Isat on my horse at the crossroads, dreading what came next, but unable to put it off any longer. “Akiko, I’m sorry, but we’re stopping in Whitehall before we travel to Saratoga Springs Depot.”
Akiko’s scowl deepened. “But you promised!”
I bit back my response because she was right; I had promised. Days earlier, in a moment of desperation, I’d dangled the lure of her own art supplies as a bribe. I swallowed, trying to ignore the guilt curdling in my gut, and the ever-increasing throb in my leg. “A quick detour, and then we’ll continue to the depot. Bring Lady back, this is the turn.”
When Akiko didn’t move her horse, my remaining patience evaporated. “Fine. Enjoy your stay here on the road. I’m going to Whitehall.” To prove it, I kicked Oxide and yanked on Magnesium’s lead rope, turning them onto the narrow side route. My chest tightened, and shame flooded me as my horse grunted in discomfort, his ears twitching. My leg also protested the kick, sending waves of pain rolling up my calf.
This was not my finest moment.
As my horses clattered over the broken pavement, I tilted my head, listening for Lady’s distinctive shuffling gait. If Akiko didn’t follow, I’d have to turn back, and dusk was already approaching.
The road swept to the left, and I used the bend as an excuse to glance behind. Lady plodded after us, her rider drooping and tear-stained. I slumped as the tension drained from me, but even though Akiko had done what I wanted, this interaction dragged at me.
Each parental mistake I made stayed with me, coalescing into an ever-growing knot of remorse. The failures ate at my core, each memory a bruised apple with spots of rotten flesh for my fingers to sink into. They left me hollow, a man-shaped husk of paternal failure.
Was this normal?
In life, I’d made mistakes, but out of all my misguided decisions, I had not expected to regret adopting Akiko. Even now, I dreaded facing her and her disappointment, hated causing the bruised look in her eyes. Would I return to make a different decision given the chance?
The trouble was, though I was barely twenty, I’d taken responsibility for the welfare and wellbeing of another person. And I’d done it with the same nonchalance I agreed to small improvements involving my art. But this time, instead of improving a life, I was tearing one apart. In the weeks since we’d left Wakefield, Akiko had transformed from a thoughtful, precocious eight-year-old into a sullen, scowling creature. Where had my sweet girl gone?
It galled me that I was failing at fathering Akiko.
In the past, I’d
succeeded at everything I’d tried, and to nurture and protect a child had seemed a simple task. Yet despite my efforts, my best intentions fell flat again and again.
More than anything, I wished to be a good father, so this time, like every time before, I promised I’d try harder to keep my patience. In time, with enough effort, I’d find the magic combination of words and actions, and Akiko would agree without an argument. But even as I resolved to do better, a tiny voice in my mind asked the question I hadn’t wanted to consider when I’d adopted her.
What did I know about child-rearing?
My parents had abandoned me into the abbey system when I was four, to be raised by the masters at Popham Abbey.
My parents.
Would I finally find them when we reached Toronto Depot? Each year on family day at the abbey, I’d hoped they’d show up like the other boys’ parents did, but no one ever came. Even when I graduated, there was no word, and the masters either couldn’t, or wouldn’t, tell me anything. It’s why I’d set out on this journey after graduating from Popham Abbey. It was why I’d been traveling and met Josephine, Ben, Genevie, and Akiko… and it was why Akiko and I traveled together now.
I needed answers, and my birth parents could be in Toronto Depot.
Without warning, Akiko galloped her mare past us. Charcoal streaked after the girl, his face set and grim. Oxide shied to the side, cutting off Magnesium and nearly unseating me. By the time I’d balanced myself and settled the horses, my daughter, her horse, and my dog were out of sight.
“The masters would have never allowed behavior like that,” I muttered. In truth, the masters had not dealt with a child such as Akiko—they only trained boys as artists.
Oxide’s ear flicked backward toward me, and I patted his neck, my leg throbbing in protest as my weight shifted. My stomach knotted as I pictured her mutinous face, the outcome of yet another parental mistake.
Perhaps the larger mistake had been in leaving Wakefield without the others. After learning my painting titled Home might depict Toronto Depot, I’d been eager to depart. I’d worried only about the weather and avoiding Talbot’s next trap.
Talbot.
I still couldn’t believe the community of Newfane had let Talbot walk away before
we’d censured him for crimes committed under his watch.
Crimes like Whistler’s death.
A lump grew in my throat, and I swallowed. After three weeks, the hurt was still too fresh, the loss too recent. It was unreal to think I’d never watch him tease his wife or pull a perfect pie from the oven again.
Worse, somehow, losing Whistler had morphed into a terror of losing Akiko too. Since the battle in Wakefield, whenever she was out of sight, gusts of guilt and fear blew through my core.
Like now.
Anxiety gnawed at me, and I urged Oxide to hasten. He quickened, his head nodding rhythmically as we flowed over the cracked pavement. The clatter of hoofbeats disturbed the birds flitting in the trees, and their songs turned to calls of alarm as we passed.
We rounded the next bend too quickly, and Oxide stopped hard to avoid colliding with Lady, who stood in the middle of the road. Our abrupt halt threw me over Oxide’s neck, and although Akiko didn’t appear to notice the near miss, her mouth twitched.
I gritted my teeth and pushed myself back into my saddle. “Nice riding.”
Her lower lip poked out as she glared at me. “All we do is ride.”
Since leaving Wakefield, I hadn’t allowed either of us the time to play or be creative. In the spirit of doing better, I reached for a compromise.
“Why don’t we stop early today? If you’ll work on your reading while I set up camp, I’ll show you a new sketch technique.”
She straightened, and though she feigned indifference, I could tell I had intrigued her. “Can we stop early enough for you to work on Home?”
“I haven’t looked at it since we left Wakefield.” The drive to work on the painting had faded after I’d learned it depicted Toronto Depot’s skyline.
She watched me, her dark eyes wary. “If you finish it, we’ll have someplace to go, and we can stop traveling.”
I shifted, trying to ease the throbbing in my leg. “We’ll see. The first one to find a campsite wins.”
Her eyes narrowed. “Wins what?”
I dropped my reins, lifting my arms in a grand gesture. “Naming rights.”
My attempt at
humor worked, and though she sighed, she urged her mare forward.
“Naming rights and the best seat by the fire,” I said in a tone of defeat.
Akiko flashed her gap-toothed grin, her disgruntlement falling away like dust. “I come up with better names.”
My heart lightened at her change of attitude. “What? You didn’t like Mud Pit?”
“Nope. Or Mosquito Pit, or Tree Pit, or—”
“Cherry Pit was a brilliant campsite, and we found cherries to eat.”
Akiko rolled her eyes. “You put them on the tree!”
“Still counts.” I grinned. “I hope we camp at Strawberry Pit tonight.”
A warm breeze carrying the scent of wild roses and marshy ground ruffled Oxide’s mane as we continued down the empty road.
“I’d rather have Ben’s Cooking Pit.” Her shoulders drooped. “I miss them.”
“Me too,” I said, scanning the roadsides for a clearing. “I wish they were here.”
Akiko sighed again. “Ben’s stories. And his cooking.”
Charcoal pounced on a green-and-brown mink frog, and though I winced at the squeak and slurping sounds that followed, my stomach growled too. “I long for Ben’s cooking more than you do.”
“I miss it more!” She toyed with Lady’s mane. “They will come, right?”
Akiko’s plaintive expression twisted my heart. “They will.”
“How do you know?” Tears glimmered in her eyes.
I understood her worries—I’d grown up yearning for my birth family.
“They’re coming because we’re family. Even separated, family sticks together.” Until I had met Ben, Josephine, and Genevie, I hadn’t experienced the compassion, empathy, and emotional support a family could provide.
Spotting a suitable clearing, I cleared my throat. “Bet I’ll find a campsite first.”
Akiko squealed and trotted forward. “No, I found one first!”
I pretended I hadn’t seen it and stared the wrong way. “Way too brushy.”
She pointed. “No,
the other side!”
I spun Oxide in a circle, lifting Magnesium’s lead to keep it from wrapping around us. “This side is also too thick.”
Akiko sighed. “You’re thick. Come on, Charcoal.”
I followed the girl and the dog off the road into a meadow, assessing the tree line for a suitable campsite. The mid-May grass was a lush blanket of emerald green with no hint yet of the seed pods and Magnesium knickered as he waded through the blades.
“Great find,” I said, dismounting. The motion reignited the throbbing pain in my left calf, but I swallowed my groan before she noticed.
Akiko’s brow wrinkled as she pointed. “Is that thing pretending to be a tree?”
The curious object resembled a tree. It had a trunk pieced together in sections, its seams made more obvious by rusting rivets. The lower branches stuck out about two meters from the trunk and incrementally shortened, giving it a conical shape. However, the metal spikes jutting from the top ruined the illusion.
I shrugged, tying Magnesium to a sturdy branch. “Before the world died, people built a lot of strange things. Why did you notice it?”
“It’s too regular.” She turned toward me. “Trees don’t look like that.”
I glanced past her at the strange object. “Why not?”
She cocked her head. “Trees are full of happy mistakes.”
I treasured these glimpses of how she observed the world. “Happy mistakes. I like that. I’ve made an unhappy mistake today, didn’t I?”
Akiko bit her lip. “I want to go to the depot.”
“I know, and I’m sorry about the delay. After Whitehall, we’ll go straight there. One night here in Charcoalpitt, then onto Whitehall, then straight to the depot.”
Her lips twitched. “This is Charcoalville.”
“Didn’t we stay in Charcoalville last night?” I pulled the packsaddle from Magnesium.
Akiko dropped to the grass, giggling as Charcoal nuzzled her neck. “Yesterday we stayed in Charcoalton.”
“My mistake,” I said, unsaddling Oxide. “Tell me, what lesson are you working on?”
She shrugged. “They’re all the same. Squiggles and smudges.”
I chuckled, taking Lady’s reins from Akiko. “Letters and numbers. Tell you what, you come recite your letters while I set up, and I’ll help with your reading.”
Akiko sighed. “Do artists really need to learn how to read?”
“Yes,” I lied.
After weeks of travel, the routine had become second nature again, so I listened with half an ear as I unsaddled Lady. I’d nearly finished before my mind registered the discrepancy. “Wait, what?”
Akiko shrugged. “What?”
I crossed my arms. “Repeat those last letters.”
She rolled her eyes. “O, P, R, S, T, W, Y, Z.”
“You’re missing a few.”
She rocked back and forth, hugging herself. “No one uses them, so I left them out.”
I laughed. “How do you spell quiet?”
She stilled, staring left. “K-Y-E-T?”
“Q-U-I-E-T,” I said, unfolding the tarpaulin.
She kicked a rock, frowning. “It’s too hard for me. Maybe I’m dumb.”
I glanced at her as I uncoiled the rope. “You’re not dumb. It is hard, especially when you learn it later.” I tossed the rope over a branch and pulled the canvas up to create a shelter. Akiko held one end while I tied off the other.
“How old were you?”
I shrugged, securing her end to an exposed root. “Five?”
Akiko played with the donkey’s long ears. “See? Even a baby can learn it.”
“You’re not exactly elderly.”
“Will you ever paint Sir Donkey? He’s the only one without a name.”
I winced as the heavy pannier banged against my injured calf. “If you tell me what pigments you’d use, we can name him right now and I won’t even need to paint him.”
Akiko wrinkled her forehead. “That’s why Genevie calls him brownishgreyishyellowishblack?”
I laughed and carried the last of the tack under the shelter. Akiko hadn’t moved, so I lay on the crushed grass next to her, my head pounding. “Let’s watch clouds.”
She wriggled closer to me. “I see a rabbit.”
The cloud
resembled a hare. “R-A-B-B-I-T.”
“D-U-M,” she said, showering me with dandelion fluff.
“D-U-M-B,” I corrected.
The clouds formed and reformed shapes as they scudded across the cobalt sky. Dragon, waterfall, horseshoe.
Perhaps I had gone about this wrong. “Mouse, there are twenty-six letters in the alphabet.”
“Only if you keep them all,” she said in a matter-of-fact tone.
I grinned. “Twenty-six letters, assuming you keep each one. The letters get mixed into different combinations to make each word, like how we mix pigments to create an infinite rainbow of colors.”
She rolled to her side and propped her head on her hand. “Letters are like pigments?”
“Sure. What happens if you put a smear of blue and a smear of yellow on a canvas?”
Her face tightened, as if the question was a trick. “You get a smear of yellow and a smear of blue.”
“Correct. What about if you allow them to overlap?”
She sat up. “You get green where they touch.”
“Why don’t they stay blue and yellow?” I asked, turning toward her.
She chewed her lip before answering. “You said they bounce light different when they get mixed up.”
I nodded. “Exactly right. We recognize green even though the pigments are still blue and yellow. Now, the letter T makes a ‘teh’ sound. What sound does an H make?”
Her eyes brightened. “Huh.”
“And E?”
“Eee,” she said, enjoying the game.
I picked a long stalk of grass and tickled her nose with it. “Put them together and you get the word ‘the’ even though it’s spelled T-H-E.”
She puffed out her cheeks. “Is there a color wheel for reading?”
I shook my head. “Nope, you learn it the hard way like I did, but once you get it, it sticks forever.” To chase away her crestfallen expression, I stood, trying not to wince. “Let’s be letters.”
Akiko sprang up. “How?”
“A.” I demonstrated, standing with my feet apart and my hands together above my head. She followed my lead, grinning.
“B!” I shouted.
She crooked one leg
in a lowercase b before shouting, “C!”
We both bent, but where she bent forward, I tried curving sideways.
She scowled. “You’re like a floppy I.” When I copied her posture, she nodded. “D!”
We went through the rest, laughing. This time, she didn’t skip any letters, shrieking with glee as I fell over while trying to contort into an S. After Z, we flopped on the grass. Blades poked through my hair, tickling my ears, but I ignored them, too lazy to move. The compromise had worked; not only had it avoided another squabble, but Akiko was more like her old self.
“I’m hungry,” she said.
Charcoal squirmed between us, wedging himself upside down, panting happily.
“Me too. Your turn to cook,” I said.
Akiko tried to poke me, but Charcoal’s waving legs blocked her. “Get up, old man.”
“Nope. I’ll live right here.”
She giggled. “On the ground?”
“On the ground.” I settled deeper, breathing in the scent of crushed clover. “It’s very comfortable.”
“Get up!” Akiko panted as she pull my arm.
I sat up suddenly, tumbling her backward, my spirits rising as she collapsed into giggles. “You go pick our meal and find the pot.”
She scrambled to her feet. “Okay.”
Charcoal trotted after her, his eyes bright at the mention of food.
As soon as she was distracted, I lifted my trouser leg. The wound on my left calf was angry and raw, the white cut surrounded by swollen, red skin.
In moments of quiet, the hiss of the knife as its blade sliced through my leg echoed across my mind’s canvas. Yet another reminder of what Talbot’s people had done.
“Great,” I muttered, gritting my teeth as I poked the wound. It oozed and the angry red lines extending laterally had deepened into a dioxazine purple. I’d clean it again after Akiko fell asleep, though I wasn’t sure my ministrations were helping. I knew little of healing because they’d trained us in literature, philosophy, and art, but skipped the standard apprenticeship training most young people received.
“Hey Mouse, bring the map over?” I called, rolling my trouser leg down.
After we spread it on the grass, Akiko traced her finger down the route we’d followed. “We’re here, right? All I could find for dinner was barley.”
I groaned dramatically. “Only barley?”
Whitehall was the nearest community, and at least a day away. After what happened in Wakefield, it felt safer to detour around unknown communities, but I needed a healer. Plus, unless we wanted to eat unadorned grain for a week, we needed supplies. Last, although I had misgivings, Akiko needed a break from traveling. “We’ll be there tomorrow,” I said, pointing at the map.
She frowned. “Whit- Whit-e-hall. Whit-e-hall?”
“Whitehall,” I said, sitting back.
Akiko’s eyes sparkled. “That’s how you spell white?”
“Mm.”
Her brow furrowed. “Always?”
I grinned. “Yes, always.”
“W-H-I-T-E,” she murmured, her expression pleased.
Charcoal put one foot on the map, and Akiko batted it away, giggling. “You can’t read.”
He glanced at me and I smiled with sympathy. “Even if you can read, you can’t read out loud, so she has you there.”
After they scampered off to find firewood, I stared at the map, uneasy. If the community of Whitehall refused to help us, we would be on our own. There were no other farmsteads or communities on the map between Whitehall and Saratoga Springs Depot.
Iretched over Oxide’s left shoulder, hoping Akiko wouldn’t notice. I didn’t want to alarm her, but the dull pain I’d been ignoring had grown to a roar. Not much came up; it had been hours since breakfast, and the sun was high in the sky. I spat and rinsed my bitter mouth.
Akiko, riding lead, continued to chatter. “The colors between the horizons are strange. Don’t you think it should be more gray than green?”
I shook my head to clear it. “What?”
Akiko twisted in her saddle. “Are you listening to me?”
“Yup.” I tried to smile.
She spun around to ride backward. “Are the flashes a memory, or is someone pushing the picture into your brain?”
I blinked. “Pushing the picture?”
Akiko sighed. “Are you remembering or being shown the picture?”
This conversation again.
I shrugged, naming pigments to marshal my patience. “When a flash comes, I add it to the painting.”
Akiko wrinkled her brow. “But you named the painting ‘Home,’ so it must be where you’re from.”
“Maybe. Or perhaps I’m seeing a vision of the future,” I said, shifting.
She nodded. “That would be nice. I’ve never had a home.”
Her words squeezed my heart. “Never?”
She shook her head. “My parents followed preacher after preacher, so my whole life has been on the road.” She sighed, turning around.
My shoulders drooped, head pounding and ears hot, so when Oxide moved to the left and bumped my calf, I groaned. My leg was so swollen I couldn’t even lace my boot this morning.
Akiko turned her head. “Did you say something?”
“No.” We needed to reach Whitehall before the infection in my leg spread any further.
When the road widened, Akiko made a kissing noise, loping her mare in a graceful circle before falling alongside me. “When are we stopping for lunch?”
I didn’t want to stop because I wasn’t sure I’d be able to get back on my horse if we did. “Don’t you want to reach Whitehall first?” I asked through gritted teeth. “We’d get a better lunch there.”
Her lower lip poked out. “I’m hungry now.”
I dug through my pommel bag, fishing out a small sack of roasted sunflower seeds. “Here, try these.”
She took the sack from me and peered inside. “What are they?”
“Sunflower seeds,” I said, swallowing my nausea. “They’re delicious.”
She put one in her mouth and crunched it tentatively.
I attempted a grin. “Split the seed open with your teeth and eat the middle.”
Akiko’s nose wrinkled. “What do I do with the shell?”
“Spit it out.”
She beamed, spitting the shell in my direction. “These are good.”
“Nice try.” My vision grayed, and I shook my head to clear it, then caught her expression. I needed to distract her. “Let’s play a spelling game.”
She frowned, squirming in her saddle.
To ease her worry, I explained the rules. “I’ll say a word and spell it. You rhyme my word, then spell yours.”
She pressed her lips together. “You start.”
Head pounding, I said, “Mop. M-O-P.”
Akiko frowned. “Top?”
I nodded. “Spell it.”
“T-O-P,” she said in a small voice.
I shifted. “Correct. Stop, S-T-O-P.”
“Crop! K-R-O-P,” she countered.
I made a buzzing noise. “Nope, crop starts with a C.”
Akiko slapped her forehead. “Fine, smarty pants. New word.”
“Cat. C-A-T.”
She brightened. “Bat. Same as cat with a B.”
“Brat. Same as bat with an R,” I said, chuckling.
Akiko rolled her eyes. “Fat. F-A-T.”
I opened my mouth, but no words came. Head pounding, I shook my head.
“Gnat, at, hat, that, flat, chat. I win,” she crowed.
I tried to smile, focusing on the rhythmic clip-clip-clop of the horse’s hooves striking the ancient pavement.
“Are you okay? Your forehead is wet.” Akiko’s voice sounded far away.
My vision grayed again. “I’m not well.”
She quieted. “Then… we’re traveling to Whitehall for a healer?”
There was no point in keeping the truth from her now. I nodded, fighting to keep my gorge from rising.
“Good, because your face is the color of a tube of yellow-gray.” She clucked to her mare, and the horses quickened. “What do you think? About an hour?”
“I hope so.” My voice was thin, and heat poured from my ears.
She stared at me. “Can we fix you with art? Like how you healed Josephine’s arm?”
“No, this is more
than skin deep.”
She evaluated me, her face serious. “I’m taking your reins. You concentrate on staying on.” Before I could protest, she reached down for Oxide’s rein. “Tie Magnesium to your saddle.”
As soon as I’d complied, she moved to the lead, squeezing her mare into a slow jog. Oxide quickened, Magnesium’s lead tightening across my thigh until he matched our pace.
“Wow,” Akiko said, as we passed an ancient farmhouse.
A tree had, long ago, broken through the dwelling’s roof, so it appeared as though someone had built the structure around the tree. As the smaller buildings from Before had long since rotted and collapsed, we rarely found such reminders outside of filling stations and depots. Why had they used such flimsy materials to build their dwellings?
“Matthew? Matthew,” Akiko repeated in an urgent voice.
We’d stopped moving. Confused, I shook my head, peering around. “Is this Whitehall?”
She smoothed her hair. “Sit up. They’re coming.”
A man with close-cropped hair reached us first. “Heya, Travelers. Welcome to Whitehall. I’m Atticus Rush, the administrator. How can we help you?”
Akiko jerked her thumb at me. “This is Matthew, and I’m Akiko, his wart.”
“Ward,” I corrected, my voice hoarse. I coughed to clear it. “Can we see your healer?”
“Ah.” The administrator stepped backward. “Are you ill?”
I shook my head. “Leg infection.”
Rush’s expression cleared. “Wait here, and I’ll get someone to help you down.”
I nodded gratefully. When he left, I slumped forward, resting my chest against Oxide’s neck. “Thank you, Mouse.”
She dropped to the ground, stretching. “You fell asleep hours ago.”
Hours? “You must be hungry,” I said, glancing at her.
She shook her head. “I ate all the sun seeds.”
“Sunflower.” Several people approached, so I straightened. “Remember, don’t let anyone see you sketching while we’re here.”
She rolled her eyes.
“I know. You tell me every time.”
With help, I dismounted, but my left leg nearly buckled when it touched the ground. Supported between two women, I hopped toward a faded red dwelling with a deep, covered porch. We struggled onto the porch, sapping my strength. Exhausted, I leaned against the door frame while they knocked.
An older man dressed entirely in black opened the door. “Yes?”
“Tuckett, Administrator Rush asked us to bring this man to you,” said a woman.
Tuckett stared at me, unsmiling. “Put him in there,” he said, pointing to a door on the left.
I hopped into the room and leaned against a long table, nodding my thanks to the women. They scurried out of the dwelling, closing the door behind them.
Tuckett crossed his arms. “What’s wrong with you?”
Where was Akiko? Distracted, I peered through the windows. “My leg.”
He didn’t move. “Where are you from?”
I wasn’t sure how to answer his question. “Where am I coming from, or where did I grow up?”
He blinked, waiting.
I shivered. “I grew up in Popham Abbey, but we’ve come from Wakefield.”
His posture softened. “You’re an artist? Give me your leg.”
I tried to roll my trouser leg up, but it snagged on my swollen calf. “I’ll have to take them down.” With difficulty, I stood and unbuckled my trousers, sliding them to the floor. I kicked off my left boot and slid my pant leg over my foot. My calf throbbed as another wave of exhaustion slid over me.
Tuckett brought a tray to the table. “Sit back.”
As I slid backward on the table, Charcoal streaked past the window, a stick in his mouth.
“Nasty. Did someone take a saw to your leg?” Tuckett poured a clear liquid into a
ceramic dish and the scent of alcohol filled the room, stinging my nose.
“I…” I stopped. Should I admit I injured my leg during a battle?
He dabbed at the wound with the saturated cloth. “Go on.”
I hissed, gritting my teeth. “People attacked the community we were in.”
His expression remained unchanged, so I shook my head and chewed on my cheek until his lips flattened. “You should have kept it cleaner.”
My eyes watered. “We’ve been traveling.”
“We?”
“My ward and me. She’s—” I craned my neck, but she wasn’t visible. Unease flickered through me. “She’s outside.”
Tuckett shrugged. “She’ll be fine. They like kids, these people.” His words spiked my adrenaline.
These people. They like kids. Was he trying to tell me something?
When Tuckett pressed a square of linen near the swelling at the top of my calf, I groaned.
His eyes flickered with sympathy. “I’ll need to drain this abscess.”
I nodded miserably.
He patted my shoulder. “Lay back. It’s better if you don’t watch.”
I complied, shivering as Tuckett moved around the room, gathering supplies. The cleaning had set my leg on fire; how much worse could it get? “Have you lived here long?”
“In Whitehall? Yes, though most here are new.” He laid a blanket over me, leaving only my infected leg uncovered.
“Where did everyone else go?” I asked, propping myself up on one elbow.
Tuckett shrugged. “Some left to live with family. Some left in the middle of the night, saying nothing. These people didn’t bring a healer when they arrived, so they’ve largely left me alone and have pushed none of their nonsense toward me. Here we go,” he said. “On three.”
I lay back again as something cold touched my leg.
Tuckett gripped my ankle with his left hand. “One, two—”
A searing pain shot down my leg, followed by the sensation of hot liquid running over my skin.
His grip tightened. “One more time. One—”
This time, he cut on one. I convulsed, but relief immediately followed the pain, tempering the hurt. A putrid stench, like sweaty feet bathed in rotten egg, filled the room. ...