"Denning, Troy - Forgotten Realms - Legacy of the Draw 2 - Starless Night" - читать интересную книгу автора (Denning Troy)Catti-brie took a firm and silent hold on the end of the pillow, quietly stood, then yanked it suddenly, tearing it from the surprised halfling's grasp so that his head knocked hard against the bare wood.
Groaning and grumbling, Regis sat straight in the chair and ran stubby fingers through his fluffy and curly brown locks, their bounce undiminished by a long night's sleep. "What?" he demanded. Catti-brie slammed the panther figurine atop the table, leaving it before the seated halfling. "Where is Drizzt?" she asked again, evenly. "Probably in the Undercity," Regis grumbled, running his tongue all about his cottony-feeling teeth. "Why don't you go ask Bruenor?" The mention of the dwarvish king set Catti-brie back on her heels. Go ask Bruenor? she silently scoffed. Bruenor would hardly speak to anyone, and was so immersed in despair that he probably wouldn't know it if his entire clan up and left in the middle of the night! "So Drizzt left Guenhwyvar," Regis remarked, thinking to downplay the whole thing. His words fell awkwardly on the perceptive woman's ears, though, and Catti-brie's deep blue eyes narrowed as she studied the halfling more closely. 25 R. A. Salvatore Starless Night "What?" Regis asked innocently again, feeling the heat of that unrelenting scrutiny. "Where is Drizzt?" Catti-brie asked, her tone dangerously calm. "And why do ye have the cat?" Regis shook his head and wailed helplessly, dramatically dropping his forehead again against the table. Catti-brie saw the act for what it was. She knew Regis too well to be taken in by his wily charms. She grabbed a handful of curly brown hair and rugged his head upright, then grabbed the front of his nightshirt with her other hand. Her roughness startled the halfling; she could see that clearly by his expression, but she did not relent. Regis flew from his seat. Catti-brie carried him three quick steps, then slammed his back against the wall. Catti-brie's scowling visage softened for just a moment, and her free hand fumbled with the halfling's nightshirt long enough that she could determine that Regis was not wearing his magical ruby pendant, an item she knew he never removed. Another curious, and certainly out-of-place, fact that assailed her sensibilities, fed her growing belief that something indeed was terribly wrong. "Suren there's something going on here thaf s not what if s supposed to be," Catti-brie said, her scowl returning tenfold. "Catti-brie!" Regis replied, looking down to his furry-topped feet, dangling twenty inches from the floor. "And ye know something about it," Catti-brie went on. "Catti-brie!" Regis wailed again, trying to bring the fiery young woman to her senses. Catti-brie took up the halfling's nightshirt in both her hands, pulled him away from the wall, and slammed him back again, hard. "I've lost Wulfgar," she said grimly, pointedly reminding Regis that he might not be dealing with someone rational. Regis didn't know what to think. Bruenor Battleham-mer's daughter had always been the levelheaded one of the troupe, the calm influence that kept the others in line. Even cool Drizzt had often used Catti-brie as a guidepost to his conscience. But now ... Regis saw the promise of pain set within the depths of 26 Catti-brie's deep blue, angry eyes. She pulled him from the wall once more and slammed him back. "Ye're going to tell me what ye know," she said evenly. "We should go and sit down with BrueЧ" he began, but he was summarily interrupted as Catti-brie slapped him across the face. He brought his hand up to the stinging cheek, felt the angry welt rising there. He never blinked, eyeing the young woman with disbelief. Catti-brie's violent reaction had apparently surprised her as much as Regis. The halfling saw tears welling in her gentle eyes. She trembled, and Regis honestly didn't know what she might do. The halfling considered his situation for a long moment, coming to wonder what difference a few days or weeks could make. "Drizzt went home," the halfling said softly, always willing to do as the situation demanded. Worrying about consequences could come later. Catti-brie relaxed somewhat. "This is his home," she reasoned. "Suren ye don't mean Icewind Dale." "Menzoberranzan," Regis corrected. If Catti-brie had taken a crossbow quarrel in her back, it would not have hit her harder than that single word. She let Regis down to the floor and tumbled backward, falling into a sitting position on the edge of the halfling's bed. "He really left Guenhwyvar for you," Regis explained. "He cares for both you and the cat so very much." His soothing words did not shake the horrified expression from Catti-brie's face. Regis wished he had his ruby pendant, so that he might use its undeniable charms to calm the young woman. "You can't tell Bruenor," Regis added. "Besides, Drizzt might not even go that far." The halfling thought an embell- 27 R. A. Salvatore ishment of the truth might go a long way. "He said he was off to see Alustriel, to try to decide where his course should lead." It wasn't exactly trueЧDrizzt had only mentioned that he might stop by Silverymoon to see if he might confirm his fearsЧbut Regis decided that Catti-brie needed to be given some hope. "You can't tell Bruenor," the halfling said again, more forcefully. Catti-brie looked up at him; her expression was truly one of the most pitiful sights Regis had ever seen. "He'll be back," Regis said to her, rushing over to sit beside her. "You know Drizzt. He'll be back." It was too much for Catti-brie to digest. She gently pulled Regis's hand off her arm and rose. She looked to the panther figurine once more, sitting upon the small table, but she had not the strength to retrieve it. Catti-brie padded silently out of the room, back to her own chambers, where she fell listlessly upon her bed. * * * * * Drizzt spent midday sleeping in the cool shadows of a cave, many miles from Mithril Hall's eastern door. The early summer air was warm, the breeze off the cold glaciers of the mountains carrying little weight against the powerful rays of the sun in a cloudless summer sky. The draw did not sleep long or well. His rest was filled with thoughts of Wulfgar, of all his friends, and of distant images, memories of that awful place, Menzoberranzan. Awful and beautiful, like the dark elves who had sculpted it. Drizzt moved to his shallow cave's entrance to take his meal. He basked in the warmth of the bright afternoon, in the sounds of the many animals. How different was this from his Underdark home! How wonderful! Drizzt threw his dried biscuit into the dirt and punched the floor beside him. How wonderful indeed was this false hope that had been dangled before his desperate eyes. All that he had wanted in life was to escape the ways of his kin, to live in peace. Then he had come to the surface, and soon after, had |
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