Steven Erikson - Memories of Ice
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- Название:Memories of Ice
- Автор:
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- Год:2010
- ISBN:9781409092421
- Рейтинг книги:3 / 5. Голосов: 1
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'Not my master any longer.'
'He saved our skins, Gruntle, including your worthless hide.'
Crossing his arms, Gruntle raised a brow. 'Oh, and how did he manage that? Blacking out at the first rush — funny, I didn't see any lightning and conflagration from his Elder God, his nasty Lord-'
'We all went down, you fool. We were done for. But that priest plucked our souls away — as far as those K'Chain Che'Malle could sense, we were dead. Don't you remember dreaming? Dreaming! Pulled right into that Elder God's own warren. I recall every detail-'
'I guess I was too busy dying for real,' Gruntle snapped.
'Yes, you were, and Keruli saved you from that, too. Ungracious pig. One moment I was getting tossed around by a K'Chain Che'Malle, the next I woke up … somewhere else. with a huge ghost wolf standing over me. And I knew — knew instantly, Gruntle, that nothing was getting past that wolf. It was standing guard. over me.'
'Some kind of servant of the Elder God?'
'No, he doesn't have any servants. What he has is friends. I don't know about you, but knowing that — realizing it as I did there with that giant wolf — well, a god that finds friends instead of mindless worshippers … dammit, I'm his, Gruntle, body and soul. And I'll fight for him, because I know he'll fight for me. Horrible Elder Gods, bah! I'll take him over those snarling bickering fools with their temples and coffers and rituals any day.'
Gruntle stared at her, disbelieving. 'I must still be hallucinating,' he muttered.
'Never mind me,' Stonny said, sliding her rapier into its scabbard. 'Keruli and his Elder God saved your life, Gruntle. So we're now going to him, and you're going to apologize and if you're smart you're going to pledge to stand with him, in all that's to come-'
'Like Hood I am. Oh, sure, I'll say sorry and all that, but I don't want anything to do with any gods, Elder or otherwise, and that includes their priests-'
'I knew you weren't smart but I had to offer anyway. Let's go, then. Where's Buke disappeared to?'
'Not sure. He was just, uh, delivering me.'
'The Elder God saved him, too. And Mancy. Hood knows those two necromancers didn't give a damn whether they lived or died. If he's smart, he'll quit that contract.'
'Well, none of us are as smart as you, Stonny.'
'Don't I know it.'
They left the compound. Gruntle was still feeling the effects of the last few days, but with a belly full of food instead of wine and ale and the momentary but efficacious attention of the Grey Sword priest, Karnadas, he found his walk steadier and the pain behind his eyes had faded to a dull ache. He had to lengthen his stride to keep up with Stonny's habitual march. Even as her beauty attracted attention, her relentless pace and dark glare ensured a clear path through any crowd, and Capustan's few, cowed citizens scurried quicker than most to get out of her way.
They skirted the cemetery, the upright clay coffin-boles passing on their left. Another necropolis lay just ahead, evincing the Daru style of crypts and urns that Gruntle knew well from Darujhistan, and Stonny angled their route slightly to its left, taking the narrow, uneven passageway between the necropolis's low-walled grounds and the outer edge of the Tura'l Concourse. Twenty paces ahead was a smaller square, which they traversed before reaching the eastern edge of the Temple District.
Gruntle had had enough of stumbling in Stonny's wake like a dog in tow. 'Listen,' he growled, 'I just came from this quarter. If Keruli's camped nearby why didn't you just come to get me and save me the walk?'
'I did come to get you, but you stank like a pauper-tavern's piss pit. Is that how you wanted to show yourself to Master Keruli? You needed cleaning up, and food, and I wasn't going to baby you through all that.'
Gruntle subsided, muttering under his breath. Gods, I wish the world was full of passive, mewling women. He thought about that a moment longer, then scowled. On second thoughts, what a nightmare that'd be. It's the job of a man to fan the spark into flames, not quench it …
'Get that dreamy look off your face,' Stonny snapped. 'We're here.'
Blinking, Gruntle sighed, then stared at the small, dilapidated building before them — plain, pitted stone blocks, covered here and there by old plaster; a flat, beamed roof, the ancient wood sagging; and a doorway that he and Stonny would have to crouch to pass through. 'This is it? Hood's breath, this is pathetic.'
'He's a modest man,' Stonny drawled, hands on hips. 'His Elder God's not one for pomp and ceremony. Anyway, with its recent history, it went cheap.'
'History?'
Stonny frowned. 'Takes spilled blood to sanctify the Elder God's holy ground. A whole family committed suicide in this house, less than a week past. Keruli was …'
'Delighted?'
'Tempered delight. He grieved for the untimely deaths, of course-'
'Of course.'
'Then he put in a bid.'
'Naturally.'
'Anyway, it's now a temple-'
Gruntle swung to her. 'Hold on, now. I'm not buying into any faith when I enter, am I?'
She smirked. 'Whatever you say.'
'I mean, I'm not. Understand me? And Keruli had better understand, too. And his hoary old god! Not a single genuflection, not even a nod to the altar, and if that's not acceptable then I'm staying out here.'
'Relax, no-one's expecting anything of you, Gruntle. Why would they?'
He ignored the mocking challenge in her eyes. 'Fine, so lead the way, woman.'
'I always do.' She strode to the door and pulled it open. 'Local security measures — you can't kick these doors in, they all open outward, and they're built bigger than the inside frame. Smart, eh? The Grey Swords are expecting a house by house scrap once the walls fall — those Pannions are going to find the going messy.'
'The defence of Capustan assumes the loss of the walls? Hardly optimistic. We're all in a death trap, and Keruli's dream-escape trick won't help us much when the Tenescowri are roasting our bodies for the main course, will it?'
'You're a miserable ox, aren't you?'
'The price for being clear-eyed, Stonny.'
She ducked as she entered the building, waving for Gruntle to follow. He hesitated, then, still scowling, stepped through.
A small reception chamber greeted them, bare-walled, clay-tiled, with a few lantern niches set in the walls and a row of iron pegs unadorned by clothing. Another doorway was opposite, a long leather apron providing the barrier. The air smelled of lye soap, with a faint undercurrent of bile.
Stonny unclasped her cloak and hung it on a hook. 'The wife crawled out of the main room to die here,' she said. 'Dragging her entrails the whole way. Raised the suspicion that her suicide wasn't voluntary. Either that or she changed her mind.'
'Maybe a goat's milk hawker knocked on the door,' Gruntle suggested, 'and she was trying to cancel her order.'
Stonny studied him for a moment, as if considering, then she shrugged. 'Seems a bit elaborate, as an explanation, but who knows? Could be.' She swung about and entered the inner doorway in a swish of leather.
Sighing, Gruntle followed.
The main chamber ran the full width of the house; a series of alcoves — storage rooms and cell-like bedrooms — divided up the back wall, a central arched walkway bisecting it to lead into the courtyard garden beyond. Benches and trunks crowded one corner of the chamber. A central firepit and humped clay bread-oven was directly before them, radiating heat. The air was rich with the smell of baking bread.
Master Keruli sat cross-legged on the tiled floor to the left of the firepit, head bowed, his pate glistening with beads of sweat.
Stonny edged forward and dropped to one knee. 'Master?'
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