"Patricia A. McKillip - In the Forests of Serre" - читать интересную книгу автора (McKillip Patricia A) ONE
In the forests of Serre, Prince Ronan crossed paths with the Mother of All Witches when he rode down her white hen in a desolate stretch of land near his fatherтАЩs summer palace. He did not recognize her immediately. He only saw a barefoot woman of indeterminate age with an apron full of grain, feeding her chickens in the middle of a blasted waste full of dead trees and ground as hard as the face of the moon. It was the last place Ronan expected chickens. He did not notice the cottage at all until after the hen pecked its way under his horseтАЩs nose. It flapped its futile wings and emitted a screech as a hoof flattened it. Startled, Ronan reined in his mount, blinking at something unrecognizable even as suitable for a stew pot. The princeтАЩs following pulled up raggedly behind him. A few feathers flurried gently through the air. The woman, one hand still outflung, golden husks clinging to her fingers, stared a moment at her hen. Then she looked up at the prince. His following, a scarred, weary company of warriors, guards, servants, standard-bearers, a trumpeter or two, seemed suddenly far away and very quiet. The young prince felt the same stillness gather in his own heart, for with her in front of him, he had nothing else to fear. As in all the tales he had heard of her, there was the ox-bone pipe in her apron pocket, the green circular lenses over her eyes, the knobby, calloused feet that broadened to an inhuman size when she picked up her cottage and carried it. There, behind her, stood the cottage made of bones, some recent and still bleeding marrow, others of a disturbing size and indeterminate origin. A single circular window, its pane as green as her lenses, seemed to stare at Ronan like a third eye among the bones. The door stood you doтАж Who, he wondered incredulously, would choose to enter that filthy pile of bones? She smiled at him, showing teeth as pointed as an animalтАЩs. Her face, which could be sometimes so lovely it broke the heart, and sometimes so hideous that warriors fainted at the sight of it, looked, at that moment, ancient and clever and only humanly ugly. тАЬPrince Ronan.тАЭ Her voice was the hollow sough of windblown reeds. тАЬBrume, тАЭ he whispered, feeling a twinge of fear at last. тАЬYou killed my white hen.тАЭ тАЬI am very sorry.тАЭ тАЬMy favorite hen.тАЭ тАЬI wasnтАЩt watching for chickens in this part of the forest. What can I do to repay you?тАЭ тАЬBring the white hen into my house, тАЭ she answered, тАЬand pluck it for me. I will boil it in a pot for supper, and you and all your company will drink a cup of broth with me around my fire.тАЭ He swallowed. Never, neverтАж Those strong pointed teeth had sucked the boiled bones of warriors, so the tales said. тАЬI will do anything for you,тАЭ he said carefully, тАЬbut I will not do that.тАЭ Her eyes seemed to grow larger than the lenses, and disturbingly dark. тАЬYou will not pluck my hen?тАЭ тАЬI will do anything for you, but I will not do that.тАЭ тАЬYou will not bring your company into my house to drink a cup of broth with me?тАЭ |
|
|