Читаем More Than Human полностью

‘Yes,’ he said. ‘Yes, I know.’

She said, ‘It’s the first time the twins ever touched him. It was very brave. He could have burned out their brains in a second.’

‘They’re wonderful. Bonnie!’

‘Ho.’

‘Get me a knife. A sharp one with a blade at least so long. And a strip of black cloth, so-by-so.’

Bonnie looked at Janie. Janie said, ‘What – ‘

He put his hand on her mouth. Her mouth was very soft. ‘Sh.’

Janie said, panicked, ‘Bonnie, don’t – ‘

Bonnie disappeared. Hip said, ‘Leave me alone with him for a while.’

Janie opened her mouth to speak then turned and fled through the door. Beanie vanished.

Hip walked over to the prone figure and stood looking down at it. He did not think. He had his thought; all he had to do was hold it there.

Bonnie came through the door. She held a length of black velvet and a dagger with an eleven-inch blade. Her eyes were very big and her mouth was very small.

‘Thanks, Bonnie.’ He took them. The knife was beautiful. Finnish, with an edge he could have shaved with, and a point drawn down almost to invisibility. ‘Beat it, Bonnie!’

She left – blip! – like a squirted appleseed. Hip put the knife and the cloth down on a table and dragged Thompson to a chair. He gazed about him, found a bell-pull and tore it down. He did not mind if a bell rang somewhere; he was rather sure he would not be interrupted. He tied Thompson’s elbows and ankles to the chair, tipped the head back and made the blindfold.

He drew up another chair and sat close. He moved his knife hand gently, not quite tossing it, just feeling the scend of its superb balance in his palm. He waited.

And while he was waiting he took his thought, all of it, and placed it like a patterned drape across the entrance to his mind. He hung it fairly, attended to its folds and saw with meticulous care that it reached quite to the bottom, quite to the top, and that there were no gaps at the sides.

The pattern read:

Listen to me, orphan boy, I am a hated boy too. You were persecuted; so was I.

Listen to me, cave boy. You found a place to belong and you learned to be happy in it. So did I.

Listen to me, Miss Kew’s boy. You lost yourself for years until you went back and learned again. So did I.

Listen to me, Gestalt boy. You found power within you beyond your wildest dreams and you used it and loved it. So did I.

Listen to me, Gerry. You discovered that no matter how great your power, nobody wanted it. So did I.

You want to be wanted. You want to be needed. So do I.

Janie says you need morals. Do you know what morals are? Morals are an obedience to rules that people laid down to help you live among them.

You don’t need morals. No set of morals can apply to you. You can obey no rules set down by your kind because there are no more of your kind. And you are not an ordinary man, so the morals of ordinary men would do you no better than the morals of an anthill would do me.

So nobody wants you and you are a monster.

Nobody wanted me when I was a monster.

But Gerry, there is another kind of code for you. It is a code which requires belief rather than obedience. It is called ethos.

The ethos will give you a code for survival too. But it is a greater survival than your own, or my species, or yours. What it is really is a reverence for your sources and your posterity. It is a study of the main current which created you, and in which you will create still a greater thing when the time comes.

Help humanity, Gerry, for it is your mother and your father now; you never had them before. And humanity will help you for it will produce more like you and then you will no longer be alone. Help them as they grow; help them to help humanity and gain still more of your own kind. For you are immortal, Gerry. You are immortal now.

And when there are enough of your kind, your ethics will be their morals. And when their morals no longer suit their species, you or another ethical being will create new ones that vault still farther up the main stream, reverencing you, reverencing those who bore you and the ones who bore them, back and back to the first wild creature who was different because his heart leapt when he saw a star.

I was a monster and I found this ethos. You are a monster. It’s up to you.

Gerry stirred.

Hip Barrows stopped tossing the knife and held it still.

Gerry moaned and coughed weakly. Hip pulled the limp head back, cupped it in the palm of his left hand. He set the point of the knife exactly on the centre of Gerry’s larynx.

Gerry mumbled inaudibly. Hip said, ‘Sit quite still, Gerry.’ He pressed gently on the knife. It went in deeper than he wanted it to. It was a beautiful knife. He said, ‘That’s a knife at your throat. This is Hip Barrows. Now sit still and think about that for a while.’

Gerry’s lips smiled but it was because of the tension at the sides of his neck. His breath whistled through the not-smile.

‘What are you going to do?’

‘What would you do?’

‘Take this thing off my eyes. I can’t see.’

‘You see all you need to.’

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Для кого-то восемнадцать - пора любви и приключений. Для меня же это самое сложное время в жизни: вечно пьющий отец, мама в больнице, отсутствие денег для оплаты жилья. Вся ответственность заработка резко сваливается на мои хрупкие плечи. А ведь я тоже, как все, хочу беззаботно наслаждаться студенческой жизнью, встречаться с крутым парнем, лучшим гонщиком в нашем университете. Вот только он совсем не обращает на меня внимания... Неугомонная подруга подкидывает идею: а что, если мне "убить двух зайцев" одним выстрелом? Что будет, если мне пойти работать в ассистентки к главному учредителю гонок?!В тексте нецензурная лексика!

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