"Springer, Nancy - Book Of The Isle 3 - Sable Moon" - читать интересную книгу автора (Springer Nancy)"Come to me, Trevyn of Laueroc." Wael recited a spell in the same silky whisper, ill suited to the guttural language of his magic. He thinks the brooch pulls me, Trevyn thought, and ached inwardly for Alan. But Wael's efforts were ludicrous, just the same, and Trevyn felt his thoughts swerve to Meg, her teasing, her smile. He could almost hear her exclaim, "Silly old man!" Hugging memory to himself like a talisman, Trevyn threw back his head and laughed the sweet, healthy laugh she had taught him. Wael stopped his chanting abruptly, and a faint frown shadowed his eyes.
Emrist quickly pressed the advantage. "Let us see that brooch, Wael!" he cried, and power flickered through him. Wael's coarse gray garments parted like wings, and Trevyn glimpsed the sparkle of Alan's brooch within them. Excitedly he stepped forward. But in an instant Wael clapped his arms down over his robe, and Emrist was jolted as his spell was severed. Wrath crawled across Wael's face. "Fool," he hissed, "you shall pay for that." He snapped both hands forward like spitting snakes, and Trevyn saw Emrist reel from an unseen force. "Stop that!" Trevyn shouted, and once again started toward Wael. But then the blow struck him in his turn, blinding him with the magnitude of its malice. He stopped where he was, clenching himself in helpless wonder that anything could hurt so hard and yet continue without abatement. "Take no notice, Prince." Emrist's voice, though labored, was composed. "It's only pain." "Very true." Trevyn forced his sluggish tongue to move, trying to match Emrist's tone. "He drains himself of power with the making of it," Emrist went on. "When he stops, he will be the weaker." "Still strong enough to deal with a dozen such as you!" shrieked Wael. Nevertheless, the pain stopped. Trevyn shook his head .to clear the haze from his eyes. Then he stiffened. The leaping figurehead leered into his face, scarcely a foot away. "Ay, you remember him well, do you not, Islendais Prince?" Wael gloated. "You will be his, you who have spurned me!" Trevyn could not move or speak. Some inexplicable horror X"f the thing bound him immobile. Its glass eyes took on a saffron sheen from the gilded wood and held his sickened gaze. Beyond them, shielded from his reach by the wooden wolf, another pair of yellowish eyes entered his narrowed view. "Look at me, Trevyn of Laueroc," Wael whispered. Behind Trevyn, Emrist spoke tightly, forcing words from his frail, anguished body. "Do not heed him, Prince!" "A fine wolf, is it not?" Wael went on. "But this is only a toy. Since you will not join me, you and all yours shall be a sacrifice at the altar of the Very Wolf. Would you care to see him? Look at me!" Wael's voice rose to a hiss. "Can a Prince such as yourself not withstand the gaze of an old man?" Trevyn looked, whether from stung pride or sheerest compulsion he could not say. In a moment his world had faded into nightmare. Laueroc had fallen, his father lay dead, his mother torn and dishonored; the wolves surrounded him in his turn, frenzied for his blood, worrying at his legs to pull him down. The largest wolf came at him, huge, looming, dark enough to blot out sun and day and sky. . . . Falsehood, he knew it to be, and he pressed his mind against the vision, struggling to see with present sight. For an instant, he thought he had succeeded. The sorcerer's shadowy chamber was again before him. But a giant black wolf with teeth of flame was coming at him, leaping for his throat. . . . Trevyn could not, or would not, scream. He closed his eyes. "A thing of smoke and fire," said Emrist in a strong voice. "You shall not gull us so easily again, Wael." Trevyn's eyes snapped open. The specter had vanished. Only old Wael faced him over a carved figurehead, his wrinkled face twisted in fury. Emrist stood with hand raised in command, straight as a young tree, his russet hair flying, though there was no wind. Trevyn went swiftly to his side. "Hold fast," Emrist murmured to Mm, "The worst is yet to come." Wael was muttering a spell in the harsh language of his cult, and Trevyn recognized some of the words; it was the spell for the transferring of the living soul. But not until he felt grinding misery fill his veriest being did he fully realize what Wael was doing. "Hold fast!" Emrist charged him again. - The new torment was not so much pain as pressure, a straining within and a battering, hostile presence without. Though he breathed, Trevyn felt crushed, as if he held his breath under water, under something heavier and more alien than water or earth, with no hope but to smother quickly. He could see Emrist, though thick glass seemed to be between them, and he noted that his friend's face looked white as death. If this spell succeeded, Trevyn remembered dully, he had promised to kill him. That would be the worst of promises to keep. But if his own strong body felt weakened under its magical load, how was Emrist to withstand it much longer? As if moving in lead, Trevyn forced a hand to his tunic, drew from it a rolled parchment. With a wrenching effort of will, he made his tongue move, form speech. "Wael," he asked, "do you know anything of this?" He let the scroll fall open in his fingers. The spell left as suddenly as a weight dropping from a snapped string. In the empty moment that followed, Trevyn thought he could sense Wad's startled fear. "Give it to me!" Wael demanded sharply. "I will trade it for a certain brooch," Trevyn replied. "I will do what I must," Trevyn told him obliquely, but with a covert wink. "Come, come," said Wael, reverting to his caressing tones. "It is a paltry thing, of no importance except that I fancy it. ... Why struggle for it? I will take it from you either way." "The brooch, if you please," Trevyn answered evenly. Wael pressed his lips to a line like a scar and extended his hand. The parchment in Trevyn's grasp sent sudden pain through him like a searing iron, burning hot. He managed to keep his grip, though agony twisted his face. "False fire!" he taunted, between clenched teeth. Wad's fire did not injure him, could not consume, if he wished to keep the parchment whole. "And water of like sort," Emrist added. Trevyn felt his hand drenched in healing coolness, though nothing was wet. Wael wheeled away from him to face Emrist in consummate fury. "Renegade sorcerer-" Wael spat out the words with choking emphasis. "How I wish I could deal with you at my leisure! I would make you into a thing a dog would pity! But it seems that I must dispose of you here and now, if I am to have my way with this young fool. ..." Wael swept his hand across his body like a scythe, and Emrist slid to the floor with a gasp. Trevyn stood, feeling his knees turn to water as Wael confronted him. The old warlock was grinning with triumph, his gaping teeth as jagged as fangs in his ancient jaws. "And now for you," he breathed. "See the Wolf, Princeling? You shall be His tonight." Wael turned toward the gilded wolf of wood, but froze, thunderstruck, as it burst to splinters before his eyes. From the crumpled form on the floor a movement had come; a hoarded bolt of power had dearly spent itself. Wael spun with an inarticulate screech and struck the air with his clenched fists. Emrist moaned deeply, then lay still. \ "Now, I will have that scroll!" Wael advanced on Trevyn with burning eyes. Trevyn let him come without a sign. All fear for himself had left him with Emrist's moan. Rage filled him, but he did not let it show-not yet. He stilled himself until the sorcerer was within two paces, within one pace, and then he sprang with lion force, silent as Fate. Knocked to the ground, Wael gasped and flailed the air with his hands, but to no avail. Trevyn tore the brooch from his clothing. The moment he seized it, Wael slithered from his encumbered grasp and made for the door. "Guard!" he shrieked. "Guard!" The ancient warlock scuttled away down the corridor, and Trevyn let him go. With brooch and parchment in hand, he knelt by Emrist, taking his head into his arms. Emrist opened his eyes and smiled. "You have them both?" he murmured. "That is good, very good. We wore him out at last, it seems. But you must go now, Freca, quickly." "Let me get you on my back, then." Trevyn spoke past the lump in his throat. "Nay, I am done." Shouts and the sound of running feet echoed through the corridor, drew nearer. "Go, make haste." "I cannot leave you here!" Trevyn blinked back stinging tears. "By the mighty One," Emrist begged in the Old Language, "do not let me fail in this one last thing. Alberic, as you love me, think of your kingdom and your sire and go!" The guards reached the door. Trevyn kissed Emrist once, the kiss of death's parting, and then ran. The door opened before him; he burst through the startled guards like a stag through the bushes. The stair by which he had come was blocked. He ran the other way, the guards hard after him, found the front stair and leaped down it, careless of his neck, half crazed. He sped down another corridor, almost toppling a lean, swarthy man in a crown. The guards lagged far behind him now, but the whole palace was acry for him. Leaping, half falling, he descended some more stairs, then paused, listening. Shouts closed in from every side. He did not know ' which way to turn. A hand plucked his elbow, and he whirled. The old man, his fellow slave, beckoned, led him to a servant's door behind a curtain. From there they twisted through a maze of dark, narrow passages and rooms smelling of chamber pots and unwashed bodies: the slave quarters. The shouting faded away behind them. The old man went surely, though none too quickly, with Trevyn treading restively at his heels. Slaves gaped at them from doorways, scurried out of their path. "You'll get worse than a drubbing for this, if any of those tell," Trevyn said tightly. "Someone will tell. But I am an old man, and quite ready for death," the slave replied placidly. They came out at last to the back courtyard where Trevyn had found him before. The old man led the way to the postern gate, gripped the iron bars, and braced himself against them. "On my back," he directed tersely. Trevyn kicked off his sandals and climbed up, one-handed, clutching the parchment and the brooch. Wriggling, he was able to squeeze out over the pikes and drop down outside the gate. "Good speed to ye," said the old slave, and stood watching as Trevyn silently saluted him and trotted away. He had not left the shadow of the wall before the guards sighted him. The cry went up, and as he sped away he heard the call to horse. He ran aimlessly. The town gates would be closed against him, he knew. He and Emrist had not planned for this; hopeless as their confrontation of Wael had seemed, getting Trevyn and the brooch out of Tokar had been goals as distant as the stars. Now the tumult of his mind kept him from thinking. If only because it was easier on his tiring legs, he ran downhill. Between the houses and shops he could glimpse the gleam of the southern sea. Foolishness to go that way, where he would be trapped against the endless water. Yet some deep* instinct of his elfin heritage called him to the sea, the longtime deliverer of his mother's people. He ran toward the shining deep. |
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