THIRTY-FIVE: Stuart
It took Joe around a minute and a half to handle the mishnen.
He pulled sothing that looked like a cigar case out of his pocket. Inside it were slender glass tubes full of different substances. He selected one filled with murky gray liquid, then took a pair of black rings from one of his fingers. When he slipped them onto the vial, they locked into a set of grooves that theyd clearly been designed for.
The professor turned each ring carefully, obviously trying to align them with each other in a specific way. When he was satisfied, he clasped the vial between both hands and stared into the distance for a few seconds, murmuring sothing under his breath. After hed finished, the liquid had turned several shades paler, and it had a pink sheen to it.
He dumped it unceremoniously into the pool, and within monts, the clear water was roiling with the mishnens violent death throes.
Until that mont, Alden had been busy trying to convince the wounded Artonan boy that his personal trial of suffering was over now, and there was no good reason for him to refuse Aldens help in favor of heroically bleeding all over the jungle. It was proving surprisingly difficult, so he took a short break to stare at the mishnens brief but agonizing end.
He felt sorry for the creature. Even if it did eat people, it had probably been swimming around on its own world minding its business until Jel-nor and company had brought it here.
Just before the mishnen died, there was a shrill sound, and violet lightning crackled across the surface of the pool. Then everything went quiet.
Joe tucked the empty tube back into its case, then looked around at the assembled teenagers. > he said in a harsh tone. >
None of them budged.
Alden couldnt bla them. Whatever hed poured into the pool didnt seem like sothing you should swim in.
>
Jel-nor rushed into the water, and the others were hot on her heels.
I dont think he ant you, Alden said exasperatedly as the victim he was supposedly in charge of struggled to sit upright.
> the boy cried. >
Why is the assignnt I gave you still so vocal, Alden? I understand you may find him amusing, but
He wont entrust himself to , said Alden, waving his arms to gesture at the injured boy. I tried to pick him up, but he just flails around and shouts a lot about how he can endure more pain.
Hed never imagined helping soone with a serious injury would require so much begging on his part.
Joe sighed.
Normally, I would suggest waiting until he passed out, but I think he might not unless he wants to. He cos froma rare background. And he has no doubt received a number of uncommon body modifications by this age. He might be able to maintain control of his awareness until he actually dies.
He marched over, clasped his hands behind his back, and looked down at the boy with a pleasant smile.
> he said. >
> the boy replied with such wide-eyed seriousness that Alden had to wonder how he and Joe could be mbers of the sa species. >
>
I cant believe his na is Stuart, Alden thought. It was pronounced almost exactly the sa. He looks like a Stuart.
Joe bent lower to stare into Stuarts tal-ringed eyes. You have an un-ruinable future thanks to your lineage. Even I wouldnt dare presu to blackmail your father. Dont you think you should be ashad of yourself for blathering about your honor when youre the only one here who wont face permanent consequences for your actions?>>
Alden was fascinated that he was getting to hear all of this. Stuarts dad must have been one scary guy if Joe wasnt willing to cross him.
But Stuart himself seed to be having a hard ti processing what Joe had said.
Youre not being honorable. Youre being a prick, Alden offered. At this point, youre just making a difficult situation worse for everyone else.
Joe gave him a startled look. But after a mont, he nodded. >
For a mont, it seed like even that wasnt going to get through, but finally, the boy nodded. He turned his pale face to Alden. > he said. >
For the sake of what, Alden didnt know. Hed already swooped down on Stuart, and lifted him bridal style.
Shit, he said, adjusting Stuarts weight and bringing him closer to his chest as he took a step. I noticed this when I tried to pick him up before, but I thought it was just because he was fighting . This guys heavy for an Artonan.
It was weird. He looked skinny, and he was shorter than average.
If the strain on your power is likely to be a problem, let know right away. Id rather get the foot and have it go to the healers with you
Its not that. The skill drains not terrible. Its him. Has he got lead-lined clothes or sothing?
Oh, said Joe. Its most likely his bones. Theyve probably been enhanced.
Alden grunted. Is he like an Artonan super soldier or sothing? He said he was going to be a knight.
Sothing like that, Joe said vaguely. Push yourself but not to the point of exhaustion. It will take us a short while to prepare the appendage.
Alden didnt understand why the severed foot might need to be prepared, but he nodded and kept slowly walking around, trying to find the easiest way to hold on to his passenger while he avoided tripping over tree roots and attempted to ignore the fact that he was walking around the jungle in nothing but a soggy turtleneck, his underwear, and a single sock that was on the verge of falling off.
They dont tell you it will be like this when you get powers. Its not like Im not happy to help soone, but I didnt think Id be feeling quite this awkward while I did it.
His arms were burning. He should have asked Stuart to climb onto his back before he activated the skill. Thats what hed been doing with the lab assistants lately.
He almost set the boy down to do it, but then he saw the size of the blood pool on the ground and reconsidered. Just because Lancelot here seed unnaturally hearty, it didnt an there were no limits. What if Joe was right and the guy would go on acting more or less okay until the mont he keeled over dead?
Alden gritted his teeth and kept going, comforted and energized by the knowledge that he wasnt the only one suffering. The examinees had finished dragging the mishnen out of the pool, and Joe had started barking orders and passing out knives. He kept an alarming number of scalpels on his person.
The sll when they sliced the creature open was ghastly. Aldens eyes watered even though he tried to get so distance from the disgusting project.
He kept waiting for soone to pull out a recognizable foot from whatever part of the monster was its stomach. But all the students just kept dropping little chunks of at onto the silvery fabric tarp Joe had magically produced from one of his pockets.
Gradually, Alden ca to the horrifying realization that the chunks were Stuarts foot. Apparently the mishnens digestive system worked like a garbage disposal. Even on this guys enhanced bones.
How are they going to fix that? Surely theres not any point?
Magic was magic, but this
Hed stopped walking for too long and Stuart suddenly said, >
He was finishing the sa sentence hed been in the middle of when the preservation had activated. Alden hastily took another step before the poor guy could see how grueso the situation was.
The chunks of flesh and bone were gathered into a pile, and Joe coated them with sothing from one of his vials. Then he started questioning the students about which of them could perform >. When none of them answered, he shouted at them, and Jel-nor finally raised a hand covered in sli and blood.
> the professor said, >
Then he called out to Alden. Bring him over here please!
They had him lay Stuart down beside the horrid pile, with the injured leg pressed against it. Alden tried not to look, and when the Artonan teen started struggling to sit up and see what was going on, Alden automatically pressed him back down onto the ground and slapped a hand over his eyes so hard that it probably qualified as an assault.
Everyone who wasnt off in the bushes crying or being sick stared at him.
Sorry! he said. He was still holding Stuart down with almost his full bodyweight, and his voice ca out in almost a squeak. I didnt want him to panic.
> one of them muttered.
> Stuart began.
> Joe said quickly. >
> Stuarts shocked voice was slightly muffled since Alden was crushing him.
> said scholarship guy. won the duel.>>
> said Joe, >
The translation suddenly cut out. Suprised, Alden looked up at Joe. Hed stood, and he was gesturing from Jel-nor to the pile of foot. She asked a question, and he answered it animatedly.
Alden recognized his teaching-mode at once.
Youre real petty, you know that? he thought at the System. Im going to learn to speak Artonan flawlessly and then laugh at you when you drop the subtitles.
He wondered if the setting that kept it from translating things it considered to be official magic lessons was universal or if it was a policy specific to the university. If he accidentally overheard sothing educational when he was off campus would the sa thing happen? Surely the Artonans had to know that having the System translate almost everything but school made them look absolutely awful?
Huh. Maybe they actually dont? They had so pretty strict traditions about classroom behavior even for their own people, after all.
A minute later, Jel-nors lesson was over, and everyone drew back from her, Stuart, and the pile of foot. A few of them picked up the edges of the tarp and lifted them almost like they were trying to hide behind them.
No, you stay there, Alden, Joe said. Its best if soone holds him down, and it seems like youve got a lot of enthusiasm for the job. I thought youd broken his nose for a mont.
> Stuart asked. He still had not a drop of fear in his voice.
I have no clue, thought Alden.
Im sure itll be fine, man, he said bracingly. And then well get you to a House of Healing.
> the girl whod been helping stabilize Stuart earlier whispered.
Miss?
> Jel-nor unwound a piece of gold thread from her dark hair.
Keep still, Alden, said Joe from a concerningly large distance away. And keep him still.
Stuart spoke up again. >
Then Jel-nor started to chant, and Stuart stiffened up. For a second, Alden wondered if that was what the spell did, but Jel-nor kept going. As she chanted, she wove the string like a cats cradle with startling speed.
Stuarts breath started to co in sharp gasps. His hands shook.
Youre totally fine, Alden said, though he had no idea if it was true. Youre doing okay. This is fine.
It only took the girl a few seconds to complete the spell from start to finish, but it was a very long few seconds.
The beautiful string pattern Jel-nor had woven flared white, and she aid the center of it at Stuarts lower leg.
The expression on her face was hard and focused. She dropped string from a few fingers, and the design tightened into a new shape. A sharp, shining X.
The pile of ruined flesh, and an additional three inches of Stuarts leg, blasted apart before Aldens eyes. Blood went everywhere. It spattered against his face, his hands, his hair. A tiny, hard shard of bone hit his cheek and fell onto the Artonan boys chest.
Ohgodohgodohmyg
Soone pulled him off the boy, and Joe was shouting sothing about picking up all the pieces as quickly as possible, and then Alden was being shoved into the pond.
For the first ti since he had arrived on the scene, Stuart was screaming.
Soone dunked Aldens head under the water. His mind cleared enough for him to have a coherent thought through his shock: These people are all insane.
He sputtered to the surface and found himself eye-to-eye with Jel-nor. She was the one whod dunked him. And herself. They were both still covered in gore.
> she said in a tight voice. >
As an example, she plucked a tiny diamond-shaped piece of Stuart out of Aldens hair and showed it to him. Then she retreated from the water, and he watched her run off to join the others.
Joe was leaning over Stuart now. The guy had finally fallen unconscious.
Alden sank back down under the water. He gave himself permission to feel self-pity for a few seconds.
I want to go ho. I really, really want to go back ho.
But he couldnt. So he scrubbed the worst of the blood off, collected the pieces as hed been told, and went back to pick up his charge.
Who was injured worse than he had been when Alden arrived.
This was not the way hed seen his afternoon going.
Several minutes later, Alden was teleported directly to the ergency departnt of a House of Healing. He arrived in a large, fancy teleportation alcove. He was carrying Stuart, and a plastic baggy full of Stuarts foot was shoved into the boys pocket so that it was being preserved as well.
Which seems virtually pointless considering it was eaten, blown apart, and scattered across the forest.
But hey, bright sidethey wouldnt have bothered to go to this much trouble if the parts couldnt be put back together again, right?
Aldens coat had been retrieved before he departed but not his pants or his shoes. Hed lost his last sock.
These things happened.
The second he arrived in the ergency departnt, chaos surrounded him. Masked Artonans in dark-colored scrubs appeared with handheld equipnt and a gurney. The one in charge ordered him to put the patient on the gurney, and then seconds later, apparently after getting so notice about what his skill did, ordered him to pick Stuart up again.
> the woman said, her eyes rocketing around in two different directions behind her glasses. >
So hed be getting doped. That was fine. Hed forgotten to take his dical team pills anyway. Because hed been dropped in the water.
I dont know what an accessory is. My skill is fine, but my muscles are getting tired. I dont think I can carry him well for more than a couple of minutes.
It took her approximately a nanosecond to jab a tiny hypodermic into the side of his neck.
It hit quick. The lights were all suddenly too bright, and Alden felt like he could fight a gorilla.
>
Nope, Alden said, pacing back and forth. All good on that front. I think my panic buttons got pressed too hard, too many tis today, and now theyre stuck in the off position.
She looked confused, but then she scanned him with so kind of tal loop she wore around her neck and shrugged.
They gave him his own empty room to pace in. It looked similar to the rooms in the House of Healing in Chicago, but there was a lot more equipnt lining the walls.
Alden took it all in. He wondered how things were going back in the jungle.
I think Joe is about to give all of your friends a tattoo and make them pay up sohow in exchange for keeping quiet about this, Alden told Stuarts petrified body. It must be crazy important for you people to get into wizard school, huh?
Alden understood how they were going to explain away the destroyed foot now that hed seen the contents of the baggie. Whatever spell Jel-nor had cast tore all the pieces into tiny, distinctly clean-cut diamond and triangle shapes. So the foot no longer looked roughly digested by the mishnin; it looked like it had been tidily chipped up by a combat spell.
Alden guessed maiming soone in a duel must not have the sa consequences that summoning that thing did.
Joe had co up with the idea awfully swiftly, hadnt he?
Maybe he does this all the ti. Maybe its his go-to, hide the evidence spell.
About ten minutes later, soone ca back for him. He didnt feel even a little tired. They led him to the doors of an operating theater that was absolutely glowing with runes. He placed Stuart on another gurney, and the Artonan boy was whisked inside. Before the doors closed again, Alden saw an odd mix of people in scrubs and wizards clothes. One of them was holding a pair of giant yellow candles.
> the woman whod led him to the operating room said, scrolling through a tablet. >
She collected supplies from a cabinet embedded in a wall and took Alden to a surprisingly normal looking office. It was cramped and full of books, papers, and miscellaneous junk.
Alden took a seat in an uncomfortable swivel chair.
Several minutes, and a shocking twelve needle sticks later, he felt absolutely horrible. Like soone had stretched all of his muscles a little too far and sucked out all of his energy with a vaccuum.
> The doctor spun one of her rings to deactivate whatever hand-sanitizing feature it had on it and gestured to a glass dish full of things wrapped in brightly colored paper.
Alden stared at it.
>
Aldens temporarily exhausted emotions suddenly made themselves known again. His eyes stung.
My mom was a nurse in a House of Healing, he blurted out. We used to wrap the gifts for the gift bowl together.
> the woman said gently. >
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