Fever

"I'm afraid it is a fever," said the man, gazing down at the motionless face before him. "There is nothing we can do now but pray."

"But surely there is a way!" cried the woman frantically. "He is but a child. There is no reason for him to die this way!"

"Very little in life has a reason, Madame. Death least of all. Often have I seen them taken like this, boys like your son, and once this fever has set in, there is naught that can be done save to let it run its course and hope that your son will be one of the few lucky ones who are spared."

The woman was silent for a long while, gazing down at the pale, cold face and longing to run her fingers through the golden hair. Finally, she looked up from the portrait, her lined face wearing a sorrowful determination which mirrored that of her son.

"Then I shall give myself also to this fever and, come what may, tend to the wounds left by the Revolution. He shall purge, and I shall heal. I should not be the mother of my son otherwise."