[ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
my master, though I doubt that he would have admitted as much to you."
"I guess more than I am told," Drizzt said, ironically leading into his next suspicion. "Your master
seeks vengeance as well, does he not?"
"Perhaps," said Entreri without a pause. "But the return of the pendant is paramount. So I offer this to,
you: We shall work together to find the road back to your friends. I offer my assistance on the journey
and your life in exchange for the pendant. Once we are there, persuade the halfling to surrender it to me
and I shall go on my way and not return. My master retrieves his treasure and your little friend lives out
the rest of his life without looking over his shoulder."
"On your word?" Drizzt balked.
"On my actions," Entreri retorted. He pulled the scimitar from his belt and tossed it to Drizzt. "I have
no intentions of dying in these forsaken mines, drow, nor do you, I would hope."
"How do you know I will go along with my part when we rejoin my companions?" asked Drizzt,
holding the blade out before him in inspection, hardly believing the turn of events.
file:///F|/rah/R.%20A.%20Salvatore/R.%20A.%2...%20Dale%202%20-%20Streams%20of%20Silver.html (147 of 172) [1/23/03 5:28:54 PM]
Streams of Silver
Entreri laughed again. "You are too honorable to put such doubts in my mind, dark elf. You will do as
you agree, of that I am certain! A bargain, then?"
Drizzt had to admit the wisdom of Entreri's words. Together, they stood a fair chance of escaping from
the lover levels. Drizzt wasn't about to pass up the opportunity to find his friends, not for the price of a
pendant that usually got Regis into more trouble than it was worth. "Agreed," he said.
The passageway continued to brighten at each turn, not with flickering light, as with torches, but in a
continuous glow. The noise of machinery increased proportionately and the two had to shout to each
other to be understood.
Around a final bend, they came to the abrupt end of the mine, its last supports opening into a huge
cavern. They moved tentatively through the supports and onto a small ledge that ran along the side of a
wide gorge - the great undercity of Clan Battlehammer.
Luckily they were on the top level of the chasm, for both walls had been cut into huge steps right down
to the floor, each one holding rows of the decorated doorways that had once marked the entrances to the
houses of Bruenor's kin. The steps were mostly empty now, but Drizzt, with the countless tales Bruenor
had told to him, could well imagine the past glory of the place. Ten thousand dwarves, untiring in their
passion for their beloved work, hammering at the mithril and singing praises to their gods.
What a sight that must have been! Dwarves scrambling from level to level to show off their latest
work, a mithril item of incredible beauty and value. And yet, judging from what Drizzt knew of the
dwarves in Icewind Dale, even the slightest imperfection would send the artisans scurrying back to their
anvils, begging their gods for forgiveness and the gift of skill sufficient to craft a finer piece. No race in
all the Realms could claim such pride in their work as the dwarves, and the folk of Clan Battlehammer
were particular even by the standards of the bearded people.
Now only the very floor of the chasm bustled in activity, for, hundreds of feet below them and
stretching off in either direction, loomed the central forges of Mithril Hall, furnaces hot enough to melt
the hard metal from the mined stone. Even at this height Drizzt and Entreri felt the searing heat, and the
intensity of the light made them squint. Scores of squat workers darted about, pushing barrows of ore or
fuel for the fires. Duergar, Drizzt assumed, though he couldn't see them clearly in the glare from this
height.
Just a few feet to the right of the tunnel exit, a wide, gently arching ramp spiraled down to the next
lower step. To the left, the ledge moved on along the wall, narrow and not designed for casual passage,
but farther down its course, Drizzt could see the black silhouette of a bridge arching across the chasm.
Entreri motioned him back into the tunnel. "The bridge seems our best route," the assassin said. "But I
am wary of moving out across the ledge with so many about."
"We have little choice," Drizzt reasoned. "We could backtrack and search for some of the side
corridors that we passed, but I believe them to be no more than extensions of the mine complex and I
doubt that they would lead us back even this far."
"We must go on," Entreri agreed. "Perhaps the noise and glare will provide us ample cover." Without
further delay, he slipped out onto the ledge and began making his way to the dark outline of the chasm
bridge, Drizzt right behind.
Although the ledge was no more than two feet wide at any point and much narrower than that at most,
the nimble fighters had no trouble navigating it. Soon they stood before the bridge, a narrow walk of
stone arching over the bustle below.
Creeping low, they moved out easily. When they crossed the midpoint and began the descent down the
file:///F|/rah/R.%20A.%20Salvatore/R.%20A.%2...%20Dale%202%20-%20Streams%20of%20Silver.html (148 of 172) [1/23/03 5:28:54 PM]
Streams of Silver
back half of the arch, they saw a wider ledge running along the chasm's other wall. At the end of the
bridge loomed a tunnel, torchlit like the ones they had left on the upper level. To the left of the entrance,
several small shapes, Duergar, stood huddled in conversation, taking no notice of the area. Entreri looked
back at Drizzt with a sneaky smile and pointed to the tunnel.
As silent as cats and invisible in the shadows, they crossed into the tunnel, the group of Duergar
oblivious to their passing.
Wooden supports rolled past the two easily now as they took up a swift gait, leaving the undercity far
behind. Roughhewn walls gave them plenty of shadowy protection in the torchlight, and as the noise of
the workers behind them dimmed to a distant murmur they relaxed a bit and began looking ahead to the
prospect of meeting back up with the others.
They turned a bend in the tunnel and nearly ran over a lone Duergar sentry.
"What're yer fer?" the sentry barked, mithril broadsword gleaming with each flicker of the torchlight.
His armor, too, chain mail, helm, and shining shield, were of the precious metal, a king's treasure to outfit
a single soldier!
Drizzt passed his companion and motioned for Entreri to hold back. He didn't want a trail of bodies to
follow their escape route. The assassin understood that the black elf might have some luck in dealing
with this other denizen of the underworld. Not wanting to let on that he was human, and possibly hinder
the credibility of whatever story Drizzt had concocted, he hitched his cloak up over his face.
The sentry jumped back a step, his eyes wide in amazement when he recognized Drizzt as a drow.
Drizzt scowled at him and did not reply.
"Er . . . what might ye be doin' in the mines?" the Duergar asked, rephrasing both his question and tone
politely.
"Walking," Drizzt replied coldly, still feigning anger at the gruff greeting he had initially received.
"And . . . uh . . . who might ye be?" stuttered the guard.
[ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
Tematy
- Home
- 0127. Dale Ruth Jean Showdown znaczy rozrĂłba
- Dale_Ruth_Jane_Klopotliwy_poczatek
- Loius L'Amour Silver_Canyon_v1.0_(BD)
- 065.Thayer_Patricia_Czyje_to_dziecko
- Harper_R_P_Cooper_G_E_Handling Qualities and Pilot Evaluation_[1986]
- Diana Palmer Men of the Hour 01 Night of Love
- (M
- Sandemo_Margit_ _Saga_o_Czarnoksiezniku_Tom_2
- 057. Jordan Penny Ukryty skarb
- Kossakowska Maja ObrośÂ„cy królestwa
- zanotowane.pl
- doc.pisz.pl
- pdf.pisz.pl
- audipoznan.keep.pl