Afficher le menu
Information and comments (0)
<<   <   1, 2, 3, ..., 19, 20, 21, ..., 74, 75, 76   >   >>

= (CRP) A Changing of the Guard

Destini
She cringed when Allan cried out. His reassuring smile over her shoulder did nothing to ease her sympathy at his pain. The furrows in her brow remained where they were. She nodded three times in quick sucession at his instruction.

She placed her right hand under the pack to support its weight while her left hand grasped the top to steady it. Craning her head around, she looked to see how the holes were positioned in the leather pack. She'd have to lift it off at the exact right angle to keep the pack from catching on the arrow's course wood.

"Right," she said, taking a deep breath and letting it out slowly. "Let's get this off o' ye. Three ... Two ... One ..." she counted down. On the count of one, she lifted the pack up, angling it carefully to pull it off as quickly and smoothly as possible.
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Several things all happened at once.

Destini lifted the pack off with gentle strength and there was a queasy grinding feeling in Allan's back. It did, however, completely fail to hurt very much.

A sudden tingling sensation began to flow outward from the wound.

The pack started leaking a steady stream of blue liquid which then slowed to a drip again.

"Well done, my dear. That actually hurt a lot less than the first step. Hopefully we'll be as lucky with the last little bit to do. Shall we, then?"



Destini
She set the pack aside next to her own satchel, watching the blue liquid drip onto the ground. She swallowed past the lump in her throat when she turned back to the task at hand. Now that she could see the wound more clearly, it looked more serious than she had initially thought. Her stomach knotted. This would be painful.

She leaned over his uninjured shoulder and placed her lips close to his ear. "I'm sorry, Allan," she whispered softly to him. "I'm so sorry. Please forgive me for this."

Stepping back, she placed her left hand around the wound the way he'd described earlier. She carefully but firmly grasped the quarrel with her right hand. "Here we go. Three ... Two ... One ..."

She pulled the arrow.
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan cringed as two inches of shaft and a steel tip was removed from his back....he remained still so that Destini could examine the wound. As she tended it he spoke quietly

" Thank you very much, that was smoothly done. One might think you a hardened battlefield barber.

Please take a look at the wound...Is there any blackening around the edges? I need to see the metal point of the quarrel. Is there a set of grooves in it?"





Destini
Destini let out a breath she hadn't realized she'd been holding. It had gone better than she had expected. At Allan's instruction, she looked at the arrow's metal tip. She shook her head - although Allan was turned away from her and probably couldn't see it. She had no idea what she was looking for. "I think ye know arrows better than I," she said as she handed him the arrow.

"As fer the wound ..." she looked. There was too much blood to tell, plus the fabric of his tunic shadowed the puncture from the light. She would have to clean the wound to bandage it anyway, and to bandage it, she would have to get to it.

She dug in her pack, rummaging through, searching for a scrap of cloth with which to bandage or clean, but came up empty. Sighing, she knelt down and raised her skirt of her heavy traveling clothes to reveal the cloth of her soft under-tunic. It was one of her most comfortable pieces of clothing. She hated to destroy it, but here in the wild there was nothing for it. Destini took her knife from her pack and severed the seam along one side, tearing the bottom six inches from the underskirt all the way around. When she was done, she had a long strip of cloth suitable for cleaning and bandaging. She replaced the knife in her pack and pulled out her canteen of water. She soaked a portion of the cloth with it.

"Remove yer shirt," she said to Allan. Her tone was even and humorless. Despite the connotations the unremitting, worldly deacon might apply to her words, asking him to remove his shirt was no idle request. This was business, and not a business she cared for at all. "I cannae tell anythin' about the wound 'till it's clean."
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Brightpoint largely concealed a slight roll of the eyes as he complied as best he could. Removing a shirt that was recently pinned to your back by a crossbow is at the best of times a tricky business. The bit of numbness in his right shoulder did nothing to add either grace or elegance to the effort.

Still, remove it he did, and focused on the broken quarrel end Destini had given him.

There was a series of grooves all along the metal section. Grooves that had traces of a black liquid under the blood.

"Well this explains the numbness in my shoulder,"
sighed the tired deacon.


Destini
Her eyebrow slightly raised when Allan didn't offer a retort, but complied to her request without a response. It wasn't what she had expected. In the two months she'd come to know this man, he was more often quick with an impish comment than silent compliance. This new behavior unnerved her slightly.

Still, she turned back to the task. When his shirt was off, she placed the cool cloth against his skin and felt its warmth seep through the fabric. She wiped away the blood as gently as she could, blotting in places she guessed would be more tender than others. She listened to him as she worked. Numbness? Perhaps that was why he didn't appear to be in as much pain as she would have expected. But why was his shoulder numb?

With the puncture cleaner than it had been, she could see that the edges of the wound beneath were darkend slightly. "The wound does have a darker tint 'round the edges," she told him. "I'm not dim, Allan. Ye've drawn some conclusion to all o' this, haven't ye?" she asked as she finished cleaning and gathered the cloth to hold it against the wound. "What's goin' on? Why the discoloration? What do grooves in the arrow mean?"
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan looked back at her stonily.

"It means poison. Numbness spidering out from the wound, black tint to edges of wound and my fingernails looking like I have been out on a cold, rainy night.

That means not only poison, but the successful delivery of the third part of the poison I used to carry antidotes for. The same blue liquid making mud on the ground from my last (now broken) vial"




Destini
If the stony look in Allan's eye wasn't enough to blanche the color from her face, the words he spoke were. She glanced from the wound to the arrow to the blue-ish tint in Allen's fingernails to the antidote upon the muddy soil. Her mouth fell open and her breath caught in her throat as what he was saying struck home. "Jah! Allan! No!" she exclaimed when she found her voice again. She dropped the cloth she was holding against the wound and knelt on the ground in front of him to look directly in his eyes.

"What do we do? I mean - how long do ye have? I mean - where can we get more o' the antidote? How far is it? I - I - mean ... oh, Allan!" She was beside herself with worry and fear, and not making much sense at all. She knew it. She felt a fool for the tears that pricked at the back of her eyes. But there it was. She was afraid ... for him ... for her ... for their quest. What would happen to her if he died? To her kin? She had left everything she knew to follow Allan in an effort to save her kin. What would she do if he died? She was certain the Cardinal would never forgive her for the death of his attache. Damn Elais. Damn whoever he worked for. "No," she cried in a strained tone. "Ye must survive. Ye will survive." She looked him in his eyes and grasped his hand. "Ye have to live," she said to him. She looked at him deep in his eyes, daring his stony gaze in an effort to show him how determined ... how desperate ... she was. "How.do.we.stop.this?"
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan smiled gently and stood up.

"Well, dear, we need to head to the Hospital of St. Thomas. The antidote comes from there. And I owe Reverend Mother Mary a shilling, if memory serves. Let's be off and quick about it. As best I can tell we should make it with hours to spare.


Allan turned and strode swiftly up the road


Destini
She was both warmed by his smile, and unnerved. Hours to spare? They hadn't much time, then. She watched him as he walked off ... biting her bottom lip as she watched him, allowing him to get a few paces away. If her gaze was a bit appraising, well, hopefully Jah would forgive her.

"Allan," she called, trying to hide her appreciative amusement. She held up his tunic. "Yer shirt?"
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


The deacon stopped cold. Really cold actually, what with no cloak or shirt on.

He blushed a bit as he took the shirt.

"Ah. Right. Well, then. Good show. Let's be off shall we...

Oh...sorry about your skirt..."



Destini
Good show? ... well, yes.

At least he was acting more like himself, now ... for the moment. Before he put his shirt, she placed the fallen bandage over his wound, securing it firmly with a wrap of cloth around his chest. She nodded at him satisfactorally and handed him his pack.

She blushed as he mentioned her skirt. Under-tunics being naturally longer than the over-tunic, he was now able to see her ankles since she'd used the fabric to bandage his wound. "Do nae worry 'bout my dress. 'Tis fer a good cause." She lifted her satchel over her own shoulder. "Shall we?" she asked as she set forth upon the trail.
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


As they walked down the trail beside the road, there remained no sign of pursuit. Allan calculated how far it would be to the Hospital of St. Thomas. A bit less than two days walking, faster if they found a cart or some horses.

There probably was no source for the horse and cart option though, and he had no time for diversions to find them.

"You'll like the Reverend Mother Mary Persephone, " he commented to Destini, "she is delightfully straightforward and can read more out of a silent moment than many folk can get from days of conversation.

And she asks a lot of questions."



Destini
"The reverend mother sounds like an intriguin' person," she said, indulging him in his conversation for a moment.

She kept a careful eye on him as they traveled, not wanting to miss a subtle sign if his health should suddenly go from bad to worse. He hadn't told her what to expect or even how long he had. Maybe he didn't know. Maybe he simply didn't want to think about it. After all, who wanted a constant reminder that the time left to live was slipping away?

The very real possibility that she might finish this quest alone struck her like a bolt of lightning from a clear, blue sky. Allan had been her guide this whole while. Would she know her way if he were unconscious ... or worse? She bit her bottom lip at the thought.

Whether he wanted the reminder or no, she needed to bring it up again. "Allan," she said hesitantly as they walked. "I cannae blame ye if ye do nae want to talk about it nor want the reminder o' the poison. An' I promise ye I willnae bring it up again after this if ye wish. But I think ye'd best tell me our road ... in case --" she fumbled with her words. She didn't want to offend him, but she knew she had to finish what she was saying. "... in case the worst should happen."
_________________
See the RP information <<   <   1, 2, 3, ..., 19, 20, 21, ..., 74, 75, 76   >   >>
Copyright © JDWorks, Corbeaunoir & Elissa Ka | Update notes | Support us | 2008 - 2024
Special thanks to our amazing translators : Dunpeal (EN, PT), Eriti (IT), Azureus (FI)