Camelot’s Shadow. Sarah Zettel. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Sarah Zettel
Издательство: HarperCollins
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Жанр произведения: Историческая литература
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9780007399550
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the fear that filled Rhian. ‘Leave him be!’ She flung herself from Thetis’s back. The sorcerer did not seem concerned for her shout or her sudden movement. Steel glinted in the moonlight as he drew a wickedly curved knife from his belt. The sight of it stopped Rhian’s heart. Whitcomb rolled, trying to get away, trying to rise, but although he pushed himself up on his arms, it was only to fall again. Rhian pulled her bow off her shoulders and an arrow from her quiver.

      ‘Do not touch him!’ she cried as she nocked the arrow in the string. ‘Can you make a beast run itself to death? I can hit a mark at fifty yards.’ She drew the string back next to her ear, sighting along the shaft. Even in the dark Euberacon Magnus would be an easy target.

      ‘Run,’ croaked Whitcomb, rolling to his side again, struggling still to rise. ‘Run!’

      She did not heed him. She would not abandon Whitcomb to this devil. ‘Leave us, sorcerer. I belong to none such as you!’

      Euberacon turned his inhuman eyes towards her. They glinted like the steel of his knife. Rhian braced herself to let the arrow fly.

      The bowstring snapped in two.

      The arrow fell soundlessly to the ground. Rhian stared dumbfounded, unable to understand what had happened. Euberacon bent over Whitcomb, who swung out feebly. The sorcerer avoided the blow with ease. Rhian rushed forward, but it was too late. The sorcerer lifted his dagger and plunged it straight down into Whitcomb’s heart.

      Rhian screamed. Whitcomb cried out, a long wail of terror and pain, as his blood poured out onto the ground. Rhian threw herself at the sorcerer, grappling with him, but he tossed her back easily. She scrambled backward, groping for a branch, a stone, anything she might use for a weapon.

      Whitcomb’s cry fell silent, and all his struggles ceased.

      ‘No!’ wailed Rhian, pushing herself to her feet. She could not see Thetis. She could not see the road. She could not see anything but Whitcomb dead on the cold ground, and the sorcerer bending over him as if to examine his work for flaws.

      ‘Demon!’ She still had no weapon, but in that moment she could have torn him apart with her bare hands.

      ‘Cease this nonsense.’ Euberacon straightened up. His robes were so black that she could not even tell if he had any blood on them. ‘Come to your master.’

      Rhian’s breath froze in her lungs. Unseen hands seemed to catch up her limbs, compelling her forward even as a fog descended over her mind, disordering her thoughts and confusing her senses.

      ‘No!’ she screamed, straining to hold herself still. ‘Mother Mary save me!’

      Euberacon laughed, and the sound filled her like winter’s ice. ‘No mystic virgin can hear you now, little girl. All ears, all eyes here are mine.’ He was close enough that she could feel his breath on her skin. How had she moved so far? Her hands and arms had gone numb. ‘For you now there is no God, no saviour, no father, no mother, no protector save for me.’

      ‘You lie, villain!’

      Hoofbeats shattered the stillness. Sensation returned in a rush and Rhian jerked her head up to see a figure on a grey horse thundering towards them, a flashing spear raised high. Euberacon yanked Rhian sideways, but she twisted in his grip, grabbing at his little finger and forcing it back. He cried in pain and his hold broke. Rhian dived forward just as the mounted figure cut the night between them. She rolled, getting tangled in her own skirts, but somehow managing to get her legs free to stagger to her feet.

      The horseman wheeled his mount in a tight and expert turn. Moonlight sparkled on mail, on harness, on spear’s tip and on shining dark hair. Euberacon’s face had broken into a snarl, and he raised clawed and empty hands. The horseman wasted no time digging in his heels and charging the sorcerer again. At first she thought the spear must have caught him square in the chest, but he only spun back, and did not fall.

      Rhian did not stand and stare, for the moonlight also showed her where the sorcerer’s knife had landed. She snatched it up and held it out low by her waist as she had seen Whitcomb do while helping train young men who came to her father for fostering. Her flesh seemed to recoil at the touch of its smooth, warm hilt but she clutched it tightly nonetheless.

      Again, the horseman wheeled. This time, the blow struck Euberacon flat on the ground. Now it was his turn to struggle to rise. Blood stained his temple black and he clawed at something under his robes. The horseman pulled his mount to a halt and leapt from its back, sword in his hand. Euberacon looked directly at Rhian with his snake’s eyes and she raised his knife defiantly.

      ‘Do you yield?’ demanded the horseman as he put himself between Rhian and Euberacon.

      In answer, Euberacon’s mouth curled into a smile, and he made a gesture as if to throw something at them both. Suddenly, there was a roaring wind and a foul cloud of smoke. The gale knocked Rhian off her feet and she lay coughing in the damp grass, unable to do anything for a long moment but squeeze her eyes shut and clutch at her mouth and try not to breathe.

      At last, there came silence and stillness.

      Rhian opened her eyes and scrambled to her feet. A thick lock of hair had come loose and tumbled in front of her eyes. She pushed it aside and for a moment saw only a man’s broad back, corsletted in a leather coat with bright mail rings over it. He was breathing hard, and staring at the place where Euberacon had been. Soft sounds she suspected were oaths came from him.

      Of the sorcerer, there was no sign.

      The horseman turned towards her and for the first time, Rhian could see the whole of her rescuer. Broad and strong, he stood against the night. Behind him, to one side, her bewildered eyes saw his white horse and his shield that hung from the saddle. Its device shone clearly; a five pointed star of green on a silver field, the symbol of the Virgin Mother.

      It seemed that her prayer had been heard after all.

      To the other side of him lay Whitcomb, her dear friend and protector, still as stone, his eyes open and staring at the stars, but seeing Heaven.

      It was too much. Relief, wonder and sorrow poured over her and Rhian began to cry. Not quietly with a maiden’s gentle grief, but in great, inconsolable sobs that shuddered through her frame. The strength in her legs gave way, and, still sobbing, she fell to her knees on the cold and sodden ground.

       THREE

      The violence of the maiden’s weeping shook the whole of her body. Gawain tightened his arm around her shoulders to keep her from throwing the whole of herself into the mud. Sudden violence, fear and loss had clearly robbed her of all composure.

      ‘My lady, do not grieve so,’ he murmured, not knowing if she could understand him in her state, but hoping the sound of his voice would bring her comfort. ‘You are safe now, I swear it. On my life, I swear it.’

      Even as he spoke those words, his eyes searched the shadows of trees and bracken that crowded this disused length of road. There were too many places to hide here, too many ways to watch unseen. Sorcerers were full of more tricks than man could number, and there was no knowing if her attacker had taken himself miles away, or simply vanished into the trees behind the cover of his smoke.

      He had to get her safe away from here.

      But having begun to weep so hard, she did not seem to be able to stop herself. Her tears ran down in rivers and her sobs clogged a throat that seemed too tight to release them all.

      ‘Come away, lady. Come with me.’

      She lifted her head, her tears coating her cheeks like a layer of ice. She looked not at him, but at the dead man stretched out before them. ‘I cannot leave him like this.’

      Cursing hard necessity, Gawain took her hands in far too familiar a fashion so that she looked from the corpse to him. ‘Lady, there is nothing more that can be done for him, and we do not know where your