David Dalglish - Blood of the Underworld
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- Название:Blood of the Underworld
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Thren ran, ran, leaping over the gaps between buildings without slowing in the slightest. His shortswords grew heavy in his hands as he held them. Grayson had often defeated him when they sparred, and he’d near fatally wounded his son, as well. Could he win now?
Digging in his heels, Thren came to a halt, spinning on Grayson like a deer turning on a chasing wolf. He’d made a promise, sworn his vows. He was Thren Felhorn. How could he lay claim to a city yet fear to fight one making similar claims? He would not let Grayson be right. No running, not from this. Standing firm, he held his swords together in an X, eyes locked on the giant man barreling toward him.
They crashed together, Grayson’s weight and momentum pushing him back. In the light of the stars, upon the rooftops, the two battled. Thren constantly circled, refusing to give Grayson a chance to bring his full strength to bear. The ringing of their swords was a song, and the battle felt so comfortable, so familiar, that only the pounding of his heart in his ears assured him that it was not some old training match, not some unimportant spar, but a meeting to the death.
“This stops nothing,” Grayson said, hammering at Thren’s defenses. His shortswords, dwarfed by his enormous arms, moved with both speed and unmatched power. “Veldaren is ours, Thren.”
Thren dove underneath a swipe, circled to his left, then slashed upward at Grayson’s side. One sword he parried, but the other cut into flesh. It was a minor wound, like a bee stinging a bull, but it angered him nonetheless.
“It’s mine, Grayson!” Thren shouted as he retreated once more, leaping back and forth in the constrained limits of their chosen place of battle. “Veldaren, its people, its fear…mine, and I do not share!”
“Liar! Wretch!” Grayson continued on, showing no impatience despite Thren’s stalling tactic. He knew better than to give Thren any sort of edge. When Thren fell too far back, Grayson took the moment to catch his breath, and rebalance his stance before slowly approaching. “You’ve lost that title, that respect. The Watcher took it from you. I fought him, Thren. Whatever miracle kept him alive doesn’t change that he should have died, and by my hand. You could have killed him at any time, yet you haven’t. You coward…”
Thren stood there, hunched low, ready to spring into an attack at any time. Grayson shifted his feet, ready to meet it.
“Coward?” Thren asked. “Is that so?”
“You let him live. Why?”
Thren’s grin spread ear to ear, and despite his exhaustion, despite his inability to score more than a single scratch on his opponent, he laughed.
“Because he’s my son,” he said.
“Your son?”
Grayson froze, just for a moment, as he realized all that meant.
“Marion’s son,” Thren said. “Your blood as well as mine, you damn fool. The Watcher and I are two sides of a single coin. Every man, woman, and child of this city fears one of us. Together we own the night. You are nothing to him, nothing to me. He lives, as do I. Come, Grayson. Let’s see if the same can be said of you come the dawn.”
Thren leapt at him, every ounce of his speed sending him flying toward the giant man. Once more their swords clashed, but Grayson’s mind was overcome for just a moment, unable to maintain the balance needed against such an opponent. But Thren had cried his tears for Marion, and he’d long since buried her in his heart. Grayson’s wounds, though, they’d stayed fresh, and because of it new ones slashed across his chest as Thren pressed harder and harder. He felt rage boiling in his veins, and it gave him strength. Looping closer, he slashed through Grayson’s left wrist, severing tendons. The blade dropped to the ground. Thren hammered the other, staying close, denying him the chance to flee. The other fell, its handle soaked with blood as Thren hacked into his arm.
Grayson tried to sweep out his feet with a kick, but Thren leapt into the air, his knee catching Grayson’s forehead. The man fell back, and Thren stabbed through his side, the blade puncturing the roof so it held him there like a stake. Grayson screamed, and he pulled against the blade. Another stab, this one through the shoulder, kept him down.
Thren leaned close, so they were mere inches away.
“You know who he is,” he said. “Your arrival was not coincidence. You’ve spat in my face, and for that you’ll die, but first you’ll tell me who.”
“What are you talking about?” Grayson asked, still struggling against the two blades. Thren had purposefully made sure neither punched through a vital organ, wanting to control Grayson’s death, to have it be exactly when he desired it.
“The man mocking me,” he said. “The one who has killed my members, taken their eyes, and left his words written in blood. Tell me who he is.”
“I don’t know,” Grayson said. He reached toward Thren with a shaking hand, and despite his wounds, tried to grab his neck to strangle him. Thren admired his dedication, but had no time for that. He released the hilts of his swords, grabbed Grayson’s wrists, and held him down.
“You lie.”
“I was never told his name.”
Thren’s eyes narrowed.
“Told by who?”
Grayson shook his head, and he laughed despite his pain.
“It’s all a game, Thren, and I played along because it suited us well. His name’s Laerek, a priest of Karak.”
It made no sense, but he detected no lie.
“A priest?” he asked. “What have I done to them that Karak’s followers would hate me?”
Another laugh.
“I don’t know, and I don’t give a shit.”
Thren grabbed Grayson’s neck with a hand and pushed his head down.
“Tell me where to find him.”
“Are you going to kill me?”
Thren swallowed, and then he nodded.
“Yeah. I will.”
Grayson let out a soft sigh. His dark skin was turning pale, yet he kept total control of his voice.
“So be it. He’ll be waiting for me in an alley off Songbird Road, by that shoemaker’s place.”
Thren again sensed no lie. He stood, and his hand closed around the hilt of his sword.
“Thren,” Grayson said, and for the first time his voice wavered.
“Yes?”
Grayson grinned darkly.
“Make sure that bastard suffers.”
Thren yanked the blade free, spun it around, and then slashed open Grayson’s throat. His body convulsed for a moment as blood spilled across his neck and chest, and then he lay still. Thren stood over him, breathing heavily, and despite himself, he felt tears run down his face.
“You loved Marion more than I,” he told the corpse. “A shame it cost you so.”
He yanked the other sword free, not bothering to clean off the blood. He still had work to do.
“Laerek,” Thren whispered as trumpets sounded, the raid on the Sun Guild nearing its end.
30
Alyssa tossed and turned, but she could not sleep. Zusa had still not returned, and with the setting of the sun she felt her hope dwindling. With every creak of a board she sat up in bed, looking to see if Zusa was opening the door or climbing down from the ceiling. Always, nothing. She’d give so much to have the Faceless Woman climb into her bed, to wrap her arms around her and tell her everything was well, everything was safe. Despite her wealth and fortune, she could not buy the one thing she so desperately needed.
Still feeling anxious, she at last gave up on sleep and slipped out of bed. She threw a robe over her thin nightgown, then stepped into the hallways. It was dark despite the many candles. Something gnawed at her tired mind, but she couldn’t place what it was. Even more impatient, she hurried to Nathaniel’s room. If she were stuck awake, at least it’d be with her son. Seeing him asleep, and at peace, was often what it took to reassure her troubled mind that all was well. She’d done it plenty when he was a newborn, and though it felt childish to do so now that he was older, she didn’t care. Reaching his door, she again felt that gnawing fear, an awareness that she was missing something both troubling, and obvious.
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