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monster said with a smile that showed him a row of jagged fangs, some of which
outstripped his sword for length. "And-unfortunately for the sometimes-famous
and often beloved-of-the-gods man called Durnan-I've chosen you."
Strange sights in plenty are seen in Skullport, and folk who survive there
long have learned not to stare overmuch, nor linger long in one place, lest
they be marked for dealing with later. So it was that no lizard-man or
scurrying halfling moved more than a wary eyeball as a little line of
drifting, dancing sparks of radiance came out of the darkness, heading down a
certain alley that was narrow and noisome even for the Source of Slaves. A
sorceress out ahunting from the great city above, perhaps, or a fetch sent by
a noble's pet wizard ... or a brood of will o' wisp younglings? It was better
not to speculate, but merely to observe without being seen to look, and mark
where the lights went.
More than a few of those watchful eyes widened as they recognized the
shuffling, wheezing bulk that trudged along in the lights' wake, worn leather
boots flopping. A Lord of Waterdeep, now . . .
Many folk skulking the streets of Skullport would fain be seeing the sun over
Waterdeep above, were it not for the lords' decrees. Mirt specifically had
made rather more than a hand-count of personal foes down the years, too. Some
of them had offered much coin for his delivery to their feet, alive and
more or less whole, or failing that, just his head, goggling on a platter.
So it was that the distinctive rolling walk and bristling mustache
was noticed by many in the circumspect crowd, and excited whispers and
hurryings followed those recognitions. It was not long before a dagger
spun out of the night, thrown hard and unerringly, coming fast at the old
Harper's left eyeball. Mirt ignored it, keeping his gaze instead on the stones
underfoot, bodies that might move to block his path, and the guiding trail
of motes.
The dagger struck his invisible shields and spun away with the faintest of
singing sounds, heading back at the hand that had flung it. So, too, did a
stone that leapt out of the darkness at the back of Mirt's head- and another,
the band of slayers-for-hire hight Hoelorton's Hands were known to be deft
hands with a sling.
Or a cudgel. Mirt heard the faint scraping sound of a rushing boot on stone,
and spun around like a wary barrel, his belt dagger gleaming in one fat fist.
Two rogues were almost upon him, running fast. One swung his stout club in a
deadly arc as he came.
The fat moneylender's hairy fingers plucked at the battered wood as it
whistled past, and pulled.
Overbalanced, the startled man had barely time for an apprehensive grunt as
the pommel of Mirt's dagger came up under his chin. The blow sent him swiftly
into the arms of the ladies who whisper softly to warriors in slumber:
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he crashed over like a felled tree, spitting teeth from his shattered jaw,
eyes already dark.
The second man had to dance around the falling body, and met Mirt's roundhouse
left while still trying to raise his cudgel. Mirt let his knuckles take the
man's head into the nearest wall, hard, and felt something break under them
before he spun away to follow the drifting lights again, wheezing
along patiently as if nothing had befallen. The two slumped forms in the alley
did not rise to follow.
Another dagger flashed out of the darkness, and a bucketful of stones
plummetted from the air as
Mirt trudged under one of the many catwalks that crisscrossed the emptiness
above most streets and passages of Skullport. His shields sent both offerings
back whence they'd come, journeys marked by strangled, gurgling cries.
Mirt sighed in reply-Faerun certainly seemed to breed no pressing shortage of
fools these days-and hunched his shoulders to pass under a particularly low
catwalk.
A garotte slipped down and around his throat as he emerged into the torchlight
beyond-but the fat old lord paid it no apparent heed, striding deliberately
on. Only the corded muscles rising into view on his thick neck betrayed the
effort it took to walk on without slowing, as the waxed cord skittered over
the hard, smooth steel of the gorget that covered his grizzled throat.
It took less than a breath before the wheezing merchant reached the full
stretch of the deadly cord and the skilled arms that wielded it. With a
startled oath, their leather-clad owner pitched forward out of the darkness
above, hauled down into the street like a grain-sack from a loft. A casual
swing of one thick arm brought a belt dagger solidly into the masked man's
temple, and the garotte fell to the cobbles alongside its limp and
crumpled owner. Mirt did not even bother to look down, this was Skullport,
after all. Moreover, business awaited him ahead . . . and if he knew Durnan,
'twould be hasty business.
Three masked figures stepped out of a side alley, down the passage ahead of
him, but Mirt showed no sign of slowing or drawing the stout sword at his
belt. He forged on steadily into waiting death, and after a tense moment one
of the three stepped back and waved at his fellows to do likewise.
"Your pardon, Mirt," he growled. "You're looking so well, I almost didn't know
you."
"Prettily said, Ilbarth," Mirt grunted, turning suddenly to glare at one of
the others, who'd sidled just a step too close to the fat old man's back. "So
ye can live, all of ye."
"Generous, White-Whiskers," that man said softly, "when it's three to one."
"I'm known for my open-handed generosity," Mirt said, baring his teeth in a
grin without slowing, "so
I'll let ye live a second time, Aldon. Take care ye don't use up all thy luck
and my patience, now."
Aldon took one uncertain step in pursuit of the wheezing man. "How'd you know
my name?"
"He knows everyone in Skullport," Ilbarth said with a nervous grin. "Isn't
that right, Mirt? I'll bet cold coin you've lived all your life down here."
"Not yet," Mirt grunted, turning to fix him with one cold and level gray-blue
eye. "Not quite yet."
He turned away from them and went on down the alley without looking back, but
the three men did not follow. They stood watching him for a time, and
soon had cause to be very glad they'd not proceeded with more violent
activities.
The old moneylender strode past a tentacle that slid down from an upper window
to pluck aloft a man who'd summoned it, stepped around an ore sprawled on its [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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