Unknown - The_Growing_589064
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- Название:The_Growing_589064
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With a conscious effort, Koda forces herself to ignore the anger battering against the walls of her refuge from without, forces back the rage that burns white-hot just beyond the limit of conscious thought, that requires only a moment’s inattention to burn through. Instead she deliberately recalls the pressure of Kirsten’s body against her own, the generous yielding of her mouth. Deliberately too, she recalls the sense of rightness in their coming together, as if her own journey from her parents’ home, Kirsten’s struggle over half a continent, had found their appointed ends in the snow at Minot.
Everything happens precisely as it should. Precisely.
And where, she wonders, does that come from? Dakota is no fatalist. Nor, she knows, is Kirsten. If the last months have taught her anything, it is that fate is shaped by human will, or by lack of it. Many of the uprising’s victims have died not so much from the androids’ onslaught as from a moment’s unbelieving paralysis. Like Kirsten, she has come to Minot and now to Ellsworth by a series of refusals to be stunned into inaction, by choices to fight against an enemy still unknown. And out of those actions has come the warrior she has felt dormant within her the whole of her life. And out of them, too, this unexpected love, ripening now in its appointed season.
“No!”
The shout breaks her calm, jerking her mind abruptly back into the anger that pulses off Dietrich in waves. With an effort she stifles the rage that rises to meet it: if he did not set the traps himself, then certainly he knew of them, was complicit in the pain and death of every creature caught in them. He stands before the court, his face blotched scarlet, his hand raised as if to strike out at the men and women of the jury panel.
“Sit down, Mr. Dietrich.” Harcourt motions to the uniformed Sergeant still standing at the door of the Judge’s Chambers. “If you persist in this disruption, I will have the Bailiff remove you.
Dietrich’s color remains high, but he pauses for a moment, deliberately lowering his hand to rest at his belt. When he speaks his voice is quieter, though none of the tension has gone out of the corded tendons at his neck. “You heard them. They were robbing his traps. He had a right to defend his property.”
“Given that, item—the Judge ticks off his points one by one on his fingers— leghold traps are illegal; and that, item, trapping of any kind without a license is illegal; and further, that the grey wolf remains a federally-listed endangered species, I’m not sure that the late Mr. Dietrich could lawfully claim any property interest in the fruits of his activities. Now: sit down, sir. Dr. Rivers, please.”
Dietrich resumes his seat as Koda takes up her place beside the table with the projector. As she steps up to the low dais, a murmur runs through the room. Deliberately she turns her eyes away from the crowd. She knows what she will see in their faces: admiration in some, awe in others, contempt in a very few still trapped in the prejudices of an age long dead. It is the same almost everywhere she goes now, except for the clinic or among the men and women who have stood shoulder to shoulder with her under fire and who give her the respect of one warrior to another, no less and no more.
“I must warn the court that some of what I have to show you is graphic and disturbing,” she says as she unpacks the laptop and attaches the cable to the projector. “Some of these slides are from photographs taken by Lieutenant Rivers and Lieutenant Andrews at the sites of the traps and depict injured animals in pain. Others show victims that did not survive.”
She begins with the snapshot of the coyote, which draws a nervous giggle from the back of the room. Keeping her voice even, she says, “Among the Lakota, Coyote is a trickster, famous for getting himself into difficulties. Many of those adventures are funny, with the joke on Coyote himself. But this,” she says as she turns to face the audience, “this is an individual animal, not a myth or Coyote-with-a-capital-C in a traditional story. If you look more closely, you will see that he has chewed his own tail half through in a effort to escape.” A flick of the switch zooms in on the wound, with teeth marks clear on the small vertebrae. “A little more closely, and you can see the infection that might well have killed him even if he had succeeded in freeing himself.”
This time there is a small gasp, and more than one head turns away from the sight of the inflamed and swollen flesh, the pus seeping into the ragged fur. “If the infection had not been stopped, this is what would have happened to him.”
The projector clicks softly, and the dying badger appears on the screen. “I can’t say for sure exactly how long this animal remained in the trap, but for full-blown sepsis—‘blood poisoning’—and terminal pneumonia to develop would require a matter of days.”
“Excuse me, Doctor Rivers.” One of the jurors, an elderly man whose grizzled beard approaches prophetic length, interrupts her. Turning to Dietrich, he says, “Now, I can understand why someone might get the impression that federal laws don’t apply any more. In fact, I can understand why someone might get the impression that there wasn’t any law at all. And I take it you admit that you knew your father was trapping?”
“Sure I did,” Dietrich answers. “He’d been running lines for years. And he’s not the only one who did it, either.”
The juror nods understandingly. “No, I imagine not.” He pauses, looking at his hands, then raises his head to stare at Dietrich, milky blue eyes blazing. “What I can’t imagine—damn it, I refuse to imagine it—is that any half-way decent man would set traps and not check them at least once a day. God knows we may get thrown back to stone knives and bearskins, more’s the pity for the bear. But to leave an animal to suffer like that”—he shakes one gnarled finger at the screen—“is plain sadism. I refuse to accept that as necessary, sir. I refuse to.”
‘Sit down, Mr. Dietrich,” Harcourt says repressively, before the man is halfway to his feet . “I will not warn you again. Do you have any further remarks at this time, Mr. Leonard?”
The juror shakes his head, leaning back against his seat and staring balefully at Dietrich. We’re going to make it. There is a grim triumph in the thought, and a small ironic smile pulls at the corners of Koda’s mouth. They’re as disgusted with the old man as they are with the son. They’re going to confirm the law. Aloud, she says, “Shall I go on, Judge?”
“If you would, Doctor Rivers.”
Steeling herself, Koda cues the next slide onto the screen, turning to face the panel, deliberately looking away from the image of Wa Uspewicakiyape dead in the snow. Her voice sounds hollow in her own ears as she says, “Here we see what happens when such injuries and subsequent infection run their course. This victim is an adult male Grey Wolf, Canis lupus, an endangered and federally protected species.” She focuses in on the shattered leg, and a young man in the back of the room abruptly gets up and pushes his way out the door, one hand over his mouth. “The initial injury in this case is a multiple compound fracture of the right tibia and fibula; plainly put, his leg was so badly crushed, with bone protruding through the skin, that medical repair would have been impossible; even if this wolf had been found immediately, the only choices would have been euthanasia or amputation and life in captivity.” She pauses for a moment, the words bitter in her mouth. “While immobilized by the trap, this wolf was attacked by, and somehow managed to fight off, a large predator, perhaps a bear, more likely a wolverine. Note the puncture wounds to the neck. Note also the abdominal wound. The edges are dry and inflamed, indicating the onset of infection. As in the case of the badger, exposure would have resulted in pneumonia. Again, we are speaking of days.”
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Ну что сказать по поводу сей книги? Половина нудная и неинтересная. Чересчур растянутый сюжет.
Убила на неё 33 дня (с учётом перевода на русский).
Первые 150 страниц интереса не вызвали. Потом более менее были интересные моменты. В Дакоте есть нечто от Зены, а в Кирстен от Габриэль. Хотя эти персы там и не упоминаются. Думаю, не кажлый осилит данную книгу. Тут надо терпение иметь, чтобы её прочесть. И кстати вначе я подумала, что книга про зомби или оживших мертвецов. Только позже поняла, что она про роботов.