"Jack Vance - The Brains of Earth" - читать интересную книгу автора (Vance Jack) THE BRAINS OF EARTH
By Jack Vance Scanned by BW-SciFi Copyright ┬й, 1966, by Ace Books, Inc. All Rights Reserved Printed in U.S.A. I Ixax at the best of times was a dreary pla-net. Winds roared through the jagged black mountains, pro-pelling jets of rain and sleet which, rather than softening the landscape, tended to wash what soil existed into the ocean. Vegetation was scant: a few drab forests of brittle den-drons; wax-grass and tube-wort bunching out of crevices; lichens in sullen splotches of red, purple, blue and green. The ocean however, supported extensive beds of kelp and algae; these, with a fairly abundant catalogue of marine ani-malculae, conducted the greater part of the planet's photo-synthetic process. In spite of, or because of, the challenge of the environ-ment, the original amphibian animal, a type of ganoid ba-trachian, evolved into an intelligent andromorph. Assisted by an intuitive awareness of mathematical justness and har-mony, with a visual apparatus that presented the world in tactile three-dimensional style rather than as a polychrome set of two-dimensional surfaces, the Xaxans were almost pre-ordained to build a technical civilization. Four hundred years after their advent into space they discovered the no-palтАФapparently through the workings of The war, lasting over a century, devastated the already barren planet. Scum crusted the oceans; the few sparse pockets of soil were poisoned by yellowish-white powder sifting out of the sky. Ixax had never been a populous world; the handful of cities now were rubble: heaps of black stone, liver-brown tile, chalk-white shards of fused talc, wads of rotting organic stuff, a chaos which outraged the Xaxan compulsion for mathematical exactness and nicety. The survi-vors, both Chitumih and Tauptu (so to transcribe the clicks and rattlings of the Xaxan communicative system), dwelt in underground fortresses. Distinguished by Tauptu aware-ness and Chitumih denial of the nopal, they nourished to-ward each other an emotion akin to but a dozen times more intense than Earthly hate. After the first hundred years of war the tide of battle ran in favor of the Tauptu. The Chitumih were driven to their stronghold under the Northern Mountains; the Taup-tu battle-teams inched forward, blasting the surface de-fense-ports one by one, dispatching atomic moles against the mile-deep citadel. The Chitumih, although aware of defeat, resisted with a fervor corresponding to their more-than-hate for the Tauptu. The rumble of approaching moles sounded ever louder; the outlying mole-traps collapsed, then the inner-ring of diver-sion-tunnels. Looping up from a burrow ten miles deep, an enormous mole broke into the dynamo chamber, destroying the very core of Chitumih resistance. The corridors went pitch-dark; the Chitumih tumbled forth blindly, prepared to fight with hands and stones. Moles gnawed at the rock; the tunnels reverberated with grinding sound. A gap appeared, followed by a roaring metal snout. The walls broke wide apart; there was a blast of anaesthetic gas, and the war was over. The Tauptu climbed down across the broken rock, search-lights glowing from their heads. The able-bodied among the Chitumih were pinioned and sent to the surface; the crushed and mangled were killed where they lay. |
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