"Asprin, Robert - Another Fine Myth" - читать интересную книгу автора (Asprin Robert)He looked up suddenly and our eyes met. It was too
late to look away so I simply looked back at him. "Hungry?" His grease-flecked salt and pepper beard was suddenly framing a wolfish grin. "Then show me how much you've been practicing." It took me a heartbeat to realize what he meant; then I looked up desperately. The feather was tumbling floor- ward, a bare shoulder-height from landing. Forcing the sudden tension from my body, I reached out with my mind . . . gently . . . form a pillow . . . don't knock it away.... The feather halted a scant two hand-spans from the floor. I heard Garkin's low chuckle, but didn't allow it to break my concentration. I hadn't let the feather touch the floor for three years, and it wasn't going to touch now. Slowly I raised it until it floated at eye level. Wrap- ping my mind around it, I rotated it on its axis, then en- ticed it to swap ends. As I led it through the exercise, its his mind to the task, but it did move unerringly in its assigned course. Although I had not been practicing with the feather, I had been practicing. When Garkin was not about or preoccupied with his own studies, I devoted most of my time to levitating pieces of metalЧkeys, to be specific. Each type of levitation had its own inherent problems. Metal was hard to work with because it was an inert material. The feather, having once been part of a living thing, was more responsive . . . too responsive. To lift metal took effort, to maneuver a feather required subtlety. Of the two, I preferred to work with metal. I could see a more direct application of that skill in my chosen profession. "Good enough, lad. Now put it back in the book." I smiled to myself. This part I had practiced, not because of its potential applications, but because it was fun. The book was lying open on the end of the work- bench. I brought the feather down in a long lazy spiral, |
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