Richard Knaak - The Legend of Huma
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- Название:The Legend of Huma
- Автор:
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- Год:2005
- ISBN:0-88038-548-0
- Рейтинг книги:4 / 5. Голосов: 1
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“Awake, alive, and in less pain than he thought, apparently.” The minotaur rose. “I shall leave you in the hands of this healer, Huma. While you have been resting, I have been put to work identifying what I can of my former masters’ battleplans.”
“They allow you freedom of the camp?” It was an astonishing gesture on the knighthood’s part, if true.
Kaz snorted in contempt. “Only as long as I am accompanied by two armed guards. They deigned to allow me to visit you privately.”
“You wrong us, Kaz.”
The man-beast shook his fearsome head. “No, I may wrong you and a few others, but I do not wrong the knighthood.”
Kaz stalked off without another word. Huma watched him leave. The inflammatory words had taken their toll on him. Did the knighthood deserve such scorn? It could not be.
“You have interesting companions.”
Huma turned his attention back to the woman. “What?”
She smiled, and there seemed to be only perfection in that smile. Her lips were full and red, and above them, perfectly positioned, was a pert nose and two almond-shaped eyes. The eyes were like sunlight in color, a direct contrast to her glistening mane. Overall, she did not look quite human, and Huma suspected she drew much of her beauty from elven ancestors.
“Are you quite through?” she asked in apparent amusement.
He realized that he had been staring at her in abject fascination. His face reddened, and Huma began to study the ceiling.
“I apologize. I didn’t mean to annoy you, milady,” he said, reddening more deeply as he stammered slightly.
The smile broadened and became—impossibly—more perfect. “I never said I was annoyed.” She took a moist cloth from a bowl near him and began to mop his head, “I am also no ‘milady.’ Gwyneth will do nicely. It is my name, after all.”
He dared to smile back to her. “My name is Huma.”
She nodded. “Yes, I know. Both the minotaur and knight who brought you in used your name several times. I’d never seen a minotaur before this one.”
“Kaz is a friend.” Huma decided to leave it at that. He lacked the energy to explain further. A thought occurred to him. “You said a knight. Do you know which one?”
“I could not forget.” A shudder ran through Gwyneth. “He was much like a dead man in form and voice. I felt, though, a certain sadness within him.”
Huma had never heard Rennard described quite like that, but he knew that somehow the pale knight had delivered him from the field of death.
“Are you better?”
The pain seemed less now. “Yes. Do I have you to thank for this miracle?”
She blushed. “No, I am only assisting the healers.”
Huma attempted to rise and discovered he was still too weak for such a maneuver. He grimaced in pain. Gwyneth eyed him as one might eye a bad child.
“Do not try that again.”
“I do not think I could. Did not one of the clerics heal me?”
“There are only a very few of them in camp. You will have to accept what little aid they could give you. Even healers have their limits.” Although she still smiled, Gwyneth’s tone indicated that she thought the clerics overtaxed.
“Where are we?”
“In part of the westernmost woods of Solamnia. You were unconscious for a day’s ride. We are about that far from the front.”
“We won?” Huma could not believe that the lines had held.
“No one won. It was the same as always. If not for your group, the ogres might have broken through. Fortunately, they have failed again.” She paused, deep in thought, and then resumed in a new vein. “Enough of this war talk. Do you feel like eating something? You’ve not had food for the last two days.”
Huma agreed readily to some nourishment. He was dismayed, though, when Gwyneth began stirring a chalk-colored paste. She looked up, saw his expression, and smiled pleasantly. The spoon came out of the bowl. Gwyneth leaned down to feed some to Huma. He glared at the substance.
“It is not as bad as it looks, Huma. Taste some.” Feeling like a child, he gingerly opened his mouth. It was true, he discovered; the paste tasted better than he’d imagined. He forced himself to continue eating, more because he did not want to look foolish in her eyes than because of any desire for such food. Huma was quite pleased when the last of the stuff was gone.
Gwyneth also seemed pleased as she put the bowl away. “I’m sorry to leave you, but I do have other tasks. I’ll look in on you from time to time, I promise that.” He reached out a hand to her. “Thank you again.” She hesitated, and Huma dropped the hand out of embarrassment. They were saved any further awkwardness by Rennard’s appearance at the tent opening, Gwyneth gathered her things and whisked out of the tent. Huma’s eyes watched her leave, then focused on the knight.
“The minotaur said you were awake and recuperating. I was pleased to hear that.” The flat level of Rennard’s voice made it sound as if he were reading off a supply list, but Huma believed his words. Like Gwyneth, he knew that there was something behind Rennard’s perpetual mask of indifference.
Rennard’s visor was up. Huma had no trouble now staring into the face that so many turned away from. Rennard’s presence here was important. Few other knights cared enough about Huma to visit him.
Rennard kneeled next to him. “Keep your guard up at all times, Huma. It is your one failing.”
“That and being struck on the head.”
The thin lips pursed into a slight smile for only a moment. “Yes. You must put a stop to that as well. It could prove detrimental.”
Had he not know better, Huma would have taken the statement as serious. “What goes on? Gwyneth—?”
“The young woman?” Huma reddened.
“Yes—she said that we were back at a stalemate once more.”
Rennard sighed and reached up to remove his helmet. The act revealed frost-colored hair plastered to his head. Rennard was one of the few knights who chose not to sport the long, thick mustaches but rather to go clean-shaven; he was also one of the few who kept his hair cut short well above his collar. No one questioned these decisions; Rennard was Rennard.
“For the moment, that appears to be where things are. Bennett claims this is a sign that victory is ours. He repeats over and over that the big push by Crynus has crumbled. No one has seen or heard of Crynus since your brief battle with him. Bennett has even gone so far as to praise you in his own fashion.”
“Praise me?”
“I quote: ‘Thanks in part to that one’s astounding luck, the warlord Crynus may be dead or at least incapacitated.’ “
Huma turned away. Bennett was right, though. He had been lucky. A true knight would have made better use of the opportunity and assured himself of the warlord’s destruction.
“I know what you’re thinking, Huma. Stop it. You are every part the knight that Bennett and his lapdogs are. More so. You’ve not lost sight of the true world.” Rennard lapsed into an uneasy silence as Huma turned back to him.
“How long before they release me?”
“When you’re ready, no sooner. There’ll be more than enough waiting for you when you’re fit.”
“Lord Oswal—does he have anything to say?” Huma felt a tremor of fear. The elder knight was like the father Huma had never known.
Rennard stood up and replaced the helmet on his head. He nodded. “The High Warrior wishes you the best and speediest of recoveries. He says he still has the utmost faith in your abilities.”
Which was the High Warrior’s way of stating how proud he still was of Huma. It was a rare boost for the young knight’s confidence.
“Rest well, Huma. I will attempt to see you when next I’m free.”
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