When jaida got the news, the first thing she did was to rush to the guard that was feeling the effect of fluid loading. The man was sweating profusely. "He needs to lie down for a while," she commanded to the others there like she had some authority. She took her hand and placed it on the man's chest. His heart beat was still strong. That was a good sign.
The human body is amazing in how it deals with water. Water crosses membranes in the mouth, the intestines, through the capillaries in the kidneys and the skin. She placed her hands on his back as he labored to breath. One over the lungs. She closed her eyes and slow drew the fluid from his lungs. She swallowed a few times, then coughed spitting out fluid with crud from his lungs. She then moved her hands to his kidneys and started the process there. The man would would not have control of himself. The human kidneys could take off fluid quickly, even faster when her magic was applied to it. Each heart beat pushed the water out of his body and as the water left his blood, the heart beat grew stronger.
Jaida was glad that she had not killed the man. She realized that she came closer to it than she thought. That was the nature of water, it was powerful and got stronger over time. This meant that it was less forgiving when given time to work.
As she was escorted out of the building, she walked through one of the gardens. She saw what she thought was the queen standing in the window watching. She knew what this was like, every woman from a child to adult worries about those they love.
In the garden was a fountain, Jaida put her hand in the water and swirled it. Making sure there was no one near by, she made the water rise like two nymphs and swirl like they were dancing. After a couple moments, she made a dolphin and made it jump into the air landing back in the water a few times. Then she made a romanticized image of the royal family rise from the water. Then she let the water fall back into the pool, and sat on a bench with her eyes closed for a few moment, resting from the exertion.