"Watt-Evans,.Lawrence.-.Ethshar.2.-.Single.Spell" - читать интересную книгу автора (Dragon Stories)I don't think theyre toughening us for battle, Tobas replied, I think theyre just too cheap to do better. It makes me suspicious about that reward of a hundred pounds of gold.
Oh? Do you think theyre lying? Tillis turned and stared at him with wide, worried eyes. Tobas sighed. Not exactlylying, perhaps, he said, but exaggerating a little. Oh, but they wouldntdare refuse anything to the man who slays the dragon! What would the people think? Surely the peasants would rise up against any king so treacherous as to refuse the kingdoms savior what might be due him! Tillis, Tobas thought, talked like a storyteller, and was undoubtedly aboard the foul-smelling and nameless little ship as a result of listening to too many storytellers. I wouldnt put much trust in peasants, he said. Nor in kings, either. Do you know anything about this place were going to, Dwomor, I think its called? Its in the mountains in the Small Kingdoms, and they say it was the original capital of Old Ethshar. Startled, Tobas asked,Who says so? The Dwomorites, of course! Oh, of course. He settled back in his hammock again. From what he had always heard, virtually every one of the Small Kingdoms claimed to be the original capital or else its government claimed to be the rightful government of all Ethshar. Or both. If any capital had ever actually existed, its location was long since forgotten. Tillis, he asked, how do you expect to kill a dragon? I don't know, Tillis confessed. I hadnt really thought about it. How big a dragon do you suppose it is? I don't know, Tobas replied, but its big enough to eat people. Thats pretty big, Tillis said, his voice hushed and uncertain. Then, more confidently, But a good sword and a stout heart should serve! Tillis, Tobas said in exasperation, unless youve been hiding it somewhere in the hold, you havent got a sword. No, I don't, but I can get one from the castle armory, Im sure. Tobas sighed again. What in the world made you decide to sign up to be a dragon-slayer, anyway? Tillis was silent for a long moment before replying, Sixteen siblings. What? I have sixteen older siblings. Every single inheritance or apprenticeship or wealthy marriage orany sort of arranged marriage my parents could possibly claim was spoken for before they got to me. Nine brothers and seven sisters can use up a lot of property, and my parents were never rich. Tobas whistled. If they were raising seventeen children, its no wonder! They wouldnt havetime to get rich, and that crowd would eat it as fast as they brought it in! Tillis nodded silently. Tobas lay for a moment, trying to imagine what it would be like to live in such a large family. He had sometimes pretended Peretta and Dйtha and Garander were his siblings instead of his cousins, but he had never considered what a really large family would be like. He didnt think he would like it. How olds the oldest? he asked. Before Tillis could answer, a voice came from another hammock. Arent you two ever going to shut up? Sorry, Tobas said. He rolled over to face the wall. The speaker was one of those he had classified as blackguards or scoundrels, a small man with a scarred face, at least ten years older than himself, who carried no fewer than three knives. Tobas had not caught his entire name Arnen of something. He was not someone Tobas cared to argue with. Now that he had met the other recruits he was not at all sure that, as a wizard, even a wizard with a single spell, he might not be the best chance the kingdom of Dwomor had. Dragons were usually said to breathe fire, and were therefore presumably fire-resistant, but some way of using Thrindles Combustion against a dragon might still exist. He dozed at last, as the ship sailed on into the east. At dawn the next day the lookout sighted land ahead; they had crossed the Gulf of the East, leaving the Hegemony of Ethshar for the Small Kingdoms. Tobas and the other adventurers came on deck to see the jagged, rocky coastline for themselves. Is that Dwomor? someone asked a crewwoman, pointing at the cliffs. No, of course not, she replied in heavily-accented Ethsharitic. Unless the captains gotten us off-course again, thats Morria; we should be able to see the castle in an hour or so. Tobas had never actually seen a castle, though he had heard numerous descriptions, some of them going into elaborate detail; the only castles were in the Small Kingdoms, the other nations of the World being either too advanced and peaceful or too barbaric and primitive to have any. He resolved to watch carefully, so as not to miss it. One story he had heard as a child had described a castle as a great pile of stone, leading him to believe that some were camouflaged, and he was afraid that he might mistake this one for a natural outcropping. He need not have worried; Morria Castle towered up quite unmistakably atop a low cliff, with no fewer than six turrets jutting above its battlements. Will we be putting in there? he asked, noticing the small harbor below the cliff. No, a sailor replied briefly. Whats our course, then? The crewman looked him over. Youve been to sea before? He spoke with the accent of Ethshar of the Spices. My father was a captain, and I worked my passage to Ethshar, Tobas replied. The sailor nodded. Well, well be cruising down the length of Morria, here, and on past Stralya, and then up the river at Londa to Ekeroa, where well put your party ashore. No stops; I think your leader is afraid hed lose some of you if we put in anywhere before that. I wouldnt be surprised if hes right in fact, hell probably lose a couple during the overland trip. Its a good seven leagues of rough travel from Ekeroa to Dwomor Keep. Youve been there? Not I! The sailor laughed, though Tobas saw nothing humorous in the question. No, Ive never been there, but all the traffic from Dwomor comes along the same route. There isnt any other way, I suppose. Oh. Ah ... Have you heard anything about this dragon? A little. Rumors say its a fifty-footer thats a bad size, big enough to be smart and strong, small enough to be fast and vicious. It breathes fire, they say, but that might be an exaggeration. Some people seem to thinkall dragons do. Tobas shivered. You're not very encouraging. Oh, don't worry, the sailor said. Its not allyour problem. Look at all these other heroes coming to kill it! And this is just the group from Ethshar of the Spices; there are bound to be others, as well. Chances are the old king will be sending an entire army of volunteers against the poor beast, and youll be lucky to get a few whacks at its tail. He paused. Assuming they don't all back out, anyway. Its a mystery to me why he didnt just hire a real expert; there must be some. Maybe he couldnt find any. Tobas, who had wondered the same thing, glanced at his comrades those who were on deck, at any rate. Tillis was staring eagerly ahead, holding onto a foremast shroud and staggering every time the ship rolled. Arnen was talking to a knot of off-watch sailors by the mainmast; Tobas thought he saw the flash of coins, and suspected that the group was involved in some sort of wager. Three others Peren the White, Arden Adars son, and a fifteen-year-old orphan girl named Azraya of Ethshar whom Tobas suspected of being not merely a fool but actually insane were in various places on deck. The other three were presumably below somewhere, still being seasick. Peren, whose cognomen came from his bone-white hair and pale skin, had been sick the first day, but recovered quickly; the others had not been bothered. None of them looked much like dragon-slayers to Tobas. He was, so far as he knew, the only magician in the bunch; Peren had the only real sword, and Arden, between them in age, was the only particularly large, strong one. It was confusing, having both an Arnen and an Arden at least they had no two with exactly the same name, and no one named Kelder. Practically every village in the Free Lands, and presumably every street in Ethshar, held a Kelder or two. Tobas classed Arnen and two of the trio struck down by seasickness as scoundrels, and the other five as various sorts of fool. Peren, a tall, thin, frail fellow two or three years older than Tobas, seemed determined to prove he was stronger than anyone else, which he obviously wasnt, though he might well outclass Tobas; Arden, a big man in his twenties, was simply stupid; Azraya, fifteen and wild, was perpetually angry about something and would willfully misinterpret anything said to her as an insult; Tillis was lost in ancient legends of heroism; and the seasick Elner seemed to honestly believe he could single-handedly slay the dragon and, in his lucid moments before succumbing to the ships motion, had already been bragging about how he would spend his reward money. The scoundrels talked less and appeared far more dangerous, but Tobas thought it far more likely that they would kill their comrades than that they would kill a dragon. Knives, lies, and stealth would not be much use against dragons. |
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