62nd of Frost
He woke from a dream only to find that he was right where he’d been.
Floor made of cold stone, air stinking of mold, clothes soaked with sweat and blood. Just by looking at own hands, he felt that he was turning into something inhuman. He'd never admit it, but he'd welcome being startled awake by a bucket of cold water. It would at least provide minimal hygiene. Slowly, his body was forgetting how it felt to be clean, or warm. First signs of transformation into shadows that lived here never to see the light of gloomy day again: murderers, thieves, evil men and outlaws, everyone who did not fit into the society up there by their nature, rotted by pain.
Just… just like him.
How long had it been? Two weeks? Two and a half? Three? He couldn't tell. His sleep cycle was no longer a reliable source of information. Everything was becoming an endless loop, a routine of torture, healing, rest, food, and waiting to start all over again . It was the alpha and omega of life there, an eternal boredom that could last for years.
The power of this place slipped into his thoughts and mood, like a great night turning life into a living nightmare by its darkness. The more he tried to resist those feelings, the harder it was.
The dark and dirt were like a sickness here. It was in the walls, the people, the food, the water, and even the air. He was breathing it in and out and it was growing inside of him. Day by day, it was slowly building until one day it would fill him wholly. A sickness he could not heal, nor escape.
After all that time, he still didn’t get it: he saw people doing and saying terrible things, but this was something different. This was all the bad he had ever experienced, all the pain, cold and loneliness, despair, turned into an art. A clever device a technique, that sickness weaponized against those who were trapped here.
At first, he thought he could convince these grim looking people, that the things they accused him of were wrong and false accusations: he never killed, or hurt anybody. He’d saved lives actually, dozens of them! Hell, he would help these cruel people, if they were hurt and he was able to… even after all they did to him.. and all they were going to do. He wasn’t sure how they could sleep at night.
Why didn’t nightmares haunt their minds each dusk? Why did they seem to enjoy the moments of his suffering, as if they fed off his misery. Using at least a minimal, basic, above-animal level of empathy, this wasn't supposed to be possible. But it was. No bad dream, no hallucinations, no scary story, this was hard reality. And these men didn’t care. They didn't care at all. They just make everyone trapped here feel properly miserable, ensure no one escapes… and then go home. Home, to their warm beds, clean clothes and lovely families. Maladan was sure they behaved like normal people there.
Carl, for example. He was the kind of man that allows the shopkeeper at the vendor stalls to keep the change for anything he bought at the market, kiss his children good night and make love to his wife.
If they were just doing their jobs, before coming back to their children and families, being fathers, brothers and husbands, were they to be blamed?
Human nature is pretty simple and complicated at the same time, Maladan thought.
Until yesterday, he thought the point was to make him confess to what he stood accused of, but no: this was a war with the goal of breaking his will. Their aim was total loyalty and submission to the man who feared death so much he sent his puppets to inflict unspeakable horrors upon others. Those were possible because they knew - Maladan was already doomed. And now, he knew too.
What a fool he’d been.
The doors opened with the cracking sound of old metal.
Maladan got on his feet – he had been through all this before: Denial, in which he thought that he just woke up in the tavern basement one day. Anger that pushed him into deepest thoughts of vengeance and even… fighting back. Only once he dared to hit a guard. Never again.Bargaining led him nowhere, as he only found out the truth mentioned above.
And depression? He; welcomed its heavy embrace made of sloppy sadness. Or is it acceptance? Did this mean they won?
No! Not quite.
Not… just yet.