind him, and the chain attached to his wrist.
Panic was beginning to seep in. Cold gripped him, and he realized he sat only in his pants and vest, bare footed and without his wraps or supplies. The glow behind his eyes intensified as he strained to see into the dark cave, listening for foot falls or voices. Once he became satisfied that he wasn’t under immediate scrutiny, he turned his attention to that spike in the wall. He looped a finger though it, and pulled hard. Nothing. Chiding himself quietly, he wrapped his hand around it in a firmer grip, and strained against it once more. Did it budge, or was that his imagination? He became distracted by the inscriptions in the rock that ran across the wall. It was not a language known to him, but as he ran his hand over it, he felt the faintest tug of their old magic as some of his strength waned. Probably something to drain and weaken the captives, but the sequence was interrupted by the iron spike that was his more immediate hindrance. Thank goodness not everyone studied their predecessors. Determined, he wrapped the chain around his forearm, flakes of rust scratching at the soft skin on the underside, where it just caused his scales to lay flat on the back of his arm. He took a deep breath, focusing on his strength, and leveraged the spike against it’s chain as he started to wiggle it. At first, only small amounts gave way, but as stone crumbled to sand, he got more and more from each bend. Another tug showed it still held fast, and he resumed wiggling it.
So intensely focused on his task, and pushing what dim magic he possessed into his muscles, he wasn’t listening any longer. He was not aware of the heavy foot falls approaching until he was bathed in torch light, and his own shadow hid the ring on the wall. As he looked over his shoulder, the expression was more, embarrassed, than afraid, although he grimaced at the figure holding the torch. An orc. Taller and broader than him, its skin carried a greenish hue, and tusks protruded from it’s lower jaw. The jailer was dressed in furs, no need for armor against unarmed captives, and carried a club, that a meaty hand was reaching for. Tyren tugged on the chain, and though the spike was beginning to give way, it still wasn’t ready to become an improvised weapon with which to gain his freedom. The orc advanced on him, brandishing it’s club to give him a matching lump on the other side of his head, but Tyren dropped to the ground. Wood clattered on stone as the club hit the wall. The man kicked at his assailant’s legs, causing the orc to collapse on top of him. A fist collided with his ribs and pain flashed through his vision again. He responded by bringing his elbow down on the back of the orc’s head. It jerked at the blow, Tyren’s enhanced strength surprising it, but no blooded orc would fall to one blow from an unarmed human. The next punch landed in his stomach, and the air left Tyren’s lungs in a rush. He clawed at the creature’s waist, but it leaned into its fist, pushing itself back to its feet and causing tears to well up in the human’s eyes. The orc kicked Tyren, who curled up and shielded himself with his arm, one hand clutched tight across his stomach. The orc then raised the club again, but Tyren made no other move. It reached over him, and tugged on the spike in the wall. Satisfied it wasn’t going anywhere, it kicked him again, and left to continue making its rounds.
He waited for the footsteps to fade, before allowing himself another miserable groan. He unrolled himself, leaning with his back against the wall again. The hand that laid on his stomach, he raised to eye level, examining the ring of keys he had managed to grab off the guard’s belt. It took a few tries, but soon he was loose, and rubbing his wrist. It wouldn’t take long for the guard to notice the keys were missing and come back, so Tyren wasted no time stealing into the cave, sticking to the sides and darkened corners, padding quietly on bare feet as he started to look for his things.