"S. M. Stirling - Shikari in Galveston" - читать интересную книгу автора (Stirling S. M)

Sonjuh dawtra Pehte thrust her way into the beer shop through the swinging board doors, halting for a
second to let her eyes adjust to the bright earth-oil lamps and push back her broad-brimmed hat. The
dim street outside was lit only by a few pine-knots here and there.
There were a few shocked gasps; a respectable girl didn't walk into a man's den like this
unaccompanied. Some of the gasps were for her dress.—she'd added buckskin leggings and boots,
which made her maiden's shift look more like a man's hunting shirt, and so did the leather belt cinched
about her waist, carrying a long bowie and short double-edged toothpicker dagger and tomahawk. A
horseshoe-shaped blanket roll rode from left shoulder to right hip, in the manner of a hunter or traveler.
One man sitting on the wall-bench, not an Alligator clansman and the worse for corn-liquor,
misinterpreted and made a grab for her backside. That brought the big dog walking beside her into
action; her sharp command saved the oaf's hand, but Slasher still caught the forearm in his jaws hard
enough to bring a yelp of pain. The stranger also started to reach for the short sword on his belt, until the
jaws clamped tighter, tight enough to make him yell.
"You wouldn't have been trying to grab my ass uninvited, would you, stranger?" Sonjuh said sweetly.
"'Cause if you'were, after Slasher here takes your hand off, these clansmen of mine will just naturally have
to take you to the Jefe for a whuppin'. 'Less they stomp you to death their own selves."
The man stopped the movement of right hand to hilt, looked around—a fair number of men were
glaring at him now, distracted from their disapproval of Sonjuh—and decided to shake his head. A sensible
man was very polite out of his own clan's territory. If he wasn't. . . well, that was how feuds started.
"No offense, missie," he wheezed.
"Loose him," Sonjuh commanded, and the dog did—reluctantly.
The man picked up his gear and made for the door; several of the others sitting on stools and rough
half-log benches called witticisms or haw-hawed as he went; Sonjuh ignored the whole business and
walked on.
The laughter or the raw whiskey he'd downed prompted the man to stick his head back around the
timber doorframe and yell, "Suck my dick, you whore!"
Sonjuh felt something wash from face down to thighs, a feeling like hot rum toddy on an empty stomach,
but nastier. She pivoted, drew, and her right hand moved in a chopping blur.
The tomahawk pinwheeled across the room to sink into the rough timber beside the door, a whirr of
cloven air that ended in a solid chunk of steel in oak. The out-clan stranger gaped at his hand, still resting
on .the timber where the edge of the throwing-ax had taken a coin-size divot off the end of the middle
finger, about halfway down through the fingernail. Then he leapt, howling and dancing from foot to foot and
gripping the injured hand in the other as the mutilated digit spattered blood; after a moment he ran off down
the street, still howling and shouting bitch! at the top of his lungs.
Most of the men in the beer shop laughed at that, some so loud they fell to the rush-strewn clay floor and
lay kicking their legs in the air. She went and pulled the tomahawk out of the wood, wiped it on her sleeve,
and reslung it; Slasher sniffed at something on the floor, then snapped it up. The roaring chorus of guffaws
and he-haws was loud enough to bring curious bypassers to the door and windows, and send more hoots of
mirth down the street as the tale spread; several men slapped her on the back, or offered drinks—offers
she declined curtly. The older men were quiet, she noticed, and still frowning at her.
Instead she pushed through the long smoky room toward the back, where the man she sought was
sitting. The air was thick with tobacco smoke—and the smell of the quids some men chewed and spat, plus
sweat and cooking and sour spilled beer and piss from the alley out back. Still, she thought he'd probably
seen all there was to see; those smoldering blue eyes didn't look as if they missed much.
"Heya," she said, and to her dog, "Down, Slasher."
"Heya, missie," he replied formally, as the big wolfish-looking beast went belly-to-earth.
"You Hunter Robre? Robre sunna Jowan?" The form of a question was there, but there was certainty in
her voice.
"Him 'n' no other," the young man said. "You'd be Sonjuh dowtra Pehte, naw?"
His brows went up a little as she sat uninvited, pulling over a stool that was made from a section of split