Spring 5, 505 AV
Ordinarily, the cries of pain from his patients never truly bothered Dhalvasha. When he worked, he immersed himself within a different world, one hewn of discipline, action, and reaction. Today, however, he could not seem to tap into his usual state of inner peace. Instead he found himself hanging on the grated ends of every yowl and piteous moan. The patient in question, one Delesha, of Web Curanide, had injured herself during a hunt not a few hour ago. On the trail of some mountain deer, she had misjudged her shot and rather than pierce the deer, instead took a wasp hive from the branches. In her hurry to escape, she had fallen prey to a mistake of clumsiness, slipping and falling down a short, rocky, gulley. It was a relief she had worn her exoskeleton armor, otherwise she might not have managed to drag her way back. It was her cries for help, not her admirable progress, which spirited her to Dhalvasha’s care.
In the Place of Purging, Dhalvasha was a tenuous doctor, working based on a trial period set by the master of the domain. He and Dhalvasha had never seen eye to eye. Svorador was a stern picture of his profession, every bit as commanding and skilled as his reputation indicated. Unfortunately, the dismissive way he treated other Symnestra and his obsessive fixation on the surrogates put the two at odds. Dhalvasha believed in putting more concern in the Symnestra patients and less in the Surrogates. Their importance was to survive long enough to die, and in doing so continue the race. Treating them like princesses was beyond the point, and honestly a pittance compared to what they would soon experience. If Svorador was so concerned about his precious surrogates, than perhaps a case study in neutralizing newborn venom would have been a more fruitful, if not more noble venture.
His patient screamed again, twisting in agony underneath Dhalvasha’s fingers as he examined her right arm for signs of a break.
“It hurts, it hurts damn you!” she hissed between clenched teeth. Her eyes blazed red in the dim lighting of the room as she rocked against his influence.
“Please,” Dhalvasha murmured, running his claws across the length of her arm, “You must calm your thrashing, you’ll only aggravate your injuries.” Catching her eyes with his own, a connection was forged. In that instant he pierced her personal aura with his own influence, flooding her mind with calming whispers, assurances of safety and peace. Delesha held his eyes with her own, staring blankly as an overwhelming sense of calm seeped into her body. The knotted muscles in her arms and chest softened and she lay back down on the slab quietly. With an audible sigh, Dhalvasha continued his examination, running his fingers over the sharp angle near her wrist and another barely raising the skin on her left leg. Two broken bones, likely fractured to extremes. Exoskeletal armor may be useful in some cases, but the Symnestra skeleton could only take so much stress on a single bone before it snapped like tinder. She would not be walking for some time, assuredly, but neither injury appeared sever enough to hamper her hunting thereafter.
Before setting the bones, Dhalvasha set himself to examining the angry red blotches stamping her skin from head to foot. Nearly fifty three individual stings in all, sites that oozed a yellow pus and pushed upwards in angry defiance of natural skin. None of them were fatal, although had several more set themselves upon the huntress she may not have survived. Wasps, as a whole, were vicious creatures when disturbed, and had a strange penchant for exacting vengeance for damage done to their homes. In that way, were not all races a bit like wasps?
No.
A God had created the Valterrian and yet no human army stood poised to attack the gods should they appear. Like all problems the gods created, people leaped at the chance to forgive them should they bless them with a measure of power.
In such an analogy, the wasps would forgive the Symnestra of destroying their nest so long as the huntress had promised to crush a nest of some rival hive, or perhaps shower food upon the ground beneath them.
Fools were those that sold their loyalty for convenience.
Dabbing some of the stings with a cotton swab, Dhalvasha collected a sample of both the stingers and the venom, dropping them into a glass jar at the end of the table for further study an analysis. While inconsequential in small doses, introduction to the right (or wrong) location in the body would promise a swift and painful death…likely through suffocation.
Wiping the back of his hand across his forehead, Dhalvasha banished perspiration and sighed. Setting the bones would be an effort in strength and possibly patience. It was unlikely his Hypnotic suggestion would hold her for long, so he had to be quick about his purpose.
Taking her arm he felt for where the bone had fractured. Sure enough, the line of form was broken neatly, but not in such a way that it would make setting it overly difficult. He had to imagine it like pieces of a puzzle, a dangerous puzzle where exact positioning would ensure solvation, while incorrect would mean another attempt later. Then and again, life was an experiment of progress. Failure now was not indicative of failure later, merely the long road of ups and downs that characterized learning.
He pushed, roughly, suddenly, forcing the two bones to meet together and gripping down on the wound. The huntress screamed, thrashing wildly on the table and for perhaps the tenth time in the last week, Dhalvasha quietly cursed his superior for not supplying proper anesthetics. “Calm yourself,” he growled amidst her agony, “I didn’t set your bones so you could break the others!” Djed flowed through his words like individual conduits, filling her mind again with a river of suggestion. Calm down, lay still, be at peace, sleep, relax…all the words he felt represented the state of mind he wanted her in.
A bitter coppery flavor exploded along his tongue and Dhalvasha reared back, raising the back of his hand to his lips and bringing it away spotted in blood. Now the bitch had caused him to overgive…fantastic. Gritting bloody teeth, he pulled away from the effort, letting the patient mumble and cry in quiet heaving sobs, more breath than noise. Quickly, taking advantage of the lapse in thrashing, Dhalvasha rose and retrieved gauze, wrapping it securely around the wounded area and tying it tight. He’d fashion it into a sling later as the more pressing matter was her leg. Another examination to the bruise forming around the bump revealed he had mistaken her leg for broken, when it was simply sprained and stung. Putting a hand to his head, Dhalvasha reminded himself that he should rest afterwards, if only to replenish his state of mind. She would need to stay off the leg for a week or two, nothing serious, and then could return to hunting…provided she took care of the arm and used a crossbow.
Sitting back from the huntress, now resting, Dhalvasha swallowed the excess blood in his mouth. He knew he’d find no wound where the blood had sprung from, that his body had warned him of his limits as a Hypnotist and he’d come dangerously close to crossing it. Perhaps some practice was in order, or some refining. He could not afford to become one of the hopeless, the lost, those empty minded creatures who had reached the edge of power and simply fallen off.
Taking a deep breath, and then another, Dhalvasha rose from the table and passed out of the Place of Purging. He needed a break from this, a place to concentrate solely on himself or his own studies.
He headed beneath Kalinor, the area directly below the city but well above the ground. It was quiet there, he knew, and perhaps he would find solace in that embrace of shadow.