DargonZine | Volume 19, Number 7 |
ilike walked toward the gates of Dargon Keep late on the last day
of the mid-year festival of Melrin. She watched wistfully as
well-dressed couples wandered happily away from the keep; she would have
loved to have attended the Melrin Ball as they had, but as the mere
apprentice of Rebecca the healer, she wasn't one of those who was
privileged enough to receive an invitation. Cavendish the scribe, whose
house she was watching for the sennight, had given her permission to use
his, but she had nothing fancy enough to wear and she knew she would
have been out of place. She would not have even come to the gates,
except that at the last mene she had been asked to perform a task.
Lilike turned away from the tall doors at the front of the keep and
went around to the servants' entrance on the south side. People were
going in and out of that small door with intent looks on their faces and
she had no trouble slipping through without comment. She made her way
between the passing servers, falling in behind one who carried two
buckets of water on a yoke. She followed him through the twisting
passageways and up a winding staircase into the ballroom.
In the ballroom, the festive decorations hung over the banquet
tables, which were still groaning with untouched food. The stage at one
end of the hall was empty of all but chairs, and Lilike wondered what
the musicians had played, and how elegant the dancers had looked moving
to it. The Melrin festivities were always lavish, even in the poorest
sections of town where she had grown up, and the Melrin Ball on the last
day of the holiday was always the most spectacular, but the nobles
celebrated in a fashion that Lilike couldn't even imagine.
She scanned the room and found her goal. "Oh, there you are,
Cereid!" Lilike called as she approached her friend. The young Olean
priest was looking uncomfortable as he stood there in his robes, and
Lilike knew why: he had a rash somewhere beneath them. Despite her
occupation as a healer, he had refused to show her the rash, even while
asking that she make a salve for it. She knew it was because of his
growing affection for her; it made him very self-conscious whenever they
were together. She had spent all day concocting the healing balm and had
come to deliver it.
"Do you have it?" he asked anxiously.
"Lovely to see you, too," Lilike said sarcastically, enjoying the
way it made Cereid squirm. Unable to keep a straight face, she grinned.
"Here it is. But I had to borrow this pot from Cavendish, so you can't
keep it. You'll have to put the salve on here."
Cereid began to stammer nervously, shaking his head, and then
Lilike saw his eyes widen. He pointed over her shoulder and said, "Over
there." She turned and saw a window alcove with a curtain bunched up to
one side. Cereid strode over to it and reached for the curtain. As
Lilike followed, he said, "Please keep an eye out while I apply this."
She nodded as he pulled the curtain closed.
Lilike turned her back to the curtain and stood there, trying to
look inconspicuous as servers passed back and forth across the hall,
cleaning up. In her boredom, her imagination turned to Cereid's hands
applying salve to his backside, where she assumed the rash was. The
image was pleasant, and she savored it. A smile burst onto her face when
she realized that she had started to imagine his hands on her backside
instead. She was interrupted from this thought when someone next to her
said, "Well, Tasia, once again a fruitless debate has cost us
celebration time."
The clearly heard response, "Sorry, Courtney, but you can be so
stubborn about your convictions!" made Lilike turn her head to find two
priests of the Creators pantheon -- she thought they were of the
highest, or euilamon, rank -- standing right next to her. She let out a
little squeak of surprise, and while both women directed their gazes at
her she frantically tried to think up an excuse as to why she was
standing there. Her heart started hammering as the plain one reached
toward her with a frown on her face. Lilike breathed a sigh of relief
when the woman's fingers grasped at something behind her. She turned her
head and glimpsed the raveled thread dangling from a section of subtle
embroidery on the curtain. The euilamon pulled on that thread and the
entire curtain tumbled to the ground.
The two euilamon calmly said, "Oh my," as Lilike turned around to
make sure that Cereid had not been hurt by the falling curtain rod. She
echoed the "Oh my," as she saw him standing there with his robe tucked
under his armpits, clay pot in one hand, his other hand halted in
mid-application of the salve, not to his backside, but to his front. Her
eyes met his red-faced gaze. She remembered her daydream of a moment
earlier, and blushed.
Cereid gave voice to something inarticulate and anguished. He
dropped his robe and ran out of the alcove, passing the pot to Lilike in
passing. She watched for a moment, and then chased after him. As she
raced away, she heard one of the euilamon say, "I told you so, Courtney!
Olean priests are not all eunuchs!"
Lilike rounded the back of the stage and found Cereid leaning
against the wall, his robe back in its proper position, his face
returning to its normal color. She stopped a pace away, wondering what
to say to make him feel better. Knowing how shy he was, she decided to
take the blame. She took the last few steps and said, "I'm sorry about
that, Cereid. That woman pulled a thread and knocked down the curtain
before I even knew they were there. I'm so embarrassed --"
Cereid looked at her with a scowl and said, "You're embarrassed?"
Cereid interrupted, looking at her with a scowl. "I'm the one that got
exposed!" He lowered his gaze and said, contritely, "But that wasn't
really your fault, was it?" He grimaced for a moment, then continued,
"Who were those two, anyway?"
"Two Creators priests by their dress. Euilamon, I think."
"You're kidding!" Cereid said. "By Ol's huge nose, could this
possibly get worse? If they take this story back to my superiors, who
knows what will happen?!" He winced yet again.
"We could find them and explain," suggested Lilike. "By the way,
how is the rash?" Lilike asked.
"No, no, we should just avoid them, not complicate matters." Cereid
gasped in pain and shifted his feet farther apart, then continued, "The
rash is ... Well, it hurts more, actually." He pulled his robe out and
away from his middle.
"Really?" Lilike asked, concern filling her. She mentally reviewed
the ingredients and the mixing process, and found no mistakes. "The
salve should have worked immediately. You're sure it was just an
ordinary rash, straight? How did you get it, anyway?"
"Well ... ah ... I don't think that's really important," Cereid
said, grimacing again. "Ol's big feet, that hurts!"
Lilike wracked her brain for something to help her friend. "You
weren't in this much pain before, Cereid, so the salve must have made it
worse. Go wash it off."
Cereid hesitated, then nodded and dashed off. Lilike watched him
go, still worried about why her salve had burned him. She knew she
should have insisted on seeing the rash. What did Cereid know, after
all, about such things? Instead, she had let his modesty and her own
feelings for him sway her judgment into accepting what he had asked.
"Excuse me, my dear, but could I offer you some advice?"
Lilike whirled around and found one of the euilamon from the
curtain disaster standing next to her. Her mouth dropped open in shock
and all she could manage to say was, "Ah ..."
"Good, good. Let me introduce myself," the plain woman said. "I'm
Tasia, the Euilamon of Randiriel, the god of lovers. As such, your
plight touched my heart. When I saw you and that nice young man in such
an odd, and awkward, position, I knew that I could bring happiness to
your lives by giving you instruction from Randiriel."
Lilike's mouth remained open. Tasia's monologue was fast-moving and
forceful, and the euilamon barely looked at her as she spoke. Before
Lilike could try to interrupt the woman, Tasia continued.
"Young people these days have the most shocking ideas about how
lovers should behave. I'm sure there was a good reason that you thought
that having your man apply grease to himself in public while you didn't
watch was stimulating, and perhaps it was. But Randiriel teaches that
lovers of any age should experience one another's body directly and not
be shy about each other. She also states that both partners should be
equal, that pleasure is not one or the other's responsibility but should
be shared by both, given and received equally by each of you.
"Now, let me recite from Randiriel's Manual of Ritual Pleasure.
First you --"
"Please, stop!" said Lilike in horror. If there was anything she
didn't need at that moment, it was a lecture on sex from a total
stranger. "You have the wrong idea. Cereid and I are not lovers; we were
not engaging in some strange kind of foreplay!"
"There's no need to be embarrassed, my dear," Tasia said.
"Randiriel passes no judgments, so neither do I. This incident will not
become gossip in our temple, despite what you may have heard about us. I
could tell that there are feelings between the two of you, and if you
insist on expressing them in that manner, it is all the same under
Randiriel's eyes. But she has lessons to impart, and I know that you two
could benefit from them if you only gave her teachings a chance.
"As I was saying, the Manual of Ritual Pleasure's first rule
involves --"
Lilike resisted the urge to stick her fingers in her ears, scrunch
her eyes closed, and hum loudly; she wasn't a child any longer. She
changed tactics instead, saying, "Thank you, Euilamon Tasia, for showing
me the error of our ways. I'll tell my ... lover ... of your advice. I'm
sure it will improve relations between us. And if we have any more
questions about the mechanics of ... pleasure ... I'm sure that we will
come to your temple first.
"Now I need to go find him to give him the good news. Many, many
thanks! I'm so glad that you crossed our path. Farewell, and happy
Melrin's End!" She darted away before the nosy priest could utter
another word, glancing back once to see the woman walking away with a
satisfied smile on her face. Lilike thought that it was nice that
someone had gotten pleasure out of the last several menes.
Lilike slipped out of the ballroom and into the servants'
corridors. Cereid had come this way, and she was sure she knew where he
had gone. The only place certain to have water available was the
kitchens. As she walked, she realized that her embarrassment was as much
for the euilamon's assumptions as her own fantasies about those
assumptions coming true, fantasies that had gained fodder from the
accident. A moment later she turned a corner and found herself face to
face with the other euilamon.
"I'm glad I found one of you," the prim young woman said. "I
followed your client back here, but got lost. If I --"
"Client?" Lilike shouted, outraged. "And which Creator's god looks
after prostitutes, then? I told your friend that Cereid and I are not
lovers, even if she didn't believe me. How dare either one of you assume
anything from just a glance?"
The euilamon smiled placatingly. "Tasia can be presumptive, but no
more than yourself I think. I am Courtney, Euilamon of Araminia, who
numbers healing among her attributes. I recognized the scent of that
salve the young acolyte was applying to himself, and I recognize you as
the apprentice of Rebecca, who is known as a fine healer. Since the
young man handed you the pot very carefully despite his haste to depart,
I thought that you were his healer."
Lilike felt her face heating up again. She felt like kneeling and
begging forgiveness from the woman. Instead she said, "I apologize for
my outburst, Euilamon Courtney, but this evening has not been one of my
best." Lilike stared helplessly at the woman for a long moment, at a
loss for words. "And Cereid, the acolyte, is not my patient; he's a
friend who had a need I could fulfill."
Courtney frowned and said, "I don't think you were fulfilling it
particularly well. Why were you letting him apply the salve himself?
Have you even inspected his rash?"
"N-no," Lilike replied, ashamed to be suddenly stammering, "but
he's my friend, and I could tell how embarrassed he was."
The euilamon arched an eyebrow. "He must not be that good a friend,
if you care so little for his health. Either that, or you are not that
good a healer."
Lilike bristled at these disparaging remarks against both her
ability and her friendship. She had already lashed out at the euilamon
once, though, and suspected that a second outburst might not be
forgiven. Instead, she looked at her own feet and murmured, "I'm not
sure I understand what you mean."
Courtney laid a gentle hand on her shoulder. When Lilike looked up,
the older woman met her eyes and said, "You did not give your friend the
full benefit of your abilities."
Lilike's mind cleared as the words registered, and she saw respect
in the woman's eyes. "So, I shouldn't let my feelings for someone
interfere with the proper treatment?"
"You are blessed with the understanding of Araminia," Courtney
said, beaming. "Your highest calling is to heal. If that means treating
someone badly because they will not follow your instructions, then you
must harden yourself to take those steps."
"Even if it means embarrassing him?"
"Which is worse, my child, a little fresh air on his loins, or
prescribing the wrong medicine for the problem?"
Lilike looked at Courtney's serene face and felt almost as if
Araminia herself was speaking to her through the young woman. She
remembered Rebecca's lessons on matching cures to ailments and realized
why her teacher had taken so much time to drill them into her. She also
realized what would happen if someone put her salve on an injury that
wasn't the right kind of rash.
"Thank you, Euilamon Courtney, for sharing your wisdom with me. I
will never forget what I have learned. Now I must find Cereid and do
what I should have done at first to make sure my friend is healed." She
bowed awkwardly to the priestess and pressed on to the kitchens.
Lilike entered the cavernous kitchens of the keep. The center of
activity was the large washtubs where the help were cleaning plates,
trays, pots, pans, and serving utensils. She looked around and quickly
spotted Cereid in the corner by the pantry door, with a pail, a rag, and
a large wet spot on the front of his robe. She walked over to him and
asked, "Do you feel better now, Cereid?"
The acolyte glanced up and then quickly back down. "Yes", he said.
"I had to draw the water directly from the well, and it was very cold,
but it made me feel much better."
"Good," she said sharply, taking his hand. She drew him into the
pantry, and from there into the well room to the side. "Now get that hem
back up to your chest so I can finally see what we're dealing with
here."
"But, Lilike --"
"No excuses or evasions, Cereid. You asked me to give you healing
salve, and it didn't work. It should have, so there must be some reason
for that. I can't find out what that reason is without seeing the rash
itself. So, lift your robe."
Cereid turned his head, crimson streaking over his cheekbones, but
his hands didn't move. Lilike said more gently, "Come on, do it. After
all, I've already seen it."
Cereid's eyes squeezed tightly shut as his hands reached for the
hem of his robe and slowly lifted it all the way to his chest. Lilike
hunkered down in front of her wounded friend. She couldn't help smiling
as she took a good look at what she had only glimpsed earlier in the
ballroom. Judging by the size of the serpent's forked tongue the water
had been cold indeed. Then she pressed those thoughts aside as Euilamon
Courtney's words came back to her, calling on the professional in her to
assert itself.
At first the light of the single lamp revealed only the obvious
shapes. As her eyes adjusted to the dimness she saw the redness in the
creases of his crotch and down the insides of his thighs. She looked
closer. The skin was roughened. Carefully pressing the organs aside, she
gingerly traced the outline of the redness. Cereid flinched, and she
swore. "Cereid, you dolt! That's no rash, it's a burn! Tell me truth,
how did you get this?"
"Well," Cereid said, then paused. Finally, he continued, "Do you
recall yesterday morning when I was helping you with your potions? Well,
between the flux elixir and the sleep easer, whatever that one was, I
spilled one of the ingredients on my lap as I was passing it to you. It
was such a stupid move that I didn't want to tell you about it, not to
mention that I wasted half of the phial. It wasn't so bad then, but it
got worse when I got back to the temple. I couldn't go to our healer,
since I was supposed to be mucking out the stalls while I was with you.
Early this morning I decided to ask you to cure my rash, but I guess
that wasn't the right thing to do, was it?"
Lilike was only half-listening to Cereid's story even though she
was glad to get it out of him. The burn wasn't serious, but it had
blisters here and there, some of which were broken. It was no wonder her
salve had burned him. She felt a small flare of irritation at him for
concealing his actions. She knew she had to apply the proper cure and
quickly, as those kinds of blisters could become infected quite easily.
Lilike had learned about burns from Rebecca. She knew that it would
take her a day or more to gather the proper ingredients -- bark and
herbs -- to make a tincture to speed the healing of the burns, but she
didn't have that long. Anger at her friend and worry for his injuries
wavered in her mind as she stared at the burn. Suddenly she remembered
the servant who had come to Rebecca to replace her employer's kitchen
stock of burn-sop. Rebecca had explained that large kitchens usually
kept the tincture prepared and ready should a pot boy or clumsy server
have an accident around the fireplace or stoves. Of course, Dargon Keep
probably had a magical healer within its walls, but would that worthy be
bothered by every scald or blister?
Standing, Lilike moved back into the kitchen and quickly examined
the hot areas. She found no wax-sealed jugs or covered dishes there.
Then she glanced at the pantry door and stepped back inside, where she
found what she was searching for, marked just as Rebecca had marked the
one for her client. Lilike grabbed the jug, a jar of honey, and some
clean rags. Returning to Cereid, she saw that he was still standing with
his robe held high, a pitiful and vulnerable look on his face. Her heart
melted then. Friend or not, here was someone suffering because of her
mistake. Tears of shame welled in her eyes, and she had to bite her lip
as she knelt in front of Cereid.
She wetted down one rag from the jug and began gently blotting the
burns in front of her. She took care with the blisters, but she made
sure to be thorough. Next she slathered honey all over the same areas,
and plastered the rest of the rags as best as she could on top of the
wounds.
As she stood and pulled the hem of his robe down for him, she
marveled at how Cereid had transformed from a love interest into a
patient as she had administered her cure. She returned the borrowed
ingredients, and then asked, "Do you feel better now?"
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