"Mary Kirchoff. Kendermore ("Dragonlance Preludes I" #2) (angl)" - читать интересную книгу автораwaiting for my next visit, though!" Tasslehoff pushed his empty mug to
the edge of the table for refilling. Flint's eyes twinkled merrily under his bushy, grayblack brows. "I'll bet they've been waiting! And I'll bet they've kept busy, too, working on kender-proof door locks!" Beneath his huge bulb of a nose and wild, peppery moustache, the old dwarf's mouth opened wide with laughter, setting his fleshy cheeks to jiggling. Even Tanis, ever the peacemaker, could not help smirking behind his hand. "Oh, do you think so, really?" Tasslehoff cried earnestly. As he smiled, his young face broke into a thousand tiny, spreading creases, like a shattered pane of stained glass. Facial wrinkles were a characteristic shared by all kender, which made it very difficult to accurately guess a kender's age. "Most locks nowadays are so flimsy - no protection at all! I don't know how anyone expects to keep anything safe anymore." "No one does if kender are about," Flint snorted under his breath. He could tell from Tanis's warning glance that the elf's sharp ears had caught his words. Tanis liked to defend the kender against Flint's gratuitous insults, even if Tas was never in the least truly offended. Two of Flint's fingers, tightly pressed together, disappeared inn was not busy, so in no time the innkeeper's adopted daughter appeared. She was a rosy-cheeked girl with eager eyes and short-cropped, dark, curly hair. Though a slight breeze blew through large cracks in the inn's few arched, stained-glass windows - in a few weeks they would be doubly covered with oiled parchment to keep out the winter - the weather on this day was unseasonably warm for early fall. Flint called it "summer's last dance." Coupled with the heat from the ever-present fire in the hearth, the heavy air had pasted the girl's hair to her forehead and moistened her coarse, graying tunic to her back. "Yes, sir?" she inquired eagerly. Her voice carried none of the weariness so common among seasoned serving wenches. In a few years, Flint thought sadly, when the impertinence and unwanted attentions of too many men wore her down... "Tika, isn't it?" he asked, and she nodded. Flint smiled encouragingly. "Then, Tika, I need two more -" Tanis quickly drained the last of his own mug and pushed it forward. "- make that three more mugs of Otik's fine ale," Flint corrected himself. "On me." "Very good, sir." Tika's willowy form bobbed once, then darted skillfully through the closely spaced tables to the bar. |
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