~Fourth Night~
Heid Me or Hang Me
The key needed an eternity to turn in the lock, followed by ages of metal squealing on metal as the bolt slid back. Sibyl had managed to manoeuvre herself to the middle of the room, her beaten body still wrapped into the blanket. She gave a cough-like sound of relief as the door finally opened. Two silhouettes were standing beyond it. One belonged to the Askirtay on gaoler duty, the other to that sawbones of a physician. Sibyl rushed out through between them as quickly as her weak legs allowed, not looking up once. Not wanting to meet anyone's gaze. Not wanting them to see her blood-shot eyes, either.
"Wait, let me first check on—"
"Don't you dare touch me!"
The physician made an attempt to follow her, but gave up after some steps.
"Fine. But let someone look at the wounds."
She didn't reply nor slowed down.
Out! Just out of here!
~
"Did you forget everything I taught you? Or just the part about how to not fuck up an entire mission?!"
I didn't know what was missing...
Sibyl had just enough time to clean herself up and don fresh clothes before László had asked for – read demanded – her presence down in the counting room.
In some ways, his scolding was even worse than the chastisement. The whip had only flayed her body, sending her mind into a menacing, demeaning yet inarticulate state of helplessness and mortification. But László's words hurt, burnt, cut deeply. His lashing was aimed at her very core.
When he finally finished, Sibyl didn't know anymore where her head was in relation to her body. She had to fight hard against the tears forming in the corners of her eyes.
"What?! What is that? Are you gonna cry on me?!"
"Damn, László! Do you think I don't know that I fucked up?!"
She quickly moved the back of her hand across her eyes. He frowned, but took out his cigarettes, which was a good sign.
"What was I supposed to do? Keep the pistol, so they would nick me for illegal gun possession?"
"There was no correct course of action anymore. That's the whole point. You failed to prevent this predicament in the first place. And don't you dare argue with me." He opened the pack. "Do you mind?"
Sibyl sniffed and shook her head, and the Hungarian lit one of his cancer-sticks. He smoked half of the cigarette before speaking again, now in a more conciliatory tone.
"Nobody expects you to do perfectly right from the start, but, girl, this time you hit it hard!"
"And for that I was hit hard, and by a complete stranger?"
Her questions hovered somewhere between defiance and fishing for sympathy.
"Don't you think Grau let Kask administer your punishment for a certain reason?"
Sibyl frowned.
"Yes. To show me humility."
"Wrong. To avoid you being beaten by a person with whom you work and train, someone whom you meet every other day on the corridor. Bad for the morale."
"How foresightful. But still – and please don't yell at me again – I don't understand why I was subjected to such a draconic punishment. And if you come up with 'it was for your own good', I throw something heavy at you."
"Politics." He did not yell. "You may not like to hear it, but the good Doktor had been indeed too easy on you on several occasions in the past – even by my standards. And you know what lenient a teacher I am."
Sibyl deliberately declined to commentate on that subject. Too well she remembered the weapon cleaning excesses under his vigilant eyes. Every time an apprentice had brought a firearm that hadn't been absolutely clean to László's table for inspection, it had landed in a bucket full of muddy water, and the culprit had been bidden to start anew.
"With Sawatzki in attendance, Grau finally had to show rigour," László continued. "His verdict may appear draconic and arbitrary to you, but acting soft-gloved in your case would have undermined his authority."
"That's not fair!"
"You forgot to stomp your foot."
"She was driving him before her!" Sibyl insisted.
"She challenged him. Don't be fooled: There is as much intrigue between the Houses as there is struggle against the Elders."
"But I understood that Sawatzki stood beyond the single Houses due to her...
gift
."
László took a particularly long drag and exhaled the smoke in a sharp jet.
"I wouldn't use the term 'beyond'. 'Amidst' suits better. As long as I know her, she had her nose in every House's business, manipulating left and right. I reckon this freelancing makes her even less controllable."
Sibyl frowned. After all, Grau was the Head of one of the Houses of the Greats. An
Eskravin
. He should not need to align his decisions with the vagaries of a scheming bitch. His verdict had been supposed to be a demonstration of his authority, a display of his power. But in fact it had displayed Sawatzki's.
And what means "as long as I know her"?
"How old is she really?"
"It would be indiscreet to tell."
The Hungarian gave a crooked smile and tapped the ash off his cigarette. She knew from experience that he could never stay angry with her for long.
"I'm sorry that your puppy licence has run out like this."
"It wasn't fair," repeated Sibyl.
"At least you are not moaning about it."
"Just saying..."
"I wouldn't have had you whipped. But that doesn't mean you did not deserve it."
She swallowed hard.
"What else is in store for me?"
"Don't you feel punished enough?"
I do. Thanks for asking.
Sibyl, who had been standing until now, eased herself against the edge of one of the lower tables, keen to keep her back straight.
"Did you take anything against the pain yet?"
She shook her head.
"You weren't so concerned about my well-being last night."
A bitter thought that was, and Sibyl knew it, but László let her get away with it.
"How's your back?"
"Terrific."
He tossed her a package of Aspirin.
"To take the edge off. And don't you dare give me any hard-arse stuff."
For a moment she considered to refuse it on principle, but the pain still carving across her back suggested otherwise.
"The Countess will be staying a couple of days. I reckon you have no intent to run into her again and that you going to watch your steps."
He took another drag, watching his apprentice pull a face.
"A word of advice, though: Sawatzki does not consider herself a mere medium. She has dedicated herself to uphold the purity of faith; to show us lowlifes the true path –