"Larry Niven - The Integral Trees (2)" - читать интересную книгу автора (Niven Larry) Harp snorted. "Who says so? The Grad? The Grad's full of theory, but he doesn't have to
hunt." The swordbird's slow rotation exposed what should have been its third eye. What showed instead was a large, irregular, fuzzy green patch. Laython cried, "Fluff! It's a bead injury that got infected with fluff. The thing's injured, Harp!" file:///F|/rah/Larry%20Niven/Niven,%20Larry%20-%20The%20Integral%20Trees.txt (4 of 105) [1/19/03 6:07:18 PM] file:///F|/rah/Larry%20Niven/Niven,%20Larry%20-%20The%20Integral%20Trees.txt "That isn't an injured turkey, boy. It's an injured swordbinL" Laython was half again Harp's size, and the Chairman's son to boot. He was not easy to discipline. He wrapped long, strong fingers around Harp's shoulder and said, "We'll miss it if we wait here e.rguing! I say we go for Gold." And he stood up. The wind smashed at him. He wrapped toes and one fist in branch- lets, steadied himself, and semaphored his free arm. "Hiyo! Swordbird! Meat, you copsik, meat!" Harp made a sound of disgust. It would surely see him, waving in that vivid scarlet blouse. Gavving thought, hopefully, We'll miss it, and then it'll bepast~ But he would not show cowardice on his first hunt. He pulled his line loose from his back. He burrowed into the foliage to pound a spike into solid wood, and moored the line to it. The middle was attached to his waist. Nobody ever risked losing his line. A hunter who fell into the sky might still find rest somewhere, if he had his line. business end was a grapnel: hardwood from the finned end of the branch. Laython swung the grapnel round his head, yelled, and flung it out. The swordbird must have seen, or heard. It whipped around, mouth gaping, triangular tail fluttering as it tried to gain way to starboard, to reach their side of the trunk. Starving, yes! Gavving hadn't grasped that a creature could see him as meat until that moment. Harp frowned. "It could work. If we're lucky it could smash itself against the trunk." The swordbird seemed bigger every second: bigger than a man, bigger than a hut-all mouth and wings and tail. The tail was a translucent membrane enclosed in a V of bone spines with serrated edges. What was it doing this far in? Swordbirds fed on creatures that fed in the drifting forests, and there were few of these, so far in toward Voy. Little enough of anything. The creature did look gaunt, Gavving thought; and there was that soft green carpet over one eye. Fluff was a green plant parasite that grew on an ~nin'i~1 until the animal died. It attacked humi~nc too. Everybody got it sooner or later, some more than once. But hnmRns had the sense to stay in shadow until the fluff withered and died. Laython could be right. A head injury, sense of direction fouled up and it was meat, a mass of meat as big as the bachelors' longhut. It must be ravenous . . . and now it turned to face them. An isolated mouth came toward them: an elliptical field of teeth, expanding. Laython coiled line in frantic haste. Gavving saw Harp's line fly past him, and tearing himself out of his paralysis, he threw his own weapon. The swordbird whipped around, impossibly fast, and snapped up Gavving's harpoon like a tidbit. Harp whooped. Gavving froze for an instant; then his toes dug into the foliage while he hauled in line. He'd hooked iL |
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