The Science Fiction Novel Super Pack No. 1. David Lindsay

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу The Science Fiction Novel Super Pack No. 1 - David Lindsay страница 69

The Science Fiction Novel Super Pack No. 1 - David Lindsay Positronic Super Pack Series

Скачать книгу

old Duke’s time. The closest Earthly parallel Green could think of for these edifices was a housing project. Small cottages, all exactly alike, set in military columns.

      For a moment he considered stopping off to see Amra, then decided against it. She’d get him tied up in an argument or something, and he’d spend too much time trying to soothe her, time that should be spent at the marketplace. He hated scenes, whereas Amra was a born self-dramatist who reveled in them, almost wallowed, one might say.

      He averted his eyes from the Pens and looked at the other side of the street, where the walls of the great warehouses towered. Workmen swarmed around them, and cranes, operated by gangs pushing wheels like a ship’s capstan, raised or lowered big bundles. Here, he thought, was a business opportunity for him.

      Introduce the steam engine. It’d be the greatest thing that ever hit this planet. Wood-burning automobiles could replace the rickshaws. Cranes could be run by donkey-engines. The ships themselves could have their wheels powered by steam. Or perhaps, he thought, rails could be laid across the Xurdimur, and locomotives would make the ships obsolete.

      No, that wouldn’t work. Iron rails cost too much. And the savages that roved over the grassy plains would tear them up and forge weapons from them.

      Besides, every time he suggested to the Duke a new and much more efficient method of doing something he ran dead into the brick wall of tradition and custom. Nothing new could be accepted unless the gods accepted it. The gods’ will was interpreted by the priests. The priests clutched the status quo as tightly as a hungry infant clutches its mother’s breast or an old man clings to his property.

      Green could make a fight against the theocracy, but he didn’t feel it was worth while to become a martyr.

      He heard a familiar voice behind him calling his name.

      “Alan! Alan!”

      He hunched his shoulders like a turtle withdrawing his head and thought desperately for a moment of trying to ignore the voice. But, though a woman’s, it was powerful and penetrating, and everybody around him had already turned to see its owner. So he couldn’t pretend he hadn’t heard it.

      “ALAN, YOU BIG BLOND NO-GOOD HUNK OF MAN, STOP!”

      Reluctantly Green told his rickshaw boy to turn around. The boy, grinning, did so. Like everybody else along the harbor front he knew Amra and was familiar with her relations with Green. She held their one-year-old daughter in her arms, cradled against her magnificent bosom. Behind her stood her other five children, her two sons by the Duke, her daughter by a visiting prince, her son by the captain of a Northerner ship, her daughter by a temple sculptor. Her rise and fall and slow rise again was told in the children around her; the tableau embodied an outline of the structure of the planet’s society.

      3

      Her mother had been a Northerner slave; her father, a native freeman, a wheelwright. When she was five years old they had died in a plague. She had been transferred to the Pens and raised by her aunt. When she was fifteen her beauty had attracted the Duke and he had installed her in the palace. There she gave birth to his two sons, now ten and eleven, who would soon be taken away from her and raised in the Duke’s household as free and petted servants.

      The Duke had married the present Duchess several years after his liaison with Amra began and her jealousy had forced him to get rid of Amra. Back to the Pens she had gone; perhaps the Duke had not been too sad to see her go, for living with her was like living with a hurricane, and he liked peace and quiet too well.

      Then, in accordance with the custom, she had been recommended by the Duke to a visiting prince; the prince had overstayed his leave from his native country because he hated to part with her, and the Duke had wanted to give her as a present. But here he’d overstepped his legal authority. Slaves had certain rights. A woman who had borne a citizen a child could not be shipped away or sold unless she gave her permission. Amra didn’t choose to go, so the sorrowing prince had gone home, though not without leaving a memento of his visit behind him.

      The captain of a ship had purchased her, but here again the law came to her rescue. He could not take her out of the country, and she again refused to leave. By now she had purchased several businesses—slaves were allowed to hold property and even have slaves of their own—and she knew that her two boys by the Duke would be valuable later on, when they’d go to live with him.

      The temple sculptor had used her as his model for his great marble statue of the goddess of Fertility. Well he might, for she was a magnificent creature, a tall woman with long, richly auburn hair, a flawless skin, large russet brown eyes, a mouth as red and ripe as a plum, breasts with which neither child nor lover could find fault, a waist amazingly slender considering the rest of her curved body and her fruitfulness. Her long legs would have looked good on an Earthwoman and were even more outstanding among a population of club-ankled females.

      There was more to her than beauty. She radiated a something that struck every male at first sight; to Green she sometimes seemed to be a violent physical event, perhaps even a principle of Nature herself.

      There were times when Green felt proud because she had picked him as her mate, chosen him when he was a newly imported slave who could say only a few words in the highly irregular agglutinative tongue. But there were times when he felt that she was too much for him, and those times had been getting too frequent lately. Besides, he felt a pang whenever he saw their child, because he loved it and dreaded the moment when he would have to leave it. As for deserting Amra, he wasn’t sure how that would make him feel. Undeniably, she did affect him, but then so did a blow in the teeth or wine in the blood.

      He got down out of the rickshaw, told the boy to wait, said, “Hello, honey,” and kissed her. He was glad she was a slave, because she didn’t wear a nose-ring. When he kissed the Duchess he was always annoyed by hers. She refused to take it off when with him because that would put her on his level, and he mustn’t ever forget he was a slave. It was perfectly moral for her to take a bondsman as a lover but not a freeman, and she was nothing if not moral.

      Amra’s return kiss was passionate, part of which was the vigor of asperity. “You’re not fooling me,” she said. “You meant to ride right by. Kiss the children! What’s the matter, are you getting tired of me? You told me you only accepted the Duchess’s offer because it meant advancement, and you were afraid that if you turned her down she’d find an excuse to kill you. Well, I believed you—half-believed you, anyway. But I won’t if you try sneaking by without seeing me. What’s the matter? Are you a man or not? Are you afraid to face a woman? Don’t shake your head. You’re a liar! Don’t forget to kiss Grizquetr; you know he’s an affectionate boy and worships you, and it’s absurd to say that in your country grown men don’t kiss boys that old. You’re not in your country—what a strange, frigid, loveless race must live there—and even if you were you might overlook their customs to show some tenderness to the boy. Come on back to our house and I’ll bring up some of that wonderful Chalousma wine that came in the other day out of the cellar—”

      “What was a ship doing in your cellar?” he said, and he whooped with laughter. “By all the gods, Amra, I know it’s been two days since I’ve seen you, but don’t try to crowd forty-eight hours’ conversation into ten minutes, especially your kind of conversation. And quit scolding me in front of the children. You know it’s bad for them. They might pick up your attitude of contempt for the head of the house.”

      “I? Contempt? Why, I worship the ground you walk on! I tell them continually what a fine man you are, though it’s rather hard to convince them when you do show up and they see the truth. Still....”

      There

Скачать книгу