"Brooks - Heritage 3 - The Elf Queen of Shannara" - читать интересную книгу автора (Brooks Terry) The Home Guard materialized beside her.
"Stand with me a moment," she said. They stood without speaking and looked out over the city. She felt impossibly alone. Her people were threatened with ex- tinction. She should be doing something. Anything. What if the dreams were wrong? What if the visions of Eowen Cerise were mistaken? That had never happened, of course, but there was so much at stake! Her mouth tightened angrily. She must be- lieve. It was necessary that she believe. The visions would come to pass. The girl would appear to them as promised, blood of her blood. The girl would appear. But would even she be enough? She shook the question away. She could not permit it. She could not give way to her despair. She wheeled about and walked swiftly back through the Gardens to the pathway leading down again. Cort stayed with her for a moment, then faded away into the shadows. She did not see him go. Her mind was on the future, on the foretellings of Eowen, and on the fate of the Elven people. She was deter- mined that her people would survive. She would wait for the girl for as long as she could, for as long as the magic would keep their enemies away. She would pray that Eowen's visions were true. She was Ellenroh Elessedil, Queen of the Elves, and she would do what she must. It burned within as well. Sheathed in the armor of her convictions, she went down out of the Gardens of Life in the slow hours of the early morn- ing to sleep. CHAPTER 2 REN OHMSFORD YAWNED. She sat on a bluff overlooking the Blue Divide, her back to the smooth trunk of an ancient willow. The ocean stretched away before her, a shimmering kaleidoscope of colors at the horizons edge where the sunset streaked the waters with splashes of red and gold and purple and low-hanging clouds formed strange pat- terns against the darkening sky. Twilight was settling comfort- ably in place, a graying of the light, a whisper of an evening breeze off the water, a calm descending. Crickets were begin- ning to chirp, and fireflies were winking into view. Wren drew her knees up against her chest, struggling to stay upright when what she really wanted to do was lie down. She hadn't slept for almost two days now, and fatigue was catching up with her. It was shadowed and cool where she sat beneath the willow's canopy, and it would have been easy to let go, slip down, curl up beneath her cloak, and drift away. Her eyes closed |
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