Author's note: this chapter is one of a series, and does not contain erotic elements.
-rb
04.
Village of the Wolf-Men
The next morning dawned clear and hot, with enough humidity that Min could've swam through it without touching the ground. She woke up alone, wonderfully sore and battered again, her body a mess of frazzled nerves, smells and senses. She crawled out of her little tent, squinting her eyes at the sun. When she tried to put weight down on both arms, she tumbled to the dirt with a cry.
"What, what is it?" Sergen asked from nearby.
"I...I'm not sure," she said, wincing. Looking over, her healed shoulder had swollen up to half again it's normal size; trying to move her arm or even flex her fingers sent waves of unpleasant heat up her neck. "My arm...my shoulder hurts again."
"What? Let me see." He walked over, taking a firm grip on her swollen forearm.
Just the touch of him burned like touching a sun-baked rock; Min screamed and crouched down in the dirt. "No! It hurts!" She squeezed her arm with her good hand, whimpering, missing the bliss and pleasure of the night before. Why did that have to end so that pain could take its place? But then, pain and pleasure were always constant with each other. Perhaps this was the price she had to pay for last night's pleasantries.
"Get up." His voice was firm, yet it somehow lacked the impatience from before. "We can't tend to it here. My people can help, but we must make it there first."
Min bit her lip, nodding. While she wanted to curl up on the ground and wait for the pain to subside, instead she pushed to her feet, took a sharp breath while cuddling her injured limb to her chest. "Let's go. Please."
Something on his face said she'd made the right choice. That mattered to Min, maybe more than it ought to have.
What unfolded next was one of the most agonizing days in Yasemin's life. Traveling while holding her arm made for slow going, but she swallowed her complaints and kept Sergen in sight and in front of her. Every step was difficult, and every time her arm was jostled and shaken, it put more fire in her veins, made her sweat more, made her shake harder, which just made the pain worse.
It was midday when Min had no fight left in her. At the bottom of a dry river bed she slid to a stop and dropped to her knees. Her eyes were clouded over with sweat and tears; her entire side was burning with fire. It was so bad she wondered if cutting the arm off would've been the better choice.
"No, we can't stop!" he said, circling back towards her. "We're so close now." He reached down, took hold of her uninjured arm and tried to pull Min to her feet.
She screamed, then turned her head and vomited, bile and water spilling into the stones at her feet. Min sagged in his grip, a rag doll with nothing left. "Can't...can't go on." She whimpered. "Hurts too much!"
She was certain that Sergen would leave her—it would be a sad, unwelcome end to her story. But instead, the wolf-man bent down and, as gently as one could, he laid her across his shoulders. When he straightened, it jostled her arm.
Min shrieked.
Then he started running, and she was shaking too hard to cry out anymore. The pain didn't go away, but thankfully, before her arm could burst into physical flames, she blacked out.
"Mama! S-sorry Mama..."
—
Min opened her eyes and saw a hand-sewn ceiling over her head. It was still daytime, but the light came as though from far away, until she slowly turned her head and saw it was coming from underneath the hem of the tent. It reminded her of her mother's hut, but this tent was made of some woven fabric. She was lying on a bed mat and covered with a matching blanket that was wonderfully soft.
But where was she?
Min had a dozen questions. A hundred of them. But before any of that, she said: "W...water." Her throat was so dry that she barely recognized her own voice.
"Ah, she awakens." The voice belonged to a woman.
"M-mama?"
"Shhh." The woman's face came into focus; it wasn't Erden, but someone even older—her hair was pure silver shot with white and black streaks, cut short to just above her shoulders. The only thing she wore was a
kollik
, a necklace of beads and adornments just like the one her mother wore—hers had animal teeth as decoration, strung between beads of polished wood and ivory.
"Here now," the old woman cooed, sliding a hand under Min's head, lifting it, while a small bowl of clear water was pressed to her lips. Min felt as weak as a newborn kitten, with barely enough energy to breath and to swallow what she was offered. "Careful now!" the old witch woman said, pulling the bowl away. "Too much and you'll spit it all up again—silly girl."
"What... Where..." Min closed her eyes for a moment, summoning up the strength to open them again and speak. "Where is...Sergen?"
"Oh, gone, by now."
"W-what?!" Min felt her stomach drop and she pushed up to one elbow, eyes wide with sudden fright. The sudden jerk of movement left her upright but incredibly weak; she almost toppled over.
The old witch stared at her for a second, then started sputtering with laughter, slapping her bare leg from the force of it. She had a loud sort of laugh, and was so amused with herself that she had to wipe a tear from her eyes. "Oh! Oh, child, mercy!" Cackling for a moment longer, drumming her hands on the rug under them until she wiped both eyes dry. "No. No, dear, he's close-by, I promise. I only sent him away for some rest after he sat up all night tending to you."
Min blinked, confused. "Sergen...sat with me? All night?"
"He's quite protective of you," the old woman said with a sly smile. "And..." She leaned in close to Min, nose right in below her navel, taking a deep, long breath. "...given that he laid with you, and recently, I'd guess—" She took another hard sniff, nodding in the affirmative "—I suppose that explains that."
Min took a breath, slowly pushing up to a seat; she felt warm all over, especially after what the old woman was referring to. Her strength was returning, albeit slowly, but even the effort to sit up made her head spin. "Explains what?"
"Easy, child,
eeeeeasy
," the old witch said affectionately, squeezing Min's shoulder. "You've been through quite an ordeal, my lovely, what with fighting off a bout of infection and deep magic the way you did. It's a miracle you're alive at all."
Min rubbed her eyes, testing both hands. Her injured side felt sore, same as before, but now she took a closer look at her injured limb. The swelling was gone, but her forearm and shoulder were covered in fine, dark lines, swirling out in dream-like circles from a round lump of scar tissue in her shoulder nearly the size of her palm.