"Mary Kirchoff, Douglas Niles. Flint, the King ("Dragonlance Preludes II" #2) (angl)" - читать интересную книгу автораShould he speak out? The hammer continued pounding. Immersed in his task, the dwarf did not see the grotesque figure moving through the shadowy doorway. For a mo- ment the fire flared, outlining a black, misshapen figure shorter even than the dwarven smith. This dark one shuffled forward, and again the blaze rose, revealing a hump of flesh that twisted the stunted body half sideways. Still the smith hammered, eyes focused on the wheel, unaware of the one who slowly limped toward him from behind. The hunchbacked figure raised a hand to his chest and wrapped his blunt fingers around a small object that hung suspended from his neck by a chain. Blue light glowed between those fingers as the amulet sparked to life. His other hand gestured toward the smith. Softly, the blue light spread outward, advancing slowly like an oily, penetrating mist. It reached forward in uneven tend- rils, closer and closer to the smith. For the first time, the hammer faltered slightly in its blow. Reflexively, the dwarf raised it again, ready to strike. Sud- denly his face distorted in a grimace of unimaginable agony, and his body convulsed with a violent spasm. For a moment his movement ceased, as if he had been frozen in a grip of ex- cruciating pain. ened, wracked within the blue glow that outlined him. The gentle, almost beautiful cocoon belied the supernatural grip of its power. Only the dwarf's eyes moved, growing wider and more desperate with the slowly increasing, inevitably fatal pressure of dark sorcery. Abruptly the light vanished, and the hunchback shuffled backward, melting into the darkness. The dwarven smith's hammer finally slid from his gloved hand with a loud clang to the anvil. Slowly, the corpse top- pled forward, the stocky body splaying across the anvil and the nearly straightened wheel. It slipped silently to the cold ground. Chapter 1 Autumn Winds Watching dead leaves swirl into his windowss, Flint Fireforge threw back his mug and swallowed the last of his draught. A satisfied belch ruffled his thick mustache. For cheap ale, it wasn't half bad, he concluded. But it was gone. He held the empty bottle - his last - up to the light of the fire. The dwarf stroked his salt-and-pepper beard out of |
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