"Katherine Kerr - Deverry 10 - The Black Raven" - читать интересную книгу автора (Kerr Katherine)'Marka, dearest?' Keeta said. 'I'm sorry. There's something wrong with him.'
Marka tried to answer, but her throat filled with tears. Her youngest son, not yet two years old, sat on a red and blue carpet in a patch of sunlight that spilled through the tent door. He was frowning at the edge of the brightness; over and over again he would reach out a pale brown hand and touch the shadow next to it, then draw his hand back and frown the harder. Tight brown curls hung over his forehead; now and then he would bat at them as if they bothered him, only to forget them again in an instant. 'He does know his name,' Marka said. 'He may not have any other words, but he does know his name.' Keeta sighed and sat down next to the boy, who ignored her. They made an odd pair, Keeta so massive and dark, Zandro so slender and pale. Even though she had taken over the business end of managing their travelling show, Keeta still juggled, and her long arms sported muscles many a man had envied over the years. In her curly black hair, which she wore cropped close to her skull, grey sprouted at the temples. 'I've been afraid for months,' Marka said at last. 'He still can't use a spoon.' 'Is it that he can't use one?' Keeta held out her hand to Zandro. 'Or that he simply won't?' Zandro whipped his head around and bit her on the thumb. Calmly, without speaking, Keeta put her other hand under his chin, spread her fingers and thumb, and pressed on both points of his jaw. With a squeal he opened his mouth and let her go. 'That's better,' Keeta said to him. 'No biting.' on her thumb. 'No! No biting!' All at once he smiled and nodded. 'Very good,' Keeta said. "You understood me.' This he ignored; with a yawn he returned to his study of the edge between light and shadow. 'Ah ye gods!' Marka said. 'Just when I think it's hopeless, he'll do something like that. Understand a word, I mean, or even do something kind. When Kiwa fell and cut herself yesterday? He came running and kissed her and tried to help.' 'I saw that, yes. At times he's really very sweet.' Marka nodded. In the twenty years since her marriage, she'd borne nine pregnancies, not counting the miscarriages. Six of the children had lived past infancy - Kwinto, their first-born son; Tillya, the eldest daughter; Terrenz, born so soon after Tillya that they loved each other like twins; their sisters Kiwa and Delya, named after Keeta's long-time companion, who had died in the same fever that had killed another infant son. Zandro would, she hoped, be the last. She wondered how she was going to find the love and strength to deal with him, who would demand more of both than all the rest of them put together. Keeta must have been thinking along the same lines. 'It's not like you don't have enough troubles on your mind already. What with Ebany's' - a long pause - 'illness.' 'Oh, come right out and say it!' Marka snapped. 'He's gone mad. We all know it. And now his youngest son is obviously mad, too. Why are we all being so |
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