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Battlefield Earth by L. Ron
Hubbard, "Turn off the juice," said Terl. "I only said that man—" "I know what you said. But you got your appointment because you are clever. That's right, clever. Not intelligent. Clever. And I can see right through an excuse to go on a hunting expedition. What Psychlo in his right skull would bother with the things?" The smaller Chamco brother grinned. "I get tired of just
dig-dig-dig, ship-ship-ship. Hunting might be fun. I didn't think anybody did it
for—" |
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Char turned on him like a tank zeroing in on its prey. "Fun hunting those things! You ever see one?" He lurched to his feet and the floor creaked. He put his paw just above his belt. "They only come up to here! They got hardly any hair on them except their heads. They're a dirty white color like a slug. They're so brittle they break up when you try to put them in a pouch." He snarled in disgust and picked up a saucepan of kerbango. "They're so weak they couldn't pick this up without straining their guts. And they're not good eating." He tossed off the kerbango and made an earthquake shudder. "You ever see one?" said the bigger Chamco brother. Char sat down, the dome rumbled, and he handed the empty saucepan to the steward. "No," he said. "Not alive. I seen some bones in the shafts and I heard." "There were thousands of them once," said Terl, ignoring the mine manager. "Thousands! All over the place." Char belched. "Shouldn't wonder they die off. They breathe this oxygen-nitrogen air. Deadly stuff." "I got a crack in my face mask yesterday," said the smaller Chamco brother. "For about thirty seconds I thought I wasn't going to make it. Bright lights bursting inside your skull. Deadly stuff. I really look forward to getting back home where you can walk around without a suit or mask, where the gravity gives you something to push against, where everything is a beautiful purple and there's not one bit of this green stuff. My papa used to tell me that if I wasn't a good Psychlo and if I didn't say sir-sir-sir to the right people, I'd wind up at a butt end of nowhere like this. He was right. I did. It's your shot, brother."
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