"Calm down, it's okay. Come on, lets sit. Take a deep breath." Ushering the woman towards the chairs that lined the waiting room, Addy gently pushed her down into one before perching on the coffee table in front of her. Zinger was still cradled against her chest, a hand absently stroking his feathers, hoping to comfort him as he wove back and forth.
"Now, the worse case scenario is that this is an airborne disease. Those are very hard to control, but would explain why all the other birds fell ill so quickly." Addy said this slowly, the tone of her voice carefully measured in hopes of keeping Sima calm. Years of dealing with the public had taught the healer how to wear a mask of confidence; even if she didn't feel it, showing patients how concerned you really were never made them feel any better. They came to the infirmary, to her, for her level of knowledge, for her expertise to make them feel better when they could not to it themselves.
Sometimes, people just wanted to be told that everything was going to be okay. Unfortunately, this was not one of those times, though Addy would do anything to change that. Instead, she tried to break the news as carefully as possible. "You also may be a vector. If the disease that is effecting your birds is a strain that only shows in the avian species, you could be harboring it without any symptoms.... unintentionally spreading it around." Reaching out a hand, Addy showed her where Zinger had covered her glove in mucus. [color=#FFFFF]"Do you remember getting any of this on your face directly? Or maybe your hands, and you just wiped it off instead of washing, mouth or nose after? It could be a helpful clue if you noticed any change in your own mucus."[/color] Yummy, but as was the life of a healer. Addy had delt with much worse than snot.
"Actually, I'm going to try something..." Was all she managed to explain, as she began to pull what she thought of as the blanket of calm around her, beginning to block the outside world. It only took a few moments for the complete meditative state to consume her; Addy tucked away the different parts of her mind in their metaphorical boxes, leaving her awareness blissfully blank and empty. Sima would simply see the woman close her eyes, slow her breathing and cease all movement when she found her center.
Having achieved the nothingness she sought, Addy reached for the power that had been instilled within her upon birth. She imagined it to be within the deep core of her mind, a glowing, golden, coiled mass of power. When she reached for it, it lept into her hand like a puppy that had been stuck inside for too long, and wanted to play. Handling her gift with an ease that only comes from constant usage, the healer envisioned Zinger as he had been before she closed her eyes: Perched on her hand and cradled against her chest.
Since healing was a hands on job, Addy found it easier to envision using her gift as if she were just using her hands, like any normal procedure. So she extended a fistful of glowing power towards the raptor, stretching it like a string so that she could feed it into his nostril. It was a crude way of getting inside, but it worked. Suddenly, Addy was within the bird, so to speak. Adept in anatomy, she was able to distinguish where she was by careful observation.
However, what she encountered was far beyond anything that she had seen before. To her minds eye, Zinger was filled with a dark, pervasive substance. It almost completely coated his insides, seeping through his internal organs. His nasal cavities were shrouded in black, as well as his lungs. Great dark patches of the stuff covered his stomach and liver, though some living tissue could still be seen. Finding his heart, Addy was able to take a little breath of relief, as none of the stuff had made it there yet; a good sign. But the life giving muscle was completely surrounded. It was only a matter of time.
Addy pulled herself back out of the bird, landing back in the real world with a large weight in her shoulders that hadn't been there previously. Rek'keli, help me. I am no animal doctor. Never having been notably pious, when the woman did throw a prayer or two towards the skies, it was usually to the Goddess who marked her, rather than Priskil, whom the rest of Wind Reach worshiped. The face of the goddess who marked her was a mystery; she had never seen the deity who had apparently chosen her before she could even walk or talk. Addy found it hard to fell like she owed this unknown entity anything... what if these deities they all worshiped weren't even real?
Opening her eyes and meeting Sima's intense gaze, Addy sighed and felt her shoulders slump. She was in over her head, though she could never admit this to a patient. Quickly, the birds symptoms were run through her head against the catalog of diseases that she knew well. The results were disappointing. Give me strength, at least was the final plea to the goddess before Sima was finally addressed.
"I think you need to take me to the other birds."