The Mist and the Lightning. Part I. Ви Корс

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу The Mist and the Lightning. Part I - Ви Корс страница 4

The Mist and the Lightning. Part I - Ви Корс

Скачать книгу

pulled up the hood and walked out of the castle. Orel followed him with his eyes.

      "No," he said quietly. "Not farewell."

      Chapter 2

      Conversation with Mark

      "So, Lis was right," Orel said. "You also know Nikto."

      "Yes, I do." Mark met Orel's gaze. "If you see him once, you won't forget, right?"

      Orel looked away, got up and walked to the window. He looked through it not saying anything, with his arms crossed on his chest. Mark also kept silent, watching Orel as if calculating something in his mind. Then he said:

      "I think it'll work for you!"

      Orel looked back.

      "I nearly killed him!"

      Mark shrugged. "So what? Me too."

      "Yes? And what?"

      "Nothing. We're friends now."

      Orel walked back to the table.

      "A strange friendship – between a friend of the Unclean and someone who fights them," he said.

      "He helped me like no one else," Mark's eyes flashed with an unhealthy sparkle, his fingers twitched nervously. "Thanks to him I created a real hell for the Unclean in the west! How we killed them! How we killed them, Orel, if only you could see it. If only any of those fat townsmen could see it! We slashed them! Hanged them! Burned them! Tore them apart. We razed their houses to the ground. We chased them to the very mountains, freed the outpost and many people…" Mark stopped suddenly.

      "I see you are a real warrior. A rare thing in our times," Orel said.

      "Nikto is a warrior, too."

      "I know, figured that out. But he's a warrior of the Unclean."

      "You can stop worrying about it. Yes, he is a warrior of the Unclean but he isn't their ally. More than that, I think he hates them."

      "Why is he with them then?"

      "The cities of the Unclean accept him as a warrior, hold him as an equal and even higher than many of them. And humans don't accept him."

      "But you? Haven't you accepted him?"

      "I have but he can't team up with me, the Unclean will kill him for that."

      "And can he team up with me?"

      "Yes, he can. You don't interfere in the business of the Unclean. If you make Nikto your friend, the Unclean will be your friends, too. Your power will multiply, and I heard, prince Arel, your state of affairs is horrible now."

      "Perhaps it is, but I don't want to become a toy of the Unclean for the sake of that power! My independence is my strength."

      "Not a toy. But having an ally won't hurt you."

      "Do I hear it from you? You who fight them to death? I can't believe my ears."

      Mark shrugged. "To each their own."

      "And that girlfriend of his. That perfect sample of a non-human! She'll cut the throat of anyone who dares harm her precious. I hope you haven't seen that monster."

      "I brought her to him from the west."

      "What?"

      Mark laughed.

      "Her name is Amba. I brought her from the west."

      "Why?"

      "It just happened."

      "Can you tell me?"

      "Why not? I see he's got to your heart, I know you too well. You'll be a nice pair. New times are coming to the City, together you'll be formidable."

      "I haven't decided anything yet."

      "Oh, you have."

      "Well, it doesn't mean he'll agree."

      "He will. Nikto is attracted to humans. And you are from the upper society, rich, noble – exactly what he needs."

      "Then tell me what you know of him!"

      "Destiny brought us together in the far west. My squadron attacked a caravan of a slave trader. He sold them in village markets. One of those slaves was Nikto. We freed them all and hanged the trader. Many of the men we had freed joined us. We took the ill ones to our camp. The first one who noticed Nikto was an old warlock from my suite. He told me: 'I feel he's dangerous, Mark, we should get rid of him.' I just laughed – but I was stricken with the color of Nikto's hair. At first I took him for an old man, his face was hidden behind a black mask. I asked the slaves who joined us: 'Who's that old man?' They said: 'We don't know. He was picked up on the road.' He was very ill, never said anything, and the slaves didn't see his face. But the servants of the slave trader who had seen Nikto's face begged not to take him along. They told their master such a slave would bring bad luck. But the slave trader didn't listen to them. Then I took off his mask and saw a young man who had no undamaged place on his face. He was cut in a way that even my experienced warriors were shocked. I saw the traces from 'black water' on his arms, the collar, the wounds from chains, tattoos of the Unclean and I figured out he managed to escape.

      "I couldn't miss such a chance! We treated him, healed his wounds. In exchange I asked him to tell me everything he knew. At first he kept silent. And had he not wanted to help us, he wouldn't have said a word, no matter what we'd do to him. I raised my sword over his head several times, and he didn't even flinch, as if he didn't fear death but on the contrary, desired it. But I couldn't kill him. I got to love him. He was so young yet so tortured. At some moment I understood that I'd just let him go, and it was when the warlock told me Nikto was ready to tell us everything he knew. The old warlock said: 'He's reading our thoughts,' and I think it was true. Nikto understood what I thought of him, what I felt. It was his way to thank me. The warlock and all the Unclean called and keep calling him 'son of the Devil' but I don't believe it. Could a son of the Devil respond to kindness like that? Only later I understood what he'd done for me. He'd been so far west as no one else had.

      "He drafted the layouts of farms and villages of the Unclean, told about their outposts and other things. Without him I wouldn't have had triumphed! I asked him if he'd follow me but he refused. Then I promised to avenge him, avenge everything that'd been done to him.

      "He said to me: 'What the Unclean did to me is nothing in comparison with what others had done before them.' I said: 'They slashed your face.' He said: 'I did it myself.'

      "He said it so seriously that I felt uneasy. And I didn't ask him anything else.

      "We parted. I went to the west and he, to the east. Bidding farewell I warned him that the Unclean would get him sooner or later, to punish him for betrayal. He just smiled. He probably knew what he was doing.

      "That woman – Amba – he described her to me, said she was his owner and asked not to torture her but to kill her quickly. But she is very cunning and when I killed all her family, she wrote to me asking to take her to Nikto to the city, and then no Unclean in the city would harm me.

      "She wrote about Nikto: 'I hear him, he needs me.' And I took her along. When we arrived to the city,

Скачать книгу