Escape from an Ancient Civilization Ch 101
by berryChapter 101
As Medeus stepped through the gate, his gaze swept quickly up and down Nataek. The faint smile at the corners of his eyes vanished. As soon as Medeus approached, he snatched away the quiver in Nataekâs hand.
âCan you really laugh when you look like this?â
Medeusâs glance flicked toward Nataekâs hand. The bandages, wrapped clumsily by himself, were loosely tied, stained with blood and pus that had already seeped through and discolored the cloth. Nataek hurriedly hid his hand behind his back.
âIsnât this how it usually ends up when you keep training?â
Without answering, Medeus set the quiver down and pulled Nataekâs hand toward him, carefully examining the mess.
âHerbs. Do you have them in your quarters?â
Through the parts of skin not covered by cloth, Medeusâs warmth seeped in. Nataek awkwardly pulled his captured hand away and answered,
âYes. I do.â
He rubbed the lingering warmth on the back of his hand with his other hand. Watching this, Medeus reached toward Nataekâs head.
âWhatâs all this stuck in your hairââ
âI-Iâll take care of it myself.â
Nataek drew his upper body back, refusing Medeusâs concern. Before Medeusâs fingertips could brush his black hair, the distance between them widened. Medeusâs hand froze in midair. Nataek, without even looking at him, shook his head briskly. A short stem of a date palm fruit fell from his hair.
âWhen I was drawing the bow earlier, I was under a tree. Mustâve fallen on me then.â
ââŚI see.â
From the moment his touch had been refused, shadows crossed Medeusâs face.
âGo in first. Iâll tidy these up and come in afterward.â
Just as Nataek was about to pass him by and head toward the target, Medeusâs hand, still hanging in midair, caught his arm.
âYour hand. Treat it first.â
âIt wonât take long. Iâll finish this first and thenââ
âNo. Treat it first.â
Nataek tried to slip out of his grasp as before, but Medeusâs hold was firm, leaving no room for escape. He pulled Nataek straight into the quarters.
Thudâthe sound of the door closing made Nataek sigh inwardly.
Heâd been trying so hard not to let things end up like this latelyâŚ
âCome here. Where did you put the herbs?â
âI can do it myself.â
Nataek stood at the doorway and answered, but his words were ignored.
âWhere did you put them?â
ââŚOver there.â
He pointed beneath the cabinet where the flower vase sat. The clinking sound of jars echoed through the spacious room. It was late at night, the outside dark, the interior lit only by lanternsâforcing them close together, face to face. On top of that, the treatment would require skin-to-skin contact, sharing each otherâs warmth. It was exactly the kind of situation Nataek had been trying to avoid lately. Especially here, alone together in this room.
âCome sit here.â
Medeus sat on the bed and beckoned him. There was a table in the room, yet of all places, he sat on the bed. Things Nataek had never been conscious of before now drew his attention.
âWhat are you waiting for?â
Medeus urged him as he pulled out herbs and a mortar from the box. With no choice, Nataek cautiously perched beside him.
âWhen youâre learning archery, injuries on your hands are normal. But if you donât take care of them, they can worsen, so you have to treat them properly. Apply these herbs now and change the dressing once more before bed; itâll be better by tomorrow.â
âYes. Thank you.â
The rhythmic grinding of plants in the mortar filled the silence. Looking back, every time Nataek was alone with Medeus, the mood always seemed to shift strangely. Recently, it had been even more so. MaybeâŚ
No, better to bring up work and cut off any weird developments.
âLord Medeus, is it truly all right for you to personally head to Uruk? Isnât Lord Agadis in charge of its defense right now?â
âThatâs right.â
âThis key Iâve given you is the debt I owe. It is repayment for protecting our family all this time, so you can trust me.â
This wasnât just a war between nations; it was also a war between two former comrades-in-arms.
âWhy? Are you worried about Agadis?â
âNo, not at all. I just wondered⌠if perhaps you might be.â
âThe contents of the letter from the diviner were only the beginning. Exploitation will grow worse. Not only those outside the walls but even the Uruk people within them will suffer. The Uruk ruled by Luhaljagesh is not the Uruk we knew. Ever since Kushanna died, the seat of ensi of Uruk might as well be vacant.â š
âDo you think the people outside the walls evacuated safely?â
One of the requests Nataek and Medeus had made to the diviner was relocating the slums outside Urukâs walls to the west, since the east would soon become the battlefield.
âThe diviner passed it alongâshould be fine. No oneâs quicker about those things than Hak.â
Nataek agreed. Relieved to hear the answer to something that had weighed on him, he drummed his fingers lightly on his knee as though playing piano.
ââŚTeresi.â
âYes, sir.â
âDo you really want to go to the battlefield that badly?â
âItâs not the battlefieldâI only wish to accompany your campaign to Uruk.â
ââŚWhy?â
âPerhaps Inannaâs blessing might truly help.â
âAre you saying that as Inannaâs envoy?â
âWell⌠I suppose so.â
âThat excuse was only to fool Samuagon.â ²
Medeus, who knew what kind of life Nataek had led before arriving at Kish and whether he truly was Inannaâs envoy or not, wasnât buying it. Yet until now heâd never brought it upâwhy mention it now?
âIt could be true, though.â
âIâve always won victories without divine blessing.â
âThatâs true.â
âYou donât need to follow me; the Kish army will win regardless.â
âI know that too.â
The grinding of the herbs ceased. Medeus looked at him with a deep, searching gaze.
âThen why insist on going to such a dangerous place? Even soldiers try to avoid the frontlinesâwhy do you insist on following me there?â
So quiet⌠Is he planning to leave me behind again?
Waitâam I about to be dumped because I tried keeping some distance?
I have to stick close to Medeus until all of this is over. Alarm bells rang in Nataekâs mind. He scooted closer to Medeus instinctively.
âWhen we left Uruk, I promised you, didnât I? That Iâd stay by your side no matter what. And isnât it a servantâs duty to take responsibility for their master until the end? Attendants are bound to stay with their lord. Iâm still yours, Lord Medeusâwhether you head to the battlefield or anywhere else, Iâm bound to follow.â
Nataek rattled off his words like rapid gunfire, and Medeus chuckled softly.
âFinally, you come close on your own.â
ââŚWhat?â
Medeus took Nataekâs hand and set it on his thigh, then carefully unwrapped the poorly tied cloth.
âYouâve been avoiding me ever since that day you came back from the river covered in mud.â
Nataek flinched instinctively.
Whyâs he so damn perceptive?
ââŚI never avoided you.â
Feigning ignorance, Medeus casually tossed aside the dirty cloth and gently placed the herbs over Nataekâs injured fingers.
âYou did.â
âI didnât. Why would I everâŚâ
Before Nataek could finish, Medeus suddenly reached for his cheek. Startled, Nataek leaned his upper body back, but Medeus lowered his hand as if expecting the reaction.
âSee?â
âIf someone suddenly does that, anyone would flinch.â
âYou didnât flinch before.â
ââŚâ
Back then, even when you did things like that, I felt nothing. My heart didnât drop into my stomach, nor did my skin tingle with a strange aftertaste. Or maybe⌠maybe I only now understand what those feelings were.
Medeus continued tending Nataekâs hand.
âDid I⌠do something wrong to you?â
âWrong? What do you mean?â
Silence fell between them. After a long pause, Medeus spoke again.
âIs it because I kissed you? That day I taught you archery?â
That kissâcloser to passion than blessingâflashed in his mind. The memory of that bewildering moment left Nataek suddenly parched.
Nataek had tried desperately to dismiss what Medeus did that day as some ancient custom. Medeus himself had even called it nothing more than a blessing. But no matter how hard Nataek tried, the modern part of him couldnât easily accept it.
Is it really because of that day? Because Medeus keeps doing confusing things⌠and the shock of that kiss hasnât faded yet?
To Nataek, it was an event he couldnât accept as purely sacredâbut now was hardly the time to bring it up.
âThat was just a blessing, wasnât it?â
ââŚâ
If by chance Medeus were to say it wasnât a blessingâor if Nataek were to admit that he couldnât see it as oneâtheir relationship might unravel. If the conversation twisted in the wrong direction, if they grew distantâŚ
No. Absolutely not. He had to stay close to Medeus until the day he escaped.
Nataek sealed off even the faintest chance.
âIt was merely sharing a blessing; why would that be a mistake? I donât mind it at all. Thatâs not why.â
âThen why?â
ââŚLord Medeus.â
Fine. Since it came up, I might as well draw the line now. Stop driving me crazy.
âIâve been debating whether to bring this up⌠Like when the deputy commander was shocked to see us sharing that blessing, or for the sake of the troopsâ discipline⌠I think we should maintain more propriety with each other.â
âWhat kind of propriety?â
âExcept when a blessing is truly necessaryâŚâ
Nataekâs mind spun, searching for a word that wouldnât sound ridiculous. He couldnât exactly say letâs not touch each other. A no-closer-than-one-meter rule? That seemed too extremeâŚ
âExcept when?â
âExcept then⌠we should try not to touch each other, as much as possible.â
The unrefined words slipped from Nataekâs lips.
ââŚWhy?â
Footnotes:
Ensi â A Sumerian title for a city-state ruler, roughly equivalent to a governor or prince.
Samuagon â Likely a high-ranking figure or military leader; in context, someone who had to be deceived about Nataekâs supposed divine role.