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.An icy cloud hissed past Beldar.He shrank down as most of the room vanished under a frigid coating of glittering ice.Flattened against the wall, cushion in one hand and sword in the other, Beldar waited as silently as he could manage.He tried to breathe gently, slowly.so quietly."It'll take too long, Father," Mrelder said suddenly, from just outside the door."If I'm still feeling around for the lordling's mind when some nobles get up here with their swords and their anger—with you like that."Cautiously the sorcerer peered into the room, and Beldar swung the cushion as hard and fast as he could.It caught Mrelder in the face, trailing feathers, and burst into flames as the sorcerer got it with some lightning-swift cantrip or other, but by then Beldar had swung his blade, slicing through fire and feathers into flesh.Mrelder sobbed, and Beldar's blade came back wet with bright blood.He hacked again, hard, but this time his seeking steel bit only air, and he heard the moaning sorcerer stumbling away."Couldn't you even—" Golskyn began angrily, and Mrelder hissed something furious and pain-wracked.then two pairs of stumbling footfalls receded hastily down the gallery.Beldar Roaringhorn ran to the window with bloody sword in hand, his mind free of shouting voices, and glared at the stone legs.Step away, he thought angrily.Step AWAY.And with the sound of ponderous thunder, the wall of stone outside the window moved.Beldar thought hard, seeking to thrust himself into that heaviness, the great stone weight he could now dimly perceive in his mind.As a great foot came down and Beldar's room rocked, plaster falling in tumbling plumes, he became aware of movement.He was moving, or rather, the statue was moving and he was a part of it.Buildings all around him, at knee and thigh level, bright lights in the night.He was the Walking Statue.Great power, slow but unstoppable, surging cold and dark and heavy, surging.Beldar beheld a garden wall across the shattered street from the Purple Silks.Strike that down!A fist swung, and stones melted before it, spraying down across the street to shatter against the festhall walls.Blocks crumbled and fell, opening rents that gave Beldar a glimpse of the sagging feasting hall galleries inside as stone fell into dust and rubble, and tumbled into the festhall.From his great height, Beldar looked down.There were holes in the street, great pits of collapsed cobbles, and behind him, pits that laid bare the sewer-tunnels where frightened men and women were scurrying, some looking up at him in pale-faced horror as they ran.Around that terrified human flood, smaller folk were at work: dwarves, hammering and hefting in expert haste to shore up the walls and crumbling ceilings of the damaged tunnels.Beldar plucked up a great handful of stones from the rubble he'd caused, turned with infinite care, bent, and tilted his great hand into a chute, lowering it to just beside a dwarf.That bearded stalwart squinted up at him for a moment—it must have been like gazing up at a mountain—and then leaped onto the great hand and tugged at the nearest stone, passing it down to others below.Beldar kept the Statue motionless as the dwarf worked, thrusting and tugging.A great iron bar was tossed up, and a second dwarf joined the first, huffing and shoving, tipping the stones one by one to the swarming dwarves below.Gods above, he was rebuilding Waterdeep! Beldar grinned into the great cold darkness that engulfed.and was still doing so (there was something about the Statues that made one's thoughts slow and heavy) when his hand was emptied of the last stone.One dwarf and the bar promptly disappeared over the edge of his finger.The last dwarf—the one who'd first been brave enough to leap onto his hand—looked up and gave Beldar a laconic nod of thanks ere leaping down out of sight.Beldar made the Statue straighten slowly and carefully and then was struck by the whim to look back at himself in the window and see what wayward sons of Roaringhorn look like.That was a mistake, because something roared and flashed in Beldar's head.and he found himself sprawled over the padded sideboard, sword in hand, back in the shattered room full of cushions and mirrors.Back in the festhall, where Mrelder and Golskyn of the Amalgamation were lurking.Beldar found his small crimson vial and unstoppered it.He was free for the moment, but who knew when the voice might return? Of one thing he was certain: they must not regain control of the Statues.With one hand he held his eyelids firmly open—and with the other he emptied the vial into his beholder-eye.White fire exploded in his head.Agony like he'd never known.the potion spilled down his face in corrosive tears, searing bubbling furrows.Darkness swept in, the white light dwindling.somehow Beldar pushed away oblivion and took a step.The room tilted and swayed.He took another cautious step.Glass crunched underfoot as he felt his way to the doorway.Tears were glimmering in his remaining eye, but he could— just—see.There was no waiting sorcerer or priest, just a deserted, sagging gallery.A deep-voiced shout called for more stone.Beldar turned back to the window, wistfully eyeing the Statue [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]

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