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The Hob's Bargain

The Hob's Bargain

Titel: The Hob's Bargain Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
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there was no reason why the hob could not. “If you’ll start down, I’ll follow.”
    It was hard climbing down with my knee stiff and sore, but I managed it with the help of Caefawn’s bracing hand. When we reached the ground, the hob bent and put his hand on my poor, sore knee and squeezed.
    â€œOuch,” I said, jumping back. “That hurts.”
    â€œLet me look at it—there may be something I can do to help.”
    When he approached me again, I let him look. This time he was more careful when he put his hand on it. It still hurt.
    â€œWell?” I asked.
    He shook his head. “If I’d seen it when it first happened, I could have fixed it up tight. There’s nothing wrong that a day’s rest won’t cure. I can do nothing about the swelling—you’re not going to be able to walk far on that, at least not very quickly.” He pursed his lips and whistled a little melody.
    Since he was obviously waiting for something, I waited quietly, too—trying not to look at the dead men who lay nearby.
    I didn’t think it was obvious what I was doing, but after a moment the hob said, “They bother you?”
    There was no ridicule in his voice, nor censure, so I nodded. “I can’t help but think that the man I killed was someone’s sweetheart, someone’s son.”
    â€œHe was,” agreed the hob. “Best you remember it, or you’ll become more wicked than he ever was. The only thing worse than those who don’t think about who they kill, are those who do, and enjoy it.”
    â€œIs that why you didn’t kill anyone?” I asked.
    He smiled, but there was no merriment in his eyes. “I killed a few today, but there aren’t so many dead here as are sleeping or wandering. I’m thinking yon village is going to need every head it has to make it through the coming troubles. But it won’t work as long as men like the one who chose to kill his own comrade still survive. I can’t sort the good from the evil, but there are some helping me who can.”
    I really didn’t want to know, but I had to ask just the same. “What’s coming?”
    â€œAh.” The hob pursed his lip. “Now that’s something you shall see for yourself, mah’folen .”
    The sound of hooves on turf saved him from the back of my tongue. I didn’t know what mah’folen meant, but it sounded loverlike, too familiar from a man—a hob—I’d just met. I turned to see a white pony jump the low park wall and canter toward us. For a moment the breath caught in my throat at the sight of him. Then it was merely a half-bred pony stallion.
    He had straight, almost delicate, legs, but his neck was thick even for a stallion. His nose was convex, making his head appear too large for his body. Brambles were caught in his tail and in his mane, which fell haphazardly on either side of his neck, as if a comb had never touched him.
    â€œYour ride, lady,” said the hob with a bow, spoiling it by adding “I hope.” He turned to the pony and said a few words in another language.
    If the pony replied, I couldn’t tell, but the hob motioned me forward. Mounting with my sore knee was even more interesting than climbing trees, but he wasn’t tall, so I managed.
    â€œHold on,” warned Caefawn, and sprang forward.
    Without his warning I would have fallen as the pony surged forward to follow with a speed that lent validity to my first vision of the animal. This little wildling that looked like a hill pony made the fastest horse Albrin had bred seem a plodding workhorse in comparison. The hob didn’t seem to have much trouble keeping ahead of it.

    T HE HOB WHO CALLED HIMSELF C AEFAWN GLANCED obliquely at the woman who rode Espe. The white beast snorted at him, telling him that he was too slow. The run had been good for Espe. Like Caefawn, the beast needed a good chase now and then to keep life interesting.
    He wasn’t so certain Aren was better for this day. Perhaps it hadn’t been a good idea to bring her with him. Convincing the villagers wouldn’t be all that hard. He’d been watching their struggles since he’d become aware of them this spring. They were losing, and losing people grasped at any straw, no matter how strange it appeared to them. Despite their distrust of magic, they would take his bargain and regret it later. He was trying for something better.

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