The Tranquil Gardens
16 Searing 121
When Urs first began his apprenticeship at the Tranquil Gardens, he learned he’d been using the wrong sort of words. The healers of the Tranquil Gardens didn’t call a corpse a corpse, but a cadaver; a knife was preferably a scalpel; a poultice, potion, or powders were to be called medicine. Curses weren’t curses, not at the Tranquil Gardens, but were known as the flu, gout, or the measles.
Mother’s teachings earned him little with his instructors. They weren’t impressed by the stories he’d memorized. His talents with necromancy weren’t enough and his skill with Semblance did less than he expected; he could see where a patient hurt, but he didn’t have the education required to prescribe treatments.
Mother had taught him to give honey for a throat or a stumbling tongue. The Tranquil Garden explained that honey was fine to calm a sore throat and tongue, but was better used in a mixture to keep a wound or cut clean. He’d learned that grains, like oats, could be milled into a cream to cure rashes of all sorts; this was true, but the Tranquil Garden used various oils to cure rashes without the worry of a scar.
Urs had spent the vast majority of his life in the shallows of the Middens. There, in the underbelly of Kalazi, healing had been scarce and Mother respected. She wasn’t questioned because she never asked her patients any questions. It didn’t matter who or what they were, or why they were injured. The Tranquil Garden was a kind and fair place, but he hadn’t seen the same sort of patients he’d known to visit Mother. Here, they asked questions and were asked questions in turn, busybodies and nosey about the how and the why of treatment.
That sort of thing got your throat sliced in the Middens.
You weren’t supposed to slice throats, not in the upper city but especially not in the Tranquil Garden. His instructors had been firm with that rule, especially.
Everything he learned had been for a more dangerous sort of place. The Tranquil Garden was, well, a more tranquil sort of place.