9th day, Winter, 515a.v.
19th Bell
River Flower
She was living on tea and toasted bread. There might be a little cheese or vegetable soup. It had to be soupy that was all she could stomach. The pain had subsided to a degree, but if she was out in light or pushed herself, the headaches returned. Those sky blue eyes were still tender. Still there was still work to be done. She sipped the tea and updated the medical records of recent births, injuries and treatments. The River Flower was mostly quiet so the doctors, assistants and other helpers were doing the innumerable amounts of work on details that keep the River Flower functioning.
Life with the River Flower has been a saving grace. Though it was pretty much most of what she did to cover her pain of being alone. That was what she did when hardship came about, work harder. Something makes her said, go to work. It was her coping mechanism. The cup went to her lips as she sipped it quietly, letting the herbal concoction go down her throat. Those eyes looked around. The young healer had to be careful of looking anyone directly in the eyes as she was getting weird looks. The sunbursts were startling and rather intriguing. One of the nurses said that it might be a trick of the light but they glimmered like gold dust. She did not tell anyone what had happened, only that bandits had chased her. The Watch had sent out webbers and patrols. Amunet did not know what happened to those bandits of rather the Watch got them or the Grass claimed them. Either way, no one lasted long alone in the Grass.
She moved from her seat picking up her tea and started to help the nurses with rolling bandages. There was different sizes for different reasons. Unbleached linen was the usual material and they were boiled well to both shrink and sanitize them. Her little fingers made for a tight roll as she tucked oneside, then the other side to form a little v, before she tightly tipped the end inward and formed the initial roll. The rest was a piece of cake as the bandage was rolled up methodically and tightly. The quiet and the rhythm of the rolling provided a nice meditative measure.
The girl thought on the new things she could see. The ribbons and sparkles that came in many colors. The girl didn’t know what the colors meant. Maybe she could start writing these things she noticed and at some point they have to make sense. Right? This brightened the red head up as the medicine worked on her headache. The grace of Rak’keli helped some but it didn’t solve everything. As with all things, it had a limit. That was another thing during this thoughtful meditation, the little impressions she gets now and again. Was the Goddess speaking to her? if she had her grace, she had a connection to the Goddess. The girl pondered on these details as she thought back each time she got an impression or something guided her to where the injury or sickness was at. These things she should be writing down also. The girl had little to no instruction on either of these things. Maybe this will come to her in time, meanwhile she did the work she was called to do.
19th Bell
River Flower
She was living on tea and toasted bread. There might be a little cheese or vegetable soup. It had to be soupy that was all she could stomach. The pain had subsided to a degree, but if she was out in light or pushed herself, the headaches returned. Those sky blue eyes were still tender. Still there was still work to be done. She sipped the tea and updated the medical records of recent births, injuries and treatments. The River Flower was mostly quiet so the doctors, assistants and other helpers were doing the innumerable amounts of work on details that keep the River Flower functioning.
Life with the River Flower has been a saving grace. Though it was pretty much most of what she did to cover her pain of being alone. That was what she did when hardship came about, work harder. Something makes her said, go to work. It was her coping mechanism. The cup went to her lips as she sipped it quietly, letting the herbal concoction go down her throat. Those eyes looked around. The young healer had to be careful of looking anyone directly in the eyes as she was getting weird looks. The sunbursts were startling and rather intriguing. One of the nurses said that it might be a trick of the light but they glimmered like gold dust. She did not tell anyone what had happened, only that bandits had chased her. The Watch had sent out webbers and patrols. Amunet did not know what happened to those bandits of rather the Watch got them or the Grass claimed them. Either way, no one lasted long alone in the Grass.
She moved from her seat picking up her tea and started to help the nurses with rolling bandages. There was different sizes for different reasons. Unbleached linen was the usual material and they were boiled well to both shrink and sanitize them. Her little fingers made for a tight roll as she tucked oneside, then the other side to form a little v, before she tightly tipped the end inward and formed the initial roll. The rest was a piece of cake as the bandage was rolled up methodically and tightly. The quiet and the rhythm of the rolling provided a nice meditative measure.
The girl thought on the new things she could see. The ribbons and sparkles that came in many colors. The girl didn’t know what the colors meant. Maybe she could start writing these things she noticed and at some point they have to make sense. Right? This brightened the red head up as the medicine worked on her headache. The grace of Rak’keli helped some but it didn’t solve everything. As with all things, it had a limit. That was another thing during this thoughtful meditation, the little impressions she gets now and again. Was the Goddess speaking to her? if she had her grace, she had a connection to the Goddess. The girl pondered on these details as she thought back each time she got an impression or something guided her to where the injury or sickness was at. These things she should be writing down also. The girl had little to no instruction on either of these things. Maybe this will come to her in time, meanwhile she did the work she was called to do.