"Judith Merril - Pioneer Stock" - читать интересную книгу автора (Merril Judith) PIONEER STOCK
Dear Burt: I deeply regret the necessity for what I must do, darling. You see, I am returning your ring by registered post. I need hardly tell you that this reluctant action represents no change of sentiment on my part. But after your last visit, and in view of the decision you have come to since, I have no other possible choice... TWO YEARS AGO, when both of them were just past being children, he had given her the ring. Deena had worn it proudly ever since, and it shone brighter in the world's sight than her own gleaming beauty. It shone brighter because she saw to it that no man could notice her without noticing as well the ring that committed her to one man alone. Every night since then she had gone to sleep holding hands with herself: the fingers of one hand ardently stroking and caressing the slender band of metal which she wore on the other. And each time he was home from school, for a day or a week, or through the two long glorious vacations, she had struggled between the pounding needs of her own blood, and the restraining memory of the blood of her ancestors. Each time she had won the fight untilтАФhis imperative accumulated urgency, more than her own, had overcome at last the shame and the fear. ...alternative. My grandfather, as you know, was a pioneer here on Ganymede. My grandmother... And now the very memory of that urgency, and of the wonder and mystery of those two nights before his departure, and of the burning in her body ever since, had left her no other choice but this. She knew her heritage well enough, and always had. But now she knew exactly how he felt too. They could have waited, and endured the last year still ahead. But another year after that, or three or fiveтАФthe time which must of necessity elapse before she She sat at the table in her own room, the room in which she had grown up, and would almost surely live all the rest of her life, and stared at the last two words she had written: My grandmother. She couldn't tell him after all. She would have to go back too far, explaining. He would read the words, and never even know what they meant. ...My grandmother was not a happy woman, though she loved her husband dearly, and he her in return. That much was true, no matter which grandmother you were speaking of. Perhaps it is unfitting in the descendant of "pioneer heroes" to be so fearful but... Burt didn't know. Nobody knew except the family, and perhaps a few old-timers who didn't talk. When the whole world knows part of the story, the part that's not fit to be known is buried deeper than usual. ...but perhaps it is just exactly that background of growing up in a household where the stories of pioneer days and pioneer hardships were so much a part of my conditioning... *** Thatcher and Leseur came out on the same ship, but they didn't team up right away. Life on Ganymede was not so tough that you had to have a partner to survive. If you could stand being alone almost all the time, it was smarter to keep your pickings to yourself. There was plenty of room then for everybody, and plenty of uranium scattered about, and the Dzairdee, the graceful, green-skinned peoples who were native to the satellite, were as timid as they were backward, and thus represented no menace to the roaming prospectors. Phil Thatcher had always been a lonely man, even in the crowded cities of Earth. For him the rocky heights and wilderness valleys of Ganymede were a natural and suitable environment. If every now and then he crossed the trail of a fellow fortune hunter, and spent a day or two in human company, he found it |
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