"Margaret Weis & Tracy Hickman - Rose of the Prophet 02 - The Paladin of the Night" - читать интересную книгу автора (Weis Margaret)THE PALADIN OK THE MCHT
A Bantam Spectra Book I May 1989 AH rights referred. Copyright C 1989 by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman. Cover art ana interior HuOrations copyright C J989 by Larry Elmort. No part of tha book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without ptrmistion in writing from the publaher. For information addrett: Bantam Books. ISBN 0553-27902-5 Published simultaneously in the United States and Canada Bantam Books are publiiaed by Bantam Booki, a division of Bantam Douhieday DeO Publishing Croup, Inc. Its trademark, coiuMfing of the wordt 'Bantam Books" and the portrayal of a rootter, it Registered in V.S. Patent and Trademark Office and in other countries Marca Rttfttrada. Bantam Boob. 666 Fifth Avenue, New York, Jtfnc Yorft 10103. PRINTED IK THE UNITED STATES OK AMERICA 00987654321 Book One THE BOOK OF THE IMMORTALS 1 Chapter 1 *!l1┬╗e theories about the creation of the world of Sularin num- ,: bered the same as the Gods who kept it in motion. The followers of Benario, God of Thieves, were firm in their belief . that their God stole the world from Sul, who had been going to set it as craftsman, holding calipers and a T , square in his hand and spending his spare time considering ;ihe nature of the dodecahedron. Quar taught that Sul molded the world from a lump of clay, used the sun to bake it, then bathed it with his tears when he was finished. Akhran told his followers nothing at all. The Wandering God hadn't the least тАв interest in the creation of the world. That it was here and now was enough for him. Consequently each Sheykh had his own view, handed down from great-great-grandfather to great-grandfather to grandfather to father to son. Each Sheykh's view was the right one, all others were wrong, and it was a mat-;'ter over which blood had been spilled on countless occasions. ~ in the Emperor's court in Khandar, renowned for advanced thought, learned men and women spent long hours , debating the differing theories and even longer hours prov-;-,ing, eventually, that Quar's teachings were undoubtedly the v inost scientific. Certainly it was the only theory to explain 'adequately the phenomenon of the Kurdin SeaтАФan ocean of '^arft water populated with seagoing fish and completely surrounded on all sides by desert. ;1:.- The landlocked Kurdin Sea was populated by other things, 4 WEIS AND HICKMAN too; dark and shadowy things that the learned men and women, living in the safety and comfort of the court of Khandar, saw only in their sleep or in fevered delirium. One of these dark things (and not the darkest by any means) was Quar's minion, Kaug. Three figures, standing on the shore of the sea, were discussing this very |
|
|