Читаем Outlander 03 - Voyager полностью

A sense of lassitude and utter peace stole gradually over me. I couldn’t feel my feet or legs, and only Jamie’s crushing grip on my hands reminded me of their existence. My head went under water, and I had to remind myself to hold my breath.

The wave subsided and the wood rose slightly, bringing my nose above water. I breathed, and my vision cleared slightly. A foot away was the face of Jamie Fraser, hair plastered to his head, wet features contorted against the spray.

“Hold on!” he roared. “Hold on, God damn you!”

I smiled gently, barely hearing him. The sense of great peace was lifting me, carrying me beyond the noise and chaos. There was no more pain. Nothing mattered. Another wave washed over me, and this time I forgot to hold my breath.

The choking sensation roused me briefly, long enough to see the flash of terror in Jamie’s eyes. Then my vision went dark again.

“Damn you, Sassenach!” his voice said, from a very great distance. His voice was choked with passion. “Damn you! I swear if ye die on me, I’ll kill you!”

I was dead. Everything around me was a blinding white, and there was a soft, rushing noise like the wings of angels. I felt peaceful and bodiless, free of terror, free of rage, filled with quiet happiness. Then I coughed.

I wasn’t bodiless, after all. My leg hurt. It hurt a lot. I became gradually aware that a good many other things hurt, too, but my left shin took precedence in no uncertain terms. I had the distinct impression that the bone had been removed and replaced with a red-hot poker.

At least the leg was demonstrably there. When I cracked my eyes open to look, the haze of pain that floated over my leg seemed almost visible, though perhaps that was only a product of the general fuzziness in my head. Whether mental or physical in origin, the general effect was of a sort of whirling whiteness, shot with flickers of a brighter light. Watching it hurt my eyes, so I shut them again.

“Thank God, you’re awake!” said a relieved-sounding Scottish voice near my ear.

“No I’m not,” I said. My own voice emerged as a salt-crusted croak, rusty with swallowed seawater. I could feel seawater in my sinuses, too, which gave my head an unpleasant gurgling feel. I coughed again, and my nose began to run profusely. Then I sneezed.

“Eugh!” I said, in complete revulsion at the resultant cascade of slime over my upper lip. My hand seemed far off and insubstantial, but I made the effort to raise it, swiping clumsily at my face.

“Be still, Sassenach; I’ll take care of ye.” There was a definite note of amusement in the voice, which irritated me enough to open my eyes again. I caught a brief glimpse of Jamie’s face, intent on mine, before vision vanished once again in the folds of an immense white handkerchief.

He wiped my face thoroughly, ignoring my strangled noises of protest and impending suffocation, then held the cloth to my nose.

“Blow,” he said.

I did as he said. Rather to my surprise, it helped quite a lot. I could think more or less coherently, now that my head was unclogged.

Jamie smiled down at me. His hair was rumpled and stiff with dried salt, and there was a wide abrasion on his temple, an angry dark red against the bronzed skin. He seemed not to be wearing a shirt, but had a blanket of some kind draped about his shoulders.

“Do ye feel verra bad?” he asked.

“Horrible,” I croaked in reply. I was also beginning to be annoyed at being alive, after all, and being required to take notice of things again. Hearing the rasp in my voice, Jamie reached for a jug of water on the table by my bed.

I blinked in confusion, but it really was a bed, not a berth or a hammock. The linen sheets contributed to the overwhelming impression of whiteness that had first engulfed me. This was reinforced by the whitewashed walls and ceiling, and the long white muslin draperies that bellied in like sails, rustling in the breeze from the open windows.

The flickering light came from reflections that shimmered over the ceiling; apparently there was water close by outside, and sun shining on it. It seemed altogether cozier than Davy Jones’s locker. Still, I felt a brief moment of intense regret for the sense of infinite peace. I had experienced in the heart of the wave—a regret made more keen by the slight movement that sent a bolt of white agony up my leg.

“I think your leg is broken, Sassenach,” Jamie told me unnecessarily. “Ye likely shouldna move it much.”

“Thanks for the advice,” I said, through gritted teeth. “Where in bloody hell are we?”

He shrugged briefly. “I dinna ken. It’s a fair-sized house, is all I could say. I wasna taking much note when they brought us in. One man said the place is called Les Perles.” He held the cup to my lips and I swallowed gratefully.

“What happened?” So long as I was careful not to move, the pain in my leg was bearable. Automatically, I placed my fingers under the angle of my jaw to check my pulse; reassuringly strong. I wasn’t in shock; my leg couldn’t be badly fractured, much as it hurt.

Перейти на страницу:

Все книги серии Outlander

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
Фараон
Фараон

Ты сын олигарха, живёшь во дворце, ездишь на люксовых машинах, обедаешь в самых дорогих ресторанах и плевать хотел на всё, что происходит вокруг тебя. Только вот одна незадача, тебя угораздило влюбиться в девушку археолога, да ещё и к тому же египтолога.Всего одна поездка на раскопки гробниц и вот ты уже встречаешься с древними богами и вообще закинуло тебя так далеко назад в истории Земли, что ты не понимаешь, где ты и что теперь делать дальше.Ничего, Новое Царство XVIII династии фараонов быстро поменяет твои жизненные цели и приоритеты, если конечно ты захочешь выжить. Поскольку теперь ты — Канакт Каемвасет Вахнеситмиреемпет Секемпаптидседжеркав Менкеперре Тутмос Неферкеперу. Удачи поцарствовать.

Болеслав Прус , Валерио Массимо Манфреди , Виктория Самойловна Токарева , Виктория Токарева , Дмитрий Викторович Распопов , Сергей Викторович Пилипенко

Фантастика / Приключения / Альтернативная история / Попаданцы / Современная проза
1917, или Дни отчаяния
1917, или Дни отчаяния

Эта книга о том, что произошло 100 лет назад, в 1917 году.Она о Ленине, Троцком, Свердлове, Савинкове, Гучкове и Керенском.Она о том, как за немецкие деньги был сделан Октябрьский переворот.Она о Михаиле Терещенко – украинском сахарном магнате и министре иностранных дел Временного правительства, который хотел перевороту помешать.Она о Ротшильде, Парвусе, Палеологе, Гиппиус и Горьком.Она о событиях, которые сегодня благополучно забыли или не хотят вспоминать.Она о том, как можно за неполные 8 месяцев потерять страну.Она о том, что Фортуна изменчива, а в политике нет правил.Она об эпохе и людях, которые сделали эту эпоху.Она о любви, преданности и предательстве, как и все книги в мире.И еще она о том, что история учит только одному… что она никого и ничему не учит.

Ян Валетов , Ян Михайлович Валетов

Приключения / Исторические приключения