"Jennifer Roberson - Sword Dancer 2 - Swordsinger" - читать интересную книгу автора (Roberson Jennifer) file:///D|/Documents%20and%20Settings/harry/Desktop/Roberson,%20Jennifer%20-%20Sword%20Dancer%202%20-%20Sword%20Singer.txt
Sword SingerSword Singer Book 2 of the Sword Dancer series. By Jennifer Roberson Sword Singer Table of Contents One, Two, Three, Four, Five, Six, Seven, Eight, Nine, Ten, Eleven, Twelve, Thirteen, Fourteen, Fifteen, Sixteen, Seventeen, Eighteen, Nineteen, Twenty, Twenty-one, Twenty-two, Twenty-three, Twenty-four, Twenty-five, Twenty-six, Twenty-seven, Twenty-eight, Twenty-nine, Thirty, Thirty-one, Thirty-two, Thirty-three, Thirty-four, Thirty-five, Thirty-six, Thirty-seven, Thirty-eight, Thirty-nine, Forty, Forty-one, Forty-two, Forty-three, Forty-four One "Flea-bitten... jug-headed... lop-eared--" I sucked in a deeper breath, "--thrice-cursed son of a Sahet goat!" Or similar sentiments. Trouble was, I was mostly incoherent, being somewhere on He didn't answer. At least, not verbally. Physically, yes, and fervently; he humped and hopped and squealed, then buried his nose in the sand. Since he simultaneously elevated eloquent hindquarters with a powerful precision, I didn't stand much of a chance. My saddle does not, thank valhail, have much of a pommel on it, being little more than a hummock of rigid leather shaped to fit the stud's back and my rump. I'd bought it thinking mostly of comfort for the long, hot hours spent crossing the Punja on one job or another. But now I blessed myself for picking it; a man in imminent danger of taking a nosedive off a horse--headfirst, belly-down, scraping over the shoulders and neck--doesn't much want to leave the best part of himself hung up on the front of a saddle while the rest of him sprawls in the sand. Of course, I did have other worries. Like where my sword might end up. Even the most active sword-dancer doesn't generally entertain his opponent upside down in the circle; this meant there existed the possibility my borrowed sword might end up out of its sheath and in something else entirely, possibly even me. Or--(just give me half a chance)--in the stud himself. Face-first, I slid over the sloping front of my saddle (sucking up belly and everything else I could) and proceeded to dangle, however briefly, in the vicinity of his head. To which the stud took an immediate dislike, not being an animal who much cares to have a large, cursing man shrouding his head like a glop of half-cooked egg. The hindquarters came back down. It was the head's turn to elevate itself. Because I knew what was likely to happen if I didn't take immediate action, I |
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