leander (
sarcophage) wrote in
faderift2020-02-11 10:46 pm
Entry tags:
closed; i get eaten by the worms
WHO: Benedict, Colin, Leander
WHAT: grippe club for men
WHEN: now-ish
WHERE: Gallows Chapel, a side room reserved for early quarantine
NOTES: gross. (if you want a starter, ask.)
for benedict;
Perhaps Benedict slept through the arrival, or perhaps he witnessed it. He might even have tried to say hello, and found his neighbour unresponsive, either too ill to acknowledge him or unwilling to expend what little energy he had for the sake of being polite. Now, though...
Now, should Benedict turn to see the cot newly installed some feet away, he will find Leander's face likewise turned toward him, strangely flushed and bloodless, heavy-lidded eyes fixed in a bleary stare. Pale lips parted just slightly. Sweat-dampened curls dark on his forehead. Thin inside the loose sleeves of his linen, most of his body a few peaks and valleys beneath the infirmary blanket, and utterly listless.
One may forgive him for assuming the worst.
for colin, after benedict is removed;
—The other nurse, meanwhile, will be given no opportunity to think the worst as long as Leander is awake, for he keeps himself stoic, blandly arranged in repose and lacking expression, following the young man with only his eyes. In contrast, he looks boyish in sleep, lacking some indefinable tension beneath his skin, with only a slight crease between the eyebrows to belie his peaceful rest.
Or seeming rest. He has ample eyelashes to disguise a pair of watchful slits.
WHAT: grippe club for men
WHEN: now-ish
WHERE: Gallows Chapel, a side room reserved for early quarantine
NOTES: gross. (if you want a starter, ask.)
for benedict;
Perhaps Benedict slept through the arrival, or perhaps he witnessed it. He might even have tried to say hello, and found his neighbour unresponsive, either too ill to acknowledge him or unwilling to expend what little energy he had for the sake of being polite. Now, though...
Now, should Benedict turn to see the cot newly installed some feet away, he will find Leander's face likewise turned toward him, strangely flushed and bloodless, heavy-lidded eyes fixed in a bleary stare. Pale lips parted just slightly. Sweat-dampened curls dark on his forehead. Thin inside the loose sleeves of his linen, most of his body a few peaks and valleys beneath the infirmary blanket, and utterly listless.
One may forgive him for assuming the worst.
for colin, after benedict is removed;
—The other nurse, meanwhile, will be given no opportunity to think the worst as long as Leander is awake, for he keeps himself stoic, blandly arranged in repose and lacking expression, following the young man with only his eyes. In contrast, he looks boyish in sleep, lacking some indefinable tension beneath his skin, with only a slight crease between the eyebrows to belie his peaceful rest.
Or seeming rest. He has ample eyelashes to disguise a pair of watchful slits.

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And that's when he notices he has company. He gives a little start, whispering "Leander," as he does-- and if he didn't know any better, if he couldn't see that the man is breathing, he'd think him already dead.
Well, he's awake now.
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Leander, not quite a corpse, in trade for the sound of his own name, finally blinks. Closes his lips, too, into a thin smile. Turns his face away, back toward the ceiling, inoffensively. Clears his throat. At length, through the sleepy thickness of fever,
"I was surprised to see you in here."
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"So was I," he admits uneasily.
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"You don't look like you're dying." He chances a swallow, which seems fine, "I can't imagine why else," until it doesn't. Pardon him while he stubbornly weathers this round with his mouth closed.
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"I don't know... how long I've been here," he admits in a rasp, "...or how long you've been here." Come to think of it, he can only guess at what time it is right now.
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"Hardly a day. I wouldn't have, but Sister Sara insisted. Might've knocked me out and dragged me in here if I hadn't come peacefully."
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"She seems like that," Benedict murmurs. After a moment, he adds, "I'm sorry you got it too."
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"Why?"
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"...because it's miserable," he says, as if that should be obvious.
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So, instead: an aggrieved sigh, punctuated by one half-hearted cough.
"Yes. It is that."
they're friends now
It's possible he's just happy to have someone around.
He closes his eyes again, letting silence fall between them.
time for matching bracelets
And he looks peaceful, otherwise. Like a boyish, sweaty corpse recently laid to rest.
Which is exactly how he will feel whenever he wakes up.
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He takes it, reads it, and looks up at the guard, then around at the room, then back of the letter with a whispered "what?? why?"
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(Like Leander himself still might decide to do, out of spite for someone else entirely.)
There is no sympathy in his voice, and he may still be eyeballing the guard, when he asks, "What is it now?"
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"Nothing," he says in a defeated sigh, looking back to the letter and resting his head back down, his back turned to Leander. He doesn't get to lie there for long, however, as the guard, who only left for about five minutes, returns.
"Up," they say, "you're going back downstairs."
Bene regards them carefully, then slowly stands, still holding the blanket from the cot around his shoulders for warmth. He's not well yet by a long shot, but he promised himself he wouldn't make any fuss, and he still intends to hold to that.
Still gripping the letter in one hand, he almost looks at Leander as he's led out, but forces himself not to.
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But nothing very interesting has happened in those several minutes, which by now are beginning to feel like several hours, so he gives up by way of staring openly until Colin notices. Or until he interrupts his own silent scrutiny with a few pathetic, wheezing coughs, hardly stifled by his closed mouth.
Bah.
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"How are you feeling?"
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"Ill."
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"Exactly as you should, with the grippe turning into a robust winter lung fever. But we'll nip that short in quick order if you keep rested and breathing in that steam. Let me know if there's anything that would make you more comfortable."
A slight shift in energy as he changes from healer to person.
"I have something for you." Without waiting, he stands and ventures toward the fabric-wrapped package he set aside earlier.
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Not at all true. He wants some very particular things, none of which are achievable in this location, in his present condition, nor with present company. It might sound like mere cantankerous opposition born of discomfort, were he not calm in his delivery, which he is, as usual.
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"A peace offering. I tried to get your old box from Yseult, but I had no luck. So I went shopping in Kirkwall. I know it's not the same, but Lexie said you like things with esoteric value some months ago. So I found this."
He passes him a jet-black cigarette box, bog oak inlaid with enamel and intricately carved.
"There was an old man who'd died and they were selling his things, and that's where I found this. You get this kind of wood in Ferelden, and it's hundreds of years old. I also have cigarettes to go in it, and you can have them after you've been discharged from here."
He looks straight at Leander. "I did not steal the old one from you. I only told Athessa about it to get her opinion on what you might trade for it. If you throw this across the room, or..." a smile "...into the ocean, that's your prerogative. But it would be rather a shame."
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"Sell it," he answers, almost without delay. "A collector will pay more for this than you managed to scrape together. Sell it and pay the difference to the infirmary." Reedy, beginning to cough, "They could use it."
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"As a healer working for that infirmary, thank you. And as a person..." His head bobs. "I'm sorry I spoke to you the way I did."
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That he's sorry. He ought to be. Whether he's genuinely remorseful or only moved to the feeling by having been subjected to Flint's authority, Leander isn't inclined to care; it's well to know he himself won't be subject to any more moral pantomiming while he's confined to bed.
"You said it's lung fever?"
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"It's trying to be," he says lightly, "but we're working very hard to nip it in the bud. Speaking of, I have a tea I would like you to drink."
He picks up a cup he prepared earlier and goes to the fire. Aside from the large kettle producing herb-infused steam, there's a small pot of hot water. He uses a dipper to transfer some water to the cup before bringing it over.
"Once it's cooled enough for you to drink," he says, "I'd like you to drink it all. It will help your body balance the level of phlegm."
In addition to numerous herbs, added via a small fabric bag that keeps the loose leaves from escaping into the water, there is honey.
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"Very well. Thank you." The cup, he does take, after sitting himself up without audible complaint, and simply holds it for its warmth. "How awful is it? I'd like not to be surprised."
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"It's actually quite a pleasant tea, for most, but it may not be to your taste. Long pepper, ginger, lemon peel, elfroot, and honey. Would you like for me to cast on you?"
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Not that he doesn't need it, probably, but he is more tolerant of discomfort than some are apt to be. No nurse will hear him complain for the sake of complaint.
Clearing his throat, "So we're clear, while I harbour no resentment, it's unlikely we will become friends. If it's in your nature to try, fine. But in this case you ought to save yourself the disappointment."
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"I am not trying to be your friend," he says gently. "I am trying to get you well.
And you let me worry about my own energy."
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"I am asking you... to leave me alone."
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And he goes to his chair and picks up his book about medicine and continues reading it.