Название: Einstein Intersection
Автор: Samuel R. Delany
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Историческая фантастика
isbn: 9780819571960
isbn:
He was all crumpled up on the ground. The hand slapped a few more times (Boom—Boom! Boom!) and then arm and fingers slipped, pulling a lot of stone and bushes and three small trees, down, down, down.
Lo Hawk wasn’t dead. (The next day they discovered he had cracked a rib, but that wasn’t till later.) He began to curl up. I thought of an injured bug. I thought of a sick, sick child.
I caught him up by the shoulders just as he started to breathe again. “Hawk! Are you—”
He couldn’t hear me because of the roaring from the pit. But he pulled himself up, blinking. Blood began trickling from his nose. The beast had been slapping with cupped palm. Lo Hawk had thrown himself down, and luckily most of the important parts of him, like his head, had suffered more from air-blast than concussion.
“Let’s get out of here!” and I began to drag him towards the trees.
When we got there, he was shaking his head.
“—no, wait, Lobey—” came over in his hoarse voice during a lull in the roaring.
As I got him propped against a trunk, he grabbed my wrist.
“Hurry, Hawk! Can you walk? We’ve got to get away. Look, I’ll carry you—”
“No!” The breath that had been knocked out of him lurched back.
“Oh, come on, Hawk! Fun is fun. But you’re hurt, and that thing is a lot bigger than either of us figured on. It must have mutated from the radiation in the lower levels of the cave.”
He tugged my wrist again. “We have to stay. We have to kill it.”
“Do you think it will come up and harm the village? It hasn’t gone too far from the cave yet.”
“That—” He coughed. “That has nothing to do with it. I’m a hunter, Lobey.”
“Now, look—”
“And I have to teach you to hunt.” He tried to sit away from the trunk. “Only it looks like you’ll have to learn this lesson by yourself.”
“Huh?”
“La Dire says you have to get ready for your journey.”
“Oh, for goodness—” Then I squinted at him, all the crags and age and assurance and pain in that face. “What I gotta do?”
The bull’s roar thundered up from the caved-in roof of the source-cave.
“Go down there; hunt the beast—and kill it.”
“No!”
“It’s for Friza.”
“How?” I demanded.
He shrugged. “La Dire knows. You must learn to hunt, and hunt well.” Then he repeated that.
“I’m all for testing my manhood and that sort of thing. But—”
“It’s a different reason from that, Lobey.”
“But—”
“Lobey.” His voice nestled down low and firm in his throat. “I’m older than you, and I know more about this whole business than you do. Take your sword and crossbow and go down into the cave, Lobey. Go on.”
I sat there and thought a whole lot of things. Such as: bravery is a very stupid thing. And how surprised I was that so much fear and respect for Lo Hawk had held from my childhood. Also, how many petty things can accompany pith, moment, and enterprise—like fear, confusion, and plain annoyance.
The beast roared again. I pushed the crossbow farther up my arm and settled my machete handle at my hip.
If you’re going to do something stupid—and we all do—it might as well be a brave and foolish thing.
I clapped Lo Hawk’s shoulder and started for the pit.
On this side the break was sharp and the drop deep. I went around to the sagging side, where there were natural ledges of root, earth, and masonry. I circled the chasm and scrambled down.
Sun struck the wall across from me, glistening with moss. I dropped my hand from the moist rock and stepped across an oily rivulet whose rainbow went out under my shadow. Somewhere up the tunnel, hooves clattered on stone.
I started forward. There were many cracks in the high ceiling, here and there lighting on the floor a branch clawing crisped leaves or the rim of a hole that might go down a few inches, a few feet, or drop to the lowest levels of the source-cave that were thousands of feet below.
I came to a fork, started beneath the vault to the left, and ten feet into the darkness tripped and rolled down a flight of shallow steps, once through a puddle (my hand splatting out in the darkness), once over dry leaves (they roared their own roar beneath my side), and landed at the bottom in a shaft of light, knees and palms on gravel.
Clatter!
Clatter!
Much closer: Clatter!
I sprang to my feet and away from the telltale light. Motes cycloned in the slanting illumination where I had been. And the motes stilled.
My stomach felt like a loose bag of water sloshing around on top of my gut. Walking towards that sound—he was quiet now and waiting—was no longer a matter of walking in a direction. Rather: pick that foot up, lean forward, put it down. Good. Now, pick up the other one, lean forward—
A hundred yards ahead I suddenly saw another light because something very large suddenly filled it up. Then it emptied.
Clack! Clack! Clack!
Snort!
And three steps could carry him such a long way.
Then a lot of clacks!
I threw myself against the wall, pushing my face into dirt and roots.
But the sound was going off.
I swallowed all the bitter things that had risen into my throat and stepped back from the wall.
With a quick walk that became a slow run I followed him under the crumbling vaults.
His sound came from the right.
So I turned right and into a sloping tunnel so low that ahead of me I heard his horns rasp on the ceiling. Stone and scale and old lichen chittered down at his hulking shoulders, then to the ground.
The gutter on the side of the tunnel had coated the stone with fluorescent slime. The trickle became a stream as the slope increased till the frothing light raced me on the left.
Once his hooves must have crossed a metal floor-plate, because for a half-dozen steps orange sparks СКАЧАТЬ