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第33部分

ggk.asongforarbonne-第33部分

小说: ggk.asongforarbonne 字数: 每页4000字

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 Bertran stood quietly as the boatmen manoeuvred the next small craft into position。 Valery and the bearded coran from Gorhaut had moved down beside him; Lisseut saw。 A murmur of sound; gathering and swelling as it went; began to race along the banks of the river carrying the news of what was about to happen。
  Lisseut looked upwards; and in that same moment most of the others on the pier did the same。 A bank of clouds; moving swiftly eastward with the breeze; had cut across the face of white Vidonne and would soon obscure the blue light of Riannon as well。
  〃Let me go first;〃 said Valery of Talair; stepping past the duke in the shadows。 〃Wait for the moons。 No one has challenged me so it doesn't matter if I miss。〃 He quickly unbuckled his sword and handed it to one of the boatmen。 He looked over his shoulder and Lisseut was close enough to hear him say; 〃Follow my line; Blaise。 If you overshoot the third raft do everything you can to slow down before you reach the fourth…unless you're partial to the taste of river water。〃
  The Arimondan beside Urté laughed at that。 It was not a pleasant sound; Lisseut thought; looking over quickly。 The man frightened her。 She turned away; back to the river; hoping the Arimondan hadn't noticed her staring at him。
  Valery was in the boat with the flat paddle to hand。 He grinned up at Bertran。 〃If I get wet it's your fault。〃
  〃Of course;〃 his cousin said。 〃It always is。〃
  Then the boat was gone; out into the high; swift current of the river。 A moment later; straining to see amid the shadows; Lisseut was made to understand something about the skills of men: Jourdain the troubadour was an athlete; and gifted; in the prime of his youth; but Valery of Talair was a professional coran; trained and hardened; and very experienced。
  He snapped up the first wreath effortlessly; the boat turning back the other way almost before the priestess's torch had been raised and the responding shout had gone up along the bank。 The second ring; which had initiated Jourdain's precipitate descent towards a watery immersion; was negotiated almost as easily and Valery; unlike the troubadour; kept both his balance and his control of the boat; paddling strenuously back across the river with a second triumphant torch lofted behind him and screams of wild approval on each bank。
  〃They think he's the duke;〃 little Alain said suddenly; and Lisseut realized that it was true。 The word that En Bertran was to run the river had gone racing down the banks before the clouds had e and Valery had taken his place。 These screams and cries were those the people of Tavernel reserved for their favourites…and the troubadour duke of Talair had been one of those for most of his life。
  Meanwhile; Valery; approaching the third of the moored rafts; stood up smoothly in his bobbing craft…making a perilous feat seem easy…and stretched up and over to snatch the third of the olive laurels from its pole。 He dropped back down into the boat and began paddling furiously across the water; leaning into the task as the people watching from riverbank and overhanging window and the crowded boats moored against the shore stamped and roared their most extreme approval。
  The angle back to the fourth and final raft was the most acute by far and Valery was working for all he was worth to avoid being carried downstream past the ring; Jourdain had jumped for the laurel here and smacked into the water。 Valery of Talair pulled hard to the upstream edge of the raft; let his small craft turn with the current and then stood; smoothly again; and without evident haste or urgency lifted his paddle upward and swept it along the pole suspended high above the raft and out over the river…and he caught the olive ring thereby dislodged as his craft went hurtling beneath。
  That is what it looked like to Lisseut; a long way upstream with swift clouds obscuring the moons and men and women jostling and shouting around her as the priest of Rian's signifying torch was thrust triumphantly skywards far down along the Arbonne。 For some reason she glanced over at the coran from Gorhaut: an unconscious grin; an almost boyish expression of pleasure; showed in his face; making him look different suddenly; less austere and formidable。
  〃My cousin; too; is worth six men…no; a dozen!〃 Bertran de Talair said happily; looking at no one in particular。 There was a stirring among the green…garbed corans of Miraval。 Lisseut; feeling particularly sharp just then; doubted that En Bertran had spoken carelessly…there were verbal daggers in almost everything he and the duke of Miraval said in each other's presence。 Ariane; her hair swept up again and hidden beneath her hood; said something to Urté that Lisseut could not hear。 Ariane stepped forward beside Bertran; the better to see Valery approach the end of the course。
  The rope across the river was the last obstacle。 An enormous round shield with a hole drilled in its centre hung exactly halfway across with the rope passing through it。 Whichever side of the shield his boat passed under; the petitor's task was to leap up; seize the rope and then pull his way hand over hand under or over or around the shield…an exceptional achievement in itself…and then all the way to the opposite bank。
  Every one of the men who had made it this far would be formidably agile and strong。 Ropes across water would not customarily faze them。 This one was different。 This one was virtually impossible。 It had; for a start; been coated with attentive; careful malice in layers of beeswax。 Just before being strung across the water it had also been oiled extravagantly with the purest olive oil from the celebrated groves and presses in the hills above Vezét。 Then it was strung across the Arbonne in such a fashion that it sagged just low enough in the middle to force the hapless adventurer who had adroitly made it this far to pull his way hand over slippery hand along a cruelly upward inclination towards the dismally remote platform on the bank where triumph and glory awaited。
  Lisseut; in three years of watching this contest on the river at Midsummer Carnival; had never seen anyone e close; she'd never even seen anyone cross the shield。 She had seen quite a few undeniably graceful men made to look ically helpless as they struggled to find a way across the shield in the middle; or found themselves hanging on grimly; as if pinned down by the bright watching moons; unable to move at all while their legs kicked helplessly above the racing river。
  There was a point to all this; she knew; during Carnival there was a point to everything; even the most apparently trivial or licentious activities。 All the inversions and reversals of this night of the goddess; suspended outside the rhythms and the round of the year; found their purest emblem in these torchlit and moonlit images of gifted men rendered helpless and inept; forced either to laugh at their own predicament while themselves suspended on a slick rope or; if too grimly serious to share the hilarity; bear the mockery of a shrieking crowd。
  No one; though; was mocking Valery of Talair that night; and there was nothing even faintly hilarious about him as he guided his tiny boat straight towards the shield。 Approaching the rope; he stood up again and; without hesitation; with a neat; precise; economic movement; hurled himself up towards it just to the left of the shield。 Tucking his knees in tight to his chest like a tumbler performing at a banquet he let his momentum swing him around in an arc at the top of which he released his precarious grip on the slippery rope and rose gracefully into the air…to e angling back down; as if it were the easiest; most natural thing in the world on this night or any other night; on the other side of the shield barrier。
  For all the relished anticipation of ic failure; the people of Tavernel and those assembled in the city for its Carnival knew excellence when they saw it。 They exploded with exultant approval of such stylish mastery。 The shouts and applause assaulted the ears。 Lisseut; back on the launching pier; heard a bark of delighted; surprised laughter beside her and turned in time to see the Gorhautian coran's bearded face pletely unguarded now with pleasure。 He caught her quick glance this time though; their eyes met for an instant and then his flicked away; as if he were embarrassed to have been so observed。 Lisseut thought of saying something but changed her mind。 She turned back to watch Valery deal with the rope。
  And so saw; by a trick; an angle; a flaring of torchlight far down the dark river; how the arrow…white…feathered; she would remember; white as innocence; as winter in midsummer; as death…fell from the summit of its long; high arc to take the coran in the shoulder; driving him; slack and helpless; from the rope into the river and laughter turned to screaming in the night。
  
  Blaise saw it too; out of the corner of his eye。 He even marked; purely by reflex; with a professional's instinct; the two tall; dark…timbered merchant houses along the bank whence an arrow descending at that angle could have been let fly。 And he; too; saw; by torchlight and the elusive gleam of the blue moon now riding free of the clouds; the

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