The Second Randall Garrett Megapack. Randall Garrett
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Название: The Second Randall Garrett Megapack

Автор: Randall Garrett

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Научная фантастика

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isbn: 9781434446756

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СКАЧАТЬ one. “Well, I’m sure you will,” he said in what he hoped was a calm, hearty, hopeful voice. He was reasonably sure it wasn’t any of those, and even surer that it wasn’t all three. “You seem like a—like a fairly intelligent young lady,” he finished lamely.

      “Oh, no,” she said. “I’m sure I won’t be able to remember all those old-fashioned dates and things. Never. Never.” Suddenly she pressed herself wildly against him, throwing him slightly off balance. Locked together, the couple reeled against the desk. Forrester felt it digging into the small of his back. “I’ll do anything to pass the course, Mr. Forrester!” she vowed. “Anything!”

      The insistent pressure of the desk top robbed the moment of some of its natural splendor. Forrester disengaged himself gently and slid a little out of the way. “Now, now,” he said, moving rapidly across the room toward a blank wall. “This sort of thing isn’t usually done, Maya. I mean, Miss Wilson. I mean—”

      “But—”

      “People just don’t do such things,” Forrester said sternly. He thought of escaping through the door, but the picture that arose immediately in his mind dissuaded him. He saw Maya pursuing him passionately through the halls while admiring students and faculty stared after them. “Anyhow,” he added as an afterthought, “not at the beginning of the semester.”

      “Oh,” Maya said. She was advancing on him slowly. “You mean, I ought to see if I can pass the course on my own first, and then—”

      “Not at all,” Forrester cut in.

      Maya sniffed sadly. “Oh, you just don’t understand,” she said. “You’re an Athenian, aren’t you?”

      “Athenan,” Forrester said automatically. It was a correction he found himself called upon to make ten or twelve times a week. “An Athenian is a resident of Athens, while an Athenan is a worshipper of the Goddess Athena. We—”

      “I understand,” Maya said. “I suppose it’s like us. We don’t like to be called Aphrodisiacs, you know. We prefer Venerans.”

      She was leaning across the desk. Forrester, though he supposed some people might be fussy about it, could see no objection whatever to the term Aphrodisiacs. A wild thought dealing with Spheres of Influence strayed into his mind, and he suppressed it firmly.

      The girl was a Veneran. A worshipper of Venus, Goddess of Love.

      Her choice of religion, he thought, was unusually appropriate.

      And as for his.…

      CHAPTER TWO

      It was hard to believe that, only an hour or so before, he had been peaceful and calm, entirely occupied with his duties in the great Temple of Pallas Athena. His mind gave a sudden, panic-stricken leap and he was back there again, standing at the rear of the vast room and focusing all of his strained attention on it.

      The glowing embers in the golden incense tripods were dying now, but the heavy clouds of frankincense, still tingled with the sweet aroma of balsam and clove, hung heavily in the quiet air over the main altar. In the flickering illumination of the gas sconces around the walls, the figures on the great tapestries seemed to move with a subtle life of their own.

      Even though the great brazen gong had sounded for the last time twenty minutes before, marking the end of the service, there were still a few worshippers in the pews, seated with heads bowed in prayer to the Goddess. Forrester considered them carefully: average-looking people, a sprinkling of youngsters, and in the far corner a girl who looked just a little like…

      Forrester peered more closely. It wasn’t just a slight resemblance; the girl really seemed to be Gerda Symes. Her long blonde hair shone in the dimness. Forrester couldn’t see her very clearly, but his imagination was working overtime. Her magnificently curved figure, her wonderful face, her fiery personality were as much a part of his dreams as the bed he slept on.

      If not for her brother…

      Forrester sighed and forced himself to return his attention to his duties. His hands remained clasped reverently at his breast. Whatever battle went on in his mind, the remaining few people in the great room would see nothing but what was fitting. At any rate, he told himself, he made rather an imposing sight in his robes, and, with a stirring of vanity which he prayed Athena to chasten, he was rather proud of it.

      He was a fairly tall man, just a shade under six feet, but his slight paunch made him seem shorter than he was. His face was round and smooth and pleasant, and that made him look younger than he was: twenty-one instead of twenty-seven. As befitted an acolyte of the Goddess of Wisdom, his dark, curly hair was cut rather long. When he bowed to a departing worshipper, lowering his head in graceful acknowledgment of their deferential nods, he felt that he made a striking and commanding picture.

      Though, of course, the worshippers weren’t doing him any honor. That bow was not for him, but directed toward the Owl, the symbol of the Goddess embroidered on the breast of the white tunic. As an acolyte, after all, he rated just barely above a layman; he had no powers whatever.

      Athena knew that, naturally. But somehow it was a little difficult to get it through his own doubtless too-thick skull. He’d often dreamed of power. Being a priest or a priestess, for instance—now that meant something. At least people paid attention to you if you were a member of the hierarchy, favored of the Gods. But, Forrester knew, there was no chance of that any more. Either you were picked before you were twenty-one, or you weren’t picked at all, and that was all there was to it. In spite of his looks, Forrester was six years past the limit.

      And so he’d become an acolyte. Sometimes he wondered how much of that had been an honest desire to serve Athena, and how much a sop to his worldly vanity. Certainly a college history instructor had enough to do, without adding the unpaid religious services of an acolyte to his work.

      But these were thoughts unworthy of his position. They reminded him of his own childhood, when he had dreamed of becoming one of the Lesser Gods, or even Zeus himself! Zeus had provided the best answer to those dreams, Forrester knew. “Now I am a man,” Zeus had said, “and I put away childish things.”

      Well, Forrester considered, it behooved him to put away childish things, too. A mere vanity, a mere love of spectacle, was unworthy of the Goddess he served. And his costume and bearing certainly hadn’t got him very far with Gerda.

      He tore his eyes away from her again, and sighed.

      Before he could bring his mind back to Athena, there was an interruption.

      Another white-clad acolyte moved out of the shadows to his right and came softly toward him. “Forrester?” he whispered.

      Forrester turned, recognizing young Bates, a chinless boy of perhaps twenty-two, with the wide, innocent eyes of the born fanatic. But it didn’t become a servant of Athena to think ill of her other servants, Forrester reminded himself. Brushing the possibility of a rude reply from his mind, Forrester said simply: “Yes? What is it?”

      “There’s a couple of Temple Myrmidons to see you outside,” Bates whispered. “I’ll take over your post.”

      Forrester responded with no more than a simple nod, as if the occurrence were one that happened every day. But it was not only the thought of leaving Gerda that moved him. As he turned and strode to the small door that led to the side room off the main auditorium, he was thinking furiously under his calm exterior.

      Temple СКАЧАТЬ