"Roger Zelazny - Amber 05 - The Courts of Chaos" - читать интересную книгу автора (Zelazny Roger)

"You are lying," Random said.
"Then let Dara tell us," I said, and I turned to her.
She still knelt beside Benedict, though she had finished bandaging him and
he was now sitting up.
"How about it?" I said, waving the card at her. "Who is this man?"
She glanced at the card, then up at me.
She smiled.
"You really do not know?" she said.
"Would I be asking if I did?"
"Then look at it again and go look in a mirror. He is your son as much as
mine. His name is Merlin."
I am not easily shocked, but this had nothing of ease about it. I felt
dizzy. But my mind moved quickly. With the proper time differential the thing
was possible.
"Dara," I said, "what is it that you want?"
"I told you when I walked the Pattern," she said, "that Amber must be
destroyed. What I want is to have my rightful part in it."
"You will have my old cell," I said. "No, the one next to it. Guards!"
"Corwin, it is all right," Benedict said, getting to his feet. "It is not
as bad as it sounds. She can explain everything."
"Then let her start now."
"No. In private, just family."
I motioned back the guards who had come at my call.
"Very well. Let us adjourn to one of the rooms up the hall."
He nodded, and Dara took hold of his left arm. Random, Gerard, Martin and
I followed them out. I looked back once to the empty place where my dream had
come true. Such is the stuff.



The Courts Of Chaos
Chapter 2

I rode up over the crest of Kolvir and dismounted when I came to my tomb.
I went inside and opened the casket. It was empty. Good. I was beginning to
wonder. I had half expected to see myself laid out before me, evidence that
despite signs and intuitions I had somehow wandered into the wrong Shadow.
I went back outside and rubbed Star's nose. The sun was shining and the
breeze was chill. I had a sudden desire to go to sea. I seated myself on the
bench instead and fumbled with my pipe.
We had talked. Seated with her legs beneath her on the brown sofa, Dara
had smiled and repeated the story of her descent from Benedict and Lintra, the
hellmaid, growing up in and about the Courts of Chaos, a grossly non Euclidean
realm where time itself presented strange distribution problems.
"The things you told me when we met were lies," I said. "Why should I
believe you now?"
She had smiled and regarded her fingernails.
"I had to lie to you then," she explained, "to get what I wanted from
you."
"That being...?"