"Mercedes Lackey & Larry Dixon - Mage Wars 01 - The Black Gryphon" - читать интересную книгу автора (Lackey Mercedes)

at the air and threw it on the growing stack of kindling.
"I'm sorry, Gesten." Though he meant he was sorry about angering the hertasi, Gesten would
probably take it some other way. "It's just that... you know how I feel about him."
"Feh. I know. Everyone knows. You seem to be the only one who doesn't know." The hertasi
opened the latch on the firebox and withdrew a coal with blackened tongs. His tail lashed as he spoke.
"You worry about everything, Drake, and you don't listen to yourself talking. There is no one in Urtho's
service who is better than him. No one else more likely to come back." Gesten dropped the coal into the
folds of cotton batting and wood-chips between the two smoke-pots. "Even if he doesn't come back,
he'll have died the way he wanted to."
Amberdrake bit his lip. Gesten thought he was right, as usual; nothing would dissuade him. Nothing
Amberdrake could tell him would persuade him that the situation was hopeless; only the things
Amberdrake could not tell him would do that. And he was right; Skan had died the way he wanted to.
"I'll—keep quiet, until we know."
"Damned right you will. Now go back to your tent. You can manage your clients without me
tonight." Gesten turned his attention to lighting the center fire, then the blue and white smoke-pots blazed
into light. Amberdrake walked in the cooling night air toward the Tower and the semi-mobile city that
clustered around it, stopping once to look back at the lonely figure who'd wait for all eternity if need be
for the Black Gryphon's return. His heart, already heavy, was a burden almost too great to bear with the
added weight of tears he dared not shed.

Oh, not now. I don't need this....
Skandranon struggled against gravity and rough air, jaws clenched tightly on his prize. His heart was
beating hard enough to burst from his chest, and the chase had barely begun—the makaar behind him
were gaining, and he was only now past the ridge. As if it weren't enough that makaar were quicker than
gryphons, they possessed better endurance. All they had to do was cut him off and fly him in circles. That
was clearly what they intended to do. His advantage was his ability to gain and lose altitude more quickly
than they. With cleverness, he could make them react, not act. At least they weren't terribly well
organized—it wasn't as though Kili was leading them—
Skandranon twisted his head to assess his pursuers, and spotted an all-too-familiar black and white
crest—Kili, the old makaar leader Skan had taunted numerous times. Kili, who had almost trapped him
once before, with a much smaller force aflight, was streaking to a pitch a thousand feet above the other
six, screaming commands.
Three gray-patched makaar canted wings back and swept into a shallow dive, gaining on him all the
faster by trading height for speed. Their trajectory took them below and past him a few seconds
later—and they were followed by another three. He tried to watch them all, eyes darting from one to the
other, as they split off and rejoined. Why head below him, when altitude was so important against a
gryphon?
Altitude—damn!
Instinct took over even as he realized Kili's gambit. He folded his right wing completely, rolling
sideways in midair as the elder makaar streaked past him by a featherlength. A shrill scream of rage rang
in his ears as Kili missed, and Skan threw himself out of the roll by snapping his wing open again and
spiraling nose-first toward the earth—and the six makaar there.
That bastard! He had the audacity to learn from me!
Skan clamped his wings tightly and plummeted through the massed makaar below him, seeing the
claws and razor-edged beaks of the surprised makaar as a blur as he shot past. He followed dead on the
tail of Kili. The chances of surviving that move were slim—he'd gambled on his swiftness, and the makaar
did no more damage than removing a few covert feathers.
Distance for speed—let's see if they can follow this.
Kili was so very close ahead that Skan was tempted to strike at him, but he couldn't afford to be
distracted from his primary objective—to survive and escape. Already, the two flights of makaar behind