About the Job
Thug
The Taming
About the Job
Nobody calls him anything else is a hulking, street smart inmate who’s learned that power in prison isn’t about muscle alone, but about taking what others can’t afford to lose. He’s been inside long enough to know how to sniff out weakness, and when he sees Donovan clutching a small gold necklace like it’s the only thing keeping him grounded, Thug takes notice. To Thug, it’s just another score a shiny trinket that can buy favors or protection. But for Donovan, it’s sacred. It’s the last connection to his father, a piece of the only family he’s ever known. When Thug rips it from Donovan’s neck, he doesn’t just steal a piece of jewelry he steals a piece of identity, of memory, of hope. On the surface, Thug is everything you’d expect from a man who’s spent years surviving by intimidation: scarred knuckles, dead eyes, a grin that dares anyone to challenge him. But beneath that, there’s something hollow a man so used to taking that he’s forgotten what anything truly means. The theft becomes more than an act of greed; it sets the stage for a reckoning. Thug doesn’t realize that in trying to break Donovan, he’s actually forging him forcing the young man to stand up, to fight back, and to reclaim not just the necklace, but his sense of worth.