"Baxter, Stephen - Huddle" - читать интересную книгу автора (Baxter Stephen)

STEPHEN BAXTER

HUDDLE

HIS BIRTH WAS VIOLENT. He was expelled from warm red-dark into black and white
and cold, a cold that dug into his flesh immediately.

He hit a hard white surface and roiled onto his back.

He tried to lift his head. He found himself inside a little fat body, gray fur
soaked in a ruddy liquid that was already freezing.

Above him there was a deep violet-blue speckled with points of light, and two
gray discs. Moons. The word came from nowhere, into his head. Moons, two of
them.

There were people with him, on this surface. Shapeless mounds of fat and fur
that towered over him. Mother. One of them was his mother. She was speaking to
him, gentle wordless murmurs.

He opened his mouth, found it clogged. He spat. Air rushed into his lungs, cold,
piercing.

Tenderly his mother licked mucus off his face.

But now the great wind howled across the ice, unimpeded. It grew dark. A flurry
of snow fell across him.

His mother grabbed him and tucked him into a fold of skin under her belly. He
crawled onto her broad feet, to get off the ice. There was bare skin here, thick
with blood vessels, and he snuggled against its heat gratefully. And there was a
nipple, from which he could suckle.

He could feel the press of other people around his mother, adding their warmth.

He slept, woke, fed, slept again, barely disturbed by his mother's shuffling
movements.

The sharp urgency of the cold dissipated, and time dissolved.

He could hear his mother's voice, booming through her big belly. She spoke to
him, murmuring; and, gradually, he learned to reply, his own small voice piping
against the vast warmth of her stomach. She told him her name -- No-Sun -- and
she told him about the world: people and ice and rock and food. "Three winters:
one to grow, one to birth, one to die..." Birth, sex and death. The world, it
seemed, was a simple place.

The cold and wind went on, unrelenting. Perhaps it would go on forever.

She told him stories, about human beings.