The begging was predictable. Perhaps disappointingly so. Watching from the sidelines, Nov could feel neither blame nor respect; if it had been him instead, with any family at all to sell out in the first place, he would have taken their secrets to his bloody, miserable grave.
Keene’s lack of hesitance before his ice cold response, though…Noven found himself watching the Initiate with newfound curiosity. And maybe just a little bit of extra caution as well.
It didn't take long for his wariness to be rewarded. With all the emotion of a slab of ice, Keene raised his hand and some strange, translucent substance began to swirl into form above it. His voice was calm and rational even in the midst of dishing out whatever torture he had in mind. The Akvatari should answer Cryptly's questions to avoid more pain, Keene had stated as his victim cowered against the wall, blubbering more useless pleas.
Nov watched the substance seep into the creature's wings, coating them until not an inch of filmy color was left untouched. The merc's eyes grew wide despite having no inkling of what this magic was. A true Sunberthian inside and out, he'd steered clear of sorcery his entire life. But, even so, he could not deny there was something captivating about the process, dark as its purpose was. Captivating, and deadly. Whether the Akvatari knew what was being done to him remained unknown; he was too busy wasting his precious time with all of his body parts still in tact pleading in vain. Break early or do everything you could to wear down your tormentor's patience. Those were the only two ways to go as far as Noven was concerned.
Without warning, Keene snapped his fingers. The whole of Blonde Boy's wings was now frozen solid.
It took a tick for the merc to realize what had happened and another for him to process how quickly and effortlessly the Initiate had commanded such a transformation. Nov's rather rusty imagination began to run ahead of him as the creature ceaselessly begged. It didn't take an artist to picture what was going to happen next, but still...
At the sound of ice shattering, Nov forced every muscle in his body not to flinch. A breath he hadn't known he'd been holding shuddered free, controlled and silent, as Cryptly practically blew a wad over Keene's stellar performance. At least the Nuit was happy. Sure, their new victim was now lying in a steadily growing pool of his blood, probably wishing he'd chosen death long before he'd ever been caught. But the Dungeon Master's displeasure was no less appealing, and the faster his sadism was fed the more likely they could all move on from this unsavory business. Temporary as that satiation would be.
Cryptly had added several more coins to his growing collection in the time it took Keene to open their interrogation with a literal bang. Whether the Initiate knew it or not, he'd given Noven a giant headstart. In order for Krysus's mark to work, the victim needed to be wounded, and Blonde Boy right now was in enough pain to make torture of greater finesse obsolete. There was no viable way to heal him, so this was where Nov would have to begin. Which also meant whatever the Nuit desired in terms of drawing things out was now null and void.
That didn't prevent the old bastard from trying, though. With infallible confidence oozing through his very gait, Cryptly strolled up to the weeping creature, careful to skirt around the blood, and reached for one of the torches. He still had a gold miza in one hand as he brandished his new tool in the other, stroking this piece of his newfound wealth with palpable greed.
"Don't want you bleedin' out just yet, laddie," he chuckled darkly. "As those in the business say, the show must go on!"
And then he brought down the flames to the Akvatari's bleeding nubs, sending a strange scent wafting through the air the creature screamed and screamed. Beyond the dingy little cell, everything had grown deathly silent. When Noven was to look back on this particular moment later on, the only thing he could really remember was thinking if burnt butterflies had a smell, this would be it.
Wounds more or less cauterized, Cryptly nestled the torch back into its proper place and returned to transfer one more coin from Blonde Boy's stash to his own. "Now normally," the Nuit grunted as he eyed his collection with a calculating squint, "I like my fun to last as long as possible. But you've got a limited amount of gold, and these gentlemen here I'm sure have better things to do than humor old Cryptly for the rest of the night. So let's make this simple, eh? Tell me where that greedy little sister of yours is hiding with the rest of your coin and you go free. Easy as pie."
Lies. All lies. Anyone with half a brain could see as much. But the now wingless creature wasn't in much of a position to analyze, his mind no doubt clouded with more pain than he'd ever felt in his entire life.
If only he knew it was going to get much, much worse.
"P-please..." Blonde Boy sobbed pitifully in between wheezes of hysteria and agony. "I c-can't...she's...she's all the f-family I h-have...I've given you all my c-coin...th-there is n-n-n-o more...."
Nov couldn't tell whether this kid was incredibly brave or horrifically stupid. Even Cryptly seemed to find his answer somewhat surprising. The old Nuit possessed enough patience, however, so long as there was still gold to be earned, and cackled at Nov next. "Well then, Krysus's precious little play thing. Looks like you're up for round two."
His mouth set in a grim line, Noven made no attempt to answer. He just walked up to the blubbering Akvatari, crouched before him, and removed his left glove. Blonde Boy didn't seem to notice the crimson veins on his hands, only that a different face and voice were now demanding he answer Cryptly's questions. "I don't know what level of stupid you're aiming to reach," Nov seethed, caustic eyes burrowing straight into those of his soon to be victim's, "but it's going to stop. And you're going to answer the Nuit's question. Right here, right now. You don't want what's coming next."
The Akvatari sniffed and narrowed his eyes at the merc, doing exactly what Nov had just told him not to do. He was aiming for new levels of stupid.
"Are you...going to use magic on me?" he managed to ask in a hoarse and reed thin voice. The sobbing had mostly stopped, but it just made Nov all the more irritated. Plain idiotic how quick most folk were to forget their suffering. Just because he was feeling better now meant nothing in terms of the future. Blonde Boy ought to know that, but he didn't. Nov suspected he was something of a well-off, sheltered boy--if something with a tail and wings could be called boy--clearly in over his head with this whole debacle involving mizas and being anywhere near Cryptly's grubby reach.
The merc gave him a flat look. "No, I don't know the first thing about magic."
A flicker of relief passed through the Akvatari's delicate features, hard as he tried not to show it. "Well then," the kid concluded, adopting more of his earlier airs, "I'm sorry, but you can do what you will with me. Kill me if you must. I won't give An--my sister away."
Blonde Boy was probably expecting that whatever followed be tragically grand. That he would go down in a glory of heroic sacrifice. That, perhaps, he'd even earn a smidgen of respect from his tormentors, as plays and fables usually ended.
Noven growled through his teeth, "You stupid, fucking cunt."
There was only enough time for the Akvatari to feel a tick's worth of doubt before Nov shot out his hand, grab the end of one, burnt nub, and flare his mark with a hair's worth of pity and not a whole lot of remorse. For him, there was a wave of clean relief that swept over his senses as his symptoms were set back to zero for the next twenty four bells. It was like a subtle weight had been lifted and Nov rolled his shoulders at the almost soothing sensation.
Blonde Boy, on the other hand, writhed and bucked beneath Noven's grip, jaws wide open in a silent scream. Neither were aware of the veins the pulsed bright red beneath the merc's skin. One was lost in the vast sea of endless, white hot agony, and the other too busy trying to remember when he ought to let go.
It lasted for about four or five ticks. Nov took longer than usual to relinquish his hold, having been enduring a throbbing headache for the past bell and too stubborn to take care of or mention it earlier. The feeling of there suddenly not being any pain was divine and he was reluctant to let go of it right away. That, and he figured giving the kid a couple extra doses might speed things up a bit.
What the Akvatari experienced ought to have felt like his wings shattering again, only infinitely worse. But Nov hadn't held on that long and the boy wasn't foaming at the mouth or unconscious yet. He still needed to give them some kind of answer, after all. By the time Nov opened his own eyes to see his handiwork, the creature's face was scrunched in immeasurable pain, tears washing like streams down his pale cheeks. A soundless howl and desperate, fruitless attempts to tear free of his grip later, Blonde Boy was face down on the ground, panting as if he'd run--swam? flew?--an entire league, not caring a fig that his cheek was stained in his own blood.
"Answer the question, kid," Noven ordered. "That was just a taste."
The wingless creature sobbed on, shoulders shaking as he curled his head against his chest. Somewhere near the cell entrance, Cryptly had nearly claimed all of the boy's gold, the clinking sounds of coins being dropped onto his pile unfailing through the passage of time. Nov would have lost all track of how long they'd been here if it hadn't been for the Nuit's uncanny ability to tie time with mizas.
With a sigh of impatience, the merc raised his hand one more time, but the Akvatari saw and scrambled to throw up his own in surrender. "She's...she's holed up in one of the ships on the Harbor," he blurted without pausing for breath, visibly hating himself as each word was spoken.
Cryptly took Noven's place, shooing the merc away, as he leered into the creature's defeated face. "Which ship?"
There was a moment of hesitance, then the boy choked out, "The W-Winged Mai...Maiden."
The Nuit's laughter seemed to reverberate around and around the tiny confines of the cell before trailing all the way down the still silent as a crypt halls. "And to think I was worried I wouldn't get every last coin out of you." He threw the empty sack at the Akvatari's lifeless expression. "Lucky for you, boy. I'm feeling mighty generous today."
Then Cryptly just sauntered out of the cell, leaving it both unlocked and still occupied by three other inhabitants. Nov wasn't ready to believe the master interrogator would just leave his prisoner free to walk as he followed after that lumpy, decrepit form once more. But when he looked back at Blonde Boy, with nothing but an empty sack and burnt stubs where his magnificent wings had once been, his surprise was quashed. The creature showed no signs of moving. He just laid there in a puddle of blood and tears, weeping at what he'd just condemned his sister to.
So that had been the final touch to Cryptly's game all along.