"Martha Wells - Wheel of the Infinite" - читать интересную книгу автора (Wells Martha) Maskelle stood and eased the kinks in her back. She wasnтАЩt hungry anymore, even for tea, even for
rice wine. And she didnтАЩt want to answer all the same questions from the others, once the smell of supper permeated the wagons and they began to creep out. She nodded to Rastim and Old Mali and limped toward her wagon. It stood slightly apart the way she liked it, the two oxen unharnessed and dozing over fodder. Old Mali drove it for her during the day, and had opened the light wooden side panels when the rain had stopped, so the interior could air out. Maskelle paused at the dropped tailgate, looking into the dark. She could see the temple from here. The massive domed spire was black against the lighter shade of the sky, the moon shape of the portal below it barely visible; male and female phallic symbols woven together. The detail of the terraced carvings was entirely lost in shadow. They had passed small sanctuaries along the way, but this was the first time in too many years that she had been so close to a true temple. She moved away from the wagon, one of the oxen snuffling at her as she drifted past. The temple was calling to her, not the stone shell, but what it represented, and the power that likeness gave it. She walked through the sodden grass until she came to the edge of the baray and stepped up onto the stone bank. The Koshan priests had the custody of the temples, but they were only static forms. It was the End of Year Rite that remade the universe in its own image, and that was only performed by the Voices of the Ancestors. The End of Decade rites were even more crucial. This year would be the End of a Hundred Years rite. Maskelle lifted her staff, holding it above her head. An echo whispered through her, a reflection from the Infinite through the structure of the temple. After all these years, it still knew her. тАЬI helped another stranger tonight,тАЭ she whispered. тАЬI didnтАЩt kill anyone to do it. Not intentionally, at least. Is that enough for you?тАЭ A slow wave of darkness climbed the temple wall, the lamps in the windows winking out one by one. She lowered the staff and let out her breath. No, it wasnтАЩt enough. And now they will all know youтАЩre back. Oh, the delight in the power never died, that was the curse, and her true punishment, She reached the wagon and climbed up the back steps, closing the panels that faced the campsite. She sat on the still damp wooden floor, looking out at the temple and the silver surface of the baray in the distance. She was facing the right direction for an illusion of privacy, though voices from the other campsites, oddly distorted over the plain, came to her occasionally. The night breeze was chilly on her wet clothes, the drying mud itchy on her legs. And someone was watching her. She knew it by the way the oxen, caught in the firelight from behind the wagon, cocked their ears. She found his outline in the dark finally, about twenty feet away, sitting on his heels just out of reach of the light. She might have walked within ten feet of him on the way to the baray. Again, the shock of being so taken by surprise was like ice on her skin. She waited until it drained away, then quietly she said, тАЬCome here.тАЭ The breeze moved the short grass. He stood up and came toward the wagon. Her staff, as much a part of her as her hands or feet, lay on the wooden bench of the wagon. He stopped just out of armтАЩs reach. Her armтАЩs reach. She was within easy range of his sword. He stood in the shadow where the wagon blocked the firelight, but the moonlight was strong. The heavy siri rested easily on one lean hip. Maskelle stretched out her foot, her toes finding the staff where it lay on the rough planks and gradually easing it toward her hand. тАЬWhat did you do?тАЭ he said. He couldnтАЩt be asking her what she thought he was asking her; after a moment she realized he meant the lamps in the temple. тАЬIтАЩm a Voice of the Ancestors.тАЭ That was still strictly true, if it didnтАЩt actually answer the question. тАЬWhat were you doing in the outpost?тАЭ тАЬGetting killed. Did it look like anything else?тАЭ Instead of taking the bait, she said, тАЬThatтАЩs a fine way to say thank you.тАЭ тАЬI was going up river and walked into them.тАЭ |
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