V nodded. Unsolicited advice from the Scribe Virgin was not the kind you left at the roadside.
"And, warrior, keep your shield of light in place around this human. Further, use your hand to heal him. He may yet die unless enough light enters his body and heart."
V felt the power of her fade as another shot of nausea hit his gut. While he dealt with the lingering effects of touching that thing, he figured, Jesus, if he felt this bad, he couldn't imagine how Butch was doing.
When the phone rang in his hand, he realized he'd been lying on his back in the snow for some time. "Hello?" he said, all groggy.
"Where are you? What's happening?" Rhage's bass holler was a relief.
"I have him. I have" - V eyed the bloody mess that was his roommate - "Jesus, I need a pickup. Oh, shit, Rhage - " V put his hand to his eyes and started to shake. "Rhage - what they did to him..."
The tone of his brother's voice instantly gentled, as if the guy knew V had gone bye-bye. "Okay, just relax. Tell me, where are you?"
"Woods... I don't know..." God, his brain had totally shorted out. "Can you pinpoint me on the GPS?"
A voice in the background, probably Phury, yelled, "Got him!"
"All right, V, we got you and we're coming - "
"No, place is contaminated." As Rhage started in with the whats, V cut the brother off. "Car. We need a car. I'm going to have to carry him out. I don't want anyone else to come here."
There was a long pause. "All right. Head straight north, my brother. About a half mile you'll run into Route 22. We'll be there waiting for you."
"Call - " He had to clear his voice and wipe his eyes. "Call Havers. Tell him we're bringing in a trauma case. And tell him that we need a quarantine."
"Jesus... what the hell did they do to him?"
"Hurry, Rhage - wait! Bring a lesser jar with you."
"Why?"
"No time to explain. Just make sure you have one."
V shoved his phone into his pocket, stuffed his glowing hand back into its glove, and went to Butch. After making sure the Mylar blanket was in place, he gathered the cop in his arms and eased all that deadweight off the ground. Butch hissed with pain.
"This is going to be a rough ride," V said, "but we gotta get you moving."
Except then V frowned and looked at the ground. Butch wasn't bleeding much anymore, but holy hell, what about the footprints tracking out through the snow? If a lesser happened to come back, he might catch them on the way out.
From out of nowhere, storm clouds rolled in and snow started to fall hard.
Damn, the Scribe Virgin was good.
As V headed off through what was now nearly a blizzard, he imagined a white light of protection around both him and the man in his arms.
"You came!"
Marissa smiled as she shut the door to the cheery, windowless patient room. On the hospital bed, looking small and fragile, was a seven-year-old female. By her side, looking only somewhat larger but much more breakable, was the young's mother.
"I promised last night I would visit you again, didn't I?"
When the young grinned, there was a black hole where her front tooth was missing. "But still, you came. And you look so pretty."
"So do you." Marissa sat on the bed and took the young's hand. "How are you?"
"Mahmen and I have been watching Dora the Explorer!"
The mother smiled a little, but the expression didn't touch much of her plain face or any of her eyes. Since the young had been brought in three days ago, the mother had seemed to be on some kind of numbed-out autopilot. Well, except when she jumped every time someone came into the room.
"Mahmen says that we can only stay here a little while longer. Is that true?"
The mother opened her mouth, but Marissa answered, "You don't have to worry about leaving. We need to take care of your leg first."
These were not wealthy civilians, probably couldn't pay for any of this, but Havers never turned anyone away. And he wasn't going to rush them out.
"Mahmen says that my leg is bad. Is that true?"
"Not for long." Marissa glanced down at the blankets. Havers was going to operate on the compound fracture momentarily. Hopefully it would heal right.
"Mahmen says I'll be in the green room for an hour. Can it be shorter than that?"
"My brother will keep you there only as long as he has to."
Havers was going to replace her shinbone with a titanium rod, which was better than losing the limb but still a hard path. The young would need more operations as she grew, and going by the mother's exhausted eyes, the female knew this was just the beginning.
"I'm not scared." The young tucked her tattered stuffed tiger in closer to her neck. "Mastimon is coming with me. The nurse said he could."
"Mastimon will protect you. He is fierce, as a tiger should be."
"I told him not to eat anybody."
"Wise of you." Marissa reached into the skirting pocket of her pale pink gown and took out a leather box. "I have something for you."
"A present?"
"Yes." Marissa turned the box to face the young and opened it. Inside, there was a gold plate about the size of a tea saucer, and the precious object was buffed to a high shine, all mirror bright, gleaming like sunshine.
"That's so pretty," the child breathed.
"This is my wishing plate." Marissa took it out and turned the thing over. "Do you see my initial on the back?"
The young squinted. "Yes. And look! There's a letter like as in my name."
"I had yours added. I'd like you to have this."
There was a little gasp from the mother in the corner. Clearly she knew what all that gold was worth.
"Really?" the young said.
"Hold your hands out." Marissa put the gold disk in the girl's palms.
"Oh, it's so heavy."
"Do you know how these wishing plates work?" When the young shook her head, Marissa took out a little piece of parchment and a fountain pen. "Think of a wish and I'll write it down. While you sleep, the Scribe Virgin will come and read it."
"If she doesn't give you your wish, does that mean you're bad?"
"Oh, no. It just means she has something better planned for you. So what would you like? It can be anything. Ice cream when you wake up. More Dora?"
The little female frowned in concentration. "I want my mahmen to stop crying. She tries to pretend she doesn't, but ever since I... fell down the stairs she's been sad."
Marissa swallowed, knowing full well the child hadn't broken her leg like that. "I think that's fine. I'll write that down."
Using the intricate characters of the Old Language, she penned in red ink: If it would not offend, I would be grateful for my mahmen's happiness.
"There. How is it?"
"Perfect!"
"Now we fold it and leave it. Perhaps the Scribe Virgin will reply to you while you are in the operating - the green room."
The child hugged her tiger closer. "I would like that."
As a nurse came in, Marissa stood up. In a rush of heat, she felt a near-violent urge to protect the young, to shield her from what had happened at her home and what was about to happen in the OR.
Instead, Marissa looked at the mother. "This is going to be fine."
When she went over and put her hand on a thin shoulder, the mother shuddered, then gripped Marissa's palm hard.
"Tell me he can't get in here," the female said in a low voice. "If he finds us, he'll kill us."
Marissa whispered, "No one can get into the elevator without identifying themselves in front of a camera. The two of you are safe. I swear to it."
When the female nodded, Marissa left so that the young could be sedated.
Outside the patient room, she leaned against the hallway wall and felt more heaving rage. The fact that those two were bearing the pain of a male's violent temper was enough to make her want to learn how to shoot a gun.
And God, she couldn't imagine setting that female and her young loose in the world because surely that hellren would find them when they left the clinic. Although most males put their mates higher than themselves, there had always been among the race a minority of abusers and the realities of domestic violence were ugly and far-reaching.
A door shutting to the left brought her head up, and she saw Havers come walking down the hall, his head buried in a patient chart. Odd... his shoes were covered with little yellow plastic booties, the kind he always put on when he donned a hazmat suit.