"Robert F. Young - Passage to Gomorrah" - читать интересную книгу автора (Young Robert F) She was the Galaxy's most beautiful whore. He knew that if he
went to her couch during the time-storm, he, too, would be booking PASSAGE TO GOMORRAH By ROBERT F. YOUNG ILLUSTRATOR SUMMERS EVEN for a lady of the stars, the Lady Berenice was beautiful. Her short blonde hair made Cross think of Martian maize, and her blue eyes, set wide apart in her tanned, oval face, reminded him of the ice lakes of Frigidia. Her tall, Junoesque body put to shame the porno-graphic photographs he had seen of it, cheapened the lurid passages he had read about it; betrayed, as yet, no evidence of her apostasy. He wondered who her lover was, and why she had refused to reveal him. When the Jacob's lift hatched levels with the Pan-dora's lock, she stepped lightly into the ship beside him. The corporation officer who had accompanied her, handed him her papers, then signaled to the longstarmen below. After a moment the lift and its sole occupant sank from sight. "How soon do we blast?" the Lady Berenice asked. She was looking at Cross intently, as though trying to probe beyond the bleak grayness of his eyes. "In about fifteen minutes, my lady," he said. She nodded, stepped into the ship proper. He sealed the lock and escorted her up the spiral companionway to her cabin. She paused in the doorway. "I'd like my luggage, please." yourself on the acceleration couch." He watched as she did his bidding. "You can get up as soon as the 'all clear' signal sounds," he said presently. She nodded again, not in the least perturbed. He won-dered if she'd be equally calm if "acceleration couch" was something more than a hand-me-down term from pre-degravitation days; if she'd be equally composed if she had to contend with 3 or 4 g's, in-stead of just the temporary instability of blast-off. She probably would be, he decided. A miscarriage would not affect her banishment to Gomorrah, but it would save her the unpleasantness of hav-ing to give birth to a mutant. He excused himself and headed for the control room. A Priori drive, once acti-vated, required no supervision except in cases of emergency. The Pandora was only a one-passenger-one-pilot job, but Falcon Lines, Inc., had a repu-tation throughout the civilized sector of the galaxy for fast, efficient service, and even its smallest ships boasted the lat-est in automatic equipment. Cross secured the control-room door behind him, made his way leisurely down the spiral companionway to the hold, where the Wine-Women-and-Song longstarmen had de-posited the Lady Berenice's luggage. Even in the artificial 1/2 g, the two bags were heavy and he was breathing a little hard when he halted before her door. He knocked. "Yes?" she answered, her voice muffled by the sound of running water. "Your luggage, my lady." The sound of running water ceased, and presently she opened the door. She had wrapped a ship's towel deftly around her torso. It was a white towel that enhanced the hue of her clear, tanned skin. Water glistened on her golden shoulders, ran in twinkling rivulets down her coppery thighs and calves. "Set them inside, please." |
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