"Miller, Rand and Robyn & Wingrove, David - Myst 01 - The Book of Atrus" - читать интересную книгу автора (Miller Rand)sanity after all that had happened. She stared at the child in her arms, not knowing at that moment what was best. Even so, she was determined he would hold the child once before he went.
She made to give the child to Gehn, but he brushed past her and stepped out onto the rope bridge. In a moment he was gone. "But you didn't name him," she said quietly, holding the baby tight against her. "You didn't even name him. . . ." vVithin the great volcano's shadow, the desert floor was fractured. There, in a crack some eighty feet by fifteen, the darkness was intense. The casual eye might, indeed, have passed on, thinking it no more than a natural feature, but for the strange lipЧa wall of stone some five or six feet highЧthat surrounded it. For a moment all was still, and then a tali, cloak-less figure climbed up onto the lip of the cleftwall, stepping out into the dawn light. All was silence; a silence as only such desert places possess. In the cool of the desert dawn, a mist rose from the warm heart of the volcano, wreathing it in a faint, mysterious veil. Anna watched as the tall cloak-less figure climbed the volcano's slope, the mist swirling about him, concealing then revealing him again. The heavy lenses he wore gave his head a strange. MYST: THE BOOK OF ATRUS 5 yet distinctive shape. For a moment he stood there, his head turned, looking back at the dark gash of the cleft a mile below him, his tall, imperious shape backlit by the sun that bled through the shifting layers of haze. Then, with a dreamlike slowness, like a specter stepping out into nothingness, he turned and vanished. z TH .HE SANDSTORM HAD SCOURED THE narrow rock ledge clean. Now, all along the sculpted, lacelike ridge, shadows made a thousand frozen forms. The rock face was decorated with eyes and mouths, with outstretched arms and tilted heads, as if a myriad of strange and beautiful creatures had strayed from the dark safety of the calderas gaping maw, only to be crystallized by the suns penetrating rays. Above them, in the shadow of the volcano's rim, lay the boy, staring out across the great ocean of sand that stretched toward the mountainous plateaus that were hazed in the distance. The only thing larger than that vast landscape was the clear blue sky above it, The boy was concealed from watchful eyes, his very existence hidden from the traders who, at that moment, had stopped their caravan a mile out on the sands to greet the old madwoman. The patched and dirty clothes he wore were the color of the desert, making him seem but a fragment of that arid landscape. The boy lay perfectly still, watching, the heavy lenses he wore adjusted for long-sight, his sensitive eyes taking in every tiny detail of the caravan. The storm had delayed the caravan two days, and 8 RAND AND ROBYN MILLER while two days was as nothing in this timeless place, for the boy it had seemed a small eternity. For weeks before the caravan was due he would dream of them night and day, conjuring them up in his mind; imagining himself cloaked and hooded, up on the back of one of the great beasts, leaving with them. Off into the greater world. Of those dreams he told his grandmother nothing. No. For he knew how she fretted; worrying that one of the more unscrupulous traders might come in the night and take him, to sell him into slavery in the markets of the south. And so he hid when she said hide, and held his tongue about the dreams, lest he add to her worries. Right now the boy's eyes were focused on the face of one of the eight men: one he often studiedЧa dark man with a narrow head, his features sharp and curved within the hood of his jet black cloak, his beard trimmed close to his cheeks. Studying the halted caravan, the boy noted the changes since they had last passed by. They had nineteen camels nowЧtwo more than last time. This and other, smaller signsЧnew necklaces on several of the camels, small items of jewelry on the wrists and about the necks of the men, the heavier lading of the camelsЧrevealed that trade was good right now. Not only that, but the ease of the men spoke volumes. As they haggled with his grandmother, the boy noted how they laughed, revealing small, discolored teeth. Teeth MYST: THE BOOK OF ATRUS 9 that, perhaps, evidenced an addiction to the sweet things they sold. He watched, taking it all in, knowing that his grandmother would ask him later. What did you see, Atms? I saw ... Atrus adjusted his glasses, certain that he had imagined that movement, then looked again, in time to see his grandmother place the sack upon the pile of other things she'd bartered for. For a brief while longer he watched, then, when it showed no sign of moving, looked to his grandmother. Anna stood facing the eldest of the traders, her gaunt yet handsome face several shades lighter than his, her fine gray hair tied back into a bun at the nape of her neck. The hood of her cloak was down, as was his, their heads exposed to the fierce, late afternoon heat, but she did not seem to mind. Such she did deliberately, to convince the traders of her strength and self-reliance. Yes, and suffered for it, too, for even an hour out in that burning sun was more than enough, not to speak of the long walk back, laden down with heavy sacks of salt and flour and rolls of cloth, and other items she'd purchased. 10 RAND AND ROBYN MILLER And he lay here, hidden, impotent to help. It was easier, of course, now that he could help her tend the garden and repair the walls, yet at times like this he felt tornЧtorn between his longing to see the caravan and the wish that his grandmother did not have to work so hard to get the things they needed to survive. She was almost done now. He watched her hand over the things she'd grown or made to tradeЧthe precious herbs and rare minerals, the intricately carved stone figures, and the strange, colorful iconic paintings that kept the traders coming back for moreЧand felt a kind of wonder at the degree of her inventiveness. Seven years he had lived with her now; seven years in this dry and desolate place, and never once had she let them go hungry. That in itself, he knew, was a kind of miracle. Knew, not because she had told him so, but because he had observed with his own lensed eyes the ways of this world he inhabited, had seen how unforgiving the desert was. Each night, surviving, they gave thanks. He smiled, watching his grandmother gather up her purchases, noting how, for once, one of the younger traders made to help her, offering to lift one of the sacks up onto her shoulder. He saw Anna shake her head and smile. At once the man stepped back, returning her smile, respecting her independence. Loaded up, she looked about her at the traders, MYST: THE BOOK OF ATRUS n giving the slightest nod to each before she turned her back and began the long walk back to the cleft. Atrus lay there, longing to clamber down and help her but knowing he had to stay and watch the caravan until it vanished out of sight. Adjusting the lenses, he looked down the line of men, knowing each by the way they stood, by their individual gestures; seeing how this one would take a sip from his water bottle, while that one would check his camel's harness. Then, at an unstated signal, the caravan began to move, the camels reluctant at first, several of them needing the touch of a whip before, with a grunt and hoarse bellow, they walked on. Atrus? Yes, grandmother? What did you su? I saw great cities in the south, grandmother, and menЧso many men ... Then, knowing Anna would be expecting him, he began to make his way down. As Anna rounded the great arm of rock, coming into sight of the cleft, Atrus walked toward her. Concealed here from the eyes of the traders, she would normally stop and let Atrus take a couple of the sacks from her, but today she walked on, merely smiling at his unspoken query. MYST: THE BOOK OF ATRUS 13 At the northern lip of the cleft she stopped and, with a strange, almost exaggerated care, lowered the load from her shoulder. "Here," she said quietly, aware of how far voices could travel in this exposed terrain. "Take the salt and flour down to the storeroom." Silently, Atrus did as he was told. Removing his sandals, he slipped them onto the narrow ledge beneath the cleftwaU's lip. Chalk marks from their lesson earlier that day covered the surface of the outer wall, while close by a number of small earthenware pots lay partly buried in the sand from one of his experiments. Atrus swung one of the three bone-white sacks up onto his shoulder, the rough material chafing his neck and chin, the smell of the salt strong through the cloth. Then, clambering up onto the sloping wall, he turned and, crouching, reached down with his left foot, finding the top rung of the rope ladder. |
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