As it was, the Mystic’s attention was split several different ways. He was trying to keep an eye on the mortal they had come to rescue, as well as all of the sorcerers (because he didn’t want one sneaking off, only to attack them when his guard was down). He was also one of the few mystics who required incantation for his spells to work. He’d talked with a few others like himself, and each seemed to have a different experience of using the exact same magic. Some could do it with no ceremony at all. Just will the blood in another person’s body to become corrupt and caustic - and it did exactly that. Azraeth, on the other hand, what he did always required some form of sacrifice, occasionally some hand gestures, and almost always a spoken component (though over the years, he’d learned to more mutter those under his breath so as not to sound like a lunatic). As such, he didn’t even really notice the approach of his partner until Flynn was right on him, speaking his name.
He could immediately tell something was wrong though, or off. He scanned for injury immediately, ready to look for whoever had caused it and rip their throat out with his (very blunt) fingertips. However, the exact nature of the problem presented itself when the Paladin reached for his hand and then there was a tongue on his flesh. Which was not helping matters because it took the vampire’s mind out of the fight and in the direction of...other things. Normally, Az gave into his temptation fairly easily. Flynn knew this about him well. It took very little to distract the Mystic when there were certain rewards for his attention. Except it totally, totally was not the time. His gaze narrowed. Or at least one of his eyes did - the other destroyed by the heat blast.
He was about to tell the other man to save it for later, when he could have significantly more than a taste, but before he could utter a response, Flynn was gone to take care of some of the ‘baddies’, and Az was being attacked by another staff-wielding sorcerer - specifically in the form of a hard bash right to the back. What had that been about not letting his guard down? He whirled.
“Really now?!” He asked as he slid out of his defensive posture and slammed the heel of his palm right into a nose after stepping inside of the sorcerer’s guard. Up close and personal was not a good move for someone who relied heavily on magic. The nasal passage suddenly dislodged and slammed into a brain. There was some blood and other fluids which trickled out of the nostril holes. Eyes rolled back in a head, and the combatant fell to his knees, then to the ground. Dead.
The rest of the fight went largely on auto-pilot. There were some things people could do adequately without concentration. This was a fairly commonplace notion. A person got up every morning (or evening) and generally followed the same routine. The individual acts of getting up, pulling on clothes, preparing a bed, coffee - all of these things became muscle memory, and didn’t require active thinking to accomplish. Azraeth had been fighting for long enough that he rarely had to consider what he was doing unless his opponent was particularly crafty or strong. Neither of which was the case with the group of sorcerers.
He was just finishing up (tying up loose ends really), when his partner caught and kept his attention. ****. ****. Right. “The **** he isn’t!” He called back, making his way across the room, dropping a corpse along the way. As he approached, he dug his middle finger into the wound on his palm, and slowly inscribed a rune into his pale flesh. A last bit of magic came over him, and the damage done during the fight seemed to fade away. His eye returned. His ear. His skin became clean and smooth once more. His facial hair was gone, having totally burned away.
In the seat, the dead man’s throne, sat a man who was rapidly losing his blood, losing his life. Valdimar would not last more than another few minutes without prevention. Which left Az with limited options. He could not heal the wounds. Restoring the mortal’s blood would buy them scarcely any time at all because of how quickly the fluid was dripping from him. He knew what he was going to do, of course.
Being a sire was all about choices. Usually, Azraeth liked to hand that first choice off to his potential childer. Lazy of him, really. Except there was no way to gain consent from an unconscious, unseeing, unhearing form. So it seemed the vampire would need to take that decision into his own hands. And that meant the next choice would be Valdimar’s. The choice to embrace what he became, or to hate it, and by association, to hate Az.
The mystic tore into his own skin as he hovered over the Icelander, so he could tip the human’s head back. Blood flowed from his clenched fist and down past lips. At first it was a few drops and then this steady stream of darkness which slithered its way down the other man’s throat and crept into the core of him.
Az believed that blood called to blood. Only time would tell if that was true in this case, if Valdimar would return to himself, not as the man he had been, but as a dragon.