Azira had never been in the infirmary. It was used for treating Avora and Endal so it was no surprise that the girl had never been there, being neither, and she'd never known anyone who'd spent time their either. Her mother was there now but nobody knew how long she'd be there.
The young girl hadn't seen her yet so she couldn't believe that her mother was going to die. Her mother was the other side of the curtain that separated the waiting area and the sick bay. The glassworker, Rysinna, and a healer were having a quiet but heated debate that the Yasi learned from overheard snatches of conversation was about her. She tried to block them out as she waited impatiently to see her mother. The Avora wouldn't be as badly injured as they'd said and the girl would know that when she saw her. They just didn't want her thinking that she'd definitely live. They were saying that so that she'd feel relief when she survived, that was all.
Her thoughts weren't making sense.
Everything in the room seemed to draw her attention, I training details into her brain. The hooks by the door for hanging things up. The bed in the waiting area for visitors who wanted to stay with loved ones. The reading material on the stone coffee table. The very smell of the place would stick in her mind there after, the scent of medicine and medicinal plants, as well as the sounds of coughing and moaning, constant moaning like an animal in pain. It was unbearable.
The Yasi covered her ears and closed her eyes, hoping that the rest of her senses would shut down too, block it all out. Maybe it was all a dream, a surreal and horrible dream. It couldn't be real but yet everything was so vivid, so detailed, and Azira knew there was no way that it could be a dream.
A voice calling her name seemed to beckon her to return to the harsh reality of what was happening and she was reluctant to open her eyes, admit that it was real. A comforting hand on her shoulder forced her to open her eyes as she was guided in the direction of the curtain. A Chiet nurse smiled sympathetically, a stone bowl in her hands as she pulled back the curtain and ushered them through to the sick bay.
The stone bowl stuck in the girl's thoughts as she tried to work out why the nurse was holding it. She needn't have bothered as the answer presented itself. The bed she was steered towards contained a bandaged figure with scarlet flesh visible through the gaps, the bandages stained a dirty colour. The thing was moaning endlessly, the sound she'd heard from the other room. Azira gazed at the thing not understanding until the head turned slowly and with obvious effort, blue eyes met hers and blistered, bleeding lips mouthed her name.
Nausea came with comprehension and she promptly vomited into the stone bowl thrust in front of her.
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