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

temporary liaisons must be approached with great caution.
Which left him even more alone.
Even more alone—no. This is ridiculous. If I were a client, I'd be told to stop feeling sorry for
myself and concentrate on something that would make me feel good. Or at least stop me from
being engulfed by the past.
The sleeve was done; he picked up a second garment and began sewing a fringe of tiny beads back
in place. Thousands of tiny beads had been strung into a heavy, glittering fall of color, in luxurious
imitation of a Kaled'a'in dancing costume where the fringe would be made of dyed leather. It was a task
exacting enough to require quite a bit of concentration, and with gratitude, he lost himself in it.
Until someone scratched at the tied flap of the tent door, and he looked up in startlement. The
silhouetted shadow on the beige of the canvas was human, not that of a hertasi.
Now what? he wondered, but put his mending down and rose to answer it.
He was a little disconcerted to find yet another young Healer—another stranger, and another
newcomer—waiting uneasily for him to answer the summons. "Are you—ah—Amberdrake?" the
youngster asked, blushing furiously. "The—ah—kes-kes-kes—"
"Yes, I am Kestra'chern Amberdrake," he replied, with a sigh. "How may I help you?"
The youngster—barely out of a scrawny, gawky adolescence, and not yet grown into the slender
and graceful adult Amberdrake saw signs he would become—stared down at his shoes. "I—ah—have a
patient, and my Senior Healer said my patient needs to see you and if I wanted to know why—I, ah,
should ask you myself."
"And who is your Senior Healer?" Amberdrake asked, a little more sharply than he had intended.
"M'laud," came the barely audible reply.
At that, Amberdrake came very near to destroying the poor lad with a bray of laughter. After having
sent one of M'laud's juniors up the hill with his tail on fire, the Senior Healer had evidently decided to
teach his juniors about kestra'chern directly.
But he kept control of himself, and when the lad looked up, it was to see a very serene countenance,
a mask that would have done Silver Veil herself proud.
"Come in, please," Amberdrake said, calmly. "I think you are probably laboring under a great many
misconceptions, and I would be most happy to dispel those for you."
When he held the tent flap wide and gestured, the boy had no choice but to come inside.
Amberdrake noted with amusement how the youngster stared around him, while trying not to look as if
he was doing so.
What does he expect to see? Never mind, I think I can guess.
"Take a seat, please," he said, gesturing to a hassock at a comfortable distance from the cushion he
took for himself. "I take it that you are afraid that I am going to hurt your patient, is that true?" At the
boy's stiff nod, he smiled. "I take it also that you have never had the services of a kestra'chern yourself?"
"Of course not!" the young Healer blurted with indignation, then realized how rude that was and
winced. But Amberdrake only chuckled.
"Young man—what is your name, anyway?"
"Lanz," came the gurgled reply.
"Well, Lanz—by now, I should think that M'laud has made you aware that the preliminary training
for Healers and kestra'chern is practically identical. And I know. I began my training as a Healer."
Amberdrake raised his eyebrow at the boy, who gaped at him.
"But why didn't you—I mean—why a kestra'chern?" Lanz blurted again.
"You sound as if you were saying, 'why a chunk of dung?' Do you realize that?" Amberdrake
countered. "When you consider that the Kaled'a'in rank the kestra'chern with shaman, that's not only
rude, that's likely to get you attacked, at least by anyone in the Clans!"
Lanz hung his head and said something too smothered to hear, but his ears and neck turned as
scarlet as Amberdrake's favorite robe.
I seem to be making a great many people blush today. Another Gift? "Lanz, most of the