[ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]

thing in the morning. Quite a pair, we made.
I heard the rattle of fallen pebbles high in the rocks and glanced up to see
Del picking her way down from one of the piles of boulders. You'd think that
since we'd been sharing a bed for several years modesty would no longer
Page 59
ABC Amber Palm Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcpalm.html
matter, but Del was fastidious. She always went off to find privacy, and I'd
been ordered to do the same. I just never went as far. Men have a certain
advantage when it comes to relieving the bladder.
Her arms were spread for balance as she worked her way down. She was
concentrating on her path, rope of hair swinging in front of one shoulder.
It's difficult to look particularly graceful when clambering down over piled
rocks and boulders. Even for my Northern bascha.
I drew in a deep breath, preparing to bellow complaints about her horse. But I
lost the impulse the instant I saw movement behind her.
Vashni? No
Movement flowed down the mountainside, disappeared behind rocks.
I dropped the reins. "Del!"
Then it sprang up onto a boulder, and I saw it clearly.
"Del " I was running for the rocks, yanking sword out of sheath. Her face was
turned toward me.
I'd never make it, never make it
"
behind you
 "
Atop the rock she spun, grasping for her sword hilt, and went down hard
beneath the leaping sandtiger.
EIGHT
WHEN in the midst of deadly danger, time slows. Fragments. It is me, the
moment, the circumstances.
As it was now.
I saw Del, down. The glint of sun off her bared blade, lying against stone.
The spill of white-blond braid. The sandtiger's compact, bunched body,
blending into the rocky background as it squatted over her.
I bellowed at the cat as I ran. Anything to distract him, to draw his
attention from his prey.
Del was unmoving: probably unconscious, possibly dead.
"Try me!" I shouted.
"Try me, you thrice-cursed son of a Salset goat "
The sandtiger growled, then yowled as it saw me. I threatened his prey. For a
moment he continued to hunch over Del, then came up into a crouch, flexing
shoulders. Jaw dropped open.
Green eyes glared.
Everything was slowed to half-time. I watched the bunching of haunches, the
leap; judged momentum and direction; knew without doubt what was necessary. My
nearly vertical blade, at the end of thrusting arms, met him in midair. Sank
in through belly fur, hide, muscle, vessels and viscera, spitting him to the
Page 60
ABC Amber Palm Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcpalm.html
hilt- I felt the sudden weight, heard the scream, smelled the rank breath, the
musk of a mature male. Without pausing I ducked head and dropped shoulder,
swung, let his momentum carry him through his leap. Over my head, and down.
I was conscious of the horses screaming, but I paid them no attention. I was
focused only on the sandtiger, now sprawled on the ground, jaws agape, tongue
lolling. For all I knew he was dead already, but I jerked the blade free, then
swung it up, over, down, like a club, and severed his head from his body.
Then I dropped the sword. I turned, took two running strides, climbed up into
the boulders.
"Bascha . .
."
She lay mostly face-down, one arm sprawled across a cluster of rocks. Her
torso was in a shallow guliey between two boulders. Legs were twisted awry.
"Del ?"
There was blood, and torn burnous. I caught the tangled rope of hair and moved
it aside, baring the back of her neck to check for wounds. She had not had
time to face the cat fully. His leap had been flat, then tending down. Front
paws had curled over her shoulders, grasping, while back paws raked out,
reaching for purchase.
He had leaped at her back, intending to take his prey down from behind. But
Del had moved, had begun to turn toward him as I yelled, had begun to
unsheathe her sword, and he'd missed his target. Instead of encircling her
neck with his jaws, snapping it, piercing the jugular, the big canine teeth
had dug a puncture and furrow into her right forearm and the top of her left
shoulder at the curve of her neck. The main impetus of the bite had fouled on
harness and sheath.
I planted my feet as firmly as possible in the treacherous footing, then bent,
caught a limp arm, and pulled her up. I squatted, ducked, levered her over one
shoulder, head hanging, braid dangling against my thigh, while her legs formed
a counterweight before me. I rose carefully, balancing the slack-limbed drape
of her body. Teeth clenched, I made my way slowly down the boulders, found
level footing on the flat, sandy crown of the bluff, and carried her to the
lean-to. I had tossed her rolled bedding there while unpacking the gelding; [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
  • zanotowane.pl
  • doc.pisz.pl
  • pdf.pisz.pl
  • dudi.htw.pl
  • Linki
    Powered by wordpress | Theme: simpletex | © To, co się robi w łóżku, nigdy nie jest niemoralne, jeśli przyczynia się do utrwalenia miłości.