The whip had hit hard, and it opened the skin imdiately. A line ran across the shoulder from it, already draining blood. Oliver stiffened from the surprise of it, and from his position in the stocks, he could see so of the won amongst the crowd turn away.
The whip flashed again, and this ti Oliver was ready for it. He did not react. He took it like a stone. He'd faced far worse pain than this. The pain would fade, as all things did, though the scar on his back where the whip had slid across the other shoulder would likely remain. Again the skin split and more blood ca with it.
The next strike ca to his oblique on his side, as the sergeant worked to avoid the more glaring wounds of his back. The change brought more pain with it, worse than the other two strikes, and more blood as well. Again, Oliver did not flinch.
The other oblique was where the whip went next, and then it ended, right in the middle of his back, just below his neck, with both flicks of the whip splitting the skin, drawing blood. The sergeant seed to be an expert at that.
"The First Trial is complete," General Tevar announced, though there was a hesitancy to his voice, as though even he expected more.
Oliver removed himself from the stocks sowhat cautiously, expecting to be told to wait, and remain, but the order did not co, and the First Trial had passed far quicker than he had expected.
"Professor," Tevar said, nodding to the professor of dicine, to co and inspect Oliver's back before they proceeded any further.
Begrudgingly, the professor got to his feet, making it clear that he more than disapproved of the whole proceedings. He'd brought a leather bag with him, which he dropped to the floor with a loud thump of air. The students were inspecting Oliver's back along with him, noting how it had all run red.
"Well, as you might expect, General, these are going to need stitches, but seeing as though you're about to throw the boy into a lake, I see little point in administering them now. He will not die of blood loss from them, but I imagine infection will be keen on getting inside, whilst he swims in stagnant water. Satisfied?" The professor asked, his tongue particularly acid.
The General showed no signs of minding, as though he was used to the man's attitude. "If that is your assessnt, then I will trust it. Replace your clothes, boy, it is ti for the Second Trial."
That command horrified him far more than the lashings of the whip. He'd already sacrificed a shirt to blood once that day, he was not willing to do it again. "But General, it's going to ruin the shirt…"
General Tevar looked at him oddly, in the sa way that Verdant had looked at him earlier. Having already received an explanation himself, the priest stepped in to hurriedly explain, lest Oliver invite more of the upper echelon's ire.
"He is rather adverse to waste, General, he ans no offence by it," Verdant said quickly.
Tevar grunted at that. "It makes no difference to the Trials. Most would prefer to enjoy a last little bit of warmth between now and the Second Trial. The night will be long, as long as you are sure your decision will not fail you, then do as you please."
Oliver nodded to Verdant. "If you would take care of my upper layers, until dawn cos."
"Hypothermia, boy," the dical professor put in. "They're breaking the top layer of ice on the lake for you – don't need to tell you how cold that is, do I? If you're to survive the night, then you must move, else you'll be a stiff frozen corpse co morning."
The dical professor was a gruff intense looking man, but Oliver decided that he rather liked the honest way that he had. He nodded seriously at the advice. He knew the dangers of the cold, to a degree. He knew what it was to spend the night outside in winter, without the benefit of a fire. The unknown variable was the wetness that would co along with it, and the lack of clothes."
"If you are quite ready then, we will begin the Second Trial," General Tevar said. He said it loudly, so that those that had gathered to watch the Trial could hear. The General did not seem to find the crowd distasteful. Quite the opposite, he seed to approve of it, as though acknowledging it as a necessary part of the proceedings, invoking the intended effects of deterrence.
The crowd parted as General Tevar led the way towards the lake. Oliver walked directly behind him, his back still exposed, covered with slow-moving rivers of blood. The lashes from a whip weren't as deep as a weapons wound though, he, like the professor, was not worried about blood loss.
He looked for Heathclaw amongst the crowd – he'd supposed the ex-professor would be there, if only to gloat at his misfortune, but in his absence, Oliver supposed that he was likely forbidden to attend. Instead, he saw Blackthorn once more, her eyes narrowed as she watched him. Oliver pointedly returned the glare. He walked with his shoulders back, proudly, as though he had nothing to hide.
He found no sha in his scars, only pride. He found no particular sha in his punishnt either, only regretting that it would reach more people than he. Once again, he acknowledged his need to fix the hole in his soul, before they caused further problems for him.
Verdant watched Oliver closely as he walked. Every movent was carefully tracked by Verdant's pale blue eyes. His gaze was soft, he'd been told, so that even an experienced warrior at tis could not feel it. It was not by intention, it was simply how things had turned out to be. Ever since the ocean had claid him, Verdant was a watcher, and a visionary.
He could see by the way Oliver carried himself that he did not see the full significance of his actions. He acknowledged again that such was the way of the Greats. They moved in what ways they thought to be sensible, without truly realizing the full ripplings of aning that their actions carried.
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