altusimperius (
altusimperius) wrote in
faderift2020-02-03 11:20 pm
[open] stop, drop
WHO: Benedict and whomever
WHAT: LE GRIPPE
WHEN: Guardian
WHERE: DUNGEON (and possibly elsewhere)
NOTES: cw for illness I s'pose
WHAT: LE GRIPPE
WHEN: Guardian
WHERE: DUNGEON (and possibly elsewhere)
NOTES: cw for illness I s'pose
I. (one thread please) It was bound to happen eventually, and one might even find it a little impressive that it took this long: the illness floating around Kirkwall has somehow tracked its way to the Gallows dungeon, where it has befallen the solitary prisoner like a sackful of so many bricks.
It started out as a shudder, a sneeze, a cough one day, and over the course of 24 hours has rendered Benedict a shivering pile of blankets on the stone floor, burning with fever, and barely able to take a breath without coughing it violently back out.
To be fair, sometimes he just looks like that. But it's been a day or so and he hasn't touched his food (which he's usually so good about), and it won't take long for the right person to notice that he can't even seem to wake up properly, let alone acknowledge their presence.
He will absolutely die if left in this state. There those who are, no doubt, perfectly comfortable with that.
II. The Sickroom
Camped out on a bed in the chapel sickroom for the foreseeable future, Benedict is awake and available to interaction with healers, other sickies, or those on official business who don't mind getting coughed on. There's a lot of that happening.
III. Relocation
There was a letter, and there were orders, and one day when Benedict is a little more conscious and less feverish, guards arrive to escort him back downstairs.
He'd suspected that this would happen, and is prepared to go quietly, without a word of complaint or a muscle moved out of place. He's still weak and slow as he's shuffled out of the infirmary, but that seems to be that.
Anyone in or near the open windows of the cells will, shortly thereafter, hear the sounds of panicked, wailing protest and a futile struggle, which is muffled efficiently behind the closing of a heavy door.
Future visitors will find the prisoner curled on his side by the brazier in the center of the isolation cell, staring distantly into the coals and moving only when he has to cough.

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"What can I do for you, Colin," she says.
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They can get permission, or forgiveness, once Benedict is somewhere warm and under constant care.
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They'll have to sort out the logistics of how she's meant to help move him when both of them are rather significantly taller than her later. She arrives at speed, skirts gathered up to give her more room to move quickly. She frowns when she makes note of who the patient is.
"Right then, you get him on his feet. Find out when he's had his most recent dose of magebane. I'll inform the guard he's under my supervision so we're not all of us arrested just yet."
And they're definitely going to have to tell the division heads sooner rather than later.
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"Come on. Try to stand up. Can you do that for me?"
His legs brace, ready to bear as much of the prisoner's weight as he can. If he can't stand, he'll have to enlist the guard's help and possibly fetch a stretcher.
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"Good, you've got him upright at least." She gestures to the guard, "Ser, grab his other arm, if you please. There's a sick room off the Chapel we can use. Take him there at once, I'll get the fire started." She turns on her heel without waiting to see if any of them are actually doing as she bids, setting off up the stairs while muttering to herself the list of things they'll need.
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"Stay here," Colin tells him, "just guard the door. We can find the key in a moment."
The guard nods and steps outside. Colin turns to Benedict and begins assessing him further, particularly sitting him up to have a listen to his lungs. It's easy for the grippe to become lung fever, especially when the patient has been in a cold, damp room. Medicines can help the body reduce phlegm, but the diagnosis will prove which will be most effective. His heart sinks as he hears fluid in the lungs.
"He's going to need steam and expectorants," he tells Sawbones. "I think it might already be lung fever. I didn't realize he could get worse so quickly. Yesterday, he just had the sniffles."
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It's so much warmer in here. A great deal of tension begins to leave Bene's body in shudders, held in for so long by trying to sleep on a stone floor in a damp room.
He actually falls unconscious sitting up, his head resting on Colin's shoulder.
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"I've got a bit from Darktown still. Juniper, some embrium and pine. Out of chilies though. Can you get him sorted while I fetch water?" No time to call someone else to do it and she trusts Colin more than enough to keep their patient managed while she's gone.
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Gently, he rests Benedict back on the stack of pillows, keeping him at an incline so he can breathe.
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It's only when they reach that point that Sawbones uses a little of the hot water to make tea for the two of them.
"Well," she says, grimly, "So much for hoping the whole mess would stay in Kirkwall."
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He rocks gently in his chair, gaze turning dull. "He's been in that cell for months. He had to weave a curtain out of straw to keep some of the chill out. He didn't want to ask for anything and I respected his wishes. Should I have insisted?"
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"You're a friend of his then," she says. It's not a question. "Suppose there's nothing wrong with respecting a friend's wishes, but as a healer, yes, you should have. Dungeons are cold and wet, blasted breeding ground for illness." If he's looking for absolution, he's asking the wrong person. She grimaces and takes a sip of her tea, "Still, I knew he was there and hadn't taken the appropriate precautions myself because he seemed hale enough. We were both careless."
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"He came very close to being executed," he says. "Any time I've mentioned him, people didn't want to listen, least of all Flint. I didn't want to push my luck or his. And..."
A soft sigh. "I was never acting as a healer. As his friend, I felt I was too close to the situation. I just want to know where to draw the line. Or if I can't separate my personal and professional lives, how to combine the two ethically."
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"I did go to Flint a few months ago, saying Benedict shouldn't stay in the cell, that if he wasn't going to be executed then something else needed to be done with him. I was essentially told he should be grateful for what he's got. And it's just...it's not the prisoner's gratitude that matters, nor even what he did, which obviously, was bad. But it's how we conduct ourselves as an organization. And leaving people in the cold and draft for months at a time, with no opportunity for exercise, until such a time as we stop being angry with them, then...acting like being confronted with this should keep him there for longer? I...I stopped confronting Flint about him because I was afraid it was hurting his chances. I don't actually know what kind of man Flint is, or if he'd be that spiteful. I just know that if he is, there's nothing I can say to him that will get Benedict in a better place, only things that will get him in a worse one."
It's a relief to have someone to say these things to, who will understand.
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Because the rest is complicated. "Haven't ever spoken to the man myself, but generally folk in power don't give a fuck about the well being of those below them. We wouldn't have places like Darktown if they did. If you're trying to appeal to them for the sake of Benedict as a person, then you're going about it wrong. Like as not he's not a person to them." She shrugs and takes a drink of her tea, "Either way, we'll have to speak to him now. I'll do it."
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"Thank you," he says. "Do we want to take shifts with him?"
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After she washes up. Grippe and lung fever weren't the same as the Taint, but old habits die hard.
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That he's required here doesn't mean his other patients should suffer for it.