"Roger Taylor - Arash-Felloren" - читать интересную книгу автора (Taylor Roger)

Arash-Felloren

Roger Taylor

Mushroom eBooks

Chapter 1

The Wyndering

The door opened, creaking noisily. As the sound faded into the miasma of stale ale that pervaded the
gloomy interior of the inn, it was followed by that of a glass being knocked over and hastily retrieved.
The innkeeper had started violently out of his drowsing vigil at the crude wooden counter. He swore, a
little too loudly, and gazed around angrily to indicate to such as might be watching that he had not been
asleep but vigorously alert.

His charade evoked no response from the six customers in the drinking room. Two of them were
slumped inelegantly across their tables, having succumbed either to the poor ale that was the inn’s
speciality, or to the heat that had been oppressing the region for the past weeks. The other four, with
varying degrees of suspicion and concern, were doing what the innkeeper was now doing – staring at the
figure of a man silhouetted in the doorway, stark and still against the red sky.

For a moment, the figure seemed to the innkeeper to be emerging from a glowing fire; despite the heat in
the room, he shivered. A quick and unnecessary rearrangement of several glasses and bottles disguised
the reaction.

When he looked up again, the man had not moved though there was an inclination of his head which
indicated that he was perhaps examining the interior of the inn before deciding to enter.

The action reassured the innkeeper. Not normally given to thinking about anything other than his own
immediate needs, the sudden intrusion of his imagination into his thoughts had unsettled him far more than
he would have admitted – not least to himself. Now, however, the surly normality of his life was
reasserting itself. The new arrival was exhibiting one of the signs which were typical of a traveller in this
area: caution.

Mercenary? the innkeeper thought. Trader? Labourer? Artisan? Miner? It was a game he played
whenever a stranger arrived and he flattered himself that he could identify the calling of any newcomer at
the merest glance, though he usually announced his success at this retrospectively with a knowing nod to
his cronies and, ‘Saw it, as soon as he came in,’ or something similar.

Studiously turning his attention away from the door, he returned to his normal position, leaning heavily
forward on the counter as though keeping his clientele under revue. It was an unremarkable posture and
only his regular customers knew that his brawny arms were so arranged that his right hand would be
hanging near a weighted cudgel strategically placed on two makeshift brackets behind the counter; a
cudgel that he could wield with a speed and accuracy quite at odds with the lumbering pace that his
overweight frame imposed on most of his actions. They knew too, that his small, peevish eyes were not in
fact watching them, but maintaining a close, sidelong observation of the newcomer.

The figure stepped forward. The red evening sky behind him appeared to flare, as if suddenly released.
He had scarcely taken one step when the innkeeper’s eyes came sharply forward like those of a dog