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fallen_senbon ([info]fallen_senbon) wrote in [info]fallen_leaves,
@ 2009-05-06 19:24:00

Previous Entry  Add to memories!  Tell a Friend!  Next Entry
Entry tags:genma, raidou

Meet You on the Other Side [closed to Genma & Raidou]
[Directly follows Follow You Into Dark]

One of the hardest tasks a medic ever faced, according to the wisdom of Konoha's most experienced healers, was keeping alive a patient who believed he had lost any reason to continue the struggle. Only the suicides were worse, and it being a ninja village, there were almost no suicides who survived long enough to receive any medical treatment at all.

No, it was the shinobi who came in a bloodied mess, clutching dogtags torn from the necks of corpses; the men and women who had watched their partners cut down; the jounin-sensei bringing back the lifeless bodies of the genin they had sworn to protect; the survivors of capture and torture who had failed their missions, their teammates, themselves--those were the ones the medics dreaded caring for most. There was no hope you could give a man who'd had all his hopes wrenched away.

Of course, Konoha's medics weren't the types to give up easily. Even in the most dire of cases, there was always a chance. As long as the patient made it through the first twenty-four hours, they said, there was hope.

Within an hour of arriving in Konoha, Genma was in surgery. Ten hours later he was moved to a closely monitored recovery ward, swathed in bandages painted with intricate seals. An hour after that he was back in the operating theatre, crashing, failing. Dying.

The medics painted more seals. Cut through damaged flesh. Cast jutsu upon jutsu.

Twenty hours after arrival, Genma was moved to ICU. His broken hand was in traction, thumb and each finger suspended individually to hold them straight, to pull the shattered bones into perfect alignment while they healed. Delicate lines of blue script ran down each digit, merging in intricate spirals of ink across the palm and back of his hand, and tracing along his forearm. It had taken Ito, the hand surgeon, fifteen of those twenty hours to paint the seals.

His bruised and swollen larynx was forced open by a narrow tube of plastic connected to machines doing the work of breathing for him. His throat was bandaged. His airways were flushed clean of poison residue and the sloughing flesh the toxin had destroyed.

Blood-tinged bandages around his torso hid the ugliest damage. Broken ribs were wired in place over a deep tear in his liver. It, too, was held together with seals painted internally, and the efforts of several medics working in tandem to pour healing chakra in.

His less severe injuries were cleaned and bandaged. His broken false tooth had been removed, though no replacement had been implanted. If he survived the day, the week, then dentistry might be worth worrying about.

He lay unmoving but for the rise and fall of his chest with each mechanical breath. The nurses on the floor spoke in hushed, guarded tones, and turned all inquiries away. It was too soon to tell, they said.

At the twenty-fifth hour, Genma's eyes slitted open.

There was dim light. A scent of antiseptic mingled with blood. A taste of anesthetic lingering in the back of his throat. The soft beep of monitors, the hissing shush of a ventilator. The beeps picked up tempo as he came back to himself.

Raidou was dead.

He tried to fight the rhythm of the respirator, and an alarm shrilled. Lights brightened, a hand caressed his forehead, cool and long fingered.

"Shh, shh, don't fight it. Just relax. Easy breaths. Easy, easy..."

A metallic taste flooded his mouth as drugs were injected. He started to float away.

"It's okay, Genma," the voice said. "You're home. You're safe." For a moment, before he drifted off again, he was sure it had been Yumiko calling his name.



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[info]fallen_raidou
2009-05-06 09:43 pm UTC (link)
For the first time in years, Raidou found himself losing track of time. There was no clock disgracing the pristine white walls of his sterilized room, no window to let him get a fix on the outside light, and the nurses would have rather stripped off and danced naked than put anything so potentially contaminating as a watch near a burns patient.

It was that more than anything that convinced him he was home. What was the point of trapping him in a genjustu if Sago was only going to torture him with neurotic medical staff and excruciatingly sporadic updates about his partner? There were much quicker ways to break a person.

Though, after the tenth hour of drifting in and out of drugged consciousness, waking to find no more news, sleeping just to dream of Genma's name on the stone, Raidou couldn't think of many.

The medics weren't stupid; they kept his wrists in padded cuffs, his ankles in foam-lined shackles, his blood full of morphine and carefully graded tranquilizers, trying to minimize pain and whatever damage they expected him to do after the thirtieth I'm sorry. We still don't know anything. It was its own kind of torture, but one he could almost understand.

Every few hours, a medic with scrolls and seals came in, dressed in sterile white from the neck down, and peeled away bandages to weave chakra through seared flesh. To scrub sloughing skin and weeping pus away, exposing deeper layers of red tissue. Twice the pain crested so high that Raidou passed straight out. Three times they held him down and drugged him unconscious. Once he managed to last through it, sweat-soaked and pale, half a breath from screaming himself silent, but awake.

It was, in a very small way, the only fight they let him have.

Sometimes, the green-eyed medic sat and talked to him. He couldn't see much of her behind the surgical mask and cap, the neck to ankle shrouding of achingly white clothes--just her eyes and a glimpse of red hair. It was from her that he finally found out what had happened. That Genma had translocated them (five miles, one handed; how?) and the safehouse ninja had brought them in. That Sago had been tracked down and slaughtered (he was dead; how could he be dead?), and a team dispatched to bring Yukaho and her kids home.

His right shoulderblade had been shattered, he learned. Cracks marbling out through the bone from the strike Sago had managed to get almost dead centre. It had been partially healed, his skin painted with an intricate web of seals that would promote natural healing to do the rest. Apparently it would leave the bone stronger, but for now it just ached.

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