The Mist and the Lightning. Part 18 - стр. 11
Kors lowered his head.
“Now I understand this and admit my mistake, but in fact I am not as noble as you think due to your inexperience. I am not as pure-blooded as Prince Arel, Prince Ariel or Salafael. There is no royal blood in my veins. Yes, I am from the race of masters, from a good decent family, but my ancestors did not observe purity so much: sometimes there was a misalliance. Of course, I am not a peasant or a commoner. But in many ways, I built my career myself. Thanks to my intelligence and hard work, I reached the top and approached the true blacks, became one of them and entered their Supreme Order.”
Nik listened intently.
“And more, more, Nick, I was young and madly in love!”
Kors fell silent, lost in thought and lost in memories.
“What would you do when you saw that your son had blond hair?” Asked Nik, tearing him out of the past. “When you saw that he was such an obvious half-blood? You would get rid of him, right? You planned to let live only dark-haired children? People like Karina? Yes?”
“Yes,” Kors replied barely audibly. “Maybe I would leave a blonde girl…”
“And the boy?”
“No. No, I’m sorry. I’m telling you honestly.”
“So this is how you were going to solve this problem. And how would you explain this to your beloved Iness?”
“Small children often die…”
“It turns out that your son was lucky that the Reds stole Iness: they themselves, unwillingly, saved his life.”
“Nik…”
“You were looking for your child, you suffered, and if you found and saw that he was light-haired, you yourself would get rid of him! Great!”
“Please don’t…”
“Or would you sell him into slavery? Why kill him if a white child is worth good money?”
“Well, why are saying this!”
Nik, slightly raising his head, quickly looked up: the day ceased to be cloudless, and the sky was increasingly covered with gray clouds:
“It looks like it’s going to rain,” and he put his black glasses into his belt bag, not putting it on as usual.
Kors looked at him, still a little sleepy and rumpled, looked at his face, realizing that no matter how hard Nik tried to pretend to be indifferent, inside behind this inept mask he was upset and depressed.
Guided only by his passions, Kors, without hesitation, transgressed the laws and regulations, having entered into a relationship with a woman of another race, thereby dooming his descendants to life-long torment to be half-breeds, second-class people. And no matter what Nik did, he remained a mud for the blacks from birth to death. Yes, the soul of Kors belonged to the Demon, and he was completely devoted to him, but the human body of the Demon was the body of his son and belonged to Kors: the Demon had nowhere to escape from him, and he couldn’t do anything about it.”
And Kors involuntarily smiled: he understood that it was ugly in relation to Nik and unpleasant for him, but now Kors no longer regretted what he had done, he was satisfied with this alignment.
“Put on your glasses!” He ordered, just to demonstrate his power over his son. And, since it seemed to him that Nik was hesitating, he added sharply:
“Do you hear badly what I said?”
Nik silently took out his glasses and put them on. Kors was pleased, his mood improved a little:
“Tell me, Mara, this witch – did she pay them a lot for you?”