Friday, October 23, 2009

Surprised. "Well you know that's really not our area. You probably want to talk to someone at the FAA. " "Can you give me anything on background?" "Well FAA aircraft.

As Death's granddaughter was not easy and just occasionally she had the irresistible urge to annoy. AH. A PUN OR PLAY ON WORDS said Death wearily ALTHOUGH I SUSPECT YOU WERE MERELY TRYING TO BE TIRESOME. 'Well that sort of thing used to happen a. buy imitrex online Legionary just after the Romans came to Vi- dessos. But miracles he thought did not go stale with repetition. Nepos was still protesting his unworthiness as Gorgidas tugged him onward. His expostulations faded when he came face to face with the horrid facts of injury. The worst-hurt soldiers were already dead either of their wounds or from the sketchy care and jolting they had received during the Romans' grinding retreat. Many who still clung to life would not for long. Shock infection and fever coupled with scant water and constant baking sun made death almost an hourly visitor. The stench of septic wounds turned the stomach even through the aro- mat! ic ointments Gorgidas had applied. Men witless from fever shivered in the noonday heat or babbled anguished gibberish. Here was war's aftermath at its grimmest. In the face of such misery Nepos underwent a transforma- tion nearly as great as the one Gorgidas hoped he would work Harry Turtledove 23 on the wounded. The rotund priest's fatigue fell from him. When he drew himself upright he seemed inches taller. "Show me the worst of them " he said to Gorgidas and sud- denly it was his voice not the Greek doctor's that was filled with authority. If Gorgidas noticed the reversal it did not faze him. He was content to play a secondary role should that be required to save his patients. "The worst?" he said rubbing his chin with a slim-fingered hand. "That would be Publius Flaccus I think. Over this way if you will. " Publius Flaccus was beyond thrashing and delirium; only the low rapid rise and fall of his chest showed he was still alive. He lay unmoving on his litter the ! coarse stubble of his beard stark and black against tight-drawn waxen skin. A Yezda saber had laid his left thigh open from groin to knee. Somehow Gorgidas managed to stanch the flow of blood but the wound grew inflamed almost at once and from mere in- flammation quickly passed to mortification's horror. Greenish-yellow pus crusted the bandages wrapping the gashed limb. Drawn by the smell of corruption flies made a darting cloud around Flaccus. They scattered buzzing as Nepos stooped to examine the wounded Roman. The priest's face was grave as he said to Gorgidas "I will do what I can. Unbandage him for me please; there must be contact between his flesh and mine. " Gorgidas knelt beside Nepos deftly undoing the dressings he had applied the day before. Battle-hardened soldiers gagged and drew back as the huge gash was bared. Its stench was more than most men could stand but neither priest nor physician flinched from it. "Now I understand the Philoktetes " Gorgidas said to him- self. Nepos looked at him without comprehension for the doctor h! ad fallen back into Greek. Unaware that he had spo- ken at all Gorgidas did not explain. Marcus also realized the truth in Sophokles' play. No. eawwu668xcbws446uyftgu54445

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