John Gwynne - Malice
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- Название:Malice
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- Издательство:Tor
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- Год:2012
- ISBN:9780230767270
- Рейтинг книги:5 / 5. Голосов: 1
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Malice: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация
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Without another word Gar limped towards the stables.
Corban had never seen the feast-hall so full. All were welcome at the King’s table, but in reality most of the smaller holds within the fortress, such as Thannon’s, took their evening meals in their own homes. Not tonight, though. Conversation thrummed around the room as Corban sat on a bench, squashed between his da and his sister. A door at the rear of the chamber opened; the murmur of voices in the hall faltered. Brenin swept in, Ardan’s King stern-faced, accompanied by the eagle-messenger.
Brenin made his way to the firepit and cut the first slice of meat to begin the meal.
All became noise again as the rest of the hall set about eating.
Corban washed his food down with a mug of ale, scowling when he saw Rafe standing behind Evnis.
Brenin pushed his half-filled trencher back and stood, all eyes turning to him.
‘On the morrow I must leave Ardan, for a time,’ he said.
Silence.
‘A messenger has come from Tenebral,’ he continued, gesturing to the man sitting at his side.
‘Aquilus, King of Tenebral, High King of the Banished Lands, has called a kings’ council.’
Gasps around the hall now.
‘This is the first time this has happened since the Exiles were washed up on the shores of these Banished Lands, over a thousand years ago. I must be there. I leave Alona in my stead. She will rule in my place until I return.’
‘What about Darol and his slaughtered family?’ a voice cried out, faceless in the crowd. Brenin nodded slowly. ‘I have not forgotten my oath. Pendathran will take a warband into the Baglun Forest. He will not return until he has caught those responsible. Alive, I hope, so that they may face my judgement when I return.’
Pendathran thumped the table with his fist, trenchers and cups leaping into the air.
‘May the Ben-Elim protect you while I am away,’ Brenin said, then he turned and left the chamber.
Noise erupted around the room as the door closed, everyone in the hall talking at once.
Corban lay in his bed, fingers laced behind his head as he stared at the roof, watching shadows flicker across it cast by torchlight from the hall. The muted sound of conversation drifted into his room, his mam and da talking in the kitchen. He snorted. They had been annoyingly silent when he and Cywen had wanted to talk about Brenin’s announcement, but since he and his sister had been bustled off to their beds the two had not seemed to stop talking.
His mam paid special attention to teaching him and Cywen their histories, as far back as the Scourging, and he had recognized the name of Tenebral as soon as Brenin had mentioned it, a hot country far to the south and east, where men wore sandals and skirts, not boots and breeches. He snorted at the thought of it. Tenebral . Just the sound of it had him excited, somehow. He sighed. He could not sleep, although he had been lying here a long while.
A soft tapping filtered into his room, the latch of the kitchen door turning, a draught suddenly blowing around him. Footsteps and then the door clicked shut. He held his breath to hear better, but there was only silence, then the clinking of mugs and the scrape of chairs. Silence again.
Sleep completely banished by curiosity now, he carefully pulled back his woollen blanket and inched himself out of bed. He tiptoed to his open doorway, crept a few paces down the corridor to the kitchen, stopping when he dared go no further, and held his breath again, straining to hear who the visitor was. More silence, then Gar’s distinctive voice drifted from the kitchen.
‘It is coming then. We must be more vigilant than ever.’
‘Aye,’ his mother sighed. Then chair legs scraped and Corban fled back to his bed.
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
EVNIS
Evnis stood by his wife’s bedside. And for now, his duties as King Brenin’s counsellor were far from his mind. She was sleeping, her chest rising in shallow, bird-like breaths. He felt the frustration in him like a weight, a raw anger at his uselessness. Her fingers twitched and he reached out, stroking the back of her hand.
There was a time when all he had felt was hatred; for his brother, Gethin, for his mother, with her mocking condescension. Then he had been handbound to Fain. Strange that his brother’s most spiteful deed had resulted in Evnis’ greatest happiness. Gethin thought that wedding Evnis into such a minor family would be a source of immense pain to his younger brother, and at first he had been right. But Evnis had fallen in love with Fain. Not instantly, like a thunderbolt, but gradually, incrementally, day by day. It was her kindness that had won him in the end, her ability to see only good. And somehow his love for her dulled his hatred of others, never completely removed it, but made it feel less important , somehow.
But, seeing her like this, he could feel it all bubbling back to the surface, fuelled by his great fear of losing her. He wanted to lash out and kill something. Or someone.
He thought back to Rhin and that long-past night in the forest, when he had learned of the book beneath the fortress that contained the secrets of the earth power. He had to find the giants’ book.
Uthas had told him of it on that night in the forest long ago, and in a handful of whispered meetings since. Told him that Uthas’ giant clan had dug a labyrinth of tunnels beneath Dun Carreg, and that in those tunnels were treasures, one of them a book teaching the secrets of the earth power. When Evnis first came to Dun Carreg and worked his way into Brenin’s good graces, he had searched long and hard, but to no avail. He was in the right tower, was looking in the right region, he was sure, but nothing . Over time he had given up. But now, looking at Fain, he had to find the book. He had been told it could prolong Fain’s life long enough to take her to the cauldron, hidden far to the north in Uthas’ homeland. Since he had received the message from Rhin on the day of the Spring Fair, reminding him of the power of the book, he had renewed his efforts. Day and night he had set men of his hold to digging out the basements of this tower. But the rock was hard, the basements deep and wide, and so far nothing had been found.
And now King Brenin was leaving, had announced in the feast-hall that on the morrow he was going to Tenebral, at his fellow king’s summons. The time approaches . Events were escalating, all that he had waited for, planned for, was coming to a head. He felt his pulse quicken: fear, excitement? Probably both .
There was a soft knock on the door. His chief huntsman, Helfach. ‘We’ve found something.’
Evnis almost ran to the basement, down spiral stairs and through a series of low-ceilinged rooms. A handful of warriors were in the corner of a room, most of the stone floor torn up, only dark earth or rock beneath. Bricks had been levered from the wall, revealing a door, thick oak, iron-banded.
‘It won’t open,’ one of the warriors muttered.
‘Of course not,’ Evnis said, ‘it will be locked. Axes.’
In short time the door was splintering, two men hacking at the old oak. When it was wide enough for a man to walk through, Evnis called for torches. Helfach had fetched one of his hounds, a tall grey beast. It whined as the huntsman led it through the doorway into the darkness. Evnis followed, two spearmen behind him.
They were in a tunnel, high and wide, the walls slick and damp. Helfach led them on, the path sloping gently down, turning. Smaller openings dotted the tunnel wall, passages burrowing into the darkness. Suddenly they were in a cavern, walls arching high and wide, veins of blue spiralling through grey rock, glistening. Two archways led out of the cavern, one going up, one down.
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