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df.therunelords-第2章

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 The assassin lunged; knife flashing。 Dreys twisted away; shoved the fellow。 The blade struck wide of its mark; slashed Dreys' ribs; a grazing blow。
 Now Dreys grabbed the fellow's elbow; had the man half…turned around。 The assassin stumbled; unable to support himself on his broken leg。 Dreys kicked the leg again for good measure; and pushed the fellow back。
 Dreys glanced frantically into the shadows for sign of some cobblestone that might have e loose from its mortar。 He wanted a weapon。 Behind Dreys was an inn called the Churn。 Beside the flowering vines and the effigy of the Earth King at its front window sat a small butter churn。 Dreys tried to rush to the churn; thinking to grab its iron plunger and use it to bludgeon the assassin。
 He pushed the assassin; thinking the smaller man would go flying。 Instead the fellow spun; one hand clutching Dreys' surcoat。 Dreys saw the knife blade plunge。
 He raised an arm to block。
 The blade veered low and struck deep; slid up through his belly; past shattered ribs。 Tremendous pain blossomed in Dreys' gut; shot through his shoulders and arms; a pain so wide Dreys thought the whole world would feel it with him。
 For an eternity; Dreys stood; looking down。 Sweat dribbled into his wide eyes。 The damned assassin had slit him open like a fish。 Yet the assassin still held himhad thrust his knife arm up to the wrist into Dreys' chest; working the blade toward Dreys' heart; while his left hand reached for Dreys' pocket; groping for something。
 His hand clutched at the book in Dreys' pocket; feeling it through the material of the surcoat。 The assassin smiled。
 Dreys wondered; Is that what you want? A book?
 Last night; as the City Guard had been escorting foreigners from the merchants' quarter; Dreys had been approached by a man from Tuulistan; a trader whose tent was pitched near the woods。 The fellow spoke little Rofehavanish; had seemed apprehensive。 He had only said; 〃A giftfor king。 You give? Give to king?〃
 With much ceremonial nodding; Dreys had agreed; had looked at the book absently。 The Chronicles of Owatt; Emir of Tuulistan。 A thin volume bound in lambskin。 Dreys had pocketed it; thinking to pass it along at dawn。
 Dreys hurt so terribly now that he could not shout; could not move。 The world spun; he pulled free of the assassin; tried to turn and run。 His legs felt as weak as a kitten's。 He stumbled。 The assassin grabbed Dreys' hair from behind; yanking his chin up to expose his throat。
 Damn you; Dreys thought; haven't you killed me enough? In one final desperate act; he yanked the book from his pocket; hurled it across the Butterwalk。
 There on the far side of the street a rosebush struggled up an arbor near a pile of barrels。 Dreys knew this place well; could barely see the yellow roses on dark vines。 The book skidded toward them。
 The assassin cursed in his own tongue; tossing Dreys aside; and limped after the book。
 Dreys could hear nothing but a dull buzz as he struggled to his knees。 He glimpsed movement at the edge of the streetthe assassin groping among the roses。 Three larger shadows came rushing down the road from the left。 The flash of drawn swords; starlight glinting off iron caps。 The City Guard。
 Dreys pitched forward onto the cobblestones。
 In the predawn; a flock of geese honked as it made its way south through the silvery starlight; the voices sounding to him for all the world like the barking of a distant pack of dogs。
  
 Chapter 2
 THOSE WHO LOVE THE LAND
  
 That morning a few hours after the attack on Dreys and a hundred or so miles south of Castle Sylvarresta; Prince Gaborn Val Orden faced troubles that were not so harrowing。 Yet none of his lessons in the House of Understanding could have prepared the eighteen…year…old prince for his encounter with a mysterious young woman in the grand marketplace at Bannisferre。
 He'd been lost in thought at a vendor's stall in the south market; studying wine chillers of polished silver。 The vendor had many fine iron brewing pots; but his prize was the three wine chillerslarge bowls for ice with plementing smaller pitchers that fit inside。 The bowls were of such high quality that they looked to be of ancient duskin workmanship。 But no duskin had walked the earth in a thousand years; and these howls could not have been that old。 Each bowl had the clawed feet of a reaver and featured scenes of hounds running in a leafy wood; the pitchers were adorned with images of a young lord on a horse; his lance at the ready; bearing down on a reaver mage。 Once the pitchers were set into their silver bowls; the images plemented one anotherthe young lord battling the reaver mage while the hunting dogs surrounded them。
 The ornaments on the wine chiller were all cast using some method that Gaborn could not fathom。 The silversmith's detailed workmanship was breathtaking。
 Such were the wonders of Bannisferre's goods that Gaborn hadn't even noticed the young woman sidle up to him until he smelled the scent of rose petals。 (The woman who stands next to me wears a dress that is kept in a drawer filled with rose petals; he'd realized; on some subconscious level。) Even then; he'd been so absorbed in studying the wine chillers that he imagined she was only a stranger; awed by the same marvelous bowls and pitchers。 He didn't glance her way until she took his hand; seizing his attention。
 She grasped his left hand in her right; lightly clasping his fingers; then squeezed。
 Her soft touch electrified him。 He did not pull away。 Perhaps; he thought; she mistakes me for another。 He glanced sidelong at her。 She was tall and beautiful; perhaps nineteen; her dark…brown hair adorned with mother…of…pearl bs。 Her eyes were black; and even the whites of her eyes were so dark as to be a pale blue。 She wore a simple; cloud…colored silk gown with flowing sleevesan elegant style lately making its way among the wealthy ladies of Lysle。 She wore a belt of ermine; clasped with a silver flower; high above the navel; just beneath her firm breasts。 The neckline was high; modest。 Over her shoulders hung a silk scarf of deepest crimson; so long that its fringes swept the ground。 She was not merely beautiful; he decided。 She was astonishing。 She smiled at him secretively; shyly; and Gaborn smiled back; tight…lipped…hopeful and troubled all at once。 Her actions reminded him of the endless tests that one of his hearthmasters might have devised for him in the House of Understandingyet this was no test。
 Gaborn did not know the young woman。 He knew no one in all the vast city of Bannisferrewhich seemed odd; that he should not have one acquaintance from a city this large; with its towering gray stone songhouses with their exotic arches; the white pigeons wheeling through the blue sunlit sky above the chestnut trees。 Yet Gaborn knew no one here; not even a minor merchant。 He was that far from home。
 He stood near the edge of a market; not far from the docks on the broad banks of the south fork of River Dwindella stone's throw from Smiths' Row; where the open…air hearths gave rise to the rhythmic ring of hammers; the creaking of bellows; and plumes of smoke。
 He felt troubled that he'd been so lulled by the peacefulness of 
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