"Bc24" - читать интересную книгу автора (Niven Larry & Pournelle)

His cheek burned, and he wasn't completely certain that he understood why.
Cassandra said, "Your alternate path is approved. You will head west by fifteen degrees--"

The second water hole was smaller. They'd found a grendel carcass lying seven meters away from the water's edge. They'd left it untouched. Justin lay thirty meters farther out, flat on his stomach behind a bush, and examined the scene through war specs.
"What do you think?" he asked into his mike.
Jessica answered from her vantage point in the skeeter above. "I think that the grendel who owns the water hole got into a fight for supremacy. It must have been something to see."
"All right. Hit it."
She brought the skeeter in to five meters above the water and dropped a wad of cotton scented with speed. Alien speed, guaranteed to make a grendel crazy.
Justin watched. The skeeter throbbed. The water lapped at the edge of the pool.
And nothing else.
"Try it again," he whispered, and she did. Splash. And then nothing.
The sound of his own breathing grew almost unendurably loud. There was something wrong here.
He stood. Justin tucked his war specs away, and approached cautiously. "Keep scanning for infrared. No grendel sign?"
"None," she said, "We've scanned that water hole. There are samlon there, but no adult."
"Then the old adult was killed. How long ago?"
He examined the corpse. It was torn and flattened, but he noted some fluttery motion around the edges. He backed up, then tore a branch from a nearby tree to use as a lever. He lifted the grendel's jaw. "Scavengers," he said. "Like the one I saw earlier. Bugs."
"They're not bugs," Jessica said.
"I know, they're obviously related to crabs like half the life on this planet." One of the scavengers flew up as he exposed it. The motor wings buzzed violently. It circled his head, then settled again. "Jessica, this carcass is just seething with these things. Cassandra, are you recording?"
"Affirmative. This is a new life-form."
"I'll get a sample." Justin lowered the grendel to the ground and took out a collection box. The grendel's hollow eye sockets stared at him. A beetle emerged from the left socket and flew away to the south with a harsh burring sound.

The chamels had been watered and grazed, and were settled down for the night. Tents had blossomed around the water hole, and a defensive perimeter was established.
Aaron was off at the other fire with some of the kaffeeklatsch, and Jessica felt glad of it. Her reconnection with Justin was still fragile, still needed time to cement--but there might not be time after all. Katya snuggled up to him. Jessica tried not to feel anything, but she couldn't help watching. The two seemed to have settled into a rhythm. There were subtle turnings when either of them moved, subtle responses of body language when either spoke. They were more than lovers. Quietly and without fanfare, Justin and Katya had become a couple.
The firelight danced across them, as Jessica sipped her hot cocoa. At the second fire, there was singing, and Aaron's strong voice rose above the sound of the guitar.
Justin looked up at Jessica as she left the fireside, and smiled. He was happy. They were brother and sister again.
There was no reason for the odd sadness that she felt. Perhaps it was the loss of Stu. That had to be it.
"I'm going over to the singing," she said. "I don't think that I'll be missed too much."
Katya's head was against Justin, and she grinned up. "You and Aaron have a good evening, you hear?"
Jessica nodded.
Only thirty feet of space separated the two fires, and in crossing she passed the chamel pen. One of them nuzzled up against the wire that confined them. The wire carried a light charge. If pressure was applied, the charge grew stronger. The fence was portable, and bundled to swing beneath a skeeter.
The chamel nuzzled at her. She stopped to stroke its long, delicate neck.
She looked back at her unbrother. Justin and Katya. A good couple. Katya was quieter. She would bond more quickly. The two of them would probably start making fat babies. That would be a good thing. Justin needed to be a parent. He wasn't like her, not at all.
She looked over to where Aaron was strumming his guitar, head tilted back in song. He was golden, Apollonian. Her head swam at the thought of him. He was so strong. So . . . perfect. He made her ache. Just listening to his laugh, watching the way his head rolled back when he sang, when he tossed his hair . . . she wanted him inside her, she wanted to feel the enormous power of his body, to feel the fire that drove him igniting her.
But when she looked at Justin and Katya, she saw a gentle thing, a softness. Not at all like the driving hunger that she felt from Aaron. Jessica went and sat next to Aaron. After a while, she laughed, and sang along.

They made love, and as usual, it was perfect. Perfect. Her body had exploded more times than she could count. As usual. The perfection of their union was . . . almost predictable. As if he had direct access to her nervous system.
If anything was missing, it was the experience of exploration. With Toshiro there had been a constant unfolding that was lacking with Aaron.
"What are you thinking?" Aaron whispered.
Jessica felt the hard flat plates of his stomach muscles against her back. His left arm circled her waist. His right thumb made slow lazy circles around her right nipple. Waves of pleasure washed through her. "Don't," she said.
"Don't what?"
"Don't . . . that."
The pressure stopped. "Okay." He paused. She felt his heart beat against her back, strong and slow. "What are you thinking?"
"That I feel more connected to the dream than I do to you, Aaron."
"Is that so bad? I read somewhere that love isn't two people looking at each other. It's two people looking in the same direction."
She had to smile. "I read that too. But sometimes, sometimes we have to look at each other, too."
He rolled her over, and gazed directly into her eyes. "You don't think that I look at you?"
"Maybe," she said. "I've gone along with everything that you wanted. And I've given you everything that I have to give. I betrayed my father for you." Oh, God, it was true. It wasn't true until she said it. "I need to know how you feel. About us."
He took her hand, and placed it between his legs. Immediately, he began to stiffen.
She gave him a light squeeze. "Not that. Not . . . just that. I know we turn each other on. That's easy for us."
"Love, then?"