Index
Jo Clayton Drinker 01 Drinker Of Souls
Foster, Alan Dean Catechist 03 A Triumph of Souls
Jack L. Chalker Watchers at the Well 02 Shadows of the Well of Souls
Jack L. Chalker WOS 5 Twilight at the Well of Souls
Ann Purser [Lois Meade 08] Warning at One (v5.0) (pdf)
Bujold, Lois McMaster Vorkosigan 07 Cetaganda
Lois McMaster Bujold 14 Diplomatic Immunity
CKE 2006zima Oryginalny arkusz maturalny 1 PP Polski
MA16_ _The_Empire_of_Glass
Jeffries Sabrina Taniec zmysśÂ‚ów Stare panny Swanlea 04
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    Ista considered His reputation. "It's dreadful," she observed.
    He merely grinned, that familiar, stolen, heart-stopping flash of teeth.
    "What training?" she added, feeling suddenly cantankerous. "You never
    explained anything."
    "Instructing you, sweet Ista, would be like teaching a falcon to walk up to
    its prey. It might with great effort be done, but one would end with a very
    footsore and cranky bird, and a tedious wait for dinner.
    With a wingspan like yours, it's ever so much easier just to shake you from my
    wrist and let you fly."
    "Plummet," Ista growled.
    "No. Not you. Granted, you tumble and complain halfway down the abyss, but
    eventually you do spread your wings and soar."
    "Not always." Her voice went lower. "Not the first time."
    He tilted his head in a sliver of acknowledgment. "But I was not your falconer
    then. We do suit, you know."
    She glanced away, and around the strange, perfect, unreal room. Antechamber,
    she thought, boundary between the inside and the outside. But which door was
    which? "My task. Is it done?"
    "Done and well-done, my, true, foster, laggard child."
    "I have come very late to everything. To forgiveness. To love. To my god. Even
    to my own life." But she bowed her head in relief.
    Done was good. It meant one could stop. "Did the Jokonans slay me, as Joen
    ordered?"
    "No. Not yet."
    Smiling, He stepped up to her and tilted her chin up. He lowered His mouth to
    hers as boldly as Illvin had, that afternoon yesterday? on the tower. Except
    that His mouth tasted not of horsemeat but of perfume, and there was no
    uncertainty in His eyes.
    His eyes, the world, her perceptions, began to flicker.
    Infinite depths became dark eyes reddened with frenzied weeping. Perfume
    became parched, salt flesh, then fragrance, then flesh. Sweet silence became
    noise and cries, and then silence, and then din again.
    Painless floating turned to a crushing pressure, headache, thirst, which
    melted in turn to bliss.
    I think He takes His foot to his cat and pushes her to decision.
    She had no doubt she might yet dodge around that boot in either direction. But
    just what direction He desired was plain. The unsettling
    Not yet did at least suggest He did not guide her back toward a body pierced
    with sword thrusts.
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    The
    Bastard maneuvers me into this, blast Him.
    It felt very comfortable, cursing her god. He was a god she might always
    curse, and the more inventive the invective, the more He would grin. Well
    suited, indeed, to true Ista.
    The flickering slowed, stopped, on parched mouth, weight and pressure, din and
    pain. On dear, distraught, blinking, merely human eyes.
    Yes.
    And furthermore, my god cheats. He set out this bowl of cream before ever He
    held the door, and
    He knew it well.
    She smiled, and tried to inhale.
    Illvin pulled his frantically questing tongue from her mouth, and gasped, "She
    lives, oh, five gods, she breathes again!"
    The crushing pressure, Ista discovered, was Illvin's arms, wrapped around her
    torso. She stared up into tree branches, blue sky, and his face, bent over
    hers. His face was flushed with heat and furrowed with terror, and a thin
    spattering of blood droplets marked it in an angled track from side to side.
    She raised a weak hand and dabbed at the red beads, and was relieved to find
    they did not appear to be his.
    She whispered through dry, bruised lips. "What has happened?"
    "That is what I prayed you might tell me," said Foix's hoarse voice. She
    looked up to see him looming over them. He still wore his Jokonan mail and
    tabard, and stood in a convincingly menacing guard stance above his apparent
    prisoners. She and Illvin were seated on the ground not far from the green
    command tents. Foix's eyes were white-rimmed, but it seemed not to be the
    surrounding Jokonans that disquieted him.
    "You were marched into the tent," Foix continued in a lower tone. "You looked
    . . . ordinary. Helpless.
    Then suddenly the god light blazed from you, so brightly I was blinded for a
    breath. I heard Joen cry for your death."
    Upon her arm, Illvin's tight clutch tightened further.
    "When I could see again," continued Foix, gazing away in guard-pretense, "all
    the demons in the tent seemed to be rushing into you, like hot metal being
    drawn through a form. I saw you swallow them all down, Joen's soul as well. It
    was all over in an instant."
    "Save one," murmured Ista.
    "Eh. Ur. Yes, there was that. I felt when you freed me from Joen's geas. I
    almost bolted from the tent then, but I got my wits back just in time. Prince
    Sordso and some other officers were drawing their swords five gods, but the
    scraping seemed to go on forever. Sordso's knuckles were white."
    "I tried to get between them and you," Illvin said huskily to Ista. He rubbed
    at his nose and blinked.
    "Yes," said Foix. "Bare-handed. I saw you lunge a lot of good that was going
    to do. But instead
    Sordso whirled around and hacked at Joen."
    "She was already dead by then," murmured Ista.
    "I saw. She was starting to topple, but his edge caught her just in ... time.
    Or something. He struck so hard, he spun around and fell backward off the
    dais. Half the freed sorcerers were running away, but I
    swear half the rest had the same idea Sordso did. There was one of Joen's
    women had a dagger out, and was going at the body even as it fell. I'm not
    sure she knew or cared that it was dead she just wanted to get in her stroke.
    Everyone was jostling and yelling and starting in every direction. So I jumped
    in front of Illvin and you and shouted, 'Back, prisoners!' and brandished my
    sword."
    "Cursed convincingly," muttered Illvin. "I just about tried to leap on you.
    Except that I had my hands full."
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    "You fell, Royina. You just . . . turned gray and stopped breathing and
    crumpled up. I thought you had died, for your soul was gone from my sight,
    like a lantern blown out. Illvin tried to lift you up, fell down, then
    scrambled up again I dared not help I let him drag you out, pretending to
    stand guard over him.
    Most of the Jokonans thought you were dead, too, I think. Slain in your [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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