Glen Cook - Sung In Blood
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- Название:Sung In Blood
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"This mess is big," he said defensively. "We need to get organized to handle it."
Su-Cha declared, "I don't need to be organized to dance on that thug's head. And this time he isn't going to slick me." The imp headed for the door. Everyone but Chaz and Greystone followed.
Chaz went to the window to watch the gnarly man. Greystone continued picking up. He said,
"Precipitous action often leads to its own reward. The sensible course is to restore the web before undertaking any action. We need its support."
"You figure the news is out yet?" Chaz glanced at the grisly ornament still pinned to the wall.
"This cabal would have an interest in maintaining secrecy till they placed themselves in the most favorable position."
"What happens tonight?"
"What do you mean?"
"Jehrke always hands out the prizes to the rope divers."
"Ah. Yes. So. These enemies of ours must have been confident they could achieve their ends before then."
"Rider will take his father's place, I guess. Oh-oh. There they go."
Greystone joined Chaz. They watched their comrades race toward the gnarly man, who spotted them, took off, stubby bow legs pumping furiously. "That fellow can surely run."
"For a ways," Chaz said."Bet he ain't much over a quarter mile." Below, Soup suddenly slowed to a trot, though he did not give up pursuit. "What's Soup up to?"
Soup had been smitten by a suspicion that Emerald had been too easily spotted. Maybe he was leading them into another ambush. If so, he would get a surprise of his own. Soup would materialize after the trap was sprung.
Emerald began to slow and his pursuers to gain. The looks he cast back seemed genuinely desperate. He whirled around a corner, knobby limbs flailing.
Rider's men rounded the corner and drifted to a halt. "Where'd he go?" Spud demanded. "He couldn't disappear into thin air."
"Look around," Preacher said.
"I know. 'Seek and ye shall find.' Su-Cha, do your stuff."
There was no place for the gnarly man to have gone. The street was just a wide alleyway between two doorless walls. It dead-ended in another brick wall.
"Dig through that trash," Soup said. "Maybe he's under it." He had arrived to find his friends baffled.
The usually loquacious Su-Cha said nothing for several minutes. Then he grunted, snatched up a broken brick, flung it at the alley-spanning wall. It did not rebound. It simply vanished.
Soup howled. "We've been hornswoggled! The wall is an illusion."
He charged forward—and through. His hair stood up and crackled. When he looked back he saw no evidence of the illusory wall, just his comrades looking baffled.
There was no sign of Emerald.
The others joined him. "What now?" Spud asked.
"We still have a trick," Su-Cha said. He grinned and tapped his nose.
The others chuckled. "Is he going to be surprised."
Soup, though, recalled his earlier reservations. "He may be leading us away from the laboratory."
"Maybe," Spud admitted. "But Chaz and Greystone are there. And he expected to lose us here.
Let's go, imp."
There was a delicate tap at the laboratory door. Chaz and Greystone exchanged looks. Greystone whispered, "I'll cover," and stepped into a contrivance of mirrors from which a man could watch the doorway without being seen.
He picked up a light crossbow. The tapping was repeated. Chaz pulled the door inward.
His eyes grew huge. He gasped, "I think I'm in love. The heavens have opened and shed an angel on my doorstep."
The woman was startled, not just by this remark but by the barbarian's size. Then she glanced over her shoulder fearfully, as if expecting peril to overtake her any moment. "May I come in?" she asked breathlessly.
"A godsend," Chaz said. "I have to be dreaming. Do come in. Do sit down. Just anywhere."
The woman did so, her gaze fixing upon the cadaver of Protector Jehrke. Her mouth opened and closed several times. Nothing came out. Horror flooded her face.
"More like a devil in disguise," Greystone said, stepping out of the mirror contraption. "This is the witch Soup told us about."
"Mercy," Chaz breathed, startled. "It isn't possible. The gods could not be so cruel as to make something so gorgeous so wicked."
"Horsefeathers," Greystone countered. He prided himself on his immunity to the glamor and wiles of the fair sex. "Bet that Emerald character was supposed to draw us off so she could get in here and unravel what's left of the web." The scholar kept his weapon aimed at the woman's heart.
Chaz was smitten but not blind. "Well? What about it, Sweetheart?"
"The Master planned that. But not I. I knew you would not all pursue Emerald. Your reputations say you are too wise."
Greystone snorted and muttered.
The woman continued, "I hoped to be captured."
"Why?" Greystone demanded.
"Because that is the only way I will ever escape him."
Chaz drifted to the window. Below, the festivities were approaching a roar. The rope divers had begun jumping. He saw nothing alarming. He moved to the doorway, checked the hall. Nothing.
From a shelf nearby he took an earthen jar, scattered part of its contents outside. Tiny seeds rolled around. He stomped one. It exploded with a loud pop. "Good enough." He closed and locked the door.
"Tell your story, Sister," Greystone said. His crossbow remained unwavering. "I haven't heard a good fairy tale in years."
"Kralj Odehnal—the sorcerer who had you captured, and would have had you killed had he taken Ride-Master Jehrke into his power ... "
"We know all that. We want to know about you. Who are you?"
"Easy, Greystone," Chaz said. "Would you care for something to drink, sweet lady?"
The woman glanced at the remains of the Protector. "I couldn't."
"Going to have to do something about him," Chaz muttered. "Starting to spook me, hanging there. Like he was watching everything we do."
"Tell your story," Greystone snapped.
"I am Caracene, a slave of Kralj Odehnal, who is known to his creatures as The Master. I was given to him as part payment for his joining the scheme to destroy Protector Jehrke and unseat Shasesserre as mistress of the world."
She was no Shasesserren, nor had her like appeared among the city's slaves. At least openly.
Such beauty was too rare and precious to be allowed public display. Nor did she dress as, or have the manner of, a slave. Those eyes ... She was a slave-taker.
Puzzled, Chaz asked, "Who gave you to him?" He found that name Odehnal vaguely familiar. He could not imagine anyone bribing such a monster.
The woman stared at the cadaver on the wall. "I cannot say. One greater than he. One from whom none escape."
"Horsefeathers," Greystone said again. "We're being stalled, Chaz. It's time for a truthcasting. I'm no sorcerer, but I can manage that much."
The woman bolted to her feet. "No! It would kill me! I must go. I was wrong to come here.
There is no hope here, either." She looked at the dead Protector once more. "Not even he ... "
Chaz moved to comfort her. As he reached out, a loud pop! pop! pop! came from beyond the door.
The woman gasped, "He knows I thought to betray him!"
Greystone jerked his crossbow irritably, indicating that she should retreat into the connecting library. Chaz moved to a peephole that, through a succession of mirrors, would show him who was outside without his having to reveal himself.
VIII
Rider slowed his pace after he had run three miles. Not that he was exhausted. He'd barely worked up a sweat. He ran ten miles every morning. But the tracks he followed were increasingly fresh. He did not want to overtake his man here, between the piers and yards and warehouses and ways of the Golden Crescent, and the strip of ten thousand markets the great ships served. There were crowds like no other city ever boasted. This was the hub of world trade, where the quarters of the earth came together in a frenzy and babble. Here there was no privacy, ever.
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