The Mist and the Lightning. Part I - стр. 13
"How much does such a beast cost?" Orel asked. "Thirty thousand, I bet."
"Why are you so rich?" Tol got curious.
"I'm fighting for money," Nikto said. "And the stallion is a gift."
"Welcome to the castle of the prince Arel Chig!" Orel made an inviting gesture.
They walked up the stairs and the servants opened massive carved doors for them.
"Not like the first time, is it?" Orel said to Nikto. Nikto glanced at him.
"Yes," he said simply.
"Hey, Nikto, can you make someone else's horse fall asleep?" Lis asked. Nikto stopped at the entrance.
"Lis, what's bugging you?"
"Tell me." Lis met Nikto's grey eyes with his yellow eyes and didn't look away.
"Yes, I can pacify a horse."
"Only your own horse? Or any horse? Or maybe not only a horse?"
"No." Nikto almost hissed it. He was speaking slowly, carefully choosing every word, and because of it his accent and a distorted timbre of his voice were even more pronounced, revealing his alien nature.
"No. It is only my horse I can pacify. I trained him like that. No one else."
Servants were pressing to the walls in terror, and the friends were silent and looked at Nikto.
"What's wrong, Lis?" Now Nikto was talking calmly. "Two hours ago you were sure I could read someone else's thoughts and you were not afraid of it. And now you're implying that I'm going to hypnotize you. Why didn't I hypnotize you when you killed my friend Lamy then? When you were beating and abusing my Unclean? When you nearly killed me!"
"Why indeed," Lis said; he was very pale.
Nikto squeezed his temples with his palms.
"Enough of it, enough," he whispered. "You wanted me to be with you, you voted, you came to an agreement with me. I am what I am, and if you're going to suspect me in every little thing, I'd better leave now."
"No!" Orel exclaimed. "You're not leaving! Lis will leave if he decides to say anything else."
He gave Lis an expressive look.
"I don't like magic tricks,” Lis said. "If he is a warlock, I'd like him to admit it now."
"Lis, he lived among the Unclean, his horse is an Unclean, he hangs around with them, he's used to it. No magic here," Enriki said.
"Do you even care how Nikto talks to his horse," Tol said.
"If you're going to pick on Nikto because of small things, you'd better leave, Lis," Orel said.
"I won't say another word," Lis promised. "What are we standing here for?"
He turned away and started climbing the stairs. Orel touched Nikto's hand.
"Let's go," he smiled. "You've scared my servants shitless."
Nikto didn't answer. He walked up to the wide stairs and followed Orel holding the rails. They entered the central hall of the castle, huge, gloomy and empty. Servants rushed around to aid them.
"Welcome to the table," Orel said, "the dinner will be ready in a moment."
He pointed at the big table in the left, higher part of the hall. A few steep stairs led to the table.
Nikto took out his sword and walked up the stairs leaning onto it. Orel looked at him in surprise.
"Do you always do it like that?"
"Sometimes."
Orel sat at the table and pointed at the chair on the left of him. "You're sitting here." Nikto sat down silently.
"Can't you walk up the stairs without a prop?" Orel asked.
"I can't – now."
"And what if we have to fight on the stairs…" Orel started but kept silent after looking at Nikto's face.