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But the matriarch had not survived more than a century by chance. Summoning up the last of her energy, ignoring the hot aches that spread from the pinpricks in her side, she reared up on her hind feet. Like a falling building, she towered over the band of carnivores, and they fled before her. She crashed back to the earth with an impact like a sharp earthquake, her slamming forefeet sending waves of pain through every major joint in her body.

If she had fled then, if she had hurried after her herd, she might have survived, even thrown off the effects of the spears. But that last monumental effort had briefly exhausted her. And she was not given time to recover. Again the hunters closed in, striking at her with their spears and claws and teeth.

And here came Listener.

Listener had stripped naked, discarding even the whip around her waist. Now she flew at the diplo’s flank, which quivered mountainously. The hide itself was like thick leather, resistant even to her powerful claws, and it was crisscrossed by gullies, the scars of ancient wounds, within which parasitic growths blossomed, lurid red and green. The stink of rotten flesh was almost overwhelming. But she clung there, digging in her claws. She climbed until she had reached the spines that lined the matriarch’s back. Here, Listener bit into the diplo’s flesh and began to rip away at the horny plates embedded beneath.

Perhaps in some dark corner of her antique mind the diplo remembered the day she had ruined this little ornith’s life. Now, aware of new pains on her back, she tried to turn her neck, if not to swipe away the irritation, at least to see the perpetrator. But she could not turn.

Listener did not stop her frantic, gruesome excavation until she had dug down to the spinal cord itself, which she severed with a harsh bite.


For long days the mountain of meat served to sustain the nation of hunters, even as the young played in the cavernous hall of the matriarch’s great ribs.

But Listener was criticized, in angry head bobs, dances, and gestures. This is a mistake. She was the matriarch. We should have spared her until another emerged. See how the herd is becoming scattered, ill-disciplined, its numbers falling further. For now we eat. Soon we may starve. You were blinded by your rage. We were foolish to follow you.

And so on.

Listener kept her own counsel. For she knew the damage the loss of the matriarch had done to the herd, how badly it had been weakened, how much less were its chances of survival. And she knew it did not matter, not anymore. For she had smelled the salt.

When the matriarch was consumed, the hunting nation moved on, following the savannah corridor to the east as it had always done, walking in the herd’s unmistakable wake of trampled ground and crashed trees.

Until they ran out of continent. Beyond a final belt of forest — beyond a shallow sandstone cliff — an ocean lay shining. The giant diplos milled, confused, in this unfamiliar place, with its peculiar electric stink of ozone and salt.

The herd had reached the eastern coast of what would become Spain. They were facing the mighty Tethys Sea, which had forced its way westward between the separating continental blocks. Soon the Tethyan waters would break through all the way to the west coast, sundering a supercontinent.

Listener stood on the edge of the cliff, her forest-adapted eyes dazzled by its light, and smelled the ozone and salt she had detected so many days ago. The matriarch was dead, destroyed, but it did not matter. For, after walking across a supercontinent, the diplodocus herd had nowhere to go.

The orniths might have fared better had they had a more flexible culture. Perhaps if they had learned to farm the great sauropods — or even simply not to pressure them so hard in this time of change — they might have survived longer. But everything about them was shaped by their origins as carnivorous hunters. Even their rudimentary mythos was dominated by the hunt, by legends of a kind of ornitholestes Valhalla. They were hunters who could make tools: that was all they would ever be, until there was nothing left to hunt.

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После ядерной войны человечество было отброшено в темные века. Не желая возвращаться к былым опасностям, на просторах гиблого мира строит свой мир. Сталкиваясь с множество трудностей на своем пути (желающих вернуть былое могущество и технологии, орды мутантов) люди входят в золотой век. Но все это рушится когда наш мир сливается с другим. В него приходят иномерцы (расы населявшие другой мир). И снова бедствия окутывает человеческий род. Цепи рабства сковывает их. Действия книги происходят в средневековые времена. После великого сражения когда люди с помощью верных союзников (не все пришедшие из вне оказались врагами) сбрасывают рабские кандалы и вновь встают на ноги. Образовывая государства. Обе стороны поделившиеся на два союза уходят с тропы войны зализывая раны. Но мирное время не может продолжаться вечно. Повествования рассказывает о детях попавших в рабство, в момент когда кровопролитные стычки начинают возрождать былое противостояние. Бегство из плена, становление обоями ногами на земле. Взросление. И преследование одной единственной цели. Добиться мира. Опрокинуть врага и заставить исчезнуть страх перед ненавистными разорителями из каждого разума.

Александр Михайлович Буряк , Алексей Игоревич Рокин , Вельвич Максим , Денис Русс , Сергей Александрович Иномеров , Татьяна Кирилловна Назарова

Фантастика / Советская классическая проза / Научная Фантастика / Попаданцы / Постапокалипсис / Славянское фэнтези / Фэнтези