David Farland - Sons of the Oak
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- Название:Sons of the Oak
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Better to die swiftly, she told herself, than to live as a shell, a mere hollow thing.
“Let’s do it then,” Myrrima said.
They couldn’t try to rescue the boys now, she knew. The ship wasn’t ready to sail yet. Rescuing the boys wouldn’t help, if they couldn’t make a clean getaway.
But there was one chance.
Myrrima needed to scout ahead, get a closer look.
“Stay here,” Myrrima told Smoker.
She strode down the hill, onto the muddy road, and made her way through the vast encampment, studying the terrain.
To her surprise, no one stopped her. Shadoath’s people had not needed to worry about security for a very long time.
It wasn’t until she reached the palace gate that she was challenged. Several Bright Ones watched the gate, handsome men, perfect men by their looks, all in elegant burnished black mail with black capes.
“Halt,” one of the men demanded. “State your name and business.”
“Myrrima Borenson,” Myrrima said. “I’ve come for an audience with Shadoath.”
“On what business?” one of the Bright Ones asked.
“I’ve come to offer a ransom for the princes.”
The bright Ones looked at one another, and presently one of them raced up the road, into the confines of the palace itself, a tall black building made of basalt.
Meanwhile, Myrrima had to step aside as locals pressed through the gates-golaths carrying food and other gear about as if they were an army of ants.
Myrrima studied the Bright Ones, taking special notice of their mail. It was splint mail-a suit of light and sturdy chain mail hooked to metal plates to cover the vital areas. The plates were enameled, and so shone brightly.
The epaulets curved elegantly at the shoulder, and at the cuff thickened into lip, a design that Myrrima had never seen before. It would have severely reduced any damage from a downward stroke with a blade or an ax, and would deflect a blow away from the vulnerable spots on the arm. She decided then and there that she must have some, even if it meant ripping it from these dead men’s bodies.
The breastplates that they wore showed a similarly innovative design and high level of craftsmanship, and were engraved with runes of protection. Myrrima recognized some of those runes, but others were strange to her.
The man that she was studying smiled at her, perhaps imagining that she fancied him. Myrrima smiled. “Nice armor.”
But she wasn’t studying it to admire it. She was studying it to discover its weaknesses.
It will take a blow to the armpit to defeat that design, she realized. There is a good space there under the arm that is still unprotected. Likewise, the throat is open, along with the base of the neck, and behind the knee. Many of the usual places.
Arrows wouldn’t do for such a fight. Even a saber would be tricky. A dirk might be best, something short and sharp.
The messenger returned, and bade Myrrima to surrender her weapons and follow him. She handed her bow and knife to one guard, then was escorted up a short hill, to the steps of the keep.
The basalt exterior was ugly, but the thick stones looked almost impenetrable.
Inside, the palace was grand. The tall roof soared three stories, stone arches offering support. Many high windows made it feel as if the room were open to the sky, and indeed finches and other songbirds could be seen flitting about in the rafters. There was no antechamber or offices for minor functionaries. The palace was open, a vast hall. The walls covered in polished white oak and burnished silver, with tapestries of white silk, made the palace seem full of light.
Shadoath reclined upon a couch covered in white silk. Today she wore enameled black armor, with a cape of crimson. Near her feet was a smaller couch, and resting upon it were two youngsters, a boy of perhaps seventeen, and a young girl, perhaps eleven. Her children.
Myrrima approached the queen. Shadoath watched with the glittering eyes of a serpent.
Myrrima knelt at the bottom of the dais.
“Your Highness,” Myrrima said. “I’ve come to offer ransom for the princes.” It was the only believable story that she could think of.
Shadoath smiled, and Myrrima had never seen such a beautiful face marred by such a cruel expression.
“What do you offer?” Shadoath asked.
The only thing that she had that was of worth was Fallion’s forcibles. They might just be enough to buy his freedom. But would he regret the price? Myrrima wondered.
Those forcibles were his legacy. He might never see their like again.
Is this what his father would have wanted?
“Three hundred forcibles,” Myrrima said. It was all that the boys had. “For the pair of them.”
“Do you have three hundred forcibles?” Shadoath asked. Myrrima was intensely aware of Shadoath’s predatory gaze. If the woman knew that she had so many forcibles, she’d steal them. The weight of her stare was overwhelming, and Myrrima had a sudden suspicion that she would never make it from the palace alive.
Myrrima sought to be her most convincing. “I don’t have them here. I would have to return to Mystarria.”
“Then why not offer three thousand forcibles?” Shadoath suggested, “and a thousand pounds of gold for good measure?”
Myrrima licked her lips, told the first lie that came to mind. “Forgive me, Your Highness. I am but the daughter of a poor merchant. I was taught that one should never make one’s best offer first.”
Shadoath seemed offended. “You expect to haggle as if I were some peasant dickering over the price of parsnips?”
“Forgive me. It seemed wise.”
Shadoath smiled. She peered at Myrrima as if she had penetrated her secret.
“If I were to give you time to bring the ransom, would you really bring it? Or would you return with a flotilla of warships and try to seize the boys?”
“That would be unwise,” Myrrima said. “You would still have the children at your mercy.”
“But if Chancellor Westhaven tried to rescue the boys, and they died in the skirmish, who would blame him? It would leave him free to assume the throne…”
“Westhaven is not that kind of man,” Myrrima said, surprised that Shadoath would think so ill of him.
Shadoath only smiled. “All men are that kind of man.”
Was that really true?
In a few years, Fallion would reach his majority and be ready to assume the throne. Would Westhaven refuse to turn it over?
Myrrima believed that he was better than that.
“So,” Myrrima pressed. “Three thousand forcibles and a thousand pounds of gold… Do we have a deal?”
Shadoath shook her head.
“I don’t know if I could go any higher,” Myrrima said. “Blood metal is growing rare, and I doubt that Mystarria has more than three thousand forcibles to its name. The Brat of Beldinook recently invaded, and on that account, many of the forcibles may have already been put to use. A higher price could bankrupt the nation.”
“Sadly,” Shadoath said. “None of that matters. I can’t give you the boys. They’re already dead.”
Myrrima stared in shock.
“It was not their fate to be rescued,” Shadoath continued. “Had I left them alive, I’m sure that they would have come after me in time.”
Myrrima felt her eyes misting over, her heart wrenching with grief. She succumbed to it, knelt there sobbing.
“May I take their bodies?” she asked, her mind in a fog. “They should be entombed in the halls of their fathers.”
Shadoath shook her head. “There is nothing left. I fed them to my pets.” She waved to the right and left, to her strengi-saats chained at the base of the throne.
She has beaten me, Myrrima thought. She knows it and takes delight in my pain.
Myrrima felt herself sliding into an emotional abyss. But then she caught her footing, just the tiniest bit.
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