The Steward and the Sorcerer by James Peart (books suggested by elon musk .TXT) ๐
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- Author: James Peart
Read book online ยซThe Steward and the Sorcerer by James Peart (books suggested by elon musk .TXT) ๐ยป. Author - James Peart
โThere is food enough for another day, water for two. However, there is a town near here- Carasan- where we can replenish our supplies. If the storm has passed by tomorrow morning we should reach it by mid-afternoon.โ
Thatโs more time wasted, Simon thought. However, he did not give voice to his objection. Instead he asked โWhat kind of place is it?โ
โItโs a trading town,โ the other said, โfilled for the most part with working people from Ara Fein, the region in which we are situated. They are friendly to outsiders and will do business with us, exchanging what we have for food and drink.โ
โI donโt mean to be dispiriting but what exactly do we have thatโs of any value to them?โ
โLeave that to me,โ was all the Druid said.
The company slept poorly that night, the Englishmen turning frequently, unable to find a comfortable position on the bed of sparse plants and clay-like earth that floored the shelter. Daaynan rested upright against a sheet of smooth rock, never quite asleep, one eye half lidded to keep watch against a potential intruder that might stumble into the cave. They got up early the next morning to discover that the storm had indeed abated some- the wind had died down to a strong gust and the rain was intermittent and not as heavy. They set out in the direction of Carasan, Daaynan leading a few paces ahead of the Englishmen. The land carried that sterile look it always captured in the effect of a storm. They passed vales and gorges that were completely flooded, selecting a route that detoured around impassable roadways littered with fallen trees and debris from wind-pitched dwellings. The countryside they passed through had a barren, almost witchy beauty that drew everything into sharper focus, the early morning sun highlighting in red the sprawl of land that rolled to the horizon framed by hill summits and crisp verdant treetops. Simon was relieved at first to be walking again- his muscles were tired and sore from sleeping on that hard surface and his bones ached. He was sure Christopher was feeling the same but he hadnโt responded to several attempts to engage him in conversation. His friend had withdrawn into himself, Simon noted, just like he had in Italy before all of this started. It had been drink which did for him back then, it couldnโt be that now... . Struck by a sudden terrible thought, he walked over to Christopher and clasped his hand on the otherโs shoulder. Christopher shrugged it off in irritation, continuing to walk, not bothering to glance around to see who had touched him. Simon gripped him once more, moving alongside him, leaning in close to smell the otherโs breath. Whiskey!
โWhere did you get it?โ he hissed at Christopher.
โLet me alone!โ
โDid you steal it from the castle?โ Simon pressed.
โWhat do you care,โ Christopher shrugged.
โYou fool! What if it was poisoned?โ
The other Englishman sniffed. โIf it were I would be dead by now. Besides, didnโt you hear the Druid? Iridis only poisoned the store of food. No liquids.โ
โIt was lucky for you that he did. If this journey werenโt already difficult, youโre making it damn near impossible. I canโt help Daaynan and take care of you as well.โ
โThen donโt. If it werenโt for your wanting to go on the Druidโs quest, weโd be home by now.โ
Simon looked at Christopher, saw the conviction on the otherโs face, and knew he was being serious. He glanced over at Daaynan who was walking into the wind a dozen paces ahead of the young men. โFor your information, I did not want to go with him but he represents our best chance of getting back, despite what you may think. The sticks are no good to us if all they can do is bring us back to the temple. You know this. We could have spent the rest of our lives searching for the right portal, or beam of light or whatever Christing thing might lead us back to the world.โ
โWe used the sticks to find the Brightsphere,โ his friend countered, his voice loaded with sense (and a lucidity possessed only by drunks, Simon thought, disliking himself for doing so), โwhat makes you think we couldnโt have done the same with our portal?โ
He went silent. He had no immediate answer for this aside from the fact that he thought, no, he felt in his gut that it would not have worked. โI think, perhaps,โ he said finally, โthe Drey torch sticks only work on living things.โ
โThe Brightsphere is an elemental,โ Christopher stated primly, โmade up of the elements of life, not life itself, and as for the beams, they were alive with light and more powerful than any form of life you or I know of.โ
โSo,โ Simon mused, โyou would destroy my argument in the first case and build a case for it in the second. Thatโs what I get for talking to a Cambridge philosophy major.โ
They stared hard at each other, their eyes narrowed to slits, each one poised, ready to counter what the other said next. The next moment they were laughing. โGive me some of that whiskey,โ Simon asked. The other hesitated a fraction, as if weighing some swift internal decision, then produced a small bottle from inside his
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