"Laura Resnick - Curren's Song" - читать интересную книгу автора (Resnick Laura)======================
Curren's Song by Laura Resnick ====================== Copyright (c)1993 by Laura Resnick First published in Dinosaur Fantastic, July 1993 Fictionwise www.Fictionwise.com Science Fiction --------------------------------- NOTICE: This work is copyrighted. It is licensed only for use by the original purchaser. Duplication or distribution of this work by email, floppy disk, network, paper print out, or any other method is a violation of international copyright law and subjects the violator to severe fines and/or imprisonment. --------------------------------- _In the sixth century A.D., Saint Columba left Ireland and ventured into Scotland where he preached to the Picts, whose warriors were covered with blue tattoos or body dye. According to the saint's biographer, he saved a Brude, the local king, that he and his people converted to Christianity._ _One theory about the Loch Ness Monster is that a small herd of plesiosaurs have survived in that isolated environment -- like the coelacanth, some thirty of which have been caught in the South Atlantic despite prior belief that they had been extinct for seventy million years._ **** The sky was grey, a wet, mourning color that did not change from dawn till dusk. A misty rain fell softly upon the steep green hills, its rhythm soothing and hypnotic. The steady, gentle sound comforted Curren's wounded spirit as he crept beneath the sheltering branches of a clump of fir trees overlooking the loch, the great inland sea which split the land like a deep wound. Curren sat on the damp ground and hugged his knees, gritting his teeth and refusing to cry as he stared at the black surface of the water. He was too old for tears, he told himself. Why had the gods cursed him with their visions? What sort of life was this for a boy about to become a man? To be forever an outsider, forever different, forever apart from his own people. Laughed at by some, shunned by others, ridiculed or feared since his birth, each day of his life brought a fresh, piercing pain. This morning he had done it again, had spoken when he should have kept silent. He could never separate the things everyone knew and saw from the things that he alone knew and saw, and so he was forever alienating everyone around him. |
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