"Charles Coleman Finlay - A Game of Chicken" - читать интересную книгу автора (Finley Charles Coleman)

CHARLES COLEMAN FINLAY


A Game of Chicken
GRAVEL CRUNCHED UNDER the car tires as Ed pulled off the country road beside the big iron
gates. A few placid bison grazed on the green slopes behind an electric fence. An old white
farmhouse, bright red barn, and drab prefab research buildings rested on the hilltop. The sunset turned
the clouds into hues of pink and blue, like cotton candy at the circus.

And there's the freak show, Ed thought as he spied several cat-sized shapes pecking at the grass
beside the driveway.

He parked the car, got out, and buzzed the gate, waving into the little camera like an idiot. He never
thought of himself as such, but he'd come out here without knowing why he'd been invited. Still, how
could he pass it up?

The gate swung open and he decided to walk up the long driveway, just to stretch his legs. And to
take a closer look at the famous chickens.

Yes, they certainly were four-legged chickens all right. Amazing and amusing. They strutted
awkwardly, as if always falling forward. The front legs looked too short, at least compared to the
pictures he'd seen online.

"Ah! There you are!" cried an enthusiastic voice.

Ed glanced up. A tall, fit, silver-haired man in a polo shirt and khakis lunged toward him, hand
outstretched. Ed thrust out his own hand in self-defense, had it gripped, and shaken.

"Walter Griffin," said the man, introducing himself. "Guess you could say I'm the rancher hereabouts."

"Edward Bango. Pleased to meet you, Mr. Griffin."

"Griffey. All my friends call me Griffey." He grinned conspiratorially as he removed a silver card holder
from his pocket, and offered Ed his business card.

Ed took it, even though he'd probably misplace it before he could scan it into his rolodex.

Griffin Farm Products "Growing For The Future"

That's all it said, plus the usual address information. It was made of some fancy brown paper with bits
of seed and grass in it, and printed in maroon ink. Looked handmade. Ed shoved it in his pocket.
"Thanks. So these are the chickens you invented?"

"Yes!" cried Griffey, still wearing that unexplained grin. "Though invention is too strong a term. We
take research from other fields and find commercial applications for it. With the chickens, it was a
simple modification to gene Tbx4."

"This came out of some medical research?"

"Correct! Holt-Oram Syndrome. Where other people saw a birth defect, we saw opportunity! Twice as