Emperor Sagan
Lord Commissar
Hannalore examined the severed head from a few steps away, immobile, not out of disgust but because her interest had been piqued. She had seen many dismembered bodies and various other extremities divorced from their source throughout her time, and well over half of those cases had been done by her own hand. Surgery was a particular expertise of hers. Autopsies included. There wasn't an easy number to recall for the amount of infected, stricken, crippled, or otherwise lame limbs she had amputated. Removal of the head from the body was almost exclusively an ordeal for the autopsies, and often unsanctioned ones at that. Few would tolerate their loved one being beheaded even after death. Better left to the vagabonds or street urchins.
The cut along the fouled stump of a neck did not please her. Too messy, too unprofessional. Perhaps it had been hacked away with an ax or chopped at with a sword. It didn't strike her as a very clean cut. Possibly done while the victim had still been alive, though that was not easy to determine from where she was standing. She couldn't very well do an examination right here. Not with the others around, and certainly not with those violent drunkards accosting them. Fortunately, they were quick to be on their way, putting an end to any potential further violence. She wasn't much a fighter, though she knew her way around her scalpel in very unorthodox ways. For that very reason she kept it strapped to her forearm by leather bands. Spontaneous surgical procedures were sometimes a necessity in life. A slit throat or wrist, punctured eye or windpipe, slashed muscle of the leg or puncture to the stomach would drop anyone. The problem was when they had many, many friends with them.
She realized she was staring at the head for too long and looked away, though she allowed her eyes to peer out from beneath her hood in a sideways manner. The old scholar was already rubbing his hands all over it. That irritated her for a moment until she relaxed. Those Catanach had already gotten their grubby hands all over it anyways. It wouldn't be any further dirtied by an old scholarly astrologer.
"Our hands are without wicker or clay pot. Someone must carry the head by hand," she pointed out. Despite the filth matting down the dead woman's head, Hannalore wondered how soft it would be in her fingers, interwoven like silk lace. Likely, it wouldn't feel as fine as it should. Not with the blood and dirt. And all the other hands that had grasped at it.
The cut along the fouled stump of a neck did not please her. Too messy, too unprofessional. Perhaps it had been hacked away with an ax or chopped at with a sword. It didn't strike her as a very clean cut. Possibly done while the victim had still been alive, though that was not easy to determine from where she was standing. She couldn't very well do an examination right here. Not with the others around, and certainly not with those violent drunkards accosting them. Fortunately, they were quick to be on their way, putting an end to any potential further violence. She wasn't much a fighter, though she knew her way around her scalpel in very unorthodox ways. For that very reason she kept it strapped to her forearm by leather bands. Spontaneous surgical procedures were sometimes a necessity in life. A slit throat or wrist, punctured eye or windpipe, slashed muscle of the leg or puncture to the stomach would drop anyone. The problem was when they had many, many friends with them.
She realized she was staring at the head for too long and looked away, though she allowed her eyes to peer out from beneath her hood in a sideways manner. The old scholar was already rubbing his hands all over it. That irritated her for a moment until she relaxed. Those Catanach had already gotten their grubby hands all over it anyways. It wouldn't be any further dirtied by an old scholarly astrologer.
"Our hands are without wicker or clay pot. Someone must carry the head by hand," she pointed out. Despite the filth matting down the dead woman's head, Hannalore wondered how soft it would be in her fingers, interwoven like silk lace. Likely, it wouldn't feel as fine as it should. Not with the blood and dirt. And all the other hands that had grasped at it.