![]() Timestamp: 28th of Summer, 511 AV It was far, far too late for him to save the child. The little boy's corpse was found not by the Watch, but by the baker's apprentice delivering a box of fresh pastries to the Chapterhouse of the Order of Radiance. Gemma Swyft thought she was dreaming in the light of pallid dawn glowing off the steps of the chapterhouse. She wished she was dreaming as her mind attempted desperately to protect itself by chopping up the gruesome image right before her eyes. Old blood was not bright, crusted and dried like rust over the battered flesh of the naked body. It drizzled and splattered in patterns, swirling and then sharp, detailing the terrible application of glyphs carved into young flesh. There was a tangle of matted hair, its pale hue made dark with dirt and bodily fluids. And the hands, the hands. So small, so perfectly formed, were a mangled ruin with splinters of bone bared to the dawn. The skin was scraped and torn at the palms where the child's hands had been dragged down the Denval wall to leave bloody butterflies behind. This is what was laid at the feet of Hope. They called for the healer after Gemma's hysterical screams drew the attention of the chapterhouse and the Watch. They called for him, knowing it was too late for even a Priest of Rak'keli to do more than mourn. They needed his brain this time, not his healing hands. They needed him to take up that lost child, to clean him and cut him open all over again and try in an autopsy to hunt out clues, any clues, anything at all, to puzzle the pieces of this mystery together into a whole for justice. The sun was lowering now, spreading sinking light across the cliff the Opal Clinic resided upon. The clinic was empty, volunteers gone home for the day, no over night patients resting their way towards healing in the beds. The physician was on his knees in the back garden, the sleeves of his work shirt rolled to his elbows and hands filled with freshly turned earth as he patted the soil around the base of a transplanted rose bush. He had been out here for hours, ever since the temple acolytes had come to collect the child's cleaned corpse for rituals. He sought among the vegetables and herbs and the settling twilight surcease, afraid to find a bottle of degtine in the night alone, though he knew in the pit of an emptied stomach it might well be the only thing that could wash the sights and sounds, the smells and sickness out of his memory. That poor boy's body had conjured ghosts out of the physician, stirring in the mysteries of his unspoken past. |