"Modesitt, L E - Recluce 10 - Magi'i Of Cyador" - читать интересную книгу автора (Modesitt L E) "Does that mean a wild chaos wielder? Or that one of your Magi'i can evade the truthreading?"
"Even those few skilled at truthreading cannot evade another's reading. Since no Magi'i are involved, it mean the chaos was directed in another fashion. There was no spray. That I could tell even after the fire, and wild types do not have that kind of control." "So... a former Magi'i?" "Those who have such talents are weeded out early-they are dead or in the lancers on the frontier." Chyenfel fingers his smooth chin. "And we follow those who hold chaos with the glasses until they can no longer do so or until they die. None have been detected in Cyad in seasons, if not years." "You have the impossible, then, and that is less than satisfactory, especially in these times." "It could have been a small firelance-as your guards for the Emperor carry," suggests Chyenfel almost idly. "I would be most pleased to accompany you as you question each of them." Rynst smiles tightly. "I thought you would be." Chyenfel returns the smile. XI Two figures in blue sit on a carved wooden bench that overlooks the harbor of Cyad. Below the low hill, a half-dozen ships are tied at the white piers. Cargo carts roll along the granite wharves, carts filled with the wool brought from Analeria, cotton from Hamor across the Eastern Ocean, tin ingots from Austra, and other goods from wherever the tall-masted ships sail. A single white-hulled fireship is moored at the lancer pier. The redheaded woman shivers in the cool breeze. "Lorn?" Ryalth pauses. "Aren't you cold?" "Me? No." "I am." She eases next to him, so that their sides touch. "You're warm, like a banked fire, or the sun." "I'd rather not talk about fires." "I have a gift for you." Ryalth's voice is soft. "You don't have to give me anything," Lorn insists, as he turns. "The coins and the strongbox are for you. I told you that. Don't spend them on me." "It's not that kind of gift. It's something I've had for a long time." Lorn raises his eyebrows. "You don't have to do anything like that for me. You know that." "I know I don't have to. This is because I want to." Her smile is warm, even as she shivers again. Lorn grins, and puts an arm around her. "You are cold." "That helps. You're warm." She pauses, tilting her head and looking at him directly. "Do you ever wonder where the Firstborn came from? What they were like?" Lorn frowns and shrugs. "They came and used the chaos-towers to create Cyad and Cyador. They imprisoned the Accursed Forest and opened the lands of the east for us. They built the firewagons and-" "They were people like us." Lorn laughs gently, turns and touches her cheek with his right hand, then bends forward and brushes her cheek with his lips. Ryalth gently disengages him. "Were they?" His brow wrinkles. "First you talk about a gift, and now..." "It's all the same thing." She extends a shimmering oblong. "It's here." "What is it?" "It's an old, old book. My mother's mother had it. No one knew she did. Father said no one could make anything like that then, or, I suppose, today. He told me to keep it. Never to sell it, no matter what I was offered." Lorn looks into her deep blue eyes. "Don't give it to me, then. It's yours." "Then you'll have to keep it for me," she says. "I couldn't do anything like that..." "Open it to where the leather marker is. I want you to read me the words there." Ryalth forces the thin volume into his hands. Lorn takes the book, its cover as unmarked and as smooth as if it had been created in his fingers at that very moment. He turns it sideways, seeing the light flare across the silvered green binding fabric as the winter sun's rays strike it. "Open it," Ryalth insists. He slides open the book, his fingers almost slipping on the pages that are more like shimmercloth than paper or parchment, a surface so smooth it makes shimmercloth rough by comparison. The letters are clear, but somehow slightly more tilted and angular than Lorn is used to reading. "That one." The redhead points. Lorn's eyes go to the title. He reads it... and continues. SHOULD I RECALL THE RATIONAL STARS There I had a tower for the skies, where the rooms were clear, and the music filled the walls. The light clothed the halls, and the days were long. The nights were song. |
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