
Very carefully, he pulled himself up in the bed, then swung his legs over the side and sat up. The room swam sickeningly, but then steadied.
Encouraged, he stood.
The blood rushed from his head.
He collapsed.
Hit the floor with a hideous thump, almost cried out-might have cried out-when his head hit the floorboards. He groaned, then, hearing footsteps pounding up some stairs, he slowly tried to push himself up.
The door swung open.
Propped on one elbow, he turned his head and looked, knowing he was too weak and helpless to defend himself, but it wasn’t any enemy who came charging in.
It was an angel with red-gold hair, bright and fiery as a flame, who scanned the room, saw him, then came racing to his side.
Perhaps he’d died and gone to Heaven?
“You dolt! What the devil are you doing trying to get up? You’re wounded, you imbecile!”
Notan angel, then. Not Heaven, either. She continued to berate him, increasingly irate as she checked his bandages, then small hands, surprisingly strong, gripped his arm and she braced to haul him up-an impossibility, he knew-but then two strapping lads who had followed her in came around his other side. The not-an-angel snapped orders, and one lad ducked under his other arm, the second coming to help her as on a count of three they hoisted him up-
It hurt.
Everywhere.
He groaned as they turned him and, surprisingly gently, angled him back onto the bed, setting him down on his left side, then rolling him carefully onto his back.
The not-an-angel fussed, drawing down the tangled covers, removing bricks, then lifting and shaking. Logan watched her lips form words-a string of increasingly pointed epithets; as the worst of the violent pain receded, he felt himself smiling.
