"Forgotten Realms - Moonshae 3 Darkwell by Douglas Niles" - читать интересную книгу автора (Forgotten Realms)DARKWELL
Copyright ®1989 TSR. Inc. AB Rights Reserved. This book a protected under the copy right laws of the United Stales of America. Any reproduction or other unauthorized use of the material or artwork contained herein is prohibited without the express written permisWon of TSR, Inc. Random Haute and its affiliate companies have worldwide distribution rights in the book trade for Engfoh language products of TSH, Inc. Distributed to the book and hobby trade in the United Kingdom by TSR Ltd. Distributed to the toy and hobby trade by regional dWrfcutors. FORGOTTEN REALMS, DRAGONLANCE and ADVANCED DUNGEONS A, DRAGONS are registered trademarks owned by TSH, Inc The TSR logo and BATTLESYSTEM are trademark* owned by TSR. Inc. First Printing: February, 1989 Printed in the United States of America. Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 88-51722 987654 ISBN: &S80M-717-3 All characters in this book are fictitious- Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental To Colby WaRd, TSR, Inc. P.O. Ban 756 Lake Geneva, Wl 53147 U.S.A. TSR Ltd. 120 Church End, Cherry Hinton Cambridge CBi 3LB United Kingdom MooNstjae Isles Myulocl? Vale \ Wbat has goiae Tristan Kendrick, Prince of Corwell, stood upon the brink of manhood when the Beast, Kazgoroth, emerged from its fetid pool to savage the land. The insidious monster, often disguised in the flesh of a man, engaged the help of firbolg giants and savage northmen to attack the Ffolk of Corwell. The prince came of age during this, the Darkwalker War. He returned a lost artifact, the Sword of Cymrych Hugh, to his people. He led them to ultimate victory against the Beast. And he found his life's love in the person of Robyn, a maiden who had been raised with him as the king's ward. Also during the war, Robyn discovered her own deep powers as a druid, harnessing the forces of the earth to work magic and miracles. She loved the prince but faced a deeper calling after the war. She journeyed to pastoral Myrloch Vale to study the ways of her order under the Great Druid of the isles, Genna Moonsinger. His father murdered, Tristan Journeyed to the neighboring island of CaUidyrr to confront the High King of all the Ffolk. Caught in a rebellion and finally joined by Robyn, Tristan found himself once more victorious, receiving the royal Crown of the Isles. He was crowned High King by the Ffolk, then prepared to return to Corwell. But still the evil lurked in Myrloch Vale. . . . The goddess Earthmother wept, her wound a gaping slash across her flesh. The cut was deep, perhaps mortal, but there was none to know her suffering. She cried out in pain from the scar of black magic, where her body lay torn and ripped from the assault of evil. Though the last convulsion of her power had excised the rot, tearing it from herself and allowing the cool sea towash the wound, still the pain continued. The goddess cried out for her servants, her devoted druids. These human caretakers were trapped in a prison of the mother's own invention. They stood frozen as stone statues around the blasted scene of their final defeat. The protection of the goddess had imprisoned them thus, saving them at least from death. One druid, and one alone, had escaped petrification. And the goddess wept for the Ffolk, her people. War ra v-aged their fair land relentlessly, striking each of the four kingdoms with cruel force. Many Ffolk died while resisting the attack ofnorthman or foul beast, but still peace eluded them. Now her grief manifested itself in the glowering clouds that hung low over the isles, and the unnatural chill that sucked the summer's warmth from the land and, though the season was but early autumn, brought a winterlike frost. Her pain sent whirlwinds exploding from her soul, twisting funnels of violence that tore at the land, unmindful of the hurt they caused. Yet the land was not altogether without hope. For the first DOUGLAS NILES time in many decades, the king of the Ffolk was a true hero, as was right and proper. And though one lone druid remained free, she was a druid of great faith and steadily growing might. But they were both very young, and the goddess was very old. She doubted that she could live long enough to see them prevail. Or fail. 12 THE OBSCENE Heavy breakers assaulted the stone barrier protecting Llewellyn Harbor. They crashed against the rocky rampart, sending clouds of spray through the air, roaring in frustration as the eternal power of the sea dispersed against the fundamental strength of stone. A lone figure stood near the end of the breakwater. The man was heavily wrapped in oilskins and ignored the salty shower that doused him each time a fresh wave expended itself. If anything, he relished the bracing cold of the water. The man was young, but he was a king of many lands. He had bested creatures foul and wizards of might, yet he felt unsure of his own strength. He held the love of a strong woman in his heart, but still his future remained a muddled blur before him. Tristan Kendrick claimed as ancestors a long line of kings, but for two centuries the Kendricks ruled only the small, sparsely populated land of Corwell. Now, as High King of the Ffolk, King Kendrick accepted fealty also from Moray, Snowdown, and mighty Callidyrr. The king had recently won a war, the Darkwalker War, besting a supernatural beast and its human allies. He had claimed as allies the graceful warriors of the Ltewyrr and the doughty fighters of the dwarven realms. His blade, the Sword of Cymrych Hugh, girded him as ample proof of his heroism, for he had returned the weapon to the Ffolk after many decades of its absence. Finally the man turned from the sea, walking slowly along the rocky barrier toward the welcoming lights of Llewellyn DOUGLAS NILES Town. The sea had given him no answers. Nothing, it seemed, could give him the answers. And there were so many questions. The eagle soared slowly. Its eyes, dulled by fatigue, searched the barren landscape below, seeking any morsel of lifesaving food. But the bird saw nothing. No trace of animal, small or large, appeared across the stretches of brown marsh. Even the trees of the once-vast forests now resembled gaunt skeletons, barren of leaves and needles, surrounded by heaps of rotting compost. |
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