He awoke slowly. The first thing that pierced the darkness of his sleep was the ache in his head, and an answer ache in his arm. There were other pains making themselves known as well – his knuckles, his knee, his ribs – but all seemed secondary to his head and arm. A dry stickiness slowed his tongue, and the firmness beneath him left him further confused. Cash remembered the fight. He remembered hurting his arm – breaking it, came the grim memory – and then...
Opening his eyes showed the interior of the clinic that he half-remembered. Whether it was the bitter laudanum, or the injury to his head, the American's remembrance of the night before (which was more like a few hours ago, he amended blearily) was intact, but cloudy. Mortimer had let him in, questioned him about his injury, and set the bone. That much he remembered very clearly. Grimacing, he slowly pushed himself up to a sitting position.
This did no kindness to his head, but as long as he didn't move his arm, that much stayed quiet. There was only a low light in the room; the gas lamp turned low, and dawn's light starting to break through the windows. Still, it was enough for his dark-accustomed eyes to see the splint and bandaging upon his arm. The lighting was less suited to examine the bruises along his ribs and stomach, and Cash couldn't even begin to fight his trousers to look at his knee. Vaguely he was aware of having tripped on his journey here, which probably explained the knee.
Scrubbing at his face, he tried to summon the wherewithal to quit the table that had been his bed for the past few hours. He would need to find his clothes, he decided, and it would probably be wise to also inform the surgeon that he was awake and yet again in his debt. The first step, though, was to do something about his awful mouth. At least the surgeon had seen fit to leave a glass on the near-by table. Presumably he'd seen plenty of people suffering from this particular side-effect.
Cash would've preferred a bit of whiskey, but beggars and so on. A few sips to wet his mouth and chase away the bitterness and the stickiness, and he moved to set it down – his fingers loosening at the wrong moment, though, and his other hand instinctively moving to try and catch it. Instead it shifted the break, and he was left leaning over the table, sweating and momentarily breathless for the pain of it. The glass survived, at least, though it was forgotten now; slammed with a hollow noise against the wood of the tabletop.
Opening his eyes showed the interior of the clinic that he half-remembered. Whether it was the bitter laudanum, or the injury to his head, the American's remembrance of the night before (which was more like a few hours ago, he amended blearily) was intact, but cloudy. Mortimer had let him in, questioned him about his injury, and set the bone. That much he remembered very clearly. Grimacing, he slowly pushed himself up to a sitting position.
This did no kindness to his head, but as long as he didn't move his arm, that much stayed quiet. There was only a low light in the room; the gas lamp turned low, and dawn's light starting to break through the windows. Still, it was enough for his dark-accustomed eyes to see the splint and bandaging upon his arm. The lighting was less suited to examine the bruises along his ribs and stomach, and Cash couldn't even begin to fight his trousers to look at his knee. Vaguely he was aware of having tripped on his journey here, which probably explained the knee.
Scrubbing at his face, he tried to summon the wherewithal to quit the table that had been his bed for the past few hours. He would need to find his clothes, he decided, and it would probably be wise to also inform the surgeon that he was awake and yet again in his debt. The first step, though, was to do something about his awful mouth. At least the surgeon had seen fit to leave a glass on the near-by table. Presumably he'd seen plenty of people suffering from this particular side-effect.
Cash would've preferred a bit of whiskey, but beggars and so on. A few sips to wet his mouth and chase away the bitterness and the stickiness, and he moved to set it down – his fingers loosening at the wrong moment, though, and his other hand instinctively moving to try and catch it. Instead it shifted the break, and he was left leaning over the table, sweating and momentarily breathless for the pain of it. The glass survived, at least, though it was forgotten now; slammed with a hollow noise against the wood of the tabletop.
word count: 460
— Cassius Boone