body so battered before. âDamn them for this.â Shea swallowed hard at the extent of the damage. âHow could they do this to you? And how could you have survived?â She brushed perspiration from her brow with her forearm before bending over him once more. âI need to move you onto this table. I know Iâm jarring you, but itâs the only way.â
He did the impossible. As Shea took the weight of his broad shoulders, attempting to slide him over, in a burst of courage and strength he shifted himself onto the table. Blood beaded on his forehead, trickled down the side of his face.
For a moment Shea couldnât go on. Her body was seized with tremors, and she lowered her head to hide her tears. She could hardly bear to see his suffering. âIs this ever going to end for you?â It took a few minutes of fighting for control before she raised her head to meet the impact of his black gaze. âIâm going to knock you out. Itâs the only way I can do this. If anesthesia doesnât work, Iâll hit you over the head or something.â She meant it, too. She was not going to torture him as the others had.
He touched her cheek with a gentle fingertip, removing a tear. He stared at it for a long moment before he carried it to his mouth. She watched the curiously intimate act, wondering why her heart was melting in a way she had never experienced before.
Shea washed thoroughly, pulled on sterile gloves and a surgical mask. When she would have put a mask over his face, too, he warned her off with a silent show of fangs and a wrist lock she couldnât budge. It was the same when she tried a needle. Black eyes blazed at her. She shook her head at him. âPlease donât make me do this, not like this. Iâm not a butcher. I wonât do it this way.â She tried to sound tough and not tearful. âI wonât do it.â They stared at one another, locked in a strange mental combat. His black eyes burned into her, demanded obedience; his rage, always seething, was beginning to surface. Sheaâs tongue touched her lower lip; her teeth followed, scraping nervously. Satisfactioncrept into the black ice of his eyes, and he lay back, certain he had won.
âDamn you for being so stubborn.â She cleansed the area around the stake, set up her clamps, all the time wishing for a good surgical nurse and a large mallet. âDamn them for doing this to you.â She gritted her teeth and pulled with all her strength. He moved, just a ripple through his muscles, contracting, flexing, but she knew he was in agony. The stake did not budge. âDamn it! I told you I couldnât do this with you awake. Iâm not strong enough.â
He seized the stake himself and jerked it free. Blood gushed, sprayed her, and she fell silent, working desperately to clamp off every source of bleeding she could. She didnât look at him, every ounce of concentration focused on her work. Shea was a meticulous surgeon. She worked methodically, repairing damage, at a fast, steady pace, blocking out everything around her. Her entire being was centered on the surgery, her mind locking him to her so he would not die.
Jacques knew she was unaware of her fierce hold on him. She was so involved in what she was doing, she seemed not to notice how she merged with him mentally to keep him safe. Could he have been so wrong about her? The pain was excruciating, but with her mind merged so strongly with his, it kept the shattered remains of his sanity together.
Twice she added light for the close work, suturing for hours. So many stitches inside and out, and when his chest was done she still wasnât finished. All his other cuts had to be washed and closed. The smallest laceration took a single stitch, the largest forty-two. It went on and on as the night closed them in. Her fingers were nearly numb, and her eyes ached with strain. Stoically she went on cutting away dead flesh, forcing
Dorothy Dunnett
Anna Kavan
Alison Gordon
Janis Mackay
William I. Hitchcock
Gael Morrison
Jim Lavene, Joyce
Hilari Bell
Teri Terry
Dayton Ward