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Magic Rises

Magic Rises

Titel: Magic Rises Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Ilona Andrews
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giant brain-sucking leech that would immediately try to devour me. Then again, considering the current mess, the leech might not view me as a tasty treat. Nope, no brains here.
    The sack twisted.
    No guts, no glory. I swam to the bag, pulled my throwing knife out, and sliced at the cord wrapped around its top. Here goes nothing. I pulled the sack open and looked into it.
    A human face peered at me with bright eyes. It belonged to a man in his forties or fifties, with a short gray beard, a hawkish nose, and bushy eyebrows. There was nothing exceptionally extraordinary about it except for the fact that it was about the size of a cat’s head.
    I’d seen some freaky shit, but this took the cake. For a second my brain stalled, trying to process what my eyes saw.
    The owner of the face lunged out of the bag into the water and sank like a stone.
    He sank. Crap.
    I dove down and grasped the flailing body. He couldn’t have been more than eighteen inches tall. Deadweight hit my hands. At least thirty pounds. I almost dropped him. I kicked, dragging him up.
    We broke the surface.
    I gasped for breath. A small fist rocketed toward me. Pain exploded in my jaw. Good punch. I shook my head, dragged the struggling man to the stone ledge, and heaved him onto it. He scrambled up.
    We glared at each other. He wore a bronze-colored tunic with an embroidered collar, dark brown pants, and small, perfectly made leather riding boots.
    What in the world would he be riding? A Pomeranian?
    The man blinked, studying me.
    I’d managed to find a hobbit in the Caucasus Mountains. I wondered what he would do if I asked him about second breakfast.
    The man opened his mouth. A string of words spilled out.
    “I don’t understand,” I said in English.
    He shook his head.
    “Ne ponimayu.”
    Another shake. Russian didn’t work either.
    The man pointed to his left, waving his arms, frantic. I turned.
    Something slid through the water at the far wall. Something long and sinuous that left ripples in its wake.
    I flipped the knife in my hand and pressed against the wall, as close to the stone as I could.
    The creature slid downward, into the water. The surface smoothed out.
    Another ripple, closer. Smooth water again.
    The opening bars of the theme from Jaws rolled through my head. Thanks. Just what I needed.
    If I were something long and serpentine with big teeth and I was hunting for some lunch, I’d swim up from underneath my victim.
    I took a deep breath and dove.
    A silvery-green beast sped toward me through the clear water. Fourteen feet long, as thick as my thigh, with the body of an eel armed with a crest of long spikes, it swam straight for me, its eyes big and empty, like two yellow coins against the silver scales.
    The serpent opened its mouth, a big deep hole studded with a forest of needle-thin teeth.
    I pressed against the wall, my feet against the rock.
    The serpent reared and struck. I launched myself from the wall, grabbed its neck, hugged it to me with every drop of strength I had, and jammed my knife into its gills. The sharp spikes sliced my fingers. The serpent coiled around me, its body a single, powerful muscle. I dragged the blade down, ripping through the fragile membranes of its gills.
    The serpent contorted, churning the water. I clung to it. To let go was to die.
    My lungs begged for air. I stabbed it again and again, trying to cause enough damage.
    The serpent writhed, impossibly strong.
    Black dots swam before my eyes. Air. Now.
    I let go and kicked myself up.
    The serpent lunged at my feet. The teeth clamped my boot but didn’t penetrate the thick sole. I jerked, trying to kick myself free. I could see the shiny ceiling where the air met water right above me. Another foot. Come on. I rammed my other foot into the serpent’s head.
    The teeth let go. I shot up and gulped air.
    The tiny man on the ledge screamed.
    The silver spine broke the surface next to me. I slashed at it, trying to cut it in half. The serpent clenched my foot again. Teeth bit my ankle and yanked me down.
    I kicked as hard as I could, trying to swim back up. If it dragged me down, it would be over. Magic was my only chance. I pulled it to me. Not much there—a weak magic wave.
    The serpent pulled, drawing me deeper and deeper under the water. I kicked its head. One. Two . . .
    The serpent let go, turned, and swept at me. I swam up like I’d never swum before in my life. My muscles threatened to tear off my bones.
    I broke the water. I needed

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