by Simeon Aytak on October 2nd, 2014, 4:09 pm
Simeon nodded slowly as she explained her circumstance, feeling the singe of her skin against his fingertips. He moved his hand away, pressed it to his own head, and then held his fingers against her forehead again. The contrast made it easier to gauge - and his diagnosis was not good for her. So she fell in the water, either by accident, or to avoid pursuit - either way, he did not care. Being a herbalist in Sunberth meant that all sorts needed your help, though most of the time people who needed medical attention in Sunberth tended to lean towards the wrong side of the law. Though 'law' was a poor choice of word in Sunberth. The deadlier side of anarchy, perhaps?
"I see, I see, the temperature is clearly well over normal, and the disorientation speaks volumes..." he murmured, more to himself than to her. The indifferent, though calming stare affixed itself on her eyes. Serpentine slits. When she spoke, he saw extended canines, not uncommon, but when it was that pronounced, slightly abnormal. The animalistic features hinted at a Kelvic in human guise. His suspicions, though, were hard to confirm, since the Kelvic were a largely xenophobic race - and for good reason, he supposed. His time as a slave saw them either as pampered pets or exotic menagerie-dwellers. The skilled ones, with talent in music or dance, were used as entertainers. Many other slaves considered them lucky. He suspected the Kelvic themselves considered a caged life little more than torture. Simeon had found it had to tolerate over two decades of slavery as a man. If you could fly, soar, and take to the skies, or journey the depths, or rush through the jungle canopy using tree branches as an extension of your limbs ... he suspected confinement of such freedom was little better than death in their eyes.
And so he kept his suspicions to himself, but made a mental note in his head. If she was comfortable enough with it, she could confirm his suspicions. If not, well, he didn't care that much, but he wanted to try poisoning her at least. Common remedies for her condition included the liberal use of onions, and garlic, but those two were beneficial for humans, they were poisonous to animals, in particular household ones, like cats and dogs, as well as horses. If she was truly a Kelvic, he wasn't sure how it would affect her. Poison or cure? Half-half? Better safe than sorry, and avoid them altogether. Simeon removed his hand and started running his fingers through his mangled beard again, nodding to himself. "Well, Elyra. You have a fever, which is likely to worsen without treatment. The fever has exacerbated the cough, so you have an inflamed throat. Both of which are compounded by dizziness and disorientation. If you had not come to me within the day, you would have also experienced nausea, and possibly delirium. Thankfully, I have only a few things to treat."
Turning his back on her, Simeon squatted, lifted an empty iron pot, and dipped it into the boiling water of his brazier, and begun sifting through the herbs on his outspread blanket. The fever wasn't that high - yet. No need for anything too complex. His fingers wandered over the blanket, and stopped over some pale green leaves that smelled of citrus. "Lemon balm for the fever," he murmured, tossing the leaves into the iron pot, and reached for a mossy-green pile of dried leaves. With one hand, he ground it up while holding it over the pot, and then held up a saucer, and emptied liberal amounts after the leafy powder. "Honey and thyme for your cough," he said while casually chopping up a bulky piece of ginger into tiny cubes, and emptying the lot into the pot, then he sparked a fire under the pot with flint and steel, and watched it simmer. "And a bit of ginger to steady your feet. It will be ready in fifteen minutes or so, most potent in twenty, and useless at thirty. So I don't recommend you wander off, or I'll be left with a useless pot of mush."
The deadpan tone and the passive expression almost made his words seem serious, before an almost gentle smile cut through his scruffy bearded appearance. "But I jest. Still, do sit down. Standing is doing you no favors - Elyra."
"Milk of poppy for the pain, cayenne for the bleeding, and yarrow for the fever. There you go, good as new. I recommend you pay me now, otherwise - well - learning to heal is the same thing as learning to kill, you know?"