"Simon Hawke - Wizard 7 - The Wizard of Camelot" - читать интересную книгу автора (Hawke Simon)Simon Hawke - The Wizard of Camelot.htmTHE WIZARD OF CAMELOT
Copyright ┬й 1993 by Simon Hawke All rights reserved. e-book ver. 1.0 for Natasha ABOUT THE AUTHOR Thomas Malory was born and educated in London, served as a decorated career soldier in the army, participating in most of the Internal Pacification Campaigns during the Collapse, and retired with the rank of sergeant-major. Upon retirement, he joined New Scotland Yard's elite London Urban Assault Division, since disbanded. He left the police force to work with Merlin Ambrosius in founding the International Center for Thaumaturgical Studies, which eventually grew into the International Thaumaturgical Commission, and he still holds an honorary seat on its board. Though he never became an adept himself, he is widely regarded as the co-founder of the Second Thaumaturgic Age, and played a key role in developing the administrative programs of the I.T.C., chairing its first regulatory committee and presiding over its first adept certification programs. Best known as leading authority on Professor Ambrosius, and is currently engaged in writing the definitive work on his life, Merlin, The Man Behind The Myth. He lives with his wife, Jenny, and his thaumagene familiar, Victor, in Geneva, Switzerland. CHAPTER 1 My name is Thomas Malory, and I was there when magic came back into the world. I was there right from the very start, when the Second Thaumaturgic Age began. It began with one, single, desperate act born of fury and frustration. It began with one blow of an axe. And that axe was mine. For most of my adult life up to that time, I had served in the armed forces of His Majesty, and I had retired with the rank of sergeant-major in the infantry. I had lived the simple life of a soldier. It was often a hard life, but these days I find myself wishing I could return, if not to the type of life I led then, at least to the obscurity that I enjoyed. I've gained the status of celebrity in my advanced years, however reluctantly, and fame is truly something |
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