
AGE: Twenty-eight, born in late spring.
ORIGIN: Mulhorand Mulan
NATIONALITY: Thayan
The body is covered from toe to tip in linen, leather and all matter of coverings, not much more than five foot nine. Its physique is reedy, almost spindly; the coverings fit loose except for the coif and gloves, which are fastened secure. It would be surprising if it weighed in excess of one hundred and fifty-six pounds clothed. It wears a mask for it would not visit its visage upon anyone. Over the years the bronze has been engraved with lays of silver. The eyes which peer from cross-fold slits are mismatched: one is hazel, the other a cornflower shade of blue.
The voice, heard infrequently, is ill to the ears. More often the body will sign as it has been taught.
It breathes, and that is enough.
“Am I dying?”UNTIL I CAN BEAR A FRACTION OF YOUR BURDEN, SUFFERER, I SHALL.
UNTIL I MAY SHOULDER A SPLINTER FROM YOUR RACK, OUR MARTYRED FATHER, I SHALL.
UNTIL I WOULD SEE A GLIMPSE OF YOUR PAIN, BROKEN GOD, I SHALL.
JUSTICE ENDURES.
“Yes.”
He couldn’t have hid this even if he wanted; the sores were almost bursting, a cruel and blackened rash from thigh to torso. So Eiren said what they both knew. What, instead, gave him pause was how Tyn did not move. His lips opened, shut, but he stared straight ahead. Then:
“I don’t want to come back.”
“…” Eiren replaced the cloth on his forehead. It’d been less than an hour and the last was already saturate with sweat. “You shouldn’t say that. Not so loud.”
“I’m dying,” Tyn said, reaching for Eiren’s wrist with a weak, beleaguered motion. The heat he felt was familiar—like a brand. “What does it matter? I don’t want to come back. Please.”
“Why are you asking me?” Eiren scoffed, pulling his arm away. “What can I do about that? It isn’t…”
“You can. I know you can. You’re different. Not made to work the way I was. What got me sick. Please, Eiren. I don’t want to come back! Swear that I won’t come back!”
He was shouting now, hoarse, meek, eyes blown wide with desperation. Again he reached for Eiren, this time seizing him by the collar and yanking down until they were close. Eiren could smell the rot.
“Tyn…”
“Swear it, Eiren. Swear it so I can die in peace. Please.”
Eiren looked away. The ramshackle thing they called a hospice for the ‘working ones’ was quiet. No footsteps—only the distant, sonorous roar of toil elsewhere. He returned to Tym after a sigh.
“I swear it.”
Tyn loosened, letting Eiren free. He lied there on the cot, settling into the blanket of linen rags. Eiren tried not to think about how his funerary shroud would be those very rags, if He deigned Tyn to be buried at all. If He deigned…
“Thank you.”
… but Tyn was already gone.