[ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
.So did my new partner.-•- •The magic resumed a moment later, with explosive results, since the corpse of the dragon couldn't fit in that tiny vault.Luckily, Filson and I had expected as much, and were scampering across the cavern beyond when green chunks of dragon started flying.We didn't even try to take the Dragon's Pearl with us.We'd had a bellyful of trouble from it, just like old Xantrithicus had.Besides, there was already plenty of false affluence and deceptive beauty in the Dock Ward of Waterdeep.It wasn't beneath us, however, to make a quick search of the rest of the place, hoping to scrape together enough real wealth among all the bits of glitter and twine to make our troubles worthwhile.We could not.Apparently, the dragon's hoard was nothing more than fantasy built on illusion built on air.Gone were the riches, and gone too the wretches, fled to whatever icy refuges they could find when the dragon first appeared.Most would likely die out there.I feared we would, too.About then, I heard the greatest sound in the world- the impatient champ and whinny of a very real winged horse.Apparently, even the pearl's illusory magic could not have reached to Waterdeep, so the lady had had to send the genuine article.I tipped my hat to what was left of her corpse, thanking her for inadvertently showing me you get what you pay for.With my new associate mounted on the stallion behind me, I urged the pegasus toward the bright, snowy daylight, and from there up into the bracing sky.To Waterdeep," I told the creature, patting it fondly on the shoulder."The Dock Ward.I'd like to see some genuine squalor for a change."GUNNE RUNNERRoger E.MooreIt would be a grand night in Waterdeep.An old friend, the Yellow Mage, had invited me over for First Tenday dinner; he'd do all the cooking, and he was a master.I knew from experience this was also his chance to show off his latest toy, if he had one, so I made sure I wore something bulletproof but comfortable.No sense in my spoiling the evening by dying unexpectedly.I needed dependable full-body protection instead of a metal chest plate or displacer cape, so I poked through my ring box until I found my Unfailing Missile Deflector of Turmish.It was my special prize, a little gold band that could turn aside anything short of a flying tree trunk.Even better, it was subtle and wouldn't offend the Yellow Mage.I didn't want him to think I didn't implicitly trust his handling of smoke-powder weapons, never mind that incident three months ago when he blew his priceless Shou Lung clock into little blue glass shards with a Gond-gunne.The bullet missed me by three feet at most.We all make mistakes.The Yellow Mage's given name at birth was Greathog Snorrish, so I readily understood why he never told anyone else in town about it.He apprenticed late in life, themoment he came through Waterdeep's gates, and could now toss only a pair of spells a day.Still, he was a wizard, and that, for him, was what counted.Minor pretensions aside, Snorri was really just a kid at heart, which was why everyone in the North Ward of Waterdeep who knew him liked him.He was a big puppy, into everything and always excited at his latest find.A sloppy dresser, yes, and not much of a wizard, but he could cook, he told the best stories, and he had a great laugh.You can understand how intent I was at getting to his place on time that evening, and you can understand, too, why the world just wasn't the same when I found out he had been murdered.It was an hour before twilight when I arrived at his street, but I could see fine; I had light-enhancing lenses in my eyes.I rounded the stone-paved corner onto Saerdoun Street, clutching a gift bottle of Dryad's Promise, then saw the knot of townsfolk outside Snorri's doorway.They were peeking through the shutters into his home when they weren't talking among themselves in hushed tones.Some of the gawkers glanced at me, then turned away, not wishing to stare at a stranger.Two of the onlookers, though, seemed to recognize me from previous visits.As I came up, they nervously stepped back and grew silent.Something bad had happened.I knew it instantly.I clutched the brown wine bottle like a good-luck charm.Maybe things will be fine anyway, I thought.Snorri and I will have dinner, tell our tales, pour a few goblets, trade spells-The little crowd fell back from the Yellow Mage's door as it opened.Someone inside came out.An old woman gasped and put a hand over her heart.A Waterdhavian watchman carefully stepped out, his green cloak muffling the clinking of his golden armor.He held the handles of a stretcher with a body on it.Someone had tossed Snorri's hall rug over the body, but the corpse's right hand had fallen down from under the rug, and it had the bright topaz ring of the Yellow Mage on the middle finger, just where Snorri always wore it.Someone else could be wearing his ring, I thoughtdumbly, stopping.Snorri could just be drunk.It could be his twin, if he had a twin.If he was really hurt, then-I stepped forward."Your pardon," I mumbled to the watchmen.My chest was tight, and I barely got the words out.The constables saw me and hesitated, eyeing me for trouble.I pointed to the shape under the hall rug and tried to frame a sentence.The watchman at the figure's feet understood and simply shrugged."Take a look," he said tiredly.I reached down with my free hand and pulled the hall rug from the body's face.I had the idea that none of this was really happening, so I thought I could come away unscathed.I had a moment of trouble recognizing the Yellow Mage, partly because he was so expressionless and still, and partly because so much rust-colored blood was caked over his lower face.Most of it had come out of his mouth and nose.His blue eyes were open wide, dull and glazed in the way of all dead people.I pulled the rug back farther.Streaks of blood were flung across Snorri's neck and upper chest.His yellow shirt was soaked in red.In the middle of his chest was a bloody hole the size of my thumbnail, like a little red-brown volcano crater.It punched through his sternum and probably went all the way through the rest of him.Bits of pale bone stuck out within it.I stared at my dead friend Snorri for maybe a minute, maybe five, my head swelling with mad plans to bring him back to life.Money, I thought; sure, I could get money, lots of it, then a priest, and all would be fine.Haifa dozen local temples would be glad to raise the dead for cash.The constables were very patient.Perhaps they could tell that I was a wizard, and so were inclined to humor me."I'm sorry," said a watchman at my left elbow.I started; I hadn't noticed her before.The gray-eyed elf grimaced and brushed a lock of red hair from her face, then went on."We were able to summon a Dawn Priest of Lathander who was nearby, but when the priest attempted to restore him to life, the spell did not take.I am truly sorry."I blinked at her, looked down at Snorri, and realized what she had just told me.The spell did not take.Snorri was staying just as he was.He was gone.Suddenly I didn't need to look anymore.I gently pulled the rug back over my friend's quiet face, tucked him in, and whispered good-bye.The elven watchman nodded to the others, then the three made their way off toward the guard post at Saerdoun and Whaelgond, only a dozen houses up the street.I stood stupidly, not knowing what to do next.I'd seen a few dead men when I'd been with the city guard a decade ago.I could tell that Snorri had been dead only a few hours, maybe six at most.I'd spent most of the afternoon preparing a security report for a client in the Castle Ward who constantly worried about thieves breaking into his ugly little mansion [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]

  • zanotowane.pl
  • doc.pisz.pl
  • pdf.pisz.pl
  • luska.pev.pl
  •