Eighty Minute Hour. Brian Aldiss
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Название: Eighty Minute Hour

Автор: Brian Aldiss

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Научная фантастика

Серия:

isbn: 9780007482450

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ the man was Monty Zoomer.

      Mike stood up and made himself known. If they wanted a touch of romance on the promontory, he would politely leave them alone. He knew from experience how well the promontory worked.

      ‘Don’t go,’ Monty said. ‘Let’s sit and talk. We can both cuddle Becky, can’t we?’

      ‘Just don’t be too grasping,’ she said.

      In the darkness, the two men looked not unalike in stature. But Surinat was more fine-boned, would probably grow thinner as he approached middle-age, as had his father before him, and many of the long line of Surinats. Whereas Zoomer, of nondescript origins which included a Danish-Irish-Dutch mother and a Jewish father called Zomski, had put on meat lately, success adding stature to him.

      Indifferently, Surinat settled on the short crisp grass; the grass was fed on salt spray and felt like yak fur. He put his arm round Becky. Even had she meant nothing to him, ah, the warmth, the precious fugitive human warmth of a female body – the one tolerable organisation in a universe of random heat-exchange!

      Zoomer, kicking out his legs, was already talking. Subject, as usual, himself.

      ‘Black was the colour crayon I used to like using most when I was a kid. Guess it was yours too, eh, Surinat?’

      ‘Yellow.’

      ‘Well, it means something, I guess. I used to sit out in the courtyard and draw and draw, while my dad was there, writing his endless television plays. See, we weren’t disgustingly rich like the Surinat family. “Nice blue sun” – remember that catch-line? It was famous for years, everyone said it, back before the war. My dad got it straight from me, working away on my crayoning. It was just something I said, aged two and a bit, sitting there out in the courtyard with Dad and my brother. “Nice blue sun!” He’d pass the crayons out the box to me one by one – trying to control my life even then!’

      Zoomer laughed at his own recollections. ‘We didn’t like being out in the courtyard all that time, but it was so crowded in the house – the Zomskis used to take in boarders, you know … Humble beginnings, Surinat, humble beginnings! Big blokes from little acorns grow. My brother used to peep in on boarders making love.’

      ‘Was that your brother Dimittis?’ Becky asked.

      ‘Funny how he got that name. See, his real name’s Nanko, after his grandfather. But when I was little, all I could call him was Nunkie. The beginnings of creativity, in a way. Distortion and creation – you should know that, Surinat. Everyone called him Nunc, then, and so it went –’

      ‘Talking about creativity,’ Mike said, ‘can we do a deal on a new holoplay? You have the equipment, I can finance, we can both contribute ideas.’

      ‘I’m very busy at the moment, see. I’m something like a universal property. Frankly, I’ve got more money than I know how to do with, so your offer hasn’t all that attraction …’

      ‘I know you’re big time, Monty, but wouldn’t you say that your id-projects are getting – well …’

      The night took the pause easily in its dark-throated wing.

      ‘Go ahead and say it, then, Surinat. How are my projects getting? You weren’t going to say debased, were you?’

      Mike was staring through the dark at him. Zoomer was no more than human size, slightly underweight, in fact. Nothing monstrous. And intellect the size of a pinhead. How come he had such undeniable talent? – because it was talent as well as ego.

      Yet there was so little to like or even notice about Zoomer, except for his wild hair and the pendant thumping against his plump little courtyard-bred chest.

      ‘No, I wasn’t going to say debased … What made you think that? I was going to say attenuated. As is only natural, you aren’t the creative force you were five years ago. You’ve given out so much, of course you need an infusion of fresh imagery. I saw one of your holomasques last –’

      ‘Look, friend, I give myself, right? I give myself! People want what I got. I keep the imagining popular. It’s for the masses, not for you in your precious secluded castles. You just pull in, I expand, I give out, I give the public what they want, okay?’

      ‘The argument of how many second-rate artists! A self-righteous way of saying that you pander to the lowest common denominator for as much cash as you can get!’

      ‘That’s the jealousy of an artist who’s never rated, right? And it’s the cruddy snooty toffee-nosed attitude of someone who has a lousy opinion of his fellow men. Why the suppurating sandbag shouldn’t I coin the copper while I can?’

      Surinat laughed with at least a semblance of good nature. ‘Next you’ll be saying that commercial success is a proof of merit. Sorry, Zoomer, I’m only needling you!’

      Zoomer was on his feet, jumping up and letting Becky collapse against Surinat.

      ‘What right do you get to needle me? Think you’re so good just because you’ve inherited this big fat ugly castle –’

      ‘Very different from your neat plastic dreams, isn’t it?’

      ‘– I tell you I serve the people. Better than all your word-games, your trifling. The times are all upset, who knows how much, and all you do is sit around all day and kipple about with words!’

      ‘My decadent view is, I fear, that words are the basic building blocks of man’s society. The universe could not begin to exist in any meaningful way until an intelligible word was spoken.’

      ‘Plasticine! Pictures were first, and popularity is too a test of merit. What other test is there?’

      Becky said quietly, ‘You say you serve the people, Monty. I understood you served Computer Complex, and that they pay you?’

      Zoomer said quietly, ‘So precisely what?’

      ‘So it’s not a question of popularity. The public accepts what C.C. dishes out.’

      ‘Aw; you’re all ganging up on me! You rich layabouts are all the same. You don’t know what it’s all about, you don’t know what it is to fight for existence. I’m going to get a drink. What’s so awful about working for the government, anyway?’ His dark figure merged with the dark.

      Becky leaned more closely against Mike.

      ‘He likes blowing his top. And when he does, he’s even more lavish with his words than you are!’

      They lay down side by side, hands soothing each other, lips gently nibbling, legs eventually intertwining.

      ‘By the far Pannonian Sea …,’ she quoted, and he took it up.

      ‘… that ocean

      Born again from Mesozoic springs …’

      They were both repeating it now as they lay embracing, while the sea came slobbering up to their feet.

      ‘We felt the quickening life of earth’s heart burst

      As it had ever done, in change and motion,

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