DargonZine | Volume 19, Number 2 |
om hurried towards the causeway that linked the two sides of the
city of Dargon. He tried not to worry, but he could feel the tension in
his muscles with every step he took. He looked up at the cloudless early
evening sky as he turned onto the Street of Travellers from Merchant's
Way. His eyes still up cast, he collided with another man going in the
opposite direction.
Tom stood stunned for a moment, blinking into the bright orange
light of the setting sun, and rubbed his chin where the top of the
smaller man's head had hit him. He tasted blood in his mouth: he had
bitten his tongue. The other man was lying in the street on his back,
with a slight cut above his eye.
Tom knelt at his side. "Are you hurt? I'm so sorry. I was hurrying
--"
"To the causeway, I'd guess." The other man, whose graying hair
suggested that he was at least a decade older than Tom, managed a weak
smile as he propped himself up on one elbow. "Straight, son, I'm fine.
Today has been a day of confusion for everyone. Since that barge crashed
into the causeway, nothing has been normal for any of us."
Tom nodded. "I'm sorry. I'm going to look for my neighbor's boy."
"I understand. I just found my nephew. His arm is broken, but the
healer says that he'll be fine. I was running home to tell my wife.
She's been sick with worry." The man sat up, moving his neck gingerly.
"Sounds like you'd best be on your way. I'll be fine."
"Can I help you up?" Tom offered an arm muscled by years of working
in the gardens of Dargon Keep.
"Yes, thank you." The man used the assistance to lever himself back
to his feet. Then he shook Tom's hand before letting go. "Good luck,
son."
Tom continued on his way, thinking of his beautiful neighbor, Sian,
who took in orphans and provided them with a home. There were only three
of them living with her now: Finn, Briam, and little Kerith. Two others,
Aren and Oriel, had found apprenticeships.
A few menes ago, he had seen Sian walking towards her home. Her
tearstained face and dazed expression told him instantly that something
was wrong. When he had approached her, she had told him that Oriel had
come home that afternoon for a half day and she had sent the girl with
Finn, Briam and Kerith to market. Somehow, the children had ended up on
the causeway instead. Briam, along with many other onlookers, had fallen
into the river during the barge accident. Sian had spent a few bells
searching for him and had returned home unsuccessful when evening
approached. When she finished telling him this, Tom had told her to look
after the rest of her children and that he would continue searching for
Briam.
He reached the causeway, catching his first glimpse of the
devastation, and he had to blink to make sense of the image. The bridge
had originally spanned the Coldwell River and connected the two sides of
Dargon: the southwestern side where the keep and Old City were situated,
and the northeastern side where the seaport and river port were located.
When the barge had hit the causeway, it had partially collapsed
lengthwise across the middle, with only a narrow section connecting both
banks of the river still standing.
From where he stood, the part that remained upright looked barely
wide enough for two people to cross abreast, and its sturdiness seemed
highly questionable. The Dargon town guard had blocked access to the
bridge so there was no activity on the normally busy byway. As Tom
watched, a raft on the river began to cross from the other side.
Dusk would arrive soon and he could hear distant wailing from the
riverbanks. The thought of what it meant made him shudder. The damage
had not been confined to the causeway, for it had been filled with a
crowd when the accident occurred. Briam was one of many lost, injured,
or killed. Since Sian had already searched all along the near side of
the river, Tom's destination was the far side. With the bridge closed,
the only other way to get to the Old City and the keep was by barge, so
he approached the guard who seemed to be in charge.
"Hello, sir. My name is Tom Madden. I need to get to the keep side
in order to look for a lost child ..."
Tom expected the guard to deny his request immediately, but the man
surprised him. "You're not the only one. I can't let you cross the
causeway, but there are some people waiting for a ferry to return." The
guard motioned tiredly towards a crowd standing just upriver.
"Thank you." Tom joined the group. He didn't think that he would
have to wait too long, since the raft he had seen departing the other
side was approaching from upstream, and he realized that it wasn't a
raft but a small barge. As it came abreast of the group, two crewmen
jumped off to tie her down. Tom waited until some of the people around
him had clambered aboard before he moved, but soon he was standing near
the bow, with little space to himself amid the throng, wondering at the
greed people sometimes displayed. The price that he had been charged for
passage was twice the normal fare. Luckily, he had not had to wait for a
barge; he supposed it was because it was so late in the day.
The last bell of day tolled as they cast off. Tom looked at the
wounded city, using his height to his advantage. He could see the
commotion dying down, and the gawkers leaving, probably to their homes
for dinner. The city was going to take a long time to recover.
Tom stared in awe as the barge floated past the damaged section of
the causeway. The huge rent in the stonework made the whole structure
look unstable. The fallen masonry lay piled above the waterline. One
rescue barge was still anchored in the gap, but all of the men on its
deck seemed to be moving at half speed. Tom was not sure if it was from
despair or exhaustion, but it occurred to him that it was probably both.
The barge passed under an intact arch and landed just downriver
from the causeway. Tom hopped off the craft and made his way down to the
banks. He hurried, since dusk was turning to night, and searched one aid
station after another with no success. Although a few healers were still
working on the few remaining injured, he did not find Briam. Finally Tom
realized with a sinking heart that the only place left to check was
where the guards had been laying out the dead on this side of the river.
Would he have to return to Sian with the news of Briam's death?
Earlier that day, a reverberating crack had woken Joliana from her
nap. She lifted her aching head off the pitted table when she heard the
sound. It was loud enough to intensify the pulsing behind her eyes. She
let her loose and stringy hair fall over her face to try to shield it
from the light that filtered through the closed curtains. She guessed
from the angle of the sun that it was a little after midday and she had
another four or five bells of sitting around their small house before
her husband, Aviato, would return from his work at the docks.
Joliana gazed around with little interest in the cause of the
noise, although she was reasonably sure that it hadn't come from inside.
Everything in the room looked in order. The cabinets and countertops
near the door of the room were lined with the jars of liniments and
ingredients she used in her work as a healer. She couldn't keep herself
from searching the labels for the one substance she knew was not there.
Two days back, she had run out of ardon, kept in a small jar on the
corner of one shelf and marked only with a picture of a sun and a moon.
With her thinning business, she had not had the money to purchase any
more.
Deciding that the noise wasn't worth her interest, Joliana laid her
head back on the table and tried to drift back to sleep. It had become
her normal way of passing the innumerable bells of the day. Immediately
a knock at her door startled her. This time the pain was like a knife
being shoved in her temple. She groaned.
The door opened at her audible but wordless response, and a young
boy pushed his head into the room. Eyes wide, he looked surprised at the
scene before him, as if he had expected something else. Joliana
recognized him as the son of one of the other healers living along
Atelier Street. She stared at him, the longing for a child still raw in
her heart after all these years. If she had been able to have a child,
would he have been like this fresh-faced boy?
"Mistress Joliana." His voice rose with excitement as he spoke.
"There's been an accident. The causeway broke and fell into the river.
The guard has sent for every healer that could be found. My pa said to
knock at every door."
Joliana sat upright languidly, processing the boy's comments.
"Thank you," she drawled, as much a dismissal as a confirmation. The boy
read what she put into her tone and hurried out the door, shutting it
loudly behind him.
She rubbed her temples and sat for a moment. All it had taken was
the one boy to remind her of her deep, open wound, the scar that she had
yet to heal within herself. The only cure she had found was ardon, and
that was a temporary -- and expensive -- salve at best.
Without knowing why, Joliana stood and walked over to her counter,
pulling her leather bag, already stuffed with medicines and bandages,
from the cabinet. The thin layer of dust on top affirmed the length of
time that had passed since the bag had last been used. She stared inside
it at the equipment of her trade and wondered if she could really be of
any help.
A good part of her wanted to go back to sleep and forget the
strange interruption. Curiosity got the better of her. She had been born
and raised in Dargon, and the causeway was an integral part of the city.
The bridge crossed the Coldwell River, connecting the keep side and the
port side of Dargon. Many citizens crossed it every day. She simply
could not conceive of the causeway falling into the river. It was true
that, in the past, barges and sailboats had hit it, causing minor
damage. However, those cracks had usually been repaired at once. This
time the boy had made it sound serious. She couldn't imagine a disaster
in which they called upon every healer in the city.
Joliana walked out her front door and merged with the foot traffic
heading towards the river, drifting off to one side out of other
people's way. Most of them were hurrying, while she could barely find
the energy to walk, squinting against the painful glare of the full sun.
It had been days since she had ventured out of her shop. Her husband had
taken to bringing home food for them and leaving again for one tavern or
another before she could even finish her half-hearted attempts at
eating. He was away most nights now and Joliana couldn't blame him. It
was her fault; it had all been her fault. She'd destroyed his dreams, as
well as her own.
After only a few menes, Joliana reached the riverbank and stared
open-mouthed at the scene before her. The entire bridge hadn't fallen
into the Coldwell as the boy had claimed, but a huge span of it
certainly had. From where she stood, she could see that rescuers
thronged the fallen stone, and it seemed as if all of Dargon were in
that small area where she stood, the best place to view the chaotic
activity.
Before she knew what she was doing, she found herself pushing
through the crowd of observers, mumbling, "Healer. Let me pass. Let me
pass." She was even more amazed when people moved out of her way.
A guard came up and led her down to the river where another man
stood, directing the efforts of the rescuers around him. The guard who
led her didn't seem to realize how much she needed his strength to keep
from stumbling with fright.
When at last the other man turned to face the two of them,
Joliana's guide said, "Sergeant Cepero, this here's another healer."
"Thank you, Rieqen. Come with me, mistress." The sergeant turned
and led her towards the beach and behind a small rise. "Already some of
your compatriots are working at the causeway and barge, but we don't
have enough healers on the other side of the river near the Old City.
Here's a small boat ready to take you across."
They had arrived at the water's edge, and the sergeant helped her
into a skiff. He gave quick orders to the guard manning the oars and
pushed them off. The guard on the boat did not seem inclined to speak as
he fought against the current, and Joliana was happy for the silence.
She sat with her head down, staring at the fast-moving water that rushed
around the boat.
Panicked, she realized that the safety of her house was falling
away behind her, leaving her with no escape. Mixed with her turbulent
thoughts, an odd clarity formed. This was it. She'd stand up, jump out
of the boat, and be swept away by the current. She looked into the face
of the guard across from her. He only looked at her with mild curiosity
and the urge to move faded away. If she stood up the boat would swamp;
she couldn't bear to endanger this quiet guard. So she continued to
watch the water eddy and swirl. It reminded her of her first experience
with ardon.
A sailor she had treated had not had the money to pay her, and
seeing her bleak face and exhausted eyes, he had given her ardon dust as
payment. "You look like you could use this, lady. It will make the pain
go away, but only for a while." She had not refused his offer, although
at the time she had never intended to use the drug.
She had stashed it away in the back of her ingredient shelf,
convincing herself that she might need it some day to help treat a
patient. She had let it rest there for two days; on the third day, she
had been sitting in her room, her heart swamped with despair. Unable to
bear the hopelessness for another instant, she had opened the container
and sampled the ardon.
The colors, textures, and movements around her had awoken as the
drug had taken effect. Her desolate existence had transformed into
something new and vibrant. She had spent the day studying the wonders in
the loops and whorls of her rough-hewn table, forgetting all that had
occurred in her life. The entire day had passed without the painful
reminders of her barrenness interfering. The problem, she realized
later, was that when the ardon wore off, the world looked even more drab
than it had before.
The bump of the craft hitting the opposite shore signaled their
arrival. The guard hopped out and pulled the boat onto a small sandy
patch, helping her out onto the grass. They had drifted a good distance
downriver from the causeway. Joliana turned away from the river and
looked around. A stone's throw away, a healer tended a woman. Three
people near the water were lifting more injured from another boat.
Joliana wandered down the shoreline, feeling lost. Then, her
professional instincts coming to the fore, she knelt near a young man
whose left arm lay at an awkward angle; he also had several cuts and
bruises, but he was awake. She sighed as she opened her bag and began to
extract items from it. She felt like a spirit watching her body perform
of its own accord while her mind dully echoed its need for ardon and to
crawl into its warm embrace.
"Drink this," she ordered and held a small vial to the young man's
mouth. He drank.
"The bridge fell," he said between gasps, with horror in his voice.
"The barge ... crashed ..." His voice trailed off as the decoction took
effect. It was a strong potion made from her mother's recipe. The
starter solution was ale, strengthened with a touch of the orangeheart
flower. The berries of the orangeheart plant were poisonous, but the
concentrated smell of the flowers could send a grown man to sleep for a
bell or two. "... into the bridge," the young man said dreamily. His
eyes were huge globes of blue in his white face.
Joliana searched around the beach for a moment, losing focus. Then,
seeing a small piece of wood in the grass, she picked it up and slipped
it into the man's mouth. "Bite down," she said disinterestedly.
Remembering her training, she moved her hands to his left elbow,
gripped, and pulled hard. The man groaned, and his discomfort brought
Joliana back to reality. She frowned, puzzled; the decoction was
supposed to dull all pain. Glancing at her hands, she saw that she'd
pulled the arm even further out of alignment. She quickly tugged again,
this time feeling it slide into place as a muffled whimper came from her
patient.
Joliana sat back on her legs, wondering what she was doing. In
barely five menes, she had already proved that an ardon addict made for
a poor healer. All of her being screamed for her to return home before
she did any more harm, but she had to finish her botched job before she
could leave. She looked around and saw that someone had brought several
sticks and had them stacked a few cubits from her location. Getting to
her feet, she retrieved two suitable for her needs. Back with the young
man, she placed them on either side of his arm.
"What ... doing?" He had taken the bitewood out of his mouth, but
his words were slurred. The pain of her setting his arm was still etched
on his brow.
"I'm bandaging your arm. It's broken," she said, carefully wrapping
the long piece of cloth around his arm. When she was done, she said to
him, "Stay here until you feel a little better. Then go home, you hear
me?"
Standing up to leave, Joliana realized there were now three other
healers nearby. As she watched, two guardsmen brought more people ashore
for treatment. Even with four healers, the injured were beginning to
pile up. One of the guardsmen carried a body over to another area where
there was a small row of corpses.
Joliana realized that she couldn't leave. She went back to work.
She tended people with torn and bloody limbs, and set and bandaged
broken arms and legs for what seemed like days. She lost count of the
number of people she helped. Although there were no more mistakes like
her first case, each time she worked she had to force herself to
concentrate. The patients seemed to take her shaking hands and pale face
for deep emotion from the tragedy. Or maybe they were too much in shock
to even notice the telltale symptoms of her dependence on ardon.
Every now and then, Joliana paused to pull her recalcitrant mind
together. She glanced around, breathing deeply, watching the other
healers involved in their work. The number of people being brought
ashore was decreasing, but the guardsmen were still taking bodies away
and lining them up to one side. As a healer, Joliana was familiar with
death, but it was always hard to face the ultimate consequence of a
healer's failure, so she turned her gaze back to her work.
When at last there were no more new patients, she rose to her feet
unsteadily, looking around. Two of the healers had already left, and the
other one was helping his last patient stand. Near her, just outside the
enclosure, corpses were laid in a row nearly on top of each other. When
she looked at them, she wanted to weep. Suddenly, she saw a tiny form
between a tangle of two other bodies, and her instincts took over. With
reserves of strength she did not know she possessed, she rolled a body
aside to get to the infant. When she pulled it free, she realized from
its blue face that it was long dead, but still, she cradled it to her
chest and began to cry.
All she could see in its rag doll form were her hopes and dreams.
It was not her baby, but she mourned never having the opportunity to
love a child. She had been cursed to never be able to bear children.
Possibly it was the illness she'd had years ago or maybe she'd always
been destined to be barren. That one fact had ruined her life.
Wiping her eyes, she put the baby down at the edge of the line of
bodies and found a scrap of cloth to cover it with. None of the dead had
been attended to, so she began to drag them aside and place them in a
neater row, adjusting their legs out straight and laying their arms
across their chests. After a while, she paused to wipe the sweat from
her brow. Blinking her eyes, she realized that someone was approaching
her.
"What are you doing, mistress?" It was the senior guard who had
sent her to this side of the river earlier that afternoon. What was his
name? Cepero, she remembered; it was Sergeant Cepero.
"The dead need respect," she said shortly.
He nodded in understanding. She could see the exhaustion in his
eyes, but still he began to help her move the bodies. Silence reigned
for long menes as they continued to work side by side until a moan rent
the air.
"What was that?" Cepero asked, his voice sharp.
"It came from there." Joliana pointed to the far end of the row of
dead bodies.
He hurried over despite his limp. They heard another moan, and the
sergeant hastily rolled aside the corpse of a large man and reached for
a small body underneath.
"By Ol!" Joliana straightened as if she had been whipped and said,
"Get him to some open space where I can look at him."
Cepero picked him up and walked away from the rest of the corpses.
He laid the child on the ground, and Joliana knelt next to him. She
cleaned the scratched, bloody face with a rag. It was a young boy, no
more than thirteen. The man beside her gasped as he got his first full
look at the boy's face.
"You know him," she said, touching the unconscious boy's body
gently, checking for broken bones.
"Yes. His name is Briam; one of the orphans that Sian cares for.
She must be extremely worried looking for him." Cepero rose anxiously
and began to check the nearby bodies. "What was he doing here, in the
pile of corpses?"
"Someone probably thought he was dead," Joliana replied. "If we
hadn't heard him moan, we would have thought the same. His pulse is very
weak."
She concentrated on shutting out the guard's concern so that she
could focus on the boy. Her examination had brought her to the worst
injury: his left leg. It was a broken, mangled mish-mash of flesh, with
pieces of white bone sticking out between the darkening mess of what
used to be a healthy limb. Her heart sank as she saw it and she knew
what needed to be done.
There was another gasp beside her, and Cepero said, "Can you save
his leg?"
She looked up at him, and all the fear, affection, and worry that
he had carefully excised from his voice stared back at her from his
eyes. It was not within her power to deny what his paternal feeling
demanded of her. "I will try," she said, forcing her voice to sound
confident. "Get me some water."
The sun was close to the horizon, and as she finished speaking, the
town bell tolled the night's beginning. She reached for her bag of
medicines, pretending to look for something while she gathered her
thoughts. All the hopes of this tough man and this young boy rested on
her, an ardon addict, a wreck of a human being. To heal, to fix, to
doctor this ...
Maybe she should just find another healer to do the work. No, she
knew that she was the last one present and, based on the boy's shallow
breathing, that he could not wait long enough for another to be fetched.
The guard cleared his throat.
Joliana realized that, lost in thought, she had pulled one small
pouch from her pack and was staring at it. It was her bag of powdered
orangeheart flower. She glanced around vaguely and found that the guard
was handing something to her. She blinked and forced herself to
concentrate. It was a small earthenware bowl with water. She dropped
some of the powder into the dish, and immediately a pungent smell filled
the air. It was the same substance she had used over and over all day;
the amount she had just used would put an adult to sleep for bells.
"Don't breathe the fumes," she warned the sergeant. "Let this soak
for a bit."
Joliana looked down, trying to find the clarity of mind that she
needed for the job. She saw that the leg was broken badly. Just below
the knee, the flesh was torn and mangled, making her wonder if she could
save the leg at all. With both hands, she tried to gather the skin and
flesh together. The bones stuck out at an impossible angle, and as she
tried to maneuver everything into position, the foot collapsed. It had
obviously been completely crushed. Distantly, she heard someone gasp,
but she couldn't release her hard-won clarity if she had any chance of
succeeding in her attempt.
Logically, she listed out her findings in her mind. The foot could
not be saved because the bones were too crushed to knit together. The
knee joint was fine, but the skin was torn -- a minor problem that could
be fixed with a few stitches. The leg was broken below the knee, not
above, which was good. If the knee had been crushed, it would have been
an even bigger problem. So her only course of action was to cut off the
leg at the top of the shin, where the bone had broken.
Examination done, decision made, Joliana looked up. "Hold the bowl
under his nose. Let him breathe the fumes." Even though he was already
unconscious, Joliana did not want to take even the slightest chance of
him awakening; the flower's scent would ensure that.
Darting her eyes around the area, she immediately found what she
needed. She reached down and picked up a thick strip of bark from the
grass by her knees and handed it to the sergeant. "Put this in the boy's
mouth, between his teeth." If the boy tried to moan from the pain, she
didn't want him to bite his tongue.
Next she pulled out a clean strip of cloth from her bag, propped it
under the boy's leg, and then pulled out a rough leather strap. When she
looked at the sergeant, he just nodded grimly. Placing the strap just
above the boy's knee, she cinched it as tight as she could. Squinting in
the dusk, she reached into her bag for the last tool she needed and
pulled out a small hand saw, slightly rusty on one edge. Sighing in
exasperation, she took out a whetting stone, removed the rust, and
sharpened the saw.
She had been worried that the sergeant would react with anger when
he caught sight of the tool, but he merely said, "Are you sure this is
the only way?"
"Yes." She was not sure, but all her years of training and her
instincts as a healer told her that this was the only thing that would
save this boy's life. Yet a part of her doubted. Maybe her judgment had
been tainted by her longing for ardon. Maybe the drug was still talking
through her and convincing her of the wrong choice: to cut. Could the
leg be saved? Or would the surgery kill him even quicker than just
setting the leg? The inevitable bleeding could be fatal.
Joliana took a deep breath, deciding that she would do the best she
could. She was glad that the guard had been content with her first
answer and had not pressed her. She reached out for the bowl and poured
the contents onto the area where she planned to cut. It would numb the
pain some, although she was sure he would feel little.
"Hold him down," she commanded the sergeant, "at the shoulders. I
don't think he will wake up, but he might still move."
Joliana grasped the boy's leg above the knee and steadied herself.
She could not live with herself if this went wrong; but in a shining
moment of clarity she realized that, as things were, she would not have
lived with herself much longer anyway. For the boy's sake, and for the
fear in the eyes of the grizzled veteran beside her, she could not doubt
her decision.
She set the saw against the raw wound of the boy's leg and found
herself breathing unevenly. Looking down at her hand and the instrument,
she watched as colored spots danced in front of her vision. Everything
was out of focus and she mistrusted her placement of the saw. She moved
it once, found it too close to the wound, jerked it higher and found it
nearly resting close to the edge of the leather strap. She shuddered and
closed her eyes, trying to calm herself.
With her eyes closed, she moved the saw one more time and then
looked down. It was finally where she wanted it. Using her training as a
tether to keep her attached to the present and to dull her own pain, she
began to cut.
The boy shook as she worked, moaning in his sleep, but he did not
wake. She moved steadily, forcing every other thought out of her head.
In only a few menes, she was done and began pulling thread out to stitch
the torn skin. She looked up at the guard once. He was watching the
whole process, his jaw clenched and his lips waxy white. She pulled out
a jar from her bag and began salving the raw wound, hoping it would help
prevent it from turning gangrenous.
Finally, Joliana leaned back and turned wearily to the guardsman.
"I've done what I can. The rest is up to him. He will survive or not as
his body wills it. We should take him someplace where he can rest,
perhaps his home. Can you find some men to prepare a litter?"
"I'll see what I can do." Cepero turned and limped away.
She took the piece of bark from the boy's mouth and tossed it to
the side. She tilted the bowl, pouring the water on her hands, trying to
wash the blood and grime off. The remains of the orangeheart flower made
her hands tingle, but a moment of finger flexing brought all the feeling
back. Then she looked down at the boy and began to bandage the wound
with the last of the clean rags she had in her satchel. When she was
done, Joliana sat on her haunches and stretched her stiff neck back,
seeing the night stars above her for the first time. She wished life was
as black and white as the nighttime sky.
Soon, Cepero returned with two burly guardsmen carrying a litter.
Joliana supervised the lifting of the boy as the sergeant watched. He
snapped but a single admonishment before shutting his lips tightly.
"Gently."
When they had arranged her patient on the litter to her
satisfaction, Joliana rose, aching all over.
Cepero spoke to her as the others began to carry the boy off. "I'm
going with him. Will you accompany us to help treat him there? His
guardian lives on the other side of the river, and I can get us passage
across."
"There might be others here." Joliana could not hide the weariness
in her voice as she gestured at the grassy area, drenched in mud and
blood.
"I think you've done what you can for today. Sian lives on Murson Street
and will give you food and possibly a place to rest. You've
worked tirelessly for bells. You can't keep this up."
She sighed. He had no idea how she felt. After the grueling day of
healing, splinting, and now cutting off a limb, the futility of it all
overwhelmed her. The boy's injuries were so serious that even with his
leg removed she had faint hope. She did not want to go and watch the
child die, and she did not want to face the death of hope in the guard's
eyes.
Joliana sighed. "I should be getting home. There is little I can do
now."
The sergeant turned to face her. "Shouldn't you watch the wound?
You did the surgery. You know what the problems might be. What if he
needs your help?"
She shook her head. She knew what would happen, and she couldn't
bear to see it. Looking up at the dark sky, Joliana tried not to shake
noticeably. She knew that some of her unsteadiness was from exhaustion
-- it had been a long and trying day -- but most of her discomfort was
from her increasing need for ardon. The constant stress and movement had
blunted her need for the drug, or at least pushed it to the back of her
consciousness. Now it was pushing itself to the fore again.
All her senses screamed for ardon. It was not the taste, the scent,
or the feeling that she wanted; it was the whole bundle, the complete
assimilation of the drug into her being to the exclusion of everything
else, especially her pain.
She needed to focus on something else, and she wondered what her
husband had thought when he had returned home from the docks near sunset
to find her absent for the first time in months. Someone would probably
have told him that she had been summoned to the causeway, but what would
he have felt at her absence? Would he have been happy that she could
help? Would he have been sad to not see her? Or would he have felt
relief that he did not have to face her, at least for one evening?
Joliana looked at Cepero as they followed the litter to the barge.
The guard was correct: she had to at least see the boy to his house.
Then they could find another healer to treat the boy. "Sergeant," she
called to him. "Where did you say he lived?"
"Murson Street, ma'am."
"I live on Atelier Street. I'll accompany you as far as the boy's
house; it's on my way home. But then I'll turn him over to your care."
The last place she wanted to be was in another person's house as his
suffering unfolded in front of her, but she needed the passage back
across the river. She had enough problems of her own without facing
someone else's.
Abruptly the gnawing need for ardon returned and she knew what she
would do: after Murson Street, she would find someone who could sell her
ardon on her promise of payment. Then she would take enough to staunch
the flow of memories and dreams and sate the craving permanently.
Tom Madden looked around at the last aid station left for him to
search. At the far end, he could see the line of bodies someone had
pointed out to him. He stopped, fighting a battle with his emotions. He
did not want to return to Sian with no news; at the same time, he
dreaded the thought of telling her that her adopted son was dead.
Footsteps ahead of him caught his attention and he glanced up. From
the light of the torch one of his friends in the ducal guard had given
him, he saw Sergeant Cepero accompanied by two others carrying a litter,
and a thin, bedraggled woman bearing a satchel.
"Sergeant!" Tom hurried toward him. "Sergeant!"
Cepero turned. "Tom Madden! What are you doing here?"
"I came to look for Briam. Sian said he's missing ..." his voice
trailed off as he caught sight of Cepero's expression.
"How about the other children?" Cepero asked urgently. "Are they
well?"
"Yes, they're fine, they're fine. What about Briam? Did you find
him?" Tom knew that his words had been brusque, but the way Cepero's
eyebrows drew together in a frown was alarming.
"He's alive."
Tom sighed and shuddered. "Where is he?" Seeing the litter ahead of
them, Tom ran forward.
"Madden, wait!"
The insistence in Cepero's voice made new fear blossom in Tom's
mind and he increased his pace until he reached the litter. The boy's
face was as waxy and pale as Nochturon. His tunic was torn and bloody,
exposing the scraped skin underneath. His breeches had been torn off,
barely covering his groin. One leg was extended neatly upon the litter
and the other ... Tom stared, almost unable to understand what he was
seeing: the other leg stopped just below the knee.
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