"Campbell, John W Jr - Who Goes There" - читать интересную книгу автора (Campbell John W Jr)

you grousing about a minute ago? We can set the thing in a chair next to you tonight, if you want."


"I'm not afraid of its face," Connant snapped. "I don't like keeping a wake over its corpse particularly, but I'm going to do it."
Kinner's gring spread. "Uh-huh." He went off to the galley stove and shook down ashes vigorously, drowning the brittle chipping of the ice as Blair fell to work
again.
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Chapter 4
"Cluck" reported the cosmic ray counter, "cluck-brrrp-cluck." Connant started and dropped his pencil.


"Damnation." The physicist looked toward the far corner, back at the Geiger counter on the table near that corner, and crawled under the desk at which he had
been working to retrieve the pencil. He sat down at his work again, trying to make his writing more even. It tended to have jerks and quavers in it, in time with the
abrupt proud-hen noises of the Geiger counter. The muted whoosh of the pressure lamp he was using for illumination, the mingled gargles and bugle calls of a dozen
men sleeping down the corridor in Paradise House formed the background sounds for the irregular, clucking noises of the counter, the occasional rustle of falling
coal in the copper-bellied stove. And a soft, steady drip-drip-drip from the thing in the corner.


Connant jerked a pack of cigarettes from his pocket, snapped it so that a cigarette protruded and jabbed the cylinder into his mouth. The lighter failed to
function, and he pawed angrily through the pile of papers in search of a match. He scratched the wheel of the lighter several times, dropped it with a curse and got
up to pluck a hot coal from the stove with the coal tongs.


The lighter functioned instantly when he tried it on returning to the desk. The counter ripped out a series of clucking guffaws as a burst of cosmic rays struck
through to it. Connant turned to glower at it, and tried to concentrate on the interpretation of data collected during the past week. The weekly summary -He


gave up and yielded to curiosity, or nervousness. He lifted the pressure lamp from the desk and carried it over to the table in the corner. Then he returned to
the stove and picked up the coal tongs. The beast had been thawing for nearly eighteen hours now. He poked at it with unconscious caution; the flesh no was no
longer hard as armor plate, but had assumed a rubbery texture. It looked like wet, blue rubber glistening under droplets of water, like little round jewels in the
glare of the gasoline pressure lantern. Connant felt an unreasoning desire to pour the contents of the lamp's reservoir over the thing in its box and drop the
cigarette into it. The ghree red eyes glared up at him sightlessly, the ruby eyeballs reflecting murky, smoky rays of light.


He realized vaguely that he had been looking at them for a very long time, even vaguely understood that they were no longer sightless. But it did not seem of
importance, of no more importance than the labored, slow motion of the tentacular things that sprouted from the base of the scrawny, slowly pulsing neck.


Connant picked up the pressure lamp and returned to his chair. He sat down, staring at the pages of mathematics before him. The clucking of the counter was
strangely less disturbing, the rustle of the coals in the stove no longer distracting.


The creak of the floorboards behind him didn't interrupt his thoughts as he went about his weekly report in an automatic manner, filling in columns of data and
making brief, summarizing notes. The creak of the floorboards sounded nearer.
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Chapter 5