"Tyrants And Kings - 02 - The Grand Design" - читать интересную книгу автора (Marco John) "I don't see flashes," agreed Larius. "But the soundЧ"
Overhead an object whistled past. Larius grabbed his mistress and pulled her to the ground. Kareenj screamed as another missile hissed, slamming into th< tower wall. There was a sound like exploding steam, The far-off popping in the hills intensified. Kareen; pulled free of Larius and ran to the stone railing. "What is it?" she screamed. She put her hands t( her ears to banish the sound. "Larius, what. . . ?" All around Goth, green smoke exploded, its emer aid fingers crawling through the streets. The strangi bombardment had the city looking skyward. Meni screamed, tearing at their eyes as the relentless vaporj engulfed them. On the wind came the sweet smell o| something evil. Kareena sniffed at the air, too late tol know the poison she was breathing. Fire climbed into! her nostrils, burning out the membranes. Her throat constricted and a flood of tears rushed from her eyes. She staggered from the wall, reeling backward into Larius. Desperately she grabbed for him. The old man's eyes were filled with blood. Horrified, unable to breathe or scream, Duchess Kareena looked down at her stained dress and realized that her tears were crimson. TWO The Golden Count He was called the Mind Bender. The name had been given to him by his former master, Arkus of Nar, and Savros bore it proudly, and referred to himself as such even in the presence of good imperial ladies. He handled his tools as a painter would a brush, delicately and with the flair of genius. Some said he was mad, but all agreed that he was peerless in his work, one of Nar's rare artisans. Soldiers envied his deftness with a knife, and women fainted when he told his dark tales. He had known his true vocation since his boyhood. Simon watched the Mind Bender work, aghast at the love he had for his craft. His spidery fingers crawled over his victim's flesh, his arsenal of narrow scalpels twirling between his digits like sharp batons. Simon knew he was watching a master, and despite the howls of the thing hanging in chains from the ceiling, it was wholly fascinating to witness. "It's so easy," whispered the torturer. His tongue darted out to lick the man's ear. "So easy to die . . ." The voice was honey, sickly sweet and cloying. It rose from the Mind Bender's throat like a song, teasing the man and compelling him to talk. But the man was almost past coherence. Only Triin gibberish trickled from his lips now, but Savros the Mind Bender wasn't finished. He produced another blade from his white vest and made his victim behold it, turning it slowly in the dungeon's feeble light so the flicker of the torch glowed orange on its edge. Simon stood motionless in the corner of the cell, awaiting the prisoner's end. Like all Triin, this one was perfectly white. Savros had been delighted when he'd seen him. For him the white skin was a canvas to be stretched out with chains. Promptly he had set to work, using his knives to carve out screaming figures on the man's naked back. There were almost twenty of them now, forming a twisting, living mural. Blood dripped relentlessly onto the floor, and little bits of Triin flesh clung to the Mind Bender's boots. But Savros seemed not to notice them at all, and Simon wondered as he watched the spectacle if this was what Hell was like. "Beautiful," remarked the torturer as he regarded his prized scalpel. He put it up to the Trim's gray eyeball, now hazed with fatigue and pain. "There is a smith in the Black City who works for days to make just one of these for me. He is the finest blade-maker in Nar." Savros tested the edge with his fingertip and grinned. "Oooh; sharp." Savros no longer bothered speaking Triin. His victim was past comprehension, and he knew it. But this was the best part. Disgusted, Simon fought to keep focused. He was Roshann, and if he looked away Biagio would surely hear about it. So he steeled himself and watched while Savros caressed a tear-stained cheek with the thin blade and crooned his song, and the Triin man in chains trembled against the coming death. "Just do it," Simon growled, his patience snapping. Savros turned his laughing eyes to the dark corner where Simon was lurking. A ripe web sack filled with newborn arachnids clung defiantly to the ceiling overhead, but Simon didn't stir from his spot. "Shhh," urged Savros, putting a slender finger to his lips. The air was thick and smelled of treacle; too close for Simon's liking. The Mind Bender's voice rang in his brain. He had been hearing it for hours and his feet ached from standing. Outside in the real world, the sun was probably up. If he could have, Simon would have run from the place and vomited, but there was dirty business still to do. "If you have your information, kill him," ordered Simon. "He's still a man. Treat him like one." Savros seemed shocked. "You brought him here for me," he reminded Simon. "Now let me do my work." "Your work is done, Mind Bender. Get yourself a goat from the farm if you need something to butcher. He was a Triin warrior. Leave him some honor." "Why so squeamish?" taunted Savros. The thin blade rolled between his fingertips. "Don't they teach interrogation in the Roshann?" Simon stepped out of the shadows. In the center of the cell was a small table set with the Mind Bender's implements, a curious collection of metal objects with points and pincers, all arranged neatly on a silver tray. Beside the gruesome platter stood a pitcher of rose water. It was a strange habit of Savros' to dapple his victim's lips with the cool liquid and make them agonize for more. Simon pushed the torturer aside and lifted the pitcher to the Triin's mouth, pouring the water over his lips and tongue. The man let out a thankful whimper. "What are you doing?" asked Savros. Simon ignored him, lifting another blade from the table even as he continued to pour. This one was less beautiful than the others. It was wide and heavy, with a toothy edge like a butcher's saw. Simon grasped it tightly, leaning forward so that his lips almost brushed the captive's ear. "Good death, warrior," he said simply, then plunged the jagged blade into the Triin's heart. There was a quick rattle from the prisoner's throat. The hands spasmed into fists, shaking the manacles and the long, stout chains. The eyes widened, focused on Simon for a moment, then swiftly dimmed. Simon put down the pitcher, then the knife, and calmly stared at Savros. The Mind Bender's jaw dropped. "You've killed him," Savros sputtered. "You're like a cat playing with a bird," said Simon sharply. "I won't watch such nonsense." "I wasn't done with him!" Savros wailed. He rushed over to the limp body and searched for a pulse. "I'm going to tell Biagio about this!" "I'll tell him myself. Now what did he say? I heard you mention Vantran. Is he in Falindar?" "Savros," urged Simon. "What did he say? Is Vantran in Falindar?" "He was so beautiful," replied Savros absently. "I want another." "VantranЧ" "Yes, yes!" flared the torturer. Savros released the dead man and turned toward the table, pulling bloodied implements out of his vest and placing them on the silver tray with a petulant frown. "It's as you suspected, spy" He spit out the word like a curse. "Vantran is in Falindar with his wife." "What else?" pressed Simon. "Oh, learn the damned language! Or weren't you listening?" Simon bristled but said nothing. Of all the people who had fled with Biagio to Crote, only Savros understood the clicking language of the Triin. It was, he had explained once, "necessary to know the tongue of his subjects." And Savros had a genius for language Simon could only marvel at. This had been Simon's first mission to Lucel-Lor, and he hoped his last. He had tried to learn at least a few Triin phrases, but Savros was a poor teacher and Simon an unwilling student. The animosity between them had only grown from there. Simon regarded Savros carefully, watching him turn a white towel red with the gore from his hands. He caught a glimmer in the Mind Bender's preternatural eyes, a spark of something hiding in the blazing blue irises. There was something more. "What else?" said Simon. "There is something, I can tell." "Can you?" taunted Savros. "You are Roshann, Simon Darquis. You are supposed to be observant. What have I learned? Can you guess?" "Stop fooling," ordered Simon. Savros surrendered with an evil smile. "There is a child," he said with satisfaction. "Vantran has a daughter." Simon's heart sank. "A daughter? How old?" "Very young; a baby really. Maybe a year. Maybe older, I don't know. But she lives with them in the citadel." Savros put down the soiled cloth. "Looks like you'll be going back, eh?" Simon grimaced. That was the last thing he wanted. "Vantran still expects something," Savros added. "You should tell the Master that. Tell him to stop bothering with this vendetta and get us off this bloody island." I will, thought Simon darkly. He took a final look at the dead man dangling from the ceiling. The lifeless eyes were open and staring at him blankly. An invisible breeze made the corpse sway and the chains rattle. Simon felt unclean. It had been a long and miserable journey back from Lucel-Lor, and this warrior had borne his indignity proudly. Trussed up like a pig in the ship's stinking cargo hold, he had hardly said a word or eaten a crumb. Simon looked at the man's emaciated body, ruined by the Mind Bender's insane artwork. Only Savros had been able to break the Triin's iron will, and he had done it in mere hours. "What was his name?" asked Simon quietly. Savros looked at him incredulously. "What?" "His name. What was it?" "I taught you that phrase," Savros reminded him. "Didn't you ask him yourself?" Simon shook his head. He hadn't wanted to know the man's name before. "Hakan," said Savros. The torturer sighed. "What a waste. He could have lived so much longer." |
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