Greg Keyes - The Python King's Treasure

VIP免费
2024-12-23 0 0 36.95KB 14 页 5.9玖币
侵权投诉
J Gregory Keyes - The Python King's Treasure
Fool Wolf only had a few days left to live when he saw the most beautiful
woman he had ever laid eyes upon.
Her hair was spun black glass, spilling down the sides of a face incised
from amber, flowing over shoulders and down breasts of the same red-gold hue.
He was too far away to see what color her eyes were, but he could feel her
gaze on him. She stood on the edge of a cliff, half a bow-shot above him,
looking down at the jade sea and the cinnamon sun it was swallowing in the
west.
And at him, on the desolate strand, fifteen days along the way to
starvation.
He stood rooted, stunned, watching her naked lithe half-shadow in the
melting sunlight.
<<She is pretty,>> the goddess imprisoned in him sighed, wistfully. <<She
looks good enough to eat.>>
Fool Wolf's stomach growled in agreement.
A month earlier, in the Land of Nine Princes, in the many-tiered city of
Fanva, Fool Wolf had been considerably better fed. He had arrived in Fanva
with a single carnelian and two copper coins, fleeing from the blood-guttered
city of Rumq Qaj. In the incense-choked gambling temples of Fanva, he had
increased that jewel and those two coins into what was for him a small
fortune. He took a room in a good inn, draped himself in silk, and feasted on
roast pork, pheasant, peacock, and eel. He ate sweet fruits from the
islands-Lorn, whitemelon, fernpears, bananas. He drank wines he could not name
but which pleased him a great deal, and he bedded a series of women of the
same sort.
His fortunes changed, of course. He was caught cheating by one of the
gambling-house priests. As gambling was a religious matter in Fanva, and
cheating sacrilege, he was sentenced to death.
While bets were being placed on which form of death would be chosen and how
long he would survive, Fool Wolf escaped his would-be-executioners and fled
into the Gibbering Quarter, where foreign diplomats and madmen lived. He
eluded his pursuit through the open window of a third-story apartment, waiting
breathlessly for distance to hush their cries and footsteps, alert for any
movement by the occupants of his refuge.
None came, and after five hundred heartbeats, he began to explore. It was a
large place, well furnished with exotic rugs, censers of gold and
cream-colored ivory, screens of lacquered wood and stippled velum. It smelled
strange, like burnt sugar candy and wet dog.
And books, everywhere. Crammed into shelves, littered on the rugs and
polished wooden floors, piled on low sitting-desks.
Behind one of those desks sat a dead man. He hadn't been dead long-drool was
still leaking from his mouth. His flesh was still warm.
Fool Wolf could see no obvious reason why the man died, unless it was the
small, empty cordial glass on the table before him. Suicide by poison, or just
a last drink before dying from some natural cause? Probably the first-aside
from being dead, the corpse did not look unhealthy. In fact, he looked
something like an older Fool Wolf-tall and lean, narrow of face with sharp,
high cheekbones, long black hair plaited into a queue.
That meant the dead man's clothes would probably fit Fool Wolf. He began
rummaging about the apartment and shortly found a closet full of green robes.
He took one and found it fit rather well, so he cast about for further items
of disguise. A turban, of course, and something with which to make a false
beard, perhaps.
He congratulated himself on his luck. It looked as if no one else lived
here-there were no woman's clothes, no servants' quarters. The dead man seemed
to have lived alone. He could keep his head down here until the pursuit
cooled.
He had just settled onto a comfortable cushion with a plate of olives when
the door splintered inward. Fool Wolf froze, an olive halfway to his mouth.
Standing in the doorframe was a rather large man in a black fighting sarong
and loose, blood-red shirt. His arms, visible from the elbow, were covered in
elaborate tattoos. On his forehead was a single tattoo, the glyph of a tiger
chasing its own tail. A long, curved sword gleamed in his sash.
The black-clad man walked into the room, followed by two hulking eunuchs
that made him look like a dwarf, and ten guardsmen behind them. All had the
tiger tattoo.
"Lohar Pang?" The man in black said. It sounded something like a question.
Fool Wolf pursed his lips. The corpse was in the next room. If they went in
there ...
"Of course," he replied. "Lohar Pang, at your service."
"Wonderful. You will come with us."
"I'm busy at the moment," Fool Wolf replied, bowing.
"Ah. My apologies," the man in black said. "I misspoke. You will come with
us, or you will die."
"Oh," Fool Wolf said, "this is a day for misstatement, for I'm not busy at
all. Shall we go?"
Fool Wolf had heard of Prince Fa-few in Fanva had not. He wasn't one of the
nine princes, but he was a merchant of considerable power and reportedly dark
tastes. He looked about sixty, with a trim beard and sooty eyes. He wore a
robe so deeply red it was almost black, bordered with twining serpents and
eels picked out in garnet. His throne was of heavy dun wood and would have
been rather plain if not for the human skulls along the armrests and high
back. Into each skull twenty or so nails had been driven. Fool Wolf suspected
that this had been done when the heads were still breathing and blinking and
screaming.
Prince Fa frowned down at Fool Wolf, then examined his long, gold-leafed
nails. "This should be a simple task, for one of your repute," the prince
said, flashing teeth like bits of polished abalone. "You have familiarized
yourself with the- problem-and with the gods in question? You examined the
objects I sent you?"
"Absolutely," Fool Wolf said, wondering what in the name of the Horse Mother
prince Fa was talking about.
"And you still say you can do it?"
"Of course. I have no doubts."
"Good. Then you will live. You will depart immediately." He leaned forward,
and his shadowed eyes caught the flicker of a candle flame, a red fish in deep
water. "If I have to take a hand in this myself, I will be most displeased,"
Fa murmured. "I detest the sea. You understand the consequences if I am forced
to do something I hate?"
"Of course, Prince Fa," Fool Wolf said, wondering what the consequences
were, imagining they were unpleasant.
"Good. One of my yachts is prepared to leave."
It occurred to Fool Wolf that a trip by boat would at least get him far from
the city. After that-well, there would surely be opportunities.
A week later, he was still watching for the first of those hypothetical
opportunities. More specifically, he was gazing at the horizon, wondering how
big the ocean could be.
Too big to swim, he kept coming back to. So even though he was unwatched by
the crew-somewhat avoided, even-there was no place to escape to.
Kreth-the black-saronged warrior from the apartment- joined him at the rail.
"Not much farther," Kreth said, spitting onto the sky-dressed sea, watching
the little foam island thus created break up in the ship's wake. "Can you
really do it?"
"I've never failed before," Fool Wolf assured him.
"Obviously. But you've never been to Ranga Lehau before, either," Kreth
grunted. "Still, the prince seems pretty sure of you. He read one of your
treatises or somesuch. How will you do it?"
"How do you imagine I will do it?" Fool Wolf asked.
"You don't have to be mysterious," Kreth replied, a bit sulkily. "If you
can't tell me, just say so."
"I can't tell you, but you can guess, and I can nod yes or no."
"Never mind then. I'm not good at such games, and I shall see shortly, yes?"
He reached over and gave Fool Wolf a slap on the back that clacked his teeth
together. "But you can do it?"
"Of course." Fool Wolf glanced over at Kreth. "What's your part in all of
this? Aside from making sure I do my part?"
"I'm the hunter," Kreth replied. "I will find the Python King's treasure,
never fear. He cannot hide it from me."
"I don't doubt that for a moment," Fool Wolf replied.
That's all Fool Wolf got from Kreth, and the hunter was too smart to push
any further. Fool Wolf didn't want to ask a question that raised even minor
suspicion-he didn't know what Lohar Pang was supposed to know. As long as he
was on this boat, with nothing but sea around, he might as well be in Prince
Fa's palace.
Thus it was, two days later, when Kreth came to Fool Wolf's cabin and said,
"It is time," he still didn't have a fart's whisper of what it was time for.
Up on deck, Kreth pointed to the first land Fool Wolf had seen since the
coastline of Fanva faded in the west. It was an island, looking something like
a giant black horse tooth sticking up out of the water, with its sheer black
cliffs and flat top.
"That is Ranga Lehau," Kreth commented. "According to our charts, we cross
the tapu when we pass those rocks."
Fool Wolf saw the rocks he meant, two pillars of stone jutting up from the
water, perhaps three ship's lengths apart. They looked manmade. At the rate
the boat was moving, they would reach them soon.
As Fool Wolf studied the rocks and the island, Kreth shuffled impatiently.
"Shouldn't you get started?" He asked. He sounded nervous.
"Don't tell me my business," Fool Wolf snapped. Then, a bit more
mysteriously, "besides, I have started."
"Oh. I thought there would be more-chanting, or something."
"In a moment," Fool Wolf said. "If you will kindly darken your mouth."
The rocks were closer. "Chugaachik!" Fool Wolf chanted. "Do you have any
idea what these fools want of me?" He sang in his own tongue, Mang, not a
language anyone else on the ship was likely to know.
<<I don't know,>> the goddess answered, in that silent place between his
breaths. <<Why not let me kill them all? That would solve the problem.>>
"Because I don't think we can kill them all, even with your power," he sang.
That was a half-truth. He hated Chugaachik, who had killed most everyone he
had ever loved and made him a rootless wanderer, far from his native land. She
just might be able to kill everyone on the ship, but letting her have her way,
even to save his life, was not something he was willing to do unless he knew
he had no choice.
Besides, it was his body she used, his body that paid for her excesses.
They were almost to the pillars.
<<But,>> Chugaachik offered reluctantly, <<there is a large and powerful god
crouching there, beneath the water.>>
The sea raised up in a mound, and the nose of the boat tilted with it. Fool
Wolf ran and jumped as far as he could toward the island. When he hit the
water, he began stroking furiously, ignoring the brief screams and rending of
wood behind him.
Fifteen days later none of the bodies or supplies from the ship had washed
ashore anywhere. He knew - he had made a compete circuit of the island. In the
four days it had taken, Fool Wolf had seen no sign of human life and no way to
摘要:

JGregoryKeyes-ThePythonKing'sTreasureFoolWolfonlyhadafewdayslefttolivewhenhesawthemostbeautifulwomanhehadeverlaideyesupon.Herhairwasspunblackglass,spillingdownthesidesofafaceincisedfromamber,flowingovershouldersanddownbreastsofthesamered-goldhue.Hewastoofarawaytoseewhatcolorhereyeswere,buthecouldfee...

展开>> 收起<<
Greg Keyes - The Python King's Treasure.pdf

共14页,预览3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:14 页 大小:36.95KB 格式:PDF 时间:2024-12-23

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
/ 14
客服
关注