Bücher online kostenlos Kostenlos Online Lesen
Shadows Return

Shadows Return

Titel: Shadows Return Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Lynn Flewelling
Vom Netzwerk:
bucking wildly, with an arrow in its glossy flank.
    “But this is our
fai’thast.
Who would do this?” Aryn gasped.
    “Doesn’t matter now,” Seregil told him, looking around sharply. “We’ve got to find cover.”
    But there was nowhere to go. The enemy had somehow managed to surround them. As Alec watched helplessly, the rest of their small escort was cut down, Aurënfaie and Skalan alike.
    “This way, and keep your head down,” Seregil hissed, grasping Alec and Aryn by the shoulders and propelling them toward the underbrush on their left.
    They hadn’t gotten ten feet when Aryn staggered, clawing at an arrow that had pierced his upper thigh.
    Seregil dragged him to the ground and covered the Gedre with his own body. “Alec, check the wound. Did it cut the artery?”
    “Yes.” There was nothing they could do to save the man, and they both knew it. “We can’t stay here!”
    “What would you suggest?” Seregil snapped as an arrow sang over his head and another narrowly missed Alec’s outstretched hand.
    Then, unaccountably, the attack ceased as abruptly as it had begun.
    Alec listened, but all he could hear were the cries of the wounded. Every member of their escort lay dead or dying. Aryn was dead. Seregil’s friend Rien lay faceup with three shafts protruding from his chest.
    “It’s us they want,” Alec whispered, standing slowly, an arrow nocked ready. “The only way they could have missed hitting us was if they meant to.”
    Seregil put his back to Alec’s, braced for the next attack. “Who are you? What do you want?”
    There was no answer. Sweat trickled down between Alec’s shoulder blades as he waited for an arrow to find him.
    “Show yourselves!” Seregil demanded, and was again answered with silence.
    One of the Gedre riders pulled himself slowly to his feet, bleeding from a gut wound, and tried to reach them. An unseen archer put a shaft between his shoulders and he fell without a cry. Another man tried to drag himself to cover, only to be hit by two shafts that came from the opposite side of the road.
    And still, not one shaft had hit either of them.
    “They want us alive. If we can get into the woods, we might have a chance.”
    “Left or right?” Alec whispered.
             
    Seregil looked around. The forest was thick here, and there was no telling what lay beyond the road. He signed “left” and they broke into a run as they made for the trees.
    They were within a few yards of cover when he heard a sharp clicking noise, like someone trying to strike a fire. Then the air in front of them thickened and turned black. Out of that blackness rushed two huge, hideously misshapen forms, each a misbegotten, misjointed parody of a man.
    “
Dra’gorgos!
” Seregil cried, half in warning to Alec, half in shocked recognition. He’d run afoul of one before and hoped never to again.
    He barely had time for the realization before the things were on them and the sun went out like a snuffed candle. Blind and disoriented, he seemed to feel a hundred hard, fetid hands clutching at him.
    “Alec!” he yelled, striking out with his sword.
    His blade hit something and exploded. There was no other word for it. For an instant he saw a flash like lightning. And perhaps it was, because the jolt of it sent a searing pain up his arm to the shoulder and slammed his teeth together so hard he bit the inside of his cheek.
    “Alec!” Unseen arms were tightening around him like bands of iron, crushing the air from his lungs and reducing his voice to a hollow wheeze. “Alec, where are you?”
    Lost in blackness and choking on the charnel stench, Seregil heard a distant scream.
    Blind, chilled, and rapidly losing consciousness, Seregil tried to get to Korathan’s wands inside his coat, hoping that breaking them all at once would alert the prince that something had gone terribly wrong. But the monster’s grip was too tight. Desperate to leave some sign that would be recognized, he slipped Klia’s ring from his finger and let it fall, and with it a prayer that it be found by a friend.
             
    Alec had just had time to drop his bow and draw his sword before the blackness bore down on him.
    “Seregil!” he yelled, caught in darkness and the grip of the black nightmare. A dra’gorgos—or at least that’s what he thought he’d heard Seregil shout before the world went black. He tried to fight, but something hit his arm, numbing it except for a burning pain in his

Weitere Kostenlose Bücher