"Modesitt, L E - Corean Chronicles 3 - Scepters v1.1" - читать интересную книгу автора (Modesitt L E)of the soaring winged figures had meant changeЧand usually
trouble. He cast forth an inquiry. What now? The soarer vanished without a response. One instant, she was there. The next she was not. While she had not felt familiar, Alucius had not been close enough long enough to tell for sure if the soarer had been the one who had instructed him during his brief captivity in the hidden city. His hand touched the hilt of the sabre at his belt. He glanced down at the rifle in its leather saddle case. Even with the massive cartridges used in a herder rifleЧwith casings bigger than the thumb of a large manЧrifles were usually not all that effective against the kind of trouble she foreshadowed. Rifles were most useful against sandwolves and, sometimes, against sandersЧand necessary, since both would prey on lone nightsheepЕ and especially on ewes and lambs. Rifles were useless against ifrits, but Alucius had never seen one near a steadЧnot surprising, since he'd only seen two in person in his life, three if he counted the Matrial, and he had not really even seen her. A soarer above Westridge in the morning, reflected Alucius, was so infrequent that he almost wanted to turn back to the stead to tell soarer had appeared, then vanished without a word or gesture? Outside of the Iron Valleys, soarersЧand even sandersЧhad already become a myth for most of Corus, one told in tales that included the Myrmidons and alectors of the long-vanished DuarchyЧthe millennium recalled by most of Corus as one of peace and prosperity. Both the duration of that reign and the prosperity and fairness of the Duarchy had been lies and exaggerations of the cruelest sort, as Alucius had discovered in his battles as a Northern Guard officer, but since he had no way to prove what he had discoveredЧexcept by revealing his Talent in a world that feared and mistrusted itЧthe lie lived on, a comforting tale of a golden past. Some folkЧespecially the savants from TempreЧsaid the soarers were never there at all, that they were but mirages created by light and the fine, mirrorlike dust worn off the quartz ridges that lined the natural parapets of the Aerial Plateau by the endless winds. Alucius knew better. So did any of the double handful of nightsheep herders around Iron Stem. Alucius nodded as he glanced back at his flock. Two of the nightrams edged toward each other. Their curled black hornsЧknife-sharp on the front edges, and strong enough to bend a sabreЧglittered in the morning sun. Red eyes shone out of black faces, and the black wool that was tougher than thick leather, more |
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