"David Eddings - Belgariad 2 - Queen of Sorcery" - читать интересную книгу автора (Eddings David)

But of his companions are many tales told. And of that telling, what may be
true and what false few men may know.



Part One

ARENDIA



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Chapter One

VO WACUNE WAS NO MORE. Twenty-four centuries had passed since the city of
the Wacite Arends had been laid waste, and the dark, endless forests of
northern Arendia had reclaimed the ruins. Broken walls had toppled and been
swallowed up in the moss and wet brown bracken of the forest floor, and
only the shattered stumps of the once proud towers moldered among the trees
and fog to mark the place where Vo Wacune had stood. Sodden snow blanketed
the mist-shrouded ruins, and trickles of water ran down the faces of
ancient stones like tears.

Garion wandered alone down the tree-choked avenues of the dead city, his
stout gray wool cloak drawn tight against the chill, and his thoughts as
mournful as the weeping stones around him. Faldor's farm with its green,
sun-drenched fields was so far behind him that it seemed lost in a kind of
receding haze, and he was desperately homesick. No matter how hard he tried
to hold onto them, details kept escaping him. The rich smells of Aunt Pol's
kitchen were only a faint memory; the ring of Durnik's hammer in the smithy
faded like the dying echo of the last note of a bell, and the sharp, clear
faces of his playmates wavered in his remembrance of them until he could no
longer be sure that he would even recognize them. His childhood was
slipping away, and try though he might he could not hold on to it.

Everything was changing; that was the whole problem. The core of his life,
the rock upon which his childhood had been built, had always been Aunt Pol.
In the simple world of Faldor's farm she had been Mistress Pol, the cook,
but in the world beyond Faldor's gate she was Polgara the Sorceress, who
had watched the passage of four millennia with a purpose beyond mortal
comprehension.

And Mister Wolf, the old vagabond storyteller, had also changed. Garion
knew now that this old friend was in fact his great-great grandfather -
with an infinite number of additional "greats" added on for good measure -
but that behind that roguish old face there had always been the steady gaze
of Belgarath the Sorcerer, who had watched and waited as he had looked upon