dobriennm wrote:
Perhaps they should have tried to break him sooner and get more information out of him rather than simply having their revenge on him. Though I understand them not wanting to have him babbling to everyone about the demons showing him visions.
Any counterarguments?
First of all, what arguments - outside the physical torture (and even this might not work) they could use to make him talk? Clyntahn was broken. His entire life was devoted to lie. He was probably totally unable to think at this time, much less to answer the questions. What could they do to make him talk - and moreover, how could they be sure that he told them the truth, not just the mad babbling?
Secondly - this might took time. And this time might be enough for Clyntahn to actually comprehend the truth and do something unpredictable. Like, to use his last word to claim "The holy writ is a lie! Seijins revealed this to me!" and describe his experience exactly. And this would... this could bring unforceen consequences. Quite a lot of peoples would be puzzled: why the Grand Inquisitor, having nothing to lose, may start to denounce Holy Writ and saying that Seijins told him so? And some may start to doubt: what actually Seijins told Clyntahn that could change him so much?
P.S. But what they MIGHT do, is copy the Clyntahn personality. So they may use his memory as reference base. After all, if they managed to make Narhmann work despite his personality was only partially complete, they probably could crack the Clyntahn code and extract his memories?