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Author's Note
: This story, Terrible Company, is sprawling sword-and-sorcery fantasy satire with a diverse cast of characters. Over its many chapters, those characters will have interactions (both with each other and others) that cross many of the lines that exist between Lit genres. I have come to believe that breaking the story into those different categories, as best I can, is the best way to expose the most readers to parts of the story they might dig, and that they might then be encouraged to read on.
Each chapter is written as a self-contained episode, and although there are running gags that continue through the series that enrich the experience, they shouldn't prevent one from starting anywhere in the series (including the final chapter) and enjoying it for what it is.
This chapter features:
Mathilda</a>, the female Dwarf Healer
Enjoy!//
*
"
Help
," cried a voice from the street, and Paesa jumped. It had been a slow morning, and she was eager to be able to chip in. Almost all of the beds were full, but those patients were mostly beyond her abilities. And, she saw as she rounded the end of her desk and leapt to the door, so too was this one. "
Help me
," cried an elderly man propped up in a cart. His leg was twisted, and Paesa winced just looking at it.
Another man, much younger, hopped off the back of the cart and started helping the wounded man down. "Are you a Healer?" he asked, looking at Paesa. "My grandfather needs a Healer!"
"Well then," she said, as she stepped next to the elderly man and wrapped his arm around her shoulder, "Let's get you to a Healer. We happen to haβ" Paesa winced as they walked. It was
her
turn to take a new patient.
"Miss, are you alright?"
The young man was staring at her. He had the prettiest eyes.
"Yes," Paesa mumbled shyly, her chest flushing.
"Well don't just stand there dawdling, girl!" the elderly man cried. "Get me a Healer! Can't you see I'm in pain?!"
"Oh yes," she said, flustering. "Let's get you inside and off your feet." The three of them hobbled through the cluttered lobby and turned left down a short hallway. The elderly man grumbled every step of the way.
"So, are you?" the young man asked softly, as they ambled into a larger room. Four beds ran down each wall, to either side and straight ahead, of which only one of the 12 was unoccupied. "A Healer, I mean." His wavy brown hair fell around his shoulders gloriously.
"Who, me?" Paesa blushed as she shook her head. "I'm just an apprentice. Someday though, Gods' willing." The elderly man moaned in pain as she and the young man spun to set him on the bed. "I'm gonna go get the Healer now," she said, making brief eye contact with the young man that made her middle quiver. She turned and darted back down the hallway. "Healer Iona?"
The serene Elf, tending to a sick girl, looked up from her work and smiled. "Yes, Child?"
"Have you seen Healer Mathilda?"
Iona pursed her lips, her smile souring. "I believe she is in the shrine, communing with her God."
"Thank you, Healer." Paesa bowed, as Healer Iona preferred, doubled back through the lobby, and headed down a different, longer corridor. The large wooden doors that lead to the shrine had never looked so imposing. She took a few deep breaths to steady her nerves, and walked through.
The Temple of Mended Wounds was comprised of eight rooms, of which the shrine was by far the largest. Although the Healers who practiced their craft within the walls of the temple served different Gods, they had all worked in relative harmony to keep a non-denominational place of worship. She herself had been healed there once as a little girl, pulled back from the brink of death after taking a tumble out of a third story window. Every time Paesa entered it, she always felt a kind of serenity wash over her.
That serenity was somewhat undercut by the thunderous snoring of the Dwarf passed out against the side of the altar. There was an empty bottle in her hand, and another one 15 feet away in the middle of the aisle. Mathilda's long black hair was draped across her face, and fluttered gently with each raucous exhale. "Healer Mathilda," Paesa whispered from the door. "
Healer Mathilda.
" There was no response.
Paesa nervously crept across the room, whispering "
Healer Mathilda
," over and over, but the Dwarf's heavy breathing continued, unabated. "
Healer Mathilda,
" she squeaked as she knelt down, her hand hovering just beyond touching. "
Healer Mathilda!"
"
Wha'!"
Mathilda roared, flailing to slap away the girl's hand. "
Where am Ah? Wha'?!
Ooooh Fuck." She groaned loudly as she sat up. "Why'm Ah
here?
"
"Healer Iona said you were... communing with your God?"
"Heeler Iona," Mathilda snarled, as she rolled onto her knees, "is a smug bitch who likes to play word games. Now why did Ah..." She looked down, somewhat surprised to see a bottle still clutched in her fingers. "Oh. Right." She set the bottle down on the altar, and rubbed at her eyes with the palms of her hands. "Why're you here, lass?"
"I... I-I came to get you," Paesa stammered. "You have a patient."
"My turn already?" Mathilda pushed her hair back from her face and tucked it behind her ears. "Wha' time is it?"
"Almost midday," the girl said.
"Ohhh, fuck," she grumbled. "Ah really tied it on last night, Ah s'pose."
Paesa bit her lip, and decided to risk it. "I was talking to Healer Flynn, and she said the Widow Ursed's passing wasn't your fault."
"A'course it weren't!" Mathilda growled, shaking the bottle to see if anything remained. "Ah di'int make her sick, bu' that don't make it any easier to watch 'em die."
"Healer Flynn said you eased her pain," the girl said, comfortingly.
"An' Ah'm sure she'll be right thankful in the next life." Mathilda shook her head vigorously and scratched at the back of her head. "Now wha' did that miserable sonnuvabitch send for me today?"
"A broken leg," Paesa said, smiling.
Mathilda blinked and composed herself. "Go to my desk, lass, and fetch me the clear bottle with the brown stuff inside, yeah? The one wrapped in felt cloth."
"Is that one of your blessed liquors?"
"It's at least
one
of those things," she mumbled under her breath. Mathilda twisted at the hip, her back cracking as she stretched back and forth. Paesa smiled again and headed back toward the lobby.
Her smile faltered, somewhat, when she opened Mathilda's comparatively-tiny desk. There were dozens of bottles of varying sizes and colors, some wrapped and some bare. Paesa was still sorting through them when the little Dwarf rumbled through the lobby on her way to the patient, and the girl cringed as she waited for the yelling to start. She didn't have to wait long. In desperation, she grabbed a clear bottle from the back and ran down the hall.