Milo checked outside of his door for porridge. Yesterday, there had been porridge. The previous day, as soon as heâd set foot in the kitchen, Hyacinth had put a bowl in his hands and sent him away.
Having porridge left out for him like Iron John was not as charming as he had imagined. The context was bad. He knew what was going on in the kitchen. Ann had heard Mordecai do forty-five minutes on how Royals were the wrong crackers, in between coughing and noises of pain. Some of the observations were quite astute. He couldâve gotten an act doing that at the Black Orchid.
It was actually kind of horrible.
There was no porridge this morning. So, things had either improved in the kitchen or they had deteriorated to the point where porridge was no longer possible.
Milo wondered if it mightnât be easier to just be Ann this morning and then change in a pay toilet on the way to work.
But he had promised⊠No, he had not promised, but Hyacinth had asked Ann very nicely not to do that anymore and explained she didnât have to and Ann had promised. That had been years ago.
He stayed Milo, and he wrapped all ten fingers around the kitchen door frame before peeping inside.
Erik â no, not Erik â was sitting at the table and drinking coffee. Hyacinth was absent and Mordecai was quiet.
Milo sighed relief. He knocked on the kitchen doorway and waved greeting at Auntie Enora. Erik smiled at him, nodded at him, and returned to her coffee.
Milo crept into the kitchen and sought out a bowl â as quietly as he could, which was very quietly. Mordecai undoubtedly needed his rest. He heard Auntie Enora pour another cup of coffee, and then Erik set it on the counter next to him.
âMilo, do you mind if we speak before you eat? This is a matter of some urgency.â
He nodded.
Erik nudged the coffee towards him. âThatâs for you, dear. Fix it how you like, then come sit with me at the table when youâre ready.â
Finding a spoon and mixing in sugar gave him a moment to decompress, which he really appreciated. He wished he could tell her. He sat at the table and he even managed to look at her.
âMister Milo, we have a mechanical problem. I know a man is not a toaster, but Miz Hyacinth and I are not engineers, and I believe you may be the best we can get on short notice.â
Milo nodded and straightened proudly in his seat. He touched his chest. Iâm your man.
âYou see⊠Oh, let me get the notepad. Iâll draw this.â Erik departed briefly and returned with paper and pencil. âWell, now this is a lung.â Erik drew a slightly lobed shape.
â…Thatâd be a big olâ bag in your chest that you need to breathe, dear.â Erik made a grin that proved she was teasing. âThe tissue is all full of little tiny cells. Thatâs how the air gets into the blood. And the whole thing has to expand and contract. Thatâs how the air gets into the lung.â
Milo nodded. This seemed reasonable.
âWhat Mordecai has is a problem with all of those tiny little cells. Theyâre torn up and damaged and they donât give him air like they should.
âNow Hyacinth tried to fix that, but all she can use is metal. If she knew how to work with flesh we wouldnât be in this predicament, but thereâs no helping it now. We start patching him up with all different things, the whole works will collapse.
âSo, metal doesnât expand and contract like flesh, not even when you magic the hell out of it. This is what Hyacinth did.â Erik drew several thin strips across the body of the lung. âThese places are made of gold. They have proper cells and they strengthen the lung, but theyâre stiff. The weak parts with the bad cells move better.
âIt works a little like a bellows, youâve got a soft place in between two hard places and the whole thing works together to move air. But when he breathes too hard or he coughs â or say heâs sick, and the tissue is all swole up with water â those stiff places canât flex like the rest and they come unglued.
âAnd when they come unglued, that makes him cough and breathe harder because his lungs arenât working right, and that makes more come unglued.
âNow what we have been doing for the past few days is gluing those pieces back down, and as you can imagine that hurts him like hell. I believe weâve got him on the mend now and if he stops taking damage I can repair his health, but you see how itâs only a matter of time before this happens again.
âHe needs more expansion in these strips. I donât know if we can hinge them or fold them or what, but he needs something. And if Miz Hyacinth can do it while Iâm here, then I can keep the process from hurting him too badly.
âI believe this child will hold me for quite a few days to come, but we are under a bit of a time constraint, Mister Milo. Can you help me out?â
Milo tore a sheet from the notepad and tore a strip from the sheet. He rapidly folded the strip in an accordion pleat and handed the result to Erik.
Erik pulled at the top and bottom of the strip, frowning at the motion. âI suppose that might be a help, but look here.â He shifted his grip and pulled at the sides. âA lung needs to expand all ways, not just up and down.â
Milo took the strip back and played with it for a few moments. He stood suddenly and ran out of the room.
âWell I certainly do hope he didnât just take a fright,â Auntie Enora muttered, alone.
âââ
He had not stolen the book. He had found it and he had been very interested in it and it had sort of naturally migrated towards his room until it was inside. It belonged to the house and it was still in the house. And if anyone had asked him for it, he would have given it â if they knew that he had it and had any idea that it existed.
It was called Simple Paper Toys for Children. There was a leaping frog, for example. And a fortune-teller. And a boat. He presented this book to Auntie Enora, and opened it to the page he wanted.
There! Look! Like that! You want something like that?
Erikâs face frowned as Auntie Enora used him to peer more closely at the pages. âI donât understand. I believe this is supposed to be a strawberry?â
Milo gave a noncommittal nod, bobbing his head from side to side. Well, yeah, itâs supposed to be one, but look how it works! He tapped the directions specifically and nodded at her.
âI⊠donât⊠see what youâre telling me.â
Milo huffed an exasperated sigh. He tore another piece off the notepad and he folded the strawberry. He had never done this before, he appreciated how the designs worked and did not believe they required making, but he did it perfectly the first time without referencing the book.
He showed Auntie Enora the penultimate step: a small flat diamond with a four-pointed star on top.
âI still donâtâŠâ
Milo put his mouth to the star and blew up the strawberry. He continued to blow until it was tomato-shaped and all the creases had puffed out.
âOh, shoot!â said Auntie Enora. âWell, thereâs your lung, right there! Oh, my goodness!â She covered Erikâs mouth with a hand and cast a glance back over his shoulder at Mordecai. The man shifted slightly but continued to sleep.
Milo nodded at her and handed her the paper model.
Auntie Enora turned the paper model in Erikâs hands. âThe trouble is, itâs too much. All we have to work with are these strips. This looks like replacing the whole lung, and Iâd be terrified to try such a thing. This is a lot of expansion youâve given me, but the lungs are just phenomenal. Itâs not even close.â
Milo commandeered the notepad again. This time he took the pencil and drew. He drew a watch, he drew a cup of coffee, and he drew a newspaper. He contained the newspaper in brackets and wrote 100% at the point. He contained the coffee in brackets and wrote 10. Then he flipped to the eraser and wrote 5% instead. He presented his demands to Auntie Enora.
âYou want time,â said Auntie Enora. âYou want an entire newspaper, and you want five-percent of the coffee.â
Milo made a rapid seesaw gesture. The coffee was negotiable. Very negotiable. Heâd pick up some caffeine tabs on the way home from work if necessary.
Erik smiled. âChild, you can have as much of the coffee as you want, just as long as you leave more.â
Milo nodded. He took back the pad and added a rapid sketch of the factory where he worked, then drew an arrow pointing to the watch. He drew lines and shaded an area encompassing six hours, from eight to two. He made an apologetic shrug.
âYou have to work first? Well, I canât say Iâm happy about it, but I do understand. I am overjoyed to have you helping me. I think I would hug you, but I guess you wouldnât like that.â
Milo backed off from the table, shaking his head.
âWell, what if I stay over there with Mister Mordecai and I donât say another word to you for your whole breakfast?â
He nodded rapidly to that. He even smiled!
âââ
Erik collected the newspaper when it arrived and Auntie Enora told Hyacinth where it was going.
âBarnaby wants the weather reports and the horoscope,â Hyacinth said.
âSurely he can do without for one day?â
Hyacinth was already shaking her head. âOh, boy, no. He really canât.â
âWell, then, perhaps youâd better have Miz Maggie buy us another paper when she goes out for my cigarettes. Mister Milo specifically requested the whole thing.â
âââ
Milo darted in at three, assembled a cheese sandwich, collected both newspapers and a cup of coffee, and set out for the basement holding the sandwich in his mouth.
Hyacinth went after him at seven with a dish of noodles and more coffee. She brought the previous mug back with her. She continued to supply him at two hour intervals afterwards.
Mordecai slept peacefully until ten. He woke with a gasp, but did not cough. He looked around. âWhat⊠What time is it?â
Hyacinth conked her head on the table so hard it made Auntie Enoraâs coffee cup rattle. âOh, gods, not this again.â
âNo,â said Mordecai. âI know itâs now. What time is it now?â
âAbout ten oâclock in the evening, dear,â Auntie Enora said. âDo you think you might manage a little soup?â
âTen?â he said. âIs that all?â
âItâs been almost three days,â Hyacinth said.
âThree days? Erik hasnât eaten in three days?â
Hyacinth winced. Truthfully, Erik hadnât eaten in five, but she wasnât going to correct him. She also hoped he had forgotten about Auntie Enora not sleeping.
âHe is holding up admirably,â Auntie Enora said, nodding.
âI donât want him to hold up,â Mordecai said, very soft and hopeless. âIâm all right now. I promise Iâll stay all right.â
âChild, thatâs not your promise to make.â
He wanted to cry. She wouldnât let him do that, because the bonds in his lungs might break. She wouldnât let him refuse food or medicine. She wouldnât let him damage himself. With all else, she was endlessly patient.
She wouldnât leave, but she understood why he was so upset. She promised. She comforted. As needed, she would remind him that Erik was watching and wanted him to get better â though not very often as that did tend to make him cry.
She only touched him when it was absolutely necessary because she knew he hated it, and she apologized when she did.
It was this kindness, as much as Erikâs visible deterioration after five â and then six, and then seven â days of black coffee and cigarettes, that eventually broke Mordecaiâs back. On the evening of the seventh day, he ate soup, he took medicine, then he broke down sobbing and begged to be put out of his misery.
He covered his head and said, âPlease, let me say it. Then you can. I want you to. I donât want you to let me up anymore. I canât take this. I canât stand watching you hurt him and having you take care of me. I know you wonât kill him. Itâs not enough that you wonât kill him. If you wonât go, you have to fix it so I donât care.â
Erik was already nodding. His features were noticeably sharper, and he was developing dark hollows under his eyes, but his hands remained steady, he could walk a straight line and focus, and he showed no sign of giving out. It was only going to get worse.
âI believe you know what youâre asking,â Auntie Enora said. âDo you understand that if I do that, you wonât be able to ask me to stop?â
He shook his head. âI donât want you to stop until he can come back.â
âIt might be awhileâŠâ
âI know. Thatâs why I need it. Please.â
âMordecaiâŠâ Hyacinth broke in. This was such a total reversal that she didnât trust it. âAuntie Enora, are you sure heâs with us?â
âHeâs been with us, Miz Hyacinth,â Auntie Enora replied.
âIâd like not to be,â Mordecai said softly.
âI wonât put him down so far that he canât talk to us, Miz Hyacinth,â Auntie Enora said, reaching a hand. âIt doesnât hurt him.â
âI know, I know, butâŠâ
But she couldnât help thinking about when sheâd fixed him the first time, and she had to give him all that damn codeine cough syrup so he could heal. Heâd had a bit of a habit after that. Nothing she couldnât fix by scolding him and keeping an eye on him for a few weeks, and it wasnât like this was drugs, butâŠ
But it was creepy. It was incredibly creepy, and she didnât like what Auntie Enora was doing to Erik, either, and she didnât like the thought of Mordecai lying there quietly and letting it happen.
If he wonât do something about it, she thought, then donât I have to?
What else could they do about it?
Erik soothed his hand through his uncleâs hair and made him stop caring.
Hyacinth went down to the basement.
âMilo, show me something good.â
Milo was covered in newsprint, particularly his hands, had been for two days now. Miloâs coffee cup was also covered in newsprint. He held up one finger for a momentâs pause and drained it.
He showed her a paper spring. Yesterday had been all about paper springs. She had tried to explain to him that a spiral like that was not an option, but there appeared to be some concept he was trying to nail down and he would not be dissuaded.
The last thing she wanted to see was another goddamned paper spring. âMilo!â
He shook his head. Now he was attempting to show her individual folds in the paper spring. And, since she did not seem to be understanding that very well, he began actually folding things. He was trying to impart a process.
âMilo, I donât care how you got there, just show me where you are now! Please tell me we are past paper springs!â
Milo dropped what he was doing on the floor and backed up to the basement wall.
âOh, shit!â said Hyacinth. She turned her entire body away from him and sat down on the floor.
âIâm not,â she said, âIâm not mad at you. Iâm a little upset about Erik, but Iâm not mad at you. I know youâre doing your best. I just really, really wish that fucking bond in his left lung hadnât let go. That started all this mess. Thatâs why Erik called Auntie Enora and thatâs why she wonât leave now. And thatâs why Mordecaiâs up there thinking chicken soup and crackers instead of whatâs happening.â
Milo tapped her on the shoulder and handed her a white piece of paper with a quick pencil sketch on it. He flinched when she turned around to take it from him, so she faced away from him again and regarded it.
[mechanical eye]?
âHave you noticed Erik, Milo?â Hyacinth shook her head, answering herself. Milo had a project and coffee. Milo wasnât noticing anything. âAuntie Enora doesnât eat or sleep and Erikâs been holding her for a week. Nina never managed her for more than three days at a stretch and Nina was a grown adult. I donât know how much longer this is going to go on. Itâs insane.â
Another note: [wingtipped shoe]? Milo didnât shy away from her this time so she turned back around.
âMordecai just asked Auntie Enora not to let him up anymore. Just⊠to leave him like he is when she touches him, all the time. So he wonât know whatâs happening. He just gave up.â She sighed. âSo now I donât know what to do.â
Frowning, Milo approached the worktable. He retrieved a small folded square of paper, maybe an inch wide and an inch thick. He took hold of two corners diagonally opposite each other and pulled. The whole works blossomed in both directions at once, revealing a gridwork of tiny opposing creases, until Milo was holding an entire two-page spread of newspaper.
âHoly shit!â cried Hyacinth. âDoes it go back?â
Milo nodded. Still holding the two corners, he pushed them back together slowly. With a little bit of coaxing, it folded back to an inch square.
âDo it again!â she said. âOpen it!â
He did. Open. Closed. Open. Like breathing.
âCan you do it with a strip?â
He bobbed a noncommittal nod. He should be able to, he just hadnât yet.
âCan you do it with metal?â
He touched his chest and shook his head. Me? No.
âI have to have cheap gold,â Hyacinth said. âAnd⊠I think some tinfoil, so I can practise. Do you think you can show me how to do that?â
Another bobbing nod. Heâd been trying, but she yelled at him.
âI will shut my mouth with a steel plate if I have to,â she told him. âI will be the most patient, attentive student of folding newspapers that youâve ever had in your life. I will⊠Oh, look.â She grabbed the open paper and showed him a small ad. All Gold and Sterling Silver Jewellery, 15% Off! âA sale!â
Mordecai asked her, as long as she was going out, if she wouldnât mind picking him up something to read. There hadnât been newspapers in three days.
Hyacinth stopped by a drugstore and bought him two Arlecchio romance novels and a fashion magazine. She was a little bit irritated with him for just bowing out like that.
He didnât seem to notice. He read everything. And, she later discovered as she was paging through the magazine â she was not reading it, it was just there â he did all the quizzes. Apparently, he was a Winter. There were suggestions for eyeshadow.
âââ
Milo brought an entire coffee cake home on Sigurdâs Day. Not a day old, which was what they ate almost exclusively. Fresh. He mightâve ordered it special.
He dished out five pieces. Maggie. Mordecai. Milo. Hyacinth. Erik.
âThatâs very sweet,â Auntie Enora said.
Milo twitched his best attempt at a smile and nodded.
âNo, thank you,â Auntie Enora said.
He picked up the plate and followed her.
âPut it down and sit back at the table or Iâll make it so you canât use your legs, dear,â Auntie Enora said.
Milo looked over at Hyacinth, wide-eyed.
Hyacinth was already nodding. âOh, yeah. She can do it. Nina once told five battalions of soldiers to sit down and they did. An airship landed.â
âThey were in the way of my coffee, child,â Auntie Enora said.
Milo put the plate down and sat at the table.
Mordecai was the only one who had any coffee cake. No one else wanted it.
Hyacinth put sugar in the coffee on Sunâs Day. Auntie Enora had one sip, swallowed with a deeply displeased expression, and dumped the rest of the pot in the alley. She scolded Hyacinth, âNo.â
Hyacinth had to stand in the corner for an hour. She had to.
It was, at this point, abundantly clear that the only way out was through. Erik was not going to give out and Auntie Enora was not going to give in. Fortunately, Hyacinth had completed her apprenticeship at Miloâs Academy of Folding Things, and by Moonâs Day morning they were willing to make an attempt at Mordecai.
Two days of bed rest, constant care and peace of mind had drastically improved the manâs condition. It was in fine shape for them to damage him again. He didnât seem to be too worried about going back to the hotel either.
âWhat hotel?â he said.
âCreepy as hell,â Hyacinth intimated through clenched teeth.
She pulled Maggie aside at breakfast and asked her to keep out of the kitchen all day. âThereâs a lot of Mordecai to fix and weâre going to do as much of it as we can today. Auntie Enora and I will be busy and heâll be out of it.â
âWill Erik come back after?â Maggie said. âI really, really miss Erik.â Not one word about how she liked long lunches or Auntie Enora.
âNot right after,â Hyacinth said. âI think not until Mordecai heals from this, so maybe a couple more days.â
âDays? Miss Hyacinth, will Erik be okay?â
âNot right away, Maggie, no. But Auntie Enora will make him medicine before she goes, and weâll all help him get better after.â
âWill it be like when he was hurt?â
âNo. It wonât be like that at all,â Hyacinth said.
It will be an entirely different kind of awful, Hyacinth thought. After Nina held Auntie Enora â and, again, that was for three days at most â she could hardly move for a week.
Poor Nina always said it wasnât like Auntie Enora was heavy â she was big but not heavy â but she couldnât say what it was like, and Hyacinth thought it certainly looked like sheâd been hit with a ton of bricks.
After breakfast, Hyacinth helped the impending disaster draw thirteen hash marks on the chalkboard.
Mordecai had six bonds in his right lung and seven in his left. She had started him out with four and four, but he really needed more repair than that and she had added more as he got sicker and couldnât do without. They were going to expand (that was a good word for it, as they would be getting larger and more flexible) as many as they could â left, then right, then left again.
His left lung was weaker than the right. It bothered her sense of aesthetics that she couldnât have them even, but he really didnât need that. What he needed was the expansion.
Hyacinth had one of Miloâs folded paper strips for reference (he was better with paper, but she could match him with metal) and a set of cheap bracelets (ten-karat gold over sterling silver) that would certainly do for the material. They were fifteen-percent off. One of them looked like an alligator biting its own tail.
Auntie Enora had altered two more bottles of cherry cordial, for the process and for the recovery. She had given him a good dose of one, to keep the coughing down, and Erik was sat near his uncleâs head in case further intervention was required.
Hyacinth gave the chalkboard a glance and a nod. Thirteen bottles of beer on the wall, thirteen bottles of beer. Take one down, pass it aroundâŠ
She laid one hand on Mordecaiâs chest and shut her eyes.
It was a matter of stretching out what there was and folding it back, and she had to do it very carefully so that he could still breathe. It was easier to move things around how she wanted on the exhale.
Miloâs fold was a simple repeating pattern that she could do in her sleep, but every individual crease needed doing, she couldnât automate a system to do it for her. The strips were thin, but she was more than doubling them in width and length and she still had to do all the little cells.
It took her about half an hour to do one.
She erased one hash mark with the index finger of her left hand. Twelve bottles of beer on the wall, twelve bottles of beerâŠ
She worked until she was fainting. At first, she didnât know she was fainting, then she did know it and she didnât know what to do about it.
Oh, damn it, she thought. Really? Come on.
She had seen David go until he fainted, but he got very excited about things and sometimes he forgot he needed to sleep. The faithful physician pushing herself beyond the bounds of physical exhaustion was just so cliché.
Everything looked purple, and slightly sparkly.
That was very like David. Maybe that was why he pushed himself that way. He liked the way it looked.
âSo sorry. Passing out now,â she managed in a vague voice.
Auntie Enora made her a gin and tonic.
For a moment, she thought it was David trying to help her sit up and get her back into the house.
âIâve been shot,â she said.
âNo dear,â said Auntie Enora. âNot for a long time.â
âOh. Right.â She drank gin and tonic, then she stared into the glass. It was bright-green and glowing like it was on fire.
âI know itâs not your absolute favourite,â Auntie Enora apologized, âbut it was the best thing we had in the house. Miz Ann and Mister Milo are at work, and I wonât go near that awful woman to get Miz Maggie.â
âItâs fine,â said Hyacinth, sipping. Auntie Enora made a mean gin and tonic. Hyacinth didnât think the gin they had was actually all that good either. She had learned to appreciate cheap a great deal more than good during the war. It was surprising to contend with quality all of a sudden.
Damn it, she thought. I guess the store brand isnât really just the same.
Unless you hit it up with a prohibitive quantity of magic, of course.
She glanced up at the chalkboard. Five hash marks were remaining.
Five bottles of beer on the wall, five bottles of beer⊠and they can stay on the goddamn wall, Iâve had plenty of beer.
âHow is he holding up?â she asked, nodding to Mordecai. He was breathing very hard, but not coughing, and his expression was tight with pain.
âReasonably,â said Auntie Enora. âAlthough I was just about ready to stop you. I think he has had about enough. It really started to hurt him about an hour ago, but heâs been very good about staying where Iâve put him.â
âWhere have you put him?â
Erik shrugged. âHere, but different.â He smiled. âYouâve been very good about taking care of him while heâs here, Miz Hyacinth. Itâs really a shame about the metal. Heâs never going to be quite right.â
âBut well enough that youâll leave?â said Hyacinth, with venom that surprised even her. She didnât like what Auntie Enora was doing to Erik. She hadnât liked what Auntie Enora did to Nina.
Erik nodded sagely. Well, Auntie Enora made him nod that way. âIn due time, child.â
She made creamed asparagus on toast for Hyacinth. The asparagus was canned, and the toast was alternately over-done and underdone, having been made on the stove, but Hyacinth was not going to be allowed up off the floor until she had eaten, and it really wasnât that bad.
David had gotten her started on creamed asparagus on toast. The gods alone knew who had gotten him started on it. (It seemed like she just wasnât going to be able to get away from David today.) He called it poor people food â because you could make it with the canned stuff, it was even a little bit better with the canned stuff â despite the bĂ©chamel.
When Mordecai creamed anything, he called that âbasic white sauce.â In his opinion, it was not impressive. Hollandaise is impressive, heâd say.
While she ate, Hyacinth amused herself by imagining the two of them fighting. They were about matched physically and psychologically, but sheâd never known Mordecai to scratch eyes or pull hair, so David had the advantage.
Well, would have had if he wasnât dead. Mordecai wins! she thought.
Milo came in when she was about halfway through her lunch, knelt at her side, and put arms around her to hold her up.
Hyacinth snickered and shook her head. âNo, Iâm all right. Iâm just being managed. Auntie Enora wants me to quit helping for a while.â
Erik returned from his brief visit to the alley. He was doing up the top button on his pants. âThe size of this childâs bladder is unfortunate,â Auntie Enora complained. âOh, Mister Milo. I was hoping youâd be home soon.â Erik smiled. âDo you think youâd be able to help Miz Hyacinth to bed? Just as soon as sheâs done there. I was willing to try it, myself, but you see how I am.â
Erik spread his arms. Auntie Enora meant how short he was, but Hyacinth couldnât help noticing he was a little bit wobbly when he did that.
He mounted the step stool and attended to the pot on the stove. âI have a little bit left here. Mister Milo, I donât supposeâŠâ Erikâs hand slipped. The pot upended itself and clattered to the floor.
Hyacinth said, âGods!â Milo gave a little gasp and put a hand over his mouth.
Auntie Enora regarded them through Erikâs eye, then she looked down at the pot and made him smile. âOh, I am so dreadfully clumsy. Iâm sorry. That was my fault. Iâll get it.â
âAuntie Enora, is ErikâŠ?â said Hyacinth.
âNo-no. Erik is just fine. That was all me. I assure you.â Erik smiled. âDid I startle you, Mister Milo?â
Milo nodded. Hyacinth could feel him shaking.
âOh, I am very sorry about that. Truly.â Erik wet a dish towel and began to mop up the floor. âI expect you startle easily.â
Milo nodded.
âMiz Hyacinth, why donât you just try to finish there and Mister Milo can help you to bed and get changed if he wants to?â
Hyacinth regarded Milo, and then Auntie Enora. Whatâs going on here? Are you screwing with him? Are you testing him? Did you do that to see if heâd scream?
Hyacinth was very much beginning to empathize with Mordecaiâs view of the gods. She frowned at Auntie Enora, but there wasnât anything she wanted to say in front of Milo. She ate quickly so that he could help her to bed and get changed. She had a feeling Ann would hold up better under any other experiments Auntie Enora wanted to try.
Lying in bed, Hyacinth saw tessellating metal folds on the ceiling until she fell asleep, and then she dreamed about them.
âââ
Mordecai was away from them the rest of the day. He slept and spoke softly, not really so you could understand him, though sometimes Auntie Enora would answer him. Occasionally, incongruously, he laughed.
âDoesnât that hurt?â Hyacinth asked him finally. He was even smiling a little, it was faint, but it was there.
âYes,â he replied. âBut Iâm lying on the cot in the dining room and youâve got me so high on cough syrup I donât care.â
Hyacinth frowned thunderously at Auntie Enora. âHe got hooked on that stuff, you know. He had to have it because he was healing, but it wasnât good for him.â
Erik smiled for her and was made to shake his head. âThat wonât happen again, dear. Itâs just something nice he remembers, and itâs safe.â
Mordecai sighed, relieved and contented. âErikâs all right.â
âYes,â said Hyacinth.
Where he was, Erik was all right.
Where she was, Erik was sunken and hollow, with dirty clothing that used to fit him now hanging awkwardly and trousers that kept needing to be hitched up. He had started to wander slightly when Auntie Enora wanted to get from one place to another, and Hyacinth had been concerned on multiple occasions that he was going to wobble right off that step stool.
Oh, but he was holding up very well.
Hyacinth could only hope that Mordecai would do as well. And very quickly, please.
âââ
âQuicklyâ didnât seem to be an option, although with Auntie Enora helping, he was surely doing better than he would have alone. He might not have survived such an extensive remodel alone. He had a lot more gold in him now, two whole bracelets, and he needed time to adapt.
It was almost like when she had fixed him the first time, and Hyacinth kept an eye out for the same symptoms in roughly the same span. She didnât want it to last more than three days and she was hoping for less.
For that first day, what remained of it, he was just gone. Pained, but soft, and high on cough syrup he had taken seven years ago. Auntie Enora made no attempt at food or water and occasionally gave him sips of medicine when he was breathing in the right direction.
Early the next morning he started to shiver, and he was like that on and off for most of the second day. He didnât want blankets, or any touching at all, but they tried to keep one on him so he wouldnât get chilled. He didnât want food, either, but Auntie Enora was much more successful in coaxing him than Hyacinth had been.
He had water and medicine and cold chicken bouillon and he didnât like any of it. But he didnât cry or talk, he rested.
On the third day, he was starting to come back to them. Auntie Enora still kept him from being bothered about Erik, or anything except getting well, but he knew where he was and when. He still wasnât exactly fond of food, but he managed a little soup and he didnât seem to mind it being warm. He drank lots of ice water, he wouldâve had nothing but that, if theyâd let him.
For dinner, he asked for a poached egg on toast.
He was back on solids in under three days. After sheâd fixed him the first time, Hyacinth hadnât been able to negotiate real food into him for over a week. It was faster.
But he was still weak, and exhausted, and he couldnât sit up unless you held him. It was nothing that Hyacinth couldnât have managed herself, especially with the medicine that kept him from coughing, but Auntie Enora did not delegate, and as he approached thirteen days with no food and no sleep, Erik was still somehow able to hold her.