"Jack Williamson - The Happiest Creature" - читать интересную книгу автора (Williamson Jack) JACK WILLIAMSON
If your father read science fiction, he very likely counted Jack Williamson high among his favorite writers—as you very likely do today. Young enough to have served with the Air Force in the South Pacific in World War II, Williamson is old enough, and has been writing excellent science fiction stories often enough, to have attained an almost unique status as combination revered old master and bright new star. For more than thirty years his stories have been the delight of hundreds of thousands of readers. Such consistent loyalty demonstrates the existence of talent; such talent implies the ability to create so bright a bit as— The Happiest Creature The collector puffed angrily into the commandant's office in the quarantine station, on the moon of Earth. He was a heavy hairless man with shrewd little ice-green eyes sunk deep in fat yellow flesh. He had a genial smile when he was getting what he wanted. Just now he wasn't. "Here we've come a good hundred light-years, and you can see who I am." He riffled his psionic identification films under the commandant's nose. "I intend to collect at least one of those queer anthropoids, in spite of all your silly red tape." The shimmering films attested his distinguished scien-tific attainments. He was authorized to gather specimens for the greatest zoo in the inhabited galaxy, and the quarantine service had been officially requested to expedite his search. "I see." The commandant nodded respectfully, trying to conceal a weary frown. The delicate business of safe guard-ing Earth's embryonic culture had taught him to impressive, and we'll give you whatever help we can. Won't you sit down? " The collector wouldn't sit down. He was thoroughly an-noyed with the commandant. He doubted loudly that the quarantine regulations had ever been intended to apply to such a backward planet as Earth, and he proposed to take his specimen without any further fiddle-faddle. The commandant, who came from a civilization which valued courtesy and reserve, gasped in spite of himself at the terms that came through his psionic translator, but he attempted to restrain his mounting impatience. "Actually, these creatures are human," he answered firmly. "And we are stationed here to protect them." "Human?" The collector snorted. "When they 've never got even this far off their stinking little planet!" "A pretty degenerate lot," the commandant agreed re-gretfully. "But their human origins have been well es-tablished, and you'll have to leave them alone." The collector studied the commandant's stern-lipped face and modified his voice. " All we need is a single specimen, and we won 't injure that. " He recovered his jovial smile. "On the contrary, the creature we pick up will be the luckiest one on the planet. I've been in this game a good many centuries, and I know what I'm talking about. Wild animals in their native en-vironments are invariably diseased. They are in constant physical danger, generally undernourished, and always more or less frustrated sexually. But the beast we take will receive the most expert attention in every way." A hearty chuckle shook his oily yellow yowls. |
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