"Rosenberg,.Joel.-.Guardians.Of.The.Flame.06.&.07.-.To.Home.And.Ehvenor" - читать интересную книгу автора (Dragon Stories)Jason didn't quite blush. Janie, on the other hand, had a great poker face; she had taken the smile from
her face by the time she had turned back to him. I guess I was supposed to be upset, but there's part of being a parent that appears to have been left out of my makeup: the thought of my daughter having sex doesn't bother me. Sorry. Long as she visits the Spider or the Eareven priest twice a year and gets herself taken care of—something I made sure she did for the first year after menarche—I just hope she has fun. Somebody trying to force her or hurt her would be different, but that's not sex, dammit. I'd do to that kind of slime the same thing I did to the last ones that raped her mother. (And no, I wouldn't do it slower. Doesn't make it any better, and it doesn't make them any deader.) I wasn't supposed to know what was going on between Janie and Jason, though. It made things simpler. Jason and I already had enough to argue about. Aeia went on: "But if I need any help with my social life, I'll be sure to let you know." Jason didn't suspect anything; he wasn't good enough an actor not to glance from face to face if he knew. Janie didn't seem to pick up on it, either, which meant nothing. I smiled back at Aeia in a sort of avuncular way, I hoped. We needed a long talk, her and me, and that would have to be orchestrated just right. Forget the orchestra, though—what tune did I want to play? A friend of mine who was an acting major used to say there was an old saying in the theatre: "Drunk and on the road don't count." We hadn't been drunk, but we had been on the road. And, if the truth be known, it had been awfully good, for both of us. Compare that to a woman who didn't let me touch her anymore, who claimed that she loved me but never laughed or smiled in my presence, whose shoulders shook in the night with silent weeping. You tell me how you'd rather sleep next tothat than to one who sleeps in your arms, her breath warm on your neck, her legs intertwined with yours, matching you heartbeat for heartbeat. But you don't leave your wife of almost two decades because she's an emotional cripple, and you don't All that seems reasonable. I don't know what you actuallydo , though. That makes me feel awfully old. When I was younger, I always knew what to do. I pushed back from the table; that seemed right for the moment. The ground didn't open up and swallow me. Always a good sign. "Jason, Tennetty, and I are going hunting," I said to Aeia. She either didn't take the hint, or dismissed the idea. "Have fun." She made a moue as she reached for a sweetroll. "Bren up yet?" I shook my head. "Haven't seen him." I wondered for a moment if that was a red herring for my benefit, if she was sneaking off to sleep with Bren the way that Janie was to be with Jason, then decided that I wasn't going to get anywhere guessing. I don't care who plays musical beds, as long as I don't have to sleep alone. Which had been the trouble, of late. One of them. Besides, there's Slovotsky's Law something-or-other: Don't accuse your mistress of cheating on you with her future fiancй. To hell with it. I was spending too much time musing about musical beds. I stood up. "I'm out of here, folks." Tennetty hacked off a fist-sized hunk of bread, dipped it in honey, and stood. "Let's go kill something." * * * The castle was quiet in the golden morning light, probably a holdover on the part of Karl's staff. He used to insist on—well, try to insist on—sleeping late, and U'len was probably keeping things quiet in his memory, or maybe just out of habit. "Meet you at the stables," I told Tennetty and Jason. She nodded and sprinted for the back staircase, while Jason maintained a dignified walk. I headed up to |
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