“Alright, now, open. Don’t blink.”
Follen leaned in close and shined a light in Quinn’s eye. He had her look up, down, side to side, tugged down on her cheek to look beneath the lids. When that was done, he gently shifted her eyepatch away.
“You might hear some noise in your head for a moment.”
With a surgeon’s grace, he brought a thin, metal prodder up and probed into the empty socket. His unoccupied hand held onto hers; she would know that if she felt scared, all she had to do was squeeze his hand and they would take a moment. But he moved fast today, perhaps it was the adrenaline. Sure enough there was a thin, scraping sound that radiated into her ears from behind, uncomfortable but not painful, followed by the tapping of metal upon metal.
“There we go,” he said, and sat upright before moving the patch back over her eye. He smiled reassuringly. “No signs of growth, not in your eye, not anywhere. You, Ms. Loughvein, are quite resilient.”
Follen got up from his stool and went to the little desk that all of the ward rooms had. He’d taken the opportunity to sneak them into medical through the pilot’s elevator—though it had taken some patience and one or two distractions in the commons. Funnily enough, this was the same room Roaki had been settled in.
While he scribbled notes onto a chart, Dahlia swooped back to Quinn’s side. She’d calmed down considerably, and that frantic fear of loss had eased back into her more general closeness. She smiled, rolled her shoulder with a playful wince.
“Lucky you, huh?”
“Still, best to take it easy for a couple days anyway. Give Ablaze a wide berth until it’s all healed up and the modium is cleaned. No marathon sim sessions, either—though I’m told that goes more for you, Ms. Senn. Otherwise, you two are perfectly healthy.” He flipped the chart closed, but didn’t move for the door just yet. “Now, I don’t know what the schedule is going to be. I assume at some point today you’ll be expected to go make a statement, shake some hands, etcetera. I’d imagine that’s where Besca’s being dragged to right now. Whether you’d like to go get that out of the way, or get yourselves a little rest first, is up to you.”
Follen leaned in close and shined a light in Quinn’s eye. He had her look up, down, side to side, tugged down on her cheek to look beneath the lids. When that was done, he gently shifted her eyepatch away.
“You might hear some noise in your head for a moment.”
With a surgeon’s grace, he brought a thin, metal prodder up and probed into the empty socket. His unoccupied hand held onto hers; she would know that if she felt scared, all she had to do was squeeze his hand and they would take a moment. But he moved fast today, perhaps it was the adrenaline. Sure enough there was a thin, scraping sound that radiated into her ears from behind, uncomfortable but not painful, followed by the tapping of metal upon metal.
“There we go,” he said, and sat upright before moving the patch back over her eye. He smiled reassuringly. “No signs of growth, not in your eye, not anywhere. You, Ms. Loughvein, are quite resilient.”
Follen got up from his stool and went to the little desk that all of the ward rooms had. He’d taken the opportunity to sneak them into medical through the pilot’s elevator—though it had taken some patience and one or two distractions in the commons. Funnily enough, this was the same room Roaki had been settled in.
While he scribbled notes onto a chart, Dahlia swooped back to Quinn’s side. She’d calmed down considerably, and that frantic fear of loss had eased back into her more general closeness. She smiled, rolled her shoulder with a playful wince.
“Lucky you, huh?”
“Still, best to take it easy for a couple days anyway. Give Ablaze a wide berth until it’s all healed up and the modium is cleaned. No marathon sim sessions, either—though I’m told that goes more for you, Ms. Senn. Otherwise, you two are perfectly healthy.” He flipped the chart closed, but didn’t move for the door just yet. “Now, I don’t know what the schedule is going to be. I assume at some point today you’ll be expected to go make a statement, shake some hands, etcetera. I’d imagine that’s where Besca’s being dragged to right now. Whether you’d like to go get that out of the way, or get yourselves a little rest first, is up to you.”