1354 Harriet Hunt's State
"Yes, Father," Salesi said, her voice barely a whisper. She didn't dare linger, not with Andohr in this state. She practically fled the throne room, leaving a trail of fear and uncertainty in her wake.
The moment the doors closed behind her, Andohr unleashed his fury.
He whirled on a nearby statue, a priceless depiction of some long-forgotten goddess, her serene features now mocking him with their calm indifference.
"Damn you!" he roared, his voice echoing through the empty throne room. "Damn you, Dark Lord! You think you can steal from me? You think you can defy me and get away with it?"
He lashed out, his hand crackling with temporal energy, striking the statue with a force that shattered it into a million pieces.
"You took the blood," he snarled, his voice dripping with venom. "But you won't get away with it. I'll find you. And when I do..."
He trailed off, his eyes blazing with a cold fury that promised a fate worse than death.
"You'll beg for mercy,"
As he thought about the upcoming reckoning, a cruel smile twisted Andohr's lips. He turned, striding towards a darkened corner of the throne room. A large, ornate mirror, its surface as black as obsidian, hung on the wall. With a casual wave of his hand, Andohr channeled his power. The mirror rippled, the darkness within its depths swirling and coalescing.
An image flickered into existence. A cage, woven from thorns that pulsed with a sickly green light, materialized within the mirror's depths. And huddled within that cage, her body curled into a protective ball, was Diana.
Her clothes were torn, her skin marred with countless cuts and scratches, the thorns digging into her flesh with a viciousness that made even Andohr wince. But she didn't cry out. She didn't beg for mercy. She lay there, motionless, her eyes closed, her breath shallow and ragged.
The sight of her, broken and defeated, filled Andohr with a perverse sense of satisfaction.
"Soon, Harriet," he purred, his voice a low, menacing growl. "Soon, I will break you. And your screams... your screams will be a symphony of pain, a balm for my wounded pride."
He chuckled, a low, chilling sound, and the image in the mirror faded, leaving only the cold, empty reflection of his own cruel smile.
Andohr had been keeping Diana imprisoned for what felt like an eternity to her. But Andohr, the God of Time, had ways of making even a second feel like decades. He'd been slowly, meticulously breaking her, chipping away at her spirit and her sanity. He'd twisted her perception of time, stretched her memories until they were raw and bleeding, forced her to relive her worst nightmares over and over again.
He'd made her hallucinate, conjuring images of her loved ones suffering, dying, their screams echoing in her ears even when she knew, deep down, that it wasn't real. He'd forced her to relive the pain of her past, the loss of her husband, the agony of being separated from her children, amplifying those emotions until they threatened to consume her.
And the thorns... oh, the thorns.
They were a constant torment, a living cage that tightened its grip with every beat of her heart. He'd imbued them with a sliver of his own temporal power, twisting their perception of time, so that even the slightest graze felt like an eternity of agony.
Diana was strong. Stronger than he'd anticipated. Her will, forged in the fires of loss and hardship, was a stubborn thing, refusing to break completely.
But that only made Andohr more determined.
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