Blaedergil's Host C.M. Simpson (first e reader .TXT) đ
- Author: C.M. Simpson
Book online «Blaedergil's Host C.M. Simpson (first e reader .TXT) đ». Author C.M. Simpson
âNo,â I tried, but I felt more tired than the day seemed to warrant.
âYouâve lost a lot of blood,â the voice said, and I wanted to say something sarcastic in return.
Still couldnât get my voice to obey.
The face lifted away, and I felt hands under my shoulders, and around my legs.
No! I wanted to shout, but I couldnât make a sound, had to fight to keep my eyes open.
Mackâs hand twitched, his arm shaking as though he was trying to raise it, and I knew he was making a grab for me, even as he failed to move an inch. One of the men lifting me noticed, and laughed.
âYouâll be together, soon enough,â he said, and it was more mockery than comfortâwhich was what made the sudden flare of light at my wrist, and shattering pain that followed, almost funny.
I might have laughed, if I hadnât blacked out completely.
9âHard Negotiations
The clansmen werenât amusedâor so I discovered when I woke up.
Personally, Iâd been hoping to see Doc... or Mack. Where was Mack? I twisted my head, taking in the almost comforting familiarity of the med-box walls. Even so, I needed out.
Why did I hurt so much?
âMack?â
The seals hissed, as the med-box opened, and a vaguely familiar face looked in. It wasnât Mackâs.
âYouâre awake.â
âNo, Iâm dreaming, and youâre a fucking nightmare,â I retorted, unable to explain why I didnât like him.
He scowled.
âGet out,â he snapped, and I laughed.
Damn. My chest hurt, and I wasnât getting anywhere, let alone âoutâ.
âYou and whose army?â I challenged, and then watched as the med-box morphed around me.
So much for this being a rural world with limited technology.
It made me wish Iâd had time to do a bit of reading, before weâd gone on our âoh-so-simpleâ delivery run.
âWhereâs Mack?â I asked, pushing into a sitting position, and sliding down onto the floor, as soon as the sides folded down.
Or, at least, thatâs what Iâd meant to do. I got the sitting up part okay, and swung my legs over the side, but I stopped when my left hand hit the mattress. My fingers touched the sheet, but something was wrong. Something felt wrong. Actually, Iâm not sure âfeltâ is the right word for it. I glanced down, and then I froze, gripping the edge of the bed as the room dipped and swirled, and I closed my eyes.
The man didnât move an inch. He didnât answer me, either. He just stood there, and waited, watching as I opened my eyes, and looked at the hand on the end of my arm. When Iâd adjusted to the sight of it, I looked up at his face, and then back down at the five metal digits Iâd clenched around the sheet. I wondered what would happen if I punched Mack with this... and then I remembered, and turned back to my silent companion.
âWhereâs Mack?â
âYouâre not going to ask what happened to your hand?â he asked, and I closed my eyes, again, swallowing hard against the fast-rising bile.
âMack,â I repeated, gritting my teeth, and ordering my stomach to keep its contents right where they were. âWhere is he?â
When he did not reply, I opened my eyes, and looked up at him.
This time, though, he was not alone. A doctor, dressed in the simple whites of doctors the universe over stood beside himâand I decided that this was not going to fly.
âMack,â I said. âWhere is Mack? The man I was with. My boss.â
I looked from one of them to the other, and then back again. When they did not respond, I pushed myself off the edge of the bed, and let my feet hit the floor. That almost ended in disaster.
I stumbled forward, and ended up running into the man who had woken me. He hesitated, obviously considering the idea of letting me fall, but I reached up and grabbed his shoulder with my unfamiliar hand, and gripped it tight to steady myselfâand then I squeezed, the vibration of bones shifting beneath my fingers running up my arm.
I laid my other hand on his other shoulder and forced my body to straighten up.
âMack,â I repeated, and watched his mouth open in pain.
Beside him, the doctorâs mouth dropped open, mirroring his masterâs shock, as horror wrote itself across his face.
âLet go.â
As an order delivered by someone hurting that much, it wasnât bad. I managed a grin, and gripped tighter. The sharp punch of pain in my gut came as a complete surprise, and my knees folded. I tried to hold on, but I just couldnât.
âPut her back in a tank, and speed up the process,â said the man whoâd greeted me, âand make sure her boss is restrained when I visit. That attitude has to come from somewhere.â
I was still smiling, when they put me under. Maybe Iâd get some answers when I woke up, next time. Yeah... and maybe Mack would be there, and Iâd be back on board the Marie, and Doc Oskar would be doing his very best impression of being upset.
One out of three was more than I had any right to expect.
âMack,â I said, when I was awake, and free of the tank, once more, and I took a very shaky step towards him.
âEasy there,â he said, when movement alerted me to the others in the room.
âEasy,â he repeated, taking the towel from the approaching medicâs hands, and passing it to me, before guiding me over to the san unit at one side of the tank.
He turned to me.
âClean up, and get dressed. Iâm sure these âgentlemenâ, wonât mind waiting.â
That last sentence was directed more to the well-dressed men standing on the opposite side of the room, than to me. Iâd like to say that having a metal hand took me by surprise, again, but it didnât. Somewhere in my sleep, my brain had assimilated the facts, and decided it could handle having a new hand as opposed to not having one, at all. Maybe Mack
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