Before she knew what was going on, the man had run off. Tock wanted to follow him, but unfortunately she didn't have the option of just rushing off without warning. She needed to clean up after the show, whether she liked it or not. She lingered long enough to bow to the audience, tilting her hands over the puppets' heads to get them to bow as well. Despite how much she couldn't stand kids, it felt good to see them happy, instead of lying in bed, sad and forlorn. The parents and nurses started helping the kids back to their rooms. Some of them had to be carried, since they had some injury or another that made it hard for them to walk. Quite a few had needed to he held in their parents' laps in order to be able to watch the show. But now that the excitement was over, they needed their rest. There were, of course, more children than there were parents and nurses to help them. Some had parents who were off working. Some were surely orphans. Either way, there were more little monsters than there were people to take care of them. So even after she cleaned up and had her puppets tucked away in her pack, she felt a twinge of guilt at seeing them all. It reminded her of when she'd been sick. She'd spent a whole season lying useless in bed, stuck in the fever dreams of a coma. If no one had been there to care for her, she'd have died. And her own Da had been too much of a selfish, useless drunk to care for her. She'd been tended to by the rare kindness of strangers. "Goddamnit..." she muttered, trying to fight against the guilt. She had more important things to do... A child's cough drew her attention. She sighed in defeat, and stepped over to scoop the kid up in her arms. "C'mon, kiddo," she said as she cradled him in her arms. "Let's getcha tucked in, aye? Gotta gitcha better, if'n yer gonna change the world one day." "Change the world?" the kid asked in confusion. "Aye," she said, carrying him down the hall towards his room. "I done were sick real bad once, too. But I done gots better, an' now I gots magic an' smarts an' all 'at stuff..." The kid thought about that for a moment, then asked, "Does that mean when I get better, I can learn to be a wizard, too?" He started another coughing fit. As she was settling him into his bed, she saw the nurse, who was helping the kid's roommate into the other bed, cast the little wizard a worried look. She met the woman's eyes, and saw strain and doubt there. The kid's coughing was pretty bad. Tock fought back tears and forced a smile. "Aye," she told the kid in a strained voice, "ya sure betcha are..." OOCTock is going to be helping the sick kids for a bit longer. Do you want to come find her, or have her come find you later? If you were planning to leave the infirmary, she can come searching for you later to ask about the light show. |