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to die would be beneath me
Alexandre Esquerra snaps under torture. The fun way.
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There really was a tiny fraction of Alexandre Esquerra’s mind, buried for decisionmaking but put out front whenever he needed to interact with people, that truly believed that if you obeyed Cheliax and were loyal and grateful and worshiped Asmodeus, you could live a good life. That little bit is burning, now, withering and smoking in the furnace of his rage, and he is not sure he will ever be able to recover it.

His arms are chained to the wall. There’s a great deal of give in them; he can move his arms almost freely - reach out a hand almost his arm's full length, though that’s nowhere near enough to reach the small table with the branding iron and knife-block and thumbscrews, or the fire blazing merrily next to it. (It is, very precisely, almost enough give to cast spells, but not quite.) He can’t take off the gag, but that’s because it’s tied behind the back of his head, where he’d need very precise handwork to get it off instead of the kind of handwork you can do with shackles around your wrists. It’s a very carefully designed chain, to give him the illusion of hope, and then exploit it, and he cannot comprehend why.

“There had better be an explanation for this.” That part of his mind is there, too had gotten him whipped several times; by his father, by his teachers, by his classmates. The most it had ever done had been to shift his mindset, occasionally, into “There will be an explanation for this.” But given that Alexandre has not, in fact, done anything - has not disrespected his teachers, has not violated school rules, has been loyal in every way to Asmodeus - he cannot possibly see why he is chained, to the wall, in a dungeon.

Asmodeus, if you can hear me, whatever damned traitor is doing this is breaking your tools. What smith lets His work be marred by another man?

 

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The door to the cell opens, and Enrico Castell, Divination master at Westcrown academy, steps through. He’s slim, sharp-faced, and has a knife as his arcane focus; it’s in his sheath, right now, and instead he’s carrying a scroll, which he lays on the table next to the branding iron. ‘I am honored to be taught by him' is the rote phrase used to refer to all masters at Westcrown, and Enrico Castell has never merited more praise than that.

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 (Honored, to be taught by him - who can hardly do more than extend Detect Thoughts - )

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(the thought bubbles up for a moment, and then vanishes, as Alexandre drives it under by main force.) 

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“I’m very sorry to see you here, Alexandre.” He unfolds the scroll very slightly, enough that Alexandre can see the opening lines of a Teleport spell, then lets it rest there, well out of reach.

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Sorry. He’s sorry

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Alexandre attempts to gather his self-composure, to think the right thoughts, everyone in Cheliax can think the right thoughts it shouldn’t be difficult - it’s just so much easier when he’s not in a cell - when he can talk -

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“I just don’t understand why you did it.” 

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Did what.

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“You’ve always been a good student, -”

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And if you TELL me what you want me to LIE about I will go back to it.

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“- It’s a wonder you paid any attention to Soler."

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... Master Soler? (Alexandre attempts for a moment to try to be the Alexandre who is part of a feud between two of the masters, but fails to comprehend literally any reason why anyone would ever recruit him for one.)

 

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“You remember, don’t you? That he tried to get you to steal my spellbook?”

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No, see, this story fails at a basic level. Why would Master Soler, who is competent, try to steal -

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“Acid Splash.”

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Alexandre flinches, but doesn’t quite scream, as the acid drips down his left cheek. He needs to yield why can't he yield -

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“There is a way out, Alexandre,” says Castell. “You can leave.” He holds up a ring of keys. “Just tell me what happened, and you go back to life like nothing ever happened."

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What do you want me to say? He's trying to the right thing by main force, spelling out his thoughts clearly in his head - all that matters is that he needs to do what Castell wants - that's what matters -

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“Good,” says Castell. “Now. Who else was involved in the plot?" His voice drips disdain. "I don’t suppose you had a starring role -”

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And that is when he snaps.

No, “Master,” he thinks viciously, I did not have a starring role because it never happened, because Master Soler does not care about you, because you are beneath him.

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“Acid Splash!” And the acid’s now on his other cheek, too; two scars, almost matching, where it flows down enough that you can see Alexandre’s teeth - 

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You are, for that matter, beneath me. Why shouldn’t you be? You failed Asmodeus - if you hadn’t, you would be somewhere, instead of teaching a second-rate school in a second-rate city -

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Castell slips the key into his pocket, hefts the branding iron, and places the tip delicately into the fire -

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Is that it, really? You think yourself better than me because your hands aren’t tied? Alexandre flexes his thick muscular fingers. Asmodeus knows which of us has served - and will serve - him better. He has no thoughts about tactics, no thoughts about plans - whatever part of him is driving is buried too far deep to speak, and all that is in his mind are his words -

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The iron would take to long to heat; Castell draws his knife and his eyes are on Alexandre’s right hand as he steps forwards, calculating where to cut first -

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And the part of Alexandre that is driving sees.

And, as Castell comes just too close, that part of Alexandre makes its move, and he sweeps out a leg to trip his teacher.

 

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And Castell falls - and cries out -

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You’re in a soundproofed torture room, you idiot - as he falls Alexandre then sticks out a shackled arm, catches Castell’s neck with the chain, and yanks his arm up and around to wrap his master's neck around and draw it closer -

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Castell’s eyes bulge out as he tries to reach for his arcane focus, but the chain is around his throat, he can’t breathe, can’t speak -

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And Alexandre pulls the chain tighter, smith’s muscles tightening, and stares at his ‘master’.

The problem with teaching divination, 'master', is that you spend all your spells on detect thoughts, or sometimes extended detect thoughts, instead of anything to cast if you're unarmed and defenseless. And so it comes down to strength -”

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Castell is still trying to get his knife!

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Then Alexandre will break his fingers with the other hand, won’t he?


You thought, (just in case Castell hasn't lost concentration) that you were more powerful than I, because you were a mighty wizard, and I was in irons. But a king is a king in irons, and a mouse -

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Castell is trying to get a breath - just one breath, so he can say a spell -

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A mouse is a mouse in an archmage’s robe. The superior will triumph. The inferior will fail.

And, with a snap, he breaks his master’s neck.

All hail Asmodeus.

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Well.

Alexandre has the dead body of one of his teachers, a fake scroll of Teleport, the keys to his shackles, and any magic items the aforementioned teacher had on his corpse.

Time to see how far he can get before they catch him, he supposes?