"Margaret Weis & Tracy Hickman - Love and War" - читать интересную книгу автора (Weis Margaret)Undaunted, Aril Witherwind criss-crossed the
countryside, traversing shadowy valleys, sun-lit fields, and sombre forests. He stopped at the occasional surviving inn, passed through refugee encampments, and even marched along with armies, all the time asking whomever he met if he or she knew a story that he could put into his big black book. In time, it became clear to Aril that he usually had the best luck with the older folks - indeed, the older the better. These grayhairs were not only the most likely to remember a story or two, but they were the ones most likely to be interested in relating it. Perhaps it was because they welcomed the opportunity to slow down and reminisce awhile. Or perhaps it was because they had not much of a future to give to Krynn, only their pasts. In any case, Aril Witherwind soon learned to seek them out almost exclusively, and his book slowly began to fill with stories from before the Cataclysm, when Krynn had been in what he considered its Golden Age. He gave each story an appropriate title, and then he gave due credit to the source by adding: ". . . as told by Henrik Hellendale, a dwarven baker" or ". . . as told by Verial Stargazer, an elven shepherd" or "... as told by Frick Ashfell, a human woodchopper" and so forth. People often asked Aril what his favorite story was, he'd say only, "I like them all." But, really, if you could read his mind, there was a favorite, and that was one ". . . as told by Barryn Warrex, a Solamnic Knight." It had been on a particularly lovely spring day - a day, indeed, when all of nature seemed happy and unconcerned with the political upheaval miles away - when Aril, while traversing the length of a grassy and flower-dotted valley, espied a knight, kneeling at the base of the valley wall. The knight, as luck would have it, was an old one. "Perfect," murmured Aril to himself as he strode toward the grand man, stopping several paces away. At first, the old knight didn't seem to realize he had an audience. He simply continued his kneeling, his head bowed in either deep meditation or perhaps even in respectful prayer to the recently deposed gods of Krynn. Behind him was a low, rocky overhang, almost a cave really, which was apparently serving as his humble, if temporary, shelter - The Order of the Solamnic Knights, you see, had been destroyed in the Cataclysm and fallen into disrepute, its few remaining members scattered by the four winds. It seemed to Aril Witherwind that such events must have taken a truly terrible toll on this fellow, maybe making him |
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