first: he is not giving sebastien the vial. he took an oath, primum non nocere, and while he doesn’t believe in apollo, or asclepius or hygieia or any of those other gods he pledged covenant to that final night before his graduation, with a mouthful of wine and latin whispered in unison, the brush of a dozen hands pacing circles under the stars– he does believe in intention. in choosing who you are to be, and moving through the world as that person, no matter how difficult it may become.
it’s not the first time he’s withheld a balm, and it won’t be the last– how strange, the part of caring that comes with saying no. saying, some pains are good for you. some pains leave you better off.
second: he is not letting sebastien on that ice. primum non nocere, indeed– he has the itching certainty that to stand by and let him waltz to his death would leave the surgeon somehow as culpable for the loss as if he had slid the knife in himself. or, more likely, knowing what is out there: crushed the man’s trachea between his own beastly teeth.
he’d like to believe this further proof of his moral integrity, but he knows there are others with similarly dangerous plans for their night– and he is not on their doorsteps now, is he? is he even bothering to intercede, does he even feel bad? no. non, pas du tout. patently, it’s obvious: his morals play favorites, and sylvain– hopeless thing, from the ache in his eyes and down to the small bones of his ears– has somehow wedged his way into the doctor’s good graces, without either of them noticing anything afoot.
a realisation to examine later, surely; now, he just clenches his jaw, sighs. looks at the man like a problem to be solved. a puzzle with an answer at the end of it, a thing to be cracked open. what will stop you, sebastien? what do you want more than anything else?
and then, thirdly, lastly: a circling. step back until you hit a wall; retreat until it clicks into place. sylvain is tantalus, and casimir holds the one vial aboard that may aleviate his very specific brand of suffering. he is not giving sylvain the laudanum, not tonight, not ever. but sebastien doesn’t know that. sebastien doesn’t know him. doesn’t know what he would and wouldn’t do, to get what he wants. doesn’t know what he wants at all.
he makes a small, displeased face at the way the other man half-collapses without casimir to hold him up. the surgeon’s name expelled like a sigh. further proof of the wreck of his state– further proof he has no business leaving the ship at all. “perhaps you’re right, sylvain. surely we’ve abandoned the realm of the conventional by now, this far into the abyss. it would pure cruelty to prolong your suffering, knowing the key to your relief is so close at hand.” as if the words themselves have conjured it, he brings the vial out from his pocket. holds it to the light between them, just out of reach of the other man. just beyond the grasp of that hungry, hungry gaze.
“i can’t give you the entire vial without the loss being noted, but i won’t leave you high and dry either. tell you what…” pockets the drugs again and steps further away, back towards the door now. like tempting a stray cat out of a barrel. “come with me to my quarters, and let me administer the laudanum myself. i’ll be able to monitor you in peace there, in case anything goes awry. and once you’ve settled, you’ll be free to go on your merry way, off into the night. d’accord?”
He doesn’t know what it is that surprises him, really, about the surgeon’s quarters. It seemed as if the entrance happened in an instant, a knife-flick, rather than the pull of a door. His sense of time is warped, either way; wrapped, too sleeping inside things that passed and things that never will. He tries to pare it down: is it the size of the room? The fact that it’s more barebones, more stripped of varnish and odds, varnish and ends? All that regalia they associated with Toussaint, up in Hotel Dieu. All the souvenirs of someone who can decide what to save. Decide what to keep.
Bastien blinks, and their eyelids start hurting. Yes, they knew it’d happen, the pinches inside soft tissue. Knew it shouldn’t be much of a start at all. They used to drip milk and water from a cloth, when Thien went through this; boiled water, cooled down inside the cusp of their hands. Thien would say, I feel like I’m either going blind, or like I should. Like I’d rather. Bastien wouldn’t say anything at all. Would say, hush, maybe, would weave in different subjects, different spotlights to stun the pain. But there’s no stunning to pain, not this kind. He knows that now. Wonders if it made Thien feel weak, the fact that he even tried to move him out of it. A center that can never budge. A center that can never turn, only grow.
The apprentice he was, the diptych of obedience and airs, would care if Toussaint noticed. If he looked at their eyes at all, and took stock of the red rim around them, the almost-tears. Would be irked beyond measure that someone would accuse him of crying.
But there it is. And what else to accuse? From Toussaint’s vantage, the grand vesta opening on all this burnt land, Bastien is blameless. No guile, save for the weakness. Of him, on him. For Toussaint, there never was a difference.
He shudders when the door closes. The current nips at their limbs, and without even thinking, muscle drawn to what is safest, they gravitate towards the pipes. Knows where they are, because this room, much like the best of them, mirrors Ayla’s cabin. The cabin lent to him. Fuck, he needs to go back for Ayla. Bon sang, get on with it. I have to go and see what they’re talking about, down there. Have to go and be with them. Do you know how long I’ve been waiting for a chance to make a headaway of it, docteur? To find that island again, and look inside it? Wear it all inside out? Do you know? Anything, anything at all?
The actor’s palms stick to the wall, desperate to capture the heat. Their back half collides, half curls over it, ribs bunched by the cornice. Their chin drops into their chest. It is not, really, as if they had much power to begin with, back when Toussaint cornered them in the sick bay. But now, in this bedroom, this consecrated shrine, all the balances upend. He loses even the little power he had; the bargaining chips, the common ground, the hunting ground. Power? Need strips you of it that is what Cedric had kept on trying to teach him, and Bastien refused, in some perverse, pervasive acceptance of their hunger, to accept at face value.
❝ Well? Will you apply your cure, then? ❞ He speaks softly to the surgeon. It’d be a mistake to think it a softness of its own. His tone drops, droops. A lulling pendulum in the cave of their throat. Sebastien can hardly muster more; flesh betrays, where before they had so often betrayed it. Wants to say, get on with it, I have a whole conspiracy to catch up with, and they’re messy businesses to be late to. Wants to say, who the fuck hurt you, Toussaint, and why did you never touch me? Wants to say, not underneath, but at the top of the pile, the quickest blanket to grab, will you let me sleep here? I cannot bear to sleep in that cabin alone. There are nights where I prefer it. Those are the worst nights. Those are the nights that scare me. Please, I’ll be good—just, let me? I’ll take the floor. Wants to say, well, ask, where exactly does need stop? How much can need amass, amend? It’s awful, that he thought he loved Cedric, the troupe, life, with an infinite spirit. He understands, now, bunched in the corner of this hard man’s chamber, that there is only one thing to be spoken of in infinities.
And poppy is the son of it.
From slumping, his body boils into something else. His body understands the threat of this better: that it might not happen, that Casimir might not follow on his word. What’s a word kept to a wraith? What’s a word kept to voiceless things? No. No, anything, but I must have the vial.
With a muffled scream, the actor throw up their arms. This dithering, this stalling—and what for? Casimir has no need of anything he might give. In their gesture, the arms convulse, a tension that springs rather than streams through. And the, well, the actor just turns inside the corner. With their hand is still on the wall, they push themself forward, straighter up, closer into his space. For all the good it does. Oh, le réveil. They hiss the words, scales-caked tidings.
❝ I know you think I was set to betray you, Docteur. I know you think I must be punished for it. Bon Dieu, perhaps you think I must be punished for a lot of things. But if there’s anything left of mercy inside you, you’ll string me on the rack later. Tomorrow. Do whatever you want. When’s the last time you had a shot at it? A living thing entrusted to your hand, and not a dead one? Je le jure, Toussaint, you can cut my whole body open and throw it into the water. Hack at the liver, the twirling eye nerves. Anything. Merde, anything. Just. Please. Give. Me. The. Dose. ❞