Читаем Evolution полностью

For four million years the pithecines had been a wide, diverse, very successful flourishing of the hominid family. Once, in fact, the only hominids in the world had been ape-men. But their time of significant change was already over. They had been seduced by the shelter and protection of the forest, and this had robbed them of much possibility. The future lay with another group of hominids — descendants of pithecine stock themselves — but who, unlike any pithecine, had made the decisive break away from the forest.

The future lay with Far.

III

Reluctantly she opened her eyes. She saw a patch of dirty ground, tilted up under her face. When she raised her head she could see brightness filtering through the dense tree trunks.

She pushed at the ground, and got her body off the floor. Leaves and dirt stuck to her breasts and injured shoulder. She used a tree trunk to pull herself upright, and stood still until the pounding of her heart subsided. Then she began to stagger as best she could through the forest toward the light.

She stumbled out into the day. She raised her hand, shielding her eyes against a low, reddening sun. The land was scorched, the grass blackened, the ground cracked and dried. But beyond a low rise she saw the glint of water: a stream that rolled from eroded hills a little further away.

She didn’t know this place. She had come right through the patch of forest, from east to west.

She stepped forward gingerly. The scorched ground was still hot — here and there tree stumps and bushes still smoked — and the crisped grass blades hurt her feet. Soon her lower legs, already filthy from her time in the forest, were coated with a deep black soot.

But she made it to the water. The stream was clear and fast moving. It ran over a bed of rounded volcanic cobbles, and bits of blackened vegetation skimmed over its surface. She plunged in her face and drank deeply. The dirt and dried blood washed off her skin, and the lingering stink of smoke in her nose and throat began to dissipate.

And then she heard a call. A voice. A word. But it wasn’t a word she knew.

She scrambled out of the water and threw herself flat behind an eroded boulder. In her world, strangers were bad news. Like their pithecine cousins her nomadic people were fiercely xenophobic.

A man knelt on the ground, his hands nimbly exploring the scorched soil for any pickings the fire had left behind. He was young, his skin smooth, his hair thick.

He picked up a blackened lizard, stiff and immobile. With a kind of shaped stone — its form wasn’t familiar to her — he scraped off the charred skin, exposing a morsel of pink flesh that he gulped down quickly. Now he found a snake, an adder, scorched to stiffness. Though he tried cutting through its burned skin it was too tough, and he threw the little corpse away.

Now the man found a real treasure. It was a tortoise, cooked in its shell. He picked it up and turned it over, muttering to himself. He took his handheld tool — it was a stone flake, but it was triangular, with each face worked, and a sharp edge all around it — and jammed it into the tortoise’s neck entrance. With a little effort he cracked open the shell, and soon he was using the tool to slice up the meat. Tortoises were actually a favorite prey of pithecine hunters. They were one of the few savannah animals that were even smaller and slower than hominids, and the tortoises’ habit of burrowing into the ground did not save them from clever animals able to dig them out with sticks and who had tools able to open up shells impervious to the teeth of lions and hyenas.

Far was fascinated by the young man’s stone ax. With its finely worked edge and shaped faces, it was far beyond her own people’s chopping stones and pithecine-like flakes. But she understood it immediately, at a deep somatic level; she had an impulse to reach out and take the stone teardrop, to try it out for herself.

As long as she knew him, she would associate this young man with the stone tool he wielded so expertly. She would think of him as Ax.

Suddenly Ax looked up, straight into Far’s eyes.

She cowered back behind her boulder, but it was too late.

He growled and dropped the tortoise — its shell clattered on the sooty ground — and held up his stone ax.

She had nowhere to run. She stood up. She thought his gaze wandered over her body, her back and buttocks still wet from the stream. He lowered the ax and grinned at her. Then he went back to his tortoise and resumed carving it out of its shell.

Calls came floating from the distance.

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После ядерной войны человечество было отброшено в темные века. Не желая возвращаться к былым опасностям, на просторах гиблого мира строит свой мир. Сталкиваясь с множество трудностей на своем пути (желающих вернуть былое могущество и технологии, орды мутантов) люди входят в золотой век. Но все это рушится когда наш мир сливается с другим. В него приходят иномерцы (расы населявшие другой мир). И снова бедствия окутывает человеческий род. Цепи рабства сковывает их. Действия книги происходят в средневековые времена. После великого сражения когда люди с помощью верных союзников (не все пришедшие из вне оказались врагами) сбрасывают рабские кандалы и вновь встают на ноги. Образовывая государства. Обе стороны поделившиеся на два союза уходят с тропы войны зализывая раны. Но мирное время не может продолжаться вечно. Повествования рассказывает о детях попавших в рабство, в момент когда кровопролитные стычки начинают возрождать былое противостояние. Бегство из плена, становление обоями ногами на земле. Взросление. И преследование одной единственной цели. Добиться мира. Опрокинуть врага и заставить исчезнуть страх перед ненавистными разорителями из каждого разума.

Александр Михайлович Буряк , Алексей Игоревич Рокин , Вельвич Максим , Денис Русс , Сергей Александрович Иномеров , Татьяна Кирилловна Назарова

Фантастика / Советская классическая проза / Научная Фантастика / Попаданцы / Постапокалипсис / Славянское фэнтези / Фэнтези