Название: Weirdbook #43
Автор: Darrell Schweitzer
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Триллеры
isbn: 9781479452910
isbn:
A viper dug its fangs deep into Shango’s heel as he leaped across the pit floor. The two swords clanged and silver sparks flew. Shango guessed the viper’s poison would begin to kill him in seconds, so he must take his revenge quickly. There was no time for anything but a killing blow.
The two men danced about the pit while their clanging blades sang a discordant song. The bored noblemen cheered at the lively entertainment, but the demon-faced disciples of Sangzara merely stared. Perhaps they would leap into the pit and finish what the vipers had started if Shango struck down his foe. He did not care. Let them slice him to bits, let the serpents live among his bones. He had come for only one reason: To kill Shira Zo.
Shira’s blade sliced Shango’s chest. Shango answered the hit with a shallow slice across Shira’s abdomen. The Swordmaster of Zo paused his attack to tear off his sliced and bloody robe. Two more serpents dug their fangs into Shango’s lower legs as he lunged for a killing stroke. Shira swirled and parried his blade, then scored a deep cut on Shango’s left shoulder. If it had been his sword-arm, the fight would have been over in that second.
Shango dodged a swipe that would have taken his head off. He sliced again and again at Shira’s defenses but drew little blood. The longer they fought, the more viper venom slowed his blood, made his limbs grow heavy. Death rose up from the earth like a black fog to cloud his vision. He fought on, dancing through a swarm of blows, the shock of each one shivering his arm bones. Sweat poured from his brow into his eyes.
No longer could he feel his legs at all. He countered a downward stroke but fell backward into the incensed vipers. They latched onto his body with curving fangs, at least a dozen more sending their poison into his blood. Shira stood above him now, grinning, bleeding from a dozen shallow cuts, sweat and blood glimmering on his naked chest.
Shango released all the energy of his dying heart. It flowed into his numb legs and burst like a flame from his eyes. He leaped to his feet trailing a cloak of serpents that would not let go of his flesh. For one brief moment, he saw the fear shining in Shira’s eyes. The snake-breeder had hesitated a moment to make his deathblow more dramatic for the crowd. In that moment, Shango’s blade flashed through his exposed neck. Shira’s head tumbled into the viper’s nest, and Shango fell to lay beside it.
Shira’s headless body stood for a few seconds, spewing crimson across the masks of the observers about the pit’s edge. Then it collapsed into the snakes, hand still wrapped about its useless sword. Shango’s limbs had gone completely numb. He bled from twice as many cuts as he had given Shira, and the venom of multiple bites overpowered his blood. He lay in the squirming pit but felt as if he were floating on the surface of a warm pond. The red demon faces staring down at him slowly withdrew. He turned his head and found himself looking into the face of Shira’s fallen head. Now the green eyes were truly empty, and the mouth wore a child’s expression.
As Shango lay dying in the pit of vipers, the faces of his dead wife and daughter came to him like spirits, floating above him as he faded. He spoke their names, but so softly that no one else could hear him. No one but the viper crawling past his cheek.
Suddenly Magtone was there above the pit, sitting on his carpet that floated like a cloud. It lowered him toward the pit floor, and he peered over its edge at Shango.
Shango coughed blood and blinked cold sweat from his eyes.
“Have you come to watch me die?” he asked.
Magtone shook his head. “That depends,” he said. “Are you truly oblivious to fate?”
“I am dying,” Shango said. “This is my fate.”
“If you wish to die, I cannot stop you,” Magtone said. “But I can save you. I have the magic inside me. I know the ancient words that mend the flesh and anchor the spirit.”
“I have taken my vengeance,” Shango said. “Now let me die.”
“Have you?” Magtone asked. “You said Shira Zo served Sangzara. Is that not the same Sangzara who dwells in this hideous castle? Did he not give the orders that sent Shira and the Swordsmen of Zo to Huan-gao? Your wife and child are avenged, but how many others have died in Sangzara’s reign? Will you not defy fate to avenge them too?”
“You…” Shango said, spitting more blood. His eyes grew blind, and he barely heard his own words. “You came for the wizard. You came to face Sangzara…”
“Not at first,” Magtone said. “But apparently he has the only library in town. Plus from what I’ve gathered he’s a terrible governor. Take my hand and live. Deny your fate.”
Shango laughed. Death seemed terribly humorous all of a sudden.
“I thought you had decided not to follow me after all,” he said.
“Oh, I followed you every step of the way,” Magtone said. “You simply couldn’t see me.”
With the last drops of strength in his body, Shango raised his bloody hand to find Magtone’s fingers. Magtone spoke a few words in a language Shango did not understand, and Shango erupted from the prison of his dying body. He stared down at his own mangled form lying among the vipers. He floated now beside Magtone, who stood on the floating carpet.
“Am I a ghost?” Shango asked.
“Not yet,” Magtone said.
“My body…”
“Too full of poison, I’m afraid,” Magtone said. “I’ll have to build you another one. But we’ll have time for that later.”
“You said that I would live,” Shango said. His arms and legs were transparent, and he was a weightless thing now. A cloud of living memory. Was he truly alive at all?
“You will, you will!” Magtone said. “Take up your great-grandfather’s sword.”
“But how?” Shango asked. “I’m only a spirit.”
“Trust me,” Magtone said. Shango reached down and took the blade from his own dead hand. Somehow his ghostly hand lifted the solid blade. Holding it gave his ghost-form more solidity. He almost felt alive again, weighted down with a modicum of mass and substance.
“Why did you do this to me?” he asked Magtone.
The carpet rose higher and higher into the evening sky, until Shango could no longer see his dead body, the Pit of Vipers, or the plaza of violent entertainments.
“I told you,” Magtone said. “I wish to travel in your company awhile. Call me lonely if you must. But first I must gain access to the library of Sangzara.”
“Sangzara will never allow such a thing,” said Shango. He still wasn’t sure if he was a living man or an undead spirit, but he did not want to consider the question too deeply.
“Then Sangzara must die,” Magtone said. “Besides, he wasn’t about to let your soul escape his kingdom after you killed his best swordsman.”
The carpet now floated level with the СКАЧАТЬ