"RESNICK, Mike - The Land of Nod" - читать интересную книгу автора (Resnick Mike)The Land of Nod
Copyright (c) 1996 by Mike Resnick. All rights reserved. No reproduction permitted without the express permission of the author. Once, many years ago, there was a Kikuyu warrior who left his village and wandered off in search of adventure. Armed only with a spear, he slew the mighty lion and the cunning leopard. Then one day he came upon an elephant. He realized that his spear was useless against such a beast, but before he could back away or find cover, the elephant charged. His only hope was divine intervention, and he begged Ngai, who rules the universe from His throne atop Kirinyaga, the holy mountain that men now call Mount Kenya, to find him and pluck him from the path of the elephant. But Ngai did not respond, and the elephant picked the warrior up with its trunk and hurled him high into the air, and he landed in a distant thorn tree. His skin was badly torn by the thorns, but at least he was safe, since he was on a branch some twenty feet above the ground. After he was sure the elephant had left the area, the warrior climbed down. Then he returned home and ascended the holy mountain "What is it that you want of me?" asked Ngai, when the warrior had reached the summit. "I want to know why you did not come," said the warrior angrily. "All my life I have worshiped you and paid tribute to you. Did you not hear me ask for your help?" "I heard you," answered Ngai. "Then why did you not come to my aid?" demanded the warrior. "Are you so lacking in godly powers that you could not find me?" "After all these years you still do not understand," said Ngai sternly. "It is _you_ who must search for _me_." * * * My son Edward picked me up at the police station on Biashara Street just after midnight. The sleek British vehicle hovered a few inches above the ground while I got in, and then his chauffeur began taking us back to his house in the Ngong Hills. "This is becoming tedious," he said, activating the shimmering privacy barrier so that we could not be overheard. He tried to present a judicial calm, but I knew he was furious. "You would think they would tire of it," I agreed. "We must have a serious talk," he said. "You have been back only two months, and this is the fourth time I have had to bail you out of jail." "I have broken no Kikuyu laws," I said calmly, as we raced through the dark, ominous slums of Nairobi on our way to the |
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