The Book of Swords. Gardner Dozois
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Название: The Book of Swords

Автор: Gardner Dozois

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Героическая фантастика

Серия:

isbn: 9780008274672

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ wore the face of a man who mentally balances abstract issues. After a while he said, “There is great disaffection this time around. The townspeople and the farmers have lost confidence in your … story.” He gestured toward the looking glass. “I have heard grumblings in many quarters.”

      The aristocrat’s stark face became even starker. “Revolt?” he said.

      A wave of a wizardly hand. “Some vague mutterings in that vein. But more are talking about packing up and moving to another county. The Duke of Fosse-Bellesay is founding new towns and clearing forest.”

      The aristocrat grimaced. “Little snot-nose,” he said.

      “Actually, your grace, he is now in his fifties.”

      The other man waved away the implication. “I remember his great-great-grandfather. He was just the same. Tried to steal my lead soldiers.”

      “Yes, your grace.”

      The conversation, Baldemar saw, had meandered off and left both participants temporarily stranded. Then the aristocrat seemed to recollect himself. He rubbed his hands against each other, their skin so dry it was like hearing two sheets of parchment frictioned together, and said, “So that’s settled. He’s accomplished. He’ll do.”

      The wizard considered for but a moment, then said, “I’ll need him for a little while first. I think I can get an interesting paper out of him for The Journal of Hermetic Studies. But yes, he’ll do.”

      “Do for what?” Baldemar said.

      But the aristocrat had already gone, and the thaumaturge was looking for another book, humming to himself as he ran a finger over their spines. Baldemar thought about easing out the door, then glanced again at the stain on the ceiling, and decided to stay.

      Over the ensuing few days, Baldemar learned several things: he had landed in the County of Caprasecca, which was ruled by Duke Albero, he of the papery skin. The wizard was Aumbraj, a practitioner of the blue school. The race the Duke had mentioned was a contest held every seven years to discover a “man of accomplishment” who would be sent as an emissary of the Duke to some hazily referenced realm. He would be accompanied by a woman who had bested all others in a test of domestic skills.

      “My companion is a beautiful woman?” he asked, when this news was given him by the Duke’s majordomo, a man who wore a large panache in his high-crowned black hat and was given to sniffing in disapproval at virtually everything that existence contrived to offer him.

      “Comeliness is not a factor,” the functionary said, with a mocking smile. “Certainly not in this case.”

      Baldemar’s hopes faded. He had briefly liked the idea of becoming an ambassador accompanied by some long-necked, pale aristocratic beauty, until the majordomo described the women’s champion as a lumbering rural wench who had been a bondsmaid on a dairy farm. “The things that were stuck to her boots defy description,” the servant said, adding a sniff of double strength.

      Aumbraj had repaired Baldemar’s injuries and given him new clothing and boots. He was a prisoner but could wander the castle’s confines at will though if he saw Duke Albero at a distance, he should immediately endeavor to make that distance even greater. “But don’t try to leave,” said the thaumaturge. “You have opened up an interesting avenue of research, and I will want to question you further. That may not be possible if I have to restrain you with the paralysis spell.”

      They both glanced at the workroom ceiling and agreed that Baldemar would not venture beyond the castle’s walls. However, he did stand on the battlements facing the town and saw the Duke’s men-at-arms disassembling a succession of barriers and obstacles strewn along a taped course that followed the curve of the curtain wall. There were narrow beams over mud pits, netting that must be crawled under, some barrels that had to be foot-rolled up a gentle incline, and a series of rotating drums from which protruded stout wooden bars at ankle, chest, and head height, plus some clear patches of turf for sprinting.

      “It is some sort of obstacle course?” he asked a sentry.

      “Yes, you could call it that,” said the guard. “The townies and bumpkins don’t like it, though. We have to wield whips to keep them running.”

      “And the winner becomes the Duke’s ambassador?”

      The man-at-arms regarded Baldemar as if his question had revealed him to be a simpleton. “Sure,” he said, after a moment, “his grace’s ambassador.”

      Baldemar would have pressed him for a proper explanation, but at that moment he was summoned by Aumbraj. Since the summons consisted of a loud clanging in his head that only lessened when he went in the direction of the summoner and did not cease until he found him, Baldemar did not linger.

      “Describe the Sword of Destiny,” the thaumaturge said when he arrived breathless in his workroom.

      Baldemar did so, mentioning the ornate basket hilt and its inset jewels.

      “And you just seized it?”

      “Yes.”

      “Show me your hand.” When the man did so, the wizard examined his palm and the inside flesh of his fingers. “No burns,” he said, apparently to himself.

      Aumbraj tugged his nose again, then said, “You said you tricked the guardian erbs into entering another room then locked them in.”

      “I did.”

      “But once you had the Sword, they appeared and gave chase.”

      “Yes.” The how of that had puzzled Baldemar. The lock had been securely set.

      “And yet, they did not catch you.”

      “I ran very quickly.”

      “But they were erbs,” said Aumbraj. “Were they decrepit?”

      “No, it was a mature dam and her two grown pups.”

      “Hmm.” The wizard made a note on a piece of parchment before him on the workbench. “You ran onto the roof and there you left the Sword behind.”

      “It was hampering me, poking me in the leg.”

      “Just poking? Not slashing, gouging, stabbing?”

      “It was still in its scabbard, just stuck through my belt,” Baldemar said. “No one was wielding it.”

      Aumbraj’s pale hand batted away his last remark as irrelevant. “Now, this Flapdoodle who sent you after it, did he equip you with any thaumaturgical aids?”

      “Only the flying platform. I used my own rope and grapnel, my own lock picks.”

      “Hmm, and you’re quite sure that the Sword did not seek to kill you?”

      Baldemar showed surprise. “Quite sure.”

      “Hmm.”

      Another note on the parchment. The wizard rubbed a reflective chin then raised a finger to launch another question. But at that moment, Duke Albero appeared in the doorway, his face congested with concern. “He needs to go,” he said, СКАЧАТЬ