"Lord of Light" - читать интересную книгу автора (Zelazny Roger)

Some of the monks doubted the orthodoxy of this prayer technique, but the machine had been built and was operated by Yama-Dharma, fallen, of the Celestial City; and, it was told, he had ages ago built the mighty thunder chariot of Lord Shiva: that engine that fled across the heavens belching gouts of fire in its wake. Despite his tall from favor, Yama was still deemed mightiest of the artificers, though it was not doubted that the Gods of (he City would have him to die the real death were they to leam of the pray-machine. For that matter, though, it was not doubted that they would have him to die the real death without the excuse of the pray-machine, also, were he to come into their custody. How he would settle this matter with the Lords of Karma was his own affair, though none doubted that when the time came he would find a way. He was half as old as the Celestial City itself, and not more than ten of the gods remembered the founding of that abode. He was known to be wiser even than the Lord Kubera in the ways of the Universal Fire. But these were his lesser Attributes. He was best known for another thing, though few men spoke of it. Tall, but not overly so;
big, but not heavy; his movements, slow and fluent. He wore red and spoke little. He tended the pray-machine, and the giant metal lotus he had set atop the monastery roof turned and turned in its sockets. A light rain was falling upon the building, the lotus and the jungle at the foot of the mountains. For six days he had offered many kilowatts of prayer, but (he static kept him from being heard On High. Under his breath, he called upon the more notable of the current LORD OF LIGHT 11 fertility deities, invoking them in terms of their most prominent Attributes. A rumble of thunder answered his petition, and the small ape who assisted him chuckled. "Your prayers and your curses come to the same. Lord Yama," com- mented the ape. "That is to say, nothing."