The threat to put Damen onto the cross to break him is a first painful reaction from Laurent to cause Damen as much pain as possible in retribution for killing Auguste (though Damen doesn’t actually make it onto the cross at this point due to the Regent’s intervention). He’s meeting his brother’s killer and the trigger point for all of the subsequent abuses and grief Laurent has experienced since that day at the Battle of Marlas. At this point, Laurent has basically had the last six years of suffering hurled into his face without warning. When Laurent and Damen first meet, Damen’s blond fetish rears its head and he’s instantly transfixed by Laurent, not yet knowing who he is. Laurent’s initial behavior is following this expectation. When Kastor sends Damen into slavery, specifically to Vere, it is with the expectation that he will suffer, that he will be abused and humiliated. Re-reading reminded me that to begin with all of Damen’s suffering is from his brother’s hand. It was easy to forget after reading a while that Kastor even really existed, because the presence of Laurent in the books simply dwarfs him. Captive Prince is a wholly different experience this time around. Reading this series with the knowledge of what happens introduces an entirely new perspective.
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