"David Eddings - Belgarath the Sorcerer (2)" - читать интересную книгу автора (Eddings David)steamed in the icy, dead-calm air.
"I can't see that rainbow any more." "Rainbow?" Belgarath asked, sounding slightly amused. "You know what I mean. Each of them has a different-colored light. Aldur's is blue, Issa's is green, Chaldan's is red, and the others all have different colors. Is there some significance to that?" "It's probably a reflection of their different personalities," Belgarath replied. "I can't be entirely positive, though. My Master and I never got around to discussing it." He stamped his feet in the snow. "Why don't we go back?" he suggested. "It's cold out here." They turned and started back down the hill toward the cottage, their feet crunching in the frozen snow. The farmstead at the foot of the hill looked warm and comforting. The thatched roof of the cottage was thick with snow, and the icicles hanging from the eaves glittered in the windows of the cottage were all aglow with golden lamplight that spread softly out over the mounded snow in the yard. A column of blue-grey wood-smoke rose straight and unwavering from the chimney, rising, it seemed, to the very stars. It probably had not really been necessary for the three of them to accompany their guests to the top of the hill to witness their departure, but it was Durnik's house, and Durnik was a Sendar. Sendars are meticulous about proprieties and courtesies. "Eriond's changed," Garion noted as they neared the bottom of the hill. "He seems more certain of himself now." Belgarath shrugged. "He's growing up. It happens to everybody--except to Belar, maybe. I don't think we can ever expect Belar to grow up." "Belgarath!" Durnik sounded shocked. "That's no way for a man to speak about his God!" |
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