Ник О'Донохью - Kender, Gully Dwarves, and Gnomes
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- Название:Kender, Gully Dwarves, and Gnomes
- Автор:
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- Год:1987
- ISBN:нет данных
- Рейтинг книги:5 / 5. Голосов: 1
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“Why didn’t he put labels on them?” mumbled the curious dwarf. “What good are enchanted glasses if there’s nothing to read with them? At least they should have titles so I’d know what I’m guarding ‘with my life.’ ”
For several minutes of agonizing temptation, Lodston stared first at the scrolls, then at the note from Dalamar. Finally, he snorted and started returning the cases, one-by-one, to the chest. He held the last one in his hand a moment too long, letting curiosity win the battle with judgment. With a muffled growl of surrender, he squinted behind the tiny glasses perched upon his huge nose and opened the scroll case.
Once again, the magical glyphs on the parchment writhed into a meaningful form, the words of an incantation in some unknown language forcing themselves from the dwarf’s throat.
“Drish Fetts, Drish Fetts, Lorgon Trits,” he heard his own voice pronouncing, but he could not understand what he was saying.
Lodston found it difficult to recall which of several things happened first at the instant he uttered the last syllable of the strange incantation. The scroll itself flared with a yellow light, then disintegrated into fine ashes in his hands. At the same time (it seemed) a huge sphere of orange flames formed itself from the yellow glow of the scroll and shot forward, away from the hermit. In a blinding, deafening explosion, the fireball struck the pantry wall with such stunning force that Lodston was slammed to the rock floor of the antechamber.
“Great Reorx!” he swore when he was able to stagger to his feet. The pantry, with its dirty dishes and utensils, plus some sacks of food, had been completely destroyed! The nearest comer of the ancient mine chamber was charred and bare of everything. The wooden shelves had disintegrated into smoking embers on the floor. Lodston looked at the pile of seemingly harmless scroll-cases in the chest and slammed its lid shut with a fearful cry.
“I won’t touch another one of the damnable things!” he vowed in a ringing shout, as if he were promising the absent Dalamar that he would never disobey him again. “You and this ‘Ladonna’ can have these evil things to yourselves!”
The old dwarf’s dreams that first night were filled with images of black-robed sorcerers who were fighting him with deadly magic. He had no way of imagining Dalamar’s enemy, this “Qualinesti mage,” but his mind constructed a spectral figure in a hooded white robe, the face hidden by the cowl except for terrible red eyes gleaming from its shadows. Lodston woke from his nightmare with a shudder and lay awake staring at the dying embers in the fireplace.
“What am I supposed to do if this mage from Qualinesti comes for your scrolls and books?” he cried in a hushed voice, as if Dalamar could hear and advise him. “I don’t know anything about magic. I wouldn’t even know which spell to read until it was too late. Why should I have to fight your enemy when you ran away from him yourself?”
The silence that followed his desperate cry for help offered no solace. Lodston fumbled in the darkness for the staff and the glasses. When he had found both magical items, he crawled to the door. The only thing he could do, it seemed, was leave this business to Dalamar and the mage from Qualinesti, whoever he was. He remembered stories from his childhood about the Kinslayer Wars between different elven clans and wondered fleetingly if that was the “war” that Milo Martin had mentioned.
“It’s none of my business, any way you look at it!” he muttered at the door. Then he slid the wooden bar aside and stepped into the darkness outside his dwarf-made cave. By the silver light of the white moon, he could see the curious inscription on his front door which he hadn’t been able to read before. The runes flowed together under the power of the Glasses of True Seeing, startling the hermit with their stark warning.
Death to traitors and to those who hide them ! it read.
Lodston felt his skin prickle with fear as he read his own death sentence. He whirled around and probed the darkness with the aid of his new glasses, hoping to spot one of Dalamar’s enemies in the thick shadows of the cliff side bushes.
“And death to you!” he shouted into the darkness with a shake of the quarterstaff. “This is my home! Leave me alone! I want nothing to do with elven squabbles!”
The old dwarf tensed himself, prepared to fight anyone who responded to his challenge, but the stillness remained unbroken save for the steady gurgle of the Meltstone River below him.
“Well, if magic’s your game, then that’s what you’ll get from Nugold Lodston!” the hermit shouted into the night. With that burst of bravado, he darted back inside the mine chamber and bolted the door behind him. Then he opened the chest and looked at the mute wooden scroll cases. Finally he shut his eyes behind the wizard’s spectacles and reached inside for another parchment.
He was more cautious this time. The gnarled fingers shook as he unfurled an inch or two of the scroll’s top edge and examined its surface carefully with the aid of his enchanted spectacles. A single line of glyphs began to twist themselves into a meaningful phrase in his mind.
Tisnollo’s Wondrous Incantation of Suggestion read the parchment’s title.
Encouraged by the fact that nothing dangerous had happened, Lodston unrolled another few inches of the scroll and continued to read.
“To win powerful control over the thoughts and body of one’s subject, the adept must focus his occult energies upon the ...”
Aha! Wait until I spring this one on Milo! he thought gleefully. Lodston’s childish excitement stifled his immediate curiosity. He re-rolled the parchment tightly and returned it to its case. Then he made a small mark on the polished wood with a charred stick from the fireplace. He couldn’t write, but he might at least mark the scrolls to distinguish those which seemed safe from those which were more dangerous. Then he reached for another of the powerful parchments.
By sunrise, the would-be wizard had catalogued each of the scrolls into one of four categories: “tricks,” which meant (he thought) harmless spells he wanted to use on people he knew, such as Milo Martin; “guard spells,” which seemed to protect their caster from harm; “attack spells,” whose titles suggested more aggressive results; and “unknown spells,” whose results the untrained hermit could not predict even by reading and understanding the first few lines.
A sorcerer needs a sorcerer’s robe, Lodston thought, delighted with the promise of new and unusual powers. He lifted Dalamar’s black robe from the table and let it fall loosely over his head. A blend of cloying fragrances stormed his nostrils from the hundreds of hidden pockets which had contained the wizard’s spell components and ingredients for herbal potions. The pockets were empty now, but residue of their exotic contents remained to perfume the silken fabric.
The hermit had planned to gather the voluminous garment at the waist to adjust its length, but the robe seemed to sense his shorter height. At the moment the light but strong fabric settled on his shoulders, Lodston felt Dalamar’s power surging in the robe and spreading into his own body. The flawless stitches seemed to shrink closer together, drawing the garment’s hem from the floor until it barely covered the dwarfs boots.
Suddenly, the dark elf’s lingering dweomer flooded Lodston’s mind with alien thoughts and impulses, confusing the dwarf with flashing images of fire, pain, and dark presences. Just as the psychic turmoil was becoming unbearable, it stopped. The powerful memories melted and receded into Lodston’s aged brain, merging with his own dim recollections of the past. A wave of energy swept into his arthritic limbs, dulling their pain and moving him toward the door. The black-robed figure that descended the cliff and strode confidently toward Digfel bore little resemblance to the reclusive dwarf who made golden toys for children.
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