“That’s a question right there, darling. So clearly, you have at least one. What makes me think that? Because I do, because I’m a very clever man who is very, very good at reading people.” he said, almost infantalizing the man with his words. And so what if he was? He had no respect for heroes, for people who claimed to be good, to work for the forces of light and justice.
“Alright,” he uttered, not letting Callum get any reaction out of him. “In that case, second question. What do you want from me?”
His voice grew steadier as he continued talking, losing that pervious shakiness it previously had. He took in a deep breath, feeling the straitjacket tighten around him as his chest rose and fell, the chains from the shackles bouncing lightly on the floor.
Although, these chains were looser now. He hadn’t eaten anything for a few days. Even if food was offered, he doubted he’d eat it. He didn’t want to indulge on something Callum offered him, and frankly, didn’t even want to be talking to him. Somehow, someway… anything he did seemed to play into Callum’s satisfaction.
“Darling, I want to take good care of you. But I also want my fun. Tell me, what do you need right now to keep you feeling happy and content? I won’t be letting you out of this cell any time soon, unless you happen to be very convincing, but I could get you some food or loosen those uncomfortable-looking shackles. What do you say?” he asked, tilting his head. His voice was steady and disinterested, and he looked like he could very well eat Sullivan up if he wanted to.
Sullivan internally sneered at the pet name, staying as still as he could. His eyes were the only thing about his body that moved, with the exception of his breathing. Not putting it lightly, he looked dangerous. There was something intimidating about a wild animal, but something even more intimidating about a caged one. And Sullivan was certainly caged.
“I’m perfectly content as I am, thank you,” he said, voice shockingly monotonous. Each word had a slight bite to it, like he sharpened them each individually with stone. “No adjustments necessary.”
“I know the guards haven’t bothered to feed you in days and they probably won’t do it now, so it’s either I feed you or we stick an IV up your arm and I doubt you’d like the latter. I’m no idiot, I know how terrified you felt here because I was inside your mind at the time, and I could feel your fear.” he explained, putting a hand on one him and letting his other fall limp at the wrist. He didn’t really care for this man’s wellbeing, other than how he could mess with his head. “And I know for a fact that as angry as you may be, you desperately want to be free and could do anything to get your precious freedom. So either grovel and beg or I’ll pull it out of you.”
“Pull it out of me, then,” he growled through clenched teeth. “Make me beg. Make me grovel. Make me care, Callum. Because I don’t. I couldn’t give two shits about my situation.”
And for that, he actually was telling the truth. Sullivan didn’t care about what he did here. He didn’t care about who he was with, what happened, how much he ate— the only thing he cared about was time. He needed time to think. Time to plan.
Everything would be better if he could just wait. Wait for the right moment, the right opening. He didn’t care how fast it came or what Callum made him do in the meantime.
“When you put it like that, it’s no fun. But if you’re going to be like that…”
He began punching Sullivan in the face, a steady, calculated rhythm to go along with the intense brutality of the action making it almost… perfect, really. Nothing could go wrong for him here, he could beat and beat until the man’s brains spilled out and he couldn’t do anything about it.
And, well, he was pissed. He had lost control. But… he knew this wasn’t the way to get what he wanted, so he let up. The bruising would be bad, but nothing had broken as of the moment, so he considered that a plus.
Sullivan could already feel his face begin to throb as the blood rushed to each point of contact. As fast as it had come on, a headache pieced through his temples, and he choked on the blood filling his throat. From his nose came a steady stream, and once Callum was done with the outburst of punches, Sullivan spat the blood aside. It didn’t do much, though, the taste lingering there for longer than he’d like. He could tell his nose wasn’t broken, but the impact had done a number.
But if bruised and bloodied was what Callum needed in order to leave him alone, so be it. It wasn’t the worst pain he had ever felt, even if it left his eyes watering and his straitjacket stained in his own crimson mistakes.
“I’m sorry. I tend to have, well, little outbursts, and whoever gets in the way? I pity them. This time it was you. Don’t let it happen again.” he growled. Blaming others was so much easier than taking on responsibility for his own mistakes, so that was what he did and damn to hell anyone who spoke out about it. He exited and closed the cell, not bothering to re-muzzle the man. He turned to the guard standing outside the cell and said, “Get him something to eat. I don’t care if you have to force feed it to him. If it’s been three hours and you can’t get him to work, send for one of those nutrition IV drip things, I don’t know what they’re called.” he said, wiping his bloodied hand with a handkerchief. He left Sullivan to his own devices, too tired to deal with him anymore.
Sullivan was, to say the least, extremely pleased when Callum seemed to lose interest and leave. While the silence was something he had been hearing for the last couple days, it was familiar, and he was happy to go back to it.
Even if his head ached worse than ever, and he could already feel the blood begin to dry on his face. He could do nothing to fix that, though. Even so, he was thankful the muzzle was off and he could finally breathe without any hinderance.
Sul couldn’t say he hated the pain. With all the pet names Callum called him, he would have expected a punishment a little… different. The punching was actually a nice surprise. Call him a psychopath, but it made sense in his mind.
Upon hearing Callum’s words as he walked out, Sullivan made a silent promise to himself to not eat anything they offered. Maybe it was an act of rebellion, or maybe it was all part of some un-designed plan. Either way, he knew he’d follow through with it. They’d have to IV him before he ever took a single bite.
After about an hour, a strange-looking guard came inside the cell. Strange, not because anything about her was inherently strange, but because of the way she looked. She wasn’t afraid of Callum, she held her position tall and proud like the tall and presumably proud woman she was. Everyone else here was hunched down with fear. But she… she stood attentively, at the ready for something. “Be at peace. Here’s your food.” some sort of soup and some salad. “Eat. You’ll need your strength when the time comes, and peace is hard to achieve on an empty stomach.” she said, refusing to elaborate.
Sullivan cocked his head to the side— well, as much as the shackles would provide. He didn’t recognize the woman at all, but the way she held herself with such authority made her almost familiar. He would assume she was one of Callum’s higher-ups, that worked closely with him, but her words held such… well, Sul couldn’t put a word to it. It was extremely confusing, and almost made him trust her, but he was still oddly skeptical. So he stayed quiet, despite no longer having a muzzle, and didn’t bother to try to eat. He actually didn’t even know how he would— the straitjacket was… well, kind of restricting.
She brought a spoon full of broth and vegetables to the man's mouth, and a napkin underneath in case of spillage. "Open up. They say a revolution's coming, we must be at our best when it happens." she said. Her blue eyes were cold, but underneath that a strange fire that seemed determined to get Sul to do what she wanted.
Sul met her eyes, trying his damndest to decipher what she meant. Maybe he was out of it, maybe it was the headache, maybe it was how his eye was swollen and he couldn’t really see. Either way, there was something so unreadable about her actions.
She could be trying to get him to eat by saying words he wanted to hear. He knew for a fact Callum wanted him to stay alive, and if an IV drip was on the table, he meant it. And if he didn’t even have to use an IV, then better on him. That was one less set of medical equipment he had to deal with.
“Elaborate?” Sullivan muttered, spitting out another mouthful of blood. It was more viscous than before, and in order to speak somewhat audibly, he needed to get it out. Even if it wasn’t the prettiest sight.
“Even the darkest of nights always has a Sunrise close behind.” she said, spooning the broth into his mouth while it was still open. “The night will end and the light will return, you’ll see.” she said, taking another spoonful. “Open up, Callum won’t be pleased if you die off and neither will my boss.”
Neither will her boss? Sullivan thought to himself, not allowing the confusion to show on his face. So she’s not working under Callum..?
He was still skeptical but ate anyway, stopping prematurely just for the sake of defiance and control. Sul didn’t entirely believe this woman— figuring for the worst, that she was just saying whatever she could in order to get him to eat. But some little hope still tugged at the edges of his heart, and he wanted so desperately to have blind faith. To promise himself that everything would work out in the end… but he couldn’t. That wasn’t who he was.
Again, his only plan was to wait. To wait and figure things out as he went.
She kept spooning soup into his mouth, and when he seemed to hesitate at any moment, glared daggers into him until he cooperated. She wasn’t taking any shit, now or ever, Sullivan was going to eat and that was a threat.
If humans didn’t need sustenance, then he wouldn’t have eaten. But he could feel his stomach eating itself from the inside out, burning and aching as he took the food begrudgingly. It hurt him mentally to cooperate, but cooperating took less energy. He needed to save as much as he could, right now.
But the food did taste just like metallic blood, anyway. His head still ached like there was no tomorrow and his eye still throbbed— he could almost feel the bruise coming on as it beat in harmony with his heart. Even so, he finished his food slowly and met the woman’s eyes with icy ones of his own.
“Good, you’ve finished. Now, do you want this wilted salad or should I throw it out? I think you’ve probably extended yourself enough for one day.” she said, finding the nicest looking leaf out of the pile of sad trash and taking a bite.
Sullivan looked utterly unimpressed, coughing lightly as he swallowed the last of the soup. He made an attempt to wipe the blood from his mouth, leaning down to nuzzle his shoulder with little success. Plus, it had already dried, so it was useless in the first place.
“Throw it out,” he mumbled, squinting like as if he was trying to decipher some kind of code. “I’d rather not gag my way through anything else.”
“Fine. That tasted terrible, by the way. And for future reference… call me Siren, it’ll make things easier.” she said, walking out of the room with the cart rolling right along with her.
“Siren…,” he repeated absently, eyes following her out. He let his voice drift off, preoccupied with each one of his running thoughts to speak any more.
He had to say, he was dreading the next few days. And the days after that. Just dreading how long he’d be stuck here, because now that Callum had addressed him personally and socked him a few times, it reinforced the fact that Sul had lost. He had been defeated, and he didn’t know who in this wretched place he could trust. Siren spoke of a revolution, but it seemed too farfetched to ever hope for.
But… if it came, he’d be part of it.
It was a few days before Callum returned. Siren came back a few times to give him meals, saying nothing and leaving as if she was never there each time. Mostly it was other guards who gave him meals, whether or not Sul ate them was entirely ignored. Meanwhile, Callum was busy taking over Europe, something he succeeded in in three days time. It wasn’t hard, when you could take over the minds of everyone on the continent, but it did give you a headache with all those flurrying thoughts. Eventually he could reasonably give up control with the assurance that yes, he had them in his clutches, but it was still an annoyance.
He came to visit Sullivan again, needing a break from the stress of running everything but Australia. Sure, he had a government of sorts, but what was the fun of ruling the world if you didn’t get to rule?
“Hello there, darling. I see your face has recovered nicely.” he said testily.
Sullivan had spent his last few days not eating much— only when Siren came. He couldn’t figure out why he wanted to trust her so bad, and hold on to her words dearly, and cradle them to his chest. But he didn’t. In this situation it was kill or be killed, and he wasn’t too keen on the latter.
He resisted the urge to flinch when Callum walked in, just wishing and pleading to get this over with before he lost a tooth. Or.. worse.
So he said nothing, simply watching coldly as the man appeared in the doorway.
“Aww, what’s with the cold reception? I know you like me, deep down. I’ve got… personality, that’s it, you can’t help but adore me.” he walked towards where Sullivan was chained to the floor and draped himself over the man. “I’ve taken over Europe, now all that’s left for me to capitalize on is Australia. I like Australia, lots of dangerous creatures ready to take a bit out of you, you know? They were all hoping I’d leave them alone, but no-can-do! Gotta take over the whole world, you know? Of course you know, sweet boy.” he punctuated the last two words by patting Sullivan’s cheek.