Still the beast stood there, ogling her – why would he not leave? Why would he not leave her alone? Why did he not heed her warning – for she would do as she said, if he dared to touch her and she had the chance to hurt him. Her eyes narrowed as she returned his stare, hers comprised of ice and fire together. She greatly desired to sear him with her gaze, to freeze the poison that passed for blood in his veins, to . . .
"Jael…I'm sorry, I know you are suffering."It was the girl’s expression that froze, her pretty lips pulled back in a feral snarl. In the odd way that brains do, her own snatched immediately at something – through the clearing fog, she could still remember. She had never given the Widows her name. There were none in this vile place that knew it – she had refused, stubbornly, some vague sense of retaining at least one shred of herself for herself, as they stripped her of all else. Her son’s name had slipped away, into the air, whilst she was defenseless to hoard it close to her heart. But her own name – never had she voiced it. If nothing else, she would force the one who had raped her over and over to see his child born knowing that he had no idea who she was. He would have no piece of her identity – not that she thought he would really give a shit.
But this one knew . . .
Her eyes fought to focus more precisely, as the form wavered and rippled. The man was pulling forward a chair, sitting – she could not make out his face clearly due to the drugs still seeping out of her bloodstream. Her lips puckered into an unasked question and her writhing stilled.
"I'm not here to hurt you. I won’t even touch you if you wish me not to." Hands held upwards, palms forward – she focused on them blearily.
"Not a finger, I swear."Her head flopped back down wearily, sinking into the cushioning softness of the pillow. Tears ran freely from the corners of her eyes and she sobbed, a reaction to the drug, the terror, the confusion. What new torture was this? The Symenestra did not kill with knives or blades – they killed with kindness. While they planted their lethal seed inside their captives, they bathed them with all things sweet and beautiful and comfortable. What trickery was this? How did they guess her name – and why did they need so badly to get her acquiescence to her own murder? Couldn’t they just accept the fact that she hated them? Why pretend?
Why did they pretend that what they did was acceptable? Why was this Widow here pretending to be nice? What did he want?
His words were a garbled mess. She only half-listened. How many would they send to explain – patiently – how much better it would be if she would just
cooperate? If she would just nicely and politely play co-conspirator in her own demise? Her eyes clamped shut tightly and she wished she could clamp her ears shut too, to drown out that voice. It was different, somehow. But the message it carried was to be expected. Just play nice. We even stole your secret – your name. But just be a good girl and only the very end will hurt really, really bad.
”I am your brother's doctor."It took a moment for that one phrase to sink in, past all the horribly weak defenses that she still tried so hard to keep aloft. When it hit her conscious brain, it bounced right off again. She
must have misheard him. Her eyes flew open and her head lurched towards him. She strained to hear his words now. They were incredible – unfathomable. Her brother was in Lhavit. Her brother did not even know where she was. Her brother was Shinya and could not ‘come to Kalinor.’ Her brow furrowed as she tried to concentrate – tried to decipher this strange code this Widow spoke in. With the drug clearing from her brain with each passing minute, her eyes took in his features and form more clearly, He looked . . . different. And he spoke differently too.
She bit down on her lower lip which trembled with more as yet unshed tears. The fingers of the hand closest to the healer unfurled slowly, spreading out in a fan of supplication. The far hand pulled at its restraint, the fingers also curving as if she would pull him close.
“My brother?” Her voice was weak now, all its strength spent in the previous effort of snarling at him like some wild beast. “You’ve seen my brother? Please . . . “ He had given his name but she had not been listening closely. “Please . . . Help me. Please . . .
Her hand softened into a form that beckoned him to take hold of it. “Please . . . take me to my brother.”