"Good girl," he said, dragging her more or less to her feet by one arm, andshaking her to make sure of her attention. "The long knife, now. The long knife.Sharp."
"Ghh," Mriga said, and she shambled across the hut toward Harran's grindstoneoblivious of the disgusted Raik, who nearly kicked her in passing until he sawHarran's eyes on him. "Vashanka's blazing balls, man," Raik said in the voice ofa man who wants to spit, "why're you waiting till now to do your damned knifegrinding?!"
Harran set about clearing his herbs and apothecary's tools off the table."Barracks cook 'borrowed' it for his joint last night," said Harran, bending tostir the fire and dropping the poker back among the coals. "Didn't just slice upthat chine you were all gorging on, either. He used the thing to cut through thethighbone for the marrow, instead of just cracking it. Thought it'd be neater."Harran spat at Raik's feet, missing them with insolent accuracy. "Ruined theedge. Fool. None of you understands good steel; not one of you-"
Yet another scream, weaker, ran up and down the scale just outside the door.Shal was running out of breath. "Bring him in," said Harran; and in they camelean blond Lafen, and towering Yuriden, and between them, slack as a half-emptysack of flour, Shal.
The two unhurt Stepsons eased Shal up onto the table, with Raik trying to help,and mostly getting in the way. The man's right hand was bound up brutally tightwith a strip of red cloth slashed from Lafen's cloak; the blood had alreadysoaked through the red of it and was dripping on the floor. From under the tablecame more thumping, and a whine.
'Tyr, go out," said Harran. The dog ran out of the room. "Hold him," Harran saidto the three, over the noise of the grindstone.
He pulled a penknife out of his pocket, slit the tourniquet's sodden knot,peeled the sticking cloth away, and stared at the ruin of Shal's lower arm.
"What happened?" Raik was demanding of the others, his voice thick withsomething Harran noticed but did not care to analyze.
"By the bridge over the White Foal," Yuriden said, his usually dark face evendarker suffused with blood. "Those damned Piffles, may they all-"
"This isn't swordwork," Harran said, slipping the penknife into what was left ofShal's wrist and using the blade to hold aside a severed vein.
The paired bones of Shal's lower arm were shattered and stuck out of the wound.The outermost large bone was broken right at the joint, where it met the manysmall bones of the wrist which were jutting up through the skin; the smoothwhite capsule of gristle at its end was ruptured like a squashed fruit. Oozingred marrow and blood were smeared all over the pale, iridescent shimmer ofsliced and mangled tendons. The great artery of the lower arm dangled loose,momentarily clotted shut, a frayed, livid little tube.
"No sword would do this. Cart drove over him while he was swiving in the dirtagain, eh Yuri?"
"Harran, damn you-"
"Yuri, shut up!" Raik cried. "Harran, what are you going to do?"
Harran turned away from the man moaning on the table, and faced Raik's horrorand rage squarely. "Idiot," he said. "Look at the hand." Raik did. The fingerswere curled like clenched talons, the torn, retracted tendons making no othershape possible. "What do you think I'm going to do? Mriga-"
"But his sword-hand-"
"Fine," Harran said. "I'll sew it up. You explain matters to him when it rots,and he lies dying of it."
Raik moaned, a sound of denial as bitter as any of Shal's screams. Harran wasn'tinterested. "Mriga," he said again, and went over to the grindstone to stop her."Enough. It's sharp."
The grindstone kept turning. Harran gently kicked Mriga's feet off the pedals.They kept working, absurdly, on the stone floor. He pried the knife out of hergrasp and wiped the film of dirty oil off the edge. Sharp indeed; a realhairsplitter. Not that it needed to be for this work. But some old habits werehard to break....
The three at the table were holding Shal down; Raik was holding Shal's facebetween his hands. Harran stood over Shal for a moment, looking down at thedrawn, shock-paled face. In a way it was sad. Shal was no more accomplished thanany of the other Stepsons around here these days, but he was the bravest; alwaysriding out to his duties joking, riding back at day's end tired, but ready to dohis job again the next day. A pity he should be maimed....
But pity was another of the old habits. "Shal," Harran said. "You know what Ihave to do."
"Noooooo!!"
Harran paused... finally shook his head. "Now," he said to the others, andlifted the knife. "Hold him tight."
The hand gave him trouble. Yuri lost his grip, and the man writhing on the tablejerked the arm about wildly, spraying them all.
"I told you to hold him," Harran said. He knocked Raik's hands away from Shal'sface, took hold of Shal's head, lifted it, and struck it hard against thetabletop. The screaming, which Harran had refused to hear, abruptly stopped."Idiots," he said. "Raik, give me the poker."
Raik bent to the fire, straightened again. Harran took the poker away from him,pinned the forearm to the table, and slowly rolled the red-hot iron over thetorn flesh and broken vessels, being careful of their sealing. The stink in theair pushed Raik away from the table like a hand.
The rest of the work was five minutes labor with a bone needle and catgut. ThenHarran went rooting about among the villainous pots and musty jars on the highshelf in the wall.
"Here," he said, throwing a packet to the poor retching Raik. "This in his winewhen he wakes up... it may be a while. Don't waste the stuff; it's scarcer thanmeat. Yuri, they're roofing in the next street over. Go over there and beg apipkin of tar from them-when it's just cool enough to touch, paint the stumpwith it. Stitches and all." Harran stood, his nose wrinkling. "And when you gethim out of here, change his britches."
"Harran," Raik said bitterly, holding the unconscious Shal to him. "You couldhave made it easier on him. - You and I, we're going to have words as soon asShal's well enough to be left alone."
"Bright, Raik. Threatening the barber who just saved his life." Harran turnedaway. "Idiot. Just pray the razor doesn't slip some morning."
The Stepsons went away, swearing. Harran busied himself cleaning up the messthrowing sawdust on the table to sop up the blood and urine, and scraping Raik'shangover remedy into a spare pot. Assuredly he'd be back for it; if not today,then tomorrow, after Raik had tried to drink his way out of his misery.
The sound of feet thudding on the floor eventually drew Harran's attention.Mriga was still pedaling earnestly away on a grindstone she wasn't touching,holding out to it a knife she didn't have. "Stop it," Harran said. "Come on,stop that. Go do something else."
"Ghh," said Mriga, ecstatically involved, not hearing him. Harran grabbed Mrigaand stood her up and shoved her, blinking, out into the sunlight. "Go on," hesaid at her back. "Go in the stable and clean the tack. The bridles, Mriga. Theshinies."
She made a sound of agreement and stumbled off into the light and stink of theStepsons' stableyard. Harran went back inside to finish his cleaning. He scrapedthe sawdust off the table, threw the poker back in the fire, and picked up thelast remnant of the unpleasant morning from the spattered dish into which he'dthrown it: a brave man's hand.
And lightning struck.
I could do it, he thought. At last, I could do something.
Harran sank down on the bench beside the table, speechless, almost sightless.There was a whimper at the door. Tyr stood in the doorway with her big pointedears going up and down in uncertainty, and finally decided that Har-ran'ssilence meant it was all right for her to come in again.