La Tulipe

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Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Today's Bits

now become an enemy, worthy of caution.
Maurice sat on his heels and chewed Sparrow’s jerky as he guarded the fire. He watched the horizon and waited for Shaara to bring back supper.

Twenty Three

South of Emman we found a prosperous innkeeper intent on impressing the local priesthood. The man’s boy, a lad no older than Shaara, was bedridden with fever and it seemed the malady was not new to the family.
“Took my wife off a year ago,” the innkeeper explained as he looked my troop up and down. “And my eldest daughter less than that.”
“Condolences,” Will said.
“I’ve got two more,” the man replied. “But Eric’s my only lad. Better for me if the gods look favorably on the child.”
Will’s long face hardened and he tapped the butt of his axe. I shouldered him away and bowed beneath the innkeeper’s frown.
“We’ll do my best to please, m’lord.”
“You’ve a reputation.” The man’s eyes shifted and caught on The Major and her companions. “It precedes you. Normally I wouldn’t bother with such extravagance, but if it pleases the priests –“
“Of course, my lord.” I took the pouch he proffered. “We will do our best for your son, my lord.”
“Set up in the pasture back yon. Come and sup when you’ve finished. It’s the free ale that will bring ‘em in, but not until late temple mass.”
Will watched the man stalk away, still sharp as flint.
“Let it go,” I suggested. “He doesn’t matter.”
“Better he find a good churgeon than try and charm the Seat’s skirted lackeys with drink and slight of hand.” Will had a few secrets of his own and after all this time I was in no real hurry to see them unearthed.
“The man’s covering his bets.” I weighed the pouch on my palm. “Nicely, I’ll add. We’ve all heard stories of temple miracles.”
“Heard, mayhap. Seen is another story.”
I shrugged and made for the pasture. There were a few new tricks I wanted to see about before the canvas went up. When Will did not find his place at my heels I paused and glanced back.
“I’m going to look at the child,” he said, once again tapping at his axe. “I’m no churgeon, but I learned a trick or two from my ma. Might be a thing I can do, at least get his fever down.”
I sighed, resigned. “Don’t be bringing any sickness into my family, Will.” And when he moped at me I flapped a hand in his direction. “Go. Hurry. I need you, tonight.”

The priests came as we all knew they would, a pack of solemn dogs scenting victuals. I know they spent some time at the lad’s bed. I did not hear what they told the innkeep, but the man seemed immensely when I caught his eye before the first act. As promised the drink ran in an endless flow and the meat not far behind. Neighbors appeared from across the fields and the inn’s common filled up and then overflowed into the pasture. My troop played especially well against the evening and the audience was amiable.
I knew the man was emptying his cellars on a gamble and while I did hope he won back his son’s life, I felt no qualms as I enjoyed the largesse. Nor, I assume, did any other guest. The sun sunk and the atmosphere became celebratory.
I found myself winded and dizzy, from drink and from the sheer joy of performance, and collapsed in a corner of the field not far from Maurice and his light show. The torches wheeled over his head, one after another after another, flushing the little crowd that knotted about his feet to orange.
“Man’s got some skill.”
Still panting, I looked around and discovered I was not alone on my chosen patch of grass.
The Major’s black haired guardsman sprawled an arm span away. He hugged a jug to his gut and from look of it he was well into the cups.
“Maurice knows what he’s doing.” I shed my boots in two quick yanks and ran my toes over the grass.
“You’re no odd hand yourself.” The guardsman showed his teeth in a grin. “I’ve been watching.”
“Have you?”
“Here and there. When Moire isn’t riding my arse. I like that thing you do, each time, at the very beginning,” he flipped one hand over and over, sloshing the jug.
“With the rope?” I considered. The man was obviously half gone but then, so was I. He had a handsome, rugged face and a surprisingly wide mouth. And, if I remembered rightly, he was the one without the boil.
“Mm,” he agreed. I slid closer. Maurice’s torches reflected in his irises. “With the rope. Difficult, is it?”
“V

Friday, June 22, 2007

Browbeaten

Rian has been browbeaten by family, friends, and various dinner ghosts into getting biopsies, after all.

The needle in the skin bit does not bother Rian. It is the 'trying to convince the doctor to order it up, finding a day that works, digging up a babysitter and then sitting around waiting again for results' that makes Rian want to break things.

Truly, Rian should just have them hack everything off. Elegantly, of course.

Monday, June 18, 2007

Sulky

Rian does not feel well tonight. Most likely because I forgot to take my generic Paxil on Saturday morning and so as a result my body is haywire. Feverish, stomach sick and dizzy. Plus hearing chipmonk in the ears and numb at the digits. I have been on that medication for far too long, but surely canna go off it without withdrawels.

Also, Rian's father and Rian's Saturday night dinner guests have both decided that Rian should get an MRI every THREE months instead of six. This makes Rian feel as though the entire world is nodding smuggly and waiting for Rian to keel over dead.

As a result, tonight Rian is sulky.

Possible Truths

"You must have been warned against letting the golden hours slip by. Yes, but some of them are golden only because we let them slip."

- J.M. Barrie

Tuesday, June 12, 2007


All Clean*

Good news, Rian thinks. The surgeon said the radiologists in town are very good and if they qualified something as "probably benign" (which apparently they did) the three nodules have only a 3 percent likelihood of being malignant. He said he will talk to the radiologist and if the diagnosis was on the line, they will do an ultrasound, but otherwise they simply want Rian to have another MRI in 6 months.

He did not seem concerned.


*lazily copied from an email

Saturday, June 09, 2007

Reasons Why


Wednesday, June 06, 2007

Drat

...and double drat. The MRI picked "a whole bunch of stuff bouncing around" so now Rian has take the next step and schedule minor surgery.

Nasssty genes. Horrible genes.

Tuesday, June 05, 2007

Zoom Zoom*

*with thanks to Dana for the canvas.

Monday, June 04, 2007

A Sensitive 'Sonnet' Written For Dr. Lorimer

There once was a green girl from Sonoma
whose lover gave her Ebola
on her way to the grave
she forgot to behave
and now the town's plagued by putrid aroma.

Saturday, June 02, 2007

Possible Truths

"Follow your bliss."

- Campbell