"Roger Zelazny - The Stainless Steel Leech" - читать интересную книгу автора (Zelazny Roger)The Stainless Steel Leech
Roger Zelazny They're really afraid of this place. During the day they'll clank around the headstones, if they're ordered to, but even Central can't make the search at night, despite the ultras and the infras - and they'll never enter the mausoleum. Which makes things nice for me. They're superstitious: it's part of the circuitry. They were designed to serve man, and during his brief time on earth, awe and devotion, as well as dread, were automatic things. Even the last man, dead Kennington, commanded every robot in existence while he lived. His person was a thing of veneration, and all his orders were obeyed. And a man is a man, alive or dead - which is why the graveyards are a combination of hell, heaven, and strange feedback, and will remain apart from the cities so long as the earth endures. But even as I mock them they are looking behind the stones and peering into the gullies. They are searching for - and afraid they might find - me. I might appear and go undetected, until too late. At will, I could cut the circuit that connected me with Central Control, and be a free `bot, and master of my own movements. I liked to visit the cemeteries, because they were quiet and different from the maddening stamp-stamp of the presses and the clanking of the crowds; I liked to look at the green and red and yellow and blue things that grew about the graves. And I did not fear these places, for that circuit, too, was defective. So when I was discovered they removed my vite-box and threw me on the junk heap. But the next day I was gone, and their fear was great. I no longer possess a self-contained power unit, but the freak coils within my chest act as storage batteries. They require frequent recharging, however, and there is only one way to do that. The werebot is the most frightful legend whispered among the gleaming steel towers, when the night wind sighs with its burden of fears out of the past, from days when non-metal beings walked the earth. The half-lifes; the preyers upon order, still cry darkness within the vite-box of every `bot. I, the discontent, the unjunked, live here in Rosewood Park, among the dogwood and myrtle, the headstones and broken angels, with Fritz - another legend - in our deep and peaceful mausoleum. |
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