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ordinary enough if anything, much too ordinary. My fault is this: I am easily
distracted by quirks and fancies. As you know, I hear inaudible music.
Sometimes when I look across the landscape, I glimpse a flicker of motion;
when I look in earnest it moves just past the edge of vision. If you were like
me, your quest might be delayed or lost and so your question is answered."
Aillas stirred the fire. "I sometimes have sensations whims, fancies, whatever
you call them of the same kind. I don't give them much thought. They are not
so insistent as to cause me concern."
Scharis laughed humorlessly. "Sometimes I think I am mad. Sometimes I am
afraid. There are beauties too large to be borne, unless one is eternal." He
stared into the fire and gave a sudden nod. "Yes, that is the message of the
music."
Aillas spoke uncomfortably. "Scharis, my dear fellow, I think you are having
hallucinations. You are over-imaginative; it is as simple as that!"
"How could I imagine so grandly? I heard it, you did not. There are three
possibilities. Either my mind is playing me tricks, as you suggest; or,
secondly, my perceptions are more acute than yours; or, thirdly and this is
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the frightening thought the music is meant for me alone."
Aillas made a skeptical sound. "Truly, you would do best to put these strange
sounds from your mind. If men were intended to probe such mysteries, or if
such mysteries actually exist, surely we would know more about them."
"Possibly so."
"Tell me when next these perceptions come on you."
"If you wish."
Dawn came slowly, from gray through pearl to peach. By the time the sun had
appeared the seven were on their way, through a pleasant if deserted
landscape. At noon they came to a river which Aillas thought must be the Siss
on its way to join the Gloden, and the rest of the day they followed the
riverbank south. Halfway through the afternoon heavy clouds drifted across the
sky. A damp cold wind began to blow, carrying the sound of distant thunder.
Close on sunset the road arrived at a stone bridge of five arches and a
crossroads, where the East-West Road, emerging from Forest Tantrevalles,
crossed the Trompada and continued through a cleft in the mountains to end at
Oa'ldes in South Ulfland. Beside the crossroads, with the rain starting to
fall in earnest, the seven came upon an inn, the Star and Unicorn. They took
their horses to the stable and entered the inn, to find a cheerful fire
burning in a massive fireplace. Behind a counter stood a tall thin man, bald
of pate with a long black beard overhanging his chest, a long nose overhanging
his beard, and a pair of wide black eyes half-overhung by eyelids. Beside the
fire three men crouched like conspirators over their beer, the brims of
low-crowned black hats shading their faces. At another table a man with a thin
high-bridged nose and a fine auburn mustache, wearing handsome garments of
dark blue and umber, sat alone.
Aillas spoke to the innkeeper. "We will want lodging for the night and the
best you can provide in the way of supper. Also, if you please, send someone
to care for our horses."
The innkeeper bowed politely, but without warmth. "We shall do our best to
fulfill your desires."
The seven went to sit before the fire and the innkeeper brought wine. The
three men hunching over their table inspected them covertly and muttered among
themselves. The gentleman in dark blue and umber, after a single glance,
returned to his private reflections. The seven, relaxing by the fire, drank
wine with easy throats. Presently Yane called the service girl to his side.
"Now, poppet, how many pitchers of wine have you served us?"
"Three, sir."
"Correct! Now each time you bring a pitcher to the table you must come to me
and pronounce its number. Is that clear?"
"Yes, sir."
The landlord strode on jackstraw legs across the room. "What is the trouble,
sir?"
"No trouble whatever. The girl tallies the wine as we drink it, and there can
be no mistakes in the score."
"Bah! You must not addle the creature's mind with such calculations! I keep
score yonder!"
"And I do the same here, and the girl keeps a running balance between us."
The landlord threw his arms in the air and stalked off to his kitchen, from
which he presently served the supper. The two service girls, standing somber
and watchful in the shadows, came forward deftly to refill goblets and bring
fresh pitchers, each time chanting its number to Yane, while the landlord,
again leaning sourly behind his counter, kept a parallel score and wondered if
he dared water the wine.
Aillas, who drank as much as any, leaned back in his chair and contemplated [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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