Aniska had turned to finish clearing the table, as Mara cooperatively went to fetch the kettle. As the boy was pouring its simmering contents into the basin of melted snow water, she set two platters and a bowl down on the counter top. She had just picked one up in order to put its leftover contents into a container that could better hold it for storage and use the next day, when first Mara asked his question, and then, almost right on its heels, the accident happened. She was slowed in her reactions by the surprise of it all, and so she had only turned to look at him, as he crammed his fingers into his mouth and bit down on them. Aniska was no healer, but she was already moving towards him, when Mara skittered away to fetch the dropped kettle, once again forgetting in his upset state to take care and getting another burn, though he jerked his hand away much more quickly this time. He fumbled for his sleeve and got the offending vessel back on the shelf, but it was clear that he was hurt, both physically and with embarrassment. Aniska had held back from interfering for it had all happened so quickly and Mara seemed so intent upon rectifying his tiny fumble that she did not want to press in. But as he repeated his apology – twice – she went to his side, taking his hand gently but firmly in hers, and pulling it forward to give it the briefest examination. The pads of several of the fingertips, the inner surfaces of those long, thing fingers, and a small bit of the top part of the palm were angrily red. Calmly, she led Mara to the far end of the counter, by the fireplace, to a large tub of melted snow water which sat on the floor. It had been from this larger container that the basin of water on the counter top had been drawn. Gently she dunked his hand in the still cool water, as they knelt together on the floor. Her arm then wrapped about his painfully thin shoulders and she pulled him close, as a mother would with an injured child. She rested her cheek very briefly against the fuzzy side of his head, and said softly, “We don’t have to talk of this tonight, if you don’t feel ready, Mara. I didn’t know your mother intimately, not as very good friends, no. But what I have to share, I will, when you wish it.” She gave him a little squeeze of reassurance. “It is hard, to grow up without a mother. It must bring both pain and happiness to you to think of her.” |