Читаем Out of the Darkness полностью

“Aye.” Ilmarinen spoke almost absently. He looked from her to Fernao and back again. Glowering up at the Jelgavan, he said, “You’d better take good care of her.”

“I can take care of myself, Master Ilmarinen,” Pekka said sharply.

Ilmarinen waved that aside, as being of no account. He waited for Fernao to speak. “I’m doing my best,” Fernao said.

“You’ll have to do better than that,” Ilmarinen said with a dismissive snort. He waved a forefinger under Fernao’s nose. “If you make her unhappy, I’ll tear your arm off and beat you to death with it, do you understand me? I’m not kidding.”

“Master Ilmarinen-” Pekka felt herself flush.

“I didn’t think you were, Master,” Fernao said seriously, almost as if he were speaking to Pekka’s father.

But Ilmarinen wasn’t feeling fatherly: old, perhaps, but not fatherly. “By the powers above, if I were twenty years younger-ten years younger, even-I’d give you a run for your money, you overgrown galoot, see if I wouldn’t.”

“Master Ilmarinen!” Pekka hadn’t thought her cheeks could get any hotter. Now she discovered she’d been wrong.

She wondered if Fernao would laugh in Ilmarinen’s face. That wouldn’t have been a good idea. To her relief, Fernao saw as much for himself. Nodding soberly, he said, “I believe you.” Pekka believed him, too. Master Siuntio would have tempted her more. Ilmarinen? She just didn’t know about Ilmarinen, and she never had. In a land of steady, reliable people, he was hair-raisingly erratic. About three days out of four, she found that a bad bargain. The fourth, it seemed oddly attractive.

“You’d better believe me, you redheaded-” Ilmarinen began.

Before he could get any further, though, he found himself upstaged. Pekka wondered if that had ever happened before; Ilmarinen usually did the upstaging. But now Linna the serving woman whooped, “Illy! Sweetie!” and threw herself into the theoretical sorcerer’s arms.

“Illy?” Pekka echoed, deliciously dazed. She couldn’t imagine anyone calling Ilmarinen that. When she thought about it, she also had trouble imagining anyone calling him sweetie.

As Linna kissed Ilmarinen-and as he responded with an enthusiasm that said he wasn’t so very old after all-Fernao said, “Obviously, Master, you have a prior commitment here.”

When Ilmarinen wasn’t otherwise distracted, he said, “A man should be able to keep track of more than one bit of business at the same time.”

Bit of business, eh? Pekka thought, amused and indignant at the same time. He sounded almost like an Algarvian. But then her amusement evaporated. While Leino lived, she’d had to keep track of more than one bit of business at the same time herself. How would that have turned out in the end? She shook her head. She would never know now.

Ilmarinen kissed Linna again, patted her, gave her a silver bracelet, and told her, “I’ll see you in a little while, all right? I’ve got some business to talk with these people.” She nodded and went off. Ilmarinen hadn’t been talking business before, but Pekka didn’t contradict him.

As Ilmarinen pulled up a chair, another serving woman-the one who’d been taking care of the table-came up and asked him what he wanted. He ordered salmon and ale. She went back to the kitchen. Pekka asked, “What brings you back here, Master? You went off to see what the war was like.”

“So I did, but now the war in the east is over,” Ilmarinen answered. “Pity anything in Algarve is still standing, but it can’t be helped. Nothing that happened to those bastards was half what they deserved. But what am I doing here? You’re going to drop a rock on the Gongs sometime soon, aren’t you?”

“How do you know that?” Pekka demanded. “Who told you?” That whole sorcerous project was supposed to be as closely held a secret as Kuusamo had.

Ilmarinen only laughed. “I don’t need people to tell me things, sweetheart. I can figure them out for myself. I know what you were up to here, and I can see where it was going. I want to be here when it arrives. I want to help it arrive, as a matter of fact.”

“The magecraft has come a long way since you left us,” Fernao said. “How quickly can you prepare?”

“I’ve been doing some thinking on my own.” Ilmarinen took a few bedraggled leaves of paper from his beltpouch and spread them on the table. “My guess is, you’re headed in this direction.”

Pekka leaned forward to study the calculations. After a minute or so, she looked up at Ilmarinen, awe on her face. “You’re not just even with us,” she said quietly. “I think you’re ahead of us.” Slowly, Fernao nodded.

With a shrug, Ilmarinen said, “It was something to keep me busy in my spare time. I didn’t have much, or I’d’ve done more.”

Перейти на страницу:

Все книги серии Darkness

Похожие книги

Вечный капитан
Вечный капитан

ВЕЧНЫЙ КАПИТАН — цикл романов с одним героем, нашим современником, капитаном дальнего плавания, посвященный истории человечества через призму истории морского флота. Разные эпохи и разные страны глазами человека, который бывал в тех местах в двадцатом и двадцать первом веках нашей эры. Мало фантастики и фэнтези, много истории.                                                                                    Содержание: 1. Херсон Византийский 2. Морской лорд. Том 1 3. Морской лорд. Том 2 4. Морской лорд 3. Граф Сантаренский 5. Князь Путивльский. Том 1 6. Князь Путивльский. Том 2 7. Каталонская компания 8. Бриганты 9. Бриганты-2. Сенешаль Ла-Рошели 10. Морской волк 11. Морские гезы 12. Капер 13. Казачий адмирал 14. Флибустьер 15. Корсар 16. Под британским флагом 17. Рейдер 18. Шумерский лугаль 19. Народы моря 20. Скиф-Эллин                                                                     

Александр Васильевич Чернобровкин

Фантастика / Приключения / Морские приключения / Альтернативная история / Боевая фантастика