“As for you, Marble,” Crane turned to look at her, “you might as well ride along with me. It’ll save you the walk. I want you to tell this girl’s parents that I’m not doing this out of the goodness of my heart, because I don’t want to be pestered night and day by beggars. It’s a favor to Silk—Patera Silk, is that what you call him? And it’s a one-time thing.”
Maytera Marble nodded humbly.
The little physician went to his bag again and produced what looked like a wide strip of thin yellow chamois. “Ever see one of these?”
Silk shook his head.
“You kick them.” Crane punted the wrapping, which flew against the wall on the other side of the room. “Or you can just throw it a couple of times, or beat something smooth, like that footstool.” He retrieved the wrapping, juggling it. “When you do, they get hot. You woke it up by banging it around. You follow me? Here, feel.”
Silk did. The wrapping was almost too hot to touch, and seemed to tingle.
“The heat’ll make your ankle feel better, and the sonic—you can’t hear it, but it’s there—will get the healing process going. What’s more, it’ll sense the break in your medial malleolus and tighten itself enough to keep it from shifting.” Crane hesitated. “You can’t get them any more, but I’ve got this one. Usually I don’t tell people about it.”
“I’ll take good care of it,” Silk promised, “and return it whenever you ask.”
Maytera Marble ventured, “Shouldn’t we be going?”
“In a minute. Wrap it around your ankle Patera. Get it fairly tight. You don’t have to tie it or anything—it’ll hold on as long as it senses the broken bone.”
The wrapping seemed almost to coil itself about Silk’s leg, its heat intense but pleasant. The pain in his ankle faded.
“You’ll know when it’s stopped working. As soon as it does, I want you to take it off and throw it against the wall like I showed you, or beat a carpet with it.” The physician tugged at his beard. “Let’s see. Today’s Sphigxday. I’ll come back on Hieraxday, and we’ll see. Regardless, you ought to be walking almost normally a week from now. If I don’t take it Hieraxday, I’ll pick it up then. But until I do, I want you to stay off that ankle as much as you can. Get a crutch if you need one. And absolutely no running and no jumping. You hear me?”
Silk nodded. “Yes, of course. But you told Blood it would be five—”
“It’s not as bad as I figured, that’s all. A simple misdiagnosis. Your head augur … What do they call him, the Prolocutor? Haven’t you noticed that when he gets sick I’m not the one he sends for? Well, that’s why. Now and then I make a mistake. The sort of doctors he has in never do. Just ask them.”
Maytera Marble inquired, “How does it feel, Patera?”
“Marvelous! I’m tempted to say as though my ankle had never been injured, but it’s actually better than that. As if I’d been given a new ankle, a lot better than the one I broke.”
“I could give you dozens of things that would make you
“A night chough,” Silk told him.
“Can it talk?”
Silk nodded.
“Then maybe I can catch it myself. Maytera, would you tell my bearers to come around to Sun Street? They’re on Silver. Tell them you’ll be coming with me, and we’ll leave in a minute or two.”
Maytera Marble trotted away.
The physician shook his finger at Silk. “You sit easy, young man. I’ll find him.”
He vanished into the stairwell. Soon, Silk heard his voice from the kitchen, though he could not make out what was being said. Silk called, “You told Blood that it would take so long to heal so that I’d get more time, didn’t you? Thank you, Doctor.”
There was no response. The wrapping was still hot, and oddly comforting. Under his breath Silk began the afternoon prayer to Sphigx the Brave. A fat, blue-backed fly sizzled through the open doorway, looked around for food, and bumped the glass of the nearer Sun Street window.
Crane called from the kitchen, “You want to come here a minute, Silk?”
“All right.” Silk stood and walked almost normally to the kitchen door, his right foot bare and the wrapping heavy about his ankle.
“He’s hiding up there.” Crane pointed to the top of the larder. “I got him to talk a little, but he won’t come down and let me see his wing unless you promise he won’t be hurt again.”
“Really?” Silk asked.
The night chough croaked from the top of the larder, and Crane nodded and winked.
“Then I promise. May Great Pas judge me if I harm him or permit others to do so.”
“No cut?” croaked the bird. “No stick?”
“Correct,” Silk declared. “I will not sacrifice you, or hurt you in any other fashion whatsoever.”
“Pet bird?”
“Until your wing is well enough for you to fly. Then you may go free.”
“No cage?”
Crane nudged Silk’s arm to get his attention, and shook his head.