If it was someone weak, he might get a chance in the future.
"And whoâs the other?" He looked at Amon with cold fury, asking for the other personâs identity.
Amon knew he should have just pushed everything onto Galahad. But damn it, one part of him was telling him to tell the truth.
Amonâs lips curved widely into a creepy smile. His teeth were bloodied. His face was filled with wounds.
And then those dark, delighted eyes. The creepy smile made Zareth uncomfortable for a moment.
"It was me... hehehe~ hahahahaha. That pathetic bastard... his name I donât know... but he was stronger than me... yet got killed by me... by a weakling. He had amber-colored eyes. He truly deserved death... such a loser. Hehehe~. You canât believe how he was looking at me in his last moment. He was one hell of a loser bastardâ"
Amon kept talking while laughing crazily, but his words didnât get completed as a punch collided against Amonâs swollen cheek.
Blood splattered.
"You fucker! So it was you who killed him... you killed Aziz. You really have the nerve to tell me the truth."
Zareth felt angry and amused at the same time. The young man had taken so much beating from him, yet he still told him the truth.
And even after taking the punch, he was still smiling. Laughing.
As if the fear and pain he had before had disappeared somewhere.
Amon was laughing. "HAHAHAHA!"
He didnât know why, but he really liked Zarethâs angry and irritated face. He was clearly furious. Knowing Amon was the one who killed his friend made him so furious.
It gave Amon a weird kind of satisfaction.
"You!... you have gone insane!" Zerath started to beat Amon again.
Pain shot through all over Amonâs body. But he couldnât think straight. He was still laughing.
Zareth continued his cycle. Healing Amon. Then giving pain again.
Amonâs mind began to blur at the edges. Reality felt distant. He could no longer tell where one moment ended and the next began.
"Hehehehe~" yet he continued to giggle.
Zerath finally threw him back into the cage, his breathing heavy with anger. He beat Amon so much, tortured him so much, yet he didnât feel any satisfaction.
The boy today kept laughing even while getting pain from him.
Amon collapsed onto the cold metal floor, barely conscious, his body shaking violently.
"Hehe~ tired?" Amonâs dazed but delighted eyes gazed at Zareth.
Zerath looked down at him with amusement.
"Just you wait," he said. "Tomorrow this will get worse."
The cage door slammed shut.
The tent flap closed. Silence returned.
Amon lay there, tears slipping from his eyes, but not from pain this time.
His body hurt. His mind hurt more. But there was still some satisfaction in his mind.
Now, inside him, a stubborn, burning refusal remained.
He stopped laughing. He clenched his teeth weakly.
âI wonât break...â
Even as darkness slowly crept back into his vision once again.
âI will kill himâ, he thought before losing consciousness.
---
Amon regained consciousness slowly.
At first, there was only pain.
It came in waves. Deep, crushing, all-consuming. Every nerve screamed the moment his mind surfaced. His chest felt tight, his limbs heavy, his head pounding as if it were about to split apart.
He sucked in a shallow breath.
It hurt.
Another breath.
It hurt more.
His fingers twitched weakly, and a dull clinking sound followed.
Chains.
Cold metal bit into his wrists. He didnât need to look to know. His hands were cuffed again, bound tightly with suppressive runes. The mana-sealing pressure pressed against his core like a lid screwed shut.
He let out a slow, shaky breath.
So he was still alive.
Barely.
His body felt worse than before. The healing potions had repaired the damage enough to keep him conscious, but they hadnât erased the pain. His muscles burned, his bones ached, and every movement sent sharp reminders through him.
He opened his eyes. The familiar sight of iron bars greeted him. The cage. The tent. The dim glow of the mana lamp beyond. Nothing had changed.
Except him. He lay still for a long moment, listening.
No footsteps. No voices. Just the faint crackle of the lamp and the distant sounds of the demon camp outside, metal clashing, low voices, movement.
They hadnât come back yet. Good.
Amon swallowed, his throat dry. His lips were cracked, blood dried at the corners of his mouth. He shifted slightly, testing his body.
Pain flared instantly. He gritted his teeth but didnât make a sound. Calm down, he told himself.
Panicking wouldnât help. Screaming wouldnât help. Fighting blindly wouldnât help.
He had already learned that.
Zerath was stronger. Far stronger. Physically, mentally, and in authority. As long as Amon acted like a cornered animal, he would only be toyed with.
âNo!â
If he wanted to survive. If he wanted to escape. He needed to think.
Amon forced his breathing to slow, even as pain tried to tear that control away. He stared at the bars, not really seeing them, his mind beginning to move again.
First problem were the cuffs.
Mana suppression. Heavy-duty. Probably keyed to demon enchantments. Breaking them with raw strength was impossible in his current condition.
Even if he somehow regained mana, these wouldnât come off easily. The realization came. âThere is a chance...but I need to wait.â
So brute force was out. Second problem, Zerath and commanders of the current demon force.
Zareth was sadist. Calm. Intelligent. Experienced. He enjoyed control more than answers. That meant one thing. Zerath wouldnât kill him quickly.
He also need to think of a way to avoid Commanders eyes. Others might wonât be big problem.
Also long as Amon was "useful," Zerath would keep him alive. But now Amon also know...he will keep torturing Amon until he wonât satisfy.
âI hope Mira and Harvey are not dead.â
He clenched his jaw. Third problem, the camp.
From what he had glimpsed. This wasnât a small outpost. It was a powerful camp. Organized. Disciplined. Guards, patrols, commanders.
Running blindly would be suicide. So escape couldnât be immediate.
Amon closed his eyes briefly. âThen what can I do?â He thought.
The answer came slowly, painfully clearly. He need to bbserve. He need to Endure. He need to plan. For now, survival came first.