looked back to his work. âItâs not a gut-stab,â he said, around clenched teeth. âIt missed the stomach and the lungs, Kelles only knows how. But whether heâll liveâthat I canât tell you. Without a Healerââ
He didnât have to finish the sentence. Kero knew very well what his chances were without the help of magic or a Healerâs touch. The wound itself probably wouldnât kill him, but blood loss and infection might very well.
There was nothing she could do for him that Wendar hadnât already taken care of. She felt oddly helpless, angry at her own helplessness, wanting to do something and knowing there was nothing productive to be done. She got slowly to her feet to hover just on the edge of the little group, trying to think of anything that might increase Lordanâs chances.
Iâm of no use here âShe hated thisâhated being so completely out of control, so afraid that her teeth chattered unless she clamped her jaw tight.
She looked out over the hall and saw that the last of the wounded were being tended to, the dead being carried out, the women too hysterical or paralyzed to do anything being herded over to one side of the hall by a group made up of the old woman who did the Keepâs laundry and some of the dairymaids.
Fatherâ she suddenly thought. Whereâs Father? She peered around the group caring for Lordan, looking for Rathgarâand only then saw the battered body laid out on the table, half covered with a pall made up of a table-covering, as if already lying in state.
Oddly enough, seeing him dead wasnât a shock; she wondered if sheâd been expecting this from the moment she first looked into the hall. She knew what must have happened. Rathgar would have charged the brigands barehanded and empty-headed the moment they invaded his hall, pure rage overwhelming any thoughts of caution.
She closed her eyes, and tried to summon up a dutiful tear from eyes dry with shock, but all that would come was mere anger, and exasperation. You were a mercenary, Father, she thought angrily at the quiet form. You knew better! You could have ordered the armsmen to play rear-guard and gotten everyone down into the kitchen before they really swarmed the place â but you had to defend your damned Keep personally, didnât you? You didnât think once about anything but that! Did you even think about getting your poor little daughter-in-law out of harmâs way?
She looked around for Dierna, expecting her to be among the hysterical or the half-madâ
âand didnât see her. Not anywhere.
Thinking for a moment that the girl might be hiding behind a chair, or cowering in someoneâs arms, Kero turned to one of Diemaâs two cousins who had caught up with her and were clinging to each other in limp confusion.
âWhere is she?â Kero demanded. If sheâs hurt, her family will never forgive us. Part of her calculated their reactions as coolly as a money-changer counted coins. Theyâll demand satisfaction â never mind Father died and Lordan may not live out the night, theyâll want blood price, and after this disaster, we wonât have it.
The girls stared at her blankly. She grabbed the nearest and shook her savagely. âYour cousin, girl! Where is she? Whereâs Dierna?â
The girl just stared, and stammered. She shook the little fool until her teeth rattled, trying to pry some sense out of her, but got nothing from her or her sister but tears and wailing. Disgusted, she held the girl erect between her two strong hands and contemplated trying to slap a little sense into her.
âSheâs taken,â croaked a pain-hoarsened voice from below and to the right of her elbow.
âWhat?â Kero let go of the little ninny, who promptly collapsed with her sister into a soggy heap. She looked down at the man whoâd spoken; one of the Keep armsmen, lying against the wall