Closed The Broken One (Maddoch)

A reunion of two souls

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This lazy agricultural settlement rests on the swampy shores of the Middle Suvan at the delta of The Kenash River. The River's slow moving bayou waters have bred a different sort of people - rugged, cultured, and somewhat violent. Sprawling plantations of tobacco and cotton grow on the outskirts of the swamp in the rich Cyphrus soils, while the city itself curls around the bayou and spawns decadence and sins of all sorts. Life is slower in Kenash, but the lack of pace is made up for in the excesses of food and flesh in a city where drinking, debauchery, gambling, slavery, and overbearing plantation families dominate the landscape.

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The Broken One (Maddoch)

Postby Verena Lorak on August 1st, 2015, 8:09 am

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The Broken One
76th of Summer, 515 A.V.
Continuation to To Butcher A Man’s Soul


It was a slow day for Verena Lorak. Other than two children who suffered from diarrhea and a Sitai man with hearing problems, the healer had nothing to do. She supposed it was a good thing, considering how her clinic lacked the proper manpower. The young woman should have went ahead in search for another doctor’s assistant, but she did not want to bother talking to all the people in order to find a proper one. Besides, so far, she hadn’t been overwhelmed too much.

That did not mean she did not have to think about any replacements soon, however. As she sketched the curves of a forearm, the Lorak started to flip through her cousins in her mind, singling out who seemed interested in the field, who had approached her to ask questions about medicine. Sometimes, she wished that her brother, Zorane, was into medicine instead of poisons. That would have made everything a lot easier for her.

Breaking her train of thoughts, Verena faintly heard the sound of the front door opening, followed by strong footsteps. She straightened in expectation of a patient as a knock reverberated through the door. But instead of an unfamiliar face, her slave’s figure appeared between the crack.

Hallan peered into her office slowly. Even if the healer did not notice, the unease was clear on the slave’s face. He wished to tell his mistress that there was something about the man standing behind the door that was unnerving. “Someone is asking for you, my lady.”

If it was a patient, Hallan would have simply direct the subject into her office, without asking for permission. If it was Cas or Zorane, they would have let themselves in. If it was any of her family members, the Benshiran slave would simply mention who it was. So, it was someone unfamiliar. “Who is it?”

“Zaelsen Radacke. He claimed you knew him.”

Just like that, her wretched memories broke through. Zaelsen Radacke . . . Achenar . . . Those were things she had not thought of for years. More like, she had not let herself think of it if she was to be honest. Verena did not know if she was more surprised by his sudden appearance in her clinic or her own unbelievable loathing at the sight of him. She knew perfectly well of what things he had done, what he was capable of.

“Send him in.”

“Good day, Verena,” as the man slipped inside her office gracefully, closing the door behind him. He did not seem to have changed in the past five years. “It had been some time since we last seen each other, hasn’t it?”

“What do you want? There is no reason for you to come here unless you are injured,” the healer replied briskly, her tone sharp. Deep inside, Verena doubted she could be more welcoming even if he was on the verge of dying. Then she chastised herself, it was not a thought a follower of Rak’keli should have.

Zaelsen did not sit down, instead he simply placed his hands on the back of the chair across her desk. He gave her a smile. “I am in need of your services. My slave, to be more specific, back at Whiplash. That is what you do, is it not?”

The Lorak did not even have to consider the question too long. “I am not interested. I am sure you have a plantation doctor to deal with such things.” Usually, Verena would not refuse any call for help – in fact, she had never done such a thing. But she couldn’t accept a request from Zaelsen, not after what he did to her – after what he did to his former slave. Not when she could never feel safe with him close by.

If Zaelsen was surprised at her forward refusal, he did not show it. He did not even miss a bit. “I was told that you are one of the best doctors in town and I rather have someone skilled to make sure my slave will be taken care of properly. Besides, our own doctor is a brute and his mind slow with old age,” the Radacke explained. His eyes roamed on her in a most unsettling manner. “I believe this slave of mine needs a more . . . delicate touch.”

“I recommend the Radjud-Dalat, then. N’salla Konrath is much more experienced than I am.” It was true. It would make more sense for him to seek someone more skilled if Zaelse really did need someone to heal his slave.

The man waved away her words. “This is getting us nowhere. I am simply asking you to do your job.”

“I said I am not interested.” The first edges of sharpness from the Lorak’s anger started to show as she slammed the charcoal on the table. For the first time since she took over the clinic, Verena regretted she did not agree to stationing a few guards here. “You should leave.” She looked down at her journal, expecting to hear the door opening as he left.

Instead, the Radacke now stood directly in front of her desk and he lifted a jar of salve, studying it. “So, I suppose you are content to let a slave to suffer in pain, to risk bleeding to death simply because your subjective feeling towards me? I expected a healer of your status to be more professional.”

Whether Zaelsen had planned his words or not, they were the right ones, enough to start shaking her resolve. She had sworn an oath to heal everyone she could to the best of her ability. If the Radacke had told her of the existence of an injured slave, it was her responsibility to act. Had she not done more difficult things to heal another?

But this is different, a voice in her mind insisted. This not simply about the healing. You do not have to save everyone. You cannot.

Her silence seemed to have been answer in itself to the Radacke. “I am not taking a no, child. I have seen your . . . work and I have to say it impresses me. I trust you to do an excellent job on my slaves and no one else.”

Why is he so insistent on this? She was not the sole healer in all of Kenash. “But I do not trust you.”

“How can you distrust a fellow dynast so? What do you think I am?”

“You sent your slave to assault me,” Verena replied swiftly, her voice sharper than it had ever been, her mind flying to the unpleasant memory. This was one of the few times the Lorak was grateful of her inability to express her emotions. “You are also a sadist.”

“Perhaps I am, but you are not,” he responded smoothly. “And I am sure, you will not let a soul suffer, even if there was only a small chance that I am telling the truth.”

The Lorak did not reply, letting the silence stretch between them. A small doubt suddenly crept into her mind. If what he said was true and someone was indeed in need of her attention, the healer could not let her own emotion take control. Verena supposed nothing could go wrong with a simple visitation. It was not something she had never done before. “Very well.”

The bearded Radacke smiled as he straightened. “Now, that isn’t too difficult, is it? I shall send someone when I am ready.”

“Ready for what?”

“You’ll see.”

And then Zaelsen Radacke was gone.

----------------

As she was led down a flight of stairs, Verena was already regretting her decision. Why had she agreed to this in the first place? When a man had came into her clinic and said that he was to escort her to Whiplash, she had half the mind to tell him she had changed her mind. Yet, something inside her refused to let her do so. Even if she was terrified of what the Radacke had in mind for her, the healer was also morbidly curious.

The young woman was not quite sure what she had expected, but the terrible silence caught her off guard. Everything was quiet except for their footsteps that Verena guessed everything was soundproofed. It reminded her of the basement of her family’s estate, where some experimented on slaves - dead or alive. It was made so no one could hear their screams. This was all too sickeningly familiar.

Her fingers tightened around the strap of her bag, eager to find something to ground her. Verena hated how the discomfort overwhelmed dragged cold fingers down her spine. She had made sure her scalpel was on top of her things - just to be safe. After everything she had seen lately, keeping a weapon close by was not an awful idea. Of course, there was no way she could bring herself to injure anyone, but he did not know that.

Verena was no fool. Zaelsen’s summoning of her meant something - something bad. She had little contact with the Radacke for the past five years. There must be a reason why he would suddenly drag her into this place. But what? It did not make any sense. What changed so that he turned his attention back to her?

She barely believed that he wanted her to check on one of his slaves. If that was his true intent, why had he never used her services until now? For a brief tick, Verena wondered if she was being too paranoid regarding the man. The healer knew most dynasts would pay extra care for their slaves so not to lose their investment too quickly. Still, a better part of her refused to trust this Radacke.

They stopped in front of a dark door. Her escort rapped his knuckles on its surface twice. “Master Zaelsen, your guest is here to see you.”

Too preoccupied with her own whirling mind, Verena would not hear if the Radacke had replied or even took notice of how long they waited until she could hear the click of a lock. It took the swing of the door to catch her attention again and even then, her mind scrambled to assemble itself.

At first, Verena could not make sense of the sight in front of her. Even though her eyes had adjusted to the darkness, her mind simply refused to process it right. In fact, her legs moved before she could understand why.

“Achenar.”
Last edited by Verena Lorak on March 5th, 2016, 7:12 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Verena Lorak
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The Broken One (Maddoch)

Postby Achenar on August 26th, 2015, 10:13 pm

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It might have been hours, but it had felt like months. His body hadn't felt like his own; it was a vessel for a broken soul, torn asunder by the hands of Zaelsen Radacke. He'd been alone in his thoughts for the hours that Zaelsen left him, chained to a pallet in the corner, now soiled from his blood and sweat. He was naked, exposed and trembling from the core, though there was no cold air save for the drafty breeze that seeped in from the wooden door as it opened and closed. There had been minimal contact with anyone outside with the exception of a slave who had brought him food and water, and when he refused to eat, he was force fed.

The gaping hole in his hand had been shoddily patched with bandages, now soaked and crusted with dried blood. The angry lacerations on his back were red with an early start of infection. The length of his body was covered in dark black and blue bruises. There was hardly an inch of flesh that hadn't been exposed to brutality.

Unconsciousness took him, and in his mind he stood on a precipice, a deep chasm stretching ahead of him with the roar of a black ocean below. The sun was blotted out in an eclipse, and all he could feel was the sharp stinging throb in his flesh. He yelled out a name, but even he couldn't hear himself over the noise. Then a voice, like an arrow through the dark, shot across that vast expanse of inky black ocean.

Achenar.

The ethaefal stirred. He stepped forward in his dream and found himself anchored by the ground and jutting rocks that pinned his legs.

That voice. Who was that voice?


"I suspect you can repair most of the damage," Zaelsen commented idly as he followed the Lorak's gaze toward the prone ethaefal. There was a twitch of his lips; a shadow of a smirk on his face. One would have assumed the Radacke was pleased by her reaction. "It was fortunate we found him, I was honestly surprised he hadn't killed himself out on his own in this savage world." Even unconscious and indisposed, Zaelsen Radacke never missed a chance to throw a barb at the slave that 'got away'.

And he'd make sure he'd never make the same mistake twice.

He stepped by the door, pulling his gloves tight around his hands. "Shall I leave you to your patient, Lady Lorak?" There was a sickening smugness to his tone as he eyed the young woman.
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The Broken One (Maddoch)

Postby Verena Lorak on February 21st, 2016, 8:59 am

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Overtaken by her instincts, Verena practically ran to the slave's side and knelt down, not caring that her pants would be soiled. She spared no glance to the Radacke, barely even heard his words. The healer had always been terrifyingly single-minded when it came down to the injured.

The sight of the unconscious slave and covered in blood immediately reminded her of her own slave, Hallan. Punished because of her. A flare of anger started inside her chest, but she doused it quickly. This was not the time to be angry regarding the injustice of slavery, not when she would need to keep her head clear.

It had been years since she had last seen him. And being the immortal he was, Achenar did not seem to change while Verena had grown. For a brief moment, the healer felt like she was the seventeen year old girl who barely knew what she was doing. But no. She was not the girl from all those years ago. The entire time she had managed her clinic, she had seen all sort of horror and this was just another one.

She touched the pulse on his throat and felt the feverish heat rising off him. His pulse was fast and weak, but at least it was there - that it meant his body was still fighting.

The healer was particularly concerned about the ethaefal's hand. Gently, she reached for his hand and started unwrapping his bloody bandage. When she saw the hole punched through palm of his hand, her mind ran through all the possibilities. Various muscles and tendons would be severed by the injury. The third metacarpal bone might be fractured if he was unlucky - if that happened, Achenar would require a surgery only a few Kenashian can do. At least, it seemed like most of the arteries supplying his fingers were still intact, Verena thought as she eyed the tips of the slave's fingers. On the other hand, there was no way for her to know if any nerve was severed until she could ask Achenar to move his hand.

Despite his back looking bloody and raw, it shouldn't provide too much problem as long as she could keep it from getting infected.

Now, she would have to decide her course of action. Her gaze traveled around the room briefly before she listed off everything she needed. "I need a bucket of water, towels, blankets, and some candles."

Turning back to her patient, she asked, "Achenar, can you hear me?"

"It was fortunate we found him, I was honestly surprised he hadn't killed himself out in this savage world," the Radacke commented from behind her.

"I think he is in more danger of getting killed while in your care rather than when he's out in this savage world," the Lorak said plainly as an observation. It wasn't meant as a jab, just something she truly believed in. Even if the Radacke didn't want to kill Achenar, one of these days he would cross a line and there would nothing left for any healer to fix. She had seen cases like occasionally - Dynasts insisting that they didn't do too much harm and that it was Verena's fault, that she did not do her job right. "How long have you left him here, Zaelsen?"

Carefully, Verena placed the ethaefal's hand between her and felt Rak'keli's gift rushing through her, cleansing the wound. This was one of the times that she wished the goddess would be so generous as to grant her another mark.

Without looking back, Verena let herself ask, "Why are you doing this?" She knew Zaelsen was cruel. She had known it since Achenar was first brought to her. But this? How could anyone do this? Why would they? And why would he involve her in this? Not telling her what he wanted and instead letting her see this? What had she ever done to him to make him target her so specifically? Questions crowded her mind, but for now she only needed the answer to one. "Why bring me here? You did not bring me here simply to heal him."
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