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King of The Murgos

King of The Murgos

Titel: King of The Murgos Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: David Eddings
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and a glowing spark appeared at its tip. Suddenly, out of the insubstantial air, a monster leaped directly at her. It had scaly hide, a gaping muzzle filled with pointed fangs, and great paws tipped with needle-sharp claws.
    Polgara lifted one hand, palm outward, and the thing suddenly stopped and hung motionless in midair. "A trifle better," she said critically. "This one even seems to have a bit of substance to it."
    "Release it!" the hermit howled at her, jumping up and down in fury.
    "Are you really sure you want me to?"
    "Release it! Release it! Release it!" His voice rose to a shriek as he danced about wildly.
    "If you insist," she replied. Slowly the slavering monster turned about in midair and then dropped to the ground. With a roar, it charged the startled hermit.
    The gaunt man recoiled, thrusting his wand out in front of him. The creature vanished.
    "You always have to be careful with monsters," she advised. "You never know when one of them might turn on you."
    His mad eyes narrowed, and he leveled his stick at her. A series of incandescent fireballs burst from its tip, sizzling through the air directly at her.
    She held up her hand again, and the smoldering chunks of fire bounced off into the woods. Garion glanced at one and saw that it was actually burning, setting the damp needles on the forest floor to smoking. He put his heels to his horse's flanks, even as Durnik also spurred forward, brandishing his cudgel.
    "Stay out of it, you two!" Belgarath barked. "Pol can take care of herself."
    "But, Grandfather," Garion protested, "that was real fire."
    "Just do as I say, Garion. You'll throw her off balance if you go blundering in there now."
    "Why are you being so difficult," Polgara asked the madman who stood glaring at her. "All we're doing is traveling through these woods."
    "The woods are mine!" he shrieked. "Mine! Mine! Mine!" Again he danced his insane caper of fury and shook both his fists at her.
    "Now you're being ridiculous," she told him.
    The hermit leaped backward with a startled exclamation as the ground directly in front of his feet erupted with a seething green fire and a boiling cloud of bright purple smoke.
    "Did you like the colors?" she inquired. "I like a little variety now and then, don't you?"
    "Pol," Belgarath said in exasperation, "will you stop playing?"
    "This isn't play, father," she replied firmly. "It's education."
    A tree some yards behind the hermit suddenly bent forward, enfolding him in its stout limbs and then straightening back up again, lifting him struggling into the air.
    "Have you had enough of this yet?" she asked, looking up at the startled man, who was trying desperately to free himself from the branches wrapped about his waist. "Decide quickly, my friend. You're a long way from the ground, and I'm losing interest in keeping you up there."
    With a curse, the hermit wrenched himself free and tumbled heavily to the loam beneath the tree.
    "Did you hurt yourself?" she inquired solicitously.
    Snarling, he cast a wave of absolute blackness at her.
    Still sitting her horse with unruffled calm, she began to glow with an intensely blue light that pushed the blackness away.
    Again the look of mad cunning came into his eyes. Garion felt a disjointed surge. Jerkily, one portion of his body at a time, the deranged hermit began to expand, growing larger and larger. His face was wholly insane now, and he lashed out with one huge fist, shattering a nearby tree. He bent, picked up a long branch, and broke it in two. He discarded the shorter end and advanced upon Polgara, swinging his great club.
    "Pol!" Belgarath shouted in sudden alarm. "Be careful of him!"
    "I can manage, father," she replied. Then she faced the ten-foot-tall madman. "I think this has gone quite far enough," she told him. "I hope you know how to run." She made a peculiar gesture.
    The wolf that appeared between them was impossibly large—half again as big as a horse—and its snarl was thunderous.
    "I do not fear your apparitions, woman," the towering hermit roared. "I am God, and I fear nothing."
    The wolf bit him, its teeth sinking into his shoulder. He screamed and jerked back, dropping his cloth. "Get away!" he shouted at the snarling wolf.
    The beast crouched, its fangs bared.
    "Get away!" the hermit screamed again. He flopped his hands in the air, and Garion again felt that disorganized surge as the insane man tried with all his might to make the wolf vanish.
    "I recommend immediate flight," Polgara

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