“Yes,†said Barbara anxiously; now urgently feeling she had to comfort poor Jari, she patted him on the shoulder, as one might pat a dog or a horse – he had an unpleasantly strong smell. Maybe he was ill – that would explain a lot, actually, like his obvious inability to follow the conversation. She had read, somewhere, about a virus that wizards in the Alps had caught from mountain trolls; maybe this was it. Jari seemed to be thinking slowly enough for that, although perhaps that was the alcohol.
In case it was contagious, she let go of his shoulder and wiped her hand on her skirt. “Maybe not,†she said, though not very hopefully. Though of course she did not want Jari Trickett to die, she was fairly sure that, at this point, it was unpreventable.
She watched him closely, though, trying to cross-reference his symptoms with trollsickness. Fever – check – chills – check – she put her hands on her face, her eyes starting to widen with horror. What a dreadful way to go, she thought; some of the oldest graves in the cemetery behind her house listed the cause of death, such as poor old Polymetis Perkins, whose epitaph read ‘devour’d by Manticore in the Craigs, Febr' 28 1768, the 21 Yr of his age.’ He’d come to visit once when she was nine; she had read to him. Maybe, if Jari became a ghost, she could read to him.
No – she couldn’t think about that yet.
Though Barbara had experience with the dead, she had less experience with the dying. Jari looked rather panicked at the prospect. She said kindly, “Don’t be afraid – I’m told it’s very easy.â€
Rather dubiously, she waved a hand in front of her nose, and added, just to check, “You haven’t been travelling, this holiday, have you? Or been around trolls?â€