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Traitor's Moon

Traitor's Moon

Titel: Traitor's Moon Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Lynn Flewelling
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above all others, however, and set his heart hammering against his ribs.
    A lone figure lay facedown in the center of the dark stone floor, arms stretched out to either side. It was Seregil. Alec knew him without needing to see the face hidden by the dark hair.
    He was clad in a plain white tunic and trousers and lay utterly still, hardly seeming to breathe. Kheeta and Säaban flanked him like grim specters.
    â€œCourage, Alec,” whispered Beka, guiding him to his seat.
    Atui
, Alec thought, steeling himself. No one would say today that the talímenios of the Exile dishonored him with unseemly behavior.
    Seregil had lost track of how long he’d lain there. Adzriel brought him to the Iia’sidra a few hours after sunrise. The stone floor was still cold from the night then, and the chill seeped up through his thin clothes, sapping the warmth from his muscles.
    He’d lain on wet grass last time, in his father’s own fai ’thast. Insects had come and gone across his skin, and the turf had tickled his face as it drank his tears
.
    His face and chest hurt from pressing against the cold stone, and his muscles were soon twitching from the strain of keeping still. But he did not move, just listened to the distant sounds from outside.
    In Bôkthersa, he’d listened to the mocking whispers of children and young ’faie. It hurt worst when he recognized the voices of friends
.
    Here, it was so quiet that he could hear people passing by in the street. From the bits and pieces of conversation he caught, he knew that Rhaish’s death had been discovered, and smiled with aching cheeks and dry lips as news of the man’s guilt filtered in to him.
    Bilairy’s Balls, his back ached. His knees and shoulders throbbed, and the points of his hipbones felt like they were cutting through the skin. His neck and forehead throbbed with the effort of not crushing his nose against the floor, and at last he chanced rocking his head just enough to transfer the agony to a cheekbone. Tomove any more than that would force his guardians to deal with him, and he couldn’t bear to bring that down on Kheeta and Säaban, who stood unmoving somewhere nearby. The scabs on the back of his left hand began to itch, and he flexed his fingers in a vain effort to quell the irritation.
    Sometime later something skittered across the back of that hand.
A dragonling
, his overtaxed imagination suggested hopefully. He squeezed his eyelids shut tighter as whatever it was investigated the side of his nose, then allowed himself a quick peek. A green beetle scuttled busily away, its back gleaming like fine enamel work as it entered a nearby patch of sunlight.
    No dragons for him today.
    He’d thought it would be a relief when the Iia’sidra finally began, but it wasn’t. Without opening his eyes, he knew that people were walking close to him as they entered, some pausing to stare down at his exposed back. It was awful, the weight of those eyes upon him, worse than it had been all those years ago in Bôkthersa.
    I hadn’t spent a lifetime avoiding notice then
, he thought dully. His heart was pounding now, shaking him a little with every driving beat. Could they see? He pressed his palms to the floor and silently prayed for the trial to begin.
    The shuffling of feet continued for some minutes, and he could hear people settling in, conversing among themselves. Someone was talking about the fresh caneberries they’d had for breakfast. Further away, Ulan í Sathil was talking of trade routes and weather. No one spoke his name. He lay like a forgotten pile of clothing in the center of it all, quivering under the weight of all those accusing stares. The beetle’s patch of sunlight touched his fingertips, reminding him of how cold the rest of his body was. His pulse sounded like a bellows in his ears.
    Please, Aura, let them begin!
    At last, he heard the solemn chime of the Iia’sidra bell. Still facedown, he pictured a face for each successive voice as the Iia’sidra commenced his trial.
    â€œAdzriel ä Iriel,” said Brythir. “A man of your clan has broken the laws of teth’sag laid against him.”
    â€œSeregil, once Seregil í Korit of Bôkthersa, lies before you. Let the charges be heard.” It was good to hear his sister’s voice, fix the direction in his mind’s eye. Alec and the Skalans would be there, too, seeing this. The thought made his cheeks

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