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Pawn of Prophecy

Pawn of Prophecy

Titel: Pawn of Prophecy Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: David Eddings
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said.
    "Those are just the devices of tricksters and charlatans," Wolf said. "They make a fine show and impress and frighten simple people, but spells and incantations have nothing to do with the real thing, It's all in the Will. Focus the Will and speak the Word, and it happens. Sometimes a gesture of sorts helps, but it isn't really necessary. Your Aunt has always seemed to want to gesture when she makes something happen. I've been trying to break her of that habit for hundreds of years now."
    Garion blinked. "Hundreds of years?" he gasped. "How old is she?"
    "Older than she looks," Wolf said. "It isn't polite to ask questions about a lady's age, however."
    Garion felt a sudden, shocking emptiness. The worst of his fears had been confirmed. "Then she isn't really my Aunt, is she?" he asked sickly.
    "What makes you say that?" Wolf asked.
    She couldn't be, could she? I always thought that she was my father's sister, but if she's hundreds and thousands of years old, it would be impossible."
    "You're much to fond of that word, Garion," Wolf said. "When you get right down to it, nothing - or at least very little - is actually impossible."
    "How could she be? My Aunt I mean?"
    "All right," Wolf said. "Polgara was not strictly speaking your father's sister. Her relationship to him is quite more complex. She was the sister of his grandmother - his ultimate grandmother, it there is such a term - and of yours as well, of course."
    "Then she'd be my great-aunt," Garion said with a faint in spark of hope. It was something, at least.
    "I don't know that I'd use that precise term around her." Wolf grinned. "She might take offense. Why are you so concerned about all of this?"
    "I was afraid that maybe she'd just said that she was my Aunt, and that there wasn't really any connection between us at all," Garion said. "I've been afraid of that for quite a while now."
    "Why were you afraid?"
    "It's kind of hard to explain," Garion said. "You see, I don't really know who or what I am. Silk says I'm not a Sendar, and Barak says I look sort of like a Rivan - but not exactly. I always thought I was a Sendar - like Durnik - but I guess I'm not. I don't know anything about my parents or where they come from or anything like that. If Aunt Pol isn't related to me, then I don't have anybody in the world at all. I'm all alone, and that's a very bad thing."
    "But now it's alright, isn't it?" Wolf said, your Aunt really is your Aunt - at least your blood and hers are the same."
    "I'm glad you told me," Garion said. "I've been worried about it."
    Greldik's sailors untied the hawsers and began to push the ship away from the quay.
    "Mister Wolf," Garion said as a strange thought occurred to him.
    "Yes, Garion?"
    "Aunt Pol really is my Aunt - or my Great-Aunt?"
    "Yes."
    "And she's your daughter."
    "I have to admit that she is," Wolf said wryly. "I try to forget that sometimes, but I can't really deny it."
    Garion took a deep breath and plunged directly into it. "If she's my Aunt, and you're her father," he said, "wouldn't that sort of make you my Grandfather?"
    Wolf looked at him with a startled expression. "Why yes," he said, laughing suddenly, "I suppose that in a way it does. I'd never thought of it exactly like that before."
    Garion's eyes suddenly filled with tears, and he impulsively embraced the old man. "Grandfather," he said, trying the word out.
    ""Well, well," Wolf said, his own voice strangely thick. "What a remarkable discovery." Awkwardly he patted Garion's shoulder.
    "They were both a little embarrassed by Garion's sudden display of affection, and they stood silently, watching as Greldik's sailors rowed the ship out into the harbor.
    "Grandfather," Garion said after a little while.
    "Yes?"
    "What really happened to my mother and father? I mean, how did they die?"
    Wolf's face became very bleak. "There was a fire," he said shortly.
    "A fire?" Garion said weakly, his imagination lurching back from that awful thought - of the unspeakable pain. "How did it happen?"
    "It's not very pleasant," Wolf said grimly. "Aew you really sure you want to know?"
    "I have to, Grandfather," Garion said quietly. "I have to know everything I can about them. I don't know why, but it's very important."
    Mister Wolf sighed. "Yes, Garion," he said, "I guess it would be at that. All right, then. If you're old enough to ask the questions, you're old enough to hear the answers." He sat down on a sheltered bench out of the chilly wind. "Come over here and sit

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