Allan Cole - Wolves of the Gods
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- Название:Wolves of the Gods
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"KYRANIA! KYRANIA! KYRANIA!"
Safar let the emotion carry him until it reached its highest point. The others must have felt it too. Leiria gave his hand a squeeze and Palimak whispered, "I'm ready, father."
A gesture from Safar brought the little airship sailing out of nothingness to soar above the arena. The crowd, as if sensing something, was suddenly silent, staring up at the magical airship. Safar cast the final spell, letting it ride up and up, like a trapeze racing to its apex.
He imagined Methydia. Her smoky almond eyes. Long black tresses streaked with silver. Cheeks bones dramatically high. Fruited lips parted in a smile. First he chanted the Balloonist's Prayer. The one Methydia had chanted every eve and every dawn:
"Come to us Mother Wind.
Lift us in hands blessed
By the warm sun.
We have flown high.
We have flown well.
Take us in your arms, Mother Wind.
And when you are done,
Set us gently on the ground."
Then he sang the words to Asper's poem:
" My love, Remember!
If ever I am exiled from your sight,
Know that with my dying breath
I blew one last kiss and set
It free on love's sighing winds … "
He heard Palimak whisper/singing with him and smiled. Then the circus troupe and the crowd joined in, singing:
" … free on love's sighing winds
To the place where Life and Death
And things that never meet
Are destined to unite."
She came in a gentle wind off the river, at first nothing more than a gray wisp of fog. But it was a fog heavy with the scent of violets and soon it grew and took form. A face gradually emerging.
Safar sucked in his breath.
It was Methydia.
And she called, "Sa-fahrr."
The voice came from everywhere, but at the same time it seemed right next to his ear, saying, "Sa-fahrr
… Sa-fahrr." Each like a long sigh.
And Safar said to the ghost, "I'm here, Methydia."
She saw him and smiled, nodding, "Safar. I see you, Safar."
He was nearly overwhelmed by the ghostly presence, her perfume and haunting voice unhinging him from his moorings. Then he saw the ghost frown-sad … disappointed.
Safar remembered. "Thank you for the gift, Methydia," he said. Then he held out empty hands, saying,
"But I have nothing so grand for you, my love. I have only this…"
And he blew her the promised kiss.
He heard Methydia's deep-throated laugh of pleasure. Saw her ghost reach up with a wispy hand to mock catch his kiss. She held the closed fist to her lips-kissed it. Then opened her hand and blew…
Her ghostly kiss came on a heady breeze and Safar drank it in, sighing, nearly drunk with the wine sweetness of it.
Then the ghost said, "Farewell, Safar. Farewell."
And Methydia was gone.
Instead, yawning over their heads as large as any galley that sailed the Great Sea, was the airship.
Transformed to full size by Methydia's ghostly kiss. The breeze singing in its lines, magical bellows pumping, fire gouting, twin balloons swollen and straining to sail away.
The Kyranians were overawed by the miracle. First there was a murmur. Then a low mutter of amazement. Then the mutter became a shouted chorus of:
"Kyrania! Kyrania!"
Biner pushed through the crowd to Safar. "By the gods," he cried, slapping him on the back so hard he was nearly bowled over. "We're ridin' the winds again, lad," he cried. "Ridin' the winds."
Queen Hantilia smiled through tears. "That was quite touching," she said, wiping her eyes.
She looked away from the scene in her mirror where the Kyranians, led by Safar, rejoiced. "I'm such an emotional creature," she said to her assistant. "My heart strings have always been plucked too easily."
"I must say, Majesty," the assistant said, "that the airship was quite a surprise. I never expected Lord Timura to do such a thing."
"He does have an amazing way of working his magic," the Queen replied. "Most of us mages just want to get the spell over with-and do the minimum required. In this case, the minimum would never have worked. Ghosts aren't easy to summon. And this Methydia was apparently a great witch-and those kinds of ghosts are hardest of all to deal with. Actually, I'm not sure anyone has ever managed what he just accomplished."
"Surely, the great Lord Asper, Majesty?" the assistant protested.
Hantilia rubbed her brow, thinking. Then she murmured, "Possibly. Just possibly." She looked at her puzzled assistant. "I'm only guessing," she said, "but part of that spell did have the ring of Asper to it."
"Pardon, Majesty," the assistant said, "but a little while ago you said that Lord Timura was attempting to accomplish three things. But you only named two. What, pray, was the third?"
The Queen gestured at the mirror, where Palimak was sitting astride Safar's shoulders, waving to the cheering crowd.
"The boy," she said. "The spell you just witnessed was a dress rehearsal for something much, much bigger. And the only way he can do it is with the boy."
The Queen sighed. "Another sad little tale in the making," she said.
She waved a claw at the mirror and the scene disappeared. "Send for Lord Timura," she commanded.
"It's time for the Great Sacrifice to begin!"
The Queen's messenger came and went and Safar retired to his tent with Palimak to get ready. They dressed in comfortable clothes-trousers, tunics, cloaks and boots-as if they faced a long journey, instead of just a short stroll to the Queen's palace.
They both carried small packs filled with magical devices and potions, as well several purses of various things hanging from their belts. Besides this, Safar had his silver dagger tucked into his sleeve and Palimak had the stone turtle containing Gundara and Gundaree tucked safely away in a large pocket inside his tunic. For weapons, Safar made sure they both had bows and a quiver of arrows. Palimak's bow was the one he'd used in the circus act, which Safar deemed more than sufficient to do the job.
As for swords, however, Safar made a little ceremony out of giving Palimak a steel blade that been especially cut down for him, as well as a knife to balance out his belt.
Palimak straightened, a few more years of added maturity furrowing his youthful brow.
Safar stood back to admire the figure he cut. "With you at my side, son," he said, "they don't stand a chance."
Palimak chortled with delight, eyes turning demon yellow with excitement. "Let's go get them!" he said.
With that they exited the tent to say their farewells.
The Timura family waited outside. Leiria stood a little away from them, holding Khysmet's reins, saddle bags packed and ready.
Safar's mother and sisters and female cousins fussed over them, weeping all the while, while his sisters'
husbands slapped them both on their backs and wished them "gods speed."
When they came to his father, Khadji knelt and embraced the boy, saying, "I'll show you some new pottery tricks when you get back." As always, Safar's father had difficulty saying what he really meant.
Palimak patted him and said, "I can hardly wait, grandfather." Trying to sound really excited about the promise and that the shining adventures he believed awaited him would be boring delays for when that moment came.
Khadji nodded, then rose to face his son. He was frowning, a little ashamed. "I guess I haven't been much help to you these last few days, son," he said.
"It was a spell, father," Safar assured him. "Nothing to do with you. There's no fault."
"Still," his father said, "I'm not happy with myself." He straightened, looking at Safar squarely. "It won't happen again."
Safar covered a confusion of emotions by giving his father a bear hug, slapping his back and telling him everything was going to be "fine, just fine."
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