Turning Points

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Book: Turning Points by Lynn Abbey Read Free Book Online
Authors: Lynn Abbey
Tags: Science-Fiction, Fantasy, Collections
Chance said. “What a temptation to introduce that imitation of a dog to a throwing star!”
    “Ah, that little beast is not worth it.”
    “Just a little one,” Chance persisted, tap-step…
    Strick paused and addressed the animal directly. “Imitation Dog with the voice of a bird, you are never going to be able to understand what happened, but hereafter you are not going to be able to bark again unless someone is within three steps of you
and
headed your way.”
    Chance smiled broadly. The yip-yapper’s mouth continued to move but no sound emerged. Wearing a distinctly puzzled look, the dog dropped back onto his tail and sat staring at the passersby from wet eyes. Neither so much as glanced at him. The dark one was chuckling as they went on their way.
    Even though gold showed here and there on his person, a master mage had little to fear when abroad at night in a neighborhood that, while not the worst, was also not wholly safe. His lack of fear of being accosted was bolstered even more when he was in company of the man now called Chance. In fact that proved to be the case this night, when not even a block and a half from the inn not one but two were so foolish as to accost them.
    The burly one addressed them in a cultivated snarl that unfortunately made him sound sillier than it did deadly. “Let’s see the sight of your purses and them rings, whitey, or you two old farts are going to get stuck with sharp steel!”
    Strick spoke very quietly. “I am the Spellmaster,” he said. “You boys don’t want to do this. You had better run along.”
    “I don’t give a shit if you’re the Shadow God hisself,” the thinner man with the long knife said, as if anxious to prove his fundamental stupidity and perilous lack of judgment. “Do what my friend says.”
    Since the attention of both accosters was now focused on Strick, his black-clad companion proved that his limp was false, and too that he was left-handed. His cane, startlingly heavy for the last eight or so inches of its length, became a weapon that all but brained the one with the bigger knife and drove deeply into the midsection of his burly companion. With a spin that proved him no cripple, Chance whacked the side of that one’s head, too. The sound of impact was alarmingly loud. Both would-be thieves went straight down and lay moveless half on the boardwalk and half in the street.
    The friends exchanged a smile.
    Strick shook his head. “A pair of men with a staggeringly bad grasp on reality,” he said.
    “Old fart indeed!” The offended sixty-seven-year-old kicked one of the men he had knocked unconscious, but in the leg and with not all that much force. “Candlelight!”
    “What?”
    “I called him Candlelight. One blow and he’s out!”
    Strick laughed. “No question: You’ve still got it.”
    Chance had used his left arm only, and the right continued to hang as if asleep, or dead. That had been the case since that horrible occasion when the man who had always been left-handed had awakened from… something; sleep?—he had no memory of what had gone before the waking—to discover the disconcerting fact that he was looking up into concerned faces, most of which belonged to strangers, and that his right arm no longer did what he wanted it to do. It continued in that worse than distressing behavior, and was often cursed by its possessor.
    “You had a stroke,” a medical type or shaman improbably called Changjoy told him. Whatever in the coldest hell that meant—a stroke of what?—struck by whom or what?—it essentially ended the career of the seemingly invisible Shadowspawn, the world’s most brilliant cat-burglar.
    Now he of the disrupted arm, livelihood and lifestyle went on his way homeward with his friend Strick, at home in the night and its shadows… without knowing that every moment of his violent reaction to a robbery attempt had been witnessed from an overhanging roof just above them by a vitally interested young man whose

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