Margaret Weis - Serpent Mage
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- Название:Serpent Mage
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“I believe you should tell them our news, my dear,” said his wife, Delu. Dumaka did not immediately reply, but kept his back turned, staring gloomily out to sea. He is a tall man, considered handsome by the humans. His rapid-fire speech, swift walk, and abrupt gestures always make him appear, in the realm of the easygoing Elmas, as if he were doing and saying everything in double-quick time. Now, however, he was not pacing or roaming about in frantic activity, trying to outrun the swift mortality that must inevitably overtake him.
“What’s the matter with your father, Alake?” whispered Sabia. “Is he ill?”
“Wait and listen,” said Alake softly. Her face was sad. “Grundle’s parents aren’t the only ones who have a fearful tale to tell.” Eliason must have found this change in his friend as disturbing as I did. He rose to his feet, moving with the slow, fluid grace of the elves, and laid a comforting hand on Dumaka’s shoulder.
“Bad news, like fish, doesn’t smell sweeter for being kept longer,” Eliason said gently.
“Yes, you are right.” Dumaka kept his gaze out to sea. “I had intended to say nothing of this to either of you, because I wasn’t certain of the facts. The magi are investigating.” He cast a glance at his wife, a powerful wizardess. She inclined her head in response. “I wanted to wait for their report. But . . .” He drew a deep breath. “It seems all too clear to me now what happened.
“Two days ago, a small Phondran fishing village, located on the coast directly opposite Gargan, was attacked and completely destroyed. Boats were smashed, houses leveled. One hundred and twenty men, women, and children lived in the village.” Dumaka shook his head, his shoulders bowed. “All are now dead.”
“Ach,” said my father, tugging at his forelock in respectful sympathy.
“The One have mercy,” murmured Eliason. “Was it tribal war?” Dumaka looked around at those gathered on the terrace. The humans of Phondra are a dark-skinned race. Unlike the Elmas, whose emotions run skin-deep, so the saying goes, the Phondrans do not blush in shame or pale in fear or anger. The ebony of their skin often masks their inner feelings. It is their eyes that are most expressive, and the chief’s eyes smoldered in anger and bitter, helpless frustration.
“Not war. Murder.”
“Murder?” It took Eliason a moment to comprehend the word that had been spoken in human. The elves have no term for such a heinous crime in their vocabulary.
“One hundred and twenty people! But . . . who? What?”
“We weren’t certain at first. We found tracks that we could not explain. Could not, until now.” Dumaka’s hand moved in a quick S-shape. “Sinuous waves across the sand. And trails of slime.”
“The serpents?” said Eliason in disbelief. “But why? What did they want?”
“To murder! To kill!” The chieftain’s hand clenched. “It was butchery. Plain out-and-out butchery! The wolf carries off the lamb and we are not angry because we know that this is the nature of the wolf and that the lamb will fill the empty bellies of the wolf’s young. But these serpents or whatever they are did not kill for food. They killed for the pleasure of killing!
“Their victims, every one, even the children, had obviously died slowly, in hideous torment, their bodies left for us to find. I am told that the first few of our people who came upon the village nearly lost their reason at the terrible sights they witnessed.”
“I traveled there myself,” said Delu, her rich voice so low that we girls were forced to creep nearer the window to hear her. “I have suffered since from terrible dreams that haunt me in the night. We could not even give the bodies seemly burial in the Goodsea, for none of us could bear to look upon their tortured faces and see evidence of the agony they had suffered. We magi determined that the entire village, or what was left of it, be burned.”
“It was,” added Dumaka heavily, “as if the killers had left us a message: ‘See in this your own doom!’ ”
I thought back to the serpent’s words: This is a sample of our power. . . . Heed our warning!
We girls stared at each other in a horrified silence that was echoed on the terrace below. Dumaka turned once again and was staring out to sea. Eliason sank down in his chair.
My father struck in with his usual dwarven bluntness. Pushing himself with difficulty out of the small chair, he stamped his feet on the ground, probably in an attempt to restore their circulation. “I mean no disrespect to the dead, but these were fisher folk, unskilled in warfare, lacking weapons ...”
“It would have made no difference if they had been an army,” stated Dumaka grimly. “These people were armed; they have fought other tribes, as well as the jungle beasts. We found scores of arrows that had been fired, but they obviously did no harm. Spears had been cracked in two, as if they’d been chewed up and spit out by giant mouths.”
“And our people were skilled in magic, most of them,” Delu added quietly, “if only on the lowest levels. We found evidence that they had attempted to use their magic in their defense. Magic, too, failed them.”
“But surely the Council of Magi could do something?” suggested Eliason. “Or perhaps magical elven weapons, such as we used to manufacture in times gone by, might work where others failed—no disparagement to your wizards,” he added, politely.
Delu looked at her husband, apparently seeking his agreement in imparting further bad news. He nodded his head.
The wizardess was a tall woman, equaling her husband in height. Her graying hair, worn in a coif at the back of the neck, provided an attractive contrast to her dark complexion. Seven bands of color in her feathered cape marked her status as a wizardess of the Seventh House, the highest rank a human can attain in the use of magic. She stared down at her clasped hands, clasped fast to keep from trembling.
“One member of the Council, the village shamus, was in the village at the time of the attack. We found her body. Her death had been most cruel.” Delu shivered, drew a deep breath, steeling herself to go on. “Around her dismembered corpse lay the tools of her magic, spread about her as if in mockery.”
“One against many . . .” Eliason began.
“Argana was a powerful wizardess,” Delu cried, and her shout made me jump.
“Her magic could have heated the sea water to boiling! She could have raised a typhoon with a wave of her hand. The ground would have opened at a word from her and swallowed her enemies whole! All this, we had evidence that she had done! And still she died. Still they all died!”
Dumaka laid a soothing hand upon his wife’s shoulder. “Be calm, my dear. Eliason meant only that the entire Council, gathered together, might be able to work such powerful magic that these serpents could not withstand it.”
“Forgive me. I’m sorry I lost my temper.” Delu gave the elf a wan smile. “But, like Yngvar, I have seen with my own eyes the terrible destruction these creatures brought upon my people.”
She sighed. “Our magic is powerless in the presence of these creatures, even when they are not in sight. Perhaps the cause is due to the foul ooze they leave on anything they touch. We don’t know. All we know is that when we magi entered the village, we each of us felt our power began to drain away. We couldn’t even use our magic to start the fires to burn the bodies of the dead.”
Eliason looked around the grim, unhappy group. “And so what are we to do?” As an elf his natural inclination must have been to do nothing, wait, and see what time brought. But, according to my father, Eliason was an intelligent ruler, one of the more realistic and practical of his race. He knew, though he would have liked to ignore the fact, that his people’s days on their seamoon were numbered. A decision had to be made, therefore, but he was quite content to let others make it.
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