"Douglass, Sara - Axis Trilogy 1 - Battleaxe" - читать интересную книгу автора (Douglass Sara) Hagen teetered backwards and forwards, his face surprised rather than angry. Then, with a small "Oh!" of utter astonishment that Azhure would actually do this to him, he toppled to the floor.
Azhure rolled out of the way and scrambled to her feet, one hand clutching her ribs. But her breath was coming more easily now and she stood ready, sure that Hagen would leap to his feet with a savage roar, intent on her final murder. But Hagen lay still, his right arm twisted under his body. The Avar girl's wails began to subside and Azhure quickly checked her. She was unharmed, but Hagen had come so close...so close . . . Azhure took a quick, deep breath, fighting to forget the brief images that had flashed through her mind. That never happened\ "No," she whispered, her mind slipping dangerously close to the edge of madness. "That never happened. Forget it, Azhure. Forget it. It was your imagination." In her battle to disremember the horror, Azhure unconsciously murmured the words that had been shouted at her for so many years. "Wicked child. That's what you are. Wicked." She finally slammed the door on the memories, composing herself with great effort, and stared at Hagen. Had he knocked himself unconscious in the fall? Azhure hoped so. If he was unconscious then she and the child would still be able to scramble free. Slowly, lest the man only be pretending, Azhure bent down and touched him quickly on the shoulder. He didn't react. She shoved him and leapt back. But still Hagen didn't move. "Oh, no," Azhure whispered as she watched his still body, her stomach starting to churn. "Oh no!" On the bed Shra rolled over and sat up, her tear-streaked face curious. Biting her tongue to stop herself from gagging, Azhure seized Hagen by the shoulder and rolled him over, grunting at the flare of pain in her ribs as she did so. He was dead. Everything told Azhure that: the spreading pool of blood beneath him; his staring eyes, comically surprised; his hand still grasped about the hilt of the knife, its blade stuck its entire length in his lower abdomen. As she watched, his dead hand slowly unclenched and slid to his side, hitting the floor with a sickening thud. Azhure turned away and retched. Shra stared, then slid down from the bed, toddling over to the body. Almost overbalancing on her plump legs, she squatted down and rested both hands in the pool of blood. "Azhure," she lisped and Azhure looked back, stunned to see the child with both her hands swimming in blood. "No!" she cried and snatched the child from beside Hagen's body. What did she think she was doing? Then the child did something even more strange. She lifted one hand to Azhure s forehead and ran her fat little fingers down the woman's face, leaving three trails of blood. "Accepted," she said clearly. "Accepted." Azhure sat trembling at the table for a very long time, the child in her lap, staring at Hagen's body. She had kiDed him. She had killed him. The words ran through her mind over and over. Murder. There was no other way to dress it up. And every time that thought ran through her head a wave of sickness enveloped her. Murder. She had riot wanted to kill him. She had simply wanted to protect the child and escape from him. Eventually Azhure roused herself. She could not stay here now. The village people would undoubtedly lynch O her the moment someone discovered the body. Then they would burn the Avar man and the little girl. Hurriedly she wiped her face and the child's hands, leaving the blood-streaked towel lying on the table. "Come," she whispered to the child. She rewrapped the girl, adjusted her own cloak and left the house she had called home for almost twenty-eight years behind her without a backward glance. Outside Azhure recovered the cloak she had secreted for the Avar man and walked to the rear door of the Worship Hall. Could she go through with the rest of the plan, when the initial stages had gone so disastrously wrong? "I must," she murmured determinedly, "if I am to save this girl and the man. We are all dead if we stay." She forced herself to think of what she needed to do. How many guards had been left to watch over the Avar man? She stepped down the stairs to the cell, making no effort to move silently. She did not want to appear to be sneaking. When she walked into the cellar, the Avar girl-child held tightly in her arms, Azhure fixed a bright smile on her face. She breathed a quick sigh of relief. Only one man sat in here on guard, but as that one man turned to look at her Azhure's relief turned into dismay. It was Belial, the BattleAxe's lieutenant. Azhure hid her dismay by widening her smile. She rather liked Belial, he had a good-humoured face yet acted decisively when needed. He might not be a hero, but he had kind hazel eyes that now crinkled at her in some puzzlement. She did not want to hurt Belial, but she would do what she had to do to save the Avar man. "What are you doing here at this time of night?" he asked, rising to his feet, puzzled but not anxious. Good. Azhure made a face and smiled at the child. "She wanted to see her father, and fretted at me for so long that I had to bring her." Azhure made her face fall, and she leaned a little closer to whisper to Belial. "And tomorrow morning . . . well, I couldn't refuse her one last hour spent with him, could I?" Belial relaxed a little. Of all the Smyrton villagers in the cellar this afternoon Azhure had shown the most courage and independence; besides, she was very attractive. Belial was normally a little shy around beautiful women, but Azhure did not flaunt her beauty nor seek to use it to intimidate. He patted the child a little awkwardly on her head. "Poor little girl." "Yes, I know." Azhure simply wanted to get this over and done with. She could see the Avar man begin to stir behind the bars. He had been given water to wash and was warmly dressed against the night cold. Good. Azhure gritted her teeth a little, this was going to be hard. Courage, girl, she repeated to herself. You have already killed once tonight, and that a man you called father. Surely disabling this stranger should not be a problem. But Hagen had beaten her and abused her. Belial had done nothing but treat her with kindness and respect and now displayed touching tenderness towards the child in her arms. Azhure stretched her smile until she thought she must look like a grinning idiot. "Do you think perhaps . . .?" she said, tilting her head towards the door of the cell. "Oh, of course," Belial smiled at her. "Let me get the keys." Azhure slipped the child down onto the floor and followed Belial across the cellar. As he bent down to pick the keys up from the stool where he had left them, Azhure pulled a fist-sized rock from the deep pocket in her black apron. She raised it high above her head, her hand trembling, and, just as Belial was starting to rise, she brought it down, dealing Belial a heavy blow to the back of his skull. He twisted as he fell, his eyes registering a moment's surprise before they rolled up into his head and he collapsed unmoving on the stone floor. Azhure stared at him for a moment, unable to believe she had actually hit him. She dropped the stone beside Belial's body and started to shake, raising her hands to her face. What had she done? "Quick!" a voice hissed behind her. "The keys!" She turned and saw the Avar man standing by the cell door, his eyes intense. "The keys!" he repeated. Azhure reached across the floor to where they had fallen and slid them over to the Avar man. He had the door open in an instant. He picked the child up and grabbed Azhure's arm. "Come," he said, his voice quieter now, "you must come with me. You know that your friends will kill you too, now." Azhure nodded and stood, her legs still weak with shock. She glanced one more time at Belial, hoping he wasn't dead. "Sorry," she whispered, then the Avar man was pulling her towards the stairs. Axis could not sleep. He had tossed and turned in his bedroll, listening to the sounds of the night, until finally he decided that there was no use pretending he was going to sleep and rolled out of his blankets, slipped into his clothes, strapped on his weapon belt and headed into the night. He nodded to the perimeter guards as he passed them. He still felt troubled by the events of the afternoon. The condition of the Avar man and child had appalled him. He had seen death and agony many times on the battlefield, but never before had he seen such wanton cruelty. And all in the name of the Seneschal, all in the name of Artor and the Way of the Plough. Axis had been repelled by the blood lust in the villagers' eyes, and now, as he was walking through the crisp cold air, he was repelled by the thought of the sight he would witness this morning. He cursed himself as he wandered down the pathway approaching the Worship Hall. He needed to talk with Belial to calm his nerves. The moment he descended into the cellar he knew what had happened. The cell door yawned wide and Belial lay sprawled in an unmoving heap over by the far wall. Axis crossed the cellar in five strides and gently rolled Belial over. He was still breathing, but he had a huge lump on the back of his head. Whoever had hit him had done a good job. And Axis thought he knew who might have done it. Axis took the stairs out of the cellar three at a time and ran the distance between the Worship Hall and Hagen's house in the space of six heartbeats. He burst through the door without bothering to knock. Hagen lay in a pool of blood beside the bed, a knife sticking out of his belly. A bloodied towel lay on the table; and Azhure and the Avar girl were nowhere to be seen. Axis cursed and checked the man's body — it was cool — and Axis cursed again. He ran outside again and quickly orientated himself under the early morning sky. Azhure and the Avar man would have run for the Forbidden Valley . . . and Arne had set up the Axe-Wielders' camp on the opposite side of the village. There was no time to rouse their support, and Axis refused to consider rousing the Smyrton villagers. The Forbidden Valley was unpassable to horses, and the Avar and Azhure must be close to it by now. Axis cursed yet again, low and vicious, as he turned and sprinted out of the village, heading north-east. Although he had tried to save their lives, Axis thrust aside his previous sympathy for their plight and any thought of simply letting them escape. Hagen was dead and, even more damning in Axis' eyes, Belic. lay assaulted and helpless after both he and Axis had trusted Azhure. His bonds and loyalties to the Seneschal demanded that the BattleAxe take revenge for the death of the Plough-Keeper, the assault of one of the most senior Axe-Wielders, and the escape of the Forbidden. Axis was a strong and fit man, and once beyond the village he quickly settled into an easy stride. The entrance to the Forbidden Valley lay less than half a league from Smyrton along flat and easy terrain; Axis was determined to give the Avar man and Azhure a run for their pains. Yet as he ran a small troubling voice nagged inside his head. Why not let them escape? Why not simply say that you tried your best, and stop here, and let them escape into the night? Damn it! Axis thought as the disturbing question would not go away. I cannot betray my trust to the Seneschal - it has protected me and supported me all my life. |
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