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West of Eden

West of Eden

Titel: West of Eden Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Harry Harrison
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balls of fur and bones that the owls regurgitated and Fraken poked them open and read the omens.
    "Not today, but tomorrow," he said. "That will be the time we must leave, at first light. Then when the sun is over the hills and shines here it will see nothing. We must be gone."
    That night, after they had eaten, Kerrick sat by the fire tying bits of grass to long thorns from a berry bush. The supply of darts for the hèsotsan were running low, and there were none of the special trees here on which the darts grew. They were not needed. Any bit of material of the same size would be expelled by the hèsotsan. The darts that they made worked just as well, even better if they were carefully done.
    Kerrick bit the knot off with his teeth. Armun passed by him and threw the food scraps into the fire, then began to tie their few possessions into bundles. She was silent all the time that she did this and Kerrick suddenly realized she had reverted to her old habit of holding her hair over her face.
    When she came close he took her by the wrist and pulled her down beside him, but she still turned away from him. Only when he took her chin in his hands and turned her face to him did he see the tears that filled her eyes.
    "Have you hurt yourself? What is wrong?" he asked, puzzled.
    She shook her head and tried to keep silent but he was worried and made her speak. In the end she turned her head away, held her hair before her face, and told him.
    "There is a baby coming. In the spring."
    In his excitement Kerrick forgot all about her tears and her worries, pulled her down to him and laughed out loud. He knew about babies now, had seen them born, had seen the pride the parents felt. He could think of no reason why Armun should cry instead of being joyful. She did not want to tell him and kept turning away in her old manner. At first he was worried, then grew angry at her silence and shook her until she cried harder. After this he felt ashamed of what he had done, wiped her tears and held her. When she had quieted she knew that she had to tell him. She pulled back and pointed to her face.
    "The baby will be a girl and will look like me," she said, touching the cleft in her mouth.
    "That will be very good, for you are beautiful."
    She smiled a little at that. "Only to you," she said. "When I was little they poked at me and laughed and I West of Eden - Harry Harrison
    could never be happy like the other children."
    "No one laughs at you now."
    "No. Not with you here. But the children will laugh at our daughter."
    "No, they won't. Our daughter could be a son and he could look like me. Did your mother or father have a lip and mouth like yours?"

"No."
    "Then why should our baby? You will then be the only one like that and I am lucky to have one with a face like yours. You should not cry."
    "I should not." She dried her eyes. "And I should not bother you with my fears. You must be strong when we leave tomorrow when we go to the mountains. Will there really be good hunting on the other side?"
    "Of course. Munan has told us so and he has been there."
    "Will there be… murgu there? Death-stick murgu?"
    "No. We are leaving them behind. We go where they have never been."
    He did not add the dark thought that he shared with no one. Vaintè was alive. She would never rest, never stop searching, not until he and all the Tanu were dead.
    They could flee, but surely as night followed day she would follow them.
    CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
    On the fifth day the land began to rise; the west wind was cool and dry. The hunters of sammad Har-Havola sniffed the air and laughed aloud for this was the part of the world they knew best. They talked excitedly among themselves, pointing out familiar landmarks, hurrying ahead of the sammads and their plodding mastodons. Herilak did not share their pleasure because he could see from the tracks and signs just how bad the hunting was here. A few times he saw that other Tanu had come this way, once even finding the remains of a fire with the ashes still warm. He never saw the hunters themselves; they were obviously staying well clear of this large and heavily armed band.
    The trail they were following took them further and further into the hills, each one higher than the one West of Eden - Harry Harrison
    before. The days were warm, the sun hot, but they were happy to burrow under their furs at night. Then one morning at dawn Har-Havola called out happily and pointed ahead at the place where the rising sun was touching the

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