P. C. Hodgell - Kencyrath 04 - To Ride a Rathorn

VIP免费
2024-12-19 0 0 3.55MB 419 页 5.9玖币
侵权投诉
To Ride a Rathorn
Table of Contents
Maps
Chapter I: An Unfortunate Arrival
Chapter II: Wyrm Hunt
Chapter 3: Wine, Women, and Wolvers
Chapter IV: Testing
Chapter V: A Length of Rope
Chapter VI: The Lordan's Coat
Chapter VII: In the Bear's Den
Chapter VIII: A Forgotten Name
Chapter IX: School Days
Chapter X: Battles Old and New
Chapter XI: The White Lady
Chapter XII: Unsheathed
Chapter XIII: Blood and Ivory
Chapter XIV: To Ride a Rathorn
Chapter XV: Back to the Soulscape
Chapter XVI: Midsummer's Eve
Chapter XVII: Into the Wilds
Chapter XVIII: Solstice
Chapter XIX: Darkness at Noon
Chapter XX: The Bear Pit
Chapter XXI: Loyalty or Honor
Chapter XXII: Casting the Stones
Chapter XXIII: Touchstone
Glossary
To Ride a Rathorn
P. C. Hodgell
This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious. Any
resemblance to real people or events is purely coincidental.
To Ride a Rathorn:Copyright © 2006 by P. C. Hodgell
Baen Publishing Enterprises
P.O. Box 1403
Riverdale, NY 10471
www.baen.com
Paper versions are available from
Generated by ABC Amber LIT Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abclit.html
Meisha Merlin Publishing Inc.
www.meishamerlin.com
Cover art by P. C. Hodgell
All interior art work done by, and copyrighted by P. C. Hodgell
ISBN: Hardcover 1-892065-72-X Soft cover 1-892065-73-8
First Baen Ebook, April 2007
Maps
Generated by ABC Amber LIT Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abclit.html
Gene ra te d by ABC Amber LIT Converte r, http://www.proce sstext.com/abclit.html
Gene ra te d by ABC Amber LIT Converte r, http://www.proce sste xt.com/abclit.html
Chapter I: An Unfortunate
Arrival
1st of Summer
I
Generated by ABC Amber LIT Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abclit.html
The sun's descending rim touched the white peaks of the Snowthorns, kindling veins of fire down their
shadowy slopes where traces of weirding lingered. Luminous mist, smoking out of high fissures, dimmed
the setting sun. A premonitory chill of dusk rolled down toward the valley floor like the swift shadow of
an eclipse. Leaves quivered as it passed and then were still. Birds stopped in mid-note. A moment of
profound stillness fell over the Riverland, as if the wild valley had drawn in its breath.
Then, from up where the fringed darkness of the ironwoods met the stark heights, there came a long,
wailing cry, starting high, sinking to a groan that shook snow from bough and withered the late wild
flowers of spring in the upland meadows. Thus the Dark Judge greeted night after the first fair day of
summer:
All things end, light, hope, and life.Come to judgment.Come!
On the New Road far below, a post horse clattered to a sudden stop while his rider dropped the reins
and stuffed the hood of her forage jacket into her ears. It was said that anyone who heard the bleak cry
of the blind Arrin-ken had no choice but to answer it. She had heard . . . but so had the rest of the valley.
It probably wasn't a summons to her at all, the cadet named Rue told herself nervously. Surely, she had
done nothing that required judgment, even at Restormir, even to Lord Caineron.
Just following orders, sir.
Sweat darkened her mount's flanks and he resentfully mouthed a lathered bit. They had come nearly
thirty miles that day from the Scrollsmen's College at Mount Alban, a standard post run between keeps,
but not so easy over a broken roadway strewn with fallen trees. They were near home now and the
horse knew it, but still he hesitated, head high, ears flickering.
The earth grumbled fretfully and pebbles jittered underfoot. Rue snatched up the reins to keep her mount
from bolting. The damn beast ought to know by now that he couldn't outrun an aftershock. Three days
ago, a massive weirdingstrom had loosened the sinews of the earth from Kithorn to the Cataracts. The
Riverland had been shaken by tremors ever since but, surely, they must end soon.
"Damn River Snake," she muttered, and spat into the water—a Merikit act of propitiation that the
Kendar of her distant keep had adopted.
The hill tribes believed that all quakes were caused by vast Chaos Serpents beneath the earth who must
occasionally either be fought or fed to be kept quiet. Rue found nothing strange in such an idea but had
the sense—usually—not to say as much to her fellow cadets.
Memory made her wriggle in the saddle: "Stick to facts, shortie, not singers' fancies."
Generated by ABC Amber LIT Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abclit.html
That damned, smug Vant. Riverland Kendar thought that they were so superior, that they knew so
much.
But only the night before on Summer's Eve, a Merikit princeling had descended, reluctantly, to placate
the great snake that lay beneath the bed of the Silver. Rue had seen the pair of feet, neatly sheared off at
the ankles, which he had left behind.
The horse jumped again as a silvery form tumbled down the bank and plopped onto the road almost
under his nose. With a twist and a great wriggling of whiskers, the catfish righted itself on stubby pectoral
fins and continued its river-ward trudge. If the fish were coming back down from the hills, thought Rue,
the worst must be over.
She kicked her tired mount into a stiff-legged trot. The sun sank. Dusk pooled in the reeds by the River
Silver, then over-flowed them in a rising tide of night. Shadows seemed to muffle the clop of hooves and
the jingle of tack.
They crested yet another rise, and there before them lay Tentir, the randon college.
Rue stared. All along the river's curve, the bank had fallen in, taking trees, bridge, and road with it.
Parallel to the river, fissures scored the lower end of the training fields, some only yards in length, others a
hundred feet or more, all half full of water reflecting the red sky like so many bloody slashes.
Farther back, much of the outer curtain wall had been thrown down. The fields within lay empty and
exposed.
The college itself stood well back on the stone toes of the Snowthorns. Old Tentir, the original fortress,
looked as solid as ever. It was a massive three-story high block of gray stone, slotted with dark windows
above the first floor, roofed with dark blue slate. As if as an afterthought, spindly watch towers poked up
from each corner. To the outer view at least, it was arguably the least imaginative structure in the
Riverland. Behind it, surrounding a hollow square, was New Tentir, the college proper. While the nine
major houses had once dwelt in similar barracks, changes in house size and importance over the centuries
had allowed some to seize space from their smaller neighbors. When they could no longer expand
outward, they had built upward. The result from this vantage point was an uneven roofline of diverse
heights and pitches, rather like a snaggle-toothed jaw. At least none of the "teeth" seemed to be missing,
although some roofs showed gaping holes. Rue sighed with relief: she had expected worse.
But what was that, rising from the inner courtyard? Smoke?
Rue's heart clenched. For a moment, she might have been looking down on Kithorn, the bones of its
slaughtered garrison lying unclaimed and dishonored in its smoldering ruins. None of her generation had
been alive then, eighty years ago, but no one in the vulnerable border keeps ever forgot that terrible story
or the cruel lesson it had taught.
Generated by ABC Amber LIT Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abclit.html
To the Riverland Kencyr, however, it was only an old song of events far away and long ago. After all,
no hill tribe would dare to try its strength againstthem .
No. Not smoke. Dust. What in Perimal's name. . .?
The post horse stomped and jerked at the reins, impatient. Why were they standing here? Why indeed?
From behind came the click of hooves and a murmur of voices. The main party had almost caught up.
Rue gave her mount its head. It took off at a fast, bone-jarring trot toward stable and home.
II
Inside Old Tentir, shafts of sunset lanced down through the high western windows and through holes in
the roof. Dust motes danced in them like flecks of dying fire. The air seemed to quiver. A continuous
rumble echoed in the near-empty great hall, punctuated by the crack of a single word shouted over and
over, its sense lost in the general, muffled roar.
A Coman cadet stood at the foot of the hall, before one of the western doors beyond which lay the
barracks and training ward of New Tentir, the randon college. His attention was fixed on the purposeful
commotion outside and his hands gripped the latch, ready to jerk the door open. He didn't hear Rue
knock on the front door at the other end of the long hall, then pound.
The unlocked door opened a crack, grating on debris, and Rue warily peered in, one hand on the hilt of
the long knife sheathed at her belt. A quick glance told her that the hall was empty, or nearly so.
Frowning, she pushed back the hood of her forage jacket from straw-colored hair as rough-cut as a
badly thatched roof.
"Tentir, 'ware company!" she shouted down the hall. "Somebody, come take this nag!"
A moment later she had stumbled over the threshold, butted from behind by her horse. She caught him
as he tried to shove past, then led him into the hall, needing all her strength to hold him in check. In
response, he laid back his ears and arched his tail. Turds plopped, steaming, onto flagstones already
littered with broken slates from the roof, downed beams, and fallen birds' nests.
Rue glanced around as she tramped on legs stiff from riding down the long hall that bisected Old Tentir.
Disordered though it was, the wonder of it struck her anew. All her short life, she had dreamed of training
at the randon college and now here she was, a cadet candidate sworn to the Highlord himself.
Generated by ABC Amber LIT Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abclit.html
But for how long, whispered fear in the back of her mind,given the events of the past week . Rue set
her jaw. Here she was and here she would stay.Don't think of failure , she told herself.Don't think.
Look .
In the galleries of the second and third floors, rank on rank of silver collars seemed to float against the
darkening walls. Suspended from each shining ring were the plaques that recorded the career of its
owner—in what class graduated, what ranks and stations held, what honors won in which battles and in
which slain: white edged for the debacle in the White Hills when Ganth Gray Lord had been overthrown,
blue for the Cataracts early last winter when his son Torisen had stopped the Waster Horde, black for
the misery of Urakarn in the Southern Wastes, from which so few had returned, and on, and on.
Along the lower walls hung the banners of the nine major Kencyr houses whom most of the randon
served. Leaping flame, stooping hawk, and snarling wolf on the south wall: Brandan, Edirr, and Danior.
Gauntleted fist, two-edged sword, and devouring serpent on the north: Randir, Coman, and Caineron.
Over the two western doors that opened into New Tentir were the stricken tree and the full moon of the
Jaran and the Ardeth. Between them, in pride of place over the massive fireplace, hung the rathorn crest
of the Knorth, highlords of the Kencyrath for thirty millennia.
One tenth of that time had been spend here on Rathillien, the last in a series of threshold worlds held and
subsequently lost in the Three People's long, bitter retreat from Perimal Darkling down the Chain of
Creation.
The college at Tentir dated from the ceding of the Riverland forts to the Kencyrath nearly a thousand
years ago. Since that time, every cadet had added his or her stitch to the appropriate banner, building it
up even as its back decayed against the dank walls. Some, such as tiny Danior, showed patches of stone
wall between bare upper threads. Others, especially the Caineron, looked like ungainly, pendulous
growths.
Not unlike Caldane, Lord Caineron himself, thought Rue, grinning.
Her horse stopped and tossed back his head, nearly jerking her off her feet. A moment later, a faint
rumble came from under the earth and the hall shivered. More slates fell. Birds fled out the holes in the
roof. The horse backed, eyes rolling white, jerking the reins out of the cadet's hand. Before she could
recapture them, he had bolted across the hall and down the side ramp to the subterranean stables. The
frightened bugling of horses already in stall welcomed him.
Rue tramped up to the cadet by the door.
"Didn't you hear my hail?" she demanded, having to raise her voice over the rumpus. She also had to
look up, the other being a good head taller than she as most Kendar her age were. "D'you know that the
outer ward is unguarded and the hall door is unlocked? I thought for sure the hill tribes had broken in and
sacked the place. Whereis everyone?"
Generated by ABC Amber LIT Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abclit.html
The Coman cadet shot her a distracted look, and winced: the young lord of his house, looking to his
standard, had set the fashion of wearing a tiny, double-edged dagger as an earring, never mind that with
any incautious move it stabbed its wearer. "I heard you, but this is my post. No, the guard isn't set. We
aren't back to rights yet since the last big quake, nor yet since the one before that."
"Huh," said Rue.
As far as she could see, Tentir had gotten off easy. In contrast, sections of Mount Alban had been
displaced all the way to the Southern Wastes, then north to Kithorn, before finally snapping back to their
foundation. Parts were still missing. That morning, when Rue had left, the scrollsmen and women had
been searching with increasing urgency for the upper levels' privy.
The Coman flinched as something overhead shifted. Grit rattled down into his upturned face.
"A week we spent," he said rapidly, "sweating in the fire timber hall below, expecting every minute for
the whole keep to collapse on our heads. They said the old buildings were the safest and no one dared
go out for fear of being swept away by the weirding, but still . . . all the new cadet candidates jostled
together—Ardeth, Caineron, Knorth, the lot. . . No discipline. Fights. As for the Merikit, I wish they
would come! Tentir is a proper hornet's nest, just waiting for some fool with a stick."
"Haul, there!Haul !" roared a stentorian voice outside, over the general tumult.
The Coman threw open the door. Cadets thundered past, rank on rank, feet booming on the boardwalk.
They ran grimly in cadence to the now distinguishable shouts of the drill sergeants standing in the middle
of the training square:
"Run!Run !RUN !"
The Coman waited for a momentary break between squads, then darted out. Rue, craning out the door,
saw him reach a cadet who had tripped, fallen, and been trampled before his mates could scoop him up.
"Down!" shouted the commander of the on-coming squad.
Rescuer and victim fell flat. The ten-command hurdled over them two by two, a ripple of heads rising
and falling like water over a hidden rock, lucky that none of them tripped. Then they were past. The
Coman lurched to his feet, supporting the fallen cadet. They flattened themselves against the wall as the
next squad thundered by, then staggered back to the door. Rue reached out to pull them in. All three
collapsed in a heap on the hall's flagstones.
Generated by ABC Amber LIT Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abclit.html
摘要:

ToRideaRathornTableofContentsMapsChapterI:AnUnfortunateArrivalChapterII:WyrmHuntChapter3:Wine,Women,andWolversChapterIV:TestingChapterV:ALengthofRopeChapterVI:TheLordan'sCoatChapterVII:IntheBear'sDenChapterVIII:AForgottenNameChapterIX:SchoolDaysChapterX:BattlesOldandNewChapterXI:TheWhiteLadyChapterX...

展开>> 收起<<
P. C. Hodgell - Kencyrath 04 - To Ride a Rathorn.pdf

共419页,预览84页

还剩页未读, 继续阅读

声明:本站为文档C2C交易模式,即用户上传的文档直接被用户下载,本站只是中间服务平台,本站所有文档下载所得的收益归上传人(含作者)所有。玖贝云文库仅提供信息存储空间,仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对上载内容本身不做任何修改或编辑。若文档所含内容侵犯了您的版权或隐私,请立即通知玖贝云文库,我们立即给予删除!
分类:外语学习 价格:5.9玖币 属性:419 页 大小:3.55MB 格式:PDF 时间:2024-12-19

开通VIP享超值会员特权

  • 多端同步记录
  • 高速下载文档
  • 免费文档工具
  • 分享文档赚钱
  • 每日登录抽奖
  • 优质衍生服务
/ 419
客服
关注